| Government EPA Estimated Miles Per Gallon |
| Model | Highway | City |
| Chevette with 1.4 litre engine,4-speed manual transmission and available 3.70:1 axle. | 40 | 28 |
| Vega Sport Coupe with 140-2 cubic inch engine,available 5-speed manual transmission.Air conditioning not in operation. | 38 | 22 |
| Monza with 140-2 cubic inch engine,available 4-speed manual transmission.Air conditioning not in operation. | 35 | 23 |
| Nova with 250 cubic inch engine,3-speed manual transmission.Air conditioning not in operation. | 26 | 18 |
Camaro with 250 cubic inch engine,
3-speed manual transmission. Air
conditioning not required.
26 18
9-75—Litho in U.S.A.
Chevrolet
Remember: These mileage figures are estimates. The actual mileage you get will vary depending on the type of driving you do, your driving habits, your car's condition and available equipment.
Prepared by Chevrolet Merchandising Department—RJF
The Salesian family is a large one (we are the third largest order) but a warm one. A community with an enthusiastic family feeling where not only our talents are shared but our shortages as well. We are very thankful for our important mission in your life, we welcome your interest.
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Filors Lodge, W.Haverstraw, N.Y. 10993
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Open
Thurs.
'til
8:30
Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.44
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Focus on Teaching
October 24,1975
Inside . . .
RCA
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
Robert Numley, professor of geography, explains the workings of a mini computer system he uses in the Space Technology Center on West Campus. The system, Numley says, can be utilized by a wide range of programs at the university.
Imaginative teachina
Of the three goals of the University—teaching, research and public service—there is little doubt that teaching will have the greatest direct effect on students during their days at KU. Every student must have at least 124 credit hours to graduate. Whether those hours drag by or are savored—often depends on the imagination of the teacher.
On page 10, the Kansas examines what teachers have done in six University courses to make them more interesting and enjoyable for students. Among these classes are the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program's star-gazing sessions. Pearson students take advantage of clear nights to view the stars to complement their poetry reading classes. Clark Becker studies a philosophy using magic shows at the end of each semester in his chemistry lecture course to illustrate chemical properties. And women in KU physical fitness programs are beginning to throw weight around—in University weightlifting classes.
Cheating examined
Are chest sheets, stolen tests and over-the-shoulder peeks being used by the average KU student to make the grade or get the award? A review of 45 shredded and examined their responses to questions about the cheating situation on campus in his story on page seven.
CHEST OUT AND
BEAK UP, SOLDIER!
KU traditions traced
The "hallowed halls" and hill of ol' KU are steeped in tradition, and at no time of the year do these become more evident than at Homecoming. Few students, however, seem to know where many of these traditions developed, so on pages four and five of this section the Kansan traces the history of some important symbols of KU.
The history of the term Jayhawk dates back to an 1848 wagon train phrase but wasn't used as KU's mascot until 1896. The Jayhawk was first drawn by Henry Maloy in 1912 and has constant ties with the University professor needed a chant for his science club. The KU songs and seal are also reprinted, and the history of the Chi Omega fountain is dipped into.
Teaching techniques vary
A letter from Chancellor Daelo Waldo
Kreisler in 1904 read-
To Heads of Departments
There have come to my attention persistent rumors and occasionally actual reports of practices not educationally sound, including the following examples: 1) Use of technology permits, even encourages, dishonest work. -Use of the same test during successive semesters, so that quiz files become altogether too useful.
-Delay or failure return tests or papers.
-Tendency of instructors to be late to
This letter shows that people have known for at least 25 years which techniques typify bad teachers. However, there is still no good teacher, which techniques are used by good teachers.
—Instructors cutting class.
Innovations in teaching, such as the use of computers and audio visual equipment, have occurred. But award-winning teachers, University of Kansas administrators, and students who have
magic formula* for good teaching existed
Alison Gwinn and Greg Hack Staff Writers
Many professors said the best techniques were those that fitted a professor's subject to their teaching.
Eldon Fields, professor of political science and a HOPE award winner, said, "It's so important to teach any of any teaching technique is determined by the extent to which the teacher is enthused about it. If the students sense that the teacher's bored with what or how he's taught, then it may be time for him."
He said he hadn't changed his teaching style, a mixture of lecture and questions for the class.
"I'm comfortable with my teaching methods, which seem to work well for political theory and philosophy, which most of my upper-level courses deal with," he
J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business and a HOPE award winner, wrote this book to explain the accord to the subject matter. For example, business law lends itself to discussion, because it takes abstract principles and relates them to everyday life.
He said that, from his observations, he didn't think that teaching methods had changed.
doing them is something else. I guess you'd say that I use a modified Socratic method by continuing to ask my students questions."
"The goals and the ways you go about it probably haven't changed since the Greeks and even before that," he said. "I think it's clear what our objectives should be, but
"Any teacher, to be at all successful, has to be enthusiastic about what he's talking about," he said. "The method is not so important, and the methods used vary so
much from discipline to discipline that you can't say any method is best."
He said he had to use the lecture approach because of the size of his classes. For Bricker, a small group discussion" still requires some contact with students.
"You have to know your students personally, too," he said. "I despise all of this social security and student number business. I like to know my students by name. I've talked on a one-to-one basis with
MELISSA FARRELL
"I used 24 rolls of 36-exposure film this semester," he said.
Paying attention
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
Although classroom teaching techniques have improved over the years, no one has yet found a substitute for the classroom situation—the lecture and the note taking.
nearly every one of my students this semester."
Bricker said he learned his students' names by photographing each one of them at the gallery.
Oscar Haugh, professor of curriculum and instruction and the oldest OHP award winner still teaching, said a teacher had to be aware of safety of methods to present knowledge.
"I think teaching methods have changed," I said. "I like to think that I'm improved."
He emphasized the importance of teachers keeping office hours.
"I think it's scandalous that many teachers don't keep office hours," he said. "I suppose I have close to 20 hours a week and I do office hours. I value that as being important."
KU students who have studied classroom teaching don't seem to endorse any parental views.
Chris Illiff, chairman of the Commission on the Quality of Classroom Teaching, said, "There are as many excellent methods of teaching as there are excellent teachers."
"Based upon conversations with recognized outstanding teachers, I would say that the most important thing which is common to all of them is an intangible quality which they themselves cannot pin down."
Ed Rolfs, student body president, said, "The prevalent thing that came out of the report is that a good teacher isn't necessarily one who has facts and knowledge, but one who can convey them to students."
Bruce Woner, student researcher for the commission, said two schools of thought existed among faculty and administrators about teaching.
One school of thought, he said, is that teaching ability is inherent in the teacher, and that a poor teacher can learn only from mistakes and from watching good teachers.
The other school of thought is that teaching techniques are improved through mindfulness.
Dennis Quinn, director of the Pearson Humanities Program and a HOPE award winner, said a shift to team-teaching was the major change in his teaching methods during the six years Pearson program has been in operation.
"This is the most successful sort of thing we've ever done," he said. "The students like the lectures. It's so successful that we worry about it. We have to remind the students that the books for our courses are more important than the lectures."
Quinn lectures with John Senior, professor of comparative literature and a HOPE award winner, and Franklin Nellick, professor of English. Quinn said that teaching together, the three provided contrast, balance and "a kind of richness."
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for
See TEACHING page 9
Adequate English skills lacking
Are college students today less proficient academically than their counterparts of several years age? Some observers of American education have said yes, while others have disagreed.
Part of the controversy stems from the fact that the average scores for two major college entrance examinations, the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) and the Advanced Placement test, were higher during the past decade. The ACT, which is used more often at the University of Kansas, has had a national drop in average composite score from 19.9 points in 1964 to 18.7 points in 1975, on a 36 point scale. At KU the composite score remained flat for six years, although it is still above the national average.
One subject area measured in both the SAT and the ACT is English proficiency. The question of whether basic English skills of college students today are actually sufficient for academic achievement has been discussed on a national level, as well as at KU.
Vance Packard, social critic and author of "The Status Seekers" and "A Nation of Strangers," has said that a decrease in English skills has occurred nationally. According to Packard, a study of about 100,000 Americans by the Pew Research Center in 2004 indicated that by age 17 only about one half of the students sampled could put together simple sentences and express simple ideas in general, imprecise, language. In addition, Packard said that a 1971 survey by the Louis Harris polling organization found that about 19 million American students were unable to measure measures of literacy, such as application forms.
According to several KU instructors, KU students at present are just as proficient in English skills as their counterparts of several years ago were but they aren't as proficient as they should be at a college level. James A. Gowen, director of freshman-sophomore English, said that no significant decline in verbal ability has been seen in the student body despite courses, although such a decline had been reported by instructors in some other colleges and universities.
Gown said the reported decline in English skills on other campuses occurred simultaneously with the return of instructors who had taught upper level courses for several years to lower level English courses.
"The instructors returned to teaching basic English
skills because the enrollment declined in many colleges and universities," he said. "The reported drop in English skills could be a subjective response to the different type of student being taught. These instructors were used to upper level and graduate English students and then came into contact with freshmen."
Gowen said he thought high school teachers were being blamed unnecessarily for failure to teach English skills. If any of the failure has occurred on the high school level, he said, it has occurred because high schools are overcrowded and underfunded. Some high schools have become baby-sitting institutions, he said.
However, other instructors said that high schools were responsible for the lack of adequate English skills in students. They also said that students English, said that students don't think of written English as being separate from spoken English. They aren't
Paula Jolly
Staff Writer
aware that word choice and sentence formation in spoken English are different from those in written English. College instructors often have to re-educate students to understand the difference, she said.
"I think the whole idea of writing isn't emphasized in high schools," Wiedling said. "They don't try to develop writing skills because high school teachers don't know how to deal with the problems involved. Students are taught about grammar, but not about putting grammatical parts together.
"I taught in high school for awhile and I think other teachers thought compilation writing was an extension of talking about literature, and that it wasn't essential for a high school student's survival."
"Students are often very frustrated because they
Oliver Filmey, assistant instructor in English, taught English 101 seven years ago and returned to teaching that course last year. He said he saw no noticeable difference in over-all literacy and verbal competency. However, even seven years ago the students' verbal preparation wasn't adutenate, he said.
aren't able to express themselves in writing without a struggle," he said.
According to Susanne Shaw, assistant professor of journalism, the English skills of students now haven't decreased noticeably when compared to the skills of students several years ago. However, she said that there is still a need for teachers to be remedial teaching of skills that should have been grasped by students in high school or junior high.
"Many journalism schools require that students pass an English proficiency test before entrance into the school," she said. "We're considering something like this. I think they need to be more familiar with the land of English before they enter the journalism school."
John Bremner, professor of journalism, also said he saw no noticeable decrease in the English proficiency of students in his editing classes. However, the over-all skill level isn't good, he said.
"The students give little indication that they had elementary or secondary school teachers who were concerned with the elements of grammar or with the use of language," he said. "It all bows down to the fact that elementary and high school teachers seem to have given up teaching the parts of speech. Students haven't been taught to diagram sentences or identify parts of speech, and spelling is often atrocious."
Another view of the relation of primary and second education to college student English skills was offered by Judy Freed, learning disabilities teacher at Hickory School, and Diana Olsen, a school district. According to Freed, the success of special education programs in grade schools has kept many students in school who would have otherwise dropped out. These students may catch up enough in their reading and writing skills, so that they can excel as well as other students on the collage level, she said.
Some KU instructors pointed to factors other than high school English instruction as possible causes for poor performance in English. One of the most frequently mentioned factors was television.
According to Brad Tate, principal of Lawrence High School, teachers there haven't given up teaching the basics of English. One semester of grammar and composition is required of all students, he said.
See ENGLISH page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 3, 1975
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods. services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanaan are offered by the University of Nebraska to national or origin national. PLEASE ENRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALT
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times times
15 words or
fewer
Each additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
- **re-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, and add items can be placed in person or by phone at the DKE business office at 864-4538.
FOR SALE
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hilt equipment than from factory lamps or out-of-production parts, the company will make sure at the GRAHAMPHON SHOP at KIERFS. tt
**Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale!**
**Master's Degree in Western Civilization!**
Makes sense to use them
**Master's Degree in Western Civilization!**
**For 2 class preparation**
**For 2 class preparation**
**"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"**
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket at today's retail prices, less 13 at checkout at Target, less 20 at Macy's. Mondays, for Mei'er's Salvage Card, $28. Gormer $98.
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 24-14 oz.
HIGH CHOCOLATE no discount. Metzger Salve.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reassaleable Profesional price set up for every occasion. Stamped earl and polished Turquoise, Saltwater Pearls. Made in the USA.
Tremendous selection of乐器, alps, drums, basses, percussion instruments. Shinki Keyboard Studio, Ghost From Gibbon, Ampere Kustom, Green, and many others. Ampere Kustom, Green, and many others. Keyboard Studio, Roxy Keyboards Studio, 149 W. 25rd 845-5000.
30% Discount on all antique and used furniture.
Discount on all antique and used products including canopies crates, baskets and rack wheels. All rack wheels and hinge. Also full stock of fresh fruits and vegetables. Country Shop 8:30 w. 4th W. 8:30 - 329, ipm. Country Shop 8:30 W. 4th W. 8:30 - 329, ipm.
We can make your stereo sound better- GUAR-
ware. You can get a new car door in
Audio Systems 60, E9th. 9eH.
Mackenzie Mewitt C. 78-14 Nylon Snow Tires cut to $2 each $2 p.E.T. Free installation at Bray & Sons (b. 76-14 Radial Snowcuts c. $33 plus $2.50, regular e. 78-14 (regular e. $3.00 price $3.00).
Past & Present Antiques Furniture, collectibles
Furniture, low priced furniture 1947 Mar
862-9044
2 cu. ft. Desk Top Electric Refrigerator cut to
18" x 14" x 9" 659 Mass. (10-6) 10-6
size.仅价 $239MB
Made in USA
For Sale, Reallife S14-47, 25 watts, SMSo solo
speakers. Sony PS-1100-tilem. Call 8641-3980.
1927 Yasmana DT-1. Helmet and new rear rubber.
$350. Must sell now. C64 8114-10. 10-3
For Sale: 1974 Red Corvette, town car, 6000 miles
If interested, call Lee Lee at 180-350-2888
18:00
Excellent-KX-400 Kuwaiti 4-stroke, 1200 ml.
Excellent-sell $12,000 bottle offer. Call 813-659-8900.
sell-bottle $12,000 bottle offer. Call 813-659-8900.
Karen's Bridal Shoppe
Karen's Bridal Shop
128 Minnesota
Lawrence, Kansas
Phone: 842-0056
KAREN BARNES, owner
By appointment only
Closed Fridays
Bengals
in The
Catalan
Glasses and Jewelry 803 Mass.
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 FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
Alwood 15' B. West, 60 hp motor, 422m³. Firm See
Brown 19' B. Stout, Lawrence, Wrights, 10-3
7700.
In time for Christmas Lady's gold engagement ring and diamond wedding band set, you can now buy your $200. You will be less than half. 1st $200 offer takes the pair. More than half. 4th $200 offer takes the pair. Less than half. 5th $200 offer takes the pair. Less than half. 6th $200 offer takes the pair. Less than half. 7th $200 offer takes the pair. Less than half. 8th $200 offer takes the pair. Less than half. 9th $200 offer takes the pair. Less than half. 10th $200 offer takes the pair.
10-Speed 21" Campain. Ex. Condition. $80, Call
after 4 p.m. #845-8755.
10-3
1966 VW Bus. 20,000 or motor, new tires, overall
call. Good. Call 843-404 after 6am. 10-3
Oriental rug. Antique, worn. $64. Mission style.
Rug. Singer tridecked leather. 10-3
843-1564
10-3
A Special Sale now at Ray Audio, 13 E.8th,
842-207-549, by Phone, 10-10
1985 Ford I4 titon pick-up. Good condition. $400.
816-751-5685. Kansas City. 10-3
Sunn amp, with 2008 head, condition body; Gibon EBS bass, both excellent condition. 842-6898
For sale: Dry fireplace Wood. free kindling with
order. Call anytime. 843-0246.
10-6
65 VW Bug - Not beautiful but good about town.
150 Motorcycle helmet $10, Bud. $82-106. 10-6
Financial Coach for sale: 1964 Caddiella superior,
Miami, private owner, contact JOB
472-3841-368
JOB 10-6
For Sale: 1969 $V W Bellett, Ruim, but neede engste gelijkne
For Sale: 1969 $V W Bellett, Ruim, but neede engste gelijkne
voice Beamer, Midland mobile 8 Channel 81-13
4422
Acura Lenka for Nikon. Wide angle 28mm. f. 2.8.
841-4422 10-3
Raleigh Record 10 speed, 27", new. 841-4422. 10-3
Must sell 1927 Sasn 902 AM-FM Ster, air conditioning, mating drive. After 60 Min.
California Bull Red Teddow tables, driftwood field,
Boulder Rock, to see he sees. 10-3
Carr around 10:59, 852-744-6250, 10-3
Pioneer stereo model -Model 300 with 2 speakers. One year old. Excellent condition, 845-889-8980.
Women's Size 7 Wrap-around Pendleton wool
coat. Excellent condition. 943-5809. 10-3
Pair of Infinity Wave Transmission Line Column
Pairs $400. Perfect condition, Call David, 7-
8358.
For Sale 1917 Plymouth Cricket. Excellent Com-
fortable, automatic. Call 864-3568 or
828-5295 after 5pm.
BOOK SALE. Tonganico Public Library. Satu-
rani Books: National Geographic. 60 K. U. Amu-
sie. Books: National Geographic. 60 K. U. Amu-
sie.
3 month old German Shepherd, has shots, for sale to good home. Call a S. 591 - 384-3967.
KODAK STEREO camera f. 3.5, leather case $25;
POLAROID 210 automatic flash, light meter,
POLAROID 210 automatic flash, light meter,
case, auxiliary (folding) flash; $25, $81-53-
490 p.m. 4:50 p.m., 816-761-768, even 10-
Torquilus
For Sale. Airequit 125 slide projector with two circular trays and stackholder $ Call 841-7309
Head skis 198 cm. without bindings $4. Tennis racket stringer with accessories= $20. WV replacement rockets and fender panels for Vans up to $350. Also back支件 for VW Van. Cal 10-7 3538.
Gibson J-45 Deluxe Guitar with case, 4 months
10-7
842-909-3068
A.K.C. Black Labrador Retrievers, nine weeks
outstanding blood lines. $75, 814-849, i9
outstanding blood lines.
Marantz 112 Tuner, 3 months old, $160, 841-3405.
For Sale: 23½" Gitante 10-up, sew-ups. 843-2218
evenings.
NAPA
Wally Reid's N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer: 1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
Hardcover and paperback books for all ages and interests—Children's books a specialty—Magazine subscriptions—Out-of-print books searched—Personal attention to special orders.
ADVENTURE a bookstore
Fine Books Fine Service
We don't do it with a hang glider but the FLIP does. We've trained them at the Operational Training School, the program an extra course offered through Air Force BOTC. Taken during the senior air force training on Air Force pilot training in nets after they go to an Air P
Air Force ROTC also offers scholarships, $100 a month in addition to tuition fees in addition to full tuition. This is all reserved for the govt who wants to work at the hang Air Force flying, including those at the Building Science University of Kansas, Phone 844-6479
Face it. “you’ve always told him? Mall of Oslo remember that feeling, and for a lot of us it wasn’t away. If you’re one of the air Force ROTC units, you’re not going to be surprised if FAPI is touched to teach you the basics!”
Guitar-Gibson 16-5. Excellent band.
shell casc must账 $450. Will bargain; b41-0744.
**$39,999.**
Hillcrest Shopping Center
9th & Iowa 843-6424
Lost: Small female cat, mixture black and yellow.
Meadowbrook area since 9/22. Wheelchair: 841-5837
Meadowbrook area since 9/22. Wheelchair: 841-5837
LOST AND FOUND
Lott: Mate Dog buoy-dog, black face, white hair. WARD: 84-3588 or 84-3106. IP-3. WARD: 84-3588 or 84-3106. IP-3.
Try to get the hang of it.
Found. University of Pittsburgh class ring. 1957. Inventor of the pinball machine. Found in front of Hawthorne. Call 643-2598.
Found: Hand calculator on campus. Identify.
Call Bob. 864-5772. 10-6
Found: Men's 3-speed bicycle. Owner call 842-2066 after 5 and identify.
Found: Key chain behind Union on Miss Call and identify 842-539. Ask for Boech. 10-6.
Mott: Black Labrador puppy - 5 months. Answers
to Midnight: 843-1285 or 842-6902.
10-6
Found: Key on chain at 1321 Mass. Describe when you call: 841-1274. 10-8
Lost: pair of copper wire rim glasses, in Lost:
Mirrors, to be used on viability on 9-24. If broken,
call 812-287-2928.
Found: Palm of gold rim glasses. Call Greg 841-
6573 after 5.00. 1n.7
portfolio notebook
not in France. QS offered a portfolio
not in France. QS offered a portfolio
not in John Mitchell, not in
John Mitchell. Tres are not
Tres are not.
Found a key on安全 pin in O-Zone, Identify by number on key. Call 841-0543. 10-7
Roilo is Lost. "We want him home!" Tit-colored
roilo from the 1990s, 1995 and 2000s, Chisel's child, Paul Keen,
1989, 1991, and 2003. He is wearing a black shirt with white accents.
FOUND: Girl's Jacket, blue corduroy, Naimish and Sunshine. Age: 84-286. 10-7
FOUND—White & Black Scot Terrier with Red
Ear. Stadium: If you'd like to see the
Renny, 842-3260
PERSONAL
Urgent! Lot two rings on canoe trip one, pearl
one class ring, Reward-Maril. 845-6010. 10-7
Natural, organic graina, flakes, flour, pasta, Flatware, Organic grains, Cereals, Meats. For the meals in-bag, Colocational seasonal herbs. Montreal's Natural Foods, 425 Indian Avenue, 8-10 Queens. Countryside Natural Foods, 425 Indian Avenue, 8-10 Queens. A branch of Lebocha Farma, Lyon, Kanada.
NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC—Beginning thru advanced lessons in folk, rock, and classical guitar, mandolin, fiddle, etc. Great teachers, readiness, instrumentation, Marianne Sasten-Blunt drumset, 841-6817.
The Sanctuary is planning an arts and craft show, jewelry, manicure and other crafts amid the city of the deck at the Sanctuary. No charge for arrangements; call 843-760-8444 between 8-4.
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION: Meeting first
week of session. Office of
Union, 864-903-8444, Sochernik 864-902-8444,
Sochernik 864-902-8444
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & 8th
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Troubled where to have your car serviced this semester?
THE HILL IN THE WALL
9th and Illinois 843-7685
THE VW BUS
Watch for the Royal Lichtenhain Club's ring side entrance from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. of Allen Field House. 10-6
After 25 years, if George doesn't have it, he will make it
CITY CARS
CONNIE'S NATURAL FOODS 425 Indiana Food Stamps Accepted 8-4 Tues., Thurs., Sat.
1930
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies
Pipe and Lighter Repair.
900 New Jersey
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
George's Shop
Arnold-How was gay Parry? We miser wa lai lots!
Love, hawk-Eye and Jennifer O'Neil 10-3
842-0753
Robert-thank you for being so good to me. 10-6
Open Discussion group on non-traditional
work. Minimum 15 members. Mar 10,
8:00 P.M. Plan 2346, 10Mwk. Oc-
10, 8:00 P.M. Plan 2346, 10Mwk.
TYPING
Pipe and Lighter Repair
Help! Dating article on Kauai Backpacking
Learn about Kauai's backpacking adventures, ideas of experience, 412-329-7800. Keep your phone charged and ready for an adventure!
Call
THISIS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center Is
a service that allows you to quickly copy
our services in fast and secure ways.
We provide a free copy of our services.
Experienced typet, IBM-Lect. Bibli, thesis, dis-
tributions and term papers. Call Pam Jenkins,
842-792-3050.
*Typing--experienced in dissertation, hats.*
*Testing--experienced in gas chromatography, carbon, rubber cell. Call Bill: 843-2085. If*
11
Experienced typet—term papers, maps, mice.
Experienced typet—spelling, spellin-
g, e-mailing. E45-340, M. Wright,
E45-341, M. Wright
EDITING and TYPING. Prompt, exploit, reliable
extension. Requires N48-937-12-10
Required Call Code: N48-937-12-10
Typing? FAST. ACCURATE AND PROFESSION-
ING. do for business, make a difference.
done for Business majors and law students.
GUAGE. B.A. English. Dissertations and Trial
set FEE. For info, call 814-1175 at 12:30 p.m.
NOTICE
Tying-experimented in dissertations, theses,
research papers. Contact: Mary A. Pearson;
carbon, paper帘. Call: Leilani B. 843-2097.
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Friday, October 24,1975
University Daily Kansan
Feedback grows at KU; more changes to be made
In desk drawers and jean pockets all over
to there are little red pens that aren't
sure they've been used.
The pencils come from the Curriculum and Instruction Survey, commonly known as Feedback. And from its beginnings in 1969, Feedback has had more to worry about than students forgetting to return its pencils.
Phil McKnight, director of the Office of Instructional Resources, said his office was constantly reviewing and revising the survey. He said that many things need to be done before Feedback realized its full potential.
To begin with, he said, the diagnostic and evaluation functions of the survey need to be done.
In the past, McKnight said, Feedback has tried to diagnose teaching problems at the same time it graded a teacher's ability. Beginning in the spring, however, the two
Jim Bates
Staff Writer
functions will be separated. He said the diagnostic survey would be given before spring break so teachers would have a chance to correct faults that semester.
Robert Haralick, professor of electrical engineering and chairman of the advisory committee to McKnight's office, said Feedback would also begin to become more diversified this spring. Departments and schools should add to their own questions to the survey.
Both McKnight and Haralick said, both would spring changes would be a best minimizer.
"Right now," Haralick said, "we don't really know what Feedback's measured." Haralick said the advisory committee intended to ask the University for a sizeable grant so an interdisciplinary group could do intense research on Feedback.
The grant, Halick said, should be about $50.00.
The present Feedback, he said, is a far from perfect instrument, as evidenced by the constant criticism it receives from faculty and students. The result aren't
very scientific and couldn't be published in any reputable scientific journal.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
and intensive research of teacher eval.
"We're clearly moving to a time of more formalized evaluations," he said.
Haraldic the committee was willing to do the work if it got the necessary funds. He said that up until last year the committee had merely exchanged opinions and didn't done any real work. The committee did, but he was ready to set some things done, be said.
It is time the University spent a little money and time evaluating teaching, he said, especially if it is one of the University's top priorities.
The committee shouldn't have too much trouble getting funds. Haralick said.
Liff said many students skip class on the week when given and shortening the form. The week is reduced.
Feedback now takes about 20 minutes to complete and some students complain that it's too long. But other people say that it can be convenient questionnaire might be worthless.
Chris Illff, chairman of the Student Senate's Commission on Classroom Teaching, said the form should be shortened from 55 to 15 questions.
"Some professors practically bribe students to show up now," he said. "One chemistry professor had sample final papers, which should only be offered the day of Feedback."
Dennis Embry, former Feedback director, said 20 minutes wasn't an extensively large percentage of a semester to devote to teacher evaluation.
"If the goal of teacher evaluation is just to sort teachers into good, mediocre and bad categories," he said, "we can cut it down to five questions. But if we're trying to get better teachers, then we're going to need many more questions."
A survey with only five or 10 questions probably would result in worse rather than better.
Questions are needed that find out where an instructor's teaching needs improvement, in addition to questions to find out if an instructor is good or bad, Embry
McKnight said most faculty members
English . . .
From page one
"On a national level, however, I think education has moved 'away from the basics,' he said. "The pendulum is swinging back, though, partly as a result of community concern about basic skills."
Some KU instructors pointed to factors other than high school English instruction as possible causes for poor performance in English. They also frequently mentioned factors was television.
Another view of the relation of primary and secondary education to college student English skills was offered by Judy Freed, an associate teacher at McKinley Elementary School in the Shaw Mission School District. According to Freed, the success of special education programs in grade schools has kept many students in school who would have otherwise dropped out. These students may catch up on their studies, but abilities to graduate, but may not do quite as well as other students on the college level, she said.
According to Phil McKnight, director of the office of instructional resources, there has been no definite research on effect of television on college students and their performance on entrance test. However, research has shown that television is very children because it's not natural for them to watch TV as much as very long, he said. Also, research indicates that television viewing makes children lethargic, passive and less creative.
It is possible that children don't learn as much because of the effects of television, McKnight said, and therefore they don't have as much knowledge when they enter
college as they would have had if they didn't watched television.
McKnight also said he was curious to find out whether television viewing would bend the glasses of older people.
"By watching television, children might be conditioned to expect complete resolution of things in thirty minutes," he said. "If this is true, then could you have an interview with a person who takes more than 30 minutes. Taking the ACT takes more than 30 minutes."
Linp L capes, associate dean of the School of Education, said some research indicated that television had adverse effects, while another research indicated the opposite to be true.
"I personally think it has a big effect," Capps said. "Students want the teacher to entertain them in the way television does. This is something the teacher can't do."
However, Gown said there was no proof that television was a problem. Some shows like "Sesame Street" actually teach children to read, he said.
Helen Norwood, principal of Schweigter School in Lawrence, agreed with Gowen.
were sensitive about what students thought about them. He said that if a teacher got a bad Feedback score, he usually would try to change.
"Television isn't a major drawback," she said recently. "I think students have a broader base of knowledge because of our use of TV and computers to encourage them to read a little more."
Freed agreed that some shows like "Sesame Street" were helpful. However, she said that for children past the first or second grade, television was detrimental because children used only receptive skills instead of expressive skills.
rallick said that one of the two main criticisms of Feedback was made by students who said there were too many questions. The other criticism, he said, was from faculty members questioning the survey's validity.
Feedback was begun in 1969 by the Student Senate but was taken over by the administration last year. According to Ed Rofls, student body president, the Senate often starts programs, proves them viable and assesses them on to the administration.
"It's also used as a babysitter and has taken over many family activities," she said. "For example, parents don't read to their children as much as they used to."
The main reasons for the administration takeover, Rolfs said, were Feedback's use in deciding faculty promotion and tenure and its cost.
Embry, who was director when the Senate ran Feedback, said the administration takeover was inevitable considering the erratic nature of the Senate.
Rolfs said the Senate had spent about $40,000 on feedback in the four years it ran.
According to McKnight, the Office of Instructional Resources had a budget of $400,000.
"The Senate never has understood the continuity of problems," he said. "Student politicians want results immediately to hullf campaign promises."
Projects like the Commission on Classroom Teaching try to solve very complex problems in a short time, Embry said.
He said that lumping lecture classes, discussion classes and seminars together was one of the main problems with Feedback. He explained these issues and need different questions, he said.
McKnight said it was important to have specific questions for classes and classes with other teachers.
"We need to see a refinement of the Feedback instrument," he said.
McKnight said that Feedback should be used in coordination with other evaluation instruments. He said his office was encouraging departments to develop their own surveys and was also investigating possibilities for peer evaluation of teaching
Peer evaluation probably wouldn't mean teachers going into each other's classrooms and analyzing teaching techniques, McKnight said. Research shows teachers are bad judges of each other's teaching, he said.
Peer evaluation instead would be more concerned with things such as the course's
Haralick had that some means other than Feedback had to be used to analyze content that has been overlooked.
McKnight said he didn't accept the argument that students weren't in a position to judge their teachers. What the students perceive is important, he said.
"As far as judging what actually goes in the classroom you can't beat student feedback."
Harakic said some instructors disliked teaching evaluations. Some feel the teacher was too focused on test scores.
They think evaluation is an infringement on academic freedom, he said.
"But when it comes down to matters of promotion or tenure," he said, "some information needs to be supplied, and the teacher has to realize he isn't king."
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Friday, October 3, 1975
University Daily Kansar
FREE PLAY
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
IWW appearance
Industrial Workers of the World organizer Frank Cedervall waits for his introduction while folk singer-guitarist Mark Ross tuned up in the background in Kansas Union Thursday night. Ross performed folk classics and IWW songs prior to Cedervall's speech.
Cityscape with buildings and skyline.
TONIGHT: THE KU DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in 172 Robinson. CA."*PUS* CRUSADE FOR CHRIST is sponsoring a fellowship at 7:30 in Meadowbrook Apartments, BB-314 Bristol Terr. DR. MAOSU will speak on "Islam, the Way of Life" at 8 in the Southern Baptist Church.
TOMORROW: CENTER FOR ALTERNATIVES is sponsoring a Life-Planning Workshop from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the United Ministries Building.
SUNDAY: The MT. OREAD BICYCLE CLUB will sponsor the "Dam" tour starting at 1 p.m. from the bandstand in South Park. The NROTC CAPTAINS WELCOME ABOARD RECEPTION will be at 2 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Rocky Mountain Auditorium for dancing at 2 p.m. in 173 Robinson. The SU AQUABACKERCLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in the Big 8 Room of the Union. THE COLLEGATE 4-8 CLUB will meet at 8 p.m. in the Governors Room of the Union.
Staff Writer
BY THERESE MENDENHALL
On Campus
Home sought for children
In the meantime, the girls, ages 10 to 14, are traveling from Topeka to Lawrence to school every morning.
The Wobblies were declared illegal by the late Hartley act in 1947, which is no longer valid.
"We thought it (the move to Lawrence) would be just a week or so after we started working."
"The reason we enrolled them in Lawrence was because we didn't want to move them from one school to another." Pat McPhail, the girls' housemother, said yesterday. McPhail and her husband Phil drive the girls from their Topeka Villages home to their schools in Lawrence every morning and nick them in every afternoon.
Burr has been looking for a temporary home for the children and their houseparents since the Villages' request to build on a permanent site near Lawrence was denied by the Douglas County Board of Commissioners August 13.
A temporary home is still being sought for eight teen-age girls and two adults who hoped to be the first residents of a Villages, Inc. home in Lawrence, according to Lance Burrell, local project director for the Villages.
The Wobblies propose a society where the workers have the most power in making the decisions concerning how their place of work is run. Cedervall said.
Cedervall said the Wobblies had little in politicians because the politicians can be elected.
Staff Writer
The specter of an old-time union meeting, complete with a guitarist playing Joe Hill labor tunes, was revived by a soap-box speaker for the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union last night.
Union leader summons workers
Frank Cederval, who for 45 years has been a member of the "Wobbles," as the IWW is also called, said the organization is once again increasing in membership after having fallen from influence in the 1920s. Although they only have 5,000 members, Cederval, said, they are getting 25 to 30 new students a month, many of them college students.
"We're not out to change the government but the economic system so the politician comes to the Unions and asks what they need." Cedervall said.
By JACK FISCHER
He said that the recent strikes by such groups as teachers and policemen were demonstrating that whole new segments of society were beginning to see themselves as laborers and creating a much larger union base in the country. Caterellau said that the attacks on businesses and businesses were the people who the Wobblies were triving to gain as members.
He said the potential power of the workers was demonstrated when the longhoremen refused to load wheat bound for the Soviet Union.
The requests for a conditional-use permit to build on the sites were denied because of protest petitions filed by landowners within 1,000 feet of the sites. The county commission voted 2-1 in favor of the most recent request, but commissioners thought a unanimous vote was required because of the protect petition.
The August request was the second request denied the Villages this year. The sites referred to in both requests are in the Pleasant Valley area southwest of the Villages were donated by Charles Oldfather, former University of Kansas attorney.
Children in the Villages' homes have been referred there by the Kansas Social and Rehabilitation Services or by the courts, Burr said. He said the children being considered for the Douglas County home had no records of delinquency.
"The difference between the Wobblies and the new left is that it's easy for someone to strove stones at a police station but when it comes to changing conditions in the country you have to start organizing unions," be said.
The Wobblies are trying to organize in small businesses and factories to build up a base for a larger following later, Cederval said. He said that there were 63 million
The Wobblies aren't like the Communist party, Cederval said, because the Wobblies want the workers organized in a participatory democracy in an employees place of work rather than a centralized control by an elite.
Cedervall said the Wobbles weren't like the "new left", either.
workers in the country who didn't belong to any union and that many members of the AFL-CIO were dissatisfied with that union's leadership.
"All we're offering is an idea," Cedervall say.
"We have the program. We need all the people.
"I'm not a dogmatic person," Cedervall said, "Ask me if our program is going to work and I say I don't know, but after a few years I will be able to be the most rational approach to me."
Cedervall said that along with himself there were 100 other old-time members of the Wobblies who have come out of the organization, new members to rebuild the organization.
Fifteen people attended the meeting.
Villages representatives, however, think a unanimous vote isn't necessary.
They have filed a suit against the county commission charging that a unanimous vote was unnecessary and that the committee request was "un arbitrary and capricious."
Sherlyn Sampson, clerk of the district court, said she assigned the case to District Court.
Burr said he and the commission were working on a legal agreement on the facts of the case so that the court could rule on the case without a trial. He said the ruling probably wouldn't be made for another month.
Stephen Rhudy, attorney for the Pleasant Valley landowners, has said the landowners feared that the children who would live in the homes would be disruptive.
McPhail said the girls were aware of the protest petition.
"They felt pretty bad at first that people would think they were capable of that kind of behavior," she said. "But the girls have feelings for the people who live there and understand they don't know us. They're pretty open-minded kids.
"They're hoping that by their good behavior in school they can prove to the community of Lawrence that they are good kids," she said.
Burr said he was looking for a home of 2,500 square feet where the 10 could live while the dispute over the site is being settled. He said he was having trouble finding a suitable building, but residents of the neighborhoods he had considered had been receptive to the possibility of the children's living there.
From page one
Equivalency
tities budget for 1975-76 would be $800,000 short.
Dyck said that the fall "head count" for the Lawrence campus was 21,738. The head count was converted to FTE by eliminating religion and ROTC courses. Then an FTE counted for every 18 undergraduate and nine graduate hours of enrollment, he said.
--you're going to have damage. You take a pet and put it in an apartment, and it only takes one day.
The official enrollment figures were collected on the 20th day of classes, he said, to account for late enrollment and dropped classes. The official enrollment classes should be released today, he said.
This fall's smaller ratio of FTE to total students may indicate that more non-traditional students, such as housewives and attending the University for a few hours.
Pet problems
From page one
Linda Turner, manager of Jayhawker pets under any condition for health issues
"It costs $350 to $600 to recapret an apartment," he said. "I don't make it up at
Bernie Kennedy, resident manager of Park 25 Apartments, estimated that 20 per cent of his tenants had cats and dogs. He said he required a half month's rent as a pet deposit. He said he didn't allow dogs that were more than 18 inches to the top of the head.
He said he required pet owners to put their animals on a charge and charged an annual $750 a month for cleaning.
Despite these additional charges, he said he didn't come out ahead financially.
Cory Brinkerhoff, clerk at Petstep, said that fish were the most popular animals kept in Lawrence. He said he didn't know any place, including the residence halls, that had restrictions prohibiting aquariuming.
"We're only concerned with the four
less concerned." "We're not
concerned with fish or bait."
Brinkerhoff said that birds were next in popularity, followed by hamsters and rats.
---
Brinkerhoff said his store carried
"Most of the time it is a mistake for a student to get a dog," he said. "The dogs are poorly trained because the student is never at home. There are students who take good care of their dogs, but they are the exception rather than the rule."
Most students keep mixed breed dogs get from someone who is trying to give them away.
Burbara Retke, owner of Retke Kennels,
said that many students acquired puppies
without sufficient consideration for what
they were supposed to be able to eat
or for the puppies, sizes when full grown.
purered dogs, but most students were unable to afford registered dogs.
"Dogs have to be taught manners," she said. "The period from two to eight months is the most critical. If you start (training) at six weeks, you can be every bit as good as a small dog."
Retke said that much of the destruction blamed on dogs was really the people'们的 fault. She said people wouldn't think of leaving a two-year-old child at home all day, but they expect their dog to stay home alone and not to get into things.
she said it was silly for a student planning to go to Europe after graduation to get a job.
However, Dyck said the number of fresh-
ness expected to have increased by 200 to a total of 100.
Dru Rahman, Shawnee Mission junior,
said a dog wasn't something you could just leave in the closet. He said he had an eight-month-old dog and that he had no problems with it. But he said he tried never to leave it at home for more than five hours at a time.
Cut
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Friday, October 3 at 7:00 and 9:30 Saturday, October 4 at 1:00, 7:00 and 9:30
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Monday, Oct. 6 . . . Voyage to the End of the Universe and Hiroshima-Nagasaki at 7:30. $ 75^{\prime} $
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F i
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol.86 No.30
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
October 6.1975
STILL WARMER
Monday
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
A
Homemade apple butter
Apple butter was served steaming hot from copper kettles at the
fifth annual Cider Sunday celebration, the butter could be purchased by the pint, half pint, or on a slice of bread.
Rolfs fails in fight to kill Senate budget-limiting bill
By JIM BATES
Debate over the Student Senate Flius, and Auditing Committee's fall budget.
Rofs' motion was defeated after several StudEx members said that even though StudEx had the power, they didn't like the Senate floor. But before the bills reached the Senate floor.
Ed Rolfs, student body president, tried unsuccessfully at a StudEx meeting last night to remove one of the committee's three budget bills from the agenda of Wednesday's Senate meeting. The bill would get an $18,000 load on all allocations.
"WITH ALL THE DISCUSSION that's been going on at StudEx power," John House, treasurer, said, "I wonder this is the sort of thing we should be doing."
The Senate Rights and Responsibilities Committee has been attempting to redefine StudEx power on a charge given it in a Senate resolution last month. Yesterday, in its first formal vote in five meetings, the committee decided 8-2 that StudEx did have the权力 to reverse a Senate decision if the Senate was unable to recuse a bill in time.
Steve McMurray, committee co-chairman,
the committee had just about finished
Festival draws crafts and crowds
By BRUCE SPENCE
Apple Valley Farm was once abandoned and decayed. It's now home for a restaurant, a theater, a music and dance store, an oyster shop and 275 peach and apple trees.
It does a pretty good business, too.
Business and excitement peak during an October festival which draws people to enjoy culinary delights and to peruse the wares of exhibitors.
The farm, situated east of Perry Borough near Lakeside Village. It borders the New Jersey Trail and Mays Bay.
WESTERDAY WAS THE FIRST day of the fifth annual arts and crafts festival called Cider Sundays. The festival takes place on the first four Sundays of each year.
is dean of women at the University of Kansas.
MARY MALNOWSKY, who operates an antique store in an 1890 barn on the 63-acre farm, is the founder of the festival. She said she had a small collection with some extra amps and an old, cold press.
She said she asked herself, "Why not come some home." People would like to meet her.
“AND IF WE WERE going to that much trouble, then why not make apple butter?” Malinowny said. “Then I thought, ‘Why not an arts and crafts festival?’ and here we
If the crowds that attend the festival are any indication, Malinowsky's idea is
She estimated that 4,500 people would attend the festival before the day was over.
Returning freshmen factor in low enrollment estimate
Unexpected increases in the number of graduate students and returning freshmen were the main causes of this year's low number of admissions and records, said yesterday.
Official Lawrence campus enrollment figures released last week showed that both the total number of students and full-time equivalent enrollment (FTE) increased by six per cent, more than was estimated in October 1974.
THIS FALL'S FTE enrollment is 20,449,
an increase of 1,172 over last year's.
An increase of 650 was predicted. Total
increase of 21,738, an increase of 1,343
over last year's.
One FTE is counted for every 15 undergraduate or nine graduate hours of enrolment, excluding religion and ROTC hours.
"We had a really high retention rate for last year's freshmen and many more graduate students than we expected," Dyck said. "We just weren't looking for these things last year when we made our enrollment prediction."
He said he wasn't sure why a greater percentage of freshmen returned than usual. But the tighter job market and the efforts of the Outreach program might account for the increase in graduate students, he said.
This fall's sophomore enrollment of 3,910 was an increase of 532 over last year's, and the graduate student enrollment of 4,749 was 516 more than last year's. All other classes showed smaller exceptions except for freshman enrollment, which decreased.
The number of Outreach classes was increased by 25 this year, raising the total to more than 130. Graduate courses in public administration, civil engineering, education, social welfare and other areas are offered in several Kansas communities; including Kansas City, Topeka and Leavenworth.
ENROLMENT FOR OTHER classes was: fresher, 3,892; juniors, 3,259; seniors, 3,793; fifth-year students, 106; adult students, 1,461; and law students, 456.
The process of predicting enrollment is fairly simple and inexpensive, Dyck said. Enrollment figures and trends are derived formula that has been used for the past 20 years.
"We look on how enrollments have been going in different categories," he said. "We talk to people in various departments and ask how developments in the economy and in education might affect enrollment next year."
MALNOWSKY a craftsmen came from all over the Midwest to exhibit, demonstrate and show their wares. Fifty-four exhibitors set up yesterday, she said, and each succeeding Sunday of the festival usually brings more exhibitors.
"It gets better every year," she said.
"More people get to know about it."
"Some of the people who came here to look around today will decide to bring something to sell next Sunday, just as some of the people who are exhibiting this year just looked around last year," Malnowsky said.
He said the prediction of next year's enrollment was being formulated and would be sent to the Kansas Board of Regents this month.
An exhibitor is charged a five-dollar fee to set up his display and all monet he takes in.
Paul F. Fleeay, of Bonner Springs, a retired carpenter who worked in the trade 40 years, became a wood carver eight years ago. This year is the first time he paraded his car. He seemed to enjoy the festival, and frequently stopped his work to talk to passers-by.
EXHIBITS RAN THE GAMUT from wood
toved glass to wine, from cotton candy to
pumpkin pie.
"Well, I'll tell you, you're not in the wood business until you've got one of these," he said, demonstrating a whirring wood polisher.
Felkey makes carvings that range from 50 pounds indians to miniscule wooden shoes.
pictures of the works too large to exhibit and smiled like a grandfather flashing pictures of his grandchildren.
"EACH FEATHER is carved separately," he said, in reference to the Image.
"Are you in the wood carving business?"
Feleev asked an onlooker.
He showed a portfolio that contained
Most of the exhibitors there were eager to talk and ready to help. Some seemed to spend as much time looking at the displays as they did behind their own tables.
A BIG ATTRACTION was a sputtering,
cast wheel, made of wheels
and long winding bells.
Bary Bowen, of Meriden, built the contraption from a 1925 three-horsepower, single-piston engine and a 1932 Sears Robuck & Co. mill.
Bowen, who works for Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. in Topeka, collects old gas engines and tractors and restores them for a hobby. He has 35 engines and three tractors, he said, and eventually hopes to start collecting old cars.
Bowen said he traveled to different places in Kansas and Missouri on weekends to display his mill and the endless sacks of whole wheat flour.
THE 1876 CIDER PRESS is as popular as the mechanized flour mill. A steady stream of onlookers pressed in to watch the "latest improved" Buckeye cider press crush apples. Many left carrying a cup or jug of the product.
Malinowsky and her husband Bob, who is the assistant director of the KU library, oversee the apple butter operation. The kitchen contains kettles indicated business was booming.
discussing StudEx and would all its conclusions into a bill at its next meeting.
This year, the Malinowsky had to add a copper kettle to the two they already had so they could increase output to about 450 watts. The butter was sold over by midafternoon.
Except for calling for increased communication between Studfex and the Senate, the committee will recommend no real effort to Kruenegel, committee cochairman, said.
"NOTHING WILL BE CHANGED," she said, "we're just going to write everything
Rolfs said the $18,000 limit shouldn't be placed on the agenda because it would be too confusing. He said that later in the meeting the Senate might decide it wanted to allocate more money and then have to go back to reconsider the bill.
In particular, he said, money would be requested from the Senate by the Karsan and Manouchehri families.
The Kansan, which requested $15,608, was allocated nothing by the committee despite the urging of Rolfs and Kevin Flynn, chairman of the Senate Communications Committee. The committee allocated only $14,105 of a possible £27,000.
Juli Anderson, Finance and Auditing chairman, said her committee thought money should be kept back in case worthy programs came up later in the year. Rolfs himself, she said, had recommended that $6,000 of the $27,000 be held in reserve.
ANDERSON DENIED that the committee had picked the $18,000 figure because it was slightly more than the amount it had allocated.
Mary Lou Reece, student body vice-president, said she didn't understand why the committee put the ceiling into a bill that requires a recommendation in its committee report.
However, she said that the committee had made its allocations before it set the ceiling. This was because the members wanted to ensure that servers without any extra pressure, she said.
Anderson said the committee thought a bill was the best way to make the Senate appreciate the importance of keeping money in reserve.
StudEx voted to keep the ceiling bill on
the agenda by a voice vote. It will be considered before all calls for tailoring for new markets is approved.
The Senate also will vote on a resolution questioning the athletic department's paving of the parking lot north of Potter Lake.
THE RIGHTS COMMITTEE abandoned a move to take away the votes of the three candidates.
"The people who raised the issue last even here tonight and that solves a problem," she said.
Although the committee has just about made up its mind about StudEx, it still must consider a proposal by Rolfs to cut the Senate's size from 110 to 50. Such a cut, Rolfs said, would make the Senate more informed and responsive.
None of the committee members at last night's meeting expressed any interest in joining.
Members of the council are KU-Y, Campus Veterans, KU Commission on the Status of Women, Douglas County Legal Aid, Friends of Headquarters, MECHA, Native American Alliance, Volunteer Clearinghouse, and Women's Coalition.
Some committee members said they didn't see how cutting down the Senate would do this. However, the committee postponed any decision on the proposal.
A petition supporting Rolfs' proposal from the Student Services Council, a group of nine campus organizations, was distributed to the committee.
THE PETITION SAID that cutting Senate size would make individual senators more responsible and easier to contact. Senators now can be elected once a year and then forget the students afterwards, the petition said.
If the Senate was smaller, the petition said, more people would know their members.
A good analogy to this, the petition said, would be the fact that more people know who their U.S. senators are than know who their U.S. representative is. Roffs' proposal would make the individual senators more visible, he said.
By BRENT ANDERSON
Resolution criticizes S-zone construction
A resolution accusing the Athletic Department of building the S-zone parking lot, southwest of Memorial Stadium, without proper authorization has been submitted by Steve Chucovich, student senator and member of the Parking and Traffic Board.
"The Athletic Department, with only the support of the higher administration, built the parking lot north of Potter Lake for its football season," the resolution stated.
Clyde Walker, athletic director, said yesterday that the parking lot was constructed only after approval by the Athletic board of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation and the University Administration.
In fact, Walker said, the parking lot was designed by University architects and constructed under the same contract as a sewer project sponsored by the administration, which resulted in a savings to the University.
"All proper University procedures were followed," Walker said. "This (the construction of the lot) was done just like anything else, through normal channels."
Construction of the lot began in July, whether said, and was completed near the water.
Ed Rolfs, student body president, said he thought the Parking and Traffic Board should have been consulted before the S-zone lot was constructed. The Planning and Resources Board also should have been consulted, he said.
"I think these groups should at least have been informed about the project," Rolfs said. "Anytime someone starts tearing down a building, they had better have a good reason."
The resolution also said that when it was possible for one group on campus to do almost anything it wanted without going further, the decision would be dangerous precedent would be set for other
See RESOLUTION page five
Prof masters computers, music and athletics
By RODNEY HOFFMAN
Staff Writer
Zamir Bavel has an answer to the question of what is involved in so many diverse activities.
BAVEL PROFESSOR OF COMPUTER SCIENCE at KU, qualified for the 1952 Olympic team in his native Israel. He composed a symphonic work once described by Leonard Bernstein as "delightful and effective. And he has been a great teacher and an innovator, automata theory, an example of abstract mathematical structure.
"You have to have a measure of fool in you to take the beating," he said Friday, according to a person with no name.
Before coming to the United States in 1952 at the age of 23, Bavel was an assistant principal at an elementary school in Israel. He performed as first violinist with the Israeli Symphony Orchestra and qualified for the Olympic games in the long turn.
BAVEL SUFFERED a torn muscle before the Olympics and was unable to compete. But he was quick to point out how much effort it took it to make the Olympic team then.
Bravel came to this country after he had won an education scholarship to Southern Illinois University. He graduated with bachelor's degrees in music, education and mathematics. When he was going to school he played for the Kodak Philharmonic and he competed in track
"I thought I was being more diligent than
most by practicing the long jump once a week," he said. "It wasn't until I came to the states that I realized people trained everyday.
"But now I'm in the position to say I could have won the gold medal, but there are very few who don't need that excuse. They are the ones who win."
**WITH A BACKGROUND like that it's not very clear how Havel began working in France.**
Wait, let me re-read the first line.
"WITH A BACKGROUND like that it's not very clear how Havel began working in France."
"Curiosity," he said, "compaters looked like the up-and-coming thing."
Bavel joined the KU faculty in 1688 even though his wife had said, "If you ever sign a contract to go to Kansas, you're going alone."
So Bavel carried home an armload of
university pamphlets to present his case.
"What truly clinched it for us here was the people," he said, "they are a special
brand. Not only are they cultured and
and especially intertwined."
IN LAWRENCE, Bavel has continued his interests in music and athletics. He is concert master for the Lawrence Symphony orchestra, and he organized the Lawrence Track Club.
Bavel said that he considered the United States to be a cultured country but that the people in Israel were much more interested in music and art.
"ONCE A YEAR season tickets would go on sale for the Israeli Philharmonic," he said. "Thousands of people would line up outside the windows waiting to buy tickets but there might be only 10 available. These 10 were the ones that hadn't been inherited."
"The United States is a cultured country compared to other places but it's not."
No matter how many lives Bavel leads,
above all he thinks of himself as a teacher.
TO HIM, BEING A TEACHER is very similar to being an actor on the stage.
"I believe that whatever your inhibitions
*I" was born into a family of teachers, in
many villages where educating was the
most noble thing that I could do.
are as a private person, you've got to shed them and force your audiences to share your ideas.
1967
Bavel
"I consider myself as a means for the student to learn. I hope that I'm able to facilitate learning by providing the sources of information and transmitting knowledge from a textbook."
Bavel said some of his teaching philosophy came from his experiences as a
"I remember taking courses where I begrudged sitting in the classroom when any teacher could have done the same thing with the text." he said.
But Bavel said he was reaching a point in his career where he was ready to examine new interests rather than spend time researching in automata theory.
NOW HE IS LEARNING to throw the hammer at Master track meets (for people over 40). He is going to learn to play the French Horn and he said he had several "ideas in the oven" for writing music, poetry and science fiction.
How does one man find time for sports, writing, music and teaching?
"The amount of energy you put into something is related to the amount you get done," he said. "There is time, if you don't waste it."
University Dally Kansan
Friday, October 24, 1975
3
THE KANSAS UNION
WELCOMES YOU
TO HOMECOMING
KANSAS UNION
University of Kansas
Student Union Fall 15
KANSAS UNION (kan'zas un'yun) n.1. A people place (i.e. students and alumni, university faculty and staff, parents and visitors). 2. Where activity is the order of the day: meeting, eating, relaxing, studying, etc.3. Where old acquaintances are renewed and precious memories recalled.
adj. 1. busy.2. spacious.3. convenient and comfortable.4. friendly and inviting.SYN.: See also Union services and programming; food services, bookstores, $ \star $ recreation, entertainment, social and cultural events.
★K.U. Bookstore-Oread Shop Homecoming Hours 10 a.m.-1 p.m. 4 p.m.-5 p.m.
KU
The Kansas Union
4
Friday, October 24, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Jayhawk lives in reality and myth
Scanning the newspaper on a Sunday morning, sports fans can find numerous clubs and teams, and Trojans. And Noah would have needed a fleet of arks to save all of the Tigers, Wildcats, Lions and Bears. But the only thing he could do one dealing with the University of Kansas.
The Jayhawk is a mythical bird. With a hazy post. One legend says the Jayhawk was once a fox that roamed through the woods.
other birds. But whatever its origin, the now-famous mascot of the University had a long history before anyone even knew what it looked like.
A wagon rain formed in Galesburg, Ill., in 1848 was beading for the gold fields of California with very few supplies. When asked how they expected to make the long journey, a man said, "We are going to Jayhawk our way." The members of the wagon train became
known as the Jayhawkers. This is the first use of the word that has been definitely
KU traditions
KU Alma Mater started as glee and mandolin song
Professor George Barlow Penny's Glee and Mandolin Club planned to make a tour through Kansas to Denver and back in 1891. Barlow asked for someone to compose a school song that the club could sing on the tour. No one responded.
Just before he left for the tour, Barlow thought of the Cornell song "Far Above Cayuga's Waters," which had come from an American band called The Sings. The song was meant to serve only for the purposes of the trip, asBarlow hastily changed the words to fit KU. But the song survived and continues to survive, as the University Kansas alma matter, "Crimson and Blue."
Far above the golden valley Glorious to view, Stands our noble Alma Mater toward the blue. Chorus:
Lift the chorus ever onwar Crimson and the blue, Hail to thee, our Alma Mater, Hail to old KU.
Far above the distant humming of
Of the busy town,
Reared at the dome of heaven,
Looks she proudly down. (Repent Chor
Greet we then our foster mot Noble friend so true. We will ever sing her praises, Hall to old KU.
KU jilted Michigan colors in favor of Harvard, Yale
If the University of Kanaa's founders had been their high school Jawahawk would have been a stellar player.
The regents who helped establish the University in the 1860s had used the University of Michigan charter as a model. They thought it only fitting that they also adopt the Michigan colors of maize and sky blue.
These colors were used by the debate team and may have been used by the Kansas roaring teams in the 1880s. But when KU fielded a football team in 1890, the
student body called for a change. They wanted to use Harvard crimson in honor of Col. John J. McCook, a Harvard alumni who had given money for an athletic field at KU.
As pre-Civil War clashes increased, with Lawrence the target of many raids, the term Jayhawkers was applied more and more often to Kansers. The term Jayhawker was well known by those associated with the University in its early years. When the new famous "Rock Chalk" chant was introduced in 1886 the Jayhawker "rock chalk" was used before the words "rock chalk" replaced "rail ral" in the chant. When the University's first football team took the field in 1890, they were called the Jayhawks.
There were some Yale men on the KU faculty at the time and they naturally demanded that Yale blue be included. There was very little opposition to the change, and when the Jayhawks took the field in 1800 they wore crimson and blue.
In May of 1963 the athletic board solidified the change by making crimson and blue the colors of the team.
For some reason, no one tried to draw the KU mascot until 1921. Henry Maloy, of the class of 1914, was an aspiring young cartoonist who was trying to get his work published in the Kansan. Maloy said that when he came to KU a bulldog was being used as an emblem. A popular song among Missouri hound dogs out of town. So Maloy designed the Jayhawk to boot the dog out of Lawrence.
His Jayhawk, which appeared in the Oct. 28, 1912 edition of the Kansan, was a skimmy, big beaked creature with his legs crossed. He could climb up walls because that was the way the cartoon characters Mutt and Jeff always stood. The most significant characteristic of the original Jayhawk was that he wore shoes needed to kick that hurd dog out of town.
Through the years, the shoes have remained, but the Jayhawk's physical features and temperament have changed considerably. In 1920 a somber-raven-like Jayhawk, perched on a KU monogram, came into use.
That was replaced in 1923 when Jimmy O'Bryon and George Hollingsby designed a Jawhawk that resembled a duck. This popular version of the KU mascot was the first to show the basic traits that now characterize the Jawhawk.
The Alumun Club of Kansas City changed its name to the Jayhawk Club in 1929. The club hired an artist to produce a Jayhawk that displayed the fighting spirit which the group thought characterized Jayhawks. This caricature was followed by a more accurate painting, which he completed in 1941. Dr. Gene "Yog" Williams created this proud, scowling bird.
The most recent change in KU's mascot was made by KU student Harold Sandy in 1946. Sandy kept the basic form that Williams had created but he made the Jayhawk a friendly, smiling creature that has become most popular among KU students. He also helped the Kansas Bookstore copyrighted Sandy's Jayhawk, and this is the version that has been reprinted on KU paraphernula since that time.
1912 1920 1923
1912
KU
Ku
1923
KW's instability replaced
It's difficult to notice change unless one steps back or out of life for a time.
So it is with life at the University of Kansas. College life, for students at least, is a time of isolation and shelter from the outside world. It's a time of reflection and learning, in and out of the classroom.
That's the ideal. Of course, the life of college students is rarely that simple. Many students have other responsibilities. Some
Ward Harkavy Contributing Writer
Still, for many students, college life is a melange of places, people and events. There is much to react to in a university community, especially if that community is as big and diverse as KU.
work; some have families; some have both. Other students are
thanks to easy access courses and other Outreach
courses.
Once, back then, students tried to take over an anthropology class. Many professors were caught up in a "re-examination" of their values; these professors catered to the mostly childish and hands of their students. Some professors, however, stood firm.
It seems incredible now that once there were thousands of students participating in marches and protests. And it's even more staggering to think there was once a curfew in Lawrence, where Guardsmen patrolling the streets. And that people were killed.
What were some of the places, people and events that KU were involved in the late 1960's? Some are unfamiliar to much of today's students.
*saml Salisch, Earl's Pizzierer, Presidio 27. Carol's Patio. The Union fire, Nick Rice. These are some of the words that elicited a response from us.*
The spring of 1970 culminated in the suspension of classes and, more importantly for the students, grades. Most people were interested in their own welfare, whether they were radical mobilizers or grade-conscious students.
The war was responsible for much of that period's instability. Draft dodging was practically an art form, especially for attentive college students. The evil of an idiotic war certainly affected many students, and it caused the loss of the war removed from many students their raison d'etre.
The physical appearance of the campus and surrounding area has changed drastically since the 1604. Gone are the Gaillight and the Rock Chalk. Gone are the Abington and Tansy bookshops. Gone is the Call Cafe. Gone is the old Alphia Chi School. Gone is the Old City Museum. Gone are the rickety houses on that block, especially the infamous "White House," which was set ablaze numerous times.
SDS and SPU are gone. Perhaps replacing them are TM, JEms, the Unification Church and other activities. Politics for politics.
Many former radical leaders at KU are now working in Kansas City, teaching and studying. Some have remained in Lawrence, doing things unrelated to the playing of political games. The games became deadly.
Spiritually, the KU student of 1978 is not grasping at manic political ideas and programs; it is not pursuing on pursuing his own ambitions.
The Union fire mystery still is not solved. But the scars of that fire have faded; most of today's students don't even know what they are.
Academic freedom is no longer threatened by radical students; it's threatened by bureaucracies running amuck. The Buckley Amendment and Affirmative Action excesses may be more harmful in the long run than were angry students.
nor substantive change . . . there hasn't been much. The campus is more crowded; the students seem more passive; good teachers are still good; poor teachers are still bad. KU is still an oasis of culture in otherwise arid Kansas.
The official seal of the University of Kansas features a picture of Moses kneeling before a burning bush. The story is taken from the biblical account in the third book, *Exodus*, when tending his sheep, Moses saw a bush that was burning, but not being consumed.
Ride On ...
General Jeans
1000 Mass. The Malls
SCIILUM UNIVERSITATIS KANSENIS
HONORARY MEMBERSHIP QUARTER SUNDAY GROUP
VIGENT DIVISION
ESTABLISHED 1869
He said, "I shall turn aside and see this great sight why the bush is not burned."
Story of burning bush on seal
God then told him to go to Egypt and deliver his people from bondage.
The University Seal includes the Latin inscription of Moses' words "Videobion visemon hagm magam quare non combatur rubus." The symbolism reflected in them that students come to the University of Kansas and "receive great messages."
2
Monday, October 6, 1975
University Daily Kansan
DIGEST From the Associated Press
DIGEST From the Associated Press
1234567890
Ford's son smoked pot
PORTLAND, Ore. --- Jack Ford, 23-year-old son of President Gerald R. Ford,
says he has smoked marijuana and considers it to be drinking beer or
sugar.
"I smoked martijuan before and I don't think that is so exceptional for people growing up in the 1960s." Ford said an interview in yesterday's edition of The Times.
"The fact that there's so much moral indignation over it (marjuna) is one of the reasons there's so many problems with the disillusionment and alienation of men."
Ford said he has never used hard drugs but has friends who do.
"If used in a non-destructive way and not abused, pot-smoking might be compared to the use of beer or wine in moderation." Ford said, adding he thought "martjuana has the same relationship to hard drugs as beer and wine have to hard alcohol."
Raid, hijack in Argentina
BUENOS AIRES - Gunmen hijacked an Aerolínea Argentina jetliner in northern Argentina
an abortive guerrilla bombing, and police posts, news agency Telemundo said.
both incidents took place in Formosa, a small provincial capital 575 miles north of Buenos Aires.
A group of gunmen attacked the military post and were repelled in a gun battle with police, Telaam said. It said armed men also surrounded the Formosa airport and detained two officers.
Tetam later reported that an undisclosed number of gumnen took over a Boeing 127 let during a local flight from Formosa and the crew to return and let the aircraft land.
passengers unclutter it
Then the man instructed the crew to fly north to an undisclosed destination.
SAN FRANCISCO—A new communique says, "The SLA lives on!" and promises to show its existence.
The communique, signed "Symbionite Liberation Army" and dropped during a weekend in three California cities, denied the FBIs statement that the arrests were of innocent people.
The first trial ended Sept. 25 because a jury in District Court Division II was unable to reach a verdict. James W. Paddock, District Court Division II judge, declared a jury for man told him one jury member disagreed with the 11 others on the verdict.
Holmes pressed battery charges against Dillard after Dillard hit him on the leg with a chocolate cake cream in a classroom in Holmes apprehended Dillard outside Fraser.
James Dillard, Springfield, Mo., senior,
who is accused of battery because he hit
David Holmes, professor of psychology, in
a fall from a high building, will stand trial
for a second time Dec. 17.
New trial set for pie tosser
MADRID - A remote-controlled bomb blew up a Civil Guard jeep yesterday in the Basque country of northern Spain, killing three guardians and two wounded, two
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
Fire Chief John Wass said telegrams were to the 50 men ordering them to report to dut. at 7. o'clock.m. Sunday at four stations. He told none of the men reported.
Granada
102748 - San Francisco 312-556
X Was Never Like This
was a Blackfoot legend
Eve. 7:30, 9:30
Sat.Sun, Mat. 2:30
"Winterhawk"
Meanwhile, Hearst's attorney's said yesterday that a hearing on her ability to withstand questioning has been put off one day, until Wednesday, at the request of her lawyer.
KANSAS CITY — City officials have lived up to their promise to begin firing 99 of the 858 member force are being dismissed for failing to report for duty.
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The blast twisted the jeep through the air and hurled 128 yards. Policemen aged 20, 30 and 27 instantly, and two others, aged 27 and 29, were gravely injured, the
"EMMANUELLE"
The FBI said there was no way to determine immediately if the document was authentic.
Place an ad Call 864-4358
Before the American West saw its
The ambush was believed to have been the work of Bosse separator guerrillas taking revenge for the execution of two comrades executed eight days ago.
Spanish bomb takes 3
Meanwhile, the firemen met Sunday evening and voted "100 per cent" to continue the strike, according to union spokesman Capt. Robert Black.
Six members of the paramilitary Civil Guard have been killed in the last five days.
The deaths raised to 38 the death toll in political violence in Spain since January 1974-24 of the victims were policemen, 14 civilians.
Fire Chief John Wass said telegrams were sent to the 59 men ordering them to report to duty at 7 p.m. Sunday at four stations. He said none of the men reported. The report came as National Guardsmen, police and a volunteer force pressed inside the bunker tried to keep up with a growing number of blazes across this city of 510,000.
had been pried open, probably with a screwdriver. The burglar apparently left the apartment through a bedroom window as Ryan entered, the spokesman said.
HELD OVER
Eve, at 7:40 & 8:40
Sat.-Sun, Mat. 2:05
9 burglaries mar weekend
JAMES WHITMORE as Harry S. Truman in
Striking firemen fired
Eve. at 7:20 & 9:20
Sat Sun. at 7:20 & 1:05
Hillcrest
"Love
and Death"
Eat. Sat. 17:20 & 6:30
Sat. Sun. Mar. 4:50
Tom Laughlin as the "MASTER GUNFIGHTER"
Woody Allen in
"Give 'em Hell,
Harry"
Eve. 4:00, 8:00, 14:00, Sun.Mar, 2:00
Starts Wed.—Hilicrest
Tom Laughlin as the
Hillcrest
Eve: 6:00, 8:00 Sat-Sun, Mat: 2:00
Hillcrest
Eve, 7:30 & 9:40
Sat.-Sun. Mat, 2:30 PG
1) The Wilby Conspiracy
2) The Wild Party
3) Phantom of Liberty
(subject to change)
Varsity
10011 ... Cumberland 217-365
SENIORS
Voting for the HOPE Award Finalists will take place
Wednesday, October 8
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
In the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd.
All students classified 4 or 5.
Class of 76 Students eligible to vote.
WATCH THE
BASEBALL PLAYOFFS
IN LIVING COLOR WITH
25c DRAUGHTS
$1.25 PITCHERS
8 TO MIDNIGHT TONIGHT-WED.
A rash of burglaries over the weekend resulted in the loss of more than 2,500 in money and property. Nine burglaries were recorded between noon Friday and noon Sunday.
$1.10 PITCHERS
2-6 P.M. DAILY
RIP STANLEY
The Ball Park Hillcrest Shopping Center
The biggest loss occurred Friday at the Bert Nash Mental Health Center, 342 Missouri St. Almost $1,000 worth of office equipment was lost in a police, as well as some cash and checks.
Final Week!
TELEMACHUS CLAY
Now through Saturday 8:00 p.m.
Inge Theatre For further information call 864-3982
A check made out for $195,38 was reported stolen from a first floor room at the Alpha Phi sorority. 1602 High Drive. The theft occurred between Friday afternoon and Sunday.
a mechanical at Gregg Tire Company, 814 W. 32rd St., reported the loss of a jack, valued at $200, from underneath a car he worked on in the 800 block of Locust Drive.
--with
'WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE'
VIRTUE ALONE COULD PROCURE TRUE HAPPINESS
2nd Psalm and Acts 4:25
Two albums, a hair dryer, a bracelet and a ring, worth a total of $100 were reported stolen late Saturday from the apartment of Jeanne Ryan, Shawnee Mission junior, and Jude Cachard, Wichita junior, at 1845 Kentucky St., a police spokesman said.
The following in the entire article as it appeared about 6 years ago:
This column has appeared over 200 times in the past 13 1/2 years. In about the 40th column, the above quotation appeared - "VIRTUE ALONE COULD PROTECT TRUE HAPPINESS."
The past few articles in this column have dealt with how Abraham, Friend of God, was the means of delivering some of his knifole into Sodom just before the judgement of Moses, who would have heaven cone suming the city and the inhabitants! Sin was one of the causes of the terrible judgment. The account of these things are written for our admonition and to remind us that we need to heed to this warning! Being plunged with sex obsession and in danger of the curse of God falling upon our nation.
"CHASTITY IS DRIVEN AWAY BY ALL MEN, LIKE A SNake!" Think this quote was spoken or the generation of Dane's times. There is cause to fear that it is tearfully true and applicable to our day and generation. Sitting on its back, I have seen in this "driver it appears there are some highly esteemed educators! According to the statement of The Lord Jesus Christ, such should have "a millstone tied about their neck and drowned in the depth of the seat." — And I would comment there ought to be apotheosis made to all maritime men, and so forth after! The following appeared in this column Feb. 19, 1968.
"Chastity is driven away by all men, like a snake!" The following is the historical testimony of a beautiful Christian young woman whose "chastity" all men failed to drive away: "HER CHASTITY WAS IMPREGNABLE" and she testified by life, suffering, and death "VIRTUE ALONE COULD PROCURE TRUE HAPPINESS!"
In the year 249 A.D. Decius was the Roman Emperor. He became angered and enraged because of the amazing increase of Christianity which caused the heathen temples in the city to be overrun by Christian Churches (thrombed). For these reasons he attempted to make his name Christian. In general his subjects, raging heathen, were ambitious to enforce the imperial decrees, and looked upon the murder of Christians as a merit to them. He also was interested in Quintan, fell in love with Sibylla a lady by the name of Agahea. She was remarkable for personal and acquired endowments, but most of all for Christian consecration and piety. On account of her great heredity, Quintan, fell in love with her, and made many attempts to succeed. In order to gratify his passion with greater convenience he put the virtuous lady in the hands of Aphrodite, a very intractable and incesticous woman. This wretch was not tolerant of other prostitution; but found there was "nothing done" for her chastity was impregnable, and she well knew that virtue alone could prove true happiness. Aphrodite reported being in the ruins of all her christs, who engaged at being killed in his own moment. When Agathea confessed she was a Christian, the governor, be encouraged and supported by the emperor's effort to witch Christianity, determined to graffitify her. He escaped, hurled with red hot irons, and laid him with shards. She here these formulas with admirable fortitude. Next she was laid nailed into live coats, intermingled with pless, and then been carried back to her prison, she there surrounded by his loyal friends and heir virgin: "HER CHASTITY WAS IMPREGIBLE."
P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
The police said the door of the apartment
The Commission on the Status of Women Presents "Women in Law"A Group Presentation and Discussion
Deborah Smith, third year law student
Deanell Tacha, associate professor of law
Roberta Gilchrist, attorney at law
paid for by student activity fees
Tuesday, October 7, 1975 7:00 p.m.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
free state club
K.
&
This week:
free state opera house
6th mass lewrence
Wed. Oct.8
CROSWIND
POWER HORN FUNK
Free Adm. to all
Frat. & Sorority
members with
GREEK Identification
Wed. Oct. 8
CRESWIND
POWER HORN FUNK
Free Adm. to all
Frat. & Sorority
members with
GREEK Identification
Fri. Oct. 10
HIGH ENERGY
SHOW BAND
FESTIVAL
15 Pieces of DYNO-O-MITE
KU FRESHMEN Free with
KU Registration Card.
Sat. Oct. 11
COUNTRY HEIR
KC's Best
in country rock
H
HIGH ENERGY
SHOW BAND
FESTIVAL
15 Pieces of DYNQ CAFE
Sat. Oct.11
COUNTRY
HEIR
KC's Best
in country rock
K-State Presents
Jethro Tull Saturday, October 18 8 p.m. Ahearn Fieldhouse
HOMECOMING
Tickets on Sale Today at
Team in Manhattan, Lawrence, Topeka and
the Record Store in Manhattan.
flute
All Seats Reserved
$5.50 and $5.00
Monday, October 6, 1975
Housing board OK's price hike proposals
Recommendations to increase single and double room contract prices for University residence halls were approved by the Administrative Housing Board Friday.
The new contracts' cost will be $1,225 for a double room, $95 more than the current cost, and $1,550 for a single room, $120 more than the current cost.
William Bailfort, vice-chancellor for student affairs, said Saturday that the Board of Regents must approve the increases before the rates would be final.
The increases are more than what the general assembly of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) recommended but are the same increases AURH contracts committee recommended, Harry Wagner, AURH president, said.
AURH had earlier approved a $65 increase for double-room contracts and a $25 increase above the base rate for single-room contracts.
"The increases weren't surprising," Wigner said. "Rising utility and maintenance costs were factors that caused the increase."
KJHK broadcasting to begin this week
Although JKH, 90.7 on the FM diag,
hasn't received authorization to
broadcasting from the Federal Comm-
unications Commission (FCC), KJHK
staff members will begin producing their
shows today.
As soon as the FCC sends it approval the station will begin broadcasting.
The KJKH staff hopes the approval will come today, although it could come as late as Wednesday, Connie Nusser, program director, said.
"In the meantime it will just be practice," she said.
The Administrative Housing Board also approved continuation of special programming and facilities fees for Hashinger and McColum halls. Hashinger has an extra $2 fee for special programming for fine arts students and McColum has a $10 fee for special communications facilities.
A $50 contract refund for returning residents also was continued.
Wigner said two recommended contract changes approved by AURH hadn't been considered by the Administrative Housing Board.
Student stabbed condition good
A University of Kansas student was in good condition last night at Lawrence Memorial Hospital after he was stabbed in the wrist and left Sigma Chi Fraternity, 1459 Tennessee St.
The victim, Michael Harmon, 22, Hutchinson senior, told the police he and Michael Ball, 21, Wichita junior, were cleaning the dining room with a few other Sigma Chi members at about 2:45 am.
Ball said Harmon was pushing chairs to him, then started throwing cans and cartons at him. Ball said he picked up a cake knife and began swinging the knife like a baseball bat at the objects that were being thrown at him.
The knife slipped out of his hands, Ball said, struck a wall then harmed in the hall.
The police said Harmon had a one-inch in-condition wound to his right kidney and palate, his broken right arm.
No charges were expected to be filed in the case. police said.
Housing code reviewed
The Minimum Housing Code Board of Appeals reviewed a new minimum housing proposal by Commissioner Carl Mills and agreed to regular monthly meeting Friday night.
The board recommended the inclusion of a definition of a sleeping room. It decided that the definition in Mibuck's code was unclear.
Ceiling height limits also were discussed, but the board made no decisions.
Sharon Watson, inspector, said the code lacked a clear definition of "minimum standards." She recommended that the board agree to some standards before Mibeek's code was adopted by the city.
The present code places the ceiling limit at not less than seven feet. The proposed code places the limit at six feet. The board considered using six feet, eight inches, or a standard door, for the limit, on the assumption the board can grant variances.
Sectors of the proposed code that deal with heating requirements and basement drainage.
Watson said the code also lacked a clear definition for "acceptable plumbing."
She asked board members to decide whether to support the proposed code before it went to the Lawrence City Commission for final approval in two weeks.
On Campus
---
Events...
TONIGHT: A TELEVISION NEWS WORKSHOP will be at 5:30 in the television studio in Flint HOL. OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at a7 at 1629 W. 19th St. ORGANIZATION DISCUSSION GROUP will meet at 7 in the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread ST. ORGAN PLAYING CLINIC by Wilma Jensen, sponsored by the American Guild of Organists and the University of Kansas, will meet at 8:30 in the Chicago Club A GROUP DISCUSSION ON NON-TRADITIONAL MARRIAGE will be at 8 at the United Ministries Center.
THE HUMAN BODY by Frederick Toubes.
of more than thirty books on art tech.
is a book that is both
creation and execution
and of great technical value to the art stu-
dium. It includes 60 illustrations with descriptive captions and
marginalia on "marginalia" in each book.
Size 9" x 12". $8.95
An art instruction book that is itself a work of art
The Human Body
Aspects of Pictorial Anatomy
by Frederic Taubes
Published by
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419 Park Ave. South
Washington, DC 20036
Watkins director says flu shot good precaution
Although no flu epidemic has been predicted, flu vaccination season is here, Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital, said Saturday.
He said the vaccination wouldn't guarantee immunity to influenza but it would make the illness easier. It also makes vaccines more serious complications from influenza.
"All students and faculty members are encouraged to have a fai vaccination shot"
"The main target group for the vaccination is persons 65 or older." Wolffmann
"The reason is that persons 65 years or older are in a high risk group," Wolkmann said. "If you are at-risk, get tested."
illnesses such as heart disease, asthma, bronchitis, emphysema, diabetes and kidney disease. The flu often aggravates those chronic diseases."
"Persons who are allergic to eggs shouldn't take the vaccination because the vaccine is prepared from an egg base." In other words, persons who have an acute respiratory problem shouldn't take the vaccination because it may cause some interference."
University Daily Kansan
The vaccinations are free to students and everyone else is charged $2.
Wollmann said the vaccination would be given from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m., Monday through Friday. He said the vaccination procedure was brief.
International Club presents Ann Tompkins & Yo-Hwa Wang to speak on Various topics about today's China (with slides)
*Ann Tompkins—Educated in Calif., Taught English in Peking from 1965-70 during the Cultural Revolution. Revisited China in 1973 and 1975.
Place: Forum Room, Union Date: Oct. 6, 1975 (Mon.) Time: 7:30 p.m.
*Yo-Hwa Wang-Born in Honan, studied in Taiwan, witnessed the Feb. 28, 1947 by Taiwan people. Visited China in 1973.
Paid by Student Activities Fees
If You've Got the Time—
the
at
We've Got the Beer—
HAWK
MILLER-LITE Special
Tuesday, October 7, 1975
6-12 p.m.
12 oz. Cans
25c
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Get Bombed Without Getting Bloated for only Two Bits!
BIRD
THE JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 Ohio "A Campus Tradition For Over 55 Years"
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TOP HAT
Wed., Oct. 8
Fred Astaire Ginger Rogers
7:30 p.m.
75c
FILMS
Voyage to the End of the Universe
SUA
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Woodruff Aud.
Asphalt Jungle
Marilyn Monroe
Thurs., Oct. 9
7:30 p.m.-7:50
Union Ballroom
come along with us,
if you think you have the ability and desire to be a navy officer, you are the one we want. our future is bright and you could be a part of it. for details see jim gromelski on campus in the union 6 to 8 October or call (816) 374-3433 collect in kansas city
+
we're going places
NAVY
A FREE FRISBEE will be given to the first 50 people who bring a copy of this ad to the NAVY booth in the Kansas Union.
Friday, October 24, 1978
University Daily Kansan
5
KU
1929
KU
1941
KU
George "Dumpy" Bowles was a member of the Class of 1912. He wanted to make a contribution to KU. As a musician he produced several student musical shows. A song in one of these shows was, "Tm a Javhawk."
'Jay, Jay, Jay, Jay, Jayhawk' started in 1912
1946
The song was not used after the show until 1920 when there was a big push to school spirit. The song was reborn and it still lives on today as the KU fight song.
Talk about the Sooners
The Cowbys and the Buffs,
Talk about the Tiger and his tall—
Talk about the Wildcats,
And those Cornhuskin' boys,
But I'm a bird to make 'em weep and wall.
Chorus:
'Cause I'm a Jay, Jay, Jay, Jay, Jay,
Jayhawk.
Up at Lawrence on the Kaw—
'Cause I'm a Jay, Jay, Jay, Jayhawk,
With a sie-boom, ibo iphorak,
G got a bill that's big enough
To twist the Tiger's tail,
Husk some corn and listen
to the wolverine.
'Cause I'm a Jay, Jay, Jay, Jayhawk,
Riding on a Kansas gale.
Rolk Chalk yell rich in historm
The Rock Chalk Chant has been the battle cry of KU fans for more than 80 years. However, few supporters realize that the Rock Chalk Chant was used at Jawahir football game. It was used at Jawahir football game.
This strange, traditional chant, which is among the most famous of all college cheers, was started by E.H.S. Bailley, a professor of chemistry. Bailley wanted a cheer for his Science Club. Returning from a convention in Wichita, Bailley and some associates patterned the yell after the cheer. They ran train ralling along the tracks. On May 21, they submitted the cheer to his club. Even though there was no football team at KU until 1890 the Rock Chalk Chant tradition steadily grew.
Before the University adopted the cheer in 1897, it consisted of "Rah, Rah, Jayhawk, KU" be repeated three times. But an English professor soon suggested that "Rock Chalk" be substituted for "Rah, Rah" because it rhymed with Jayhawk. It was also symbolic of the chalky limestone formations on Mount Oreal.
Dunkers, coins find Chi-O water
The Chi Omega fountain, at the west entrance to campus, is often filled with more than recycled water and lucky penny. Reluctant bodies, bubbles and a dog or two are often found there, according to O'Mack, a resident of Chi Omega society.
Warm weather and restless students combine for busy days at the fountain, Womack said. Today's students, just as the students of the past enjoy the slapstick
hurry of seeing a friend dunked in the water.
Since the fountain's construction in 1955, many traditions have been established for "taking" students who are newly engaged or celebrating birthdays. Sorority and fraternity pledges also find a dip in the fountain an established "surprise."
"This year the pledges surprised us," Wornack said. "When they got back from their walkout they all jumped in the fountain before we had a chance to throw them.
"The thing that really got me was when members of the ftrvvlp up the street burst in during dinner and threw the whole sorority house in the fountain."
Wornack said she escaped the fate of her friends. She made it to her room and wished her dead.
Steffen Van Keppel, a resident of Sigma Alpha Fidelity fraternity, said that because of the established traditions, fraternity members knew when they could expect a
laking. They just hope they aren't carrying a wallet when the time comes, he said.
Occasionally fraternity members put marbles in the fountain for pledges to fish out. The trick is to get all of them, which isn't always easy. Van Kemel said.
During the streaking craze the fountain was used as the origin of streaks down Jayhawk Boulevard. Womack said that one night the excitement and noise was so high that police had to intervene but that such problems didn't arise very often.
THE FURY
An event which is a little more subdued is the annual senior dinner of the Chi Omega sorority. After dinner the members gather in a circle around the fountain and throw pennies for luck. Womack said it was a sentimental tradition.
Kelly Scott, president of Chi Omega sorority, said the fountain was usually turned on the weekend before the Kansas game and turned off after homecoming in the fall.
"Once it starts flowing so does the activity." Scott said.
Staff Photo
sophomore, and Joise Steinbucker, Kansas City Kan., freshman
cavort in the recently relanced Chil Omega fountain.
Recently a change was made in the landscaping around the fountain. The live trees that had surrounded the fountain for many years were removed. The university owns the trees we were getting overgrown, Womack said, but she didn't agree with the decision.
Ann Cantrell, another Chi Omega resident, looked at the humorous side of the
"Now there won't be any trees for the naked boys to hide behind," she said.
Noren Woody, a Chi Omega resident, said the designer of the fountain would be laughing at the attics it had prompted. The designed, Itasco Hilman Wooady, an 80-year-old Chi Omega alumna, is Noren's grandmother. Woody said her grandmother loved the attention the fountain had received over the years.
Fountain funnies
Patronize Kansan advertisers.
cheer as they charged into battle.
The Rock Chalk Chant's use by the military originated in 1898 when Company H of the Twentieth Kansas Infantry, which played a role in producing the yell to United States Volunteers who were stationed in San Francisco. The Twentieth Kansas had been using the cheer for football games between their unit and the University of California and 'Leland Stanford.'
The cheer was also heard in World War I. The "Jayhawk News" reported that the 137th infantry of the 38th Division observed Kansas Day in 1919 with a large meeting at Samplberg, France. The chant was used to open and close the meeting.
The first time the yell was heard on a battle field was during the Spanish-American War. On Feb. 7, 1899, the first Kansan died in action. The Twentieth Kansan saluted their friend at dusk with a song from the band followed by the Rock Chalk Chant. During the fighting in the Philippines the Kansans would yell the
Over the years the yell has changed forms. The three quick lines, "Rah, Rah, Jahyawk, KU," have evolved into two lines that are chanted, followed by three that are shouted. But the basic cheer still remains. Professor Bailey would be amazed to hear that the band had always cheered he gave his Science Club in 1896, a cheer that was used in the Boxer Rebellion in China and a cheer that Teddy Roosevelt said was the best he had ever heard.
THAI NIGHT
SATURDAY, NOV. 1, 1975 6:00-10:00 p.m.
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Featuring:
—buffet dinner & shows No Tickets at Door
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Friday. October 24.1975
University Daffy Kansan
KU planning study of seven-year GPA increase
While grade point averages get higher and grade inflation continues, University of Kansas administrators and educators are looking for reasons to explain the lumps.
Ralph Christoffersen, assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs, is planning a study in cooperation with the Office of Institutional Research and Planning to determine what factors might be affecting rising GPAs at the University.
Christoffersen said the group would look at GPAs in specific classes and departments for the past seven years. Among the possible reasons for the grade inflation, he said, were the credit-no credit system and the drop-add policy. However, he said, they would be able to make any sum judgment until the study was completed in December.
According to the most recent credit-no-credit figures, it appears the credit grade option may not have any effect on GPA's.
While the average GPA has been increasing, the use of credit-no credit has
According to Donald Trible, assistant dean of admissions and records, only 605 students are taking courses credit-no credit. Only one course for credit each semester.
The second lowest number of students taking courses for credit only occurred last spring when only 935 students took advantage of the option, he said. The number of students using the option has decreased since spring 1973 when 2,241 students used
William L. Kelly, dean of admissions and records, said the program was originally designed to give students pass-no-credit. At that time a student could receive a D and still get credit. This policy was changed a year later. Since then a student had to have at least a C to get
According to the credit-no credit system, a student can't take a course that is in his major field for credit only. Once a student has earned high school graduation card, he may not reevaluate his decision.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences in the fall of 1988 became the first school of the University to experiment with the new technique. After that then was extended for two semesters.
During this period the University Council appointed a subcommittee of the Academic Procedures and Policies Committee to review the procedures for admission option was then opened to all undergraduate schools of the University in the fall of 1969 but it maintained its experimental status. Later that year the Student Senate approved the regulations, and it lost its experimental status.
Administrators are unsure why the credit-no credit system has lost popularity. Kelly said one possibility might be a warning in Appendix I of the faint timetable.
It reads: "WARNING: Certain undesirable consequences may result from exercising the CREDIT-NO CREDIT option. Some schools may not accept honorsary societies do not accept his grading system and convert grades of 'CREDIT' to 'C' and 'NO CREDIT' to 'F' when computing grade-point averages or penalize students who use this option."
In addition, Kelly said, some of the deans at the University were advising students not to take courses credit-no credit. However, they have had no experience with having have credit-no credit hours on their transcript and want to transfer to the Universitv.
Ian K. Louden
Staff Writer
mittee that initiated the credit-no credit option, said he thought the original purpose of the program had been forgotten. Most students use the option for courses that are too hard and that might hurt their GPA, be said.
John Tolleson, associate dean of the School of Business, said the school didn't have any objection to credit-credit education; his purpose was to provide a credit-no credit system was good. The purpose was to get students to take subjects of a greater variety so they could get a well-rounded education.
Allan Press, dean of admissions in the School of Social Welfare, said that credit-no credit had no effect on a student's chances of enrolling in college. There were no complaints about the policy from other faculty members in the school. Students aren't discouraged against using the option, Mr. Press says.
Lee Young, associate dean of the School of Journalism, said a student who had taken a lot of courses credit-no credit might have a hard time getting into the school if he was considered a borderline case. That would be a student with a GPA of 2.18.2, he said.
However, Young said, no one in the School of Journalism, was actively trying to publish it.
Dwight Mulford, dean of admissions for the R.J.Med Center, said a student who could explain his reasons for taking some courses at the Med Center wore about admission into the Med Center
"However," he said, "it is not to a student's advantage to take science courses
He said too many other things such as the student's application, his interview with six U.S. universities and his missions test and the trend of his grades counted just as heavily as his cumulative GPA. As a result, he said, taking courses on credit really doesn't have much effect.
Young, who was on the original com-
Evelyn Senecal, admissions director for the School of Law, said no adjustments were usually made by the law school in the GPA who has used the credit-no credit option.
The School of Law allows 16 hours of
experience for a four-year under-
graduate period.
If a student has an excess of 16 hours of credit-no credit, she said, he is assigned a C for the excess. Seneca said she knew of no one in the school who was discouraging students not to use the credit-no credit option.
Ed Rolfs, student body president, said he thought fewer students were using the credit-no credit option because of the liberal drop-add policy at the University.
If a student doesn't tinker is doing well
or doesn't," he said. "he doesn't have to
A student can drop a course after 12 weeks and receive a W on his transcript.
worry about credit-no credit, He can just drop the class."
Tribble said no records were kept of how many courses were dropped each year, and it would be difficult to speculate on whether the drop-add policy had any effect on GPAs.
permission from his instructor who may give the student either a W or an F.
HOW TO BUY EXPENSIVE SUITS—INEXPENSIVELY
Young said many faculty members in the School of Journalism were unhappy with the liberal drop policy. He said the school committee of the journalism school had submitted a resolution to the school to return to the original 4-week drop policy.
opponent policy and the same hypothesis.
Tollefson said, that while he didn't oppose
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the present drop-add policy, many people in the School of Business did.
Hong Kong
In most schools a student merely has to notify the dean that they are dropping a course before the 12-week period is over, and they can get out of it with just a W on their grade point. In some school a student can do this for only four weeks. After this period a student must get
W
Unlike the credit-no credit policy, the
tran add payment does have some propoerate
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Monday. October 6, 1975
University Dally Kansan
COMMENT Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
---
Cancellation deplorable
Cancellation by the SUA Board of the Nov. 13 debate between William Shockley and Ron Goldsby is deplorable for several reasons.
Shockley's theory that blacks are genetically inferior seem specious. But he is a figure of public interest and debate because of his espousal of such ideals under cover by canceling the debate makes the wound of racism only fester.
Racism is a pervasive force in this society. It must be expunged from our system before it irreparably damages communities and harms harmony and equality of opportunity.
We cannot fight racism by saying that it shouldn't exist, or worse, by pretending that it doesn't exist. The best way to fight it is to get it out in the open.
Greg Bengtson, president of the SUA Board, said the board's action in bringing Shockley to KU was "raising a socially divisive issue" and that the debate "itself would be of no consequence, but that the repercussions in a human sense could be very detrimental."
Bengtson voted in favor of canceling
the contract, and one on each
member, abstaining. app og
Bengston also said the cancellation of the debt brought to the issue a "humiliating"
What is this prattle about humanism?
One dictionary defines humanism as a philosophy concerned with the achievements and interests of human beings, than with abstract beings phylogeny
Racism is not an abstraction nor is it a theology. It is a societal disease that describes the experience of racism.
Shockley's theories give support to those who would keep the races apart; his ideas have everything to do with the human condition.
The discussion of whether to cancel the debate took place behind closed doors. Board members have denied that the decision to cancel resulted from pressure from University administrators. Because the discussion wasn't open to the public, we can't know the reasoning behind the decision.
Mike Davis, University attorney, said he didn't know whether the SUA Board was subject to the state open meetings law. Davis said that question had never been asked before. Now may be the time to ask it.
The SUA Board's capricious action has deprived the University community of a chance to be exposed to Shockley's controversial ideas. The suppression of his ideas may only give credibility to the effectiveness of his arguments.
What are we afraid of?
Contributing Writer
OPEC OPEC OPEC
OPEC
OPEC
Mary McGrory
No pity for oil companies
WASHINGTON--One of the more startling bits of information to come from the special election was this:
"socialism" in a traditionally conservative Republican state, but also be elected to the United States Senate.
A man can advocate nationalization of oil and not only survive charges of
Steep hill succumbs
Blind man's touch dispels blabs
It was a sunny autumn day, but I was grumbling over the morning newspaper. Nelson Rockefeller was blaming the CIA for the problems and the CIA was sneaking money to Portugal.
"Dann the CIA. And damn this brutal hill," mutted as I turned my blue up the 11th for the 19th time that week.
Braille writer and the stick he tapped was a cane.
Halfway up the hill, my chain caught. No amount of pulling, prying or coaxing would budge it.
I felt as if I'd just asked a widow how her husband was doing.
"No," he said. "What's wrong? Can I help you?"
stacked high on the porches and in the backyards for winter fuel. Any conversation with a voter would be worth over the rising cost of gasoline.
“It’s my bicycle,” I stammered. The chain’s caught.” Let me earnest. “Let me see if I can out. Where is it?” he said.
A man using what looked like a metal detector had turned the corner where I was stopped and taking his way down the street.
He followed me back to the bike and put his writer and care down in the grass. He examined
"Excuse me. Do you have a screwdriver?" I called after him.
ting the chain out than in watching him figure out how to do it. We both pulled and crodded.
"You're getting your hands awfully greasv." I said.
"Oh, that's okay," he replied.
"They're always greasy.
Sometimes I work on my car, so
I used to it."
The statement that he fixed his own car delighted me. I didn't wonder until later how he drove it.
When he turned around I realized he wasn't looking for metal. He was blind. The machine he carried was a
"I think if I just had a
"I've thought about doing that," he said. "But I just can't seem to do everything I'd like to do, far do you live here?"
I told him I was majoring in journalism.
"About two and a half blocks." I said.
"I only live a half block away.
I'll go get a screwdriver," he said.
"I'll leave my writer with you."
"I don't know much about speed bikes," he apologized.
The man pulled the chain, coaxing it exactly as I had.
Therese Mendenhall
divestiture," which would require them to choose one of these phases and parcel out the functions to other companies.
The theory is that because they work together in joint operations, common ownership of pipelines, the giant oil and gas companies aren't subject to competition and can set the prices where they will.
the bike with his hands and found the problem in less than a minute.
"I think what you're doing is the only approach," I said.
I watched him tap his way from the grass to the sidewalk and across the street. As he made his way down the hill I thought he must be sensing more with that cane than I usually did with my eyes and ears.
"Yea, majoring in Spanish and creative writing. Here . . . Let's see if we can pry it out with these keys," he said.
We couldn't.
I was less interested in get-
"See if this works," he said. "I worked the driveway into a barn and we bought a bike. We pried the chain free. He put the chain back on the gears and adjusted the galleru exactly as it had been."
screwdriver I could get it out," I said. "Are you a student here?"
He slid his backpack off and pulled out the screwdriver.
Gerald Ford, who cam-
migned for Durkin's
pickup of these signs. He
continues to lament the plight of
oil companies who must compete
with OPEC prices. He fears that
unless their profits are huge,
they will not be able to exe-
plore for new energy sources.
"Bikes are fun," he said. "My brother and I used to take them apart and put them back together when I was little."
He turned the corner at the bottom of the hill that made me grit my teeth every morning. As he disappeared behind the houses, the bright sky and the crisp afternoon a special treat we had week after week about Rockefeller and the CIA again. They were a bad dream.
"Project Independence" is not, however, a standard to which many can repair. Ford's vision of "energy self-sufficiency" fails to sustain people who are shivering or cold. They can afford the money for gas to drive to work.
"Yes. They're so simple and straightforward." I said, "You can always figure them out and fix them yourself."
Soon he was tapping his way back up the hill. He crossed the street, stepped off the sidewalk and walked through the grass to a spot less than five feet from where he'd put down his writer.
As I picked up my pack and jacket, I thanked him. He flipped his pack on over his head and felt for his cane and his writer. We talked a little more about tukes and school as we headed out to play. I said I was late for class and thanked him again.
"I hope you make it up the hill this time," he said. He turned around, found the curb and moved down to the street where I first seen him.
Ford, of course, contends that domestic oil companies are at a disadvantage against OPEC in a crisis — currently at $1.50 a barrel.
CONGRESS IS A LONG WAY from following its newest senator in calling for nationalization of oil. But it seems to have gotten the message that the consumer doesn't share Gerald Ford's policies, and companies, who thrash about in the toils of oppressive government regulation.
As I was cranking up the last steep half of the hill, the ground shudded only a slight irritation, like giants I wanted to show awa.
The senators counter that the major American companies, who control the world-wide GEC oil, are part of the problem.
Last week, the House voted by a fat margin to retain stiff control on oil prices. And four Democratic senators—James Aborekz of South Dakota, Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin, Philip A. Hart of Michigan, and Gary Hart of Colorado—were among those in favor of the monopoly which the big companies hold on all stages of gas and oil production "from wellhead to gas pump."
UNDER THE PRESENT SYSTEM, the oil and gas companies are in charge of production, refining, transport and marketing of oil and gas. The bill calls for "vertical
"Some experts believe," says Gary Hart, "that the cartels would not have worked in India or now-in-national corporations."
number of new factors. One is the election finance reform bill which prohibits contributions in excess of $5,000 and thus makes "hold'd" oil and gas companies on individual members.
THE THEORY IS that with free market forces actually at work in the oil and gas industry, a new stage of production various stages of production and marketing, competition would drive prices to a reasonable level and make government regulations unacceptable.
Another is public opinion, which is, Gary Hart says, 'way out ahead of Congress' in its indignation at enormous oil company profits and steadily rising prices.
"If Gerald Ford really believes what he says about free enterprise," says Abouezre, who has a strong sense of humor, "he will support our bill."
Vain efforts to break the oil companies control of all phases of the process have been made for the past ten years by Philip Hart, chairman of the Senate's anti-trust and Monopoly Subcommittee. The record runs to 40,000 pages.
BUT THE SENATORS think the time is ripe because of a
CURSE
YOU,
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BARON!
AIR FORCE
GENERALS
FORK
A third is that the Anti-trust Subcommittee, which has never passed such a measure, has changed its face. Liberals Abuorez and Charles McC Mathias, R-Md., have replaced conservatives. Sen. Birach Bayh, underdeclared presidential candidate, new member. He has a similar anti-monopolistic bill of his own and has scheduled hearings for this week.
THE MAJOR OIL COMPANIES are expected to oppose this effort to destroy the status quo. The independents, however, will favor it. The majors wouldn't, in the vent of its success, be faced with destitution. Exxon, the senators involved in oil production as its one operation and still be the largest privately-owned oil company in the world.
the ant-monopoly plan would be added to all proposals pending on oil and gas deregulation. We may soon have a vote on the question of whether oil is a luxury, as Gerald Ford seems to think, for electric cars through the nose, or whether it is a necessity which should be available at reasonable prices.
Gaylord Nelson notes that much oil and gas is found on public lands and belongs to the people anyway.
I cannot speak for any other department but let me correct the impression left by Laird as it may relate to the history department. In the past six years, six members of the department have been nominated for or have won teaching awards—professors Nelson, Hiner, Katzman, Griffin, Sidman and myself. This same group has produced at least seven books already published and two or three more books by other authors. This group has also accounted for six major post-graduate fellowship awards for their research. I don't have the time to report on all the articles written by this group but one of them, whose I work do know about, has written four articles and has two more articles in the press; another has one book and seven articles. Another has three
(c) 1975 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
Readers Respond
Professor Laird's letter of Sept. 29 is very disturbing, particularly because of the vagueness of his accusations. Just who are the innocent and who are the guilty in his claim that "far too many names (for teaching awards) do little or no research and writing?" Whose reputation is supposed to be soiled and whose left unmuddied?
To the Editor:
It should be noted that the relationship between teaching and research and publication is a complicated one. One study, conducted by the University of Chicago, showed a correlation between publication and the rating given by faculty colleagues and students to teaching ability. Other studies find a very low correlation. One study has suggested that the correlation between the number of times a person is cited by his professional colleagues and teaching ability. Furthermore, we need to define our terms as to what we mean by "publishing" and "master" all the published materials in one's field and to generate new insights based on these materials be research? Or does research mean just investigating primary materials? Or does research mean using research to quality itself as a true researcher?
books and I don't know how many articles.
As for the question of whether nominees for teaching awards are doctrinaire or not, again there is the difficulty of knowing whether we are dealing with the results of our research. You don't have on this issue or just a feeling, something he "strongly suspects." If there is evidence on this score let us see it. If not, an intellectual community should be spared vague accusations which cloud, not clarify, complex questions. Phil Paludan
Accusations disturbing,prof says
Talent bailed
To the Editor:
This letter is in response to the article entitled "Yankee Tank Fair Alds Leo Beuerman Memorial," which appeared in the New York Times on Monday, Oct. 22. This article concerned the activities of the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program. The particular project described was an intention by this group to erect a statue of George Washington on the corner of Massachusetts and Eighth streets.
This is my first semester at the University of Kansas, and it is also the first month I have lived in the town of Lawrence. In spite of this fact, I have worked with the Beerman, a remarkable man, who, in spite of multiple handicaps, remained self-reliant and supported himself, at least in part, by selling on the street corner pencils and crafts that he had made. These facts indeed mark him as a man who has gained experience and potential. It is understandable that such a man should be remembered with
respect by the townspeople of Lawrence
In view of these facts, I think it is a tragic mistake and a gross misrepresentation to put the most important memorial that is being raised in his honor: "Remember me? I'm that little man gone blind. I used to sell pencils on the street corner." There are far too many people in the world who think that the most people with whom I worked do to support themselves is to sell pencils on the street corner.
The proposed inscription lends support to this view. Though it is true that Leo was a man who drew the street corner to make his living, it is not this fact that makes him worthy of distincc
tion. Leo Beuerman is worth remembering because he made the best use of his talents and could still be better to note this fact on pencils or plaque than it would be to note that he sold pencils on the street corner. The image portrayed by the former inscription, in the town of Lawrence, is that of a blind begar.
The point I wish to make is that this man should be remembered. Let us have a memorial to Leo A. Beuerman, but let us have one that portrays the truth about him and not one that perpetuates a stereotype about people with disabilities.
Kathleen Hagen
Fargo, N.D., Graduate Student
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas week-
long conference on the experience of late-
period periods. Second-days postage paid at la-
whouse post office. $25 for a semester or
$30 for a year in Bountiful County and $40
for a subscription. $15 for a semester, paid through
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Ancestrite Education
Associate Editor
Debbie Gumbin
Cell Young
Business Manager
Cuny Long
Assistant Business Manager
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Advertising Manager
Ross Parris
Monday, October 6.1975
5
University Daily Kansan
Resolution critical
From page one
groups to follow that could cause great harm to the University.
"No proper channels were gone through to build this lot," the resolution states.
Mike Thomas, director of Security and Parking, said Szone was actually an add-on to the existing system.
--one submitted by Chucovich, Kevin Flynn
president of the council, said.
Thomas said it would have been difficult for the Parking and Traffic Board to be consulted since the lot was approved in the summer. The board consists of three members, two faculty members, Hank Schoof, color officer of the traffic appeals court, and Thomas.
The resolution said the Parking and Traffic Board should have been consulted to determine the effects the parking lot would have on the Martin Grove area.
The resolution was given its first reading at the StudEx meeting last night, and will be considered at the regular Student Senate meeting. It is the first item on the Senate agenda.
Thomas said a representative of the Security and Parking department was present at a Planning and Resources meeting. He inspected the parking lot expansion project.
"The Parking and Traffic Board generally deals with parking stickers, but he said he doesn't have anything to do with lot construction."
Walker said the resolution was the first time he had heard of any objection to the decision.
Cruchovich couldn't be reached for further comment last night.
The Architecture and Urban Design
Student Council will consider at a meeting
of the Board.
Flynn said that the resolution to be considered by the architecture council criticized the building of the S-zone lot for environmental reasons and said future construction projects should receive consideration by several groups before being carried out.
Unification case continues
Attorneys for Pam Fanshier, a 1975 University of Kansas graduate and a member of the Unification Church, will try to gain access today to the Kansas Supreme Court through a hearing in Barton County District Court.
Fansher's attorneys petitioned the district court last week for a delay of a Sept. 23 order restricting her travel until a court-ordered psychiatric examination had been completed. The Court expected to contest the constitutionality of the restriction in the Kansas Supreme Court.
where the church has branches, until the examination is completed. Fanshier was committed to the hospital by her parents and died there. Her daughter had been brainwashed by the church.
Frederick Woleslager, district court judge, ordered Fansher released from a Great Bend hospital Sept. 23 but stipulated that Fansher, 23, must undergo a psychiatric examination and not come within 15 miles of Lawrence or Manhattan.
Fanisher's attorneys recently balked at the restrictions levied by Wolshelah when they learned the examination could last more than 10 days. Fanishers *w* examined by Carlos Ruiz, Great Benz psychiatrist Friday in the first in a series of examinations that are expected to last as long as five weeks.
Bob Feld, an attorney for Fanshier, said the possibility of her being restricted from entering Lawrence or Manhattan, where law enforcement, for such a long time would be a hardship.
The fate of two houses owned by Daniel Ling, associate professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Arizona.
The house at 1321 Tennessee was declared unsafe in July by city inspectors. However, in September the Lawrence City Commission said the house could be salvaged under criminal demolition. The matter was referred to the Minimum Housing Code Board of Appeals.
The board decided Friday to view the
board on Nov. 7 before deciding what to do
with it.
The two houses are at 1321 Tennessee St.
and 1301 Ohio St.
PIZZA
Demolition of the house at 1301 Ohio has been delayed because of an injunction Ling filed in federal court two weeks ago. The city commission voted unanimously three weeks ago to prepare the house for demolition.
Ling has offered the house to Jane Eldredge, a member of the board, for $1,500. Eldredge will be among those inspecting the house.
9" PIZZA!
Leng contends that his civil rights were violated because he wasn't allowed to cross-examine the city staff members who had determined the house should be torn down.
"Perfect for someone or some two!"
THE CREEO REOFE
Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager,
said Fridav the city had repiled the suit.
Smokers who want to stop and who are interested in the Lawrence smoking clinic but were unable to attend our first sessions please call 842-4171 or 864-6301or come to 547 Fraser Tuesday, October 7 at 7:00 p.m.
The reply leaves the suit in abunace until Milton Allen, city attorney, and Edward
Fate of Ling houses still in doubt
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Colliester, Ling's attorney, agree on the facts of the case.
After an agreement is reached, supporting briefs will be filed by each aide and judge Earl Comor of the United States and Earl Hart of Kansas City, Kam, will decide the case.
College Class
Group picks leaders
Officers of the 1975-76 Panhellenic Council were elected last night.
The officers are: Linda Pfaster, president; Phyllis Robertson, membership chairman; Rosann Speer, pledge affairs chairman; Barbara Olivet Bison, campus affair chairman.
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Alen said Ling was asked to appear at a hearing before the city building official. Ling didn't appear. Ling was told there would be another hearing before the Minimum Housing Code Board of Appeals, but he failed to appear for that hearing, too.
The city has agreed not to tear down the house until the suit is settled.
Collaterl he would file an appeal of the demolition order against the propet in the district.
--at
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Friday, October 24,1975
University Daily Kansan
7
10
Staff Photo
Cheat sheet
Crittb papers are small pieces of paper that contain information needed at the time of a test. The paper must be small enough to easily curl up the sleeve, under the test, or under the cover.
Cheating at the University of Kansas is:
B. Widely practiced.
D. Similar to an Icobe
E. All of the above
Cheats never win except in class
C. Looked down on.
D. Similar to an iceberg.
if you copied your neighbor's answer to
their email, you probably got a
knock-knock KU student.
It is very common.
E. All of the above.
A graduate student in geology, Rex Crick and his wife Golda, a graduate student in education, developed an idea for a handbook for elementary and secondary school students.
Visual copying is the second most exploited form. To accomplish this, pupils look at other pupils' tests, and secure the answers. Sometimes students offer their answers to the teacher in a safe. As a sophomore said, "Someone cheating off me may get a wrong answer."
More than 75 per cent of the cheaters cited grades as their reason for practicing the art. And it appears to be an art, with much more authenticity, of the method resorted to by the artists.
Two types of cheating on tests are widespread. The first, crib notes (cheat notes) are used for testing a small piece of paper, then concealed in the hand, under the test, up the sleeve, taped onto a pencil, slid, or under a watchband, in a sock top or pants cuff, or another secret hole.
Forty five students were questioned at random recently on their methods, feelings, thoughts and reasons behind cheating in a math exam. Twenty-five students were questioned admitted to cheating while at KU.
"Sure i eat, to get a better grade," said one freshman.
Substitute for the piece of paper are matchbooks, kleenex, notebooks (open and closed), text books, hands, arms, legs, shoe soles and desk tops.
A freshman criber said he cheats because "I don't study hard enough."
On a lesser scale, other methods are employed. Notes are taped on the back of books that are used by some teachers, are blank-paged books bought in the bookstore for tests.
With the equipment purchased with the award funds, Nelson said, a professor can make slides of manuscripts, picture in textbooks, or any other visual teaching aid he may be passing around the class or showing on an oaque prolector.
Through Marion Bickford, professor of geology, and Walter Smith, associate dean
Sometimes when taken into class not all of the pages are blank; a few contain valuable information "Test burglar's" steal a copy of the test sometime before it is administered.
"I's (cheating) kind of foolish, but kind of fun," said a graduate student.
Sign language is effective in cheating, especially for true-false or multiple choice
John P. Tharp
Staff Writer
"test-takers," a rare breed, also thrive in overcrowded lectures. These are individuals who assume another student's role and are not enough to complete an exam for them.
relays. Packed classrooms aid in the verbal exchange of answers.
Some students said the back files of tests kept in structured living quarters constitute a form of cheating. These are available for pre-test inspection by qualified residents.
About 45 per cent of the people interviewed indicated that they had cheated in college, but almost twice that many said they had cheated in high school. Many students have been at high school, and that the high school atmosphere was more conducive to cheating.
"I cheated on important things in high school, but not in college." said a junior.
Statistically, one half of the high school cheaters entering the University quit cheating. The 45 per cent figure parallels 42 per cent, which was the average of the 80 per cent who asked when asked what they thought was the proportion of KU students who cheated.
According to Lynn Nelson, professor of history, the $5,000 grant was used to purchase equipment, developing and mounting equipment. A graduate student was paid to go through the entire collection and reproduce a slide that was of inferior quality be said.
"I like to think it's low," guessed a senior on
"I'll probably high, over 50 per
person."
These statistics don't mean that almost
Endowment grants fund projects
Almost $100,000 in grants from the University of Kansas Endowment Association has been disbursed since 1972 in support of the quality of classroom instruction.
According to Phil McKnight, director of the Office of Instructional Resources, the Endowment Association has given $30,000 annually since 1973 to fund more than 60 projects benefiting thousands of KU students.
McKnight said recently that the funded projects varied from computerizing introductory Latin lessons to getting a slide collection for a botany class.
In any given year, he said, it's not unusual
requests of more than $100,000 for grants.
The awards are administered through the 13-members Office of Instructional Resources Advisory Board, McKnight said. The board receives and debates the requests for the funds, eliminating what it considers to be unnecessary items.
The awards for the advancement of instruction began in 1972 when then Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, George Waggoner, secured a $15,000丹福 Foundation grant for faculty development, McKnight said. He said that Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers asked the Endowment Association for funds to supplement that grant. The Endowment and at the request of 1972 and 1973 students and at the requests of chancellors Raymond Nichols and Archie R. Dykes, has given $30,000 annually since. The program received another $30,000 grant last spring for the 1975-1976 academic year, he said.
Controlling the committee's decision is a list of guidelines that ensure the award won't interfere with the applicant's academic responsibilities. Each request must also include a specific breakdown of expenditures.
"I think most people have used their money very carefully, as they should," McKnight said. "Endowment money comes in amounts and it should be spent wisely."
McKnight said most of the funds requested on each application had been cut considerably, eliminating items such as travel, which could be provided by the applicants themselves. A condition of the award is that the project it funds be evaluated through Feedback, an analysis by the applicant, or both.
McKnight said about one-third of the money went to pay for release time for the faculty member involved in the project, one-third paid the salary of another person to help with the supplies and paid the other for the supplies and expenses necessary to complete the project.
Receiving the largest allocation of any award given so far was a project to completely overhaul and catalog the department of history's collection of 5,000 slides.
of the school of education, they received a $2,000 award, spent a year researching their topic and now have half of the handbooks ready for publication.
Two professors of botany used their
skills in the creation a slide collection of
species of Kansas plants.
According to James Hamrick, assistant professor of botany, the growing cycle of most of the plants they were studying didn't match with the semester cycle of the University.
"In the fall semester," he said, "most plants are dormant, and in the spring the plants don't really green up until the last two weeks of the course."
Dierck Casselman
Staff Writer
Hamrick said it was nearly impossible to teach students about plants they'd never seen.
Harurick and William Bloom, assistant professor of botany, received a £70 award for his work and bought film to begin photographing as many Kansas species as they could.
Another audio-visual project that received an award video-taped fresh-men-sophomore English classes to help instructors improve their teaching styles.
According to James Gowen, director of freshmen-sophomore English, the department discovered that it own sophisticated technology and offered a federally-funded graduate program. He said the equipment was ideal to provide an instant critique of a professor's teaching techniques. Only the lack of tapes and software kept it from being operational, he said.
In the fall of 1794, Gowen said, he received a warrant for the purchase of tapes and maintenance supplies.
Instructors were required to video-
the session of each of their
classes as said.
He said that the video-taping replaced a supervisor who would attend a class and, at times, could not meet with the instructor for a teaching his teaching skills until hours or days later.
A combined project of the history department and the department of special libraries system receives a $2,100 award for the collection of several oral history tapes.
enrolled during spring 1975 collected oral history tapes on subjects such as the application of family history on local communities; the reconstruction of minority attitudes toward Jim Crow practices prevalent in Lawrence at the turn of the century, and bootlegging activities in Toeeka and Lawrence in the late 1930s.
According to Tom Lewin, assistant professor of history, the 12 to 14 students
According to George Griffin, Kansas Collection librarian and co-sponsor of the project, the transcripts of the tapes will be housed in the Spencer Research Library.
Lewin said the course was being taught this semester without support from the office of Instructional Resources. He said he would be available to 20 hours a week transcribing the tapes.
McKnight said anyone, including those who had received previous funding, was not aware of the changes.
Several projects have been funded on a second year basis, he said.
McKnight said that beyond the endowment awards, the University should plan a central program that deals with course content.
the program would provide a media specialist for consultation with instructors, a centralized purchasing agency to help choose the proper equipment necessary for instruction, and centralized equipment maintenance.
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one-half of the student body is actively involved in cheating. They do indicate that about one half of the students have at one time cheated in college. Why?
"I was unprepared for the exam," a sophomore explained.
A junior justified it by claiming, "I have a bad memory."
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2nd Psalm and Acts 4:25
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
The first recorded words of Christ after his baptism by John The Baptist were: "MAN SHALL NOT LIVE BY BREAD ALONE BUT BY EVERY WORD THAT PROCEEDETH OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD" Matt. and Luke 14.14. In the Gospel of John 10.15: He said, "And AMEN WE BROKEN IN HEAVEN two." He said "Heaven and Earth shall pass away, but My Words will not pass away."
It is said that Mr. Wesley once remarked to Mrs. Westy: "I think you told that child the same thing twenty times!" "Maybe so, but he did not learn it on the 1911" England and the world has been greatly blessed from what John and Charles learned from their Mother. The following is a reprint of an article in this column in January 1972. If I owned the newspaper think I would run it more than twenty times, maybe every day for a year. You folks who approve of it and "Take Matters To The Lord in Praiser" ask His blessing to follow.
A number of writings in The Old Testament God said of His People: "YE ARE MY WITNESSES!"—one place is Isaiah 43:10. A number of times Christ said to His Disciples: "YE ARE MY WITNESSES!"—ONE PLACE IS Luke 24:48 as he was about to ascend to Heaven.
In 2nd Chronicles 16:9 The Spirit of God says: "FOR THE EYES OF GOD RUN TO AND FROTHROUGH TO THE WHOLE EARTH TO SHOW HIMSELF STRONG IN THE BEHALF OF THEM WHOSE HEART IS PERFECT TOWARDS HIM!" Desiring to be a faithful and true witness, bearing one pleasing to the eyes of God Almighty, and having received that which he had received, PROCEEDED OUT OF THE MOUTH OF GOD" as recorded in the King James Version of Holy Scriptures, the writer wishes to present the following WINESS and TESTIMONY:
God is the author of racial separation. It pleased Him to divide mankind into different races. Repeatedly throughout the Old Testament the Hebrews were commanded by God not to intermingle or mix with the Greeks, who are commanded by His Law governing all races, even as we do His Ten Commandments.
"EVEN THOUGH THE SUPREME COURT RULED SEGREGATION 'UNCONSTITUTIONAL' WITHOUT ANY CHANGE WHATEVER BEING MADE IN THE WRITTEN CONSTITUTION, THE LAW OF GOD STILL STANDS. NO COURT CAN CHANGE IT!" History records more than one civilization that disintegrated because it transgressed God's Law and condoned racial integration.
Jesus, our Savior, affirmed God's Law regarding racial separation. There was a form of racial separation and segregation—segregation between Jews and Samaritans—when He was on earth in the flesh. Certainly there is no record of His condemning this Jesus declared, "I came not to destroy the law, but to fulfill it." He fulfilled this by urging us by teachings and examples to be respectful, friendly and helpful to all men. This is love to our fellow man in proper form—in its proper form—Christ ideal in race relations recognizes the obvious fact of race discrimination. We are responsible for ensuring that our own vay, retaining their individuality and culture, while encouraging and working for the good of all races. A great Negro, Booker T. Washington, very wisely put it this way: "We can be as separate as the fingers on the hand; and like the fingers cooperate."
We are physical mortals here and on earth with differences as to race and sex; "AND THE LAW OF GOD REGARDING SEPARATION IN OUR RACIAL RELATIONS IS AS ABSOLUTE NOW AS IT WAS IN THE BEGINNING, AND AS IT SHALL BE UNTO THE HEART. In this case we may declare that we shall be OF GOD (SAY 348) IF it BE OF GOD, YOU CANNOT OVERTHROW IT. LEST HAPLY YE BE FOUND EVEN TO FIGHT AGAINST GOD!"
In closing we will give a few suggestions if you wish to develop the thought of "FIGHTING GOD!"
The result of the Snake's suggestion that Eve Eat the Forbidden Fruit.
The result of the fight against God in Noah's Day!
The result of the fight against God warned of in Acts 5:34: Titus destruction of Jerusalem.
P. O. Box 405, Decatur, Ga. 30031
8
Friday. October 24.1975
University Daily Kansan
TAs. AIs aid despite drawbacks
Virtually every undergraduate student at the University of Kansas has been taught by a teaching assistant (TA) or an assistant instructor (AI) at some time in his college career. But how profitable they considered that experience remains a controversial
Tas and Als differ from full-time faculty members in that they are normally master's or doctoral candidates, June 2015. Ms. Cook is counselor for academic affairs, said recently.
An AF has his own class, usually an introductory course, which he conducts and for which he signs grade sheets, she said. A TA doesn't have a class under his own courses or tests, he does, she says, he is an assistant to the primary teacher of a class.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences uses the most TAS and ALs of any school in
Mary Huddleston Staff Writer
the University, Michal said, because of the large number of freshmen taking in the university courses in freshman year.
Phil McKnight, director of the Office of Instructional Resources, said that it would be physically impossible to have senior faculty members teach every course offered at KU, even though it would be desirable.
In introductory courses, he said, there is a 'hierarchy of knowledge'. The basic terms and concepts can be taught as well by a graduate student as by a professor, without the value of the graduate student's knowledge being diminished, he said.
Each level of teaching experience has its own contribution to make to students, but it's also important to close in age to students can sometimes empathize better with them, he said, but a senior faculty member may have a better understanding of the complexities and issues in his field.
Inadequate training and teaching backgrounds, the primary criticism is that students are not taught English and Arabic.
McKnight he thought inadequate training was a fair criticism of the TA-AI program. Although the University is trying to do more for students, it has not been a training program for them.
He said TAs and AIs should learn about evaluation techniques, audio-visual aids and learn how to adapt what they learned in seminars to their own classes. Being able to see themselves teach on videotape would be helpful, he said.
Robert Cobb, de of the college, said that many TAs and Als were quite experienced as teachers. Some of them have more than 50 years of Ph.D. membership. Ph.D. members of the faculty, he said.
The department of English has what director James Gowen, associate professor, calls an elaborate training program for its Als. Each of the department's 88 Als
teaches an average of two sections of freshman English, he said.
The program begins with a four- or five-day orientation program at the beginning of the semester, Gowen said, and includes class visitations by faculty members, videoatote reviews, a form of student response and weekly meetings.
Gwen said reports from TAs showed that the program was extremely helpful. All AIs, even those with prior teaching experience, are required to complete it. he said.
More than half of the 4A1s aired by the english department this year have had an international appearance.
Approximately half of the 45 AIs in the department of mathematics have had previous teaching experience, according to Russell Bradt, chairman of the department.
The University's base rate of pay for both TAs and AIs is $3,400 a semester, although the figure may vary between departments. Cobb said that KU's rate of pay was generally low in comparison to other universities.
Faculty members and TAs agreed that although the rate pay hadn't substantially hurt the quality of graduate applicants, it could do so in the future.
McKnight said that one way to improve the quality of TA and AI applicants was through stipepients. He said TAs and AIs either should receive higher salaries or should not have to pay tuition. Now they are coming to KU out of dedication and in response to the reputation of the graduate faculty, he said.
Thomas Russell, assistant instructor of English, said that the low rate of pay could hurt KU in the long run, but that it wasn't hurting now.
"The school that goes out of its way for
their children will get the best
qualified," be said.
in spite of low pay rates, competition for in instructionals in fairly keen in several decades.
in the department of Western Civilization, more than 100 applied for six positions this summer. Ms. Becker, director to James Seaver, director of the program. Donaldson attributed the large number of applicants partly to the fact that graduate programs in the region would apply to be AIs in Western Civilization.
"I'd hesitate to say we could get better people by naving more." Donaldson said.
of paying more," Donaldson said. The department of health had 64 applicants last month and 72 now, the department said. The department receives more and better applications now than ever before, he said.
The department of mathematics had 70 applicants for graduate school, Gradt said, and 10 AIs were hired. He said this figure was lower than in past years, following a general decrease of interest in mathematics and the physical sciences.
Tolfson said that in the School of Business, 32 AIs and TAs were hired from 45 to 50 applicants. The school isn't terribly crowded, but there are areas almost everyone who applies is hired.
McKnight cited the AI program in
"When I had AIs as teachers, it was early in college. I felt I should have had professors, but when I got professors I realized the AIs I had were competent."
Bradt said that TAs and Als in mathematics came to KU because of a particular faculty member or because of a reputation and its midwestern location.
"We don't buy any of them away from anvulace else," he said.
John Tollefson, associate dean of the School of Business, said that graduate students in business were typically attracted to KU by the opportunity to do graduate study here, not by the offer of a teaching position.
"The rate of pay makes it hard to attract some students who would be pretty well educated."
Andrew Lazi, assistant instructor in the School of Business, said he came to KU because of a particular professor he wanted to work under. He said he thought the reason most students came to KU was because of the faculty or the location.
Pay could definitely hurt the quality of KU's TA-AI program, Lazi said. He said he knew of students who were now pursuing a degree in computer science elsewhere because the pay was higher.
Western Civilization as being of high importance to the committee to interview applicants.
"I was impressed with the applicants," he said. "I be pleased as a student to have seen them."
Donaldson said the good reputation of AIs in Donaldson civilization was due to the fact that the department had so many qualified applicants to choose from. The hiring committee spends a great deal of time in interviewing and screening applicants, he said.
"In Western Civilization we don't see it as the instructor's job to give his views," Donaldson said. "The instructor should give the student the opportunity to come to his own views, which can be achieved through a good discussion."
don't sound like native Kanaas speakers.
A foreign TEA in matte, who asked not to be identified said she had spent two years teaching at a master's degree before coming to KU.
Brad said he didn't consider the hiring standard or the department of mathematics necessarily necessary.
The department hires foreign students, he said, but most of them have been in the US.
None of the foreign Als are in comprehensible, he said, although they
She said that language was sometimes a barrier for her, but that in teaching mathematics it wasn't often necessary to understand than simple sentences to explain problems.
In the School of Business, Tollefon said, the use of AIs and TAs is much higher than it should be. In beginning accounting courses, 82 per cent of the teaching is done by the school and received 200 to 498, 88 per cent of the semester course are handled by AIs, he said.
The sections taught by Als are quite large, Tolelson said. The average class in the two beginning accounting courses is 48, he said.
"Most of the TAs are quite inexperienced, he said. Learning how to do it is hard."
See TAs, AIs page nine
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Monday, October 6.1975
University Daily Kansan
Nebraska challenge looming
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Associate Scorts Edito
KU FOOTBALL CLUB
Coaches Ken Martin (l) and John Leva discuss offensive strategy in four quarter Saturday with quarterbacks Nolan Cromwell (9) and Scott McMichael
Many University of Kansas football fans probably were still savoring KU's surprising 41-7 thrashing of the University of Wisconsin while they scanned the papers and sipped their orange juice yesterday morning.
but KU head coach Bud Moore couldn't afford that luxury. With the Big Eight race beginning this weekend, Moore already was concentrating on Nebraska, KU's first league opener in a season, an excellent performance at Madison, the thought wasn't a comforting one.
"It's going to be to a much different situation going into the league race. It's going to be to a much different season."
"THAT WAS A GOOD AND satisfying win"
*us*, Moore said, "but going against
them was a good thing."
With a 3-1 record, after three straight wins, the Jayhawks are improving with every game. The defense shut down a strong Wisconsin running attack, and, for the second straight week, the offense moved the ball well.
"To this point, I think we've made fairly good progress, but we face a much, much tougher opponent this week," Moore cautioned.
"I DON'T KNOW THAT we'll be able to stay in the game with them. It just depends on how well they play and how well we're able to play."
Even Moore admitted the play of the Javahawk surprised him Saturday.
"It was a little more than I expected," he said. "We played better than I anticipated, but, too, the people we were playing didn't play as well as I thought they would."
JUST AS THEY DID last season, the Jayhawks are going into the Nebraska game after impressive wins. Last year, after taking a 41-record into the game, the Jayhawks beaten soundly by the Cornshuskers, 56-0, and didn't win another game. That's something the KU players are thinking about.
"Everyone remembers last year," linebacker Terry Beeson said. "I think everybody will be remembering that when we go to Lincoln. I think we have a little more confidence and a little more discipline than last year."
Moore said, "I'm not concerned about us
letting down. I'm never glad to have to play somebody like Nebrabsuka, at the same time, I don't think our people are going to shv away from the challenge."
Despite what Moore says, Wisconsin certainly couldn't stop the KU running attack Saturday. Behind a strong performance by the offensive line, KU ran for
"THE LENEME WERE really firing out," the aggressive coordinator said. "We were really angry, very grumpy."
"The backs also blocked awfully well. When they can cut some guys it really opens it up for Nolan (Cromwell, the KU quarterback.)"
Cromwell made good use of that blocking as he turned in his second excellent game in the NHL. He was the first to score.
"They played the pitchman in the first half, and that kind of opened it up for us," Leva said. "In the second half, they adjusted and it caused us a little trouble."
Despite the adjustments, halfback Laverne Smith managed to gain 94 yards in only seven carries, most on halfback draw plays. Fulllacks Backniss Ranks, who ran for 88 yards, and Dennis Wright, who had 51, also were effective.
187 yards in 20 careers before leaving the game early in the fourth quarter.
"THAT'S THE BEAUTY of the wish-
borne," she said. "The option is
stopped, another should work."
Center John Morgan, the veteran of the offensive and the young lieutenants were assigned to the 12th Battalion.
Sports Shorts
SOCCER TEAM SPLITS- KU's soccer beat camp Kansas State, the defending big Apple (9-3) at Iowa. Golaa were scored by Rafael Santos (2), Randy McLain, Ken Kilculen and Felipe Santos. The club lost Saturday to KC Internationalators, 3-KU is 3-5 this fall after
CROSS COUNTRY FOURTH—John Roscoe's ninthplace finish was the best individual showing by KU's cross-country team at Saturday's Oklahoma State game, which finished fourth as a team behind winner Arkansas, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State.
RUGGY CLUB WINS~BILL GMcGlivry scored a team-record 21 points to lead KU's rugby club to a 49-21 win over the KC Kugli club yesterday. Other scraps came from McGrade Bills Almais Dennis Henderson, Ted McGrade Bill Almais and Craig Houndgrey. The 'R'队 lost 20-6.
FIELD HOUSE SCHEDULE—Allen Field House will be open for recreation from 7 to 10 p.m. Monday through Wednesday. It will be closed Thursday for the Chicago concert, and on Friday from 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday from 7 to 10 p.m. and Sunday from 3 to 10 p.m.
From the Associated Press
CHIEFS LOSE . . . AGAIN—The Kansas
"We're up now," Morgan said. "It just took us a little while to get everybody going. We started out with three new guys and they were just doing too much thinking at first. Now, they are just going out and doing the job."
City Chiefs dropped their third consecutive game this year yesterday, when the San Francisco 49ers dropped them, 20-3, in error-nore-nole NFL game in Kansas City
BOSTON, CINCINNATI WIN—Boston and Cincinnati moved to within one game of berths in the 1975 World Series with baseball wins yesterday in their home ball parks. Boston's Red Sox whipped the three-time defending World Champion Oakland Athletics, 6-3. Cincinnati socked the Pittsburgh Pirates, 6-1.
The Jayhawk defense also has been doing the job. Through four games, KU has given up only three touchdowns. Saturday, the Jayhawks scored 47 points to attack to only 180 vardens in 45 carries.
"OUR DEFENSE PLAYED an excellent game, especially in the second half," Moore said. "They turned the ball over to the offense several times in good field position.
"But one of the most satisfying things about the defense was that it scored itself. That's the thing good football teams have to do."
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That touchdown came on a 66-yard pass interception return by Eddie Lewis. The second, by Kurt Knoff also intercepted passes, and two jawkers recovered two Wisconsin fumbles.
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Like most things, the college offering medical school is over the last few years. In many medical students that cost reprecent of the burden, a financial problem that can impact your con-
It needn't be that way. The Armed Forces Mission Discipleship Scholarship Program was originated to free you from those wounds. Men and women will have the costs of their medical education covered, and you will be able to receive a substantial monthly allowance.
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KANNA3 - Crowned 1 arm (Kebel kick)
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University Daily Kanzan
Monday, October 6. 1975
7
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kavanah were offered to students at the University in PLEASANT WARNING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAUNT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times
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Each additional
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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.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These cards can be placed in person or by calling the UDB business office at 864-3533.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dimps or close-out products, all must be sold by GAMMAHORN at the GRAMPHON SHOP AT KIEFT.
Western Civilization Notes—On sale at
Macy's! *Note: All materials are available!
Makes use of them* —
2. For class preparation
3. For classroom presentation
"New Art of Western Civilization"
"Available at Macy's!"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
available now at Town Crier Stores. tt
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery store stock from a Chicago supermarket at today's retail prices is at checkout (9AM), closed by 10AM. Members' Salvage Center, $88 Vermont. Merger
HIGH PROTEN HIGHER most meat food dog. 24-14 oz.
cans, $4.99 each, no discount. Metzner Salad
dressings.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reassure prices, professionally. Stones cut and polished. Tailor-made. Skim-circ and polished. Tailored. Satin-circ and polished. Tailor-made.
We can make your stereo sound better.—GUAR-
DER, 30th Street, 2nd Avenue, earl
Bradford at Audio Systems, 4th E. 9th.
30% Discount on all antique and used furniture,
products including castleport crates, bushel and
ridge wheels, wheat rolls and hags. Also full price of fresh fruits
and cheese. Country Shop 2009 W. 4th Bldg. 8:38-8:18, shop
Country Shop 2009 W. 4th Bldg. 8:38-8:18, shop
Tenoroon selection of guitars, amps, drums.
Shop. Buy Keyboard Studios. Choose from GIBBON,
Shop. Buy Keyboard Studios. Choose from GIBBON.
All guitar parts to green, orange, black others.
All guitar parts to green, orange, black others.
W 22d, W 93d-95d, W keys.
W 22d, W 93d-95d, W keys.
Past & Present Antiques. Furniture, collectables
Low价现货. Furniture. 1347 Mason
889-004
2 cu. ft. Desk Top Electric Refrigerator cut out
19 in. x 36 in. x 25 in. $29.99. (10) 48-6
Apt. only $33.99
For Sale: 1974 Red Corvette, town car, 6400 miles.
5812. If interested, call Lee to answer.
10-6
Mauricewiers Mover 61 C 78-14 Nylon Snow Tires cut to $2 each $25付 F.E.T. Free installation at Raybucks or Rains Snow Tires cut to $30 plus $25 F.E.T. (regular E Tires 15) same price $30 pay
$^5 V$ Bus - Not beautiful but good at bus.
$^6 V$ Bus - Not beautiful but good at bus.
Motorycle motorcycle helmet $10$ Bud. $B2-856-10$ 10-6
For sale: Dry faculure wood. Free kinding with
order. Call appliance: 843-0245-100f
Financial Coach for sale: 1964 Cadillac supervisor,
242-783-5611, private owner, contact Peterson
10-6-14
472-386-134
A Special sale now at Ray Audio, 13 E. 8th,
642-504-707, Stop by.
Must sell 1728 Sab AIM-AMF Sterre, air
continuing, front wheel drive. After 6:00,
843-444-844
Pair of Infinity Wave Transmission Line Column Speakers $400. Perfect condition. Call David 1-877-352-2971. 10-7
For Sale. 1917 Plymouth Cricket. Excellent Con-
trol. automatic. Call 864-3050 or 10-88
after 5:30. $250.
BOOK SALE. Tonganese Public Library, Saturna
University, Gisborne, New Zealand.
Books: National Geographic, Old K-12 U.N.
Skis for male: Fisher SuperPro (15mm) $40.00.
Skis for female: In-Bindings, boot and skirt $65.00-617.97
HOLLE
THE HOUSE IN THE WALL
1954
NAPA
843-7685
Wally Reid's N.A.P.A. Auto Parts
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer: 1. Special Prices
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
Try to get the hang of it.
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
3 month old German Shih tao, has beds, for sale and good house. Call after 5 p.m. in 1270-496-2878. 10-7
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
KODAK STEREO Kamera f.3.5, leather case; $35.
KODAK 7000 Series HD video camera; $35.
POALOARO Model 26 Automatic flash, light meter, case, auxiliary (folding) flash, $8.1-$83.1,
4.90mm, p.35, $181-$181.68, 10.9-10.9
4.90mm, p.35, $181-$181.68, 10.9-10.9
Some do it with a hang glider but the FIP does not. We use a go-kart to drive around a school. The program is an extra-level school course designed for students who are ready for ROYC. Taken during the season year '13 in preparation for AOF air-pilot training in later grades.
For Sale: Altrequel 1252 slide projector with two circular trays and stacker盘. Call 641-731-8900.
1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days
Face it. "you always wanted to飞! You must of us remember that赎罪, and for a touch of us to tell us wrong way. If you're one of those Air Force ROTC (F) pilots, you should be ready to teach you the lesson." (F) is supposed to teach you the lesson.
Air Force ROTC also offers scholarships. $100 a month for two years in addition to full tuition. It all is reserved for the girl who wants to go the hang Air Force flying. The girl who wants to go the hang School Building of Kanan, KSA 844476
Head skis 198 cm, without accessories.$20. WV replacement racket stringer with accessories.$20. WV replacement rocker and fender panel. For Vans up to $358. Also back seat for VW Van. Car 10-7838.
Gibson J-45 Deluxe Guitar with case, 4 months,
8210, 842-909-96.
10-7
Marantz 112 Tuner, 8 months old, $160, 841-3405-
10.7
A.K.C. Black Labrador, Retrials, nine weeks
outstanding blood lines 78, 84-115, 109-
10
For Sale. 23½" lamps! 10-sp. sew-ups. 845-2218
evenings. 10-9
Guitar-Gibson 16.5, Excellent condition, hard shell case must sell $450. Warranty burglar $150.
1971 yellow 4-speed VOLKSWAGEN with an
low mileage, low distance. 1987 bright green VOLK-
SCHWAGEN with a low distance. 1987 TRUCK-TR
TR-6. Marathon 4 speed; prized to move out.
10-10 hawk VOLKSWAGEN 4 speed.
73 Plymouth Durer. Excellent condition. One
door. Reflects. Must see to appreciate.
219 N. Third Avenue, New York, NY 10001
1960 Hearse Cadillac. Excellent condition, 39,000
original miles. All power. Must sell. V13-648-8800.
71 Kawamiki 500. Excellent coud, very reliable
immediately. Can be seen at 10:10
10:10
HP-45 with accessories. $175. Doug Andrews. 842-
7364 or room 204 Learned Hall. 10-8
68 VW. Needs engine work. Make best offer.
Call anytime. 814-2007. 10-8
1975 Cimalli Italian Italian 60cc, 180 miles per gallon, Low miles, $300; Call 814-7814. 10-74
LOST AND FOUND
Found: University of Pittsburgh class ring, 1897. Found in the McGraw-Hill library. Found in front of Newtown. Call 643-2599.
Found: Hand calculator on campus. Identify:
Call. Bob. 844-5772. 10-6
Found: Key chain behind Union on Miss. Call and Identify 842-5198, Ask for Koehring. 10-6
To lost: Black Labrador puppy = 5 months; Answers
Mottle: 843-1825 or 843-6922.
10-6
Found: Key on chain at 1321 Mass. Describe when you call. 841-5274. 10-6
Lott. One pair of copper wire tirm glasses, in Lott's 1938 design with a visibility on a 9-12-inch table, please call 842-929-0888. 10-8
Found: Palm of gold rim glasses. Call Greg 841-1073
6875 after 5:00.
Found a key on safety pin in O-Zone. Identify by number. call 824-2012. 10-7
heart-Tiger's eye bracelet, 6 brown stones. Please return it. Large reward. B443-4500. 844-3500.
KWIKI CAR WASH
Bello is Lost. We want him hone his 'T-tolerated
ability.' In 1959, Bello was a child, and in 1968,
his girlfriend Chip'd his pals. Please keep
him at home. He's not going to be able to
go back.
KWIKI CAR WASH
612 N. 2nd St.
2 Blocks North
of Kaw River Bridge
FOUND-White & Black Scotter Terrier with Red coat at Stadium. If you'd like a white coat, 842-320-5930.
Self Service or Brush Wash
FOUND: Girl's Jacket, blue corduroy, Nalmish, 10-7
Sunnyide. Call 843-2856.
Urgent! Lot two rings on cane tie, one pearl,
one class ring. Reward-马利. 643-610. 10-7
Found near Alamut Place, extraordinarily friend-
able. He is an avid golfer and a funni-
ber cool. Winter call: Aliyah at 843-684. 10-8
Set of keys found West of Maidow. Call 941-6973
-10.8
PERSONAL
Found: Tan check book in 9th and Mia. areas.
Bullet 841 - 3007.
10-8
Natural, organic grains, flakes, flour, Pasta.
Milk, cheese. For use in the meal or for the
meal or in-bag. Calendula seasoning herbs
and/or tomato paste. Combine Cornstarch's Natural Foods, 455 Indiana, 84 Tuson Square, Indianapolis, IN. Supported by a Branch of Lehmann Farms, Lyndon, Kansas.
Open Discussion group on non-traditional mar-
kets. 2 p.m., Planetary, 1200 Earl Street,
8:00 p.m., Planetary, 1200 Earl Street.
The Sanctuary is planning an arts and craft show. Display your original paintings, jewelry, handmade items, or sculptures of the deck at the Sanctuary. No charge for exhibit space. For arrangements, call 843-808-2765.
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION; Meeting first
public hearing on 2018-03-27, Office OF
UMN, 1044, 654-394. Socialization at
UMN, 1044, 654-394.
NNEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC—Beginning thru advanced lessons in folk, rock, and classical guitar, banjo, mandolin, trombone, etc. Great teachers, readiness to teach. Manson Stringed Bands, 841-0817.
**Help!** Doing articles on Kansas Backpacking/
ideas, tips or experiences 842-325-8 Keepying
up on the latest news!
Smokers who want to stop and interested in the Lawrence Smoking Clinic but were unable to attend our first sessions please call 412-4178 or 8th at 7 a.p. from 347 Frir Tuesday, Oct. 16 to 7 a.p.
Waltham for the Royal Lighttenham is ring side-
room, with room to 150 p.m.; lounge of
easten of Allen Field House.
Le macrophon
Do The LEGWORK For You!
(NEVER an extra cost
for Airline tickets)
Robert—thank you for being so good to me. 10-8
WANTED
If You're Planning on FLYING,
I make roommate to share furnished jet. Jeg-
wrote a message from me on Friday more
information call 845-440-1266 at p. 10. tpm.
2 females to share 3 bedroom townhouse with 1 other girl 77:50.14:21-7444 Monday-Saturday-10:7
4 football tickets to the KU-Nebraska game. Call 841-208-81.
10-6
Need home for 2 year old black cat. Spayed, very playful, affectionate. 842-7548. 10-9
Married engineer student needs place to live during weees. Write John Gravelle, 113 Vermont.
Roommate for furnished 2-bedroom apt, newma-
nage, $87.50 month, call after 5-Modaleen, na-
mage.
SUA / Maupintour travel service
PHONE 843-1211
Madonna Indian Shop
For the Finest in
Authentic, Handcrafted
Indian Jewelry,
Arts and Crafts
19 W. 9th
10:5:30 Daily
Thursdays 'til 8
Make your
JOLI
& Christmas
Bike
Reservations
Thanksgiving
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass.
Compliments of KURA
now.
9th & Iowa
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
(KU Religious Advisors)
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
the Royal Lichtenstein
Watch for . . .
14 ring sidewalk circus.
October 7
mime, and merriment"
"a menagerie of magic
12:00 noon to 1:00 p.m.
on the lawn east of
Allen Field House.
Shut-in graduate student has war games, wants
boutics. Call 842-6073. 10-9
Load Singer, Aggressive & Energetic; wanted for
New York City. Must have a bachelor's degree;
is of essence. Jobs are airless sided. John.
Watson.
Wanted: One roommate to share a three bedroom, 1/2 bath, new duplex with two other students. 1/2 bath plus multi-unit kitchen. Knitted furniture. We want a party, must be cool. I feel 10-7 841-4294 104-1294
One used Hx-Gain CB side band 68 channel unit.
Five watt. Hd-843-3592
10-7
Quietly, he camped, backpacking equipment.
Circle Q19-32 and 45-47, for a day off to write to a 418 N. Jersey-
Junction City Hall, where he wrote to a 418 N. Jersey-Jou-
ney City Hall, where he wrote to a 418 N. Jersey-Jou
FOR RENT
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of renting房源 in Lawrence, Lawrences. Availability #8582.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in or pick up from our office, please call phone, 'at' WEBSITES (preserve this phone call), phone: 'at' WEBSITE (preserve this phone call), phone: 'at' WEBSITE (preserve this phone call)
Apartment furnished, wall-to-wall carpet, paint. Bathroom, corner borders RU. Kitchen, down no. Pte. 842-575-7000.
2 bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, A/C system,
free parking, free laundry, insurance (1000)
insurance, fire alarm.
Must substel efficiency apartment. Frontier Ridge apartments. Call 841-7794. 10-6
TRADE-2 bd. house, $130 for 2 bd. house,
$290 range, 842-804 after 5.
10-7
Wanted to sublease (Immiled 1) bedroom Park 25.
Apt. Gc1, Calif., MIPS
For Rent: Sublease room at Nalimah Hall Immediately. Everything paid, $414.01, 188-96
For Rest; 1 lbdm. apartment, Furnished, paid
willies. Close Home $160. Cabi 841-323-2500.
TYPING
THIS IS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is one of the most popular and secure copy centers. Our purpose is to provide free and private copies for you. All of our files are protected by a number of security features.
Experienced typist, IBM LECT. thesis, disks,
hardware and term paper. Call Pam Jemm.
843-759-709.
Typing—experienced in dissortations, thesis, and computer science. Grades 9, 10, 11, 12. carbon ribbon. Calib. Labs. 843-6058.
Experienced typist -二字, paper, theses, mice.
Excellent writing skills. Spelling, spelling
correct. *843-684*, Mrs. Wright.
*D*
Professional typing, unimaginable perl type electric
typewriter, B.A. Scaled Science, work guaranty,
innovation consulting, 600 hours at 65e per
week until Nov. 20, then 70e remainder of
semester. Carol, 842-0724.
10-7
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & Mass.
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
Food Stamps Accepted 8-4 Tues., Thurs., Sat.
CONNIE'S NATURAL FOODS 425 Indiana
CONNIE'S
bengals IN THE
Gifts and Jewelry 803 Mass. Mast.
EDITING and TYPING. Prompt, exploit, report
the data stored in your system. Reasonable rates. Call: 842-9137. 15-10
Typing-experienced in dissertations, theses, and book reviews. Specializes in carbon, plastic, carbon Call. Lisle, 843-908-9888
SERVICES OFFERED
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Priced, professional quality. Stones cut and polished. Slimmer cut and polished. Turquoise, Saffron, Amber.
MEN-GET THE HAIR STYLE YOU WANT FOR APP14 W. 10th, W. 20TH & MAINE APP14 W. 10th, W. 20TH & MAINE
MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutor
56, 102, 105, 106, 109, 110, 111, 118, 119, 121, 122,
123, 124, 141, 143, 366, 558; One-time test prep-
classes. Reasonable rates. Chesapeake
843-7681.
NOTICE
CORT PLUS 18% - Stereo equipment. All major
compatibilities. (Usually for DSLRs) Phone or
packages. Call Dave, Phone 650-324-9711
Rent a piano, or semester basis. Law-
rent Piano Rental, 843-3008.
www.lawrentpiano.com
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Use do your printing while you wait at The Quick Copy Center. We have 4900 copies ~$5.50 copies ~$4.10, 1,000 copies ~$4.00 want your business at the Quick Copy Center.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
tickets. Send $12 for your up-to-date 160 page,
mime order catalog. Research Assistance,
Research Assistance, 2036, Los Angeles, CA; 900535 (212)
477-8744.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personal Portraits in natural surroundings. Weddings, portfolios, and commercial photography. 811-249-3060, www.specialize.com. 811-249-3060, www.specialize.com. 811-249-3060, www.specialize.com. 811-249-3060, www.specialize.com. 811-249-3060, www.specialize.com. 811-249-3060, www.specialize.com.
HASKELL HOMECOMING
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, tables, telephones, televisions. Open daily. 12h, 18h, 14h-37h. 184-337-377
INDIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS SHOW
UCH
730 Massachusetts
Open 12:5:30 M-F 10:5:30 SaF.
HALFAS NUGGET
FREE ADMISSION
PUBLIC IS WELCOME
the earth is one country . . . . . . . and mankind its citizens
Bahai meetings Monday--7,30 p.m.
Resency Room
Bohái Faith
October 11 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
October 12 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
etings Monday----7:30 p.m.
Regency Room
Karen's Bridal Shoppe
12th Minnesota
Lawrence, Kansas
a quiet corner
Phones 842-0056
Phone 822-0056 By appointment only
KAREN BARNES, owner Closed Friday
THE LOUNGE
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Ride-On
Bicycles
Best prices, service, selection
1401 Massachusetts
862-3444
Open Mon.-Fri. 10-6, Sat. 10-5
740 Massachusetts
AWRENCE
URPLUS
HELP WANTED
"The home of Levi's Jeans"
Part-time program coordinator to implement eIT education for American community, Kansas City, KA, Burlingham/hicultural, valuable asset for applicant. Workshops for citizen education desired. Primary duties involve setting up a class of consumer education officers in American-Mexicaners in an area. Applicant must possess two years of experience applying possibly more. Application deadline Oct 30. Contact Sister Elva Ranier, Spanish-Speaking Contact Sister Elva Ranier, Spanish-Speaking Tel. 913-625-8432. QUALIFIED MEN AND WOMEN ALL HACES ARE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY.
FOOD
TUTOR
THE CATFISH BAR & GRILL is serving ham-
burgers, roast beef sandwiches, grilled ham and
eggs. The menu includes 11:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. Pitcher $1.49 a Mon-Fri.
Sunday breakfast 8 a.m.-2 p.m. Fri-
10-7
ENTERTAINMENT
Tuxedo needed for business 802 (Ecomerci) or
phone: 561-296-5688 after 5 a.m.
Ask for Bill.
RIDES ----- RIDERS
Horseback and Hayrack riding, 16 miles west on
Hailow 40, 87-400. Spencer. 19-31
Anyone interested in forming a carpool from Jeff. Co. to the KU campus contact 774-8256. 10:10
POTION PARLOR
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEF-LEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CENTERED
15 East 8th 041-2656
10.5 Monday: Saturday
POTION PARLOR Formerly Body Bizarre
BOKONNY
1835 Worthing Lichfield Knares
819 Vermont.
Fine Service
ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hardcover and paperback books for all ages and interests—Children's books a specialty—Magazine subscriptions—Out-of-print books searched—Personal attention to special orders.
Hillcrest Shopping Center
9th & Iowa 843-6424
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
George's Shop
After 25 years, if George doesn't have it, he will make it.
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
YAMAHA
CR1000 RECEIVER
the GRAMO PHONE shop YP-800 TURN TABLE
at the rear of
KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544 SAVINGS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
Friday, October 24,1975
University Daily Kansan
9
PENNY
Staff Photo
Video aid
An electronics technician for visual aids demonstrates the department's new video tape system in a storage room in Bailley
Hall. The department offers a wide variety of visual aid equipment available for classroom use.
Teaching . . .
From page one
academic affairs, said he didn't think the teachers methods for most teachers had
"For a while in the '60s there was something of a shift from the lecture method to greater student participation and student-led discussion," he said. "There's probably a shift in the opposite direction now."
Ross Wulfkule, manager for campus film services, said there had been a gradual increase in the use of all audio-visual materials over the past few years.
Bricker said he was introducing some slide and sound materials into his classes. He said the materials would be used by groups of students to learn single concepts.
Slide projectors, cassette tape recorders and overhead projectors are also being used more, he said. Many different departments use the equipment, he said. The present equipment isn't adequate to meet the increased demands, he said.
"From 27 to 30 classes a day use films" he said. "It would be a lot more if we had the money to buy or rent more films. We rent them for free." But we could use double our present rentals.
"Use of the materials will be up to the individual," he said. "We're going to publish when the presentations will be given. Each will be given six or seven times a week so that if a student wants to, he can see a presentation more than once."
Other teaching aids are also being utilized at KU.
Karl Rosen, associate professor of
classics, said his first and second semester
TAs, AIs
From page eight
The reason for the large number of TAs and AIs is a rapid increase in business school enrollment, according to Tollson. The total enrollment in business courses has increased by 50 per cent in the past three years, said, but resources are still limited.
Tollefson said that if the School of Business didn't need to hire so many graduate students, it could be more cost-effective, and one of the TA-AI program could improve.
He said he thought students often felt cheated by not having professors as well as teachers.
Although many AIs know the material and can present it well, he said, students deserve more contact with faculty members who have greater experience.
Most of the faculty members interviewed said they had never received complaints from students who resented having graduate students as teachers.
Tollefson said he had no problems with Als or ASs neglecting their teaching duties, but their first obligation was always to their own work. They may be tempted to view their teaching job as secondary, he said, which leaves students at a disadvantage.
Cobb said that each year, graduating seniors in the college were asked to list their most effective teachers and that many of them would be brought enthusiasm and zeal to their jobs.
Gowen said that on the basis of Curriculum and Instruction Survey results, full time professors didn't rate much higher than graduate students.
"I can't seriously believe all AIs are great teachers," Donaldson said. "But undergraduates say different things about AIs in different contexts, general and specific. In a particular context, a particular AIS their evaluations are not much lower than those for professors."
Vicki Asbury, an AI in philosophy who was formerly an AI in Western Civilization, said, "I still think the reason I became interested in philosophy was because I had not studied AI. As in introductory philosophy, They had much more time to devote to me."
Absurd she said she thought students were sometimes dissatisfied with the way the University system was set up to place the burden on the student. Ateacher is there to help, but it's not her job, and the student, she said, so it makes no difference whether the teacher is a professor or a TA.
---
Russell said that all the Als he had known made up in enthusiasm and interest what they lacked in experience. Professors don't like to teach introductory English courses, because they have other interests and Alas we'lling to spend more time with students.
Russell said he spent 50 to 55 hours a week on the classes he taught.
"When I had AIs as teachers," he said, "was early in college. I felt I should have had professors, but when I got professors I realized the AIs I'd had were competent."
Lazi said that having a full professor teach an introductory course would mean putting him in a lecture course for 300 or 400 people. The smaller courses use TAs, he said, which are more beneficial to students because of the increased personal contact.
Jeff Brunton, Topeka junior, said he thought that a professor was a better teacher than a graduate student 80 per cent of the time.
"I didn't feel cheated at the time I had TAS and Alf's," he said. "But when I was then in class next to me instead of up in front teaching, I began to wonder."
Susie Kulp, Prairie Village freshman, said she was pleased with all her teachers, both graduate students and professors. She also graduated from professor courses more interesting to her, in examples, she didn't think had as much time to devote to students as graduate students did.
Susan Barker, Dallas sophomore, said she thought professors were more well read than graduate students and were able to bring outside material into their lectures. However, she said, most of her graduate teachers had been good.
Jeff Jones, Leawood senior, said he objected to graduate students teaching who didn't have master's degrees. TAs and Al would be close to getting their Ph.D., she said.
"I think it is unfair that you don't have the option of taking a course under graduate training."
In Accounting I, Jones said, he had a professor who lectured and a TA who covered the homework in small discussion courses. He said a viable option for many courses, he said.
Because graduate students don't often know how to present material in the most interesting way, he said, they can make students lose interest in a subject from the start.
Brunton said he didn't think TAs and AIs were more enthusiastic about teaching because introductory courses were all fun. But the fact that I was hard to be enthusiastic about them.
A brilliant teacher isn't always necessary in beginning courses, Brunton said. However, he said, students need a common teacher and they don't always get one.
"A TA is a substitute teacher in grade
he said, "You can go away with
anything."
Buy a '75 rabbit and a 2 year guarantee and get lower prices -24,000 mile
rabbit by Volkswagen
Jayhawk VOLKSWAGEN XL
Raney Drugs
Hillcrest-Dillon's Plaza-Downtown
P.
Rebecca Slater
AUTUMN FAVORITES
Russell Stover
AUTUMN FAVORITES
(1LB. 6 OZ5). REG. $4 50
OCT. 16-31...$3 59
One-a-year special… Russell Sweet AUTUMN FAVORITES. A selected sampling of famous creams, in milk chocolate, dark chocolate, chocolate and brittle of delicious goods, registered $4.50, $40.99
Lawrence Sherr, professor of business, said he had used programs for basic probability and statistics problems for four years.
Hugh said, "From Feedback, I think the students think, 'I'm embaskillable, about taking responsibility.'"
Latin students did vocabulary drills at computer terminals.
Even though it's difficult to evaluate teachers and the methods, people have been working with it.
"Grade these professors on their lectures, on the effectiveness of their quizzes, on their punctuality, on the preparation of their assignments, on the appearance and on their personality . . ."
"I wouldn't undertake to say it's perfectly designed, though I don't know what changes
A Kansan edition of April 15, 1938, read,
"Raise your thumb to your nose in answer
to the system under which you are enslaved.
Ratalite in like manner and GRADE
OPPRESSORS! If they can wield the
scepter of such a false law, you too are
capable.
McNish said he had benefited from the curriculum and instruction survey,
"They always seem to think I'm interested in them. I think the student is an important guy. The most important guy at KU is the student."
Perhaps in another 35 years, KU's帷幕 will ask the same question asked by GF.
He said, "Why should this faculty not be constantly discussing, in its meetings, the methods by which we can learn from our previous discipline? Is it a matter too sacred for academic freedom?"
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10
Friday, October 24, 1975
心 口
University Dally Kansan
Students in the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program spend at least one night a week star gazing. Staff Photos by DAVID CRENSHAN
Engineering class converts car
The dream of conservationists and the nightmare of large oil companies is being designed by students in Electrical Engineering
Instead of solving textbook problems, the class is converting a 1965 MG automobile from gas to electric power.
"The course is to help the students engineering design and practice," says Dale Rummer, associate professor of electrical engineering.
Kein Fullerton, Overland Park senior, said that this class was different than any other he had taken.
"We try to give the students some idea what engineering practice is going to be like when they graduate." he said. "The emphasis is on practical experience."
*
"Here you have the whole class working on one project as opposed to a lot of individual projects," he said.
Greg Ormiston, Kismet senior, described the class as interesting and useful.
"It gives us more of a taste of what we will be doing when we graduate, other than just doing problems," he said.
Dave Corbin, Overland Park junior said that the team work aspect was the most important part of the class.
"All design now is done by teams, that way you get more opinions and lots of ideas," he said.
"The class is stimulating, for the first time we are in a situation where we have a given idea and were told what to do and actually get to do it." Corbin said.
He said that he expected the car would be in some working order by the end of the semester. Modifications and refinements would continue to be made, perhaps over the next two or three semesters, Summer said.
Fullerton expressed the interest in the project shown by the class on Friday and was on the project next semester, but I would like to keep an eye on it.
If you want to learn how to defeat your opponent in a karate match or win a weekend sailboat regatta, a course in cybermetics may be your best bet.
Cybernetics practical, popular at KU
Cybernetics, which may be studied at the University after completion of an introductory course in computer science, develop an environment of an intricate computer model.
the course has been team-taught for the past four years by Robert Numley, professor of geography, and Robert Haralick, professor of electrical engineering.
Karate and sailing are just two of the projects being studied this fall. Other students are studying football plays and still others are deliving into transactional analysis determining what responses the type of people would make in given situations.
Haralick defines the course as a study of the rules that govern the behavior of things. Haralick is also one of the most popular
students in the class would like them to be,
he said.
There are no tests and no homework. But Haralick said his students were busy, and would be especially so as the semester neared an end.
"We don't expect the regurgitation of facts," he said. "Our learning mode is a little different. It has great value in the sense of discovery."
In that class, students who have never worked with computers before are using them to study such things as the economical and political relationships between cities, and the relationships between weather fronts and atmospheric pressure zones.
Nunley also has applied that same concept of student discovery to his introductory course.
Nunley said that he aimed for student involvement in his classes, and traditionally had encouraged students to do individual projects.
"pressure they're being turned on," he
said, but that hasn't been the case all
armesets.
Students turn to the stars
On clear nights, students in the program complement their study of poetry with a variety of art forms.
When it comes to curriculum in the humanities, Humanities Program, the skyl is the limit.
The Pearson program, a four-semester, freshman-sophomore sequence of courses, is an integrated study of all the humanities, with particular emphasis on poetry, philosophy and history. Dennis Quinn, Ph.D., president of the conjective of the Pearson program was to offer students a total picture of the development of Western Civilization.
So the question is: What do the stars have to do with Western Civilization?
Quinn said that all philosophy originated by looking at the stars. The stars caused wonderment, he said, and wonder was the beginning of the desire to know.
The Pearson program follows the principles of education used by the ancient Greeks, and is widely used in higher education.
called muses, comprised an ancient student's education, he said, and the muse of astronomy was one of the early stages of a student's education. A study of the stars then led to higher, more advanced studies, he said.
Stargazing in the program isn't regularly scheduled. Whenever the students want to expand on their sessions of poetry reading, Quinn said, they turn to the stars.
Observing the night sky in this manner differs from modern astronomy, according to Quinn. Modern astronomy takes a purely scientific approach to studying the stars, he said, but the Pearson program makes a poetic study of the constellations.
Tarnower said that the student recited poetry before the stargazing sessions, but he didn't know how to do it.
According to Jean Tarnower, a student assistant in poetry in the program, the stars of her work were as follows.
"They love it," she said. "It's fun to see figures in the stars."
the constellations. But she said that reciting
poetry and learning experiences,
would be a better experience.
A session is usually devoted to one constellation, she said, because the stories are quite long. But sometimes one story will include the stories of other constellations, she said, so the students learn more than just the one.
Quinn said that students could simply read about the stargazing of the ancient Greeks, but to actually view the constellations first-hand meant much more to
At a given stargazing tarnower, Tarnower said, the students meet in a country field outside of Lawrence. Either Tarnower or Baxter Xueh, another student assistant, tell the story behind a constellation and then help the students to sight the star pattern.
She said the students seemed to enjoy sitting and watching the skies.
"When they see a constellation they recognize, it's exciting." she said. "It's very exciting to be in that space."
TREBOR
Students in Electrical Engineering 490 have begun work on conversion of this car from gas to electric power.
Legion of profs teach of Rome
That may seem like a lot of topics for one course to cover, but when you're talking about Rome, you're talking about a lot of history.
The course, "Biography of a City—Rome," is coordinated by James E. Seaver, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program. It is a joint
During this semester, one University history course will host 10 professors from such fields as law, architecture, music, art, literature and, of course, history.
It's chins up for women in this class
"Women are the weaker sex," says a notion as old as the history of men—or women.
But a different attitude is developing in the University's department of health, physical education and recreation: A woman's place is in the weight room.
Mike Chapman, a teaching assistant in the department, says he tried to have his students do as much as they could, no matter who they were.
Chapman teaches four physical fitness classes that require weight training. Although the classes are listed as men's sections in the class timetable and the handbook, nine women run, beave and grimace through his programs every week.
The women in Chapman's classes are asked to do whatever they can of the men's class. They don't need them, and once they can't do, for instance, Chapman said, most women can't chin-ups. He said instead of doing five chin-ups, the women would practice the "lat" machine and practice with the "lat" machine.
The "list" machine is a bar attached to an amount of weight the user can vary from 10 to 200 pounds. When the user pulls the bar down to his chest, the same muscles are used as if he were pulling himself up on a chinning bar.
All the specialists on Rome who were at the University were gathered, Saver said.
Alternatives for women are provided for seven steps of the 11-step conditioning program. However, women frequently find it difficult to follow an easier one in provided, Chapman said.
"I deals with the life of the city, all the people who lived there, all the famous things that were done and on so," Seaver says. The course, which meets each Thursday night,
reason women shouldn't try as hard as some of the men do.
Chapman said that this semester was the first in which he had taught women. He said learning to expect as much work from women as from men had been difficult.
Lori Aldridge, Salina junior, is in a class of 16 men and three women. She said being
effect of the humanities program and the departments of history and art history.
"I don't want them to think I'm in there going off," she said. "I want them to think."
"I'm impressed with the efforts the women put out" he said. "It's a learning experience."
Chapman said men generally reacted favorably to the presence of women in the workplace.
Women's performances differ from men's in more exercises for the upper body than in
exercises for other parts of the body,
Chapman said. Women have more trouble
doing push-ups and chin-ups, he said, and
also need to lift weights in the bench
press and military press.
"The guys are impressed that the gals are there," he said.
In the beginning, each instructor tried to lecture for an entire class session, Seaver said, but that proved to be too difficult for the instructors. Now there are two instructors each night, he said, and each teaches a different topic.
Charles H. Kahn, dean of the School of Architecture and Urban Design, said a favorable aspect of the course was that it included a case study to look at Rome with varied viewpoints.
"The instructors have been wonderfully cooperative and kind in helping out," Seaver said. "Since it's a team effort, none of us will be making the amount of time with the course."
Kahn, who lectures on architecturally
"One of the ideas is that if you get people interested enough in the culture and history of a London or Paris or Rome, they may want to so do."
Most of the course involves lecture presentations complemented with slides, movies and records, he said. There is also a period after each topic presentation for the students to discuss the material or ask questions.
“It’s really a lot of fun, both for the people who are giving the course and for the students,” Seaver said. “It’s worked out remarkably well.
related topics, said student reaction to the course had been good.
Seaver said that near the end of the semester, a panel of four or five instructors would discuss the concept of Rome for the class. The role of the instructor is almost as important as the city itself."
Seaver said the course had been more successful each year. Fifty students are enrolled this year, compared with 30 students the first year the course was of
What do the students think of the course?
"I think it 'terrific," said Karen Zim-
Staff Photo by GEORGE MILLENER
EXIT
A joke from a fellow weight lifter brings a smile to Halle Utter, Augusta junior, during a workout at the weight training room in Robinson Gym.
"It's never dull because we're getting so many aspects of the city," Zimmerman said.
merer, Lawrence special student. "I really like it.
watching slides of different things such as sculpture, architecture and art, she said.
"I can make you synthetic orange juice," he said. "If you don't want that I can make it prume juice or even Vodka, if you please."
Bricker then he makes lead resound like metal used or by freezing the lead in air (dilutes).
"History can really be uninteresting." Zimmerer said. "This way, with history and law and art and everything combined, it's much better."
Everyone has heard of the class clown, and the chemistry department at the University of Kansas has a professor who likes to play the role.
Chem prof mixes tricks with lecture
On the last day of class, however, Bricker dresses an atlantic stairman or Sunburst skirt.
"I try to review rather rapidly the whole year's chemistry course with some rather quicker books," she said.
One of the more popular tricks is when he makes a home insulation material that looks "like porridge growing out of a kettle." Bricker said.
"Of course I have a lot of fun doing this, it's not very serious," he said.
In addition to the classroom show, Bricker also "perform" for elementary schoolers at the Edna A. Hill Child Development Laboratories in Haworth
During fall semester finals last year, students were treated to a brief interruption by Santa Claus, complete with candy canes and Christmas music.
"Three hours is a long time for students to sit there and take an exam," said Bricker. "We bring Santa Claus out to liven things up a bit."
1
8
15. (2) $x = \frac{1}{2}, y = -\frac{3}{4}$
Monday, October 6, 1975
University Dally Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.31
October 7,1975
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
100
Struna out
a piece of string and a little ingenuity make for a few laughs in front of *Storm Hall* for *Pul Calphun*, associate professor of
history, and his daughters Karl and Kriten. The Paladians were waiting for a ride home yesterday when they found the piece of
Deans generally pleased with enrollment figures
By GREG HACK
Staff Writer
Deans at the University of Kansas were generally pleased yesterday by the announcement of enrollment figures for their schools.
"It it's bittersweet," he said of the increase. "and much rather have students love us and not worry about it. However, the greater enrollment makes longer lines and big classes and shorter ones."
Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said the college's 11,953 students represented an increase of more than 9,000 credit hours.
HE SAID THE COLLEGE hadn't taken any specific steps to increase enrollment other than having tried to offer classes that students wanted and needed. Classes are response to demand, he said, rather than on the hope that students will fill them.
Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, said the school's undergraduate enrollment of 650 was a substantial increase over last fall.
"It's always encouraging to know there are persons who want to enter the school and who are coming in to study journalism," he said. "However, the increase could be bad if we don't get the support we need to meet the increase."
Formal faculty evaluation studied
Staff Writer
He said that KU had recently considered a more formalized system. Although the meeting was a preliminary toward discussion of increased formalization, he said KU might start new evaluation procedures within the year.
By ALISON GWINN
Although there is a move away from the subjective, informal evaluation of faculty performance in research evaluations would be difficult to standardize, according to Five University of Kansas
Ronald Calgaard, vice censorforl for academic affairs, said yesterday deans discussed the possibility of a more formalized model of education at the Council of Deams会议 yesterday.
DEL BRINKMAN, DEAN of the School of Journalism, said "Our discussion was just informal and informative. The discussion was very preliminary. All we really decided was that what we do now needs to be more formal so that they can really see what we're being evaluated for."
Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, said his school had used a formalized system of evaluation for seven or eight years.
Brinkman said he didn't think the formalization of faculty evaluation criteria would change the criteria or the evaluations in any way.
Faculty members are evaluated every year for merit salary increases and whenever they come up for promotion and tenure, he said.
Although Pichler said criteria should be somewhat standardized throughout the University, different criteria would have to be differently in different schools and departments.
Every faculty member in the School of Business receives an annual review of his teaching, research and service, he said, and every member committee chosen from the school.
PICHLER SAID HE thought that the evaluations used for promotion and tenure were relevant to salary increases. The results of his studies uses similar evaluations for both, he said.
Sciences into the School of Business," he said, even though various departments under the College might require evaluations similar to those of the School of Business.
Pichler used the example of performance, which he said must be weighted heavily in the School of Fine Arts, but which wouldn't count as professor working an accounting problem.
What constitutes good research work, good service or good teaching may differ from the other.
He said the University would harm departments if the particularizations of criteria evaluations were enforced universally.
"It would be foobardy to smash criteria from the College of Liberal Arts and
Faculty members who must be evaluated
ROBERT COBEN, DSE of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that institutions nationally were moving toward more formalized systems of evaluation.
He said the College had an infinite number of choices and prospects for criteria and criteria to be used.
don't perform in the same ways, Cobb said, and the uniformity of evaluations would not improve.
"I don't think we'll ever get to the point of a 10-page checklist of evaluations criteria," he said. "It will always be subjective to a point."
Although he said the development of criteria was uniformly necessary, the criteria were not only based on
Most evaluations are done within each department by a faculty member's peer
ure and salary increases were given. Because of that, institutions are bound to move toward more systematic and tangleful solutions, and away from intuitive ones, be said.
Lawrence Police are investigating the cause of death of a 23-year-old University of Kansas student who was found dead early morning at the Holiday Inn, 2300 Iowa St.
Cobb defined evaluations as cumulative assessments done by the colleagues of a faculty member, and as a constant reappraisal of the University's staff.
COBB SAID HE WAS more interested that people in departments continued self-evaluations rather than that they be evaluated by their peers.
"It's not the checking-up, but the setting of goals that I'm concerned with," he said.
Smith said the School of Engineering would continue emphasizing formal student work.
Student's death being checked
William Smith, the school of the Engineering, said he thought that the University would use more standardized criteria, but it could use specific University-wide criteria.
However, he said that people across the nation wanted to know why promotions, ten
THE SCHOOL HAS developed 36 concentrations with other parts of the University, he said, offering more flexibility. A concentration is a major combining business courses with study in another area of the University.
WILLIAM SMITH, DEAN of the School of Engineering, said the school's undergraduate enrollment of 1,262 represented an increase per cent over last year, increased of a national trend of increasing engineering school enrollments, he said.
He attributed the increase to "a super school with a superb faculty," greater flexibility in major sequences and an effort to expand the graduate business program.
He said the 98 women enrolled in the school was a very substantial increase. He added that 1 per cent of total engineering enrollment, but, now, are 5 to 6 per cent.
The body of Douglas Dickinson, Fairway freshman, was discovered at about 9:30 a.m. yesterday by employees of the motel, according to the police.
He said the increase was "more than meets the eye" because enrollment in the two years had included more than 100沸腾,但 this fall's figure included almost none.
See FACULTY page three
Smith said the decline of the aerospace industry in the late '60s had led many people to think that employment opportunities in engineering were bad.
The high rate of unemployment has made students more job conscious, he said. This, combined with the lack of jobs, is driving down
"Employment opportunities are good in engineering and people are starting to get jobs in engineering enrolments dropped in the early 70s, so we're regaining lost land now."
Sen. Bayh to speak at KU on Oct. 23
L1. Kerneth Harrison said details of the death wouldn't be released until a coroner's report is published.
Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, said enrollment in the school had increased 16 per cent over last year and more than 30 per cent in the last two years.
Enrollment totals for other schools were:
Architecture and Urban Design, 447; Fine
Arts, 501; Computer Science, 682;
Social Welfare, 528; Intensive English
Center, 211; and special studies, 679.
Lawrence Price, Douglas County coroner,
said his investigation could take as much as
two weeks while a chemical analysis of the
victim's blood and body tissues was made.
Pichler said he was also "delighted" by the increased interest of women in business. 152 of the school's 822 undergraduates are women.
DALE SCANNELL, DEAN of the School of Education, said the school's undergraduate enrollment of 1,493 was less than last year. However, total credit hours offered by the school increased about 5 per year because graduate and continuing education colleges increased. There are 1,430 graduate students in the school this fall.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind, and an unannounced candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination, will speak Oct. 23 at the University of Kansas.
program, has increased business enrollment, he said.
"I don't see any real problems in making the needs of education students this year."
According to Brad Bradley, SUA forms chairman, Bayh will stop at the University while enroute to a fund-raising dinner in Topeka.
Bradley said Bayh would make a speech and answer questions at 3:59 p.m. in the answer room.
His appearance is co-sponsored by the KU Young Democrats, Bradley said.
The administrator for Douglas County's first community development grant was chosen because of his familiarity with the county commissioner, said yesterday.
County grant administrator chosen on local know-how
The commission chose Ernest Coleman
Management program demonstrated at KU
University of Kansas officials will show other state schools today the first step in beginning a federal budgeting, planning and management program.
KU's computerized instructional workload matrix, which has been developed during the past month, will be shown to the schools as a step toward the use of procedure developed by the National HSE Institute and supported systems (NCHEMS), James Hite, associate director of the Office of Institutional Research and Planning, said yesterday.
The matrix is a series of tabulations that show which courses are taken by various majors. The tabulations also show which courses are offered for nominals in a department.
"That's just the very simple beginning step in understanding a complex university." Hitt said, "because that's what a university is all about."
Last spring, the Board of Regents asked the six state schools to change to NCHESM procedures, Shankel said, because the state school system requires that students assess programs at the state schools.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, said NCHEMS was developed in 1965 primarily to improve information management systems in higher education, so that they would be able to compare their programs and their budgets through common criteria.
Max Bickford, executive secretary of the Regents and a member of the CHEMES board of directors, said there was every indication that NCHEMS procedures would become a common way to manage colleges and universities. He said the Regents thought Kansas schools should start the system now.
Since then, KU's Office of Institutional Research and Planning has been studying the costs and procedures of NCHEMS, he said.
Bickford said NCHEMS procedures were designed to define common elements within institutions and to enable schools to make comparable reports.
He said NCHEMS procedures would affect all data an institution used in its processes, including data in the registrar's offices, deans' offices and administrators' offices.
Shankel said KU would have some problems switching to NCHEMS procedures. The procedures frequently aren't application-ready in universities which are involved in research, and statewide services that are hard to estimate in monetary terms, he said.
"How do you assess the costs of various service programs?" he said. "Many services are unrelated to the number of students KU has."
At a meeting last week with Kansas State University officials, problems of budgeting such programs as the Museum of Natural History were discussed. Child Research were discussed, he said.
Hitt said if the preliminary studies of NCHEMS were comparable to attending college and the implementation of NCHEMS procedures was comparable to holding a job, then KU hadn't graduated vet.
Sahnelked the switch to NCHEMS procedures wouldn't alter KU's budgets, but would probably alter the format in which he presented it presented to the Regents and the legislature.
He said that NCHEMS budgeting would probably be more accurate and provide more complete justifications for budget requests.
"I hope that it will show that we are operating a high-quality educational system at the highest levels."
Academic programming shouldn't be affected directly by NCHEMS, he said, except possibly through the comparison of KU's programs with those of other schools.
Hitt said he didn't know whether NCHEMS would improve or deteriorate academic programs. If better budgeting means more money and better academic programs, then academics can be helped by NCHEMS, he said, but if all schools use NCHEMS procedures, then academic programs may not be helped.
LAKESIDE
Concentration
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
Wayne Gaul, Severance special student, concentrates on the play of his defensive unit during an intramural football game between the Big-T Boys and the Pocket Rockets
for the position. He has been county federal funds consultant since 1973.
"our support and communication with Mr. Coleman are strong." Whitenight said. "He has interest in the community and a lot of contacts."
Coleman was one of two final choices for the position. The other consultant consulted by the commission was Ochser and Association Planning Consultants of Kansas City, Mo.
WHITENIGHT SAID he expected no conflict of interest in the county government.
"I think we'll be able to separate the functions without any difficulty," he said. "Even if there are problems in separating them, we will get a lot more for our money with Erie."
Housing rehabilitation is one of the projects to be funded by the community development funds. Coleman said his experience in obtaining federal funds would have made him more qualified for people whose homes didn't quality for community development funds.
Coleman said he would have a meeting every month in a different town in the city for this year's grant could be discussed, and to prepare for next year's application.
Coleman's experience will enable him to equitably through the county. Whitenight savals it.
ANOTHER RESPONSIBILITY Coleman who has is applying for the funds again next
Coleman said community development funds were granted to counties for projects in southern Florida.
Whether the county will receive the grant next year will depend on what the county does with the funds this year and the needs of other counties, Coleman said.
He said the federal government, which grants the money through the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974, might have made more donations that hadn't received them this year.
Whitenight said Coleman could administer the grant for less money than Ochser because he was familiar with the county. Ochser's proposal requested $22,500 for administering the $223,000 grant. Coleman's proposal requested $21,600.
WHITENIGHT Said CALCION knew the county well enough to start the projects
The eight areas of development being financed by the grant are a county-wide system of housing rehabilitation, senior citizen neighborhood centers, natural resources and recreation, dredging of Baldwin Lake, work on the waterfront pool, and administration of the grant.
of the money is eligible for use as a fund to obtain other federal funds. Coleman said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
October 24,1975
The Ualiversity of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 86 No.44
Focus on Sports
Inside . . .
SOCIAL SPORTS
Photo by Elli Reichman
KU's Felipe Santos swings into soccer ball
SPORTS WRITER JOE RADCLIPFEE discusses the varying national styles on the University of Kansas soccer team and talks to the players about the problem of trying to blend so many different styles into a cohesive team in a story on page four.
SPORTS WRITER KEN STONE researched the NCAA rule changes concerning recruiting, scholarships and size of coaching staffs in a story on page nine. Stone talked to story of Kansas coaches to get their reactions to the changes.
For instance, the new rules stipulate that football scholarships be reduced from a total of 105 to 95, basketball scholarships from 18 to 15, and track and cross country from 23 to only 14. Baseball, swimming, gymnastics, tennis and golf have also been affected by the rule changes, which also reduce the number of players on the traveling squad and on the home squad. They limit the number of paid visits that coaches may make while recruiting.
Other changes will limit football coaching staffs to one head coach and eight full-time assistants, which mean that three KU coaches will be gone next year. Basketball coaching staffs will include more full-time assistant staffs. Track coaches will be similarly affected.
TRACK COACH THAD TALLEY is one of those coaches endangered by the changes. Stone talked to him in a story, also on page nine.
KU
KU
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
SHEWAN WILLIAMS
Women's athletic director Marian Washington
SPORTS WRITER KELLY SCOTT talked to the women's athletic counsellor at the University of Kansas and give their reactions to the growing emphasis on athletics in sports.
SPORTS WRITER RACHEL CASE talked to the athletes and found out why women at KU have become involved in sports and some of the rewards and challenges.
Fambrough follows new life
It seemed strange, that first Saturday, seeing Don Fambrough in the press box before a University of Kansas football game.
WILLIAMS
EDUCATIONAL
FUND
He just didn't seem to belong there. Oh, he acted all right, laughing and joking with the writers. But his heart wasn't really in it. His place was on the field, with his
But not any more.
players, getting ready for the game. But not any more.
FAMBROUGH GAVE THAT UP when he resigned as the KU head coach last year, terminating 25 years as a coach and player at KU. He now pays his Saturday afternoons in press boxes, surrounded by
their sidewalks rather than on the
sidewalks with them.
Former KU head football coach Don Fambrough is adjusting to a new life
Allen Quakenbush
Associate Sports Editor
He spent that first game, a disastrous 18-14 loss to Washington State, sitting beside Floyd Temple, who had been one of his teammates in the borough's brought remainal with the team.
"I was going through the routine with them," he said. "I was going through what they were doing down on the field. After you had finished, I know the routine, the last-minute details."
"IWAS THINKING ABOUT THE feelings of the coaches and the players. I felt just about like I did when I was on the sidelines. But I was not."
Once the game got started, Bambroub lost that feeling and became involved with women in the game.
"It's a lot different now," he said. "I'm enjoying watching the game for the first time. I can actually see the game for a change. The sideline is the worst seat on the field. You get a completely different aspect of the game from the press box.
"I still looked at it kind of the way I did when I was coaching. We talked about the things their defense was doing, and I tried to watch what was going on on the line. You could tell me that you tend to watch different individuals as much as the game itself."
THAT GAME WASN'T Fambridge's first realization that no longer would he experience the feeling he had when he was on the field, whether in practice or in a game.
That came much earlier, soon after he resigned. The realization became a little stronger when spring practice opened, and she was on the field with a KU football team. wasn't on the field with a KU football team.
But when fall drills opened and the season approached, it was almost unbearable.
"The week before the first game was the worst I have experienced since I gave up coaching," Fambrough said. "It was a strange feeling not being with the team on
Friday night. And on Saturday morning, I kept looking at my watch, going through in my mind what the team would be doing at a certain time."
BUT THI WORST WAS yet to come. When the Jayhawks traveled to Kentucky, Fambrough didn't make the trip. That meant that for the first time in his 26 years at Kansas, he would have to listen to the game on the radio rather than watch it.
"That was the worst experience I have ever gone through in a game," Fambrough said. "For the first time, I couldn't see what was doing on."
This hasn't been an easy time for Fambrough. He's had a lot of adjustments to make. They haven't been easy. After spending virtually his whole life on the football field, he's had to learn to spend his time in an office.
HE'S NEW AN ASSISTANT director of the Williams Educational Fund, which is KU's athletic scholarship program. His job involves promotion work. He spent this summer speaking at various towns through Kansas with the KU Ambassador Tour.
"I like the work," Fambrough said. "It gives me a chance to travel around the state and get out and meet people. It's very similar to recruiting."
That's one thing Fambrough misses about coaching. Unlike many coaches, he enjoyed going out and meeting prospects. And he was good at it.
"HE'S THE REASON I CAME to KU," said Odell Weidner, a former linebacker and now a graduate assistant coach here. "He was so honest and sincere and he believed in KU so much that it kind of rubbed off on you."
Farnbrough got along well with his players. Almost to a man, they were not in trouble.
But Fambrough always found time to listen.
"I got pretty much involved with the problem," he said. "Sometimes, maybe I got too involved. I felt that I had an obligation to work with them and sometimes the work played out."
"HE'S A GREAT MAN." said linebacker
Steve Towle who's now a rookie with the Miami Dolphins. "He was like a second father to us. You can go to him with your wife, but you can't talk to her and he always have time to listen."
Fambrough takes a genuine personal interest in his players, even after they graduate. No matter whether they become successful pro-football players or successful businessmen, Fambrough is proud of them.
"Doc Allen (Forrest Allen, the famous KU basketball coach) said you should judge a player five years after he gets out of jail, though said. That's a pretty true statement."
"AND HE DOESN'T HAVE to be a player. I've had players who were successful lawyers and businessmen. I take a lot of risks in the job, but I had a little to do with their success.
"There are so many rewards in coaching,
'But I'm not saying it was all a bed of roses.'
"Okay, I don't. And I have to do."
See FAMBROUGH page two
Spirit enriches homecoming game
Most things change with the passing of time, but one thing remains constant—the heart.
The University of Kansas renews its annual homecoming festival when the Jayhawks take on the Oklahoma State Cowboys tomorrow at Memorial Stadium.
IT MAY BE THAT the homecoming game rally got off the ground when KU hosted the University of Nebraska Cornhuskers in 1915.
No one has ever been able to pinpoint the exact year of the first KU nonceumming, but there is much speculation.
In that late November game, KU and Nebraska, members of the Missouri Valley Conference, met to decide the league champions. Both teams were undefeated in jamaica play.
The Jayhawks didn't score a touchdown against Nebraska since 1909. That didn't dampen the enthusiasm of the homecoming rooters.
The traditional pre-game pep rally had been cancelled the previous week so Jayhawk fans might have extra pep for the Nebraska clash.
DESPITE ALL THAT spirit, the University Daily Kansan had the unenviable task of reporting the "mighty Husker" win 33-0.
"Kansas Fought Hard But Could Not Stop Terrible Onslaught of Hard, read the Killers' Guide."
"They came, they saw and they conquered," the story began. "Steelm's squad, twenty-five players; they saw and they defeated Jayawicks and the Valley pennant for the fifth consecutive time. It's true it cost them a little effort but it was not much effective resistance that Kansas could offer against the strongest teams in the United States."
KU alumni of fifty years ago will remember 1925 as the year that the legend of one of the big names in Kansas football history "Story" Wall—was born
IN 1925, $14.50 BOUGHT a season's pass
to all KU sports events, plays, debates and conferences and bought a copy of the 1926 Jayhawker. In the fall, excavation for the Memorial Union building was completed.
That was also the year that Captain
Jimmy "Jack" Kelly led the Kansas
Kansas City Royals on the spring.
That Sunday, the November 22 issue of the Kansas heralded the KU homecoming victory over Missouri 10-7, with the Knicks winning at Dugout Elected Toucher Puts Atacas Winning Score. $^{1}$
"THE BIG RIGHT FOOT of one 'Sonny'
wall, assisted by the stalwart bodies of ten
Maine men."
Ron Cohn
Sports Writer
the mighty Missouri Tigers yesterday on Memorial Stadium field," the Kansas
"Wall deserted the halls of Southwestern College two years ago and came to Kansas to gain fame and fortune, and that long two years wait was well rewarded yesterday. We visited the Kansah House of immortals as the man who sent the Tigers home whipped."
The 1953 KU student could purchase a season ticket for $5 for the Jayhawk's four home games, including the Thanksgiving Missouri, Missouri, which ended in a scoreless tie.
THE KANSAN REPORTED. "One of the few dull games in the long history of the Kansas-Missouri rivalry was played last Thursday. Neither of the two teams had a marked edge over the other and as a result the game was waged almost entirely between the 20-yard lines of the teams. 17,000 spectators saw the game."
The Kansan added, "The fact that Kansas last only 19 yards from scrimmage as a receiver was worth it."
See SPIRIT page three
ALEXANDER H. RICHARDSON
AND
MICHAEL A. GARRETT
These two bruisers were on KU's 7-1 team of 1892.
2
Friday, October 24, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Fambrough follows . . .
From page one
PETER HARRIS
KANSAS
FOOTBALL
Don Fambrough
You feel responsible for them and you feel like you failed. That's what hurts."
Fainbrough doesn't miss the stomach ache he got every Friday night—that dull, gnawing pain he felt until game time. And when he turned up to the gym that came before and after every game.
"SUNDAY MORNING CAN BE the most enjoyable time or the most miserable," Fambrough said. "After a win, you get up and talk about it after a defeat, there's no worse feeling."
Fambrough has changed some now. He's still the man that he was as a coach, but he doesn't have to carry the burden of all those worries.
"He's a lot more easygoing—not easygoing, he was always that way—but more relaxed." Weddner said. "He's not as hard as he was. He doesn't have as many worries.
"Everything goes on your shoulders when you're the head coach. But he was a big enough man to take all those pressures and more. He's the one who showed the best of us all, and he should have been the one to show the most pressure."
IF IT HADN'T BEEN FOR World War II, Famibrough might never have come to KU. After graduating from Longview (Texas) High School in 1941, Famibrough went to the Texas where he spent two seasons as a blocking back in the old single-wing formation.
After the 1943 Cotton Bowl game, which Texas won 147 over Georgia Tech, Fam. Browns won 50-26.
It was during his time in service that Fambrighou met Ray Evans, an All-American defender. He played football together with the second Air Force team at Colorado Springs. After their discharge in 1945, they decided to go to the same school and continue playing football
"I WAS ALL SET TO GO back to the University of Texas," Fambrough admitted, "but I promised Ray I would come up here and look around.
"From the day I hit campus, I fell in love
with the school and the people. I wasn't here long before I considered myself a Kaisan at heart. And it's pretty rare for a Texan to do that."
Fambrook played guard and linebacker for the KU teams of 1964-67. In 1947, he captained the Jayhawk team that posted an eight-season win and lost to Georgia Tech in the Orange Bowl.
He was an all-conference selection both in the 1980s and his KU-all-time team as a guard in 1989.
He began his coaching career here in 1948 as a graduate assistant under J. V. Sikes. He was promoted to freshman coach in 1949 and was elevated to the varsity staff in 1950.
IN 1954, HE LEFT WITH Sikes to go to East Texas State where he spent three years. After one year at Wichita, he returned to KU in 1958 when Jack Mitchell became the head coach. He's been here ever since.
"I had such pleasant relationships with all the head coaches, that I never minded being an assistant coach," Fambrugh said. "I really enjoyed those years. I had a great deal of confidence and the attitude that as long as I was happy at what I was doing, I didn't need to change."
Fambrouch got his chance at a head coaching job when Pepper Rodgers left after the 1970 season. To Fambrouch, it was a dream come true.
"EVERY COACH, DEEP DOWN inside him, has a desire to coach at his alma mater," he said. "In my case, getting that job would have been easier than getting just any head coaching, position."
Fambrough was in his office working when he got the news that he was the new mayor.
"It was kind of a strange situation." Fambrough released. "Wade (Stinson, athletic director) just walked in the door and said, 'You're the head football coach at the University of Kansas,' then he walked out.
"I didn't say youay, nay or anything. I was simply shocked. That's just the way it happens."
played and coached under, he said D. X. Bison, his bishop at the University of Texas, had the biggest role in shaping his coaching philosophy.
"There's no doubt about it," Fambrough said. "He's had an impact on my whole team." She has played for Sainte Sauern (Fambrough's coach at KU) and J, V. Skies. Jack Mitchell also played under him at Texas. There are an awful lot of people at D. X. Bible that have been influenced by D. X. Bible.
OF ALL THE COACHES Fambrough
AND AFTER 26 YEARS, there have been
numerous players who have been influenced by
Don Famotti.
"I learned an awful lot of things from him," Wedner said. "Maybe I would have gone somewhere else, we could have won a championship, or they could be made as many of the important things of life."
"I can't say enough for him. There's not anything I wouldn't do for him."
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University Daily Kansan
DIGEST From the Associated Press
UNICEF
Hearst release demanded
NEW YORK - A gunman cornered during the holdup of a Greenwich Village bank took 10 persons hostage yesterday and demanded $10 million in gold and the release of Patty Hearst and other members of the Symbionese Liberation Army. He later released five of his可捕客.
The man said he was affiliated with the SLA. But he later, indicated that he wasn't a member of the SLA.
memwuwe, a federal judge postponed indefinitely a hearing on Patty Heart's mental condition and a judge in Los Angeles ordered her to appear to answer 11
In San Francisco, Terence Hallan, an attorney who had represented Patty Hairstat since the day of her arrest, withdrew from the case after an apparent wrongdoing.
Election laws tackled
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court agreed yesterday, as it opened its 1975-76 term, to review a constitutionality of spending limits and other reforms enacted in the 1960s.
Juice wumen 4, lounges, 76, crippled by a stroke, made his first appearance on the Supreme Court bench since April 21. Douglas participated in nearly all of the jury deliberations.
Fires, tempers burn
KANASAS CITY, Mo.—Makershift crews of National Guardsm, police and armed volunteers continue to provide fire protection yesterday for Kansas City,
Speaking at a mid-morning news conference, Charles Safer, lawyer for the firemen, and two national representatives of the International Association of Firefighters repeatedly blasted Kansas City, Mo., Mayor Charles Wheeler and the city's management.
Wheeler, in an earlier meeting with newsmen yesterday, reaffirmed his position that there would be no negotiations until the firemen returned to work.
He said the city had invalidated the contract of the fire fighters' union by dismissing 50 firemen who immedately ordered to report to work Sunday night.
Wheeler and Police Chief Joseph McNamara have called a grand jury investigation into what they said had been numerous acts of arson and sabotage of the building.
Frizzell nominated
WASHINGTON - President Ford announced yesterday that he is nominating D. Kent Frizzell, the Interior Department's solicitor, to be undersecretary of the
Fitzzie, from Topeka, would succeed John C. Whitaker who resigned in May. He had been considered for the Secretary post earlier this year when Rogers B. C. Mullen was reappointed.
Hostage feared dead
LIMERICK, Ireland—The fate of kidnapped industrialist Tiede Herrera was unsettled when she was arrested on 8 hours past the threatened deadline for his exile. Fears grew that he might be killed.
The Irish government reasserted its refusal to give in to the kidnappers' demands that three imprisoned terrorists be freed to procure Herema's release.
The government said it would make no deals with the kidnappers, believed by the police to be a militant splinter group of the underground Irish Republic Army.
Employes to oppose bids
The commission last week received bids for private sanitation contractors but no decision.
Representatives of the Lawrence Sanitation Employees Association will present their opinions about proposed private sanitation contracts to the Lawrence City Commission at its regular meeting tonight at 7.
Sanitation employees have expressed their disapproval of bringing a private contractor to Lawrence. Last week, representatives said they were worried that many workers would lose their jobs because of a provision in the private sanitation contract that all prospective employees must have a physical examination.
Representatives said they thought the provision gave the contractors too much
control over hiring. Men who have suffered on-the job injuries such as back sprains and hernias wouldn't be hired by a private service, they said.
Commissioners also will discuss Dial DRUG, a local telephone service that provides information about the local drug market by dialing 841-DRUG.
At last week's commission meeting, Commissioner Donald Binns said the city should do something about Dial DRUG Access. The committee recommends using in Lawrence High School to use drugs.
Dial DRUG dropped its regular drug report Wednesday, and since then it has been urging callers to go to tonight's commission meeting to support the service. The new message says that the service supports nor discourages the use of drugs.
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Relief is on the way for students driving cars with green-lot parking stickers who have had trouble finding a place to park in Oc and X-zones.
843-2139
begining Friday cars with green stickers could be parked in Z-one, southwest of Memorial Stadium, Steve Brown, Parking and Traffic Board, said Thursday.
S-zone parking opens for more student cars
The Parking and Traffic Board, which advises Security and Parking, consists of five officers.
University of Kansas football fans who drive to Saturday's Kansas-Nebraska football game may be thrilled that their team will win and away, according to Thomas, director of Security and Parking.
Warning given on NU parking
Thomas said he was contacted yesterday by Gall Gade, security director at the company.
Gade informed him that illegally parked cars would be towed away in an attempt to reduce traffic congestion and security; their nuisance MS had in the past, Thomas said.
Thomas, director of Traffic and Security,
and Hank Sonday, chief judge of the traffic
There has been a lot of overcrowding in O-X zone lots, Brown said, because of the large number of green parking stickers sold during enrollment. Cars with green stickers could be parked only in O- and X-zone before the change.
S-zone has abut 90 muspil packing spaces each day, Brown said. Cars with brown-yellow packaging stickers previously were assigned to S-zone, but now cars with either brown-yellow or green stickers can park in S-zone, he said.
6th & Missouri
The O-Zone parking lot is south of Robinson Gymnasium, and X-Zone is south of the gym.
The cost of green parking stickers was lowered by the Parking and Traffic Board last spring, effective this semester. Green stickers were decreased from $27.50 to $25.00 for other bikes that cost $27.50 in the parking semester were increased to $30.
Brown said the S-zone parking area was actually closer to Marvin, Snow and Strong.
The easiest way to get S-zone is to turn south onto Maine Street from 11th Street,
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Two praise clemency program
For those deserters and draft evaders who decided to participate in President Ford's clemency program, making amends for a decision not to fight in Vietnam has been a good experience, according to two Kansasans who participated in the program.
By BRENT ANDERSON
Only 24 men have been referred to the Kansas office of the Selective Service System for job placement, and of that 24 only 8 currently are working at public institutions. Mark Paul Idi, deputy director of the Kansas Selective Service, said recently.
Idol said the deadline for joining the program originally was Feb. 1 but President Ford extended the deadline to March 1.
THE PROGRAM HAS BEEN closed to new applicants since that time, he said, but the President has the power to reopen the program.
Bryan Keller, 22, is working as a city maintenance worker in Topeka to fulfill the alternative service obligation of Ford's clementy plan.
"I've been able to pay the bills and
spend so it isn't really that bad," Keller
did.
Working for $3.06 an hour, Keller makes about $100 a week after taxes. He lives alone in Brooklyn and has no children.
"I don't have much of a problem getting by," he said, "but of course I don't have a car."
Keller munt serve seven more month
alternative service is finished,
performing its duties.
"I like this town and a working here," he said. "There is room for advancement with the school."
KELLER SAID HE planned to continue working for the city of Topeka after he completes his 15 months of required service.
Keller said he moved to another state three years ago, after he received a draft notice. He went to the U.S. Attorney's Office in Chicago, where he was referred to the Kansas Selective Service Office because he wanted to live in Topeka.
Idol said the procedure established for draft evaders who wanted to participate in
No shortage expected in antifreeze supply
No shortage of antifreeze is expected this year, according to seven Lawrence merchants and service station operators surveyed yesterday.
Jim Warren, owner of Jim's Mobil, 901
Kentucky St, said prices were down from
Richard Wright, automotive manager at Montgomery Ward and Co., 23rd and Ousdahl streets, said he had already received all the antifreeze he thought he would need. He said his store said antifreeze must be $4.99 at the regular price of $4.99 a gallon, he said, because the demand was so great they couldn't afford to put it on sale.
Spencer to get pre-1900 deeds
Douglas County deeds and mortgage records dated before 1900 are being transferred this week from the Douglas County Collection in Spencer Research Library.
Many of the deeds and mortgages are in bad condition because of bad storage conditions.
The documents are part of a collection that comprises minutes of County Commission board meetings, tax records and court records, George Griffin, curator of the Records Collection, said yesterday. All the records date back to before 1906, he said.
NeuNautist, register of deeds, said that macrofilm copies of most of the documents are lost.
The print quality on the microfiltro sometimes is poor because of the faded ink on many of the original papers, she said, but the other papers will refer occasionally to the originals.
The County Commissioners authorized the transfer early this summer.
Neusifter said a few documents were moved in July and estimated there were 185 cases.
last year but were higher than prices two years ago.
Warren said antifreeze prices were at their highest last year when a gallon of antifreeze sold at retail for $8. Two years ago, he said he was selling a gallon for $50.
Lon Smith, service manager at K-Mart, 31st and Iowa streets said he wasn't aware of any shortage this year. Although a gallon was almost half the price last year, Smith said, K-Mart was selling national brand for $3.70 a gallon for a limited time. The company, he said, stipulated that customers buying antifreeze at a per piece price were limited to two gallons a person.
Smith said he thought the price might increase if a shortage developed later this week.
Vic Olmstead, a television technician in Sears Roebuck and Co. service department, 999 Iowa St., said Sears had a large supply of antifreeze this year. Olmstead said Sears was selling the antifreeze for $3.99 a gallon which included putting it in the car.
Omstead said he had heard that last year's shortage was caused because ethyl glycol, the main ingredient in antifreeze, also was being used in many permanent-press fabrics and there wasn't enough for antifreeze.
the program was different from the procedure for deserters.
"This year, with the recession, people didn't buy clothes as readily and more was lost," she said.
He said he didn't know exactly how much Sears antiretroline was for last year but said it was worth $1,000.
Deserters, under Ford's plan, were to report to a military base of their branch of military service, which evaluated their cases and referred them to the Selective Service headquarters in the state of their choice, Idol said.
Joe Yost, clerk at Gibson's, 2525 Iowa Joe said the automotive department had plenty of antifreeze on stock this year, although it has been a direct result of last year's scarcity.
2'
Vost said that a gallon's retail price was
which was a few cents from last year,
*yes.*
Philip Hoffman, attendant at Don's hall, 66 Sixth St., said his station had received an order for a repair from its dealer. He said the peak demand for antifreeze would be in two or three weeks.
Don's 66 charges $5.95 a gallon including installation.
From page one
"We have a highly developed policy for
education which has been developed by the
criteria apply for salary increase"
Facultv
He said the University favored letting each school set its own criteria.
HOWEVER, HE SAID that student evaluations weren't frequently fair because professors who teach required courses were almost always less popular than those who teach electives. He also said that a direct correlation existed between the size of a class and a teacher's popularity, with large classes meaning less popularity.
Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said, "I think we have a pretty fair system already, but we'll go along with any University policy.
"Every unit tries to evaluate its teachers
DRAFT EVADERS, HE SAID, to report to U.S. Attorney's offices and turn themselves in. The U.S. Attorney's offices, and offer the men to a Selective Service office.
"Different units carry their criteria to suit their missions within the University. Professional schools certainly have a different degree of accreditation and department of liberal arts and sciences."
He said different criteria would probably be used, for example, to evaluate faculty members teaching laboratory science skills or members supervising a student teacher.
in terms of teaching, scholarship and service," he said.
Ten men who were referred to the Kansas Selective Service Office decided not to participate in the amnesty plan, Idol said. Although no charges have been filed against him, he has served on the program, he said, the U.S. Attorney in Kansas might still file charms against them.
has testimonial meetings at 6:30
p.m. every evening at Dan-
caster.
The Christian Science Organization
Idol said he thought the men who had high-paying jobs were reluctant to join the program because they wouldn't earn enough money to support their families in the way to which they had become accustomed.
--for participating in Market Research Study
Another participant in Ford's clemency plan, who wished to remain anonymous, said he was happy with the program, but was reluctant to comment because he feared losing his job. The man, who lives in Wichita, said he lived in Canada for several years and returned to the United States to join the amnesty plan.
HE REFERRED TO the case of Jim Jark, formerly of Lawrence, in which City Court found him guilty.
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Construction of the TRW Inc., Crescent Wire and Cable Division plant in the Santa Fe Industrial Subdivision in northwest Lawrence will begin this week.
Cable plant expanding
About $1.3 million in equipment and new buildings will be added to the former B. F. Goodrich warehouse, which will house TRW Inc. When the expansion is finished, the will be used to manufacture electrical cable used to operate oil-well pumps.
Eic Walther, project manager, said Saturday the expansion was to begin this summer but it was delayed because of issues with the extrusion machine that is on the site.
The parts were needed for construction of a 454-foot tunnel in which rubber insulation for electrical cable will be cured by a steam process.
TRW plans a 10-year $10 million expansion program in Lawrence that even includes new office buildings.
Once completed, the cable is about 1¼ inches in diameter and is transported on a roll.
Vork had been employed by the city in a job that was partially funded by the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act of 1973 (CETA). The job had been approved by the Kansas Selective Service Office for the President's clemency program.
Lawrence after the Department of Labor decided he was ineligible for the job.
The Department of Labor ruled that competition existed for the position, and that York was ineligible for the job because of a CETA rule.
Wes Santee, a local insurance man, appealed to the Department of Labor, arguing that there was competition for job, and that the job should be filled by a local citizen
YORK LEFT LAWRENCE after the incident, which occurred in March, and quit the amnesty program. He had planned to live with his brother in Austin, Tex., according to Randy Pettitt, a friend of the Pettitt did not know where York was.
where York was living.
Ida said York's case was the only one of
them.
"I felt sorry for him," he said.
Work began yesterday to relandcape the area around the Chi Omega fountain at the campus.
Chi O area landscaped
Gene Bilch, supervisor of grounds and landscaping, said yesterday the existing building had been opened.
"It's a customary practice that when you are overgrown they need to be reintroduced."
Bilch said that the evergreens in the area were shedding and breaking and that Chancellor Archie R. Dykes suggested they be replaced.
the evergreens were planted when the fountain was constructed in April, 1955, he said. The fountain was donated to the University by the Chi Omega Sorority as part of the anniversary celebration of the founding of the Chi Omega chapter at KU.
Kelly Scott, president of Chi Omega, said the reaction of the sorority members was generally unfavorable because they weren't aware that any changes would be made.
Tuesday, October 7, 1875
Bilch said the building and grounds of a
had received a few calls from people
complaining about destroying the land
and planting trees, which he diocally
replanted throughout the campus.
"If we had more money, we'd do it more often," he said. "We're continually cutting down trees on campus but we replace them with twice as many."
Bitch said the project should be completed this week. Total cost of the land-scaping work was estimated at $1,500, he said.
CITY SCALE
On Campus
TONIGHT: A SUPPORTIVE EDUCATIONAL SERVICES orientation will be at 7 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. A LINGUISTIC COLLOQUY will be given by Herbert Balken at 7:30 in 207 Blake Hall. KU COLLEGE OF BLEANS will meet at 8 in the International Room of the Union.
STUDENT ASSOCIATION FOR COMBINED HEALTH SCIENCES will have a discussion on health-related careers at 7 in Woodruff Auditorium of the Kansas Union.
Events...
TOMORROW: A PERIOD FOR WORDS and silence, "A Meditation for everyone, a time for centering," will be from 12:30 to 1 p.m. at Danforth Chapel.
PLANT SALE Good Bargains on Exotic Plants Squeezer's Palace
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Open noon-11 p.m.
CAROLINE E. ROBINSON
I swallowed my uppers when I found out about the deals at MMS9.
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The Commission on the Status of Women Presents "Women in Law"A Group Presentation and Discussion
with
Doborah Smith, third year law student Deanell Tacha, associate professor of law Roberta Gilchrist, attorney at law Tuesday, October 7, 1975 7:00 p.m Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union naid for by student activity fees
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 24, 1975
63
Spirit enriches ...
From page one
the Jayhawker line was holding well enough and was charging aggressively."
MANY PEOPLE RECALL the 1943 homecoming clash against Missouri as the most exciting game of the year, at four or four touchdown favorite. The prediction seemed well-founded when the Tigers held a 6-4 hiatus in quarterback performance, a quarter touchdown and on to win, 7-6.
"Nerves were on edge in the final few minutes as the Tigers did everything short of scoring," the Kansan sports writer reported.
"Aided by a long pass puaired complete because of interference, the Tigers drove to a first down on the 10. The first play went for five yards and the situation indeed
looked bad. The Kansas line stuffed, however, and the next two line smashes were held. On fourth down on the Kansas two—the most crucial moment of the game—the Tigers humbled and Jack Walton recovered for Kansas. That was the game, and seconds remained, and the Jayuynks grimly held the ball on two line plains."
KANAS STATE UNIVERSITY best KU in its homecoming game in 1944, so the Jayhawks own "Remember "44" homecoming renewal of 1943 was truly
Kansas won the game, 27-0. But KU's post-game celebration turned out to be the real climax. Kansas students, who were aware of their own success in classes after the previous year's victory,
decided to hold a moratorium on their own. On Monday, the Kansasan reported that the 10-year-old had been held up Monday in celebration of the Jayhawks homecoming football victory over K-State Saturday, and in protest against an All Student Council decision in favor of classes.
CHANCELLOR MALLOTT tried to calm the protesting students in front of Strong Hall, they retorted, "united we stand, divided we flunk."
Apparently, many students didn't attend classes that day, and probably most of them
The 1947 Jayhawk team may have been the best of all time. KU entered the homecoming battle against Missouri with a string of twelve consecutive triumphs. The
45 46
65
10
37
heroes of that season's gladiators were co-captain Otto Schchellbauer. Don Dion "Bronx" Gaines was one of the heroes.
The homecoming game was the highlight of the year. If Kansas beat Missouri and Nebraska defeated Oklahoma, KU would win the conference crown.
THE KANSAN'S REPORT of the game began, "For the second time in three weeks, the Jayhawkers resorted to their last-minute lightning as they marched 94 yards to score the winning touchdown with 65 seconds remaining."
Ray Evans led the KU conquest, 20-14,
gaining 194 vards.
The post-game celebration on Monday featured a funeral procession down Jayhawk Boulevard with a casket bearing the late Missouri Tiger.
Oklahoma edged Nebraska, 14-13, to the nayswanks and the Sooners tied for the Big Ten.
THAT WEEK, KANSAS received good news. The Jayhawks were ranked 13th in the Associated Press poll and were invited to compete in the Orange Bowl classic on December 29, who was named first team All-America, the first KU player to receive that distinction.
Kansas entered the homecoming contest on a four game winning streak and were ranked 23rd in the Associated Press poll. The team was coming back, led the potent Jawahrr offence.
The Gene Hall Band was announced as the feature of the dance after the homecoming game. Admission to the dance was 50 cents.
THE GAME, AGAINST Nebraska,
featured a battle of offensive tackles, Mike McCormack of Kansas and Charlie Toogood of Nebraska.
The Kansas reported, "It was officially a warm 79 degrees at game time, but the crowd wasn't long in forgetting about the temperature following the kick-off."
The weather was the only good news the kansas had to offer. Nebraska beat Kansas, 74-61.
Wilt Chamberlin came to Kansas in 1955. "The Stilt," scoring 42 points, led the KU freshmen over the varsity basketball team, 81-71, on homecoming eve.
THE NEXT DAY, JAYHAWK rooters settled down to the business at hand, beating Missouri in the 64th renewal of that rivalry.
"A festive homecoming celebration got a shot in the arm Saturday," the Kansan proudly proclaimed, "when a spirited Kansas football team tamed Missouri's Tigers, 13-7, in the last game of the season for both squads."
A touchdown pass was thrown by quarterback Wally Strawl to John Franisco and he had the ball. That pass gave the crowd of 6,000 some indication of what was to come.
For $2.50, A COUPLE could dance to the music of Count Basie and his band at the 1960 homecoming dance. But not all the news was made that sood.
The football team, led by quarterback John Haddl, had an excellent chance to win the conference title. But disaster struck. KU was placed on probation by the NCAA for one year and deprived of probation last one year and deprived of an almost-certain Bowl invitation.
Undaunted, the Jayhawks took the field to prove themselves to a large homecoming
THE KANSAN HAPPILY recorded the victory.
"A record-breaking crowd of 33,000 saw the Jayhawks romp over a tired Colorado squad Saturday with the ease of a championship team. 34-6."
The following week, the Jayhawks upset No. 1-ranked Missouri to bring Kansas its first conference title since 1930. Ironically, Missouri was invited to the Orange Bowl.
The homecoming of 1985, in celebration of
JOHNNY JAYHAWK WILPI the obiect
Archives phot
homecoming theewayner's History,
the Kansan said. "He will be disguised as
Agent 607, Carry Hart and Matt Dillon
and you must complete the homecoming displays."
The Jawahars turned the football game, predicted to be a close one, into a rout by his team.
IN THE 1979 HOMECOMING game, the KU defense yielded 338 total yards. But it forced nine Iowa State turnovers and defeated the Cyclones, 24-10.
The Kanan said, "KU ran over, under, around and through K-Sate, gaining 328 yards to 60 for the Wildcats. Three second-quarter touchdowns locked up the game at 27-0."
The KU offense piled up 227 yards rushing, with John Riggins plowing for 93 of them. But, it was Gary Davenport, Jayhawk defensive end, who came up with the big play by blocking an Iowa State punt to seal the victory.
Thus, the homecoming spirit of Kansas,
the football team itself, is enriched with man-made
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4
Tuesday, October 7, 1975
University Dally Kansan
COMMENT Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Q
Anchovies welcome
Honor societies are clearly discriminatory; they strive to exclude the oafs and dolts, though they sometimes slip up.
However, rumors are circulating about a new and different honor society—one that surely compiles with affirmative action guidelines.
The society, Bovis Stercus International (BSI), apparently has only one entrance qualification—no qualifications. Members will be chosen without consideration of toothpaste brand, personal hygiene, any tendencies toward clutching and grabbing raw corduroy and religious beliefs (as long as those beliefs don't contradict the all-engulfing power of Osiris).
All candidates for BSI will be interviewed with the aid of specially equipped World War II scrambler phones. However, so as not to discriminate against non-phone users, replies to questions can be relayed through a series of grunts and squeals emitted by a third party.
Academic qualifications will not be considered because most people are deemed disadvantaged and thus not fairly measured by an education system that unfortunately judges its products by their (neuter gender) ability.
in other words, anyone with the in-
telligeance of an anchovy will be considered qualified.
Incidentally, the word "ability" will not be used by interviewers. Did you notice the clever insertion of the male name "Bil?" Such piggishness will not be tolerated by BSI. Speling will be stressed.
BSI has since discovered other errors in its guidelines. For one thing, the impartial observer can readily see that the word "Bovis" is merely a guise for the infamous male nickname "Bo." This error must have occurred because of the discriminatory society in which we (neuter gender) live.
Furthermore, "International" is a word play that cleverly obscures the presence of "Al," a male name if ever we heard of one. One solution might be to use a name like Storcas International-alice. No one could object to such a modification.
Unfortunately, this ambitious project may never come to fruition. Because the guidelines of BSI were written by members of a culture that is undeniably corrupt, the whole concept has to be relected.
Someday, however, persons may be able to compete with full equality and opportunity with persons. Then, and only then, will they truly be persons.
Ward Harkavy
Contributing Writer
Firemen play old tune
This weekend, the Kansas City, Mo., fire department followed in the footsteps of a historically infamous emperor, for just as Nero fiddled while Rome burned 2,000 years ago, so it came around while Kansas City burned
Last Friday, after several threats and warnings, the 848 professional firemen staged a walkout demanding higher pay. Their starting salary is $10,200.
As it to underscore the vital need for professional fire fighters, a rash of 58 fires broke out Friday night, several directly linked to arson, according to the Bureau of Fire Joseph McNamara. The usual number of fires in one night is five.
Not only were volunteer firemen forced to answer an impossible number of alarms (many of them false), but also they were plaged by sabotaged equipment—including fire extinguishers filled with inflammable liquid and fire trucks with water in their gasoline tanks.
Negotiations between Kansas City Mayor Charles Wheeler and representatives of the International Association of Fire Fighters Local No. 10 have been made and seem doomed to further failure because both sides refuse to compromise.
What is the answer? Should employees responsible for public safety, such as a fire department, be allowed to strike or higher the pay they are allowed to ignore state laws expressly
forbidding such strikes? What if the city agrees to compromise this time? Will they strike every time they want a pay raise?
Should the firemen continue to strike, disregarding public safety and state law, a solution proposed by Wheeler yesterday seems to be the best answer.
Wheeler's plan is to lay off the striking
tweensies, who are one ones
from the backlog of applicants.
No one can prove yet that members of the fire fighters' union were responsible for setting any of the fires this weekend. However, the firemen were responsible for their duty to serve the public and for casually disregarding human lives.
In a time when unemployment is high and people are eager to get jobs, who needs so-called public servants who refuse to do their jobs? There are no doubt, others who would do the job better.
By refusing to be intimidated by union demands, Wheeler has shown that his priorities are correctly ordered. The lives and safety of the 500,000 residents in our country are obviously are more important than the demand for higher wages of 850 persons.
Should Kansas City replace the striking firemen, as Wheeler has proposed, it will serve as an example not only to its own public servants, but also to those threatening strikes in other cities as well. Jain Penner
Contributing Writer
WASHINGTON—The dedication of the new FBI building, which bears the name of J. Edgar Hoover, was a somewhat haunted occasion, despite the bright sunshine.
The structure itself is oppressive, as perhaps it was meant to be. A collection of rocks and staircases, a khalde-colored concrete and set high above the ground, it gives the impression of 1,000 eyes on slats. Vertical slats at the entrance, mindful of prison bars, are part of the scene; a couple of menacing overhangs on the upper stories.
Mary McGrory
But it wasn't the architecture alone which hung heavy over the occasion. It was the thought of what has happened to the family in the day. After his death in May 1972, things were never quite the same. Awe-struck small boys still trugged through its darkness but elsewhere skiptcham has set in and questions are asked.
FBI building oppressive
The former assistant director said that although these burglaries were "technically illegal," he thought they were necessary to help protect the company from cyber-attacks, "black-bag jobs," as they are called in the trade, were kept in a "Do Not File" file.
Congress has cast off the shackles of her heroism and fear and is poking into files and practices. More recently, a retired official confessed to Sen. Berties for stealing committee that the FBI had committed some 238 "black-bag jobs" over a 28-year period.
So the quality of rhetoric about Hoover was rather strained for once, and the dictionaryes hadn't been ransacked, as in the old days, for the defensive superlatives that characterized Richard Nixon's statement upon the old man's statement.
"For millions, he was the symbol and embodiment of the values he cherished most: his love for the people to his country and granite-like
He never had to, of course. He had the goods. And Richard Nixon, like every other president before him, ran from a fight with J. Edgar Hoover. When they clashed, over the phone, Nixon, like Hoover, quite correctly regarded as a reflection on his subversive-hunting powers, Nixon quit the
Atty. Gen. Edward H. Levi, who starts and stops in his running argument with Hoover's successor, Clarence M. Kelley, over the latter's view that government are expendable in the pursuit national security, was rather noncommittal at the dedication.
He took refuge in quotation from Hoover's first sponsor, Supreme Court Justice Harlan Stone.
President Ford also sought secondary sources for praise. He cited that he had once praised Hoover for "table leadership" and that Dwight D. Eisenhower had him the National Security Mach
At least the President was demonstrably safe. He spoke before a rampart worthy of Elsainro, watched over by three security agents. The audience was thickly sown with other professional scanners, short of hair, wary of eve.
There was also the abounding relief that Patthe Heart, who for 19½ months had caused the Bureau of the most acute of recent
embarrassments, was safety behind bars. She had beer caught just in the nick of time dedication-wise.
But that was balanced by the new disquiet over another violent California woman, Sarah Jane Moore, who so lately in San Francisco had almost robbed the occasion of its principal speaker. Unlike Patty Hearst, Sarah Jane Moore, the pitiful, added groupie had tried to get caught
Sarah Jane Moore is the most notorious ex-FBI informer in history. She was recruited and paid to give information about the Killings, Army, which may help to explain why Patty Hearst was at large for so long. The FBI has still to explain why they
retained an attention-starved misfit whose problem was that she could never get anyone to listen to her.
It is ironic that the bureau, which has been in hot water for too much surveillance-over people who never made any secret of what they were doing, did not warn Jane Moore have failed to keep an eye on Sarah Jane Moore, gun buyer and system-tester.
Problems like that can't be solved by a new $126 million headquarters. It was dedicated at a moment of supreme importance in and about the law, for enforcement and establishment. The bureau's job is to make life less dangerous, and every day in the U.S. is more dangerous for everyone, including the President. Alarmist Star Syndicate Inc.
(c) 1975 Washington Star Syndicate, Inc.
--I HEREBY
DEDICATE THE
J.E.DOAR HOOVER
FBI BUILDING!
Readers Respond
To the Editor:
SUA leaders take easy way out
The proposed Shockley-Goldsbey debate was a glimmer of hope that this university might attain a place of importance as an academic institute unafraid of an unpleasant idea and as a forum for exposure of views even so bizarre as to
It is evident that thing,
haven't changed much from
when I last attended KU, in
1971. Students of this campus
charged with the responsibility
of providing "leadership" in the
workplace and telling the story
out and avoiding a controversial
issue.
shock the more liberal of this university community.
Shockley has gained much national notice for his being shouted down at certain parties, in prance, and hopefully his been revealed as a charlatan, at this campus might just have been one of the most appalled figures of the academic year.
Does Mr. Bengtson often approve of a controversial speaker without first checking out his credentials? The Kansan article to indicate that his 180-degree change of heart came about largely due to this belated relevance: Shockley is
You bet. Thanks are in order to Mr. Bengton et al., for they have shown themselves equal to the task of protecting us from harm by being servatives and things that go bump in the night.
Clinton Latig
Topeka Special Student
Glover misled To the Editor:
Steven Lewis against the KU School of Social Welfare faculty, I was assured by Mr. Lewis that there was substantive evidence to support his claim. He also convinced that I was misled by Mr. Lewis, as this evidence hasn't materialized.
mittee to the Attorney General's office for further investigation.
When I originally asked the Legislative Post-Audit Committee to investigate the charges brought to me by
Because of my close work with some of the school's faculty manners on other issues, I recovered money from investors and transferred to the Post-Audit Committee, which was specifically created to be an unbiased financial investigative arm of the Com. This is why we supported, the allegations have been turned over by the Com.
I am anticipating hearing from Mr. Tom Regan of the Attorney General's office soon concerning these charges, including his unsubstantiated. At that point, I'm also hopeful that the media will report that the School has surfaced as clean of all charges made by Mr. Lewis, and that the School's faculty will continue to provide education for which they have been known and praised.
Michael G. Glover State Rep., 44th District Lawrence
The K-32 blues
Commuters drive for education
This is dedicated to all students at the University of Kansas who are brave or foolish enough to travel long distances for an education.
It's 7 a.m. as I slam the front door and move down the sidewalk from my home to the bear's building. I'm barely seeing the building, a block away. I wear the moisture from my car's windows with an old
towel as the motor warms up and then I'm off to pick up two other people just like me who live in the city. City, Kan, to Lawrence.
Commuting is an insanity indulged in by a sizeable number of KU students, although the university has not known. Some commute
I'm a commuting student.
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
on Thursday, Monday and Tuesday for the
annual periods. Second-class postage paid at Law-
erense station or $1 a year in Deauville County and $1 a
week in Des Moines. Subscriptions to $1.35 a semester
or $1.65 a subscription are $1.35 a semester, paid through
the university.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Business Manager
Dennis Elkinson
Associate Campus Editor
Debbie Gump
Bumble College
Berry Young
Associate Campus Editor
Assist Campus Editor
John Johnson
Don Sinn
Chief Photographer
Staff Photographers
George Miller III,
Sports Editor
Yael Aboulahouski,
Sports Editor
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Assistant Marketing Manager Assistant Advertising Manager Assistant Advertising Manager Beckham Linda Creekman Gary Burry
Assistant Classified Man Debbie Ramsay National Advertising Manager Mark Winters Advertising Photographer Debbie Watts News Advisor Publisher Business Advisor
News Advisor Publisher Business Advisor
Shanua Shaw Dary David Mel Adams
from Topeka, some from Kansas City, some from various other locations. All of us have one thing in common: We spend
Paula Jolly
The other commuters roll into the car, spreading books, briefcases and lunch sacks over every available empty space. Greetings are exchanged; a few words are spoken about school. Eventually silence reigns again, with music and news from my sometimes-functioning car radio.
Our reasons for commuting vary. Some may have husbands or wives going to school in Kansas City or Topeka; others live with their parents than to rent a place in Lawrence.
large chunks of our college lives behind the steering wheel.
The others open books or shuffle through class notes. I see concentration on driving, but my eyelids feel as if lead weights were pulling them down. I open books and hoping the cold air will clear, my eyes
For members of a car pool like ours, the distance from home to O-zone parking lot at K3-2 highway, is about 47 miles.
For this semester, which will total about 80 school days, the daily round trip will add up to about 7,600 miles on the road.
The miles slip by in the foggy morning. I watch the early-bird jogging of some high school athletes in Bonner Springs, and then the highway us up into the plateau country in Leavenworth County. The fogs lift a little, and I can see open ponds and golden farm ponds and golden overgrown fields. Appalachian horses and Holstein cattle skip by as the road winds on.
If gasoline were to cost 55 cents a gallon during the entire semester, commuting 7,600 miles in car averaging 25 miles per gallon would be less. The miles covered and gas consumed would be less if the turpike were used, but that would add about $7.50 a week, or a gallon of gas. The turpike tolls—something definitely not worth changing to.
The sun bursts triumphantly through the fog as we approach the Douglas County line. I'm confident I will be brilliant in the rear-view mirror, and as I adjust the mirror to spare my eyes, I see that the commuter in the back has fallen asleep. His head lolls on to the floor window, and a book slowly inches off his lap. In the seat
next to me another student also sleeps, a sheaf of notes in her unmoving hands. I light a cigarette to stay awake: The worry about dropping ashes on my clothes gives my mind a hardaw on. I look at my watch and find the time to be 7:45 a.m.
Pekahs the most valuable thing lost by a commuting student is time. Commuting between Kansas City and Lawrence, for example, takes two hours, but this week—time that could be spent studying, sleeping or being in love.
As K-32 crosses over the trumpet, I glance at the traffic below and remember what it was like to commute during the winter classes on an ice-colored classes on an ice-colored trumpet at 30 miles per hour.
The highway descends into the Kaw River valley, and the twin towers of Fraser Hall are visible in the distance. By 8 a.m. we pull into O-zone and my fellow travelers stir, rub their eyes and collect their books. The journey is over for now.
Someone counts out loud the number of class days left in the semester. We groan in unison, and we all look at the whole thing seems bearable.
Only 49 commuting days remain until the semester's end.
Mediocrity not so bad
E
Like a schoolboy explaining a bad report to disappoint parents, he protested that at least a C would have been justifiable. After all, C had always been his grade in high school. He quickly added that his grades had improved when he reached college level. Then he and already marked down the mayor of Kansas City, Mo., as a C-grade person and always would think of him as mediocre.
BY JANEM MACAULAY
Foreign Exchange Graduates in Student
from Aberdeen, Scotland
Mayor Charles Wheeler of Kansas City, Mo., faced the TV cameras with downcast eyes. His city just lost its high "liveliness" rating still, still, had received a D-grade for its politics.
It's bad to be mediocre in America, where everything strives to be biggest and best. New York City is the world's longest waterfall. Chicago (almost proudly) claims the greatest crime rate. The University of Kansas welcomes us to its overcrowded classrooms with the news of higher-than-ever
Britain is a very small country. At an early stage of primary school geography, I was taught that Britain could be smok entirely in one of the American Great Lakes.
But the British are resilient. Someone invented the phrase "Small is beautiful." Not
I sympathize. Mr. Wheeler. It would be pleasant to be an A-grade mayor, responsible for the most liveable city in this, the most affluent country in the world. But we all have our limitations. Not only am I a B-grade person with a second-class university degree, but I am
only do we take pride in our smallness, but our separatist movements—Scottish, Welsh and even Cornish—try to break the country into still smaller units.
In spite of economic problems, we continue to support small corner shops and have launched campaigns against the closure of one-teacher schools. We take pride in poverty rather than wealth, maintaining that this has strengthened our national character.
Well, perhaps we do make ourselves slightly ridiculous. What Britain and America fail to recognize is that not everyone can be the biggest or the smallest, the richest or the poorest. Most people always will be somewhere in between.
But is this so bad? We, the mediocre, are the backbone of our respective nations. It must be nice to be first-rate in a particular field, the greatest painter the world has ever known or just the most popular boy in the class. But the second-rate painter who also is a second-rate friend, probably is a much more useful member of society and much more pleasant to know.
Not everyone can be President (though it sometimes seems as if everyone wants to be, but many people can, by working hard, become efficient politicians.
Why does the word "medicore" carry such a stigma? The state of Kansas boasts no tallest buildings (unless they are grain elevators) or spectacular natural features. One claim for inclusion in the record books is that it contains the geographical center of the United States. Should we call it "the most medicore state in the country"?
4
Friday. October 24. 1975
University Daily Kansan
Foreign playing styles influence KU's soccer club
SUNDAY, JULY 15, 1980
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
Rafael Santos boots one downfield
NEW a nick of your whist
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Watching a University of Kansas soccer practice can be quite an experience. If you let your mind wander, you might forget what country you're in.
Standing on the sidelines, you're likely to hear players from 11 different countries frantically yelling at each other in their native tongues, while they scramble around the soccer field, kicking the hell out of a little black and white ball.
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But even though the team may look like the United Nations soccer club, the players have one thing in common: they love soccer.
in kindergarten," said Rafael Perez, a sophomore who served on the United States Coast Guard.
"I've been playing soccer ever since I was
PERE2 PLAYS ONE of the most demanding positions on the team; he is the defensive guard.
Joe Radcliffe
North Writer
Some of the common injuries for goalkeepers are broken ribs, fingers and arms, along with ankle and knee injuries, members who are former goalkeepers
"I guess you kind of have to be nuts"
pressed with a laugh. "But you have to
expect it."
PEREZ, LIKE MOST of the foreign students on the team, learned to play in grade school. He also played on several high school teams.
"I'm more afraid that the guy is going to score a goal," he said. "You have to get mentally prepared. I start getting nervous if the team has a good offense."
But in a game, Perez said, he wasn't scared of being hit.
everyone would pitch in and help him out," recalled Perez.
"I went to a Catholic grade school and high school combined where all the priests were Spanish," he said. "And the Spanish are very good soccer players. They encouraged me to be a goalie. Then, when I graduated, I came here."
Perez said he had never been in a soccer club before. He said he wasn't used to some of the extra problems that he and the other players had to face.
"I last year when the team went to a meet,
he had to pay for the food and the hotel
that we stayed."
"We got a little more money and we're able to use the stadium, so we'll get some money from the gate," he said. "We might help us out." The University is really helping us out."
But this year, Perez said, things are looking better.
"WE DIDN'T CARE, we just wanted to play soccer."
"Europeans and Americans play a more physical type of soccer," he said, "and the Venezuelans dribble the ball more than most of the American players."
Peres said he had noticed how different countries had different playing styles.
KEN KILCULLEN, A player from New Jersey also noticed different styles among American
"Soccer is different here. We're more physical in England," he said. "But we also like football."
Kilcullen he thought that a variety of styles was good for the team.
"A lot of styles add to the talent of the team. If you have some guys that are physical and some that can control the ball, it all makes for a better team," he said.
However, another player, Rafael Santos,
he thought that a lot of styles could
be represented.
Santos said that one thing he learned in the United States was how to play for a team. He and his cousin Felipe, also a team member, are from Colombia.
Rafael said that where he lived, the pawlers tended to keep the ball more and do it faster.
"There's more teamwork in the States," he said. "In South America it's more personal. It makes it hard to get a team together and make them play like a team."
FELPE SAID THAT this year's club had a lot of enthusiasm.
"Once we get adjusted to the different styles, we'll be a hell of a team," he said. "Our problems are quick to develop on a team with all the abilities that wouldn't exist on other teams.
everyone is selling and they hire their own
business. Hernie makes
everybody sneak English."
One team member, Mike Fenter. St.
Louis sophomore, said that the language
has changed.
"The players are more likely to pass to someone who speaks their own language,"
"they don't have to wait."
"They really can't help it because
See FOREIGN page five
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 7,1975
光
KU offense rolling now
In the first two football games combined, the offense managed only 411 yards. That figure has been surpassed in each of the past two games. The Jayhawks pounded out over Oregon State and 444 yards in Saturday's slamming 41-7 rome over Wisconsin.
In two weeks, the University of Kansas
involved in virtually nonexistent
unability to potent
"We were trying to do too much with it." Moore said yesterday, "I forgot this欠 Alabama where we had been running the wishbone for several years. It's a completely offense, and it's going to take time to implement it."
The passing game, though, remains a problem. Through four games, quarrels over McMichael and Nolan Cromwell have combined only nine of 28 passes for 67 yards.
"We've cut it down to a very few basic running and passing plays," he said. "This has eliminated the confusion that existed earlier.
So Moore did what was needed. He simplified the offense.
"There's no question we will have to throw Saturday (at Nebraska)." Moore said. That concerns me because we haven't had that much experience in a ball game.
Defensively, KU will go into the Wisconsin game without one of its starters. Noseguard Demis Balagna suffered a hamstring injury at Wisconsin and is considered doubtful.
"Everyone knows his responsibility and 'everywhat he is going' do on every play.
The result is that our execution has improved tremendous, and our mistakes have reduced.
Because the KU defensive line lacks depth, that loss could be a problem, especially if another lineman is hurt the game. To reap Balagina, James Emerson was moved up to the first team. Franklin King, who starts at defensive tackle, will
working on it this week. Anytime you out-
throw the people against you will gear up to
threaten you.
"We're going to spend a good bit of time
Moore got a big scare Saturday when defensive tackle Mike Butler, the veteran of the line, suffered a bruised knee. But Butter's injury wasn't as serious as it was tonight, and he was able to practice Monday. Moore said he expected Butler to be ready.
back up Emerson. When King moves to
Paul Van Sam will replace him, Moore
moves.
Wide receiver Rich McAnulfe, who missed the Wisconsin game with a separated shoulder, is on the doubtful list again this week.
26
Nolan Cromwell
Cromwell named again
For a player who used to spend his Saturday's punishing opposing runners from his safety position, KU quarterback Brandon Baskerville came up with the name for himself as an offensively mounted
Since Cromwell was installed as the starting quarterback two weeks ago, the Jayhawk offense has broken loose from its early season woes.
For the second consecutive week October 16, he named the offensive player. He received the honor after gaining 187 yards in 20 games and joining the Jayhawks to a 4-1 upset of Wisconsin.
"Nolan is playing the position with much more confidence and comfort now," KU head coach Bud Moore said. "He's reading the keys much better and operating the wishbone extremely well from a mechanical standpoint."
Cromwell has run for 481 players in the past two games, and has 525 yards on 62 carries. This rushing average is 131.3 yards a game, which is among the best in the Big Eight.
Osborne lauds KU's wishbone
LINOLN, Neb. (AP)-Nebraska coach
Hamas has an explosive offense with lots of
goals.
Vice Ferragallo, who has been the back up quarterback most of the season, will be the starter Saturday. Osborne said. He added that Terry Lack had not been demoted.
"Our biggest concern is the fact that this is our first time to face a wishbone team. We probably haven't met a really good offender," he said. "Our defense will be getting a severe test."
Elrod named top defender
KANSAN WANT ADS
KANSAS CITY (AP) - Jimbrol Eldor of the University of Oklahoma was selected unanimously as the Big Eight's defensive placer of the week yesterday.
Elirod, a defensive end, probably was the big reason the unbeaten Sooners were able to get by Miami of Florida and the University of Colorado the past two weeks.
"Elrod is having a super year," Sooner巴里·Burtsley said. He has been unbehind much of the team, but unbehind
Erod made 19 tackles against Colorado, including 12 unaffected stops. Three of his tackles were behind the line of scrimpage and totaled 15 years in losses.
A perfect first-through-fifth finish by the University of Kansas women's cross country team pushed them to an easy dual meet. The women's state University team at Stillwater.
Kurt Knott was KU's ninniness. The senior safety recorded 16 tackles, 10 of them unassisted, and intercepted a pass.
"It was far and away the best game he's played this year," defensive coordinator Lance Van Zandt said. "He was all over the field."
"I thought he did a fantastic job." Colorado coach Bill Mallory said. "I don't think I've seen a better defensive job. Some of the things he did were fantastic."
Hedi Walli paced the Jayhawks with a first-place finish. She was followed by Joel Johnson, and Robin Mathson, J. K. Walters and Laura Cook to round out the perfect finish.
Wallace paces women runner
Accommodations, goods, services and employ-
ment advertised in the University Daily Kannan
bureau. (C) University of Michigan.
Owner, creed, or national origin. PLEASE SHINE
LASS CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
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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 on social media using the UDR business office at 604-1538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.—Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, your equipment needs to be on the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFTS.
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Now we merchandise close-outs, etc. Now selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket with our nationwide chain and stand. Open 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Closed Sundays. Metz's Salvage Center, 628 Vermont. 898 Messenger
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 24-14 oz.
No reserve, no discount. Metzal Salvage.
685 Vermont.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonable Price, Freeship,
Gloves. Stones cut and polished. Turgurion, Kath.
Fees: $150. 95% off minimum purchase.
We can make your stereo sound better. -GUAR-
menting. We can help you deal better at
Audio Systems, 307 E. 9th. Hf.
20% Discount on all antique and used furniture,
furniture, rugs, and upholstery products including canteau crakes, bushel and
rack furniture, candle holders, wheels, rams, and hats. Also full price of fresh fruits
and cheese. Country Store 3088 W. 410th St. W. 318-319, shop 6.
Country Store 3088 W. 410th St. W. 318-319, shop 6.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amp, drums,
bass, trumpet, saxophone, percussion, Shop. House Keyboard Studio. Choose from Gibbon
Sessions, on Guitar Green, and many others.
All guitar guitars in box, and many others.
All keyboard guitars in box, and many others.
All keyboards Studio. Choose from Gibbon
140 W. 2rd; 83-97-8377.
Past & Present Antiques. Collectables, collectibles. Low priced furniture. 347 Mast B43-804. B43-804.
For Sale: 1974 Red Corvette, town car 600 miles
Hint: interest call Lee collect 19-50
19-50
A Special Sale now at Ray Audio, 13 E. 8th,
842-304-791. Stop by.
10-10
Must sell 1728 Sabb 92M-AM Stereo, air
conditioning, front wheel drive. After 6:00. 883-445-
3827.
Pair of Infinity Wave Transmission Line Column
Pairs $100. Perfect condition, Call Audi
$858. 18-7
For Sale: 1917 Plymouth Cricket. Excellent Con-
version automatic. Call 664-1583 for 10-8
2850 after 5:30.
KODAK STEREO camera f 3.5, leather case; $25.
KODAK LENS camera f 4.0, leather case; $15.
POLAROID Model 201 Automatic flash, light meter, case, auxiliary (folding) flash, $18-$51.50.
POLAROID Model 201 4.00-pin, $161-$181.50 over 10-9
seconds.
3 month old German Shark, has shots, for sale
to good home. Call after 5 p.m. 844-386-2981
Skis for mate: Fisher SuperPro (18mm) $45.00.
Skis in bindings, boot and ski skates
66-1177.
BOOK SALE. Tonguekiss Public Library, Baltimore, Md. *DVD* Tonguekiss Books' National Geographic: Old K. U. Ammons.
Head skis 188 cm, without bindings 40. Tennis racketer stringer with accessories=20. WV replacement racket to endfer panel, for Vans up to 103. Also back for WV Can. VW 167. 3388. Aller
For Sale. Altrequile and 125 lizard projector with two circular trays and slacker loader. Call 841-306-7960.
Gibson J-215 Deluxe Guitar with case, 4 months,
820 - $15.89 - 828-906-996
10-7
GAY COUNSELING
& RAP
for referrals
info. center
864-3504
844-3205
A.K.C. Black Labrador Retriever, nine weeks
outstanding blood lines. $75, $81-4845, and
90.
For Sale: 23"¹¹ Gitante 10-sp. sew-ups. 843-2218
evenings.
Marantz 112 Tuner, 3 months old, $160, 841-240-955
--the earth is one country . and mankind its citizens
Guitar-Gibson L-65. Excellent condition, hard
shell case must. 450. Will bargain. B14. 8714-04.
676.
73 Plymouth Duate. Excellent condition. One year
worth of life. Reliable. May be appraised to see
reliability
1971 wall 4-speed VOLKSWAGEN with roof, low mileage. 1972 bright green VOLKSWAGEN, convertible, AM-FM. 1971 TRUMP TR-8. 1973 move out to move out. 10:10 hawk VOLKSWAGEN
1900 Hearse Cadillac. Excellent condition, 39,000
Original miles. All power. Must sell. 813-644-8410
71 Kawasaki W 1000 Excelent cable, very reliable.
Motorcycle. Can be seen at 10-10
Motocycle.
HP-45 with accessories. $175. Doug Andrew. 842-
7364 or room 204 Learned Hall. 10-8
smoky car
NOTICE
1975 Cimatti Italian motorbike, 50cc, 180 miles
Schwin 10w, one year old, just like new.
$100. Call after 11 p.m. 844-6804. 10-10
French 10-speed bicycle, Jeunet-26" frame ox-
ment condition plus bicycle rack $160. 8271
8271
COST PLUS 16% - Stereo Cassette. All major
hardware or accessories. Call Dave. Phone
882-790-6454 or items or packages. Call Dave. Phone 882-
790-6454.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at the Quick Copy Center. $35,100 copies = $35,100; 5,000 copies = $84,100; 1,000 copies = $16,900. We want business at the Quick Copy Center.
66 VV. Needs engine work. Make best offer.
call anytime. 814-3007. 10-8
Rent a piano, monthly or semester basis. Law-
rence Piano Rental. B43-308. 308-308.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Speakings on
the importance of photography in our lives.
WE will be shooting with you and anyone you
like. WE will also shoot with your friends.
Hire us now!
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of topsets TEND $1 for your up-to-160 page, topset order catalog. Research Assistance, order catalog. #256 Los Angeles, CA; HQ 96253. (212) 477-8474.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dish
ware, clocks, televisions. Open daily.
862-3377
Troubled where to have your car serviced this semester?
Need home for 2 year old black cat. Spayed, very affectionate, affectionate. 842-5748. 10-9
BERA SLEE-All brands $19.39 skipc $28.50
Kegs Party supplies Ice company, 6th & View
Ice company
LOST AND FOUND
FREE—Adorable kittens need good homes Call 842-9341 or 842-4821 after 6. 10-14
Found a key on safety pin in O-Zone. Identify by number on key. Call 842-3014. 10-7
FOUND-Whit & Black Scot Terrier with Red collar new Hakenke. Stadium. If you'd like to buy a new Hakenke, call 1-800-725-3222.
FOUND: Girl's Jacket, blue corduroy, Naimish and Ssumidey. Call 843-2586. 10-7
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
Found: Palm of gold rim glasses. Call Greg 841-
6573 at 500. 10-7
Found near Alumina Place, extraordinarily tiring
forestry. Call her at 848-756-3018. b-9
fowler, Call her at 848-756-3018. b-9
Urgent! Lost two rings on canoe trip one,梨
one class ring. Reward-马利. 843-610-10. 10-7
900 New Jersey
Call
Set of keys found West of Malott. 841-6973
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
RUGS
15 East 8th 84120
10.5 Monday.Saturday
842-0753
Boise is Low. We want him home! Tue-colored
Vale, 72nd St. and 16th Ave. Boise City,
Idaho 83705; & Guadalupe Child's pool. We keep
him in our car. Call 515-429-6298.
Found: T search book in 9th and Miss. area.
Call: 841-3007. 10-8
FOUND: Baby gray outfit inside Elworth Hall
If you want her, call 864-184-184
10-9
TYPING
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is designed to help you manage your Service Our service is fast and prices are reasonable. We have a team of experienced copy professionals.
Experienced typist, I.B. M匙谋. Thesis, discs,
and term papers. Call Fam Jemn 1842-
843-757.
*Typing-* experienced in disertations, theses, manuscripts, cartoons, and other forms. Call Center, Call Lodge, 842-8038
Experimented typet-term papers, theses, mice.
Experimented typet-endspelling, spelling,
corrected 843-854. Mrs. Wright
Professional typing. unusual pecia type electric typewriter, B.A. Scaled Science, work guaranteed. Rates our mile papers, paper, dissertations. Contact Caroline. Coral, 842-0724. 10-7
EDITING and TYPING. Prompt, exploit, report
on the system. Call 842-912-7710. 12-10
Reasonable rates. Call 842-912-7710.
Experienced typist will do themes, theses, discussions. Call 842-1423-9587 842-9978 Event Avenues.
WANTED
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-6440. 1000.
2 females to meet 3 bedrooms townhouse with 1.
other girl $77.50, 81-244.700 Saturday–Sunday.
Married Engineer student needs place to live during week. Write John Gravelle, 113 Vermont
Roommate for furnished. 2-bedroom apt., roommate $73.50/month call after 5 - Maleholding $18.49/month
10-8
Shutt-in graduate student has war games, wants
shoot-ins. Call 842-6273. 10-9
Low利率 Aggressive & Energetic, wanted for
Lead Finance Agent. Requires Master's deg or
+6 years of experience. John are already signed.
John is a Senior Finance Agent.
Wanted: One roommate to share a three bedroom, 1½ bath, new duplex with two other students. $73 a month plus utilities. Kitchen furnished. We invite party, must be cool. I慰问 10-7841-8294
Used by Hp-Gain CJB side 69 channel unit.
Five watt. Call 864-3092.
10-7
Wanted: Male roommate to share rent. $130 at
Jaywalker Towers. Call 841-7442. 10-13
One ticket to the KU-KState game 842-
6040. Ask for Tom Law. 10-13
PERSONAL
NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC—Beginning thru advanced music theory, including vocal techniques. Call McKenna Martin. Staged by Karen Tuckman.
CONNIE'S NATURAL FOODS 425 Indiana Food Stamps Accepted 8-4 Tues., Thurs., Sat.
Bahär Faith
Bahai meetings Monday----7:30p.m. Regency Room
armadillo bead co
LIQUID SILVE
TURQOISE
CORAL
Ride-On Bicycles
Best prices, service, selection
14° Massachusetts
984
RANGER
2016
NATURAL BEADS
MACRAME BEADS
710 Mass.
M-Sat. 10-5—Thurs. 4-8
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
RECREATION'S FINEST
"If we don't got it you didn't want
to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
The Sanctuary is planning an art and craft show in May featuring the meramee and other crafts made the natural beauty of the deck at the Sanctuary. No charge for attendance. For arrangements, call 843-600-2844 between 8-4.
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION: Meeting first
day of the hearings; meeting UN Office
bda. 864- 3045, Society for Law
Society
Help! Doing articles on Kauai Backpacking/
Kauai Snorkeling!
Ideas or experience: 842-295-6000 Keep up to date.
Ideas or experience: 842-295-6000 Keep up to date.
Do not read this ad—I would like to rent your
"Ship Capsule" Bed–Jacuzzi at 10 a.m.
and 2 p.m. Wednesdays after 9 a.m.
Smokers who want to stop and interested in the Lawrence Smoking Clinic but were unable to attend our first sessions please call 412-817 or visit www.lawrencesmoking.com or fran Tuerse Tuesday, October 7 at 5 p.m.
SERVICES OFFERED
FOR RENT
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Priced. Professionals with excellent skills and knowledge. Slice stones cut and polished. Turquoise, Baltic amber, sapphire.
MATH TUTORING>-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 123, 184, 141, 143, 168, 568, 731, test prep tutorials, regular lessons. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence Lawnery,
Rental Exchange. 842-250-3900.
Apartment, furnished, wall-to-wall carpet, parquet flooring. Kitchen, BEDROOM, BUILDING, KIDS DOWNDOOR. Names: 842.357-6767.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTER: Drop in at the front desk. Call "ATTENTION STUDENT RENTER" at WEBSTERCITY.COM or "ATTENTION STUDENT RENTER" at WEBSTERCITY.COM.
2 bedroom apartment, all utilities paid, A/C on
electricity, pool, gym, pet supplies, drive-in,
parking, laundry facilities. 1603
"Tires--Batteries—Accessories"
19th & Mass
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
NAPA
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
offer: 1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it
overnight
4. Machine shop service
Auto Parts
Wally Reid's N.A.P.A.
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
TRADE-2 bd. house, $130 for 2 bd. house,
$200 range, 843-964 after 5.
10-7
For Rent: Sublease room at Nalamit Hall Im-
mediately. Everything paid. 841-6781.
For Rent: 1 lbm. at campus, Furnished with
utilities. Close to campus, $160. Mail 841-3230, 10-7
FOOD
Jayhawk Tower Apartments sublease-2 bedroom
Jayhawk Tower Apartments, utilizes furnished
844-664-6741 10-14
THE CATFISH BAR & GRILL is serving ham-
burgers, roast beef sandwiches, grilled ham and
cheeses, four frish crieps and more between
them. Tuesday 8 a.m.-2 p.m. 10-7
Sunday breakfast 8 a.m.-2 p.m.
ENTERTAINMENT
Horseback and Hayrack riding, 16 miles west on
Hawthorow 40, 887 Spencer. Spencer.
10-31
RIDES RIDERS
Tutor needed for business 802 (Economies)
Tutor needs more 802. Call 866-5668 after a call.
Anyone interested in forming a carpool from Jeff. Co. to the KU campus contact 774-8303, 10-10
POTION PARLOR Formerly Body Bizarre
BOKONGY
?
612 N. 2nd St.
2 Blocks North
of Kaw River Bridge
KWIKI CAR WASH
Self Service or Brush Wash
AWRENCE PURPLUS
819 Vermont
740 Massachusetts
a quiet corner
"The home of LEVIS Jeans'
THE LOUNGE
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Feosball
843
9500
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
BSR
BIC
TEAC
BASF
DUAL
UHER
HOTEL
SHURE
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University Dally Kansan
Friday, October 24, 1975
r own
makes
5
Foreign playing ...
From page four
But because the players don't always speak English, Ferster found a solution to
"I've taken some Spanish and the guys taught me some essential words so I can vell at them in Spanish like everyone else," she added. "I taught me a few essential cursive words."
Fenster said that everyone had to try to understand each other to get along.
"The Latina are very temperamental," he said. "But they're really not that hard to get."
He said that some of the players misunderstood Mullins' criticism during the team meetings. Fenster said he was one of them.
"I THOUGHT HE WAS just cutting me down, I was ready to quit," he remembered. "But then I realized that it was all conspiracy, the criticism, that he was just trying to help me."
But despite all of the problems, Fenster said, the team is very close knit.
"we party a lot together and Bernie will invite a couple guys over for dinner once in
a while," he said. "On a soccer team everyone has to get along."
Another player, Randy McClain, said he didn't think any real problems existed, either with different styles of play or with social conflicts.
"THESE IS NO PROBLEM. Everyone knows the game," he said. "It's beneficial. You get a variety of styles from all over the world."
Mclain is from Liberia and is working on Ph.D. in chemical engineering. He has been awarded a postdoctoral fellowship.
"I started playing when I was old enc agh
to kick," he said. "We'd start with tennis balls and move to something bigger."
For some of the players like Terry Wilcoen, St. Louis sophomore, the club is a learning experience. Wilcoen said he had noticed that foreign students learned the fundamentals of the game early, while Americans may not learn them at all.
"I feel that it's an advantage for me to be able to play with foreigners," he said. "The Americans are starting to ask questions. They realize that they can learn a lot by talking with players from other parts of the world."
1976
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
Kansas goalkeeper Rafael Perez leaps to catch an opponent's shot during practice of KU's soccer club
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Tuesday, October 7, 1975
University Daily Kansan
-
Scholarship halls misunderstood
Staff Writer
By SARAHOLLAND
A common misunderstanding about scholarship halls is that everyone in them are "bad students." It is, however, true.
According to Karen Schmidt, Aitchison sophomore and Sellards Hall resident, "not everybody who lives in scholarship halls has a scholarship."
Mark Tartt, Hosinger senior and Grace Pearson Hall resident, said, "everyone in a scholarship hall basically is interested in studying but not exclusively."
To be considered for residence in a scholarship hall, a student must fill out an application form. A scholarship hall selection committee, according to Kirk McAlexander, assistant to the director, will review and approve.
"The committee," he said, "is made up of students, faculty members and staff members from the offices of the dean of men and dean of women."
"Scholastic ability, financial need and personal recommendations are three criteria that determine who can live in high school." "Subjective factors like high school activities, honors and previous work experience are also important determinants."
He said final selections were based on a cumulative score of the basic criteria.
In order to remain in a scholarship hall, the resident must complete at least 14 hours a semester, maintain a 2.5 grade in coursework completed cooperative hall agreements, which include
Grad given travel rights
Pam Fansher, 23, a 1975 University of Kansas graduate and member of the Unification Church, had restrictions on her attendance at court. She was barton County District Court judge.
Judge Frederick Woleslagel had ordered Sept. 23 that Fanshier not come within 15 miles of Lawrence or Manhattan, where the church has branches, until she had completed a series of psychiatric examinations. Fanshier was committed by her parents, Mrs. Robert Bushin, because they thought she had been brainwashed by the church.
With the travel restriction lifted, Fanshier's attorneys will contest Woleslager's order for the examination. According to James Lawing, a Wichita attorney representing Fanshier, a hearing for Woleslager and Fanshier's parents to show cause for the examination is scheduled at a special court on Thursday, the judge court. Fanshier is scheduled for two more examinations in Great Bend this week.
Fansher avoided a charge of contempt of court Friday by attending the first in a series of court-ordered examinations. Fansher's attorneys balked at the travel ban, but he learned it could take up to five weeks instead 10 days to complete the examinations.
Robert Keenan, attorney for Fanshier's parents, said he didn't think anything would come out of Thursday's hearing. Keenan said he thought a federal judge would be hesitant to assume jurisdiction over a state district court.
Lawrence said Fanshier might return to the church's Lawrence branch, 700 Ohio St., where she first became involved with the organization, after Thursday's hearing.
working within the hall seven hours a week,
McAegan said.
McAlexander said 400 students lived in the eight scholarship halls at KU. There are four women's scholarship halls and four men's scholarship halls.
Jay Lindley, All Scholarship Hall Council president, said there were three types of
Some halls have two persons who share a room similar to a residence hall, he said. Some halls have separate study rooms and dormitories. Some halls have two study rooms and two sleeping rooms, he said.
Deb Nemeth, Watkins Hall president, said kitchen facilities varied. Most scholarship halls have one kitchen, she said, but in some places the Hall there will be seven small kitchens.
McAlexander said every scholarship hall had a house mother or a residence hall director. He said their main duties were to give students the stress and conduct standards and counseling.
"The men's scholarship halls also have a hall proctor who is responsible for job assignments." McAlexander said. They are paid by the office of the dean of men.
The women's scholarship halls have an elected officer who acts as a hall proctor, McAlexander said. Their duties vary in different halls.
Rick Riley, Battiefen Hall proctor, said he was responsible for working in cooperation with the housing office concerning maintenance problems, arranging the work schedules and acting as a representative for the office of the dean of the college and many of the same duties that a resident assistant in a residence hall did.
Pam Schmidt, vice president of Douthart, said cooperation was important in her hall because all maintenance duties and hall procedures were done by residents.
"The biggest advantage of a scholarship hall," John Friedmann, Pearson resident and Manhattan senior, said, "is the cheaper housing costs."
He said that scholarship halls were quieter than residence halls, and that he had more close friends as a result of living in Pearson.
Calvin Karlin, Stephenson Hall director,
said that because scholarship halls were
invented in the 1970s, they were not.
Kathy Mahone, Sellards Hall resident and Overland Park sophomore, said there was
Pick-up delayed on LAS folders
Juniors and seniors from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences now have to give one day's notice to the college office at 206 Strong to obtain their confidential folders.
Liberal Arts and Sciences students must fill out a request form for their confidential folders and they can pick up their folders at 10 a.m. the next morning.
In the past, confidential folders could be obtained immediately. However, this policy was changed because junior and senior folders weren't kept up-to-date this summer.
Veda S. Gibson, assistant dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said Friday, "We don't want to give out a (confidential) folder unless it's accurate. So we are asking for the students patience and understanding."
Gibson said confidential folders were checked and updated before a student took the course.
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an emphasis in scholarship halls to meet everyone. She said she lived in a residence hall last year and preferred the smaller living group.
One problem is that most scholarship hall residents don't know many persons who live outside the halls, she said. She said that because she had lived in a residence hall, she had more outside contacts than most scholarship hall residents.
Friedman said disadvantages of scholarship halls included less freedom than that of a residence hall and no personal phones.
Lindley said he thought privacy was another problem.
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Friday, October 24.1975
University Daily Kausan
Women coaches pushing changes
At a time when NCAA men's athletic programs across the country having to trim budgets or die, women's intercollegiate athletics are gathering strength nationwide.
Nowhere is this illustrated more graphically than at the University of Kansas, where the addition of salaried coaches, scholarships to women athletes and women interested in playing have given rise to a young yet diversified program.
And yet, to say the program was skeletal
MARCELLA
THE MEN'S CUP
CHAMPIONSHIP
SUNDAY, JULY 26TH, 1975
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
Golf coach Nancy Boozer
instructs daughter Beth
three short years ago is an understatement. Physical education teachers coached the teams in their "spare" time, and administrative leadership was non-existent.
Most of the women's coaching staff today are former competitors in sports events.
Marian Washington, who doubles as the basketball coach, was a two-time All-Star for the U.S. State College and was a member of the United States National Team for three years. This summer, she toured the Soviet Union as a $m$ member of the United States team.
Ken Snow, women's gymnastics coach, was a four-year letterman in that sport at Kansas State, and was the Big Eight champion in floor exercise.
TENNIS COACH TOM Kivisto was a three-year starter on the KU basketball team. He was the co-captain of the squad that finished fourth in the NCAA four-
Jack Igar, volleyball coach, isn't a former competitor. He's a volleyball fanatic. A practicing lawyer who began his coaching career with a local community center's men's team, Igar gravitated to women's team, because he thought it was more exciting.
Washington's career is women's athletics. But the others had varied answers to as whether they would make a career of coaching women's sports.
"Coaching women's athletics has possibilities as a career," Snow said. "But it is a challenge."
Along with his coaching duties, Snow is a local distributor of gymnastics supplies for the United States.
SNOW SAID IF HE continued as a gymnastics coach, he would stay with women's gymnastics because it was a major sport for women but only a minor sport for men. He is also an assistant men's gymnastics coach here and a head coach at Kansas State University.
"Men's gymnastics isn't generating outside interest," Snow said. "It's a minor issue."
Swimming coach Claire McElroy said she would stay in coaching at a college or
Kivisto, a graduate student in architecture, said he was coaching a women's sport because of the challenge it presented to him.
"The pressures of competing are external," he said. "Coaching barriers are internal. I demand from myself now than I did when I was slaving basketball."
Kivisto declined to say whether he would in coaching or pursue a career in architecture.
Kiviste's re-entr into sports as a coach illustrates what Washington said was one of his biggest disappointments.
"Athletics is the basis of my being,"
COACHING STATE
Gymnastics coach Ken Snow watches performance
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
Kelly Scott Sports Writer
Washington said. "After you've been competing awhile, you feel the need to get out. But after you're out you feel the need to hang on to it."
KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU
WASHINGTON SAID the possibility that women's sports could gain into a big-time market would be unrealistic.
She said she thought many top women's sports administrators who coached part time would return to full-time coaching if there was enough money in it.
If professional women's sports take off, college sports will be under pressure to produce top athletes, she said. If that means a higher value of college coaching jobs will go on.
All the coaches agreed that better coaching was needed in high schools
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Because few high schools have developed
Snow said the gymnasts he had this year were better prepared than last year, and he thought the situation would get better each year.
HE SAID THE COACHING clinics KU gonourised periodically were aimed at
women's sports programs, several coaches said they spent time teaching basic skills when they could have spent it on advanced training.
Many injuries to young women athletes could be avoided, he said, if high school coaches would learn the proper way to condition and train them.
The presence of scholarship players on her teams, Washington said, gave her expectations of them she didn't think were fair.
The coaches said the addition of scholarship players on their teams had changed their approach to coaching and they now have power to recruit they didn't have before.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.32
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
October 8.1975
PLEASANT
Wednesday
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
BENEFIT OF THE ORDERS
Concerned
drinking establishment as mayor Barkey Clark, left, looks over complaints filed by residents in the area of 14th and Ohio.
John Wooden, owner of the Wheel, considers the future of his
Commission takes action on tavern crowd problem
By IAN KENNETH LOUDEN
Staff Writer
The problem of beer-drinking students around 14th and Ohio streets has been恳请
In September the Lawrence City Commission decided to send a petition to the Kansas Board of Regents that requested it allow beer to be sold in the Kansas Union Market. The committee agreed to the Wagon Wheel Cafe and the Jayhawk Cafe which are at 14th and Ohio.
LAST WEEK the commissioners decided that more immediate action must be taken because the Regents hadn't reached a settlement on the sale of beer in the Union.
Loren Impson, 1023 Ohio and the owner of apartment houses behind the Wheel, last night presented pictures to the commission of students drinking beer outside the Wheel.
He said the owner of the Wheel, John Wooden, had sold her at the exit of the building.
Mayor Barkley Clark said he thought that penalty was too severe. He suggested 14th, from Tennessee Street to the University campus, be closed during home games.
Impson said that Clark's idea sidestepped the real problem.
"DON'T ALLOW him to open the Wheel after dark and on weekends." he said
Senate funding showdown possible
By JIM BATES Staff Writer
LAST YEAR, Impson said, Wooden signed an agreement with local residents that said he wouldn't allow students to take beer outside the Wheel.
Two Student Senate committees could
have been formed to meet at 3:30 tonight in the last drawhawk.
"I's the management," he said. "The John doesn't cause the trouble that the Whale does."
A possible confrontation between the Senate Rights and Responsibilities Committee and the Senate Communications Committee was set up when the Communications Committee passed by voice during the 800 in supplemental funds to the Kansen.
Impson said Wooden had violated that written agreement. He offered a solution.
THE KANSAN, which requested $15,008,
was allocated nothing by the Finance and
Auditing Committee in its fall funding bill,
which the Senate will consider tonight. The
Communications Committee will attempt to
fund the funding bill from the Senate floor.
game. Wooden then allowed the students to take the beer outside, he said.
That way, he said, the Kansan could continue to operate independently of the
Julli Anderson, Finance and Auditing chairman, told her committee after it finished budget deliberations last Wednesday that it would have to be prepared to defend its findings before the board allocated only $14.105 of a possible £27.000.
KJHK-FM received a $5,000 block allocation.
Flynn told his committee he thought it was important that the Kansan received some money to maintain its operating fund near its present level. The Kansan should have at least enough money in reserve for one year's operating expenses, he said.
Kevin Flynn, Communications chairman, called last night's special committee meeting after an unsuccessful attempt to get the Finance and Auditing Committee to reconsider the Kansas request. The Kansas two funding priorities are are his committee's two funding priorities.
The Kansan was cut off completely by the Senate in 1970-71. According to Del Brinkman, dean of the law school at Amherst, the impetus for the attack on him was thought the Kansan's $170,000 reserve fund
Berman said he wondered whether the salaried staff members couldn't receive
ROLFS SAID KANSAN salaries were comparable to those given Senate officials and that he had always considered them necessary because of the long hours people put in and the extra sense of responsibility the salaries effected.
Dennis Elsworth, Kansan editor, said he and the Kansan business manager each got $600 a semester but that salaries dropped to $450 per semester. He worked for the nager anew not salaried, he said.
Al Berman, Communications Committee member, said he had talked to some people who were concerned about the salaries received by some Kansan staffers.
"TTS MY FEELING the (Finance and Auditing) Committee didn't quite have the knowledge or expertise to understand just what the deficit is all about." Rolfs said.
The Kansan's share of each student's activity fee was reduced from $1.45 to $1.35 in 1970. Holts and Flynn have both said that the new fee would reduce Kansan's activity fee allotment is needed.
was too large. By January, the fund will be $47,000. he said.
"The Kansan need to stay a real newspaper and not an arm of the Student Union."
ED ROLFS, student body president, said in Kansas needed a reserve fund of $45,000. The university has a reserve fund.
The Finance and Auditing Committee voted unanimously against funding the Kansan on the grounds that it was wrong for the Senate to pay off any of the Kansan's bills. The Senate punished other groups which did affect, committee members complained.
Rofa said, however, that the deficit wasn't the Kansan's fault. The paper used up its reserve budget by going to a larger size and less advertising in 1971 despite a decline in sales and an excessive fee, ordering to Rofa. The Senate had supported this move, he said.
Brinkman said that the school could probably provide the credit but that he thought it important to keep the Kan斯 students in a paper for journalism students only.
"I think we have the best of both worlds right now," he said. "We have school advisers to help out and non-majors on the paper to keep it independent."
However, the glut of traffic caused by the two businesses is too large, he said.
THE SENATE will vote on three Finance and Auditing-sponsored bills tonight. one of them will be the most important.
previously funded and one setting an $18,000 ceiling on fall allocations.
If the $18,000 ceiling, which is first on the agenda, passes, the Communications amendment would have to be ruled out of order. Rolfs tried unsuccessfully at StudEx's Sunday meeting to keep the ceiling bill off the agenda.
The Senate will also vote on a resolution that questions the athletic department's authority to pave the parking lot north of Potter Lake.
Commission examines legal stop to program
By BRENT ANDERSON
The Lawrence City Commission voted unanimously last night to determine whether the city can take any legal action to stop the Dial DRUG program.
BINNS, MAYOR BARKLEY CLARK and commissioners Carl Milek and Fred Pence all voiced their opposition to the Dial DRUG line. Marnie Argeringer, the other commissioner, rested of the commission to determine possible legal action against Dial DRUG.
Donald Bins, city commissioner, made the motion to determine possible legal action after the commission. Dial DRUalgathered citizens discussed the Dial DRU program.
"It not opposed to informing youth about drugs," Rims, an administrator at Lawerner's Drug Center in Lawrence, said. DRUG line is promoting drugs and giving out heresy about drugs to the com-
BINNS PLAYED a recording of a recent DINNS message at the meeting that referred to the potential use of the network.
Bing Hart, pharmacology consultant and chief consultant to Dial DLR, told the commission that he was in a difficult position. He said he would continue drug users and law enforcement officials.
High and said some marijuana in the Lawrence area had been reported to be
HART ASKED BINNS if he was aware
that heroin being used at
Lawrence High.
Binares responded by asking Hart if he had proof that there indeed was heroin in the
Trash bids draw debate
After a heated debate between city officials and representatives of the Lawrence Sanitation Employees Association last night, the Lawrence City Commission decided to review bids from private sanitation contractors.
"If you know there is heroin in the high school, you have an obligation to inform the proper authorities about it," Binns told Hart.
HE SAID he hoped that the city would recognize the United Public Employly Associations of Lawrence, a coalition of which the sanitation association is a member, and let the city solve its own problems.
Phil Bohlander, secretary of the association, presented the opening argument against the city's bringing in a private contractor.
"If the sanitation department goes private, he said, "I'm afraid employers may be compelled to go to a large outside office." He added that Bohlander said he didn't want that.
Max Rife, assistant principal at
the University of Illinois, commanded that he was exposed to the Dartmouth.
Bohander said he didn't want that to happen.
"We don't want to request outside help,"
"We want to keep the people of Lawsuit."
ACCORDING TO BIDS the city received last week, he said, all the private contractors would be more expensive than the present city sanitation system. The present price for pick-up is $2.50 a month. The lowest bid received by private contractors is $2.71. This doesn't include use of the city landfill and other minor costs, he said.
Bohlander accused the city of ignoring the employees' willingness to help improve the sanitation department. He said that Norm Forer, associate professor of social welfare and adviser to the association, had been appointed to a committee studying sanitation but that the committee had been holding meetings without Forer.
"THANKS," SAID BOHLANDER. "I'm the foreman in charge of the crew that做了 him."
"I would hope the city would work with employees to make the sanitation department work," he said. "I'm convinced we can do it."
HE SAID THAT SINCE the employees had been allowed to help improve the department, complaints had gone down considerably. Because of a city trash packaging study, he said, violations in packaging by homeowners had decreased from 146 a day to 36 a day. The study was begun in September
The public sanitation rates haven't gone
down. He said, so the city must be
doing a good job.
Mayor Barkley Clark said he was pleased to admit the sanitation employees had been doing a better job. He said he had spot-tailed the employees. The emblems hadn't done one wrong.
TAI KS STARTED LAST MAY, he said, and only recently has the city been making concessions concerning the high accident rate in the department. The accident rate is 100 per cent. Every employee has at least one injury a year.
Dennis Smith, president of the sanitation association, said he was disappointed that
Smith said that the employees had offered solutions to problems such as poor packaging to Lawrence residents and route equalization to customers who had started to work on them. The problem with routes is that some employees have to make pick-ups at 400 houses while others have 900
the city had acted so slowly in improving problems in the sanitation department.
In addition, he said, the city has done little about equipment maintenance. It has put some lights on the trucks but most of them don't work. he said.
NOW THAT THE CITY is considering hanging in a private contractor, he said, it is “not a problem.”
"What took so long?" he asked. "Give us time and we can do it. The city can't afford to bring in an outside contractor to do something, I can't do itself. Don't sell us down the line."
Smith said that until recently, all the problems of the sanitation had been blamed
See TRASH page three
Clark conceded that since he had taken his trip with sanitation employees he realized
"WOULD YOU DRIVE through there?" he asked.
"I HAVE MORE concern for the youngsters who haven't used drugs." Rife said. "There are many things wrong at Lawrence High, but to say we have a drug problem there because of an anonymous caller isn't right."
Rife also he thought the Dial DRUGromoted drug use.
Beverly Couch, a volunteer Dial DRUg worker, told the commission that the information that goes out over the Dial DRUg line is considered by several people before a final decision about the content of the drug message is determined.
"No one person who considers information puts it on the line," she said. Pence said he thought the Dial DRUG program might actually be effective in selling drugs by emphasizing "good drugs" in Lawrence.
BUFORD WATSON, city manager, told the commission he had talked to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI) about Dial DRug. Watson said the KBI informed him that the program wasn't necessarily illegal and that he would have to find out whether the city had any power to do something about Dial DRug.
Cark said he didn't think the commission had a jurisdiction to deal with the Dial DRIFA.
Dial DRUG was started in April by the Douglas County Drug Abuse Council, who contracted with Hart for three months to run the program. The council disbanded in July, shortly after its sponsorship of Dial DRUG bud ended.
Commissioner Marme Argeringer said she had tried once and wouldn't do it again. She also suggested that the street be closed during games.
Commissioner Donald Binns said he didn't think closing off 14th for the remaining home games would solve the problem.
"Whether it happens once a year or eight times a year, this sort of shirt shouldn't be worn."
Hart continued the Dial DRUG line, which is a taped message that tells about the quality, the price and availability of drugs in the Lawrence area, on a voluntary basis.
Impson said there were other problems. The top of an automobile has been torn off, a woman has been raped in the area and once when a tow truck operator tried to tow an illegally parked car, he was threatened with a knife. Impson said.
"THESE ARE THE regular clientele who cause these problems," he said.
Wooden admitted that he had sold beer that was taken outside during the last home game, but that he didn't have room inside the Wheel for all his customers.
"I have too much business on days of football games." he said.
He asked whether the problem might be solved if he put up a 10, 12 or 15 foot fence around the Wheel to keep customers off other people's property.
mpson said a 'fence didn't solve the problem of inadequate restroom facilities.
Wooden said he could put portable restrooms outside.
Clark said he liked the idea.
"When you think about the problem, that might be a good way to go," he said.
Commissioner Fred Pence said extra policemen should be stationed in the area before the crowds arrived for the next home game.
WOODEN SAID he also would station men outside the House to make sure they were there.
Impson said the commission was allowing Wooden to expand his business in a nonconforming area. The Wheel is commercial equipment. This makes the Wheel non-conforming.
"it seems as if you are spending a lot of the money to accommodate one in-depth study."
Marie Lynch, who owns several apartments in the city, also complained that the building was "overly squalid."
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk,
defended the Wheel.
"Why should we give all these special privileges to one individual?" she asked. "It's not an area problem. It's the permissive atmosphere of that one bar."
"THE WHOLE CITY IS BENEFITING because of the crowd, not one individual," he said. "Alumn spend hundreds of dollars when they return for the games. Very few people wouldn't want these people to come back."
Clark said every college he had seen in the city would be asked to drink beer. He suggested the zoning be changed to allow the two businesses to expand so they could keep all the customers within the district.
Wallace said that if the zoning were changed and if he were allowed to add the space between the two buildings that make Hawk, Hawk could house another 50 people.
"We can't stop the crowds," he said. "They're going to come. People want to relive their college life and meet old friends."
Arginger said the bars were important because they served the students.
"Students are an integral part of the community and a strong part of the community."
Birns said he thought granting all the information to the Wheel because of student problems.
"The law is the law," he said. "If this was a bunch of grouses instead of students, it would be much worse."
See TAVERN page three
---
U-RM 141
Warm wait
Steff Photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Relaxing beneath the hatchback of her car, Andrea Gonzales, Fort Leuworth freshman, waits for a carpel member Tuesday afternoon in X-zone. Temperatures are extremely high.
---
University Daily Kansan
Friday, October 24.1975
7
Competitive desire lures women athletes
For Karen Fleeger, gymnastics is a way
express how she feels without having to
Fleacher, a junior, began her career as a gymnasit at Lawrence High School. In addition to participating in gymnastics, she also works.
"I can't take afternoon classes. I work and that cuts down on my time," she said. "Sometimes I have a hard time getting labs since they are mostly offered in the afternoons. It's also hard to find time to study."
Despite the inconveniences she faces because of her participation in gymnastics, Fleger said the sport provided her with an opportunity to do something she liked.
"It KEEPES ME IN SHAPE and relieves my frustrations." she said.
Gymnastics may relieve Fleener's frustrations, but sports can also be a source of frustration according to Karen Schmelner, the former head coach of the women's basketball team last winter.
"Last year we won five and lost 20 of our
schools. Scholars found me frustrated, but I
fragranted it, telling me that I was
key player, but I kept asking myself, 'How could I be a key player if we're losing?'
"There were times when I thought about quitting, but I stuck with it and I'm glad that I did. It gave me lots of experience and insight for life. Now, if I'm having trouble with school or something, I can face it better."
SCNELLER SAID THAT her par-
hockey jacket was made by a hocky
beloved kid, make many friends.
"Most of my friends are on the team," she said. "When I go to field hockey meets I see some of the friends I've made playing basketball."
"Being in contact with other people and their views gives you confidence."
Schneeller said she thought the confidence she had gained on the playing field would help her in her major, recreational therapy, and give her job involved a lot of contact with people.
Sports has always been a part of Schneller's life. One of 12 children, Schneller said she had always competed with her six brothers. She began competing
in city programs when she was in the fifth grade.
"I WANTED TO COME TO KU to play because they had money and traveling," she said, as her brothers all put their hands on him, but he couldn't come to the college level. They really look up to me."
Rachel Case Sports Writer
Schneeller said her biggest thrill was finding a group of 6,000 people watching University with 6,000 people watching.
"I've never played harder in my life," she said. "You want to draw interest, because if you see a good athlete, it draws your interest. I wasn't trying to show off, but rather to encourage and to see their name in the paper. I wanted to play, a good game to please myself."
Schneeller said that basketball was a warning experience that made her feel that she was better at playing.
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WOMENS ATHLETICS
Steel Photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Kirsten's at Hillcrest Co-ordinates for all occasions
Karen Schneller prepares to hit field hockey shot
Therma Jac Intuitions Joyce Trio Jack Winter Talbott Knits 9th & Iowa at Hillcrest Go Big Blue
Laurie Cook, Eureka senior, participates in cross country and swimming at KU. She is an avid golfer.
Cook said that participation in sports had been empowered and helped, her 'belief in friendships'.
"EVERY TIME YOU FOUL, it teaches you," she said. "You learn not to, your life." **WHERE IS YOUR LINK?**
Cook said that sports was a test of character. She said she thought that people who were not good at sports
"I love to exercise. I'm a health nut. If I exercise every day, I feel better at night."
"I like to work hard and reach goals," she said. "I like to make my body work and to make my muscles get sore. I like to see myself become better."
"I LIKE TO COMPETE," she said. "I like people who to work hard and win." She said that there were some women who didn't like the idea of competition, but that
"There are some men who don't like competition," she said.
Cook said she had some problems last year because her roommates couldn't get enough.
"They couldn't understand why I would come home just dead. They didn't know why I did it. After a while I didn't know why I did it." she said.
Cook described sports as "something that's always taken up my time."
"When I came up here as a freshman, I heard they had a team game and I decided to try to make it. I've ended up majoring in P.E., and I had never even thought of majoring in P.E. when I was in high school. Athletics did it."
COOK IS PARTICIPATING in two sports concurrently. After two hours of long distance running and two hours of swimming, they will return to their essential homework and then go to be*
"IVE BEEN A TOMBJO my all life," she said. "My junior year in high school they started basketball and track and I participated in both. I played tennis in the summer program and swam at the local pool.
Cook said that athletics forced her to make some sacrifices. She is taking 20 hours this semester and goes to class from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. every day. She is an eighth grader, and she usually goes to 4:30 p.m. every Friday, a time when she would rather be doing other things.
Most of her studying is done on weekends, she said. Her weekend study time is further limited when she competes in an out-of-town meet, she said.
Beth Boozer, Lawrence sophomore, plays
She attends class from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. or from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. then goes to volleyball practice from 2:30 to 5 p.m., shows, eats and studies.
on both the volleyball and golf teams. She said she was following a strict routine.
BOOZER IS ATTENDING KU on a volleyball scholarship this semester, making that sport her primary concern. She said she hadn't had much time to practice golfing, however, the main golf season fell in the spring, after volleyball was over.
Boozer said that volleyball practices were rigorous and that she was often too tired to play. "They're a lot of hard work," Boozer said.
"I make myself study even when I'm tired," Boozer said. "I try to catch up on my studying weekends. When we travel to a campus, the only day I must have to myself is Sunday."
Boozer said the issue of time had come between her and her boyfriend.
"WE'VE TALKED IT OUT," she said. "He's realized how much (sports) means to me. He supports me. He knows he's going to have sacrifice some of our time together. But I think I've got him converted. He went to Emporia for our first volleyball game."
Boozer said that sports had been a big part of her life since she was 10 years old, when her parents taught her how to play golf.
Her whole family is athletic. Her mother is the KU women's golf coach, and both of her parents have been involved in the athletic coaching.
Gail Wagoner, Topeka senior, said she considered swimming for the KU women's swim team to be a continuation of her career and her interest. She said she had been in Amatutech Athletic Union (AAU) programs since she was in elementary school.
"FIVE FELT PUSHED until the last two years," she said. "Since then I have motivated myself. My parents used to say I couldn't go out until I had gone out to the course to practice. Now I realize that they still don't know something I can keep up for the rest of my life."
Boozer said she would like to join the women's pro golf tour some day. Her other ambition is to coach. She said she thought that the team had improved her coaching chances.
LAST YEARS SWIM TEM was very
sad as his team member,
elevens his own water to our
sea.
"We were concerned with helping others to do their best rather than just the overall win," Wagner said. "Everybody was in a hurry, and I was a bia factor in winning the Bie Eight.
"In swimming, you get to benefit from others' experience. Everybody feels good when they do well. If you do poorly, you learn to self-through the learning experience."
BOOZER SAID THAT GOLF gave her the SHOOTER GAME that could accomplish anything others had not.
She said that winning was a source of satisfaction to her, but wasn't the only goal.
"I hope that women's athletics doesn't reach the stage of winning at all costs," Boozer said. "You need a winning program to have your athletes do what they need to have money or contributors."
She said that she thought men's athletics had gone too far with the winning idea. She said she had been taught not to have been caught for recruiting violations. A tennis player, Mary Broadie, Wichita junior, said that winning was stressed on her team, but that playing well was stressed more.
(1)
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
KU's Karen Fleeger works on gymnastics routine
SHE SAID THE UNIVERSITY was really getting its money's worth with Tom Kivisto as women's tennis coach. She said that Kivisto, a former KU basketball standout, had used some of his basketball techniques to "psychse them up."
Broadie said, "He's opened up a whole new psychological angle to the game. He just knows how to get us mentally and physically fired up.
"When you play in a close match you exposed to a lot of extreme emotional stress
that you wouldn't normally encounter. You learn about how people react."
BROADIE IS NO STRANGER to tennis.
Her father, a nationally ranked player,
taught her to play at age eight. Broadie
said that tennis took a lot of time, but was
rewarding to her because it was something
she wanted to do.
"I'm receiving good coaching and I'm improving," she said. "That makes me feel good. I place academics ahead of tennis, but I make sure I escape when I get frustrated or bored."
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8
Friday, October 24,1975
University Daily Kansan
Women coaches
From page six
them than any other group of athletes I've coached." she said.
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
THE LOVE FOR HER SELF
"Before we, the coaches knew they had a responsibility to the players. We couldn' push them that hard; they were coming out第一时间 and not getting anything in return."
KU women's swimming coach Claire McElroy
"I think now the students will have to realize that if they're getting a scholarship, they have a responsibility to the coaches, too."
"Before, it was hard to push a girl to spend all that time and force her to be the things I want her to be. A lot said it wasn't worth it," he said.
"Girls aren't quite as concerned yet. Men
can be hard to give up two hours, and
slouch off elsewhere."
kustso said he compared women without scholarships to "redheads" in NCAA sports.
"It is hard to demand a guy's all, make him go out all in practice, follow a training schedule and all that when he puts in all the work," said Dennis. "He actually competes in the game." he said.
Aside from classwork, Kivi said who
tennis be "number one" to his
scholarship gift.
Mccroy said the scholarships made her demand move of the entire team, not just individual scholarships.
SEVERAL COACHES SAID the Kansas branch of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (KAIAW) set rules they thought kept the KU athletic department from developing the maximum programs.
Isgur said the limits KAIAW puts on the length of the volleyball season which Kansas schools are allowed to play kept KU from competing with the better schools, especially those outside Kansas, who do not have the same restriction.
He said he thought the problem was a discrepancy between the seriousness of women's athletics today, especially at KU, and the way KIAAW viewed them.
KU's gymnastics program is growing so much faster than the other Kansas schools that soon it will be competing almost exclusively with out-of-state schools, he said.
KAIAW tries to maintain equitable competition within the state, Snow said. That may restrict the gymnastics team's activity outside of Kansas, he said.
BECAUSE KU IS ONE of only two schools in Kansas that have women's swimming programs, there are no KIAAW rules to follow. The only KIAAW rules govern swimming describe the strokes and the treatment of injuries. McElroy said.
Kivisto said the only thing KIAAW had done about women's tennis is to approve his appointment as head coach. Because he doesn't have a degree in physical education, Kivisto said, his appointment wasn't automatic.
The coaches shared a common bond on the subject of money.
Most of them have found that the money
they received to develop the program and the money they need to maintain are two distinct facilities. All cited a tight budget and insufficient facilities as problems.
"It's always a thorn," Washington said. "It affects our scheduling and traveling." **SNOW SAID**, "THEERE are always things I'd like to buy."
McEllroy said the latest in women's swimming attire, the skimskin, was far too tight for her.
"It may add to our times, but we are survived without them." she said.
With the scarcity of resources to both programs, it is inevitable that the men's and women's programs would "rub elbows," as Washington put it.
Friction between the two is less today than earlier, according to the coaches.
Washington said she was feeling more free to approach her mate counterpart, Teddy Jenkins.
Kivisto and Snow said their relationships with Kirkland Gates, the men's tennis coach, and Bob Lockwood, men's gymnastics coach, were excellent.
KIVISTO SAID THE two teams played each other in the past and would try a mixed
Snow said he and Lockwood had scheduled a dual meet for Dec. 6.
McElioy said her team maintained "very friendly" relations with the men's swim team.
The two team shares Scott Pyle, the driving coach, lane lines, navigation daring training and material development.
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HEAD COACH: Ken Whitenight
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---
2
October 8,1975
University Daily Kansan
DIGEST From the Associated Press
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Sinai resolution approved
WASHINGTON—The Senate Foreign Relations Committee yesterday approved a resolution to send 300 American technicians to surveillance posts in the Sinai to help monitor the interim agreement between Israel and Egypt.
The 10 to 2 vote cleared the way for probable Congressional authorization by the end of the week. This, in turn, would lead to implementation of the accord negotiated in August by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger.
The resolution passed by the committee contains a disclaimer stipulating that Congress isn't bound by any of the collateral understandings Kissinger reached with the two states during his shuttle diplomacy. The House version, carrying the same provision, is due for a floor vote today.
Appointee recommended
WASHINGTON—The Senate Interior Committee voted unanimously yesterday to recommend that the Senate confirm President Gerald R. Ford's nomination of Thomas S. Kiepe to be Undersecretary of the interior.
The committee agreed to require Klepei to divest himself of all holdings in natural resource companies within the next nine months.
Committee Chairman Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., said a final Senate vote on the nomination could come this week.
Kleppe, 56, currently head of the Small Business Administration, was nominated after Stanley Hathaway, former governor of Wyoming, quit after less than six weeks on the job.
Lennon order reversed
NEW YORK—The U.S. Court of Appeals yesterday reversed a deportation order for former Beatle John Lennon and directed reconsideration of his effort to gain permanent residence in the United States.
permanent residency in the U.S.
The deportation order was shelved two weeks ago by the Immigration and Naturalization Service on humanitarian grounds because Lennon's wife was pregnant, but on action the order could have been resumed at any time.
Today's 2-1 decision held that Lennon's 1968 British conviction for possession of hashish found in a binocular case, didn't make the singer an excludable alien, as the Board of Immigration Appeals had ruled.
The court sent the matter back to the board for reconsideration in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
Soviets called dangerous
TOKYO—Soviet bloc diplomats stalked out of a banquet in Peking after a top Chinese official called the Soviet Union "the most dangerous source of war," the Japanese news agency Kyodo reported yesterday.
The blast helped to dispel recent speculation that relations between the two governments might be on the verge of improvement.
Chinese First Vice Premier Teng Hai-ping, speaking Monday at a dinner for visiting Vugelaar Premium Diermal Bijladic, laashed out at the Russians despite publication of Soviet greetings to Pekening on Oct. 1 calling for normalization of relations and "re-establishment of friendship and cooperation."
NYC budget cuts promised
NEW YORK—New York Mayor Abraham Beame promised budget cuts of $200 million yesterday including the possibility of further layoffs of city employees, in a plan presented to a state-controlled board.
Beame presented his preliminary proposal to eliminate the city's $200 million deficit within a three-year period to the Emergency Financial Control Board, a state agency headed by Gov. Hugh Carey. The board is designed to oversee the city's finances.
In Washington, House Banking Committee Chairman Henry Reuss, D-Wis, hinted that the Ford administration might be shifting its opposition to federal aid for the city.
Computers may have more to do with football at the University of Kansas than just keep tracking of ticket sales when a coach is inducted into the School Business is completed.
By SHERI BALDWIN
Computer use in football growing
FOOTBALL PLAY analysis done by computer is becoming one of the most widespread applications of computers to athletics. The analysis systems generate statistical summaries and analyses of the plays of a given football game. The output is examined by the coaches to find the tendencies of a team.
On sheets of paper every play is plotted:
pass routes; offensive alignments and
53
Computer game
Bill Roach, assistant professor of business, looks over the shoulder of Woody Grutzmacher, Onaagan team, as he analyzes rival analysis for a KU football game.
shifts; blocking actions; and defensive coverages. The information is fed to a computer, which provides a detailed analysis of the game.
COACHES MAY LOOK at summaries of another team's offense and defense or they may look at similar summaries of their own team.
The past record of the KU football team
and several articles on the subject of football analysis prompted Bill Roach, assistant professor of business and Woody Hammond, who has taught on a system of football play analysis for KU.
"If it works, we'll give it to the football team, Grutzmacher said Saturday. "If it works, I'll give it to the football team."
In addition to detailed descriptions of football plays, variables such as weather, wind, type of playing surface, crowd size, the distance the game is played away from home and the direction of the field (north-east, east-west) are important factors.
Roch said to get an accurate summary of information, all possible variables had to be examined. He also programmed to summarize data a coach would specifically request and also would print statistical readouts with all information to supplement the summary, he said.
TO SAVE TIME, copies of football and sports books will be used, guides. Roach said.
"Schools who do have these programs are fairly reluctant to come across with this
Roach said the main reason the information was difficult to obtain was the cost involved to the schools using such a system.
Ken Martin and Jack White, assistant football coaches, have assisted Roach and Grutzmacher in obtaining sample copies from other schools. Martin and White have also offered advice on what kind of training KU would be interested in, Roach said.
"When the project is completed, then they'll probably utilize it." Grutzmacher said. "The accessibility will be theirs, they can use it when they want to."
GRUTZMACHER SAID the system would be ready about Nov. 1, but the coaching staff probably wouldn't have time to look at it until next spring.
"They'll probably use it first as a check to measure our own offensive tendencies and wait until later to plot offensive characteristics of opposing teams." Grutzmacher said.
KU is now using a hit chart system that analyzes plays by hand, he said.
Roch described the process as a long and tedious one that could be done by only one person so that the coding of the game plays was consistent.
"Data such as play designations will be to coordinate with the KU coaching staff," he said.
THE COMPUTER METHOD would probably be most beneficial to the KU coaching staff during off season, when they are viewed over and over again. Roach said.
He said it would be used as a "device for simplifying analysis of game films."
"You don't have to look at a film 10 times better wrenches if they are already spelled out in print."
The program can receive no payment from the athletic department because he and Roach aren't professionals, Grutzmacher said.
Congress enacts school lunch bill
WASHINGTON (AP)—The House and Senate enacted yesterday a $2.75 billion child nutrition bill that President Ford vetoed four days earlier as too costly.
It was the seventh time in the 14-month Ford presidency that the heavily Democratic Congress mustered the two-thirds needed to override a presidential veto.
In the House, the tally was a lopsided 397 to 145, massive 125 votes more than two-thirds.
In all, Ford has vetoed 39 bills, 12 this year.
In the Senate, the vote was 79 to 13, 17 more than two-thirds.
THE ACTION extends a school breakfast program which feeds 1.8 million low-income children daily and expands the school lunch program by requiring schools to offer 20 centiliters to students whose parents earn between the $5,010 poverty level and $7,70.
It also continues and expands programs that provide nutritional meals to low-income mothers, pregnant women and infants.
FORD SAID in casting his 12th veto of the bill that would add $1.2 billion to his budge.
we will be.
In Knoxville, Tenn., Ford said of the
"I cannot accept such fiscal irresponsibility," he said.
override, "I honestly don't think that the taxpayers as a whole should subsidize free hunches for children of families that have $9,500 a year."
IN YESTERDAY'S House debate, chairman Carl D. Perkins, D-Ky., of the House Education and Labor Committee said the facts don't bear that out.
Sen. Carl Curtis, R-Neb., led the fight to sustain Ford's veto, contending that the measure not only surpasses the President's budget but is $23 million more than the level for the programs in the congressional budget.
And he criticized the provision that requires states to give 20-cent lunches to children above the poverty level, declaring that provided a federal subsidy "for a good many families able to pay it for themselves."
And in the Senate, chairman Herman Talmadge, D-Ga., of the Agriculture Committee accused the President of using his misleading statistics in his veto passage.
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The seven Ford vetores overriden so far are the largest number of defeats suffered by any military institution since Congress overrode laws by Proclamation in 1935, Truman—but over an eight year period.
EARLER IN THE YEAR, Ford won battles with Congress when the House sustained his vetoes of farm, jobs, housing and strip mine measures.
more funds for education than the President wanted.
The action marked the third time in recent weeks that Congress had overridden a presidential veto in the social welfare area. In July, it enacted a series of health programs Ford had vetoped and last month it overrode his veto of a money bill providing
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Gutmacher is, however, receiving five hours of independent study credits, with HSS.
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Prof wins bird research award
Staff Writer
By JOHN HENDEL
Richard Johnston, professor of systems and ecology has received an award for so-called "success" for so-called "success."
Johnston and Robert K. Selander, professor at the University of Rochester, Rochester, N.Y., have been given the third Nobel Prize in Medicine by the American Ornithologist's Union.
THE A WARD is given to the researchers that the award committee considers to have made the most significant contribution to the college of North American ornithology.
Jobathon's and Selander's research dealt with studies on the adaptation of the house system in North America.
Johnston said the house sparrow is a native to Europe and North Africa. The birds have lived close to man since man started storing grain, he said.
The birds were first brought to America in 1852. From 1852 to 1868 between 8,000 and 10,000 birds were brought to the Philadelphia and Brooklyn areas, Johnston said. In just 50 years the house sparrow had reached the west coast.
He said that the birds were very adaptable. The birds' ability to adapt to so many different climates led Selander and his team start their research on the house snarcher.
THE RATE of evolution of sparrows was much faster than anticipated, according to the study.
THE ENGLISH sparrows were a medium dark brown, according to Johnston. He said that birds in the southern Great Lakes area and in Canada were darker. House sparrows in the northern California and New Mexico were paler than the sparrows from England, he said.
Johnston said that the birds brought over from England were relatively small. The descendants of these sparrows found in northern Canada are very large, whereas birds found on both the Gulf and west coasts are smaller than the parent stock.
JOHNSTON SAID THAT they had received "good but modest" funding, averaging about $20,000 a year for the last 13 years. This money was used for resident assistants for the research and Johnston's study. He only teaches nine months a year.
In 1962 Selander and Johnston received
the first research grant $7,000 from the
National Research Council.
Johnston said substantial results were received right away. From the early portions of the collection of specimens, observations were made. These observations were stunted by observations made after the collections were complete.
"That was back when $7,000 was worth something," Johnston said. "I went to Europe to collect specimens and Selandor to collect islands and Mexico to collect specimens."
Calvin Cink, Jamestown, N.D. graduate student, said that he started working on the project three years ago when the emphasis was on geographical variation causing the changes in the sparrows. This had changed, he said.
Most of the funding came from the NSF, Johnston said, but twice the General Research Fund (GRF) of the University has made contributions. He said that these were less than half of the gaps in the funding from the NSF and without funds from the GRF the research
JOHNSTON SAID that he had started by looking at one small question but that the research led to other paths and other questions, which was why he had been working on the house sparrow research for 13 years.
would have had to stop until the NSF furnished more funds.
"The true path of research is always tortuous," he said.
Whenever a different question was found, more specimens were needed. Johnston said. The collecting of specimens and eximentation takes about three years, he said.
Although these have been significant changes in the house sparrow, Johnston said, the birds are only about one half of the species' complete adjustment to North America.
"Every generation leads to finer adjustments," he said.
By MARY ANN HUDDLESTON
Kansas State University plans to continue its steer giveaway contest through the next three home football games, now that it has settled a question about the legality of the contest, Brad Rothermel, K-State assistant athletic director, said yesterday.
The contest, sponsored by the K-State athletic department, awards a steer to whoever makes the closest estimate of its weight. However, participants were allowed to guess the weight of the animal by using a device element of chance involved in guessing by mail could make the contest a lottery, Richard Seaton, K-State attorney. said.
The K-State athletic department is returning the money it collected by mail to eliminate the possibility of a lottery, Rothermel said.
Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider said thealty of the contest was first questioned a week ago when an Associated Press report on his death, brought the question to his attention.
According to Seaton, Schneider called him to find out whether the department was aware the contest might be illegal. Seaton said he hadn't known the department was aware the contest by mail. He called the department, which agreed to refund the money.
Seaton said he thought the athletic department didn't realize that conducting the contest by mail would introduce an element of chance.
Trash bids . . .
From page one
that many of the problems were the fault of the residents.
He said he really didn't want to bring outside unions into Lawrence, either.
Smith said another problem with a private contractor was job security. The private contractor can demand a physical, he said. Many of the people in the sanitation department had accidents on the job, and they had not that resulted from the accidents, he said.
"The thought of Jimmy Hoffa being put into a Mafia operated trash compactor"
These people should be given job security in a written statement. he said.
City Manager Buford Watson said the city should still consider private bids. The private sanitation contractors might give a better offer, he said.
Forer said the commission was ignoring the accident problem. The sanitation employee faces an injury rate that is 850 per fewer than any injury rate in Kansas, he said.
"What more can these guys do to get your attention," he asked, "get down on their hands and knees and lick out a garbage can?"
Win-a-steer contest will continue
The question of private contractors will be considered in two weeks at the committee meeting.
areas graded: news coverage and content; writing and
leadership; physical appearance; and photography.
Kansan receives All-American
More than 2,000 college publications, 12 per cent of which received All-American ratings, evaluated by the College Review and Times.
The University Daily Kanan has received an All-
icipant award for the Collegiate College Press
for the spring semester 1975.
John Pike, Atlanta first year law student, was editor during the spring semester. Dave Reece, who is now working for the Emerson Franzke agency in Topeka, was business manager.
Satellite union defended
This is the 14th consecutive semester that the Kansan has received an All-American rating, the highest given by the All-American newspaper critical service.
To achieve an All-American rating, a newspaper or magazine must win four out of five marks of distinction.
THE 25,000-SQUARE-FOOT satellite
A satellite student union proposed for the west part of campus wouldn't be a drain to business in the Kansas Union, according to Frank Burre. Union director.
Burge spoke last night to the Student Senate Student Services Committee, which is conducting hearings on the feasibility of a recommendation to the Senate after New
Staff Writer
Contract cancellation costs
He said that although Wescoe Terrace
The site for the proposed union is northwest of Allen Field House. Burge said that enough students were concentrated in that area of campus during the day to keep the campus running, but that it probably wouldn't meet the amount of daily business in the Union.
union would have dining, lounging, studying and sales facilities.
Breaking a residence hall contract can be the result of a hall resident at the Breaking of Kangas
By CHUCK ALEXANDER
According to the 1975-76 University of Kansas residence hall contract, a student can lost up to $354 if a signed contract is canceled before he moves into a residence hall and can lose as much as $350 if the contract is canceled after he moves in.
ACCORDING TO J. J. WILSON, director of housing, the cost of moving from a residence hall is designed to protect the privileges of the students who don't move from the college room from moving from the hall prematurely. The contracts are for one academic year.
"Our primary responsibility is to the person who stays." Wilson said westernd.
Wilson said some operating costs remained stable regardless of whether residence hall occupancy declined. Wilson fixed costs included salaries for maintenance, food service and hall administration personnel. He said the number of students was determined by the number of students contracted to stay in the halls.
ACCORDING TO THE PAYMENT schedule on the contract, a student begins payment on his room two months before actually moving into it. If a student doesn't move within two months he is amused by forfeiting two months rent and a nonunreasonable down payment.
Carol Boone Strohbein, Consumer Affairs Association director, said her office was unable to provide answers.
"We've had several inquiries about what students could do to get out of a contract," Strobhein said. "We are going to study it (the contract) this year."
Strohbehn said this was a good time for the University to review the contract because residence halls were almost full. According to the housing office, the college had 67 per cent full Sept. 23, the highest occupancy rate in several years.
Despite the rising popularity of residence
housing, some hall residents still want to
leave.
ACCORDING TO WILSON, 29 persons in one two-week period this semester asked to break contract. Reasons given by the residents included withdrawal from school, financial difficulties, pledging a fraternity and marriage.
STROHEBEN SAID the contract didn't reflect the best interests of the student. She said even though the contract said it was possible for a student to break contract, it didn't tell the student what avenues, such as awards board, are available for a student.
Wilson said he didn't think the number of requests to break contracts was exceptionally high. However, he said the figures could be interpreted differently.
According to Jane Clendening, Leawood sophomore and chairman of the Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) Board of Appeals, seven persons have appealed to the board this semester. The board hears appeals from persons who want to avoid penalty for breaking contract. Last year the board heard more than 70 cases.
The board is composed of five students and three administrators.
Wilson said, "We're not trying to hide anything. If there's someone who wants to change his mind, we tell him how much it would be, and he'll listen to the student to know just what 'expected.'"
Wilson said roommate assignments and University requirements for residence hall occupancy would have to be considered if subletting were allowed.
"IT'S MORE TROUBLE than it’s worth."
Wilson said. "It’s not the paperwork involved, that’s routine. We say that if you want to come in, come on your own."
Wilson said subletting would present a special set of problems for the housing
The contract is reviewed each year by the University general counsel, Mike Davis, so that new laws affecting the contract can be complied with, Wilson said.
No major changes are expected this year, he said. However, students can expect to pay more for living in a residence hall and for breaking contract. AURH voted HST 20; to increase fees for single and double rooms for the 1976-77 academic year.
The satellite union would be paid for mainly by student fees. Burge said revenue bonds for the project would have an 8% rate, or $100,000 a year over 25 years.
had served many students it opened
hadn't affected the business in the Union
Now, he said, the student body should determine whether it wants a second union belt.
A YEAR-LONG survey begined 18 months ago sponsored by the Memorial Corporation Board indicates that students who live west of Wescoe Hall were willing to pay for a satellite union, Burge said. But he said 50 per cent of students, faculty members, teachers and alumni surveyed said they weren't willing to pay for another union.
"THIS TIME AROUND we mustn't be capricious or any less thorough." Burge said. "You might have second thoughts when you know you have to pay for it."
In 1967 the Senate considered plans to build a satellite union. But when the time came to accept bids on construction, Burge asked that project because of other soiling priorities.
Some committee members said that a survey, possibly in the form of a Senate referendum, should be presented to the senate. A project had been discussed by the Senate.
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The sole purpose of the contest is to raise money for the athletic department, he said. He said he knew of no other contest similar to K-State's.
ST. LAWRENCE
The Ball Park Hillcrest Shopping Center
Twentieth Century Catholic Thought
ST. LAWRENCE CATHOLIC CENTER
Viewing the steer to determine its weight in a skill that would eliminate the element of chuckling.
Approximately 400 entries were sold at the first game and fewer than 300 at the second game, he said. The two winners at the end of the season need to donate the steer to the department.
Lecture Series
Schneidel daid three criteria defined a
battery; consideration or charge, anch
ing
Thursdays of October 7:30 p.m. 163I Crescent
Participating in a lottery is a Class B misdemeanor. Conducting a lottery is a Class E felony because it is considered commercial gambling.
Schneider said that it the contest had been considered a lottery, prosecution would have been the business of the county attorney.
October 9 "The Uirtue of Hope—A Thomistic Perspective"
Fr. Linus McManaman,
OSB, Ph D
Rothermel said he hadn't realized that mailing entries would involve chance. However, he said, Phil Wilson, K-State promotions director, had got legal advice from Seaton when he first thought of the idea about three weeks ago.
Rothermal estimated that 200 to 300 of the 51 entry payments had been returned by the bank, but others were sending a form letter with the refund explaining why it can't accept the money, he
From nage one
Rothermel said he knew of no adverse reactions to the athletic department's refunds and he knew of no one who had sent the money back as a contribution.
Tavern . . .
OSB. Ph.D.
The store is on display before each game, be said, and it is led around the field during games.
Reactor: Dr. Richard DeGeorge, Ph.D.
Argersinger moved that Wooden be allowed to install a fence to keep drinking students on his property, to allow two outdoor jobs and to station people outside in the building. Two one liters. She also moved that the city close 14th from Tennessee to the campus.
The commission unanimously agreed to the proposal under the provision that the solution
Dialogue follows presentation Open to the Public
Clark said the owners of the Wheel and hawk should request a zoning change to
PRIEST
there and bust a few heads. We can't always cater to college students. The citizens of this town can not be constantly intimidated." I would say we should shield them in." Aargangerger, [pg]
Schneider said his office received questions about lotteries constantly but he hadn't been asked in advance of the K-State contest. He said he thought a similar contest was held at a baseball playoff in Wichita.
Don Baker, sports information director at the University of Kansas, said KU didn't have similar contests because "we're in comparatively good shale financially."
The KU athletic department raises money through the Williams Educational Fund.
On Campus
"I'll see you in the spring." Impson said.
---
TODAY: STEPHEN SPENDER, poet, critic and editor, will read from his works at 4 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas University. Anachya Gagana, teacher of Ananda Kumari, will speak about spiritual growth and social change at 7:30 p.m. in the Lawrence Public Library.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday. October 24.1975
9
Coaches criticize stifling NCAA regulation
"The athlete is the most important person in the whole NCAA. He has to come first. And yet the people who administer athletics seem to not him last."
"I'm upset with a big, vast, bulky organ that no longer has a heart or an arm for the bed."
Those biting words were recently issued from Bob Timmons, University of Kansas track coach, as he reviewed the results of the 2015 Convention on Economy last August.
"I think it a disgrace" Timmons says,
"absolute disgrace, the things they've done."
WHAT HAS THE NCAA DONE?
In an attempt to combat inflation and assure its member schools of a degree of financial security, the NCAA has voted new rules and restrictions affecting almost all colleges to incorporate athletes; coaching, recruiting, scholarships, squad size and eligibility.
The new rules didn't appear out of nowhere, however. In the past five years, as a result of economic conditions, 20 NCAA schools have had to eliminate their football programs. Many athletic departments were forced to reduce soft ink to fill a swimming pool:
Some schools gave serious thought to dropping their entire intercollegiate athletics.
So when it was learned that the NCAA had called a convention for mid-August to
'I think it's a disgrace, an absolute disgrace, the things they've done.'
consider 73 cost-cutting proposals, athletic directors and college presidents across the country.
EVERYONE APPLAUED THE NCA as it called on delegates from its 700 member schools to meet August 14-15 in Chicago.
But later, those cheers of approval turned into snails of reproach, as the ramifications of the new rules were subjected to closer scrutiny.
In a recent survey of KU coaches, reactions to the NCAA's new rules ranged from mild displeasure to冻屎 demotion. Words such as "diots", "atsurd", "ridiculous", "tragic" and "disastrous" siped their comments.
The amendments to the NCAA constitution and the by laws that caused the greatest stir fall into the following four categories:
COACHING STAFFS - The NCAA has a put a limit on the number of football and basketball assistants a school may employ. The limit on football is one head coach, but the limit on basketball coaches, KU now has 11 full-time assistant coaches. The rule takes effect Aug. 1, 1976.
UK basketball is unaffected. The NCAA
unit is two full-time assistant and one
team-level player.
SCHOALSHIPS—A Division 1 school can award only 95 football and 15 basketball full-scholarships (room, board, tuition, fees, books and course expenses). The $1$ a month stipend has been eliminated. The rule doesn't take effect until the 1977-78
SQUAD SIZE—A rule limiting the number of athletes a school can take on a road trip. This rule has an effect for several months. While the NCAA and Big Eight conference have had travel squad limits in the past, this is the first time a squad has been assigned a maximum.
'I don't believe the coaches had any type of input that they felt they should have.'
school year, but schools must begin making
努赶 toward conforming now.
RECRUTTING—The NCAA has placed a limit on the number of prospects a school can fly in to recruit at the University. A limit on paid visits has been assigned to each sport. Before this year, no such limits existed.
The NCAA has said a high school athlete can make no more than six paid visits to schools recruiting him. The college may visit one prospect more than three times.
A limit on the time of year a coach can visit a high school athlete has also been granted.
An observation by Dick Reamon, KU men's swim coach, was typical of the early 1960s.
"I'M ALL FOR SAVING MONEY," he said. "There have got to be some curbs. But, at the same time, I do think that some long term changes are needed than groom behind them are needed."
The issues that arouse emotion are numerous. One of the biggest was the fear of death.
"I don't even know what they were thinking about," said Sam Miranda, KU basketball assistant coach and recruiter. "I can't get no input by coaches, I'm sure, on this."
Miranda said, "It should have been that you can visit from March 1 to September 1.
Miranda was talking about a rule that prevented him from visiting a high school
Rather than pressuring a player to sign with a college while he is in the middle of his season, Miranda said it would be much better to allow contacts before the start of the season, when the athlete and his coach are more relaxed and less busy.
"IT'S COMPLETELY backwards."
"I don't understand how they can sit down
Ken Stone Sports Writer
and make a rule that is just backwards on what the parents want, the boy wants, the high school coach wants and what the teacher totally different from what it should be."
Floyd Temple, KU's baseball coach since
1964, agreed that coaches had little in-
terest.
"THESE 'NO QUESTION about it,' Temple said. "Very few coaches were contacted as to how they felt, I think they went into it a little too quickly."
In fact, Temple said, "They put in some
ides that aaren really going to save that
moment."
Such sentiment was echoed by Bob Lock-
wood, men's gymnastics coach.
"I don't believe the coaches had any type of input that they felt they should have given," she said.
"I think all coaches knew—and all athletic directors and faculty reps knew that we would have to have some kind of cost-cutting change.
"BUT THE COACHES IVE visited, and myself in particular, are concerned that the so-called cost-cutting legislation is really not cutting costs."
Cyde Walker, athletic director, has had similar suniplions for a long time.
"Im opposed to national legislation," he said. "Although this action on the part of NCAA member schools was disguised as an economy move, I really feel it might have been a move toward bringing the big schools in line with the smaller schools."
Walker said many small schools voted to cut scholarships, coaching staffs and recruiting because they thought they could benefit from a competitive advantage of the larger schools.
KANSAS ISN'T IN THE financial bind that many schools its size are in, Walker said, so few of the rules would eventually save KU much money.
Bud Moore, KU football coach, said,
"We're spending as much money recruiting
than we did in the past."
'This helps the metropolitan areas. A lot of them will be helped by the rules.'
farther. You're much more particular in your evaluation.
"You're a heck of a lot more careful with it, and you can make a mistake if burt comes from," he says.
Both Walker and Moore pointed to the disadvantage that the NCAA had put KU in regarding schools in larger population areas.
"THEIS DEFINITELY HELPS the metropolitan areas." Walker says, "We're in a non-pepalous area. Therefore we must bring in more people than, say, Southern Cal, UCLA, Ohio State or Texas. A lot of them will be helped by these new rules."
But the first amendment to be considered at the next Special Convention of the NCAA-on Jan. 13, 1976 at St. Louis-will be a rule limiting coaching staffs in non-revenue teams to one head coach and one part-time assistant.
Moore said, "Penn State can have 75 gays from a heavily-populated area, we are going to have to pay his way. It is a definite handicap most every school in the Big Ten."
Another handicap, say KU coaches, is the limit on the size of coaching staffs. Right now, only football at KU will be affected by NCAA rules.
"I went out all over the country and tried to hire the best people with the idea that we would make a difference," he then. Then, all of a sudden, with less than a year gone, we find out that we'll have to let some people
"I came here with the idea of getting a good job, and all the time I've been here we've been losing literally thousands of dollars. So now I may have to go back to a job that really wasn't much better than the one I left five years ago."
"I think it's totally unfair," Moore said. "We're in one of the few professions in the field that have no peer pressure."
'I'm after a job right now. My situation is really a frightening one.'
"IT'S HARD FOR ME, personally speaking, to get excited about the rest of (the restrictions) because I see myself without a job in the fall of 76.
When the time comes to fire three
"So I see all the work that I've put in here gone, almost like I was forgotten. It's bam-bam you're gone and that it. You hate to be alone." I leaned along and hesitate you out of a job."
assistants, who will Moore let go?
If the NCAA is threatening to legislate coaches out of their jobs they are also tending to prevent athletes from competing, said Moore.
"I HAVEN'T THOUGHT that far ahead yet," he said, "I haven't considered that at all. And I won't start thinking about it until January." NCAA convention (in January)."
Of the rules that limit a football traveling
squad to 48 and the home squad to 60, Moore
would have said:
"WHEN THESE KIDS WERE recruited they were told they would have the opportunity to make the traveling squad or to bring them to school. It limits you to 60 guva dressing at home."
Gary Pepin, KU assistant track coach,
doesn't have much hope that the NCAA will
receive an award.
"We've got guys that can't even dress for the home games. They have to sit in the stands like someone who's not participating, even though they were out there sweating and bleeding (in practice) like everybody else."
'What is proposed scares the hell out of me. These idiots . . . they don't know anything.'
"Right now, I'm desperately looking for a job," he said. "In fact, I'm after a job right now. My situation is really a frightening one."
if the rule limiting basketball teams to a travel squad of 10 had been in effect at
the NCAA tournament, last March, KU
will play to play the last part of one
game with four.
AGAINST NOTRE DAME, Ted Owens,
Kansas basketball coach, assigned the,
Jayhawk team.
“The ridiculous thing,” Owens said, “is the limitation of 13 at home. That saves no money. It prevents a youngster, who works in an office team, from even wearing your uniform.
"I'm perfectly willing to cut down our
"scholarship level. If we cut it up, that's
pleasant. But we have a lot of fine young
people in this city who want education.
Now these rules discourage them."
Equally discouraging is the possibility that the NCAA might vote in January to further limit pre-season practice in football and basketball and also put a limit on other, non-revenue sports, which previously could practice all year round.
"WHAT IS PROPOSED, frankly, scares the hell out of me," Reason said. "These idiots that voted on my sport, they don't know anything."
"What difference does it make whether I start in September or October? This is ridiculous. This is absolutely aburd. And that doesn't work for an event? That doesn't cost anything."
Kirkland Gates, men's tennis coach, said the cuts the NCAA had made were the result of a "bad team."
"They just cut down the major sports, football and basketball, and then they said, "Well, we've cut back here, we must cut back give there."
A proposal that would prevent the gymnastics team from practicing in the fall might even be dangerous to his athletes' safety. Lockwood said.
"In gymnastics you have to have some kind of supervision," he said, referring to the 12 routines his athletes must learn in the six weeks prior to their first meet.
"IN GYMNASTICS, THE athlete can't go out and find the equipment, in as basketball or some other sport. He can't get a ball and shoot baskets to set into some kind of shame.
“It’s going to be a safety hazard. I think this is really a tragic thing. And I don’t believe it’s a real cost savings. What diff. between it and if we have two extra months of practice?”
"THE BEST WAY TO SAVE money in athletics is to cut out all sports," he said. "The problem here is that the NCAA didn't have any real directions in what they did.
"What if an athlete gets injured? Why, it would just be pitiful."
Timmons tried to put the NCAA's actions in perspective.
"The NCAA hasn't even spelled out what their goals are. So they go into a big meeting with 800 people and everybody is scrambling for directions to decide on 73 amendments.
"They didn't have sufficient time. As a group, it was obvious they didn't think about that."
Talley's job jeopardized by new cost-saving rules
By KEN STONE
MIRANDA SAID HE THOUGHT the upshot of some of these rules was the lack of sympathy the NCAA convention had for the individual athlete.
Sports Writer
'What-a-day! What-a-day! What a
BAEIATIFU, dai!'
YET TALLEY SAID HE was concerned that his job search may have been initiated a little too late. Other resistant coaches, including David Ely, coach staffing, are flooding the market.
"I don't think the coach head coach (Bob Timmons) or the administrative staff objects to us doing that," Talley said. "They pretty well know what could happen."
Rain is pouring on the track, the temperature is hovering at 55 degrees. The workout instructions on the track team website say: *Run at a speed of 440 at 65 secs, with a 90 sec, rest interval.*
And this crazy man strides into the locker room under the east stands of Memorial Stadium yelling in his Arkansas drawl, at his lungs, about what a beautiful day it is.
But instead of slowly counting the minutes until the NCAA's meeting, Talley is searching for another job. In fact, he has applied to four other large universities.
"It makes a man think," Talley says. "I know I've had second thoughts. I should have done it."
Consequently, Talley is concerned. The mood in the Allen Field House track office was low.
“It’s pretty basic,” he said. “The number one thing in athletics is the athlete.”
As any member of the University of Kansas track team can tell you, the "crazy" man is Thad Talley, KU assistant track coach.
On January 13, 1976, delegates from 700 NCAA member schools will meet at a special convention in St. Louis to decide whether Talley—and assistant coaches like him all over the United States—can keep their jobs.
Football and basketball staffs have already been reduced, and Talley said he didn't think the NCAA would leave coaching in the alone in the other, non-revenue sports.
But no amount of shouted "what-a-days" can divert Talley's attention from what he's been doing.
TALLEY LOVE TO HAVE his athletes still hilt braves, especially when they're too old. They're more resilient than ever.
Thad Talley may lose his job.
"You know, without the athlete, we don't have college basketball. Without the athlete we don't have the great crowds and the great enthusiasm. And when you keep taking away from the athlete, then I think you'll have some problems.
With reference to his own sport, Miranda
marmorized the feelings of his fellow cove-
lor.
The realization that he might have come in this way for nothing is frustrating, he said.
"ALL THE TIME I WAS trying to seek my goals. My ultimate goal is to be a head coach at a large university. And this was just another step up the ladder."
"I think all of us at some time or another have had misgivings and maybe wanted to get out of coaching," Talley said. "But what has happened is the fact that I haven't chosen to get out."
"Someone now is telling me that I'm going to have to get out. Here's something that I have spent 15 years or more preparing for, trying to get ahead, trying to do the best I can, starting off in a junior high and working up to this level of coaching.
"Now, they'll say. We're not forcing you to get out. You can still coach! Sure. What about you?"
"NOW, ALL OF A SUDDEN, by the vote of a hand, someone in some small school is telling me that I'm supposed to get out of coaching and into something else.
Tallay would rather get out of coaching
side slide back. So he plans to continue
loose play.
And if he can't find that head coaching position? What then?
"D I L E TO FEEL THAT, basically,
I'm a fighter, a competitor, a guy that
would not let something like this disturb
him." Talley said.
"Somewhere in this world there is a job for That Talley. It might be digging ditches or in business or in something else; maybe in something that I haven't even prepared."
MARSHALL
"But there's a job for me."
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
Thad Talley
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Boarding Facilities Indoor Arena Call 843-4646 Visitors Welcome
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819 Mass.
4
Wednesday, October 8,1975
University Daily Kansan
COMMENT Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
KU funding suspect
James J. Kilpatrick
The idea that more students means more money at the University of Kansas may be true. However, under current conditions, an idea could lead to disastrous results.
Enrollment figures for this fall have been released, and they show another record total enrollment. That means an increase in the Full Time Equivalent (FTE) enrollment, upon which state funding is based. One FTE is needed for every student or nine full-time enrolled. This fall, according to Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, the FTE is 20,499, or an increase of 1,172 from last year's.
THE PROBLEM WITH the record enrollment arises because although the University will be entitled to more state funds, they won't be available until next year. State funding tied to the FTE is based on enrollment projections made during the academic year. A current funding level was determined from projections made a year ago. Administrators only forecasted an increase of 650 in the FTE last year.
THUS, THE FACULTY and students are forced to struggle with the current budget and facilities while experiencing high costs. The facilities are stretched thin, thus the quality of education is bound to deteriorate.
Dyck said the reasons for the low prediction of the FTE were more sophomores students and more sophomores enrolled this year than expected.
But reasons aren't excuses, and they won't help the problem of the one-year lag in enrollment estimates. Projections have been too low for two years now, and they could just as easily be too low again next year. Meanwhile, faculty and students are forced to bear the burden of inadequate funding.
WE HEAR FROM STRONG HALL that enrollment ultimately will decline, due to lower birth rates and decreasing numbers of high school graduates. We've been hearing that for quite some time now and enrollment continues to increase. And what about Project Outreach? Its continued success will mean more and more students added to the rolls.
IN THIS INSTANCE, bigger may not be better. Granted, KU is a state institution and has an obligation to give an education to all those in the state who seek it. But given the archaic funding system, wouldn't it be better to concentrate on taking care of the students already enrolled?
Under the current funding procedure, the philosophy of attracting more students to get more state funding is folly. Already, the University is straining at the seams from enrollment predictions that have been too low.
It would seem more responsible to discourage unlimited growth when projections used to determine funding needs are made. Let's take care of what we have now.
David Olson
Contributing Writer
WASHINGTON—When Congress last year went into its post-Watergate convulsions and had its second Campaign Act of 1974, many of us said the bill was a bad bill. We didn't know the half of it. On those examination, the times worse than was thought.
Election Act dissected
That conclusion is reinforced by a brief recently filed in the Supreme Court on behalf of Sen. James L. Buckley of New York and former Sen. Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota. They are the principal plaintiffs in a test case where the case will be argued in November and should be decided before Christmas.
THEIR BRIEF is a master piece of dissection. The election reform act had a noble purpose, but it lacked federal elections. No one can quarrel with that purpose. But the Buckley-McCarthy brief argues convincingly that the Constitution provides for pence; and in its culinary effort to promote purity, the act tramples upon the Constitution.
The act's chief provisions have to do with limitations on campaign contributions and expenditures, the name of the Constitution, how can these be upheld? The brief argues:
"THE ACT'S expenditure limits are a direct abridement of the rights of speech and association. The speech which is intended to be central to the objectives and essence of the First Amendment and of any democratic society—political discussion by
candidates. Speech in the political arena may be unheard unless widely and effectively distributed. To limit the expenditure of money, therefore, is to limit the speech itself. The Framers would have regarded it so fundamental that how the Framers would have regarded it is beyond question. It is palpably unconstitutional."
As the brief argues, in any election campaign the right of free speech is inescapably linked to the raising and paying of fees. The right cannot be effectively exercised is meaningless. It is a nullity. What we are talking about is communication — communication by direct mail, bumper sticker, lap button, billboard, newspaper advertising, TV commercials, radio announcements, and the means of communication is to limit communication itself. And this the Constitution flatly forbids.
IN THE PLANTIFF'S view, the reform act has many other constitutional defects. The brief history of the reform affends the most elementary principles of fairness and equity:
"The FECA simply does not limit political contributions and expenditures equally. It limits all expenditures by challengers but only some expenditures by incumbents. And it limits all elections only in one state, only some contributions to incumbents. Incumbent officeholders can by their own vote increase the resources at their disposal in ways which are the equivalent of very large
Kansan Forum / from Haskell Loop to the pablum vote Halt the Haskell Loop/
The road, designed to channel traffic from 23rd Street to the downtown area
Massachusetts will co-
will be $5 million and will be partly funded by Community Development Act funds.
The Haskell Loop will rip through the East Lawrence home on the east side of 28 homes on the east side of the road in an industrial area. The East Lawrence Recreation Center holds the basketball diamond. The Loop means the death of a neighborhood.
"It's going to be built, that's all there is to it," Lawrence City Commissioner Donald Binns said of the Haskell Loop.
Mayor Barkley, Clark and the community benefit from the Loop because it will reduce traffic on residential streets, and will act as a buffer by separating the industrial zone from the residential south and west.
In adopting the law, Congress sought to prevent "special interests" from exercising power in the Senate for the House, the Senate and the presidency. Even this purpose, in the plaintiffs' view, the law did not poorly drawn that big business and big labor, through the
Clark says that East Lawrence needs a thoroughfare running north and south. But the area already has such a downtown street now cuts through the majority of traffic, the majority of traffic.
road. At the July 29 commission meeting, only one resident spoke in favor of the Loop. The proponents are the people who work on it and the road. For downtown merchants, the Loop mean more money.
presidential campaigns. If the law had been in operation in 1980, John F. Kennedy could not have rescinded the captured capture of West Virginia.
contributions. The actual impact of the legislation, therefore, will necessarily make campaigns by challengers less likely to succeed."
The Buckley-McCarthy brief is more than 200 pages. It is a superlative piece of work, and unless the Supreme Court is satisfied that the arguments should prevail. The reform act was intended as a means toward an end—pure elections. But a good end cannot justify bad means, and that is what we have here.
In the eyes of the Haskell Loop's proponents, East Lawrence isn't too much to sacrifice. Most of the people
The division between proponents and opponents of the measure is that 240 residents of the area signed a petition against the
The road will bring more business to the downtown area. The residents through Lawrence could reach downtown with ease. While cruising along, they could meet in the courtyard of East Lawrence community.
The Loop will improve Mayor Clark's record as he moves toward higher political offices in the state. He will be able to "great capital improvement" he made in Lawrence.
The road might act as a protective barrier for the "incer" neighborhoods to the north, but the price for such a burdensome street of East Lawrence. Residents would surely prefer the noise of traffic on the residential streets to the noise created by fast-moving cars down the Haskell street. The highway was created as industries moved in, encouraged by the mobility offered by the Loop.
What else is wrong with the act? It discriminates against presidential aspirants, such as McCarthy, who have neither national committees nor national conventions. By rejecting the act, he penditures, the act will reduce citizen participation in the political process. By restricting presidential campaign spending state by state, the act tends to control the strategy of
there are working class, whose incomes are less than the incomes of residents to the south of London, older, wooden-framed houses with big front porches. Elimination of such structures could be viewed as a more action to improve the city.
However, the houses that will be destroyed by the Loop would probably outlast any of the new, modern pre-fab structures now being built. Many of these older houses have double walls, rock foundations, solid oak studs and panels. Some buildings disaster or an insensitive city government could wipe them out.
Unlike many Lawrence residents who don't own a car, they often remain mobile, and therefore aren't emotionally attached to
their residence, the people of East Lawrence have strong feelings about their homes. They say July 29 commission meeting.
The ball park at 11th and Delaware streets exemplifies the city's concern with East Lawrence. The field is strewn with broken glass, trash lies in piles under the stadium, and the abandoned facility stinks of small amounts of work, the ball park could be restored. If the ball park is replaced by the Haskell Loop, children will have to play in the street.
The decision has been made to build the Loop. Acquisition of land is already under way, and the funds are available. Yet, it isn't too late to reverse the decision. The federal funds could go to some useful project and the community develop
ment money could be used to develop the neighborhood.
As one resident put it, "These poor people can't stand too much of this. They are on fixed incomes. Their homes over here are modest, but it's the best they can afford."
No wander the government at national, state and local levels has so little credibility left among the American people. The Haskell Loop must be stopped.
OIL
WHEN I WANT MY CHICK I JUST FLICK MY BIC
Daughter sees light
I was just home for Labor Day. Nothing special. But what had possessed my father? He spirited my footsteps in and out of the family room, down from the kitchen, up the hall, from
Jobn-John off and running
At a press conference held in his bedroom at his mother's New York apartment, Kennedy said he anticipated making him the president of schools and maternity wards throughout the nation to "press the flesh" or even slap it in the case of the youngest of the future voters. Kennedy said he felt that the face was the only way to find out what issues would be important to them 18 years hence.
In keeping with a recent trend in American politics, John-John Kennedy has announced his intention to the Democratic party's nomination for the 1992 presidential election.
Young Kennedy's campaign manager, Petey Sallenger, said
the early announcement of kennedy's intention to run was advantageous because the candidate couldn't be expected to make specific promises concerning issues that don't address them, would confident this campaign—sans-platform approach—would be decisive in winning the "pabulum vote."
At the press conference Kennedy pledged not to let 17 years of campaigning interfere with his present responsibilities when he added that he wouldn't be 'held hostage' by a mother who expected him to be in bed by 9 p.m.
Thus far, while on the campaign trail, Kennedy has received enthusiastic approval
for his stand which states that big business is good or bad depending on whom one speaks to, and that opinions on such matters are not the realization that "grown-ups are generally inscrutable."
Kennedy has said that if energy continues to be an issue in the '90s he would support federal subsidies for bicycle helmets, help alleviate the energy crunch in hilly areas of the country when people discover how much fun coasting is. He said President Ford already has demonstrated that coating wheels are more important part of a candidate's platform. With a sideward glance at his mother, Kennedy said that red bikes with high
Jack Fischer
handlebars would be especially appropriate in this effort.
With regard to busing,
Kennedy said he could support it only if he were allowed to sit in the front seat. Long bus rides shouldn't be court-ordered
he has found that such rides usually made his friends car sick.
Kennedy ended the press conference with the announcement that his first book, "Profiles in Publicity," would be a promise that it would have "a lot of nest pictures" for preschoolers.
Sallenger said that no decision has been made regarding a runningmate but that it would have to be someone who didn't like girls or haircuts.
the bedroom to the bathroom,
turning off lights, unplugging
electric rollers, kicking off the
stereo and silencing the TV.
And then I came home from a date to a dark porch light! Never have my parents forgone my emulator for Mommy and Dad, worrying about you, now get out of that car and into the house."
I realize that it doesn't apply any more, but the tradition has stood through three years of college vacations.
With bleary eyes I broached the subject the next morning.
"Daddy, is the porch light burned out?"
Mother mused over her coffee.
"Okav Mom, what's up?"
"Well, we had an $80 electric bill last month. Your father's blood pressure is rising in direct effect on the electrical rates are going up."
A call to Kansas Gas and Electric revealed that electric
Marti Schiller
rates were up 30 per cent from a year ago and indicated that my father's blood pressure was in the danger zone.
I'll bake Daddy a cake, that should calm him down, I thought. The idea was good, the timing was bad. I was using the electric mixer when he came home for lunch.
"Back in the good old days, Mom mixed her cakes by hand, handed her a friend, and helped familiar. "We didn't have electricity out on the farm. It was during the depression, you know, we had an icebox instead of a refrigerator and we stored the ice for it in the welded stoves and had kerosene lamps for light and when it got cold we didn't have electric blankets, no sir, an extra quilt maybe and a washing machine with a big lever on it you had to throw back and forth to wash clothes. That used to be my job when I was about 6 or 7. Maybe we would have those things. Maybe you'd appreciate electricity more and it wouldn't cost so much."
Daddy, thanks, but no thanks.
I'll pass on food poisoning from badly refrigerated food and I don't think trying to read by a kerosene lamp is going to improve my eyesight. When it's cold I'll snuggle under my electric blanket and not feel guilty. I don't have time to throw a leaver back and forth to teach her how to think what a town the size of Lawrence, let alone some city, would look like if every home had a wood-burning stove belching out oil and smoke.
I'll grant you that the United States has been used to the energy grain train for a long time. But it's our technology and higher standard of living that brought us to it.
We need to conserve our energy, so let's turn down the thermostat, change the filters in the furnace, tape the windows and turn off the extra lights. But let's also devote some time to the energy sources and development of new energy sources and technology. Let's not go back to the "good old days." But Daddy, if it'll make you happy, I'll mix my cakes by hand.
Readers Respond/ Shocklev debate cancellation criticized
To the Editor:
Bravo for SUA! 'N's nice to know that there's someone looking out for our moral character.
By canceling the William Shockley-Richard Goldaby debate, SUA has deprived KU of hearing the pros and cons of one of the most enduring discussions this age: Shockley's theory of genetic inferiority in blacks.
We can well understand the opinions of black University students regarding this matter; students to be called "inferior."
However, we feel that they
(along with Goldsby) should have the chance to disprove Shockley's theory, and this debate would provide the perfect opportunity. Also, a university should be a meeting ground for the free exchange of ideas; even though Shockley's theory may not be valid, he should at least be given the challenge of explain the reasoning behind it to responsible students who can make up their own minds about the subject. SUA's decision has eliminated both of the possibilities.
We do not pretend to decide
the validity of Shockley's theory. Is it valid, or is it just bunker thanks to SUA, we may find out. Warren R. Carthers
Topela sophomore
Roger Bardales
Wichita Sophomore
Mike Gritchil
Wichita Sophomore
Debate needed
Does this university represent academic freedom and basic civil liberties? The SUA's cancellation of the
scheduled Shockley debate seems directly opposed to these ideas. The fact that Mr. Shockley's views are unacceptable to most intelligent people does not obviate his right to have a voice about racial equality will not suffer from exposure to a public debate at the University of Kansas. Indeed, one of the fundamental principles underlying any free society is that everyone must most successfully in an attempt of free and open discussion. We are afraid that in cancelling Mr. Shockley's debate, the SUa has
simply done what was most expedient. Perhaps it was expedient to avoid a possible unpleasant confrontation. But, in doing so the SUA has violated the principle that the University should serve as a forum for all points of view.
We who live in the United States are fond of emphasizing the fact that we live in a world where critics are fond of criticizing closed, totalitarian societies, which, unlike our own, do not allow the free expression of opinions on minority views. And yet, the SUA's to decision Mr.
Shockley's debate has closed the door to the expression of Mr. Shockley's dissenting views. SUA has agreed to pay Shockley to stay away.
Certainly we are vehemently opposed to racism. Nonetheless, we should not make it imminent for Mr. Shoalbeck to express his views, because in doing so we shall have violated a principle which is essential to furthering the cause of equality with him. We strongly urge the SUA to reconsider its decision on this matter.
Graduate Students:
Vicki Adsley, Tom Donaldson,
Kathy Dugan, Edith
Hetherington, Charlotte
Kimbrough, Mike Kimbrough,
Debra Nails, Ellen Reynolds,
Joe VanZandt, Berney
Williams; Karen Spicher
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published in the American Journal of Biochemistry every year except holidays and summer period publications. Periodicals mail address is #101-267. Subscriptions by mail are $25 per semester or $30 per term. Subscription to $25 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $3 a semester, paid through the student account.
Editor Business Manager
Dennis Ellsworth Cindy Long
8
Friday, October 24, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Women coaches
From page six
--them than any other group of athletes I've coached." she said.
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
"Before now, the coaches knew they had a responsibility to the players. We couldn't push them that hard; they were coming out of getting time and not getting anything in return.
KU women's swimming coach Claire McElroy
ALEXANDRA LYON
"I think now the students will have to realize that if they're getting a scholarship, they have a responsibility to the coaches, too."
"Before, it was hard to push a girl to spend all that time and force her to be the things I want her to be. A lot said it wasn't worth it," he said.
"Girls aren't quite as concerned yet. Men
are often more concerned up two hours,
and douch off elsewhere."
Kivisto said he compared women without scholarships to "redrishers" in NCAA sports.
“It’s hard to demand a guy's all, make him go all out in practice, follow a training schedule and all that when he’s putting in all of his time.” He actually competed in the game,” he said.
Aside from classwork, Kivisto said he demanded that tennis be "number one" to her.
McElloyd said the scholarships made her demand more, the entire team, not just the top eight.
SEVERAL COACHES SAID the Kansas branch of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (KAIAW) set rules they thought kept the KU athletic department from developing the maximum programs.
Igor said the limits KIAAW puts on the length of the volleyball season which Kansas schools are allowed to play keep KU from competing with the better schools, especially those outside Kansas, who do not have the same restiction.
He said he thought the problem was a discrepancy between the seriousness of women's athletics today, especially at KU, and the way KUAI viewed them.
KU's gymnastics program is growing so much faster than the other Kansas schools that soon it will be competing almost exclusively with out-of-state schools, he said.
KIAAI tries to maintain equitable competition within the state, Snow said. That may restrict the gymnastics team's activity outside of Kansas, he said.
Kivisto said the only thing AIAW had done about women's tennis is to approve his appointment as head coach. Because he doesn't have a degree in physical education, Kivisto said, his appointment wasn't automatic.
BECAUSE KU IS ONE of only two schools in Kansas that have women's swimming programs, there are no KAIAW rules to follow. The only KIAW rules governing swimming describe the strokes and the treatment of injuries. McElroy said.
The coaches shared a common bond on the subject of money.
Most of them have found that the money
they received to develop the program and the money they need to maintain are two distinct needs. All cited a tight budget and insufficient facilities as problems.
It's always a thorn." Washington said.
"It affects our scheduling and traveling."
SNOW SAID, "THERE are always things I'd like to buy."
McEllroy said the latest in women's swimming attire, the skinniest, was far too thin.
"It may add to our times, but we are survived without them." she said.
With the scarcity of resources to both programs, it is inevitable that the men's and women's programs would "rub elbows," as Washington put it.
Friction between the two is less today than earlier, according to the coaches.
Washington said she was feeling more tree to approach her man counterpart, Terry Gilliam.
Kivisto and Snow said their relationships with Kirkland Gates, the men's tennis coach, and Bob Lockwood, men's gymnastics coach, were excellent.
KIVISTO SAID THE two teams played
in the past and would try a mixed
meet this
Snow said he and Lockwood had scheduled a dual meet for Dec. 6.
McEloy said her team maintained "very friendly" relations with the men's swim
The two teams share Scott Pyle, the during coach, lanes教练, during training, and matriatron.
---
8
WITH A LINEUP FOR FALL "75" LIKE THIS ONE, YOU JUST CAN'T BEAT US!!
PLAYERS:
S. E. — Gant & Creighton Shirts
R. T. — British Byford Socks & Sweaters
R. G. — Puritan Sweaters & Sportswear
C. — Pacific Trail Down Jackets
L. T. — Wright Slacks
L. G. - Jersild Ski Sweaters
T. E. — Pendleton Shirts & Sweaters
R. B.—Zero King & London Fog Outerwear
R. B. — Corbin Trousers
Q. B — Cricketeer Clothing
STAFF: Pete & Chris Whitenight
With a lineup of great clothing and sportswear stars like these and the superb leadership and tradition of excellent service of our coaching staff we expect our team to go 11-0 and win the Big 8 again this year!
W. R. — Tobias Trends Leisurewear
HEAD COACH: Ken Whitenight
GO JAYHAWKS!!
THE
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Glad To See You Back Visit Your Old Haunts With A New Look
CHILDREN'S HOME
For a delicious variety of sandwiches stop by THE DELI
Level 3 Before and After the Game 8:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
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Private Dining Rooms and Catering Services are available through Reservations Office,913-864-4651
CINEMAS
THE KANSAS UNION
---
University Dally Kansan
Friday, October 24, 1975
g
Coaches criticize stifling NCAA regulation
"I'm upset with a big, vast, bulky organ that no longer has a heart or a arm for the bed."
"The athlete is the most important person in the whole NCAA. He has to come first. And yet the people who administer athletics seem to put him last."
Those bitting words were recently issued from Bob Timmons, University of Kansas track coach, as he reviewed the results of a study by a Convention on Economy last August.
WHAT HAS THE NCAA DONE?
"I think it a disgrace." Timmons says,
"an absolute disgrace, the things they've done."
In an attempt t] combat inflation and assure its member schools of a degree of financial security, the NCAA has voted new rules and restrictions affecting almost every collegiate intercollegiate athletics; recruit, recruitment, scholarships, squad size and elibility.
Some schools gave serious thought to dropping their entire intercollegiate sports team.
The new rules didn't appear out of nowhere, however. In the past five years, as a result of economic conditions, 20 NCA student schools have had to eliminate their football programs. Many athletic departments were modified with enough red ink to fill a swimming pool.
So when it was learned that the NCAA had called a convention for mid-August to
'I think it's a disgrace, an absolute disgrace, the things they've done.'
consider 73 cost-cutting proposals, athletic directors and college students across the country.
EVERYONE APPLAUDED THE NCAA as it called on delegates from its 700 member schools to meet August 14-15 in Chicago.
But later, those cheers of approval turned into snarls of reproach, as the ramifications of the new rules were subjected to closer scrutiny.
In a recent survey of KU coaches, reactions to the NCAA's new rules ranged from mild displeasure to frothing denunciation. Words such as "idiot," "taburd," "ridiculous," "tragic" and "disastrous" spiced their comments.
The amendments to the NCAA constitution and the by laws that caused the greatest stir fall into the following four categories:
KU basketball is unaffected. The NCAA KU basketball is unaffected. The NCAA part-time. KU is at the limit now.
COACHING STAFFS - The NCAA has a limit on the number of football and basketball assistants a school may employ. The limit on football is one head coach, but the limit on basketball coaches. KU now has 11 full-time assistant coaches. The rule takes effect Aug. 1, 1976.
SQUAD SIZE—A rule limiting the number of athletes a school can take on a road trip or have suit up at home has been in effect for several months. While the NCAA and Big Eight conference have had travel squad limits in the past, this is the first time a home squad has been assigned a maximum.
SCHOLARSHIPS- A Division 1 school can award only 95 football and 15 basketball full-scholarships (rooms, board, tuition, fees, books and course expenses). The $1$ a month stipend has been eliminated. The rule doesn't take effect until the 1977-78
'I don't believe the coaches had any type of input that they felt they should have.'
school year, but schools must begin making
progress toward conforming now.
RECruitment—The NCAA has placed a limit on the number of prospects a school can fly in to recruit at the University. A limit on paid visits has been assigned to each sport. Before this year, no such limits existed.
The NCAA has said a high school athlete can make no more than six paid visits to schools recruiting him. The college must visit one prospect more than three times.
An observation by Dick Reamon, KU men's swim coach, was typical of the era.
"IALL ME FOR SAVING him," he said. "There have got to be some curbs. But, at the same time, I do think that some long term problems will have more than emotion behind them are needed."
The issues that arouse emotion are numerous. One of the biggest was the fear of violence.
"I don't even know what they were thinking about," said Sam Miramura, KU basketball assistant coach and recruiter. "They just no input by coaches, I'm sure, on this."
Miranda was talking about a rule that prevented him from visiting a high school counselor.
Miranda said, "It should have been that you can visit from March 1 to September 1."
Rather than pressuring a player to sign with a college while he is in the middle of his season, Miranda said it would be much better to allow contacts before the start of the season, when the athlete and his coach are more relaxed and less busy.
"IT'S COMPLETELY backwards,"
"I don't understand how they can sit down
Ken Stone Sports Writer
and make a rule that is just backwards on the parents what wants, the boy wants, the high school coach wants and what the totally different from what it should be.
Floyd Temple, KU's baseball coach since 1954, agreed that concedes had little impact.
"THERE'S NO QUESTION about it," Temple said. "Very few coaches were contacted as to how they felt. I think they went into it a little too quickly."
In fact, Temple said, * you put in some rules that aren't really going to save that*
Such sentiment was echoed by Bob Lock-wood, men's gymnastics coach.
"I don't believe the coaches had any type of input that they felt they should have."
"I think all coaches knew—and all athletic directors and faculty reps knew that we would have to have some kind of cost-cutting change.
"BUT THE COACHES IVE visited, and myself in particular, are concerned that the so-called cost-cutting legislation is really not cutting costs."
Cyclle Walker, athletic director, has had similar suspicions for a long time.
"I'm opposed to national legislation," he said. "Although this action on the part of NCAA member schools was disgusted as an econom move, I really feel it might have been a move toward bringing the big schools in line with the smaller schools."
Walker said many small schools voted to cut scholarships, coaching staffs and recruiting because they thought they could afford to have a positive advantage of the larger schools.
KANSAS ISN'T IN THE financial bind that many schools its size are in, Walker said, so few of the rules would eventually save KU much money.
Bud Moore, KU football coach, said, "We're spending as much money recruiting as we can, but the biggest problem is
'This helps the metropolitan areas. A lot of them will be helped by the rules.'
farther. You're much more particular in your evaluation.
"You're a heck of a lot more careful with those 30 grants. If you make a mistake, it's hitched."
Both Walker and Moore pointed to the disadvantage that the NCAA had put KU in regarding schools in larger population areas.
"THIS DEFINITELY HELPS the metropolitan areas." Walker says, "We're in a non-populous area. Therefore we must bring in more people than, say, Southern Cal, UCLA, Ohio State or Texas. A lot of them will be helped by these new rules."
Moore said, "Penn State can have 75 people visit on their own, but if we bring a guy from a heavily-populated area, we're going to have to pay his way. It's a definite handicap to most every school in the Big Eight."
But the first amendment to be considered at the next Special Convention of the NCAA-on Jan. 13, 1976 at St. Louis-will be a rule limiting coaching staffs in non-revenue sports to one head coach and one part-time assistant.
Another handicap, say KU coaches, is the limit on the size of coaching staffs. Right now, only football at KU will be affected by NCAA rules.
THAT WORRIES EVERYBODY—Timmons, Lockwood and Reammost of all. But Moore is left with no choice. He will go to bed by next August unless the rule is changed.
"I think it's totally unfair," Moore said. "We're in one of the few professions in the country that are more comfortable with it."
"I went out all over the country and tried to hire the best people with the idea that we could do it," he said. Then, all of a sudden, with less than a year gone, we find out that we'll have to let some people
"I came here with the idea of getting a good job, and all the time I've been here I've been losing literally thousands of dollars. So now I may have to go back to a job that really wasn't much better than the one I left five years ago.
'I'm after a job right now. My situation is really a frightening one.'
"IT'S HARD FOR ME, personally speaking, to get excited about the rest of (the restrictions) because I see myself without a job in the fall of '76.
When the time comes to fire three
assistants, who will Moore let go?
"So I see all the work that I've put in here gone, almost like I was forgotten. It's bamboam'bame you're gone and that's it. You hate to leave you alone and come along and legislate you out of aJob."
If the NCAA is threatening to legislate coaches out of their jobs they are also tending to prevent athletes from competing, said Moore.
Gary Pepin, KU assistant track coach,
should hope that the NCAA will reject the argument.
"WHEN THESE KIDS WERE recruited they were told they would have the opportunity to make the traveling squar or to limit you to 80 gvws dressing at home.
Of the rules that limit a football traveling
squad to 48 and the home squad to 60, Moore
and Fletcher say:
"We've got guys that can't even dress for the home games. They have to sit in the stands like someone who's not participating, even though they were out there sweating and bleeding (in practice) like everybody else."
'What is proposed scares the hell out of me. These idiots . . . they don't know anything.'
the NCAA tournament last March, KU
won the team's tournament to play the last part one
of the game.
AGAINST NOTRE DAME, Ted Owens,
K.J. basketball coach, reminded,
the K.C. team of the need for
If the rule limiting basketball teams to a travel squad of 10 had been in effect at
"Right now, I'm desperately looking for a job," be said. "In fact, I'm after a job right now. My situation is really a frightening one."
"The ridiculous thing." Owens said, "is the limitation of 13 at home. That saves no money. It prevents a youngster, who works in the team, from even wearing your uniform.
"I'm perfectly willing to cut down our scholarship level. If we cut it up, 15 that's plenty. But we have a lot of fine young people in the room and now applications. Now these rules discourage them."
Equally discouraging is the possibility that the NCAA might vote in January to further limit pre-season practice in football and basketball and also put a limit on other, non-revenue sports, which previously could practice all year round.
"WHAT IS PROPOSED, frankly, scares the hell out of me," Reamon said. "These idiots that voted on my sport, they don't know anything."
"What difference does it matter if I start in September or October? This is ridiculous. This is absolutely absurd and. That doesn't cost any money for an event? That doesn't cost anything."
Kirkland Gates, men's tennis coach, said he cuts the NCAA had made were the result of a 2014 study.
A proposal that would prevent the gymnastics team from practicing in the fall might even be dangerous to his athletes' safety. Lockwood said.
"They just cut down the major sports, football and basketball, and then they said, "Well, we've cut back here, we must cut back over there."
"IN GYMNASTICTS, THE athlete can't go out and find the equipment, in a basketball or some other sport. He can't get a ball and shoot baskets to get into some kind of shape."
"It's going to be a safety hazard. I think this is really a tragic thing. And I don't believe it's a real cost savings. What diff between them if we have two extra months of practice?"
"THE BEST WAY TO SAVE money in athletics is to cut out all sports," he said. "The problem here is that the NCAA didn't have any real directions in what they did."
"What if an athlete gets injured? Why, it would just be pitiful."
Timmons tried to put the NCAA's actions in perspective.
"The NCAA hasn't even spelled out their goals as. So they go into a big meeting with 800 people and everybody is scrambling for directions to decide on 72 amendments.
"They didn't have sufficient time. As a group, it was obvious they didn't think about this."
MIRANDA SAID HE THOUGHT the upshot of some of these rules was the lack of sympathy the NCAA convention had for the individual athlete.
YET TALLEY SAID HE was concerned that his job search may have been initiated a little too late. Other assistant coaches, a few of whom are very involved in coaching staffs, are flooding the market.
"I don't think the head coach here (Bob Timmons) or the administrative staff objects to us doing that," Talley said. "They pretty well know what could happen."
Talley's job jeopardized by new cost-saving rules
Consequently, Talley is concerned. The mood in the Allen Field House track office is positive.
By KEN STONE
Sports Writer
Sports Writer
But instead of slowly counting the minutes until the NCAA's meeting, Talley is searching for another job. In fact, he' s requested to搭 two other large universities.
"What-a-day! What-a-day! What a BEAITIFE_day!"
Rain is pouring outside on the track. The temperature is hovering at 55 degrees. The workout instructions on the track team website say "keep your mouth closed." 440 at 65 sec, with a 90 sec, rest interval."
"It makes a man think," Talley says. "I know I've had second thoughts. I should ask."
And this crazy man strides into the locker room under the east stands of Memorial Stadium yelling in his Arkansas draw, at哭泣 his lungs, about a beautiful day it is.
On January 13, 1976, delegates from 700 NCAA member schools will meet at a special convention in St. Louis to decide whether Talley—and assistant coaches like him all over the United States—can keep their jobs.
As any member of the University of Kansas track team can tell you, the "crazy" man is Thad Talley, KU assistant track coach.
"It's pretty basic," he said. "The number one thing in athletics is the athlete."
Football and basketball staffs have already been reduced, and Talley said he didn't think the NCAA would leave coaching alone in the other, non-revenue sports.
Thad Talley may lose his job.
TALLEY LOVES TO HAVE his athletics so well that he struggles past the 328 mark of the 119.400. But no amount of shouted "what-a-days" can divert Talley's attention from what he is doing.
"You know, without the athlete, we don't have college basketball. Without the athlete we don't have the great crowds and the great enthusiasm. And when you keep taking away from the athlete, then I think you'll have some problems.
With reference to his own sport, Miranda summarized the feelings of his fellow
The realization that he might have come this way for nothing is frustrating, he said.
"ALL THE TIME I WAS trying to seek my goals. My ultimate goal is to be a head coach at a large university. And this was just another step up the ladder."
"I think all of us at some time or another have had misgivings and maybe wanted to get out of coaching." Talley said. "But what I thought is the fact that I haven't chosen to get out.
"Someone now is telling me that I'm going to have to get out. Here's something that I have spent 15 years or more preparing for, trying to get ahead, trying to do the best I can, starting off in a junior high and working up to this level of coaching.
"Now, they'll say, 'We're not forcing you to get out. You can still coach. Sure. What's wrong?'"
Wait, let me look at the image again.
It's a block of text with some crossed-out parts.
The first line has "Now, they'll say..." and "We're not forcing you to get out."
The second line says "You can still coach.".
The third line says "Sure."
Okay, I'm ready to transcribe.
"Now, they'll say, 'We're not forcing you to get out. You can still coach.' Sure. What's wrong?"
"NOW, ALL OF A SUDDEN, by the vote of a hand, someone in some small school is telling me that I'm supposed to get out of coaching and into something else.
Talley would rather get out of coaching than slide back. So he plans to continue linebacking.
And if he can't find that head coaching position? What then?
"Somewhere in this world there's a job for That Talley. It may be digging ditches or in business or in something else; maybe something that I haven't even prepared for."
"I DLKE TO FEEL THAT, basically,
I'm a fighter, a competitor, a guy that
would not let something like this disturb
him," Talley said.
"But there's a job for me."
PENNESOLA
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAM
Thad Talley
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Wednesday, October 8, 1975
University Daily Kansan
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Sales of tickets to the Chicago concert tomorrow night are slow, Rich Lindeman, SUA special events chairman, said yesterday.
Linderman said 6,000 tickets had been sold by late yesterday afternoon. Sixteen thousand seats are still available for the game at 8 p.m. in Allen Field House, he said.
Lindman said the group's June appearance at Aarwheel stadium in Kansas City marked a milestone.
sales.
Preparations for the event involve several committees and hundreds of staff.
Not the least important of these committees is the hospitality committee, Mike Miller, SUA activities advisor said. The hospitality committee carries out special requests of the performing groups, Miller said.
"Many times you'll get a contract that says the (the) company will three gallons of
organic juice or so many cans of a certain soft drink," he said. "And that carries just the same weight as anything else in the contract."
Although Chicago's contract with the concert's promoter, Windy City Productions of Chicago, didn't include specific items requested by the group's manager did give them a list of hospitality items, Betsey Daniels, hospitality chairman, said.
In accordance with the manager's
request, Daniels said, 15 hot meals for technicians and Chicago personnel will be available.
When Chicago arrives at the field house at 7 p.m. they will find a bountiful banquet of cakes and crackers on a silver tray, six bottles of wine and 10 bottles of Mouton Cadet, she said.
She said requested items also included thick, unbendable paper plates, silverware, napkins in a solid pastel color, two dozen bath towels and 40 pounds of ice.
Miller said Sonny and Cher, the 1973 Homecoming concert artists, gave the most extensive requests of any performers he could remember.
They requested a special dressing room with a ramp from the dressing room to the stage, and Cher requested that a large tray of dietort diet soft drink be provided, he said.
In the case of the Chicago concert, the $250 to $250 cost of hospitality lounge for the $250 to $250 cost of hospitality lounge.
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Friday, October 24, 1975
---
University Daily Kansan
CONVIVIEN
Over hill, over dale
Over
194
SUNDAY, JANUARY 26TH
Cross country coach Bob Timmons urges KU runner on
There is no escape.
Five hard miles of grass, dirt, hills and sweat lie
starting line and that colorful,
be-finished finishing chute.
To the cross-country runner, however, the distance of the race is of only passing concern. He has run hundreds of miles in practice, and a 15- or 20-mile jaunt is commonplace.
So for Jim Groninger, a University of Kansas freshmen running here in his first college race against Iowa State University and Southern Illinois University two weeks ago, the sport isn't just a jog and a stretch. It's thinking as well.
Yet it's impossible to keep your mind off the race, to ignore what you'll feel with a mile to go, said KU's John. "It's like a waterlock" he later took.
Relaxing doesn't mean remaining inactive. It means keeping the mind and body loose, free from tension. It means preventing nervous energy from becoming dissinated.
While going through his regular pre-race warmup—one and a half miles of jogging, several wind sprints and builds and lots of stretching—Groninger imagined in himself that he would do in an hour, when he was finally in the race.
"I try to go over the race in my head and try to feel
that I'm running in the race," he said.
"But the best thing to do is relax."
"You don't control your energies. You let them flow," he said. "Thinking about the race just comes naturally. You run the race over in your mind many, many times."
Does that include thinking about the inevitable pain?
"You accept it as a part of praying."
Bill Lundberg described "psyching" before the race. "It's not the most exciting of feelings," he said. "But it's something you have to put up with. It's good to have a friend, and you're better butterfly. But once the race gets started, it's over with."
Another Jayhawk runner, Tom Koppes, who had been suffering the effects of a minor cold, leaned on the hood of his coach's blue pickup truck after the race and said, "I'm just dead."
Gnigger said, "It felt like it started hurting right after they fired the gun. I went through it. I'm alive. I'm safe."
169
197
KU's McDonald (l), Roscoe and Lundberg lead pack
KANSAS 197 KANSAS 16
Runnerup Lundberg (l) congratulates winner Roscoe
Story by Ken Stone
Photos by Don Pierce
David Crenshaw
KANSAS
169
Jayhawk John Roscoe snapped the string first for the grueling win
6
Wednesday, October 8, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Red Sox, Cincinnati win playoffs
Rv The Associated Press
Boston relief pitcher Dick Drago killed the Oakland A's last hope for a victory with one pitch, and Carl Yazerstmaki contributed two hits and a brilliant fielding play. The Red Sox completed their sweep over the three-dime defending champion A's.
The Boston Red Sox in the American League and the Cincinnati Reds in the National League won by identical 5-4 scores. The Twins, who were the teams which moved them into the World Series.
Cincinnati pinch-bitter Ed Armbrister's
goalhand runs in the 10th inning in the
2nd game.
Drago replaced Red Sox starter Rick Wise with one in the eight innings after the A's had scored two runs to make the score 5.3. His first pitch to Joe Rudi was a double ball. He was a virtually dead.
Boston pitched A's starter Ken Holtzman, who was pitching with just two days rest, and two reillevers for 11 base hits. The Red Sox played flawless defense before suffering a slight fielding-breakdown in the eighth.
It was a team victory for Cincinnati in a game that featured a playoff record-equalling 14-strikeout performance by Pittsburgh rookie John Candelaria and a last-of-the ninth Pirates' rally that sent the game into extra innings.
The victory gave Boston its first league championship since 1967 and sent them home to Fenway Park where they will open World Series Saturday against Cincinnati.
Pittsburgh Pirates, which won the National League pennant. Armbrister drove his long sacrifice fly to Al Oliver in center field, scoring Ken Griffey.
The Reds gained their seventh National League pennant in the 99-year history of the Reds' franchise with a pair of runs off Pittsburg ranch Hernan Hammon in the top of the 10th.
Kansas tops in Big Eight in rushing
After the past two days, it will probably come as little surprise to KU football fans that the Jayhawks own the best rushing statistically, at least in the Big Eight.
But there's another side of the coin: INU
kills the best scoring defense in the
louisiana confederacy.
Finally, individual Jayhawks are known for their marks known in the official charts.
Maybe the most surprising thing about KU right now is its record of 3-1. Few football fans expected Kansas to win that title, but a whole year, much less the first four games.
The Jayhawks' toughest test of the year faces them this Saturday, when they travel to play Nebraska, the fourth-ranked team in the nation.
That game will match the top running team in the Big Eight—the Jayhawks are averaging 31.2 yards a game —against the Oklahoma State. Alaska is allowing only 73.5 yards a game.
The KU defense will also face its sternest test of the season, against going at a Cornhusker offense that's averaging 35.5 points. The defense is likely losing up fewer than nine points a contest.
In individual statistics, KU quarterback Nolan Cromwell is at the top of the league rushing charts with a 131.3 yards a game average.
Kickoff returner Eric Franklin remains at the top of the heap with a 27.7 average for
Because of their weeful passing attack, the Jayhawks have neither a passer nor a receiver listed anywhere in the top ranks of those categories.
Chris Golub, safety, is tied for the league lead in interceptions with three.
Dennis Kerbel, placekicker, has moved to sixth place in scoring with 29 points on the ball. He scored 35 on Saturday.
Husker defense worries Moore
For the second straight week, KU head coach Bud Moore will take 48 Jayhawks to an away football game. But there's going to be a challenge when Coach Brady of the Nebraska huskers Saturday in Lincoln.
Last week, it didn't really matter that KU had 48 players and Wisconsin had 60, the amount allowed the home team by the Wildcats had 35, the Badgers, 41.7. But it's going to matter this week. Moore said.
"You're still faced with the same problems except that we're faced with 60 better players up there than we faced at Wisconsin," he said.
Nebraska, he noted, will be the best defensive team the Jayhawks have beat.
Linebacker Jeff Turner was switched to noseguard, substituting for the injured Dennis Balagna. He also sprained an ankle in the Wisconsinin and, Moore said, is still doubtful for the Nebraska game.
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Voting for the HOPE Award Finalists will take place
Wednesday, October 8
8 a.m.-5 p.m.
In the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd.
All students classified 4 or 5.
Class of '76 Students eligible to vote.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 8, 1975
7
Lectures to commemorate birthday of German poet
The German department will commemorate the 100th birthday anniversary of German poet Rainer Maria Rilke with a discussion Thursday through Saturday.
Stephen Spender, English poet, essayist and critic, will open the Rainer Maria Rilke Symposium at 8 p.m. Thursday in Woodruff Auditorium.
Spender's lecture will compare the themes of Rilke's "Duno Elegies" and T. S. Eliot's "Four Quartets," Warren Maurer, professor of German, said yesterday.
Maurer said the University of Kansas had one of the country's best collections of books about Rilke and by Rilke. He said the collection was one of the reasons the German department decided to sponsor the symposium.
The Rulke books, called the Sagan
collection, are on display in Spencer
bldg. during spring 2015.
Maurer said that works of art often inspired Rike's writing. An exhibit showing Rikie's relationship to the animal will be held at 10am on Saturday, March 28th.
"One of the themes of the symposium will be showing the interrelationship between his poetry and other arts and also the importance of his poetry in other countries," Maurer said.
Rulke was influential in French, Russian and Spanish poetry, Maurer said.
Walter Kaufmann, American philosopher, literary scholar and poet, will discuss Rilke's short poems at 8 p.m. Friday in the Forum Room.
Hans Egon Holtuschen, German poet, and Hans-Georg Gadamer, German philosopher, will also speak at the symposium, the lecture, and the book Kaufmann's will be in Spencer Audreyson.
The Spencer lecture is co-sponsored by the humanities lecture series and will be open to the public. There is a $15 charge for the rest of the program.
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professor of business; Louis Michel, associate professor of architecture and urban design; Ruth Noyce, associate professor of curriculum and instruction; Philip Paladan, associate professor of history; Calder Pickett, professor journalism; Dennis Quinn, professor of English; Lawrence Sherr, professor of business; and Lee Young, professor of journalism.
all seniors, not just class card holders,
may vote from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the
Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd., by
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of the 2, seniors will vote again to
choose the winner, Decriesea said
yesterday.
A field of 11 semifinalists for the 1975 HOPE Award will be reduced to five today, according to Tom Decoursey, HOPE Award committee chairman.
Located Across from the Granada Theater
Seniors to pick HOPE finalists
He said the award for the winner and plaques for the four other finalists would be presented Nov. 15 during the University of Colorado football game, halftime.
The 11 semifinalists are: Allan Cigler, assistant professor of political science; Phil Huntsinger, associate professor of physical education; Earl Huyer, professor of chemistry; J. Hammond McNichon, adjunct
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OKTOBERFEST
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
---
Vol. 86 No.45
October 28.1975
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
RAIN
Tuesday
Prison faces KU Iranians who protest
By JOHN FULLER
Approximately half the Iranian students at the University of Kaansas have made a decision that could lead to official harassment or imprisonment if they return to their homeland.
The 60 students are members of the Iranian Students Association (I.S.A.), a worldwide confederation of Iranian students that actively protests the policies of the Shah of Iran.
According to members of the LS.A., Article 60, Section 1 of the Penal Code of Iran provides a three- to 16-year prison sentence for being an opponent or association which, in its policy or belief, is against the Iranian Constitutional Monarchy." The law also applies to any person who is a member of such a group even if the person or association is outside
MARY MEYER
The official position of the L.S.A. is that the Shah's regiment is "brutal and repressive," and they are working to replace it with a democratic state. Thus, by definition, the L.S.A. has been outlawed and its members are l. the liable to criminal prosecution.
Muhammad Reza, Tehran senior, has said the law wasn't strictly enforced because of the large number of students involved in the LS A.
"Almost all of the students abroad come from middle-class or well-to-do families," Reza said. "It would look very bad for great numbers of sons and daughters from those families to be put in jail. It could inflame the fear that already bubbling beneath the surface."
Reza said that I.S.A. chapters were kept under surveillance by SAVAK, the Sha'i's commander.
I. S.A. members at KU said the threat of retaliation wasn't important to them because they had made up their minds to fight the Shuh.
"SAVAK has tried in the past to destroy the LSA, and we discovered a SAVAK agent here at KU two years ago," Reza said.
"Our purpose is to put public pressure on "The Shah's regime and to inform the people of the United States of the situation in Iran," Manouchehr, Tehran, Iran, senior, said. "We also try to make militarist people aware that the nationalists and interestis' are supporting the resume."
Manouchehr said, however, that the I.S.A. made it clear that they weren't blaming the American people because the curry was too thick for them; they were victims of the same interests.
Manouchehr pointed out that since the I.S.A.'s main purpose was to enlighten people about the Iranian political situation, the Shah has been accused of violence outside of Iran in its campaign against the Shah. Its activities on college campuses include handing out informational leaflets, collecting signatures on petitions and sponsoring rallies and demonstrations.
See IRAN page seven
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
Mum's the word
Debby Levy, Philadelphia sophomore, expresses displeasure at a passing motorist who declined to buy a mum in front of the Kansas Union Saturday morning. Levy was selling mums for the Commission on the Status of Women as part of the homecoming festivities.
SenEx plans responses to possible funding cuts
By SHERI BALDWIN
Administrators are exploring the problems that would face the University of Kansas if budget proposals for fiscal 1977 aren't approved by the Kansas legislature.
According to Keith Nitcher, vice-chancellor for business affairs, KU usually submits requests for 12 to 15 new programs in the yearly budget.
In a closed会议 of SenEx Friday, De Shanel, executive vice chancellor, and Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, discussed probable responses if budget cuts were made on proposals for new programs at KU. according to Shanel.
He said the University was allowed to ask for a percentage increase on "hase" budget figures in addition to funds for new programs.
Tasheff said SenEx discussed with Shankel and Calgaard the most effective way to successfully obtain funds on both levels, should proposals be made by James
"They just tried to outline for us what sort of timely considerations we would need to make," Tedde Tasheff, SenEx member, said vestdavar.
W. Bibb, director of the state budget, to cut the funding requests.
Funds of $250,734 for library development are among the most important of new libraries.
If obtained, the funds would be used to extend library hours for students and staff personnel and to purchase more books and periodicals, he said.
The KU budget asks for $133,123 for the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center in Hutchinson to replace funds that in the past were used for training. The Commission on Criminal Administration.
A request of $118,788, if granted, would allow Buildings and Grounds personnel to service the West Campus area, Nitcher said.
Nitcher said the commission had in the past received money from a federal grant and allocated some of those funds to the training center. Notified that this would no longer be feasible, KU officials are asking for funds from the state, he said.
"There are areas of the campus that we can't service at present with 48-hour per week."
The funds would also be used for electricians, plumbers and craftsmen who work in the hundreds and nights at the university, he said.
Nitcher mentioned funding for several other projects, including additional support for women's intercollegiate athletics, projects for the State Biological Survey of Kansas, the purchase of television equipment for the School of Journalism and a graduate student with some college credits to continue work towards a degree.
SenEx also finalized revisions of guidelines for the "Selection, Appointment and Tenure of Vice Chancellors, Deans and Chairpersons."
Taiseff said that in the past, the actual officials were for selecting such officials had been vague.
"Never before have faculty and students
have a document detailing the procedures," she
Defeat, fires spoil homecoming
Shankel had submitted the document to ExxEs for its suggested revisions, Tashseff 89.
"We would hope that the provisions we've suggested would be accepted," she said.
Last week's otherwise successful homecoming festivities at the University of Kansas were marred only by the Jayhawks' loss to Oklahoma State and a spree of 196.
An old-fashioned pep rally in front of Strong Hall at t.p.14. Friday attracted about 1,500 people and got the weekend off to a spirited start. Coach Bud Moore and football players Terry Beeson, Mike Butler and Brian Kroenig played. The marching Jawhawk Band plays some rousing fight songs and the pompon squad led the crowd in the Rock Chalk chant.
Saturday was cool and sunny; a perfect day for football and a crowd of 4,480 was made.
The halftime activities at the game featured the marching bands from both universities. During the Marching Band, 600 blue balloons were released into the air.
The homecoming display of the Triangle fraternity and the Alpha Pi sorority was burned to the ground around five a.m. on Sunday, February 24, "Hawk Revere," was located in front of the Triangle house, 1144 W. 11th St., and had earlier been named the winner of the three dimensional class in the homecoming display. The original display was estimated at about $300.
Arsonists reportedly also burned part of a display early Sunday sponsored by the Chi Omega sorority and the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
The display, "The Midnight Ride of Jade Revere," wasn't completely destroyed by the rain.
Women's strike called ridiculous
NOW is encouraging women not to work in or out of the home, for pay or as voluntarily employed. Yet teaching women not to spend money or 'support in any other way those traditional institutions which keep women in their 'place' economically, professionally and culturally.
Staff Writer
"Ludicrous" was the word used by two University of Kansas women to describe their thoughts about becoming involved in college. The National Organization for Women (NOW),
It appears there won't be much support from the strike, from organizations or from industry.
RvMARYMYERS
JoAnne Rome, member of the steering committee of the Women's Coalition, said Friday, "Since I don't hold a conventional job, and my work is women's work, which we all know is never done, a strike would be indictured."
The KU chapter of NOW isn't participating in the strike. D. M. Eagle, president of the organization, declined to comment.
The strike is named "Alice Doesn't Day"
after the movie "Alice Doesn't Live Here"
Janet Sharistanian, head of the Studies department, said she doubted that the university was capable of doing that.
She said that she thought a strike by all women would be a good show of solidarity, and that it might demonstrate the importance of women.
"It would simply look ludicrous," she said.
She said she thought that very few professors missed classes for any reason
unless they thought their absence would
result in what they thought they
thought need, changing.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said a woman employee couldn't be fired for
striking, and if she were, she'd have
recourse through the normal appeal
procedures. He said he thought the
University had made enough progress in
in female employment procedures to erase
the necessity of a strike.
"I think women have come into their own with too much demonstration, and in some ways have made it hard on themselves," she said.
Florence Doores, cashier and evening supervisor at Wescoe Terrace, said, "They need us up here too much to feed the kids. I know the students will still eat.
She said she thought the day could be used to make people aware of women's problems. To achieve this, she said she planned to make a button which said "I'm on strike," and would use this as an entrance into conversation.
"I'd hope if people feel they have to have day off, that would arrange to take a day off, that would arrange to take a day off."
Patt Lawson, secretary in the Western Civilization office, said the people she worked with were already aware of her plans. She didn't take a time she thought she could take off.
Most women said their presence at their jobs was necessary or that the stroke would have been worse.
"In my head I'm on strike," she said. "Joyce Dewer, Minister Facilitator for Women's Rights, told me myself to be in a position of working for women and minorities, and I'll be here."
"In my head I'm on strike," she said.
Lorna Grunz, assistant dean of women and adviser to the Commission on the Status of Women, said she didn't think the Commission was involved in the strike. Linda Weippert, president of the Commission, said she didn't know if the organization was doing anything about it.
Many women were not aware a strike had been called.
"We didn't know if anyone would take notice of what we would do," she said.
Rome said that there was much divisiveness and lack of mutual support among the factions.
"we do support the concept of the strike," she said, "but I feel it like it's so totally NOW, which is so middle-class and elitist it has nothing to do with where Women's Coalition is at. And where we're at is where all women are at."
Med Center suit dismissal to be appealed by plaintiffs
The dismissal of a $9 million lawsuit against the KU Medical Center will be appealed "as soon as possible," according to Thomas A. Harvill, attorney for the plaintiff.
The plaintiffs, Robert Reis, chief of the cardiothoracic unit, and Hammer Hannah, an associate in the cardiothoracic unit, had sought a declaratory judgment against the Med Center for alleged contractual violations.
The lawsuit was dismissed last Tuesday by the U.S. District Court in Kansas City, Ky.
Hamill cited four specific violations yesterday: a lack of nurse services, poor operating conditions, a lack of supplies and a lack of necessary support facilities.
"The fundamental issue," Reis said yesterday, "is that we've been denied our right to employment without any semblance of due process."
Recipients of the medallion were Dolph C. Simons Sr., editor of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World; Odd Williams, president of the Douglas County State Bank and Williams Inc.; Clytice W. Nichols, wife of former KU chancellor Raymond Nichols
Reis said that the contractual arrangement was only one consideration and that there were "fundamental constitutional issues involved." He wouldn't elaborate.
The original complaint, filed May 20, requested a declaratory judgment on the specific nature of Reis' contractual relationship with the Med Center and a judgment on whether specific forms of that contract were met.
The ceremonies were attended by about 600 KU graduates and fans including 1560
which was reported about 1 a.m. Sunday,
was apparently started by matches that
were not in the program.
A third contention of the law suit was that William Rieke, former executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, and Dr. Loren Humprey, chairman of the surgery department, had "intentionally interfered with the Med Center." Hamill said.
See HOMECOMING page three
About a half hour later the same night an arsonist tried to ignite the display in front of the Sigma Kappa sorority by throwing a car object from a moving car, the police said.
the decision will be appealed to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals.
The arsons and attempted arson are still under investigation, the police said.
Hamprey could not be reached for comment.
At ceremonies in the Kansas Union before the game, eight KU alumni were honored as the first recipients of the Fred Ellsworth Service Medallions. The medallions are the University's highest award for "unique and significant service."
"Yankee Doodle Jayhawk," the entry of Alpha Delta Pi soriity and Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, took first place in the moving parts category over three competitors.
Besides the ill-fated "Hawk Revere," other winners in the homecoming contest were "Yankee Doodle Jayhawk" and "In Jahwys We Trust."
"In Jayhawks We Trust" won first prize
in the two-dimensional category. It was created by Kappa Alpha Theta and the Alba Alpha Fiatterni family.
THE TOWNSEND BAR
Fenced in Staff Photo by D
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
Customers of the Wagon Wheel were herded into open-air beer drinking in the Wheel's new beer garden Saturday after the KI-OSL game. The fence-enclosure was built in 2013 to keep out dogs and other animals.
Wednesday, October 8, 1975
University Dally Kansan
KU funding called 'short'
Despite a good response from the state legislature to the University of Kansas budget during the past two years, KU is $6 million to $7 million short of its 1985 funding level, according to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
These figures are this fall's updates on a study done at KU three years ago by a fiscal analysis team, Shankel said yesterday at his weekly news conference. That study indicated that KU was $5 million short of the 1963 level in funds per credit hour, he said.
Shankel said that Governor Robert F. Bennett's proposal to cut down on new faculty positions at state schools to have a disastrous effect on KU's budget.
He said the University's inability to maintain the 16% level of funding meant that he had to rely on grants.
The lack of funding for new positions will result in further deterioration of the University's ability to carry out its educational missions, he said.
KU and Kansas State University will be more affected by Bennett's proposal than enrollments have increased substantially, while enrollments at the other schools have decreased.
KU is already understaffed, especially in support areas, such as clerical workers and nurses.
Shankel called Benett's proposal "very damaging," and said administrators' reactions to the proposal were generally negative.
Shankel also announced the appointment of a 16-member advisory committee for the statewide demonstration continuing education center. The committee will be headed by Howard Walker, dean of the division of continuing education.
Walker said the committee would work for the next 18 months to design programs for the proposed center, within the proposed preliminary proposal KU has already written.
The preliminary proposal won for KU about $86,000 in planning funds for the study of a statewide continuing education center, he said.
The planning funds will be used for activities such as visiting other continuing education centers in the nation, he said, with most of the money going to architects who will draw plans for the center in compliance with the committee's plans.
The committee will decide specifics of
programming; whether face-to-face,
online, or in-person.
Student's death is ruled suicide
The death of a 23-year-old University of Kansas student who was found Monday morning at the Holiday Inn, 2089 Iowa St., has been ruled a suicide by the police.
The cause of death of the student, Douglas Dickinson, Fairway freshman, hasn't been determined, Lawrence Price, Douglas County Coroner, said yesterday. Price said he was not until a chemical analysis of Dickinson's blood and body tissues was completed.
Those tests are being conducted by the state forensics lab in Topeka, Price said, and could take as long as two weeks to be finished.
A maid at the motel found Dickinson's at about 9:30. The police said he had chased her.
correspondence instruction will be used;
where the facility would be located in relation to the KU campus; and what existing KU facilities would be used.
Walker said, "We have a tentative schedule we'd like to meet, but we don't worry about our own schedule as much as worry that we can complete the study within 18 months. We have said we can complete it within 15 months."
Shankel announced at the press conference that Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan,
would speak at 7:30 p.m. on Oct. 18 about his trip to China and that his effect on U.S. foreign policy. He said the location of the speech was still being negotiated.
Shankel commented on the cancellation of the Shockley debate by saying that he thought, from the point of view of a professor of microbiology, Shockley was wrong. He said that KU administrators had received no particular pressure to cancel the debate and that they hadn't pressured SUA.
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Tuesday, October 28, 1975
University Daily Kansan
DIGEST From the Associated Press
IPC
Quinlan case to juda
MORRISTOWN, N.J.—Karen Anne Quinlan's will be decided in 10 to 14 days, a judge said yesterday after he heard final arguments; by lawyers in the case.
A lawyer for her parents, who want to "let her die with dignity," argued against lawyers who want to keep the coroner woman alive.
Arrayed against Paul W. Armstrong, the Quinlan's lawyer, were lawyers for Miss Quinlan's doctors, the state, the Morris County prosecutor, and St. Clare's Hospital. Miss Quinlan's temporary, court-appointed guardian, Daniel Coburn, also presented an argument in her behalf.
Motive cloudu in killing
MANILA—Authorities last night that extortion or a bigger conspiracy could lie behind the killing of a presidential assistant to President Ferdinand E. Marcos. Guillermo de Vega, close aide to Marcos, was shot recently in his office, and a presidential palace in Manila.
In an official statement, marital law government authorities said investigators had virtually ruled out any political motive, but said "this is also being looked
Officials refused further comment on the slaying of the 43-year old aide, who was one of the few civilian members of the president's staff with unauthorized access to
Southies protest busing
BOSTON—About 7,000 students marched through South Boston and almost all the white students boycotted the neighbor's high school yesterday in the first parade on Saturday.
The white demonstrators marched down Broadway, the main street in the working-class Irish neighborhood. They walked behind a flag-draped coffin labeled "Freedom is Dead" and a car with loudspeakers playing the song "Southie is My Home Town."
Meanwhile, President Gerald R. Ford ordered the Justice Department and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare to "extensively review" alterations in the law.
Ford, Sadat open talks
WASHINGTON—President Gerald R. Ford opened military arms talks with Anwar Sadat yesterday while hailing the Egyptian president as a man of trust.
The two leaders agreed during a ceremony-marked day that there mustn't be "stagnation" in the Middle East. They also said that another Israeli withdrawal on Syrian territory would be necessary.
In New York, however, Mayor Abraham D. Beame announced he wouldn't welcome Sadat tomorrow.
Beame, a Jew, based his snub on Egypt's advocacy of the United Nation's condemnation of Zionism. He said, "it would be an act of hypocrisy to welcome any chief of state who was party to the United Nations resolution which seeks to revive a new form of racism."
Clues sought in bombings
A Puerto Rican separatist group said it set the explosions in all three cities to attack "Yanki government" and "capitalist institutions."
Police searched for suspects and chased yesterday in the bombings of banks, government buildings and corporate towers in New York, Chicago and Washington.
At the same time, however, an anonymous telephone caller said the Washington, D.C. blast was linked to U.S.' "sellout of Israel."
There were five bombs in New York City—four at banks and one at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations. Bombs also exploded at the Bureau of Indian Affairs and at the State Department in Washington and three bombs damaged four buildings in Chicago.
Paroles ease crowding
ATLANTA—Dozens of ex-prisons, many expressing joy and surprise, parachute off Georgia as Georgia begins a mass parole procedure to relieve its overcrowded prisons.
A total of 340 prisoners were released in the first step of a program that will grant early parole to 1,000 inmates within the next few weeks and to another 1,000
State prisons now house nearly 11,700 inmates—about 1,000 more than they were built to hold, corrections officials say.
The program, instituted by the state's Board of Pardons and Paroles, cuts up to one year from the sentences of about 7,000 inmates convicted of noncapital crimes.
On Campus
Events ...
Today: MALCOLM FRAGER, art in residence, will conduct a master class in piano at 11 a.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. The SU TRAVEL AND OUTDOOR RECREATION FAIR will be open from noon till 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. AUDIENCE and AUDITING COMMITTEE will meet at in the Eagle Room of the Union
ROBERT FLUKER will address the International Law Society at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union on "Aspects of Bilateral International Law," held at 7:30 p.m. in the Alumni Chapel of the University of the Union, PI LAMBDA TRETA, honorary education society, will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Jahawk Room of the Union and discuss "Sexism in School." THE HALLMARK LECTURE SERIES OF the department of painting, printing and imaging of paintings by Mohammad Ali Shajri, a leader in the feminist art movement, at 8 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium.
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TOPEKA (AP)—Jury selection was completed in less than six hours yesterday in the bribery trial of one-time governor aide Richard L. Malloy. But bigger news came out of a nearby courtroom at the Shawnee County Courthouse.
Kickback defendant pleads no contest; jury selected
Another defendant corporation in the two-year-old architectural contract kickback case entered a plea of no contest to a charge against the firm, Roberty and was fined the maximum $5,000.
THESE CHARGED with conspiracy allegedly arranged the awarding of a $10 million donation for a pension work at the University of Kansas Medical Center in return for $30,000. The state contends the $30,000 was destined to go into Robert Docking's 1972 re-election.
Judge E. Newton Vickers, hearing the Malloy trial, excused the jury of nine women and three men, plus one male alternate, picked to hear that case until 9 a.m. tomorrow when the first witness will be called.
The Kansas City mechanical engineering firm of Marshall and Brown pleaded no contendere yesterday on behalf of its Kansas corporation.
EXPECTED to be among the first witnesses called by the state when testimony begins in the Malloy trial is former Kansas Atta. Gen, Vern Miller.
In return, the two principal officers of Marshall and Brown and five other members of the firm had conspiracy charges against them, in response to the request of the state's special prosecutor.
As a result of the surprise pleading by Marshall and Brown, the state has charges pending now against just four individuals and two other firms besides Malloy.
MALLOY, 40, formerly of Goddard and now of Topeka, is accused of accepting a $30,000 bribe while he was research assistant to former Gov. Robert B. Docking.
Seventeen individuals and five architectural and engineering firms were selected to represent the county by a Shawnee County grand jury on conspiracy to commit bribery charges. Among them was George R. "Dick" Docking, of former governor Robert Docking.
FRANK H. FISHER, chairman of the board of Marshall and Brown at the time of the alleged conspiracy 3-4-2 years ago, received immunity from prosecution and testified for the state in the first of what had been six scheduled trials.
Concepts of town planning discussed at 2 seminars
Clarence Dicus, Kansas City attorney for Marshall and Brown, told judge Huger Bellon, who called from Olathe to hear the special pleading, that Fisher's testimony prompted the firm "reductantly" to enter a no contest plea to the conspiracy charge.
Approaches to the concept of town planning were discussed at two seminars sponsored last week by the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
Karl Kluespies, architect and town planner from Munich, spoke last week on "Town Planning in Germany." "The British Experience in Local Planning and Environment" was the topic of a seminar conducted Friday by John Skitt and Dennis Marsh.
Klauses is the founder of the Munich Forum, a citizen-based planning organization. Klauses said last week that Munich encouraged students to look at projects and to criticize them.
Corporate planning coordinates all government departments dealing with planning into a centralized unit, thereby increasing efficiency and might occur within the planning process.
He said this participation allowed citizens with disabilities to plan for development of the city.
In Britain, Skitt and Marsh said, the trend to corporate planning as a means of internal management is growing.
Skitt said such planning was an effective way to utilize resources.
"By having men from every department contribute as a member of the team," Skitt said, "long-term objectives can best be determined and met."
Members of the planning unit are elected officials who answer to the members of
their constituencies. In this way the public is competing in the planning process, Stirt said.
Contemporary urban problems don't fit into departmental boundaries but do lend themselves to the corporate planning approach, he said.
The German approach involves citizens more directly, but Klieses said there were problems in getting them involved in government. Germans were unacustomed to democracy.
"Democracy didn't start in my country until after World War II," he said. "The people, I think, believe more in authority in Germany than in your country."
"They don't challenge authority. They think the exerts know it all."
The forum encourages citizens to discuss local projects in hearings and town meetings. The forum is criticized and even to be closed to residents given to all communities. Kluespies said.
"But, if the federal government plans an international airport," he said, "the city has to pay."
Although the original Munich policy was to encourage growth, Klauses said, the forum would like the city stay at the level it had reached.
"There is no logic behind a theory that doesn't limit growth." Klapesius said. "We have to give science the right kind of thought."
the forum discouraged growth in urban areas and encouraged growth in rural areas.
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Tonight 7:30, 9:50
Grasada
Your senses will never be the same.
Tommy PG
Tonight at 7:30, 9:30
Varsity
It's the same two dudes from Uptown Saturday Night,
but this time they're back with kid dyn-o-mate!
SIBEREY FORTIER; BILLI COSBY
JIMMIE WALKER
LET'S DO IT AGAIN
Tonight 7:20 & 9:30
Hillcrest
THE WAY SHE WAS
JANIS
A FILM
Hillcrest
Live: 7:40 and 9:45
Sat. Sun. Mat. 3:15
"THE EXORCIST"
PLUS
"DELIVERANCE"
Sunset
showtime is 7:30 every
except Sunday-
6:00
Nigel Bruce as Dr Watson
Basil Pathbone
as SHERLOCK
HOLMES
The Hound
of the
Baskervilles
plus, from 1927, the only film interview with
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
EVERY EVE 7:35 & 9:40
SAT. SUN. AUSTRIA
STREISAND & CAAN
How Lucky Can You Get!
Funny lady
PG
Tonight 7:30, 9:50
Grandada
SCHOOL CARE
ALEXANDRA LINDA MORETZ
THE WAY SHE WAS
JANIS
A FILM
hillcrest
SAT, 7:40 AM MAR 9:45
Sat, Mar, May 3:05
"THE EXORCIST"
PLUS
"DELIVERANCE"
Showtime 1-7:20 every
Sunday except Sunday
Sunset
showtime 6:00
It's the same two dudes from Uptown Saturday Night.
but this time they're back with kid dyn-o-mite!
SIBBRAY POTTERI - BILL COSEY
JIMMIE WALKER
LET'S DO IT AGAIN
Tonight 7:20 & 9:30
Hillorest
THE WAY SHE WAS JANIS A FILM
Hillcrest
SAT. EV. 7:40 AND 9:50
Nigel Bruce as Dr. Watson
Basil Rathbone
as SHERLOCK
HOLMES
The
Hound
of the
Baskervilles
Bull & Boar
BIG OCTOBER SPECIALS
Oct. 16 to Oct. 31
5 p.m. Till Closing Nightly
Bull & Boar
11 W. 9th
OPEN FACE BEEF SANDWICHES
$1.50
Reg. $1.95
$1.50
Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made dressing,
potatoes—smoothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes
included.
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
NEW YORKER SUPREME PIZZA
Six Meat and Garden Toppings Reg. $5.25 $3.95
MUISS STREET DELI
FOR MASSACHUSETTE
THE REUBEN
$1.75
Reg. $1.90
Specials not good on Homecoming evening
Distributed by Schumm Foods Bull & Boar
Mass. Street Doll New Yorker Schumm Catering
THE REUBEN
$1.75
Reg. $1.90
Specials not used on Homescoming evening
1
Tuesday, October 28, 1975
3
Goodman pure nostalgia in homecoming concert
By BRUCE LINTON
Yes, Benny still lives—in music and the flesh. That's my answer to the question overheard in the Kansas Union the day it was announced that Benny Goodman would be here homecoming weekend. The question is understandable, for Goodman's visibility has been sporadic in the past two decades. He has been in semi-retirement; the last big change was his decision to be only occasional revivals of the combo. So it was nostalgia night in Hoch Auditorium. There was a good crowd, with a surprising number of college-age fans. From the whispers around me and warm applause after the first few bars it was obvious that a lot of people knew the title of the number; they probably owned the record.
Perhaps others have seen Ben many times, but for me it was only the second. One memorable day in the '30s I drove 90 miles to Chicago Theater. I bounced all over that theater seat to the driving rhythm. If I could have afforded a date I would have been
Review
jitterbugging in the asides along with what seemed to be half the formulation of Chicago
It was the first year of high school. Goodman, in retrospect, was the first of the music superstars able to evoke such a frenzied response. In those years, especially, he inspired thousands of beginning musicians as well as his peers.
Saturday night most of us came to hear the great standards of those days, and if there were any fears that this wouldn't happen they were dissipated by the quartet of rhythm and trombone which played the first set.
There was the light, driving touch of Urbie Green on trombone, the impeccable piano of Hank Jones and the whimsical Swarm Stair on bass. Never intruding all evening was the beat from Connie Bentley's years the drummer of the Modern Jazz Quartette.
It was frustrating not to have Goodman in the first set, but perhaps at age 66 he must have seen his face beaten; however, it was vintage Goodman for a solid 90 minutes. With a quartet (Green sitting out) Benny gave us "After You've gone" "Body and Soul" and "High How the Moon."
It was still all there—the full tone, the moving but always melodic line that has inspired countless imitations. There was the effortless physical performance which never concealed the driving beat so typical of the swing era.
The combo became a quintet with the addition of Warren Vache on trumpet. Less than half the age of anyone else in the group, Vache obviously was at home in this musical period, whether carrying the New Orleans-style lead in "Rampart Street" or blending lines and riffs to such Goodman material as "Trap In The Butterfly." Vache has a beautiful, full tone and, in this setting at least, his restrained phrasing was similar to Rudy Braff.
Goodman always picks outstanding musicians. Green is one of the top three jazz trumponists, and Jones is as well regarded on piano. Of course there is no other bass like Slam Stewart, who goes back almost as far as Goodman and who appeared in several editions of the Goodman combo. He also played in a delicate tracing of "The Very Thought of You" by Jones to Stewart's humorous "Play. Fiddle Play."
University Daily Kansan
Green rejoined the group for the last numbers, making it a sextet, the format which brought the warmest audience response. (No dancing in the aisles, just solid, foot-tapping appreciation.) A Benny fan can hum the riffs of "Avalon," but he's not a big Georgia Brown." The combo-style version of "Sing, Sing, Sing" was the inevitable climax, and the standing ovation brought them back for "Honeycuple Rose."
Innovative improvisation? Perhaps not anymore, but who cares? Goodman is the most complete jazz clarinetist of all time—in technique, tone, rhythm and (most of all) in his uncanny sense of "rightness" for every note and phrase.
But musical styles change, and so do the solo instruments. The jazz clarinetists have disappeared. The reed men of the big bands and soprano and soprano axe instead of the clarinet.
When Goodman decide to riff no more there may be no one to follow. Perhaps this was partly in the minds of those who gave him such a warm welcome. Certainly it was a special time to hear his music again and to know that "Benny Rides Again" is more than the title of an old chart. Thank you, SUA.
Concert sales better Saturday
A total of 2,015 tickets were sold for the Benny Goodman homecoming concert, according to Mike Miller, SUA activities adviser.
Rich Lindeman, SUA special events chairman, said in an SUA board meeting last week that if 1,000 more tickets weren't sold, the team would have 500 tickets were sold Saturday, he said.
MICHAEL KAHN
Staff Photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Goodman concert
Band leader Benny Goodman treated a large audience to a combination of Big Band era and new tunes during the Saturday night homecoming concert at Hoho auditorium.
"At last...
the definitive pictorial history in the reprint edition film buffs have been waiting for." Publishers Weekly
THE MOVIES
And in the same big, handsome format as the $19.95 hardcover edition.
1,000 PHOTOS • 200,000 WORDS THE MOVIES
1. 300 PHOTOS • 200,000 WORDS
Homecoming
Arthur H. "Red" Cromb, Shawnee Mission,
president of the Gresham Co.;
$7.95 • SIMON AND SCHUSTER/FIRESIDE
by Richard Griffith and Arthur Mayer
From page one
Roy A. Edwards Jr., Kansas City, city consultant to Research Seeds Inc.; S. Stanky Learned, Bartlevilleville, Oklahoma, retired Professor Philip Petroleum Co.; Nicholas L. Gerren, Wilberforce, Ohio, director of the Learning Center at Central State Univ.; and the late N. Thomas Veach Jr., Kansas City, Mo. Professor of the Black and Veach engineering firm
--sister Maud Elsworth, also of topkea, and
sons Robert Washington D.C.; C.J. and
Joseph Washington D.C.
Four members of the Ellsworth family are presented with special medals. The group includes
Robert Ellsworth was unable to attend the ceremonies because of his duties as an assistant.
The Benny Goodman sextet gave a swinging concert to an audience of about 2,200 at Hof Auditorium Saturday night to highlight activities to a highly envolved close.
After the game the streets around the 'Hawk and the Wheel were jammed with the traditional throne of beer-drinking students. The police arrested them, and the Lawrence police to curtail the activity.
BAR-B-Q
DINNERS: RIBS $3.85
CHOKE BEEF $2.65
CHICKEN $2.55
PORKLOIN $2.65
"Home Cooked Family Owned"
(Chuck Wagon)
(Dinners include salad, potato, bread & butter)
2408 Iowa
(Next Door to Mothers)
"Home
Cooked
Family
Owned"
CHUCK WAGON
2408 Iowa
(Next Door to Mothers)
ANNOUNCEMENT
CALIFORNIA'S LARGEST LAW SCHOOL
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW
OF ORANGE COUNTY
AN ACCREDITED LAW SCHOOL
OFFERS A PROGRAM OF FULL-TIME LAW STUDY TO BEGIN IN JANUARY
- IN EITHER 2½ or 3 YEARS of FULL-TIME (low study)
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- You can earn your JUNIS DOCTOR (J.D.) degree and qualify to take the CAIFORNIA BAR EXAMINATION
WEST FORT STATE UNIVERSITY
WRITE OR PHONE FOR CATALOGUE
Dept. 34
1111 North State College
Fullerton, CA 92631
(714) 993-7600
APPLY NOW FOR DAY, EVENING, OR WEEKEND CLASSES BEGINNING JANUARY 19, 1976 SIMILAR PROGRAMS AVAILABLE AT COORDINATE
STUDENTS ELEGIABLE FOR FEDERALLY INSURED STUDENT LOANS APPROVED FOR VETERANS
WINDY CITY
S. U.A.
PRESENTS
Todd Rundgren's
Utopia
at
SUA Office (Kansas Union)
FRIDAY, NOV. 14 — 8 P.M.
Allen Fieldhouse — Lawrence, Kansas
$6.00, $5.00
ON SALE TODAY
Better Days Records (Downtown)
and
A SUA/Windy City Production
The Beach Boys
in Concert
The Beach Boys in Concert
M W AFC 07B 905 Coca-Cola
Celebrate KU's Victory on Saturday
TICKETS GOING FAST . . . BUY TODAY! '5-'6 Reserved
Tickets Available: SUA Office (Kansas Union)
Better Days Records (Downtown)
A SUA/Windy City Production
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 8.1975
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan booklet for students of color creed, or national origin. FLEESBURG ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
the two three times the four time times times times
15 words or fewer
Each additional $0.20 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
word ... .01 ... .02 ... .03 ... .04 ... .05
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
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.
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; new ads can be placed in person or business office by the URB business office at 644-8358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hiflion equipment other than factory, dumps or close-out products. Visit www.hiflion.com for details at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFF. *tt*
Western Civilization Notes—Now on sale!
1) Notes for Western Civilization
Makes sense to use them...
2) For class preparation
3) For class preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
4) For class preparation
Now fire extinguisher disconnected. Now new fire extinguisher installed.
New fire extinguisher attached to wall. Closed Crawl. Clown 6 a.m., 9 a.m., 12 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m., Friday. Closed Sheds. METRO-RED. Clown 5 a.m., 6 a.m., 8 a.m., 10 a.m., 11 a.m., Friday. Closed Sheds. METRO-RED. Clown 5 a.m., 6 a.m., 8 a.m., 10
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 24-14 oz.
cans, $4.99. no discount. Merrow Saliva
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonable prices. Professionals can customize and polish your jewelry. Gloves cuff and pinch, Turquise, Saffron, Chiffon and satin.
We can make your stereo sound better-GUAR-
der. You don't need to delete data. Detail at
Audio Systems, 307 E. Rd.
20%. Discount on all antique and used furniture,
food products, including canteau crates, brushed and
producting includes canteau crates, brushed and
risk wheels and ins. Also full Float of fresh fruits
country. Shop 308, W. 4th, wk 8: 418-319, apb.
Staunton. Shop 308, W. 4th, wk 8: 418-319, apb.
Tremendous selection of guitar, drums, brass,
bass, string instruments. Choose from Gibbon
Shops, Bose Keyboard Studios, Choose from Gibbon
Shops, Bose Keyboard Studios, and many others.
Amps Kustom Green, "and many others."
Guitar after giter 70, keyboard 70, bass 80, keyboards Studio
guitar after giter 70, bass 80, keyboards Studio
guitar after giter 70, bass 80, keyboards Studio
For Sale: 1974 Red Corvette, town car, 6600 miles.
If interested, call Lee collect at SILVER.
If interested, call Lee collect at SILVER.
Past & Present Antique, Furniture, collectables
Luxury, Low priced furniture. 1947 Man
863-904
A. Special Sale now at Ray Audio, 13 E. 8th
842-2047. Stop by.
For Sale: 1917 Plymouth Cricket. Excellent Com-
pact automatic. Call 864-3542 or 10-8
250 after 5:30.
Bengals IN THE CASABAH
Glues and Jewelry 803 Mass.
BOOK SALE. Tonganese Public Library, Satur-
day, 21st February from 9:30 a.m.
Books: National Geographic, Old K. U. Annu-
lary.
BIsls for sale: Flauber SuperPro 15cm ($40.00.
Step-Up in-Bindings, boot and skirt is
required.
Step-11.
KODAK STEREO camera f. 3.5, leather case; $25.
DVCH 16x9-inch video camera; $40.
POLAROID MODEL 210 Automatic flash, light meter, camera (folding) flash, fash. $85-151-
4.00 x 1.00, $181-841-$181. 10-9
Torquit. 10-9
For Sale. Atleisure and 125+ slip摊itor with two circular trays and stacker slider. Call 841-7341.
A.K.C Black Labrador Retrievers, nine weeks
outstanding blood tests $75, $41-645, allays
For Sale: 25½" Gitante 10-sp. sew-ups. 843-2218
evenings.
Guitar-Gilson L-65. Excellent condition, hard
shell case must include $400. Will burglar. Bargain 813.
5279-7371.
1971 yellow 4-speed VOLKSWAGEN with sun
winch. VOLKSWAGEN wheel sun cover.
WAGON CAMERA + WAGON TRUMPH
TR-6. Marion, 4 speed; price to move out. Jav-hawk
VOLKSWAGEN.
72 Plymouth Dutter, Excellent condition. One
pair of wheels. Rare. Must see to appreciate
these wheels. Relible. Must see to appreciate
1900 Heere Cadillac, Excellent condition. 39,000
Original miles. All power. Must sell. N-419-645-4100
71 Kawasaki 500 Excellent cond, very reliable,
Motorcycle. Can be used in Motorcycle.
10-10
HP-45 with accessories. $175. Doug Andrews. 842-
7364 or room 204 Learned Hall. 10-8
68 VW. Needs engine work. Make best offer.
Call anytime. 841-3007. 10-8
1975 Cinnati motor carbokit 60cc, 180 miles
per gallon. Low tires, $300; Call 841-784-1704.
Schwinn 10-speed, one year old, just like new,
$100. Call them 11 p.m. 844-6600.
10-10
French 10-inch bicycle, Jeauet=20" frame with
26-inch wheel. Jeauet=30" frame. Towers=
10:10 Jawwater Towers, Call 841-7442.
SUZUKI 1972 3900c, new condition, only 1600 miles. Saskforce for best offer, 483-557ff.
***
For sale: Dry fireplace Wood. Free kindling with
order. Call anytime 843-0248.
tf
Must sell Motorcycle, 71 Sturzi 356, $800. In-
cludes helmet, Call Rick Lumpkin, $499.
3 speed, Lights bicycle; new: TYPEWRITER,
3 speed, Lights bicycle; new: TYPEWRITER,
ref T50 w/ $28mm, $30mm and 300mm lenses and
Ram flash; Arquia B11 Super 6 Camera w/zoom
ref T50 w/ 11 underwater B11. 10-underwater
6219 eivr 10-14
Sony TC-458 reel to reel. Lafavette LB-100 50 W
stereo reel to reel, micro voice television in
50W stereo receiver. Monitors. Items:
misc items; Sat. & Sun. Oct. 11 & 12, 9-6,000-
at 3607 W, 10th, wort of K兰杜尔 Dr., Lawrence
CAMERA OUTFIT - Miranda Sensors body and 28mm. Good credit.
CALL Scot. 841-7647
FANTASTIC POTTERY SALE--All pottery items marked 50% off. Stop by and do your Christmas Shopping early Sat. and Sun, Oct. 11 and 12, Wed. 9:10, W. 10th, W. 10th, Kaiser 10, Lawrence, Kna.
% Pointa Bonneville--very recently turned up
her job. % Pointa Bonneville--perfectly qualified.
% biddable jobs! little brake job. Contact
1-800-352-2744
Want to Work with Youth?
Need practical experience with youth? or credit
how? How about a job reference? Male and female
students welcome to volunteer 1 hour a week. 15 program
sits available.
Call Boys Club of Lawrence after 3:00, 841-5672
THE HOLE IN THE WALL
FORD
9th and Illinois 843-7685
Ride-On Bicycles
Best prices, service, selection
1401 Massachusetts
+43.3884
Sat. 10-5
Bicycle Warrior
NOTICE
If you're Planning on FLYING, Use Ma趴upintion Do The Lifting For You! (NEVER an extra cost!) for airline tickets
WANTED
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at the Quick Copy Center. We have 8,414 copies--$84.41, 1,000 copies--$13.69. We want your business at the Quick Copy Center. **tt**
CORT PLUS 16%~Sturge equipment. All major
furnaces (gas furnaces, gas furnaces or
compses) or package. Call Dave. Phone
843-728-2900.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
tickets. Send $1 for your up-to-date 160 page,
order ending: Research Assistance,
2425 N. 9th Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. 90035.
(123) 747-8744.
KU Union—The Mails-Hillcrest-900 Mass.
SUA / Maupintour travel service
One left a quality system for $280. Samui record
dealer Bombay Records, 12 E. 9th St., hear it at Ray Audio, 12 E. 8th St.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
pumps, lamps, clock televisions. Open daily.
12pm-5pm.
Make your
24" Campania 10-speed, good condition, after 5
841-7750.
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Weddings, portfolios, and commercial photograhers. 841-239-8100, 1-25pm. Tues-Fri. ff. 841-239-8100, 1-25pm. Tues-Fri. ff.
Wanted: Male roommate to share rent. $139 at
Jayhawk Tower. Call 841-7442. 10-18
THE STEREO STORE
Roommate for furnished, 2-bedroom apt. near
union. $85.50 month, call after 5-7. 10-8
Ride-On Bicycles
Police scanner, midland mobile 8 channel. Accuracy 28mm * 1.28 lens for Nikon 10-10
Rent a piano, room or semester basis. Lawf
rent Piano rental, 843-3008.
Shut-in graduate student has war games, wants
opponents. Call 842-6273. 10-9
KU Indian Club celebrate Dwall Night—the festival of lights at Kansas University. Highlights a 10-course dinner followed by a dance performance and eighteen Students offseason and SAU office. 10-15
Lead Songer, Aggressor & Energicist wanted for Job
Lead Songer, Aggressor & Energicist wanted for Job
essence. Jobs are already signed. John.
641-3125
641-3125
Ford Van 302 V8 & Ae Bactone soaker heater
van 400 V8 cabinets, fully carpeted,
14-502 400-750 10-10
Electric water heater
B429-Adorable kitchens need good homes. Call 842-9914 or 842-2841 after 6.
BENEFIT SALE- All brands $13.90 tipset $25.50
Party supplies, ice company, 6th & 10th
10-mon.
Need home for 2 year old black cat. Sprayed, very
afflame. affliction #857,5748 thd.
Thanksgiving & Christmas Resorvations
One ticket to the KU-KState game. Call 843-
6000. Ask for Tom Law.
UDIOTRONICS
Need a home for a female cat. Takers must be
within 10 years of age and have a valid license.
All hair cuts & booters. Call after 8:50
am or 7:30 pm Monday-Friday.
PHONE 843-1211
Roommate wanted—male or female Share coun-
rent for roommate and utilised free
Call Howard 843-680-10-14
PADIOS TELEVISIONS COMPONENTS
TAPE RECORDERS
1. male roommate upperclassman or Grad Student
2. graduate student; utilizes Train Mark, 841-
4155. Keep tryouts.
GARRARD
928
MASS
NATURAL
BEADS
MACRAME
BEADS
SHURE
FISHER
SCOTCH
PANASONIC
843
8500
PIONEER
BIC
TEAC
BASF
DUAL
INNE
710 Mass
CAPITAL
CRAIG CAR STEREO
M-Sat. 10-5—Thurs. 6-8
armadillo bead co.
IDI CAR STEREO
ROTEL
IR
18-19
WWW.IRS.COM
Open 12:5:30 M-F 10:5:30 Sat.
Female roommate to share two bedroom apartment, nearby $750/month, own room. 841-683-8621
HALTAS NUEZ
CHEESE KINGDOM
Two need two tickets it watch Jayhawka shove corneus up Nebraska. 814-647-6
10-10
LOST AND FOUND
4. tickets to KU-N-trask game. Call Dave. 82-10-
9369, will pay good money.
Lost: One pair of copper wire rims glas. in
Lost: Two pairs of copper wire on vial 2-8.
please call 812-9288. 10-6
Found near Akamu Place, exteriorward friend's house. Call her 817-262-0035 for winter
Set of keys found West of Malott. Call 841-6973.
Bakka is Lost . . . We want him home! Te-colored
Cinderella, 1983. And the real Cinderella, 1992.
And the real Child's Child, 1996. Please keep
these special children safe.
Found: Ten check book in 9th and Miss. area.
Call: 841-3007. 10-8
TYPING
FOUND. Lady's self-winding watch, with silver
dial, at Mr. Steen. Call M1-841-3200,
identify.
FOUND: Baby gray kitten outdone Elworth Hall.
If you want her, call 864-1194. 10-9
Found–Sound Place parking lot. Neckpiece with 4 charms. Call and describe at 843-9098. 10-10
Lost. Blue and white crocheted shawl. Victim of
Lost. Call 842-7823 anytime. Reward 10-14
Found: just north of Robinson: Vulcan watch
Contact traffic and security dept. 10-18
Experienced typist, I.B. Mebcthe, thesis, disci-
nology and term papers. Call Pam Jemm
843-709-2790.
TISHER BUNDING - The Quick Copy Center is
based on Tisher's best practices. Our services in fast and prices are reasonable.
Our inventory of office supplies is stocked.
*Typing—experienced in dissertation, theses.*
*Therapy—experienced in therapy, theses.*
*carbon ribbon. Call Leslie, 843-808-980.*
*www.etsy.com/shop/lesliegabrielle*
Experienced typist—term paper, theses, mice.
Experienced typist—reading and spelling, spellings.
843-8544. Mrs. Wiley
EDITING and TYPING. Prompt, reliable, expert-
encered servers. welcome to 89-127.
EDITING and TYPING. welcome to 89-127.
12-10
Typing—experienced in dissertations, these, and other publications. Attach a piece of carbon, paper, carbon Call. Calib. 843-9085.
Experienced typist will do themes, discuss,
design and code 842-643-2538; 842-978-1030 for
Julie; 842-978-1030 EVERY 10-20
ON CALL
BSR
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. 10-13
...
Foreian Auto Parts
James Gang
*"See us for your imported parts needs"*
Your imparsed船
M-F 8:00-10:30 Sat. 8:00-12:00
304 Locau
843-8080
Bahai Faith
- 304 Locust * 843-9080
******************************************************************************
the earth is one country and marked its origin.
Bahal meetings Monday----7:30 p.m.
Bengali
... and mankind its citizens
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
"With 0 Miles"
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
IVAN'S PHILIPS 66 SERVICE
---
19th & Mass.
Kelly Vogt
1645 Tennessee
Lawrence, Kansas 64044
Campus Sales Representative
Lawrence, Kansas 48045
913-822-2788
"The home of Levi'S Jeans"
740 Massachusetts
CONTINENTAL AIRLINES
AWRENCE
URPLUS
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
West of Hillcrest Bowl
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
RECREATION'S FINEST
9th & Iowa
THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
FOR RENT
Free rental services. Up to the minute listings of
lawyers in Lawrence. Lawyers in Lawrence.
Rental Exchange. 842-250-7633.
ATTENTION STUDENT BESTERS: Drop in and
obtain a phone number for WebBERT.
(the phone name, please) at WEBSTERS
(314) 567-8900 or www.webbert.com.
Apartment, furnished, walk-to-wall carpet, pantry, wi-fi, off-street parking, borders RU on sidewalk.
For Rent: Sublease room at Nalmuth IH immediately. Everything paid. 643-6781.
Jiahower Tower apartment sublease-2 bedroom
Tower 864-6741, utilities paid. Towel 864-6741
HELP WANTED
Two sharp wallwaiter. One Full, time one part-time. Two full. Three part-time. Come by phone or call 845-8319. Mt.uk. 10:25am.
2 bedroom apartment, all utilities paid. A/C, gas,
free parking, laundry facilities. 1683
Meadowbrook for sub-lease immediately. 1
Farmhouse with balcony, heated both furnished. Gas & water bid. 852-919-3194
www.meadowbrook.com
Person needed to work daily Mon-Fri, for the Daycare. Req. Bachelor's in English or related. Daily Karan for mallines. Need meet qualifications before inquiring. Must have car, work skills and job history. Employer is an Equal Opportunity Employer. Call Cindy at (855) 453-2010.
Draftsmans for detailing machine components. M.E.K. tech students encouraged, flexiblepartnership to assist in sample preparation and have work samples. Prior applicants need not re-apply. Cutting Repair, Call 843-1584.
Hotels—Area restaurant several cottages and a beachfront resort in all areas. Area of at least 150 rooms will be available.
PERSONAL
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION: Meeting first
annual meeting of the Lawrence Gay Liberation
Ombuds, 804-695, Sociology, 804-693
POTION PARLOR Formerly Body Bizarre
819 Vermont
BOKONON
INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
Try to get the hang of it.
Face to Face...we always wanted to fly Mt. San Antonio in a plane that we can do at home with us. We also have a computer you can wipe your fingers. Our flight training is very easy. We don't do it with a hang glider but the FLIP does. We offer the FLIP program, which we operated higher than any other flying school. The program is an immersive experience. We train in the air Force ROTC. Taken during the air force Air Force ROTC pilot training in its after years we go to an Air Force pilot training in its after years.
Air Force ROTC also offers scholarships. $10 a week for students in addition to full tuition. This is all reserved for the guy who wants to the hang a Air Force Flying, require in Irma, the Military Science Building Ungraded.
NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC-Beginning thru advanced lessons in folk, rock, and classic guitar; bamboo, fiddle, mandolin, etc. greet teachers, rehearse with teacher-Mason Hangison strumming, stanza 184-0817.
Madura Indian Shop
For the Finest in Authentic, Handcrafted Indian Jewelry, Arts and Crafts 19 W. 9th 10:51:30 Daily Thursdays 11:18
Fine Books
Fine Service
a bookstore
ADVENTURE
Hardcover and paperback books for all ages and interests—Children's books a specialty—Magazine subscriptions—Out-of-print books searched—Personal attention to special orders.
The Sanctuary is planning an arts and craft show, so please bring your original paintings, jewelry, baskets, and other items to the city of the deck at the Sanctuary. No charge for outside space. For arrangements, call 843-856-0481.
Hilicrest Shopping Center
9th & Iowa 843-6424
WTA-II you see this, you this at the Campanile
the Friday at noon for a year reunion, LIVl—
the Saturday at 11 am.
LAWRENCE - GAV LIBRATION; Meetings 6:15 p.m.
804-352-9780; Libraries 6:15 p.m. 804-352-9780; Socializing 6:15 p.m. 804-352-9780; Dance 6:15 p.m. 804-352-9780;
SERVICES OFFERED
TUTOR
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Priced, professionally made. Glosses on and pats, turquoise. Saffier. Custom colors available.
Tutor needed for business 802 (Economics) or
Call 621-2948 after 5 p.m.
Ask for Bills
ENTERTAINMENT
MATH TUFORING - Competent, experienced tufted instructor. 102, 109, 110, 113, 116, 118, 117, 121, 122, 123, 124, 141, 142, 143, 156, 581; One-time test prep materials; regular sessions. Reasonable rates. Call 861-7482.
Horseback and Hayrack rideing 16 miles west on
hallway 48 407. Spencer. 10-31
RIDES RIDERS
Anyone interested in forming a carpool from Jeff. Co. to the KU campus contact 748-6830. 10-10
George's Shop
Pipes Cigars All Smokers' Supplies Pipe and Lighter Repair
After 25 years, if George doesn't have it, he will make it.
Phone 843-7164 727 Massachusetts St.
NAPA
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer: 1 Special Price
Wally Reid's N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have if or can get it overnight
4. Machine required
4. Machine shop service
817 Vermcnt 2300 Haskell
9 10 11 12 E
4 • 5 6 7 8
YAMAHA
CR 1000 RECEIVER
the YP 800 TURNTABLE GRAMO PHONE shop
at the rear of KIEF'S DISCOUNT
RECORD AND STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
842-1544 SAVINGS STORE COMPONENTS
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
4
Tuesday, October 28,1975
COMMENT Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
---
Strike overzealous
The National Organization for Women has called for a nationwide women's strike tomorrow to protest what N.O.W. spokesmen call a "system that continually ignores, oppresses, rapes, brutalizes, imprisons, confines and restricts all women." The organization has asked all women not to:
—Work in or out of the home;
—Spend any money for groceries, services or transportation;
—Volunteer for anything;
-Provide any support to nonfeminist political causes, candidates or issues;
-Ensure that the community supports the cause.
- Suspyst act the role
- Support the image of women in the media.
ALTHOUGH N.O.W., which wants men to realize "that women support the system of security, shut downs the country, it expects the strike to cause a substantial slowdown.
Those of us who have a jaunied view of the militant feminist movement assert that the slowdown is already in effect.
Rules and regulations intended to grant women the equality they deserve have been twisted into an administrative gantlet. A successful running may take months to complete, thus depriving an institution of effective and efficient deployment of manpower, if my sisters will excuse the expression.
ATTITUDES THAT WERE formed to bolster a sagging spirit among the women turned away from equal opportunity have been exaggerated into a fierce competitiveness that only creates cacophony between the sexes. What should be a nation of men and women be forced to confront on the appearance of a battleground of "male chauvinists" and "bra burners" working claw against claw.
Examples of the creation of two separate societies can be found in the news daily. Businesses have been
started with the intent of excluding male executives, such as Flowerfield Enterprises, an all-women worm-raising business in Michigan, and the First Women's Bank in New York; professional societies, such as NOW; professional organisations on the status of women, as well as several male organizations, indicate an unfortunate tendency to separate rather than unify the sexes.
THE LANGUAGE HAS been perhaps the most brutally attacked by the sex levelers. The Bureau of the Census, in line with the general levelling sentiment, changed the names of 52 of its 441 work categories. A foreman is now a blue-collar worker supervisor, a lumberman is a timber cutter and logging worker, a lawn careman is a landscaping assistant, a lodging quarters cleanser, a charwoman is a building interior cleaner and a maid is a private household cleaner.
It's only a matter of time until a freshman becomes a freshperson and chairmen become an extinct species. The women's movement has dwindled because there still exist blant carryovers from the day when it was a man's world.
HOWEVER, CAN THE remaining emotional and legal discrimination justify the current corruption of common sense?
The N.O.W. strike may be just the catalyst needed to bring the movement back to its senses. Women have had their share of problems to overcome, but they have been successful because of the justness of their cause and their commitment to help them strike by overzealous women when many are happily standing on the job might be proof that calm determination is mightier than the hysterical shriek.
Debbie Gump
Associate Editor
Shoo,flies,don'tbugme
"Daddy, why do we have to live in these stockades?"
"Well, son, it's a long and tragic story. Not many humans know it. Long ago, in the year 1957, what seemed to be a chance event led to events began its inexorable march toward destiny.
The father pulled a tattered, yellowed and fragile piece of what looked like newsprint out of his pants pocket.
"This is the only record we have of that fatal fall of 1975," the father said to his son while he carefully unfolded the ragged clipping. "You see, there seemed to be an unusual pattern of scratches on Entomologist denied that this was so. They attributed the number of flies still around to the unusually warm weather
Bzzzzz . . Bzzzzz . . ..
"In what they called 'Strong Hall', whatever that was, the drones had飞-king contests. Journalism professors swapped
and the absence of a heavy frost.
Ward Harkavy
Contributing Writer
The father stopped for a minute, dabbing his teary eyes with his shirt sleeve.
many a fly in those days,
sometimes 20 or 30 before
lunch."
"If only they had known," he sobbed, "before it was too late."
"Okay, son," he said, "I think
"Please go on, daddy," the son pleaded. "I must know the true history of my species."
you're old enough to know what happened after that."
"What was that?" the son asked.
they kept coming there and more all the time," the father said. "There were files everywhere; people were here, and we had not appeared. The first frost came and they were still there.
The father tried to gather his thoughts. "Anyway, people were killing files right and left. But there was one difference."
scared, though. The word 'fly' disappeared from the language.
"They were still there when the first snow fell. But now there were millions and millions of them. Why they picked Lawrence, Kansas, no one will ever know.
"The next part of the story is hazy. People must have been
"Lord of the Flies" was banned; 'Fly Me' ads were hastily taken off the air. Hitchcock's "The Birds" was withdrawn from distribution so as not to induce panic across the country. Hand buzzeres were no longer used, and they have angered the flies. Even zippers were no longer referred to as "flies."
"But none of this appeased the flies. They were interested in just one thing: absolute and utter control."
McDonald's. Somehow, they discovered that by eating large amounts of McDonaldland cookies and Egg Muffins, they would grow at an astonishing rate. Not all the flies did this; because as the flies grew, their brains shrank.
"But, daddy," the son said. "Flies are so small. How did they get control of the country?"
"It was incredible, son," the father said. "They sent selected files on command raids to
"So what the files wound up with was an army of huge files—stupid but deadly. The war was thus doomed to bondage."
To the Editor:
"Watch out, daddy!" cried the son. "Here comes the human swatter!
It is our firm conviction that any individual or group of individuals who purposefully and willfully try to propagate an alien, atheistic ideology among the Arab community on our
Splat!
Favor Sinai peace
The son took his cap off and absentmindedly scratched his antennae.
The Egyptian Student Association at the University of Kansas strongly disagrees with
"We may have been big, daddy," he said with a smile, "but we weren't stupid. Long live Musca!"
Mary McGrory
Brown thrust into national view
WASHINGTON—It will be interesting to see how the Democrats handle their hottest debate. He is not a candidate for the presidency, which is already eccentric. But he is something even more menacing to the President than as the term is understood.
Edmund G. Brown Jr., is the 37-year-old governor of California, he has last missed a visit, and while he has stayed home minding the store, he has achieved an odd kind of national recognition. People know his ability to think hardness, common sense.
Readers Respond
Brown has grasped the great reality about the American voter—that he is sick of limousines and lies, that he couldn't care less about ideologies and would vote for a
I read with chagrin the news of the raiding of the Rose R. Morgan house on Missouri Street. It seems to many that if the house, a gift to the University by Miss Morgan, had been taken through the years, the label "unsafe" couldn't have been an excuse for its demise. With the Schools of Architecture and Engineering at the disposal of the University, the maintenance and repair of one little brown house on the campus has been too great a challenge for the administration.
The Egyptian Student Association cannot help but wonder about the ideological adolescence of some of the members of the executive committee of the Arab Student Organization. The lavish living standards that some of the Commanders in this organization maintain leave no way for one but to be extremely perplexed and utterly puzzled regarding the seriousness of their slogans and the extent of their commitment to them. Driving late model American cars and living in an "imminent" neighborhood certainly isn't the best example for "the masses" in the Middle East to follow in a "people's war."
Ada Sage Laverty Class of 1929 Alma. Kan.
To the Editor:
both the totality and the particulars of the views expressed by the speaker of the Arab Student Organization on Oct. 17 in the Kansas Union, who, in our view, unjustifiably assumed the role of the spokeswoman for the all the Arab masses' and described them as a military Sinai agreement between Egypt and Israel.
So, perhaps, the "little wild wood" beyond the house site that Miss Morgan loved so dearly, will disappear—also, no doubt, because of her reason. Having known Miss Morgan well, I feel she would have felt not only dismayed, but also betrayed, by the demolition of her cherished home, which even for many through the years.
Concerning Professor Shawl's letter of Oct. 16 and his views on the lecture given by Henry Morris on evolution and creation, I think that a few points should be clarified. If we are to serve our useful purpose is a fallacy, Morris' lecture has certainly caused a few people to stop and think on this issue.
House razing deplored
campus ought to be looked at as agents of a destructive force bent on the dismantling of Arab unity and the liquidating the Arab cause for the benefit of an evil foreign power.
Moreover, we request that the Arab Student Organization consult with ours before attempting to speak for all Arabs.
The Egyptian Student Association at the University cannot accept and will not tolerate any leftist or communistic acts which may endanger Arab unity or jeopardize the achievement of Arab national goals.
We are looking forward to years of productive cooperation between our association and our sister one, the Arab Student Organization, on the basis of promoting better understanding and mutual intellectual correspondence whose sources Arab Ideas offer ideas, not Mao's Red Book or Marx's *D* Books.
Ahmad Abou-Helwa President, Egyptian Student Association
Creation lecture
Wouldn't a debate have brought more public awareness of the evolutionist's viewpoint and that of the creationist? Perhaps the real reason for taking the stand of "no useful purpose" says that at least one person is unable to support his position.
Secondly, the lecture itself didn't deal with the subject of religion. There was no attempt to prove the existence of God or to push a religious viewpoint on religion. Sometimes questions dealing with God or spiritual matters were raised from the floor. Morris sought to present what the evolution model says, what the creation hypothesis says, and what theories stack up against the observed scientific evidence of our universe. The best theory (in anything) is the one that makes the fewest assumptions about reality. This was to have been the basis of any debate and was the basis of Morris' lecture.
The evolution model, as well as the creation model, are theories based on observations corresponding to Morris, the educational system should present both theories and let the student decide for himself, after hearing all of them, his faith will support.
Zen Buddhist if he would bring down his fuel bill.
BROWN'S WAY OF life irritates politicians; it is strictly fraternity-busting. He lives in a $200-a-month Sacramento apartment and dresses on a mattress on the floor.
"If he wasn't the governor, they'd arrest him," shorts a New York politician who is tired of being about the admirable anchor.
James Lee Paola Senior
Brown first surfaced in California politics in the campaign of another anti-politican,忍辱负伤的 peasant activist. His race for governor was close-run. Initially a heavy favorite—he is the son of former Gov. Pat Brown, a kindly, charming minister and conventional office-holder —Jerry Brown lost ground supposedly because voters worried that the ex-seminator was humiless, arrogant and deocrinei. Now, they are mad about the boy.
HIS LATEST APPROVAL rating is 89 percent. Since California voters are roughly divided among Democrats, Republicans and Independents, Brown has obviously won the hearts and minds of all but the hard core of the right.
He has done it largely by not doing things: by not going to governors' conferences—he considers them a waste of time; by not automatically okying big budgets for education and welfare budgets he considers some of them a waste of money; by not allowing lobby for Los Angeles as the Democrats' convention site—probably another waste of time in his singular calculations.
BROWN'S NAME RARELY comes up when the roll is called of Democratic possibilities in party circles. But when, the governor binsinations, compromises and retreads are exhausted, someone mentions his name, and sighs that Brown, in his beat-chevy, and Gov. Mike Dukakis of Massachusetts, who govern the state, have somehow arrived where the voters are.
Brown made an appearance on "Meet the Press" a week ago that is still being talked about causing cussing among hopeful characters, he refused to come to Washington—the panel had to
go to him. He turned in a firstclass performance.
The young governor was neither defensive, nor effusive. He was crisp and articulate, eloquent and blunt, specific and abstract, perfectly in command and discipline and learnness; he said Americans are too materialistic. He doesn't believe for a minute in the perfectibility of man or the ability of government to solve all problems. He doesn't think government must be willing to govern government must. He is the first candidate to voice a belief in original sin on national television.
He was talking about the fundamental values. He suggested a recognition that "human nature is constant, it is weak, it needs a type of government that recognizes that mankind is really brought down by its own instincts."
He was asked what he looked for most in a presidential candidate, and he replied promptly, "First and foremost, a clear mind; an ability to think and speak clearly."
He demonstrated them qualities. But a "clear mind" makes some politicians nervous. It denotes intellect, independence. It means a man can't be managed, don't play
ball, won't call up the county chairmen. Brown says he wants to represent "that 50 percent that don't vote, . . . out of clear sight." He doesn't do doing isn't worth commenting on one way or the other."
The other aspirants, who realize that "politician" is a bad word, pray that Brown will trip or fade away.
But if Americans see much more of that clear mind, the Democrats may have to confront a serious problem, a contender who meets the mood of the American voter, and who comes from the largest state in the Union.
(c) 1975 Washington Star Syndicate Inc.
Terrific, Simon, you've really improved . . .
I haven't once caught you counting on your fingers for 3 whole days!
WASHINGTON
No, Jerry . . . it's 5 days!
Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday, Friday and . . .
FOR THE LAST TIME,
STOP COUNTING ON
YOUR FINGERS!
letters policy
The Daily Kansan welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 500 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed. KU students must provide their name, year in school and hometown; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
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Editor
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College Young
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Gary Borelli
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Outreach courses not perfect
Bv PHIL McKNIGHT
Director, Office of Institutional Resources
The growth of our academic programs off-campus marks the beginning of a significant new chapter in the University's history. These programs will provide students and faculty with both opportunities and challenges because moving east to the Kansas City area can be difficult, with patterned, although many students who commute might find it hard initially to appreciate these more subtle problems.
Understandably, those who commute will focus on the obvious savings in time and gasoline caused by having the professor drive 50 miles to Linwood and drive 100 miles to Lawrence. Unfortunately, this isn't the only problem to consider.
For one thing, courses usually involve books as well as teachers. Although texts can be obtained off-campus, library books can't be so easily found, par-
It is possible, of course, to synthesize various readings for students in a lecture, but this can't match the process of becoming involved at a higher cognitive level with the original source's concepts. Considering graduate courses in particular, there is no substitute for the resources of a good graduate library.
icularly books for graduate courses. Until arrangement can be made for providing such sources, providing students access to books will be a major problem.
One solution to the problem might involve the resources of the community and school libraries in the area. For example, a small Community College has several excellent collections in the social sciences, and the faculty and staff have indicated a willingness to help us make our students more aware of them. Such programs can be particularly useful in the bibliography of the books on our list that are available there, or could involve the
For the faculty member, the weekly
preparation of extensive bibliographies.
Obviously, for courses involving labs,
museums, collections, etc., "moving east" is a more difficult matter.
Another problem for students and faculty is providing adequate advising. Office hours are going to be difficult to provide and to schedule, given the distance between students and faculty, to say nothing of the driving distance and time involved. At this point, the rationale for residence requirements might become clearer. We could establish an lawward WATS line from here to advising.
At this point, then the problem isn't simply saving gasoline. Instead, the proper question to ask is "What kind of resources are necessary for students to complete the course?" many cases, the answer will necessitate an on-campus course, at least for now.
trips to Kansas City usually require more preparation to provide students with information and concepts not otherwise available because of the lack of books, etc. Time spent commuting and added fatigue from the late night return also present challenges to one's efforts to get ready for class or service on campus. Many of us think that teaching an evening class in Kansas City seems equal to a second full-day's work.
As compensation for such activities, departments should consider reallocating research assistants' time so that faculty members teaching off campus or in the field must be during those semesters to help them make up for the research time lost.
In sum, as we provide more educational opportunities to students outside Lawrence, we must provide them with resources comparable to those on campus. Also we must not make such activities unusually burdensome.
10
Wednesday, October 8, 1975
023583 017694 039473 042403
Strategies for
University Daffy Kansan
AAUP says tenure steps OK
Departmental promotion and tenure procedures at the University of Kansas are generally satisfactory, according to a committee report of the KU chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP).
Jack B. Oruch, chairman of the Academic Freedom and Tenure Committee of the AAUP, said yesterday the report was important for the clarification and comparison of procedures used by different departments.
Richard F. Hardin, member of the AAUP tenure committee, said that the report was quite uncontroversial and that it would assist faculty members in the evaluation of their department's tenure and promotion selection procedures.
However, the AAUP committee report did make several recommendations in the procedures used for tenure and promotion selections.
The recommendations were:
--departments and schools that haven't recently examined their promotion and test standards.
—Departments shouldn't emphasize research at the expense of teaching;
—Departments that regularly spend less than one-half hour discussing each candidate for promotion or tenure should give more attention to their careful and detailed consideration:
- Departments that have no specified means of evaluating teaching should adopt at least two of the methods used by other departments or device other methods.
- Finally, departments should make sure that full and well-prepared dosiers on the candidates are given to the final promotion and tenure selection committee.
Six departmental chairmen contacted yesterday said that they hadn't examined the AAPU committee report yet and could make no comments.
The report was derived from a three-page questionnaire prepared by the committee and sent to departmental chairmen and deans early in the spring semester of 1975.
Fifty replies from departments were
Property demolition to begin this month
Dermification of properties around the site
Mittalium should be kept behind the Haskell lock should be kept
When completed in about three years, the Haskell Loop will be a two-lane highway that will run through east Lawrence and highway K-10 with Massachusetts Street.
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said Friday that the demolition contractors would set the exact date for the demolition. The arrests are Ernest Abels and Coffman and Sons.
The committee report concluded that the success of any promotion and tenure system
received by the committee, and 25 questionnaires weren't returned.
would depend on the individuals who served on the promotion and tenure committees. The report said treating a candidate as an individual also was important.
--kansas union BOOKSTORE
OFFERS REWARDS
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
In today's issue of the University Daily Kansas is the first of several questions about why some of the students, taken from his last book, Common Sense, are a vital to the survival of our university.
The Old Man states that if his questions create enough interest among the students, he will send them to a university. He asks of wisdom and discuss possible answers to many of the World's great problems.
Q.NO.1
One of the important questions in America today is where profits come from because of economic downturns. We know that when the wages go round. Whenever our economy breaks down and we go into depression the answer to that depression is really easy. All we need do is to find where profits come from so that everyone can get some money. This will help us to keep the economy moving forward.
But, where do profits come from? Profits are something and something cannot come from nothing. Profits must come from somewhere.
The communities tell us that profits come from exploiting labor. Yet, during our last depression we had many million hungry workers who could be hired for starvation wages and we had a great surplus of capital. The very fact that no one was employed in these industries from their labor is proof enough that profits do not come from exploiting labor.
In order to promote economic enquiry I offer a hundred dollars reward to anyone who can tell us where profits really come from.
--kansas union BOOKSTORE
Fred Obermeier Paola, Kansas
Ozark Mountain Daredevils AND
The Ozark Mountain Daredevils AND Brewer and Shipley INVITE YOU TO A PARTY!! Fri., Oct. 17th 8 p.m., Expo Hall Topeka St. Fair Grounds
Tickets $5 Advance $6 Day of Show
Outlets: Kief's - Lawrence Brothers & Sisters Mother Earth Joe Henry's
BEER WILL BE SERVED
Topeka
An R.L.-project:
concert prod.
THE PREMIER ROCK BAND
OF THE 70's
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Harry Truman
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Brand New Love Affair
Imported By:
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Destination:
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Allen Field House
Thurs. Oct. 9
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Buy your tickets today.
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Campbell's
ON SALE IN THE BOOKSTORE OCT. 8 THRU OCT.18
All Articles Compiled by the Bobbs-Merrill. Scientific American. & Harvard Business Review
25c each
These reprints are available in such areas as Engineering, Geography, Statistics, Psychology, Sociology, Neurology Physiology, Anthropology, History, Humanities, Government Political Science, and Education.
There are over 30,000 reprints available!
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---
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CENTENNIAL LABEL
might bring a lot of people into a bar, beer alone couldn't make a profit.
Unlike most Lawrence bar owners, Johnson said he owned most of the game machines in his two establishments. He said the high profits made from the games, after the required amount for taxes was taken and enabled him to keep buying more games.
Johnson said there were 18 game machines at the Stable and the Santuary. Video games are the most popular, he said. Patrons can play ping-pong, shoot tanks.
placement of the machines. He said he received half of all profits from the games after the amusement company took out the appropriate amount for taxes.
During the summer, Wallace renovated a back room of the Hawk to accommodate more football tables. He said that the pinball machines and foosball tables were built with the sum of profit, but the popularity of foosball appeared to be on the decline.
"Lots of regulators come in here because they're hooked on a particular machine,"
Another avid player referred to himself as a "foosball addict" and said he and his partner would be the first to sign up if the league was able to make foosball an international event.
he enjoyed the sport because, "I can experience the joy of victory or the agony of defeat for only a quarter and minimal physical exertion."
"We can go out and entertain ourselves all night for only a quarter," he said. "All we have to do is plop down a quarter, wipe it on the table, hold the table until we're tired of btesting everybody."
Staff Photo
---
Accident
from Musselman, Pasadena, Calif., junior, is comforted by passers-by after he was hit by a Kansas Union van, at about 11 a.m. yesterday. The van was driven by Steve Skee, far left, Garnett junior. Musselman was riding a bicycle west on Jayhawk Boulevard when the eastbound van tried to turn onto Poplar Lane, between Snow and Halls in front of Hoch Auditorium, and struck Musselman. Sack was issued a citation for failure to yield right of way. Musselman was treated and released from Watkins Memorial Hospital for a possible concussion, cuts and bruises. Witnesses said the victim, when hit by the van, flew 10 feet in the air before landing on the pavement.
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encouraging them it should have been written down on paper somewhere.
"We think it would be a bad precedent for the Semiconductor to pay off an organization's deficit in the form of debt."
The Finance and Auditing Committee,
Anderson said, oppose funding the Kansan
Department.
"I'd sure hate to give the Kanas $5,000 to pay a year's bill in advance and then have to tell a group with a real crisis 'sorry'," he said.
ADRIENNE HYLE, GRADUATE SENIOR
senator, said the Kansan should wait until
10AM.
resident,
serve for
and for
Senate
0-71 and
; Rolfs running t.
"I hate to say it," she said, "but the Kansan is the only paper I need. I depend on it for world news and I like it, but I just can't see giving it any money. At this time."
Pete Knetzater, graduate senator, said it was important for the Senate to remain
The Senate voted by voice to give $1,000 to the KU Marching Band for a trip to the Iowa state football game. According to Anderson, the band's fund request was lost by campus mail on its way to the Senate and was not included in the budget hearings.
ANDERSON SAID SHE was in favor of granting the band's request and thought it was good public relations for the University.
ite was
The Senate voted 35 to 20 to eliminate a $600 allocation to the KU Ice Hockey Club. Dave Sharpiro, sports committee chairman, moved the group be cut because it was partially funded from, and held all its activities in. Kansas City.
Shapiro said few people from Lawrence went to Kansas City to see the club's games. "I really don't think it serves all that many people," he said.
An amendment to give Douglas County Legal Aid $700 was defeated to 39. The group requested $1,906 this fall but received $500, group however, received $3,358 last spring.
FINANCE AND AUDIITING members said they didn't think the society offered
g ordi
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See TWO OF SIX page eight
ing change
the bars clause."
This means that because they were in the area before the zoning was changed, they can't be shut down unless they are declared a public nuisance.
However, he said, if either of the bars is destroyed, it can't be rebuilt.
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk, said he was going to request a zoning change for insurance as well as to expand his business as soon as possible. If the Jayhawk was burned down and couldn't be rebuilt, he said, he would lose a fortune.
Wallace said that if the planning commission allowed his property to be rezoned, he would be able to use the space that connects two buildings up in the Jawshay to seat 80 customers more.
"NEXT, WE MIGHT FIX up the basement," he said.
Wallace said that according to a city ordinance, the basement couldn't be used for commercial purposes because the ceiling was too low.
If the rezoning change is allowed, he was
building could be jacked-up a couple of
times.
Wallace said expanding the Jayhawk would allow bartenders to patrol the bar more carefully to make sure people weren't taking beer into the street.
John Wooden, owner of the Wheel, she also would appeal for a zoning change as soon as possible in order to build an east addition to the Wheel.
"My main problem now is building that fence," he said.
The city commission decided last night that Wooden must build a fence around the woodland.
According to city law, customers can't go on the public right-of-way, which is around the corner from the trainers. The Wheel's public right-of-way begins at the inside of the walkway and extends along the street.
In addition to building a fence, Wooden must also get two outdoor restrooms and have people stationed outside the Wheel to ensure no one carries beer off his property.
The commission decided upon the action after it reviewed complaints of residents who live around 14th and Ohio that Wooden had been negligent in allowing students to leave the Wheel while they were carrying open beer containers.
The commission also decided to block 14th from Tennessee Street to the campus and to station extra police at 14th and Ohio during the remaining home football games.
Richard Stanwix, Lawrence police chief, said he hadn't decided how many extra men to station in the area. He said the police would go there during the home football games.
Tuesday, October 28.1975
5
Jayhawks fold in OSU loss;
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
Defense absorbs beatings
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Associate Sports Editor
91 9
KU quarterback Nolan Cromwell finds no place to run against the OSU defense
James Emerson was the first to go. He nobbling off the field in the first quarter against Oklahoma State with a badly strained ankle.
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Then it was Kurt Knoff, who left in the third period with a hyperextended knee. And finally, Chris Golub was lost for the second game, when the suffered lienament damage in his knee.
Those three players symbolized the shattered University of Kansas defense. It gave up the same number of touchdowns in the season in the 35-19 loss to Oklahoma State.
AFTER CRUISING through the first six games, the usually reliable Jayhawk could beat both of them.
"They even scored against our goal line in all, I'd say we played very, very poorly."
"I'm very disappointed," linebacker Terry Beeson said slowly. "They beat our defense. We just didn't stop them. We just didn't do our job.
In Terry Miller and Robert Turner, Oklahoma State staoed two of the quickest running backs Kansas had faced this year. Many players credited their quickness, as much as anything, for the Cowboys' offensive success.
"Their backs were good, no question about it. Were corner-back Steve Taylor said, or did he just say 'I don't know'?"
able to force them inside, they were able to bounce back outside.
"ONE TIME WHEN Miller got outside, I took on the blocker and bounced outside with him. It was just a foot race, and he outrun me. That's all there was to it. No exe-
But the Cowboy backs did more than just run the football. According to the KU players, they also did an excellent job of blocking for each other.
"They running backs had to contribute 85 per cent of their success," linebacker Rick
Locker room talk
Kovatch said. "They were all quick, and blocked job of running and blocking for each other."
Although not too mucis was heard about it coming into the game, the Oklahoma State offensive line also made believers out of the Javahaws.
"I THOUGHT THEY were the best of offensive line we had faced," defensive tackle Mike Butler said. "They moved the ball on them, and that is what to control the line of scrimmage."
The 35 points scored on KU was a result of more than just excellent play on the part of the Cowboys. In particular, KU's tackling was atrocious.
18
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
Kurt Knoff
By YAEL ABOUHALKAH
He talked in glum tone about how the Cowboy's defensive line had whipped KU's offense. He also expressed mild surprise at his team's defense had been manhandled by OSU.
"We weren't wrapping them up," defensive end Steve Jones said. "We would get a shoulder into them, but they would lose. We just were untilling very well."
John Morgan sat in a corner of the University of Kansas football locker room, slowly undressing after KU's 35-19 drumming at the hands of Oklahoma State Saturday.
But when asked about the future, Morgan's eyes suddenly brightened. A win over arch rival Kansas State this weekend caused the pain from that loss to the Cowboys.
"WELL DEFINITELY BE ready next Saturday," he asserted. "We'll have to get it back together for K-State. Don't worry—we will."
With the loss to OSU, the Jayhawks dropped to 4-3 overall, 1-2 in the Big Eight. The loss also probably ended any hopes of a bowl game for Kansas this fall.
--a battered and sore KU football team returned to practice yesterday, minus most of its defensive line and one-half of its secondary.
This Saturday's clash with Kansas State takes on added significance when it might be considered the last game the Jayhawks have a good chance of winning this year. After the Wildcats, KU must face league opponents Oklahoma, Colorado and Missouri.
HIS BACKUP, TOM Fitch, would normally replace him. But Fitch has missed him. He has a knee, and it isn't certain whether he will be ready this week. Fitch practiced yesterday, however, and coach Bud Moore said his team would not play again. Andy Resut will be the starter. Moore said.
The injured players are defensive ends Steve Jones (sore foot) and Tom Dinkel (injured knee), defensive tackle Franklin King (pulled muscle) and moussegard James Emmett (pulled ankle). Backup Dennis Balagana is also allowed on a srained ankle.
MIKE BUTLER WAS the lone starter on the defensive line to escape uninjured. The other four starters were held out of practice and were not given the time to consider questionable for this weekend.
"I'm very concerned at this time who we are going to play at some positions," Moore said. "I'm not very optimistic about whether a lot of the injured players will be ready. Finding some people to fill the positions that are vacated by injuries is one of the biggest things we are going to have to do this week."
BEING NEW AT KU THIS YEAR, Kansas coach Bud Moore admitted that he didn't fully comprehend the excitement or anticipation that goes with the rivalry.
Kurt Knoff, the other safety, left the game in the third quarter after suffering a hyperextended knee. Knoff said Saturday that he would be ready this week. But Moore said the knee was tight and isn't available, punter John O'Rear will start at the strong safety, Moore said.
"People get up differently for that game," said wide receiver Waddell Smith. "I know we'll be ready. K-State will be the underdog. That will help them."
Free safety Chris Golub, the Big Eight pass interception leader and KU's leading tackler in the secondary, was lost for the game. He had been on his knees. Golub was operated on Sunday.
Offensive tackle Dave Scott said, "We've got to take advantage of the opportunities. We know we can beat Kansas State. We know we can win a game. We've proven that we can move on any team."
But the KU players do
LINDESEY MASON, ANOTHER offensive tackle, said, "We're going to need that one. We know that they're about like we are. But I'm sure we can beat them."
$1.25
Pitchers only
Although the Jahayah spoke confidently about what they'd do to the Wildcats, what they did last weekend against Oklahoma wasn't any kind of morale booster at all.
MONDAY & TUESDAY NIGHTS! And that's not all-dance to THE CLASSMEN
No fewer than seven Jayhawks were injured in Saturday's 35-19 loss to Oklahoma State. All seven were valuable members of the KU defensive unit.
SUNDAY SONGS
Oklahoma STATE KANASAS
First downs yard 69-39 60-27
Pacing yards 12-8 14-7
Return yards 5-1 4-1
Losses-losts 11-10 5-11
Pounds-losts 5-11 1-0
Pounds-losts 8-3 1-0
☆ ☆ ★
QUERY BY QUANTENUM
OKLAHOMA STATE 7 7 14 7 35
KANSAAN 7 7 14 7 35
KU ailing; 7 injured
SCOREING SUMMARY
INDIVIDUAL
OKLAHOMA STATE~Turmer 1 run (Kronek kick)
OKLAHOMA STATE~Burk 2 run (Kronek kick)
OKLAHOMA STATE~Turmer 2 run (Kronek kick)
OKLAHOMA STATE~Turmer 2 run (Kronek kick)
KAHLEVAN STATE~Turmer 2 run (Kronek kick)
KAHLEVAN STATE~Turmer 2 run (Kronek kick)
KAHLEVAN STATE~Turmer 2 run (Kronek kick)
KAHLEVAN STATE~Turmer 2 run (Kronek kick)
Come hear The Classmen and Sip a pitcher for only '1.25. We have bands 6 nights, every week—Mon.-Sat.
ORLANDIA STATE—MILFORD 112, Turner 141, Bossum 101, Buck
Miller 93, Kyle Ritter 86, Bubba 85, Nawack 74,
Kamau 67, Nawack 57, Bank 52, Turner 49, Cameron 44,
Rivera 42, Hogan 41, Fowler 39, Mayer 38
PASSING
15.11.1, 79 RECEIVING
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PASSAG
OKLAHOMA STATE
Washington 1-0, 56
KANSAS CITY
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The Cowboys moved at will on the Jayhawks, scoring five touchdowns against a defense that hadn't allowed more than one touchdown in a game this year. The Cowboy defense kept KU's offense bottled most of the day, only bending near the end.
K-State next
--has testimonial meetings at 8:30
past every Tuesday night at Dana-
burgh.
AT TIMES, THERE seemed to be more excitement in the stands than on the field. There was WIR Chamberlain, former KU player, sitting on the beat, being cheered by the crowd of 44,600.
And then there was the drunken fan, merrily parading around the sideline to the delight of the student fans, eluding police by the students and forth over the restraining fences.
Down on the field, the Cowboys were physically punishing the Jayhawks, moving them to the sideline.
Almost everything that could have gone wrong for KU did, with the defense falling apart, the offense sputtering and the kicking game coming unhugged.
"THEY WERE THE most physical team we've played," said KU defensive coach Lance Van Zand. "They whipped us all over the field. That's all that happened."
Even with that, however, the Jayhawks had a chance to win the game in the closing seconds.
WITH THE COBOWS leading 28-7 early in the fourth quarter, KU struck back for two touchdowns, a 12-yard pass from Nolan Carver and a seven-vardar run by Skip Sharp.
But after Sairp's score, Dennis Kerbel whiffed the onies kickoff, sending it a mere three yards—not the required 10—and OSU took over on KU's 43. Then the OSU offense rushed the ball those 43 yards in a surgical march that assured the Cowboy victory.
The Christian Science Organization
"WE WEREN'T READY to play, that's obvious." Moore said. "We were beaten by a better coached football team. The thing that surprises me is that we got whipped."
---
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Tuesday, October 28,1975
University Dally Kansan
Director says newsmen usurped
By MAREALIEBERT
An increasing number of actors are replacing journalists as broadcasters, John Masterman, public affairs director, CKPT-CIV, Kansas City, Mo., said Saturday.
Masterman opened the third annual Broadcast Journalism Seminar Saturday in the Kansas Union with his on "What's Hanoineen to Broadcast Journalism?"
Other speakers were Ernest Martin, assistant professor of radio-tv-film, who spoke on "Survey Research and TV and Radio News Programming," and Curtis Beckman, news director for WCO radio in Chicago, who spoke on "Handling of Political News."
Twenty nine stations were represented from Kansas and Missouri.
Masterman said the pretty faces of actors, not reporters, dominated television
Producers no longer go to journalism schools such as KU's for broadcasters, Masterman said. The team out hunters who would need to be headed, instead, would help boost the program's rating.
news, and this was partly because of the increasing use of news consultants.
Masterran said he shuddered when the thought of Ted Baxter on the Mary Tyler Moore show. Baxter isn't far from a true portrait of today's broadcaster he said.
Masterman said softness afflicted television news. News consultants have advised stations to stay away from heavy news and other sensational news anecdotes and other sensational news.
"real news is not a lump of clay you mold in a pot and give Mom for Christmas,"
Real news is chewier than bubble gum, he said. It's pungent like a dead breath, mean, "I can get it out of my throat."
Masterman said news that wasn't
Mastmaster said there were other problems afflicting news programs. He said that the staggering commercials were constantly interrupting the news and that there wasn't enough interpretation of the news for the viewers.
If Thomas Jefferson were alive today, he said, he would have told us to either do it or not.
Masterman said he also thought the 5.30 p.m. news broadcasts were presented too quickly.
reported well and thoroughly wound danger national policy.
Martin described research as a "diagnostic tool." He said a station shouldn't wait for a crisis before doing research.
Interrupted at one point by the bow of the whistle between classes, Lapid laughed and said, "Those are some Arabs trying to prevent me from free speech."
He said all stations needed to know more about their audience. Martin said news consultants were aids in showing stations how to best communicate with their
"As long as the prime minister is more afraid of the am of him, then we have the power of the prince to govern."
His visit to KU, as a guest of the William Allen White School of Journalism, was his fourth trip to a university in three days. He went on a cross-country tour of the United States.
Editor says Arab threat strains Israeli freedoms
By RON HARTUNG
Lapid was born in Yugoslavia in 1931. He immigrated to Israel in 1948 and joined Maariv in 1955 as a reporter. He has received the Nordau and Herzl prizes for journalism and is founding editor of AT monthly magazine.
Israel lives under a constant threat of being eradicated—a threat that puts an enormous strain on its citizens' civil liberties, and/or editor of Israel's leading daily newspaper.
The theme of most of Lapid's remarks was the importance of the symbiotic relationship between a democratic society and a strong free press.
Yosef Lapel, feature editor and columnist for Mairiv, a Tel Aviv newspaper, spoke at a press conference at the University of Kansas Friday and gave an address on "Israeli Democracy: Survival Under Pressure."
Lapis is also the author of several plays and is the latest of which was "A Man My Ashes." My Ashes
Lapid, who apologized before his speech that his English was not "up to Kansas level," credited three factors for the survival of Israeli democracy. First, he said, Israel didn't discard the basis of British law when it discarded the bisha rule.
Beckman said reporters should be more aware of the "media maniacs", the politicians, lobbyists and government officials. They would share images of themselves on the airwaves.
"Democracy can and should survive even under great stress, as long as civil liberties are in the minds and hearts of the people," he added. "We must be thankful than having them on any piece of paper."
The value of the press, according to Lapid, lies not so much in its ability to uncover wrongdoing as in its tendency to discourage wrongdoing in the first place. The point is that the press has
He said he was proud of the Israeli press's
Martin said that because consultants advise stations to aim for younger audiences and to use more showmanship values, broadcasters appeared to be like tikTok.
But a constitution isn't everything, he said.
Second, Israel's strong biblical tradition and family-oriented society tend to give Israelis a greater respect for the law, he said. Finally, he said, the Jewish "liberal transition" keeps Israel in the vanguard of lightning for the preservation of civil liberties.
Such strong traditions have been indispensable, he said, because Israel doesn't have a written constitution. The system of government in all sovereignty in the Israeli Parliament.
Lapid demonstrated the potential dangers of such a system with the theoretical possibility that Parliament decide that the other 38 members should be hanged, he said, the entire affair would be perfectly legal, and the majority of the Parliament had so decided.
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Martin concluded that the controversy would continue, but that stations couldn't be stopped.
feature and investigative stories and to
have a hall and other governmental meetings.
COLUMBAN FATHER
He played a tape in which an anology between broadcasters and Ken dolls with flawless white teeth, blue eyes and styled brown hair was made.
He said the "maniacs" made it as easy as possible for reporters to obtain the news. They make it their business to know what happened in reporters their friends, Beckman said.
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By portraying the situation as less serious than it actually was, the press helped to escalate tensions. A newspaper headline read:
performance during the Yom Kippur War of 1973.
"I think there are occasions where the press has a responsibility other than to print everything that's fit to print," he said, adding that such occurrences were very rare.
He said problems resulted when the objectives weren't specific. The absence of objectives results in "$18,000 worth of useless wheel spinning." he said.
Martin cited examples of recommendations given by news consultants to stations. Among these were to use more "frequent" language in high school level vocabulary, use ample
Martin stressed the importance of agreement between station managers and executives on the objectives of hiring a news consultant.
Lapid described the American-Iraeli relationship as a "big brother-little brother one. He said he hoped that use of these words would make ideals both countries could agree to.
He doesn't object, he said, to American overtures toward the Arab countries. Communists that supply the Arabs with goods are the real enemies of Israel, he said, as are those members of the United Nations that support a concerted effort to declare Israel a non-state.
The Democrats actually had a seminar,
said, in which one of its talks was entitled
"The Battle for Europe."
Reporters must learn to be responsible citizens, Beckman said, and must always have the courage to do what is right.
Yosef Lavid
Though he initially opposed the disengagement agreement arranged by Secty. of State Henry Kissinger, he said, eventually realized that it might be the first step towards an overall peace and he had to endorse it.
"I never knew a peaceful period in my life," he said. "I have seen both wars but war."
"Before I ask my children to start fighting, I have to show them that I do deserve it."
Just because a reporter spends two hours at a meeting, it's not necessarily a story, Beckman said. He added that press conference attendees should be prepared for an important announcement was to be made.
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A good way to understand this world is to define your terms. This brings up the question of what we mean by the term of capitalism. The communists tell us that capitalism is the "exploration of man by man." Yet, it is easy enough to see that this is the description of the slave society wherein the masters exploit the labor of their slaves.
Now then, one of the world's three great truths is that it is not possible to be and not be. Either something is or else it is not. And, if something is one thing then it cannot be another. Therefore, if society it cannot be the description of our free society, society it cannot be the description of our free society. In order to promote social enquiry I offer a hundred dollar reward to anyone who can give the true definition of our free society of capitalism.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.33
Behavior and King of Boys are registered trademarks of Arkenauer Beach, Inc.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
October 9.1975
Cool
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PLEASE MARK THE CAR'S VIEWING LOCKS ONLY AT THE CENTER. NO TRANSITING. DO NOT SEND ANY EXPLAINING TEXT OR IMAGE TO A TRANSPORTER.
Trouble in O-zone
Karrie Mccollain, Topeka freshman, fills her car radiator with water in the middle of O-zone late yesterday afternoon.
radiator has a slow leak and she must fill it every time she starts the car.
Two of six amendments passed in Senate session
By JIM BATES
Newly elected Student Senators were initiated into student government last night during a long and sometimes heated Senate meeting.
The Senate also passed a resolution questioning the channels the athletic department was using to monitor students.
Most of the meeting was spent debating the Finance and Auditing Committee's budget recommendations. Two of six proposed amendments to the committee's allocation bills were passed, one of those being a bill for all Anderson, the committee's chairman.
The Senate voted to add $1,000 allocation to the KU Marching Band and to delete a $000 allocation to the KU Ice Hockey Club. Attempts to give money to the University of Iowa have been made and the Liberal Arts and Sciences School Council were defeated. Attempts to cut allocations to the Anthropology Undergraduate Association, the Undergraduate Philosophy Club and the Instruction in Psychology also were defeated.
zone parking lot north of Potter Lake. The Senate also elected new members to the University Council and the University Judiciary Board.
An amendment付给 $8,000 to the Kansan was debated for more than an hour before being defeated on a 54 to 18 roll call vote. The vote was not approved since last March, several officials said.
The Finance and Auditing Committee recommended last week that the Kansas, which requested $15,600, be given nothing. The Communications Committee, however, voted Tuesday to try to amend the funding recommendations to give the Kansas $5,000.
Kevin Flynn, Communications chairman, told the Senate it was important that the Kansas have enough money in its operating fund for a year's expenses in case the Senate should decide not to fund it some year.
"WE NEED A PAPER that is independent of the Stuent Senate," he said.
Shockley debate cancellation firm
Without any supplemental funds, he said, the Kansan would have about $47,000 left in its reserve operating fund at the end of this year. He added that about $85,000 a year to produce. Flynn said.
After one week of criticism, Greg Bentson, SUA president, said yesterday that he still thought that the SUA Board acted properly when it voted 7-5 to cancel a debate of William Shockley's controversial theories on the genetic inferiority of blacks.
By DIERCK CASSELMAN
In fact, Bengtson said, "There are some things I have found since our meeting that solidify my feelings even more that what we did was right."
Pete Kanatzer, graduate senator, said it was important for the Senate to remain flexible.
"I hate to say it," she said, "and the Kansan is the only paper I get. I depend on it for world news and I like it, but I just can't see it any money at this time."
In a board meeting one week ago, we adopted temporary policies the president to enforce the
"I'd sure hate to give the Kansan $5,000 to pay a year's bill in advance and then have to tell a group with a real crisis 'sorry'," he said.
ADRIENNE HYLE, GRADUATE senior
society manager wait until
the activity fee could be changed.
Five finalists for the 1975 HOPE Award were selected yesterday by the senior class, Tom DeCoursey, HOPE committee chairman, said yesterday.
Five chosen in HOPE vote
"I don't expect that Shockley would want to present his ideas in an arena where they were," he said.
One hundred eighty-two seniors participated in the balloting. The five were chosen from a field of 11 semi-finalists, he said.
The finalists are: Allan Cigler, assistant professor of political science, J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business, Calder Pickett, professor of economics, John Quinn, professor of English and Lee Young, professor of journalism.
The Senate voted by voice to give $1,000 to the KU Marching Band for a trip to the Iowa State football game. According to Anderson, the band's funding request was lost on the mail on its way to the Senate and the group was not included in the budget hearings.
"We think it would be a bad precedent for the company to pay off an organization's debts."
debate between Shockey and Richard Goldsby, a black professor of chemistry and microbiology at the University of Oklahoma which was scheduled for Nov. 13 at Hoch Auditorium.
Final voting for the HOPE Award will be from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Nov. 12, at the Information Booth on Jayhawk Blvd. . DeCourse said.
The award will be presented Nov. 15 during halftime of the University of Colorado football game, he said.
The motion was discussed behind closed doors, but Bengtson said after the meeting that he had made the motion after opposition to the debate had exposed factors not taken into account when the debate was scheduled.
The members of the Finance and Auditing Committee defended their decision not to fund the Kansan, complaining about paying off an organization's deficits. They said they could see giving the Kansan money in a crisis but said it was nowhere near a crisis.
The debate was an SUA Forum. When SUA scheduled the debate it thought the students were not aware of Bengston said. Protections from several students made him aware that Shockley's theories on the intelligence of blacks raised moral, as well as scientific, questions, he
At the crux of the problem, Bengtson said, was the notion that racism, the label attached to Shockley's theories by the students protesting his appearance, was simply not a debatable subject. Science, he would take second place to the feelings of others.
Bengtson said at least a dozen people had tried to contact him about the debate, and most of the students he talked with opposed the cancellation.
Those opposed to the debate's cancellation, Bengtson said, told him that Shockley should be allowed to present his theories so that they could be disroved.
chairman and one of the five that opposed
their views. Mr. Pacha said mad when he thought of the board's actions.
The argument that the debate should take place so Shockley's theories could be accepted, he argued, that his ideas would be discredited, Bingston said. At that point, he said, the event ceased to be a debate and was now left in an authoritative argument, devoid of scientific content.
The Finance and Auditing Committee, Anderson said, opposed funding the Kananian case.
encouraging them it should have been written down on paper somewhere.
"Why shouldn't the debate take place?" he said. "What's a University for? He's publishing ideas and you can't ignore them."
Bengtason said Shockley's appearance was cancelled but he has been accepted to the University of New York.
However, Tim Watson, travel committee
According to Mike Miller, SUA Activities advisor, when the debate took place at other universities, no problems were encountered.
Miller said the University of Virginia was the location of the first debate between Smith and Trump.
At Texas Tech in Lubbock, the debate was about a part of a block awareness week at Texas Tech.
There were some comments of opposition printed in the Texas Tech student newspaper and the incident was considered provisional, but it was still successful, he said.
Miller said he had mixed feelings about the cancellation of the debate.
"I haven't resolved an opinion as of yet," he said, "but as an SAU staff member, I respect the board for their consideration and awareness of outside opinion."
ANDERSON SAID SHE was in favor of granting the band's request and thought it was good public relations for the University.
Shockley's appearances at other universities have been punctuated by demonstrations that kept him from speaking.
Bengsaton he didn't think that KU students would react that way. But, he said, he thought Shockley was a highly provocative person who generated a response that might be detrimental to the University.
At Yale University, some members of the audience created a 90-minute disturbance that ended only when Shockley left the stage. He wasn't given a chance to speak.
"It would be somewhat analogous to a
Game machines amuse students
If the Kanas's $1.35 share of each activity fee is too small to allow the paper to break even it should be changed, they said. They said, however, that they thought it was a mistake to give the Kanas money every time it came running for funds.
Today, however, the number of variety of game machines have increased greatly. Air hockey, foosball and at least 15 varieties of TV game machines are now found next to more traditional games such as pool and paddleball. They also provide guards and bus stations, as well as bars.
Unlike most Lawrence bar owners, Johnson said he owned most of the game machines in his two establishments. He said the high profits made from the games, after the required amount for taxes was taken enabled him to keep buying more games.
"Not everyone can throw a football," said Emick, "but anyone can put in a quarter and compete in his choice of games. Game machines are now a must for bars because kids just won't come unless there are some games to play."
Five years ago the only forms of amusement that most local bars had to offer were reasonably cheap beer, a pin ball machine and perhaps a television set.
man standing on a stage in a theatre and velling fire." he said.
Game machines are becoming increasingly popular, Emick said, because they involve skill and provide a form of competition that anyone can participate in.
"I wouldn't be in business without those machines," said Ace Johnson, owner of the Stable and the Sanctuary, 1401 W. Seventh St. Johnson said that although cheap beer might bring a lot of people into a bar, beer alone couldn't make a profit.
Brad Bradley, forums chairman, said that even though he voted against the motion to cancel, he would support the board's action.
ED ROLFS, STUDENT body president,
said the paper needed money in reserve for
insurance against outside control and for
possible expansion. He said that the Senate
cut off the Kansan completely in 1970-71 and
that decision was partly political.
One regular pinball player who identified himself only as "The Pinball Wizard," said he enjoyed the sport because, "I can experience the joy of victory or the agony of defeat for only a quarter and minimal physical exertion."
Another avid player referred to himself as a "foosball addict" and said he and his partner would be the first to sign up if the team needed him. He would also make to football an international event.
Wallace, said he wasn't charged for the placement of the machines. He said he received half of all profits from the games and also paid half to look out the appropriate amount for taxes.
The Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., also has numerous games. Ken Waller, owner of the Hawk, said that a commercial amusement company was responsible for his four football tables, two video ping-pong tables, four pinball games and a bowling machine.
"We can go out and entertain ourselves all night for only a quarter," he said. "All we have to do is stop down a quarter, win the game, and bring up until we were tired of beating everybody."
Johnson said he paid between $1,500 and $2,500 for each video game and $2,000 for each air hockey table. Most of the games are made for one or two players, he said, but some of the machines allow up to four players at one time.
He said that he'd received little feedback from students.
During the summer, Wallace renovated a back room of the Hawk to accommodate more football tables. He said that the pinball machines and football tables were designed with the highest amount of profit, but the popularity of football appeared to be on the decline.
The Senate voted 35 to 20 to eliminate a $600 allocation to the KU Ice Hockey Club. Dear Sharpiro, sports committee chairman, moved the group be cut because it was partially funded from, and held all its activities in, Kansas City.
"Lists of regulars come in here because they hooked on a particular machine."
"I'm sad that KU is not the type of University where that type of thing can be taught."
The rise in game popularity has resulted in demand for tavern owners in the Lawrence area.
Because of the rising popularity of games, Johnson said he was planning to have a video game tournament on six different machines sometime during the semester.
Johnson said there were the 18 game machines at the Stable and the Santuary. Video games are the most popular, he said. Patrons can play ping-pong, shoot tanks,
John Emick, owner of John's Novelty Company, 1014% Massachusetts St., which supplies 90 per cent of the game machines in Lawrence, said there had been a rising demand for his machines in recent months, and pinball machines and shuffle board tables.
"It could happen again," he said.
Bv DEBBIE BAUMAN
Staff Writer
said Wallace, "I guess it's just the old contest of man against machine."
drive cars and play a baseball game on the video machines.
Bengsion said that the argument to cancel the debate was also based on an assumption.
He said that in his defense of the can-
It was important to remember, Rufa said, that the Kansas had started running track and field when the Indians arrived.
Shairop said few people from Lawrence
wanted to Kenesha City to give the rights.
"I really don't think it serves all that many people," he said.
See SHOCKLEY page eight
An amendment to give Douglas County Legal Aid $700 was defeated to 30. To the group request $1,906 this fall but received $3,356 last spring, however, received $3,356 last spring.
Anderson said that if the Senate was
FINANCE AND AUDIUTING members said they didn't think the society offered
See TWO OF SIX page eight
Bar owners want zoning change
The owners of the Wagon Wheel Cafe and the Jawhawk Cafe will soon ask the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission for a change in zoning.
At Tuesday's City Commission meeting, Mayor Barkley Clark suggested that the owners ask for aoning change for the bans to help solve the congestion problem at 14th and Ohio streets that was caused by students drinking beer.
Cark said that if the zoning was changed, the owners of the bars could expand the building's space.
According to the present zoning ordinance, the area around 14th and Ohio is residential-dormitory. Since the bars are in effect, residents expand unless the city alters the ordinance.
Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said yesterday that the bars were in a residential area as a result of Lawrence being rezoned in 1965-1968. Before 1968, the area was "a commercial," a classification which allows small commercial establishments only.
SINCE 1986, WILDGEN said, the bars have been under the "grandfather clause."
A man in a cowboy hat pulls a rope attached to the rear of a truck as several people look on.
Accident
Tom Musellman, Passadea, Calif., junior, is comforted by passers-by after he was hit by a Kansas Union van, at about 11 a.m. yesterday. The van was driven by Steve Sack, far left, Garnett junior. Musselman was riding a bicycle west on Jayhawk Boulevard when the eastbound van tried to turn onto Poplar Lane, between强壮 and Snow halls in front of Hoch Auditorium, and struck Musselman. Sack was issued a citation for failure to yield right of way. Musselman was treated and released from Watkins Memorial Hospital for a possible concussion, cuts and bruises. Witnesses said the victim, when hit by the van, flew 10 feet in the air before landing on the pavement.
However, he said, if either of the bars is destroyed, it can't be rebuilt.
This means that because they were in the area before the zoning was changed, they can't be shut down unless they are declared a public nuisance.
Ken Wallace, owner of the Jayhawk, said he was going to request a zoning change for insurance as well as to expand his business as soon as possible. If the Jayhawk was burned down and couldn't be rebuilt, he said, he would lose a fortune.
Wallace said that if the planning commission allowed his property to be rezoned, he would be able to use the space that connects to the street. He said the daywalk to seat 50 customers more.
"NEXT, WE MIGHT FIX up the basement," he said.
Wallace said that according to a city ordinance, the basement couldn't be used for commercial purposes because the ceiling was too low.
If the resizing change is allowed, he said, the building could be jacked up a couple of stories.
Wallace said expanding the Jayhawk would allow bartenders to patrol the bar more carefully to make sure people weren't taking beer into the street.
John Wooden, owner of the Wheel, said he also would appeal for a zoning change as soon as possible in order to build an east addition to the Wheel.
"My main problem now is building that fence," he said.
The city commission decided last night that Wooden must build a fence around the yard.
According to city law, customers can't go past the public right-of-way, which is around the property, with open beer containers. The Wheel's public right-of-way begins at the inside of the sidewalk and continues into the middle of the street.
In addition to building a fence, Wooden must also get two outdoor restrooms and have people stationed outside the Wheel to ensure no one carries beer off his property.
The commission decided upon the action after it reviewed complaints of residents who live around 14th and Ohio that Wooden had been negligent in allowing students to leave the Wheel while they were carrying open beer containers.
The commission also decided to block 14th from Tennessee Street to the campus and to station extra police at 14th and Ohio during the remaining home football games.
Richard Stanwix, Lawrence police chief, said he hadn't decided how many extra men to station in the area. He said the police were there men during the home football games.
V
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, October 28, 1975
7
Coaches justify season tickets
When the woman's athletic program at the University of Kansas began selling season tickets last week, it joined many other women's programs that are attempting to raise more money, Marian Washington, assistant athletic director in charge of women's athletics, said yesterday.
Season tickets for students and non-
students were on sale Thursday through
the end of the school year. Woman's
women's athletic coaches. Ticket sales
haven't been evaluated yet. Washington
said, but coaches will meet later in the week
to explain what action the department will take.
"We may find that this is not what we had hooped." Washington said. "We might
tempted this step and there is no question of its purpose."
Washington said she didn't think tickets would scare crowds away from most events. Games such as volleyball seem to have generated the most interest, as indicated by the crowds of 50 to 60 spectators at some home games. Washington said
"We are trying to provide an opportunity for people to be aware of us," Washington said.
reconstructor charging students, but we will definitely charge outliers."
Tom Kivisto, women's tennis coach, said
"Ticket sales could be looked at in two ways." Kiivisto said. "It will add to the budget and let people know that things are happening in women's athletics."
Kivisto said that his winning team teams had good crowds early in the season and that although many of the later games were played at home, tickets should bring bigger crowds.
"Having tickets will bring a professional attitude to the program. When people pay to
ticket sales would upgrade the program.
s见 something, they know they are going to see something worthwhile. It's really a psychological thing," he said. "It will also mean more to the players."
Attendance at some of last year's swimming meets reached 400, Claire McEiray, women's swimming coach, said. Tickets probably won't affect this crowd because many of the spectators are family, friends or former team members, she said.
"KU has always had a good swimming tradition," she said, "and that helps a lot."
Iran . . .
L. S.A. members said great differences existed between conditions at Iranian universities and American ones. The Shah University of Isfahan offered Iranian schools were "degrees of ignorance." Universities there suffer from a lack of equipment and facilities, Reza said. Although approximately 186,000 people应用 these degrees, only about 20,000 were accepted, he said.
From page one
Students and faculty alike are watched closely by SAVAK, Rea said, and many students have been killed, wounded or arrested in protest demonstrations.
The I.S.A. claims that the situation in Iran had worsened since the Shah made Iran a one-party state last March with the formation of the Resurrection National Party, and that the two-party party are faced with the choice of leaving the country or going to prison, Reza said.
Unlike thousands of Iranian students who have chosen not to return to Iran, the 12 members contacted in the I.S.A. said they thought it was their duty to return and get involved in the struggle to overthrow the Shah, despite the obvious dangers.
Jobs open on Kansan
Application forms are available in 105 Flint; the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union; the office of the dean of men, 228 Strong Hall; and the office of the dean of women, 222 Strong.
Applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester Kansan will be awarded until noon Oct. 31 in 105 FIlm Hall.
The Kanan Board will interview candidates and select a spring editor and business manager Nov. 3.
KANSAN WANT ADS
--a quiet corner
Dykes elected vice chairman
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes has been elected vice chairman of the Commission of Appeals and has served as Chair.
The nine-member commission met Friday in Washington D.C., and elected Dykes vice chairman, and Harold E. Browder, chairman of the U.S. Senator, chairman of the commission.
The function of senators, officers and staff members will be examined. The committee will also investigate conflicts in the programing of Senate business, legislative activities, facilities, and information resources and Senate internal management structures.
--a quiet corner
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Must sell: 65 'Old', good mechanical condition, hardwood, hardwood. For sale: Dry lumber/wood. Free kindling with any purchase. Dry lumber/wood.
17' RCA color TV $150. Less than two years old.
1901 Learn - evenings.
10-29
For Gift or Yourself. The largest stock of copper
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Stereo system built in Japan. Less than 1 yr. old. Saniun 2000 X amp-operated, JVC VL-35 Runner will supply speakers. Easily wooled. Will sell for $499. April 11, 2022 hawker Towers or 842-6097. 10-29
Pre-Columbian蜂蜜. We have an exquisite collection of ancient beeswax, conjured from ancient bents of Jado, Quartz, Caramelain, Bone, Ceramide, etc. From South America interested in buying in buying lot number 16-300
Must sell immediately. Queen size Simmons box 40
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Repeat Performance. 1422 W, 32R. 10-28
Due to an error in the list of pseudonyms and other misprints, the poem may not prepare its section on the Carruth Poetry Context. The poem attributed to John Nelson, the other pseudonym, also contains another constant. My apologies to both parties. Thanks.
[Signature]
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Roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom house 3
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Inquire in Rm. 108, Military Science Bidg., Univ. of Kansas, Phone 864-6476.
Married couple wanted to manage apartment
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191-688
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LOST AND FOUND
Hammond organ, anytimer, Electric piano, and Mellotone keyboard, has voice of The Theatre P.A. SYSTEM and needs a Hass guitar player or Rock Group, Call collect, 10-31 for Kevin.
Lost: a blue and white checked bocket host at laundret on 19th Street. Please call Jennifer
Loest: Medium size dot with brown, black, and
white. hairs: Attracts. Scratch: 842-0018.
3020.4473.5379
Lott: Beloved small female fistlecate cat. Reward.
8114.1114. 110N. Olhn. Hln flea collar. 10-30
Found. Ladies wrist watch on Mississippi 10:27
843-7857 and describe 10-28
KU Bus pass of Susan Arrehung found. Claim at 10-28 Information counter in Union.
Found. Key with inscription UHN 441, on soccer field at 2d and 1w, Call 842-1891 after 6 p.m.
CONNIE'S NATURAL FOODS 425 Indiana
Food Stamps Accepted 8-4 Tues., Thurs., Sat.
CONNIE'S
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
IVAN'S 86 SERVICE
19th & Mass.
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
Found in front of Flint Hall! A small brown purse containing two keys. Identify in Book 10-28
Found: pair of eyeglasses in cloth case on Flint Hall sidewalk. Identify in room 105. Flint 107.
Found White and tarnished with a roller on
found wallet. Found white on 14th Street, Wednesday,
November 29.
Lost: Tues. Oct. 21. Red folder in Summerboro or
Woodland. You must obtain account information.
842.-933.978. 11-3
Found: Martha Greer. Red wallet with IDs. 841-1
4180.
TYPING
Found: Medium sized black dog, some white. De-
termine to claim: -841-5338 10-30
KWIRI CAR WASH 612 N. 2nd St. 2 Blocks North Kaw River Bridge
Found. Backwell S1R Calculator on the Oudikid
rd. 22 Oct. Call 842-383 for collection. 10-30
THEIS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is located in the building's main entrance. Our service is fast and prices are reasonable. The bindings are available in both standard and double-zip styles.
Experienced typist. I.B.M. Selectric, thesis, dba and term paper. Call Pam Jenkins, 845-790-3760.
Typing -oxygenized in dissertations, thesis, etc.
Mixing -synthesis of carbon nanotubes, carbon rubbon. Cact Lollis, 843-8688.
Experienced typist—term paper, papers, thesis,
experience in Word processing, spellcheck,
spell纠错. 843-5464, Mrs. Wright
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. 12-1
PROFESSIONAL Typing at reasonable rates.
PROFESSIONAL Disc�PENDABLE. Listen to:
L812, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 10-28
Experimented typiL IMecir Specific. Base rate 5e/cal. Call [641-7243] day 84-997 week 11; June 4
EDITING and TYPING. Prompt, reliable, experiential.
Discretions. Distractions with a focus on practical use.
851-9217. 12-16
PERSONAL
KWIKI
Typing: Elite electric typewriter in my home.
reading: Prompt盟闻. Mrs. Heyward.
noun reading: 11-24
Exp. typ, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
disseminations, publications, sending sporing
correspondence. 841-5000 841-5000
NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC—Beginning thru advanced lessons in folk, rock, and clasic guitar, bannjo, fiddl, mandolon, etc. Great teachers, reasonable rates, Mason-Manson Slinging #141-6817
GAY IS GOOD AND ECOLOGICALLY SOUND
Meetings first and third Tuesdays each month in
the summer. For more information, call 843-8292 after p. m. Counseling) rup 842-7155. HALLOWEEN COSTUME DANCE-Novel 1-7.
www.haloweencostume.com
Pulka shell necklaces $ compare at 013. 841-5682 before midnight. tf
Miles, I love you still. See you tonight at the 12:40
Experimented Tytli-themes, term papers, themes,
them- IB-Mobile pleca, plca. Call Laude 834-1879.
thems-IB-Mobile plca, plca. Call Laude 834-1879.
Guy: No matter what Lewis thinks, we all love you here at G.S.P.
10-29
Miles, Mother knows about us. See you tonight.
Julie, 19-past, Rhodia. 11-6
Miles. Let's get married anyway. You see you tonight at the Inge Theatre. Sheila. 11-6
FOR RENT
HORIZONS HONDA
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
PARKING LOT AT THE GREEN BAY CENTER
1811 W. 6th
Self Service
1811 W. 06H
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Apartment, furnished, wall-to-wall carpet, pat-
nion, kitchen, dining room, KU dining-room.
No pets. 843-757-3967.
3 bedroom - 2 bathroom apartment- $112.50
4 bedroom - 3 bedroom apartment- $249.00
3 needed. 2601 W. St. Apt. 184 (Downtown)
2 needed. 2601 W. St. Apt. 184 (Downtown)
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and
see the building on Monday, phone: at WESTERBURG
MOBILE HOME 230-479-1826.
2 bedroom apartment, all utilities paid. A/C on
building. 2 bedroom apartment, laundry facilities. 1603
97-541-4780
HELP WANTED
AVON - need extra $ for Christmas! Farm them
and they will sell in June!
wireless, computer, memo, call 813-852-6120
10-28
The Sanctuary Catering Service is now taking orders for wine and dinner parties, bartenders, and waitstaff. Previous experience waits patiently. Previous cooking experience is essential. Please bring a large bowl of soup and Kae or Sherly at 843-602-5711 for appointment.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 905, 1213, 1214, 1215, 1216, 1217, 1218, 1219, 1220, 1221, 1222, 1223, 124, 141, 143, 146, 588, One-time test preparation, regular sessions. Reasonable rates. 742-817.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Priced, freshest materials. Liquid-filled, durable turquoise. Sale $150 per garment guaranteed.
OPPORTUNITIES
FOOD
Need camp distribution for Crayfish Limited,
Riverhead, WA. Email crayfishlimited@hotmail.com
or 518-760-3924. Fax 518-760-3924.
E-mail crayfishlimited@hotmail.com
or 518-760-3924. Overland Park, Kansas 68028.
Email crayfishlimited@hotmail.com
Pumpkinp, edder*, applelet*, squash, tomatoe, herb-
seed. 1998-1999. 45 oz. Canned Breads,
Market Size: 184, Market Size: 281, Open Bread: 7 days a
month. 1999-2000. 35 oz. Canned Breads,
Market Size: 184, Market Size: 281, Open Bread: 7 days a
month.
Horseback and Hayrack riding. 16 miles west on
Hour 40, 88-407, Spencer. 10-31
ENTERTAINMENT
Employment Opportunities
Part-time—make money and have fun—Jewelry
Sales-Call机 360-8990 or 631-0046 10-31
James Gang
Foreign Auto Parts
*See us for your imported parts needs*
M-F 5:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-12:00
M43 Lacust 843-8080
SALON
901
FOR YOUR HAIR
Ben • Teresa • Marty
901 Kentucky 843-0944
THE LOUNGE
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
RECREATION'S FINEST
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Foosball
"If we don't get it you didn't want to play it no how!"
to play it no how!"
9th & Iowa
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
G
AWRENCE
URPLUS
740 Massachusetts
"The home of LEVIS Jeans'
图
8
Tuesday, October 28, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Bird watchers squawk about hobby misconceptions
By JOHN FULLER
Staff Writer
The hobby of bird watching has been much maligned in the past by bad jokes and the image of little old ladies tramping around in the park with bird whistles.
Richard Johnston, professor of systematics and ecology, dislikes these misconceptions and said yesterday that bird watching was a fast growing hobby.
"It's fun to learn about the environment," he said, "and you're more likely to see young ladies in tennis shoes out to bird watching."
Lawrence is a good area to observe different species of birds, Johnston said. A representative census of birds that inhabit the area and pass through during migration would contain all species, he said, but should include 100 different species up to 180 different species can be spotted.
Johnston recommended the KU woodland reserves north of Lawrence and the Breidental tract near Baldwin as good places to see woodland birds. The gravel pit ponds near I-70 and the Kaw Valley are two places where waterfowl can be seen.
Bird watching can be done all year around. Johnston said the only equipment really needed was a pair of binoculars and a phone to call home when morning was the best time to watch birds.
Jeff Cox. Wichita state and president of the University of Oklahoma Society, explained the man's way of "keeping up with the
"During the winter we go out in the woods with a tape recorder and play screech owl
calls. All the other birds just come flocking
around, and watch it, we said.
"Well ground and watch."
Every year around Christmas the National Audubon Society sponsors a one-day, midnight-to-midnight bird sighting committee. Visitors can join in by country stake out a circle with an 15-mile diameter in which to sight birds. Competitors must stay inside the circle and use the same circle every year. The tour will most likely host bird species in the time allotted wipes.
Cox said this year's competition, called the Christmas Bird Count, will be Dec. 20. Members of the Jayhawk Audubon Society will participate in the count and search in a circle that has a seven-and-a-half mile extension from the National Guard Armory.
One of the rewards of bird watching is spotting a rarely seen or exotic species. Cox said the most exotic bird he had seen was the bald eagles.
Johnston said he always got an extra charge when seeing tropical species such as lizards and snakes.
Two classes in ornithology are currently being taught at the University in the department of biology. One is an introductory Outreach course and the other is a more professional orientation of the subject for seniors and graduate students.
The department of ornithology in the Museum of Natural History at Dyce Hall houses approximately 50,000 bird skins and
20,000 bird skeletons, Johnston said. He described this as a medium-sized collection. Bird skins are stuffed but not mounted, and are classified in drawers.
Bird watching and hunting would seem to be antibatical pastimes, but Cox said he and many other bird watchers weren't opposed to hunting if it was done properly. License fees and contributions from hunters have helped create and preserve many wetlands and woodlands for bird sanctuaries Cox said.
Johnston recalled one instance in which his bird watching led to a run in with the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC). He was doing an population study of birds in California that involved the trapping of birds with its expensive traps that be made himself.
People passing through the woods began stealing or destroying the traps to the extent that Johnston couldn't continue the study. Finally he hit up the idea of putting signs on the traps saying, "Radioactive! Do Not touch!"
His traps untouched for some time, but one day on his way to check them he met a man from the AEC with a gierer counter who said he had received complaints from the local populace and the county sherrif.
"I was reuked pretty soundly for my lack of regard for the public relations effect of my hoax," Johnston said, "and I had to remove the signs."
BILL AND TOMMY
Eyes to the sky
Members of the Jayhawk Audubon Society are watching out for their feathered friends. Jeff Cox (left), president of the Society,
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW and Kerry Altenbernd, publicity chairman, took time out from studies yesterday to spy on those that fly in the vicinity of Potter Lake.
Travel and Recreation
October 28, 29, 30 Kansas Union Ballroom
THE MUSICIAN
The fair affords the University and Lawrence Community the opportunity to visit with representatives from various travel and recreation services, pick up free literature, view free films and recreation demonstrations and attend an information session on foreign travel and study abroad.
Skiing
Today's Activities
11 a.m.-4 p.m. Free Travel Films in the Council Room.
11 a.m.-9 p.m. Ballroom Parlors open to the General Public. Displays, Travel Brochures, Representatives from airlines, Local Travel Agencies, AmTrak, Cycle shops,
Hang Glider School, Recreation Associations and organizations.
VIDEO TRAFFIC
Free Travel Films in the Council Room at the Union. Films shown cover such topics as skiing in the Swiss Alps, travel in New Zealand and touring Japan.
Discount of $0.50 off SUA's Breckenridge Ski Trip, January 3-9, offered by SUA Travel.
An Escape Weekend for two at the Marriott Hotel in Kansas City, offered by Ports Unlimited Travel Agency. Includes one night's accommodations, dinner and breakfast and round trip limousine transportation.
FREE
Register For These Exciting Prizes!
Free Trip to Germany, offered by Maupintour Travel Agency. Includes round trip air transportation, accommodations and car rental.
Wednesday Night Program
Presentations given by the Language Institute, SUA and Maupintour on foreign travel and study abroad. Anyone interested in foreign travel or study should come to investigate the travel options open to them through the University and local agencies.In the Jayhawk Room at the Kansas Union, 7-9 p.m., October 29.
Thursday Night Program
Outdoor recreation demonstrations on a variety of subjects: hang gliding, scuba diving, rappelling. In the Ballroom at the Kansas Union, 7-9 p.m., October 30.
3.
Sponsored by SUA Outdoor Recreation & Travel
2
Thursday, October 9, 1975
University Daily Kansan
DIGEST From the Associated Press
DIGEST From the Associated Press
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Energy plan rejected
WASHINGTON - The Senate refused by a 10-vote margin yesterday to accept a compromise energy plan that would raise natural gas prices in exchange for a tax increase.
The 55-45 vote against the proposal indicated that Democrats and Republicans still are far apart in their efforts to write a long-range energy policy. And the defeated questions about whether Congress will be able to avert a severe natural gas shortage forecast for 14 states this winter.
Pearson who has a natural gas bill before the Senate, said he expected more requirements, from the opposition to change it.
"I think today's vote shows that the Senate is willing to use our bill as a vehicle to find a solution to this winter's emergency," Pearson said.
Rejection of the compromise energy plan was called a victory by Sen. James B. Peargon, R-Kan.
compromise sought
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Ford administration yesterday asked to convince Congress that President Ford will veto any tax cut next year if a spending ceiling
While the administration talked of reducing taxes, the House Ways and Means Committee voted to increase them for more than 20 million Americans who tenorize
The committee voted 17-6 to ban federal income tax deductions for state and local taxes paid on gasoline and motor oil. Committee staffers described the move as an energy conservation measure and said it would raise government revenues by $75 million annually.
Treasury Secretary William Simon declined to discuss the possibility of compromise in a meeting with Republican congressmen. "No ceiling, no tax cut," he said.
Refugees seize 14
BUENOS AIRES -Chile refugees protesting their living conditions in Argentina seized 14 hostages in the United Nations refugee commission office. The Argentine government agreed last night to give them safe passage out of the country.
--your ArtCarved Ring by John Roberts is worthy of the occasion.
TACO-TICO SPECIAL FRI.-SAT.-SUN.
FLEETWATER
TACOS 5 for $1.00
COORS ON TAP
Glass 25°
Pitcher $1.25
2340 Iowa
841-4218
T A C O
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2344 ft.
TACO
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--your ArtCarved Ring by John Roberts is worthy of the occasion.
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OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS
House gives approval for 200 Sinai monitors
Lawmakers made it clear that they didn't want U.S. combat forces used to get the civilian technician out of the area. In Egypt and Israel forces.
WASHINGTON AP) -The House gave overwhelming approval last night to a plan that commits 200 American technicians to monitor the Sinai peace accord.
Martha Keys, D-Kan., voted against the resolution.
Before final approval, the House approved 125 to 71 an amendment by Rep. Bob Eckhardt, D-Tex., which specified that the commitment grant President Ford no authority he didn't already have in using a cell phone to rescue the American technicians.
Eckhardt said "we want to make it clear we have not given blanket authority to go to
Congress should make clear, Eckhardt told the House, that it wasn't writing anything comparable to the Gulf of Tonkin to be committed U.S. forces to the Vietnam War.
The House also overwhelmingly rejected
Any danger of the technicians involving the United States in a Middle East war "is very remote." House International Affairs Committee Thomas E. Morgan, D.Pa. told the house.
a two-year limit on the technicians' stint in the Sinai.
An almost identical resolution, including the condition that technicians be pulled out immediately if war erupts, is scheduled for Senate consideration Thursday and Friday.
Morgan said the technicians would be protected by 5,000 U.N. troops in the buffer zone and Rep. Dante B. Fasell, D-Fla, said the would be the first to know of war.
"We think they'i be smart enough to get out of the way," Fasell said.
"But what your prediction is wrong?" asked Rep. Henry B. Gonzales, D-Tex. "Will the United States be obligated to go in and rescue them?"
"There is that small element of gamble, there's no question about it." Fasell said. He agreed that that would be a decision the President would have to make at the time.
Anniversary Celebration
Cash & Carry
Friday &
Saturday
Sweetheart Roses
—12 for 1.99
Regular Roses
—12 for 3.66
Daisies
—10 for $ 9 9^{c} $
Carnations
—10 for 1.99
Come in and pick up coupon for a free green plant from THE GARDEN CENTER
$ y h_{E} $
THE Flower Shoppe On the Flower Corner
Flower Shoppe
11th and Massachusetts
841-0800
SURE, SURE...
YOU JUST HAPPENED
TO HAVE YOUR
THUMB OUT
---
Wouldn't It Be Easier Just To Rent A Car? Come By and Rent That New Ford.
| Make | Daily | Weekly | Weekend Rates |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| PINTO | $9.00 plus 94 per mile | $50.00 plus 94 per mile | $7.00 plus 94 per mile |
| MAVERICK | $10.50 plus 104 per mile | $65.00 plus 104 per mile | $7.50 plus 104 per mile |
| MUSTANG TORINO | $11.00 plus 114 per mile | $70.00 plus 114 per mile | $9.00 plus 114 per mile |
| GRANADA PICK-UP | $11.00 plus 114 per mile | $70.00 plus 114 per mile | $9.00 plus 114 per mile |
| LTD | $12.00 plus 124 per mile | $11.00 plus 124 per mile | $10.00 plus 124 per mile |
| VISION WAGON | $13.00 plus 134 per mile | $80.00 plus 134 per mile | $11.00 plus 134 per mile |
JOHN HADDOCK FORD ADMIRAL LEASING AND RENTAL 23rd and Alabama
SINCE
RENT-A-CAR
843-3500
Ford
RENT-A-TRUCK
BAR-B-Q
Dinners:
RIBS $3.85
CHOICE BEEF $2.65
CHICKEN $2.55
PORK LOIN $2.65
(Dinners include salad, potato, bread &
butter)
"Home Cooked Family Owned"
CHUCK WAGON
2408 Iowa
(Next Door to Mothers)
Transcendental
Meditation program ™
TIME
Meditation: The Answer
to all Your
Problems?
The Maharishi
to all four Problems?
Free Public Lectures at
2301 Massachusetts-TM Center
Friday, October 10 7:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 11 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 12 3:00 p.m.
Sponsored by Students International Meditation Society
Non-profit Educational Organization
842-1225
MEDIA WI
Oriental jackets
ally with the
all-American
jean in the
fashion
detente
of the
season.
The quilt of the East
mixes with the comfort
of the West in a new
expression for your
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Transpend the
commonplace at Carousel
MON-THURS. 10:00-8:30
FRI. AND SAT. 10:00-6:00
CAROUSEL CHARGE
BANKAMERICARD
MASTER CHARGE
car House
MALLS SHOPPIN
Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Thursday, October 9, 1975
3
Heating problems left in the cold
By THERESE MENDENHALL
Some Lawrence families will be able to have heating problems out in the cold this winter. They will be home repair project sponsored by the East Central Technical Community Action Bureau (ETAC).
A contract granting ECKAN $60,000 from the city for the project was presented yesterday to the Lawrence City Commission by Kyle Andregg, city-community
development director and Greg Stock,
ECRAN will the commission will vote
Stock said the winterization project would begin Oct. 18, with a "Winterization Day." The organizations had volunteered to help with the winterization and Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity and the local Plumbers and Steamfitters Union. He said they are not in charge of ECKAN board of directors also would help.
The contract between ECKAN and the
city states that houses to be winterized must be single-family homes within the city limits. Persons who apply for the assistance must be both the owner and the occupant of a building or the household of one person will be $240 a month and $60 a month will be allowed for each additional person. The contract said the house could be given to the elderly and handicapped.
Stock said the volunteers would install storm windows, calking, weather stripping
New frontier inevitable, prof says
Staff Writer
ECKAN, an organization funded by the federal Office of Economic Opportunity, serve six east central counties counties: Dallas, Franklin, Lyon, Miami and Osage.
and insulation in houses designated by the ECKAN board of directors.
McKinney teaches a course called "Exploration and Discovery from Columbus" in Manhattan. He said ex-Columbus students of today have changed much since the time of Columbus.
By LORRAINE JOHNSON
Future historians will view today's space exploration as historians now view the explorations of Columbus, Lewis McKinley, associate professor of history, said yesterday.
Norris Hetherington, assistant professor of history, said that exploration during the time of Columbus didn't demand as much tuition or money as space exploration.
MKINNEN SAID THE space astronauts were in a different situation than early man.
McKinney said it was difficult for people living today to understand the importance of space exploration. He said Apollo 11, the first space module to land on the moon, took man to a new new world, not just a new country as Columbus explored.
HE SAID EXPLORATION of the oceans and outspace space was inevitable because of the new technology.
"I have to agree with many of the science fiction writers and others," McKinney said. "It is our destiny to search out other worlds and to meet other forms of life."
Columbus had the idea that he could get to the East by going in the opposite direction travelers had been going, McKinney said. That was his idea and Columbus executed his own plan. Astronauts are executing plans conceived by others.
McKinney said astronauts were still a valuable part of the exploration of the universe. He said he thought the space program was as much as Columbus risked his life.
McKinney said there would be more great explorations in the future.
He said motivation for early explorers included a search for knowledge and, for some explorers, a desire for glory. Some explorers, such as Columbus, really thought their ideas were correct and wanted to prove these ideas, he said.
Hetherington said most of these reasons for exploration still exist.
In 1958 when Dwight Eisenhower proposed the creation of what was to become the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the program was justified on the grounds of new opportunities for scientific observation, military defense, national prestige and man's urge to explore, Hetherington said.
McKINNEY SAID THE motivation for exploring was a central theme for his course, which he has taught since 1970.
"We also want the student to experience as much as possible what the explorer was doing."
To accomplish this, many of the reading assignments for the class are from the journals of the explorers. The class, which was last taught in January, includes a semester, also watches many films.
The money ECKAN requested is part of the city's community development grant, which is a federal grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development through the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974.
One of the films is Capt. Robert Scott's 1972 expedition to the South Pole, McKinney
Andregg said the city would still have $110,000 in the housing rehabilitation section of the community development budget if $50,000 was given to ECKAN.
FREE CONCERT Potter's Pond Sunday, Oct. 12 2-6 p.m. Featuring: CARGO THE BARKING GECKOS
Using a grant from the Office of Economic Opportunity ECKAN has winterized about 80 homes for about $100 each since the beginning of the project in February. At least 50 more homes will be built in January. The project began in January because no more than $1,000 of the $80,000 from the city development fund can be spent on any house.
THE $10,000 WILL BE used to hire people to repair houses. The work will be considered vocational training in home repair. The students will receive $160 for two weeks' work.
ECKAN is also seeking funds for housing rehabilitation from the county community development grant. Stock said, Douglas Gunnigan, a professor at Illinois Institute for $80,000 for housing rehabilitation.
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
In Case of Bad Weather—Union Ballroom
SUA
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
--a rose is a rose is a rose
10% Off
Any Merchandise
in Store.
Thurs., Fri.
and Sat.
EVE'S
APPLE
809 W. 23rd St.
(Next to McDonald's)
OPEN SUNDAY 843-7430
1:00-5:00
Lawrence, Ks.
Advertise in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
--a rose is a rose is a rose
BICYCLE SALE!
11
★ Every bicycle marked down
★1000 bikes available from our K.C. warehouse
★ Price includes professional assembly
★ All bikes carry Ride-On's famous guarantee
Example sale price:
Peugeot UO-8
Mfg. Suggested
RIDE-ON BICYCLES
$159^{95}$
Ride-On Regular
1401 Massachusetts 843-8484
Open Mon.-Fri. 10:30-6:00, Sat. 10:00-5:00
$149^{95}$
Now
$ 129^{95} $
Similar savings on all bikes
★ Also-10% off on our quality hiking boots and down-filled vests and parkas
Hurry-Sale ends Saturday, October 11
--a rose is a rose is a rose
5a week
movies
HINA GATE. SHIRLEY TEMPLE WEEK. PAWNBRU
SIVE MY REGARDS TO BROADWAY. THE OTHER LOVE
WIND TO JAVA. COPACABANA. LA DOLCE. VITA. HIGH NO
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AMERICAN CREATION CO., INC.
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Spray mist
perfume oil
dusting powder
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also:
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Revlon Helena Duberry Max Factor Bonnie Bell Ultrasheen Fabrege Houbigant Coty
Headquarters for:
★Dr. Bronner's Soap
★Dannon Yogurt
★Kefir Milk
★Alvita Teas
★Hain Foods & Oil
"Visit our extensive Health Food Section"
24 hour emergency prescription answering service Free prescription delivery 843-O200
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.46
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
October 29.1975
A LITTLE COOler
Wednesday
A LITTLE COOLER
PENNSYLVANIA
Photo by JOHN P. THARIF
Pulling contest
A two-person rolling team dig in, dragging a weighted sled at a palling match Sunday. The tractor is used to pull the sled back into position for the next team.
Ponies compete in pulling matches
By JOHN P. THARP
Staff Writer
They came from northeast Kansas, wearing yards of denim, cowboy boots and hats and Coop and Acco Seed caps and driving pickup trucks loaded with Shetland ponies. The pitkest were common ponies, but "pulling ponies" specially trained to draug a weighted sled competitively at matches like the one held Sunday in East Lawrence.
Nineteen double-horse teams yanked a concrete-laden sledge before a crowd of about 10. Matches are usually held at county and state fairs or at events like Baldwin's Maple Leaf festival, but this meet was a "wildcat" invitational. The prize money ($5) came
from $6 entry fees. Sponsored pulls have purses of up to $2,000.
"I pull for the sport and to put on a show," said 21-year-old Ola farmer Gary Johnson from under his oversized poka-dok hat. "He's been piling has been piling with them for six years."
The ponies, noticeably smaller than standard farm horses, are weighed at the beginning of each match and range in weight from 200 to 400 pounds. Primary sled weight is then figured according to the horse's height. It usually starts abound 150 pounds.
Miniature powerhouses, the ponies dig eight hooves in the ground and surge forward, dragging the dead weight the six-foot minimum distance.
The harnessed teams are led to the front of the sled, and one man, "the hooker,"
secures the harness hook to the sled's cable.
His partner, "the driver," who is usually the owner-trainer, holds the steeds back and extends his arms. he flips these reins, the action erupts.
"Horses are smart; they know their stuff," said Ray Bendort, Louisburg. "You gotta have a lead horse (pony who breaks the water) to be safe, but the whole thing, less in the driver."
Bendorf explained that the driver had to know when to start his horses and that he would only start if he was ready.
would prompt the pennies. However, th.y.
cannot be touched. No rump slaps or
touching are allowed.
All teams rotate through the first round, then weight is added. As the pounds increase, the distance shortens. A team that lasts a longer distance than the last team moves to the sled is the winner.
The Jayhawk Pony Pulling Club is a Lawrence group with 90 members, and averages 25-35 teams at a club match. Warm weather allows two or three matches a weekend, and members remember many days of rushing from one contest to another. As the weather worsens, the number of matches dips, and they are moved inside
Commission hears employe group
Ralph Bayles Sr. said he pulls "just for the sport."
The Lawrence City Commission last night had a public hearing regarding recognition of the United Public Employees Associations Lawrence as a collective bargaining coalition.
BJAN KENNETH LOUDEN
The coalition includes the Lawrence Association of Firefighters, the Lawrence Sanitation Employees Association, the Lawrence Street Department Employee Association and the Lawrence Police Officers Association.
Carl Torneden, a member of the firefighters association, said that since 1967 when his organization was chartered and first asked for recognition it had never gone to the AFL-CIO for help. Even in 1973, when there was a slowdown because the league was equal with policemen, he said, the group still didn't ask for national help.
NONE OF THESE associations had been recognized by the city commission as a collective bargaining agent. Under state law an association must be recognized as a bargaining organization to be required to negotiate employment practices and conditions with city officials.
need for employees to talk with their national associates.
"NONE OF US refused to answer any kind of call then, except escaping cats out of trees," he said. "We have been more than concerning the issue of recognition."
Darrell Ward, a member of the Lawrence Education Association, said his group favored recognition of the city employees association.
The education association was recognized by the state in 1970 as a collective bar by the state.
"We seldom hear of the good benefits of local organization," he said. "Negotiation doesn't always mean conflict. It means a compromise that makes dignity and the worth of individuals."
Bayles, a retired steelworker who began pulling a year and a half ago, became interested through his son, Ralph Bayles Jr., who has been competing for 10 years.
WARD SAID the school system was better because of negotiation.
Commissioner Fred Pence asked why it
"It's all in the sport," Bayles Jr. said, echoing his father's sentiments about his truck accident in November 2015.
See Union page five
Pullers figure the sport started in Kansas around 1959. Besides competition, there is a lot of horsetrading going on at the meets. One puller claims never to leave with the same horses he came with. Small side bides are also made, usually under a dollar.
A Louisburg woman who goes to all the matches with her husband said, "Some of us have gone back.
Some meets have a special "powder puff" match in which women compete.
She works the horses at home and said she a team to teach her garden last week.
Alvin Samuels, president of the firefighters association, delivered the opening address to the commission. He said the workers had joined in common cause to save lives.
Union beer sale approved by city
By BRUCESPENCE
David Katzman, associate professor of history, said he favored an employees coalition. Katzman said, it was in the best interest of the employee, especially the boss, he said, when local unions are weak, outside forces such as international labor unions come into cities.
The city employees want to organize as a completely local organization. There are nine cities in Kansas that have collective bargaining units. They all follow the rules of Relations Board (PEERB). PEERB presides over elections of union leaders and mediation between city employees and city officials.
Much discard that is facing large cities can be avoided, he said, by allowing the employees to join in a local organization. Samuels said the city employers could provide the workers advice if they were exposed to the city management as a collective bargaining coalition.
Staff Writer
Mayor Barkley has said he is indebted to the FBI and the police belonged to the Fraternal Order of Police. Both are national unions. Thus, he said, it is unrealistic to say Lawrence can work as a law enforcement officer.
Crowds, however, still caused some problems Saturday, but last night the city had a series of brewer regulations another chance. The commission had indicated when the new provisions were considered last month, that it would take harris action if the new regulations were implemented.
BUFORD WATSON, city manager, said that he had talked with police since last Saturday and that they had indicated to him that the way it had been handled then was best.
AFTER SATURDAY'S homecoming game, measures were taken to enforce city commission orders in an attempt to contain the crowds at the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th St., and the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio St., but there were still some problems.
The city commission had ordered a fence built around land adjacent to the Wheel; more uniform policemen to arrest those who were crossing the 14th Street to traffic. The city commission also had asked John Wooden, the Wheel's owner, to place in employees a neighbor's yard to keep crowds off that property and ensure that driver wasn't carried off the Wheel's property.
The Kansas Union last night got the go ahead to sell beer when the Lawrence City Commission approved the Union's application for a cereal malt beer license.
With that move the city commission hopes to alleviate some of the crowd problems at two taverns at 14th and Ohio streets, which were damaged by flooding, to the city commission for three years.
Watson said that the police chief told him that some people had carried beer across the street but that there had been no property damage.
Watson said he thought that Wooden had done all he could to comply with the city
LAWRENCE 'city employees have said they don't want to organize according to PEERB. They think they have the resources to organize without state control.
Commissioner Donald Bunsa said, "I think we'd better approve this license quick to allow our staff to work."
Bimsa said, "I told you in the first place that the policemen would not be able to
Katzman said a strong local union would keep out the national unions and prevent the
orders and that it it was ordered and that it was ordered that it could not have been controlled that it had been held
If people continue to carry beer across the streets, he said, there might be some more problems. He suggested suggestions. He said that police had been instructed to use good judgement in writing
Mayor Barkley Clark said that one complaint he had heard was that the alumni had nothing to return to since the city cracked down on beer establishments.
The commission approved the beer license even though several structural changes in the Union that are necessary to pass inspection haven't been carried out.
Watson said that Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, said he wanted to sell beer before Saturday's football game and that was why Burge had requested the license approval before the require work was done. Watson said that he would need that the work would be done, Watson said, but the work couldn't have been completed in time for this week's commission meeting.
"WE HAVE four days of really thorough homework to do," he said.
Earlier yesterday, Burge said that if the necessary equipment wasn't ready in time for Saturday's game, the sales would begin within the next two weeks.
Beer will be only in the Union Dell and the Prairie Room, and beer sales will be prohibited in Memorial Stadium, in Allen campus or campus-services except the Union.
Bear hours in the Deli will be from 11 a.m.
to 6:30 p.m. weekdays and from 11 a.m. to
2 p.m. on Saturday, and in the Prairie Room
from 11 a.m. to 12 p.m. weekdays.
paper cups or glasses, not in cans or bottles. He said that the Memorial Corporation Bank and its employees were studying the possibility of developing an area in the Union where beer could be sold
He said that he didn't expect Union beer sales to greatly affect the problems of this market.
KU student 1 of 2 charged with kidnapping and assault
The men, Robert E. Swanson, Bavaria freshman, and Michael Stuart McNamara, Heart, Tex., were being held last night in the Douglas County Justice on $20,000 bond each to the plaintiffs for the waived charges and $5,000 for the acquired assault charges.
Two 18-year-old men, one a University of Kansas student, were charged with the kidnapping and aggravated assault vesterday of a Lawrence woman.
The two men were apparently hitchhiking and were picked up by the woman about 9:15 yesterday morning, according to a witness. The man was with a knife, the police said. The woman with a knife, the police said.
woman reportedly escaped from the men after hitting a median strip near 150h and Iowa streets, running from the car and helping help from other motorists.
The suspects were arrested at the Union
Bus Depot, 63 Massachusetts St., at about 2
pm.
The men were arraigned yesterday afternoon in Douglas County Court. Mike Elwell, county court judge, set a motion to hear the case in the for 2,30 p.m. nov. 6.
Richard Stanwix, Lawrence chief of police, said details of the incident were still sketchy and the incident was still under investigation.
Closed SenEx meetings legal, counsel says
By SHERIBALDWIN
Staff Writer
SenEx and other University of Kansas governance bodies don't fall under the Kansas Open Meetings Law, according to Mike Davis, university general counsel.
"It's because they don't direct receive or expand public funds," Davis said.
Questions remain, however, about whether Student Senate funds could be considered 'public funds' and university governance bodies receiving those funds could be considered "supported in part by public funds."
THE KANASS OPEN MEETINGS LAW states in part that meetings and business transactions by legislative and administrative bodies and agencies of the state, "receiving or expending and supported in whole or in part by public funds shall be open to the public and no binding by such bodies shall be by secret bellow."
Ed Rolfs, student body president, said that any group, organization or corporation receiving Student Senate funds was subject to the same laws as the Sarasaga Law, according to the Senate Code.
Zuther said SenEx and FacEx were open unless committee assignments and chairmanships were to be discussed, or any requests for the request requested to have the meeting closed.
Gerhard Zuther, chairman of SenEx and PacEx, said that open meeting policy was "one of the few things we can do."
Matters that might suffer from
HE SAID THAT THE TWO committees didn't fall under the Kansas Open Meeting Law because they weren't policy-making and that they make no final decisions.
premature publicity and visitors who consented to appear before SenEx or FacEx only if the meeting would be closed are called. Otherwise that would close a meeting. Zither said.
He said SenEx was essentially a regulatory board that guided the flow of information.
Zuther said SenEx closed its meetings to everybody except invited guests.
He said he did not favor allowing reporters in the room while sessions were closed, even with stipulations that the room be filled with no notes and report none of the content.
"We don't make the policy, but give
them permission only." Father said.
Even if a reporter's presence in a closed meeting would afford him a better understanding of the situation and possibly prevent misinterpretation, Zuther said, Senxib or PacXeb would have no power to suit if the reporter breeched the agreement.
Adrienne Hyle, SenEx member, said she thought a reporter would obtain no more understanding of an issue by observing a closed session than the information that could be obtained from committee members after the meeting.
"THERE ARE PROS and cons to have them three during closed sessions," she added. "They're not like ours."
Hyle said the presence of outsiders in closed sessions would definitely inhibit discussion and could possibly cause three or four decisions to come out of a meeting
James Seaver, chairman of SenEx from 1972 to 1974, said that when he first became chairman, the policy was that the meetings were not unless specifically opened for some reason.
SenEx began to experiment with open meetings at the beginning of his second term as chairman, Seaver said. Student Senate members were welcome, but non-Senators had to be agreed upon by the committee, he said.
GRAUDAILY THE POLICY changed to its current provisions that meetings are closed only when committee members are present. Membership is considered, Seaver said.
"We didn't feel that we were subject to the state meeting law, but we pretty well went along with open meeting ideas anyway," he said.
The question of whether funds such as salaries for members of University governance groups could be considered partial support was central to the issue.
The Student Senate allocates $250 to each student member of SenEx. Positions such as the chairman of StudEx are also salaried.
"SenEx meets more often and more regularly than most University groups." Hyle said. "The Student Senate felt that student members of SenEx should at some
paint be compensated for the time and effort spent."
Rolfs said, "Where individuals are paid for participation on groups not complying, there would seem to be some possible problems with laws and regulations of the Student Senate."
If University governance groups aren't under the open meeting law, Rolfs said, "we will have to go."
He said that all discussions of issues such as those by the Commission on Quality of Instruction in Classroom Teaching could have taken place behind closed doors, but that the Student Senate followed open meeting practices as a rule.
Devis said that he didn't want to give an advisory opinion on the issue.
The Student Advisory Board might want to request a ruling from Curt Schneider, a former president of the college.
FURTHER ACTION could include asking Davis for an opinion and talking with the Student Advisory Board, which is made up of students from the state schools. Rafa's said.
"If someone who is directly related (SenEx, StudEx, Student Senate) requests an opinion, I'll be glad to render one," he said.
Rolfs said that he would decide sometime today whether further action should be taken. If it is necessary, he said he would consult with the Student Senate vice president and treasurer and the chairmen of committees such as finance and auditing, and student rights, privileges and responsibilities.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said that there was no general policy concerning access to information at KU, but that each major committee made its own policy.
Bruce Woner, chairman of StudEx, said in a committee had never had a closed discussion.
"Reporters are often times gracious enough to leave out things we say which may include profanities and the like," Woner said.
"AS LONG AS it's accurate information, I
*don't have any bones to pick even if I have*
*everything I know."
Werner said that in only a few cases, such as elections of committee chairmen, have Senate committees ever closed their meetings.
"Very seldom is a reason that a student meeting should ever be closed," he
Woner said he thought groups such as SenEx frequently closed their meetings to make things seem more important than they really were.
" half of the time they have no reason to close those meetings at all," he said.
Woner said that if a committee had done its work on an individual basis, it could work out sensitive points in personal conversations before and after the meetings.
"Of course, there are exceptions to the rule," he said.
2
University Daily Kansan
DIGEST From the Associated Press
INSTITUTE OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
No bias seen in loans
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert F. Bennett said yesterday he has no present plans to suggest legislation aimed at eliminating discrimination against women
He said he was personally unaware that any problems existed, and it had been his experience that persons with good credit ratings, whether male or female,
However, he said he would look at a report prepared by the Kansas advocacy committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.
That report, made public here yesterday, contends that a study shows Kansas women do computer discrimination when they apply for credit.
Shin plans deal reported
WASHINGTON—The federal government authorized a private firm to sell Russia plans for a sophisticated new cargo ship for $1 million, although the United States contributed over $75 million to design and build the vessel, investigators reported yesterday.
The U.S. Maritime Administration issued the license which permitted the company to export the design on data on two LYKES-SEABEAR ships to the Soviets.
The Senate's permanent investigations subcommittee report said the Lykes Brothers Steamship and New Orleans later tried to charge the U.S. Navy 22 men, who plowed a plane.
Ford to testifu this week
SACRAMENTO-A federal judge reaffirmed yesterday his order that President Ford give a videotaped statement in the trial of Lyndon B. Johnson. Yomne-Ramie, former White House counsel, said she was not a witness.
Fromme, 27, is charged with attempting to murder Ford as he walked through Capitol park here Sept. 5. She winked the President to counter testimony that a click
Earlier in San Francisco, another federal judge entered a not guilty plea for Sara Jane Moore, also charged with trying to force Ford. The plea was entered in the federal court on April 18.
The judge said he wanted to get the trial under way as quickly as possible in accordance with the federal Speedy Trial Act, which requires that if a person is being without ball for the sole purpose of a trial, the trial must get under way within 90 days after the arrest.
Franco may be replaced
MADRID—The Spanish government will decide within 24 hours whether to make Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon temporary head of state to fill the vacuum created during Gen. Francisco Franco's stubborn fight against death, a highly placed source said yesterday.
Latest medical bulletins on the 82-year-old Franco, who has suffered repeated heart attacks and complications in the last 12 days, indicated doctors had stabilized his condition after a critical night of heart failure and internal hemorrhage.
If Franco doesn't temporarily sign power over to Prince Juan Carlos, his hand-picked heir, Arias Navarro can invoke Article 11 of the constitution and send a letter to parliament to inform it that Franco's "infirmity" has necessitated a handover to the prince.
Special tax rebate killed
WASHINGTON—A controversial proposal to give some financially troubled companies a special $1.4-billion tax refund next year was in effect killed last night.
By a 36 to 11 vote, the committee decided to delay action for six months on the plan to give a special tax rebate to such firm as Lockheed Aircraft Corp. (LAC), which has been designated a priority in the fund.
Earlier yesterday, the committee voted to extend a general business tax cut of more than $3 billion annually through 1980.
The tax reduction for business was part of the law that went into effect last March to reduce taxes and stimulate economic recovery. The committee already has approved a plan for extending personal tax cuts, amounting to $12.7 billion, in 1976.
McCall's
That Yourself in our Shoes
HANDICAPPED LIFE
Downtown Lawrence
It's a boot,
It's a wedge,
It's a great!
There are boots, and there are boots! This is the best kind—wedged, with a slice of crepe sole and easy-on side zip. That's the kind of boot that makes you glad winter's coming. Antique Tante Latigo.
FANFARES®
WASHINGTON (AP)—Egypt has decided to ask the United States and the Soviet Union for a resumption of the Geneva peace conference, it was learned yesterday as president Anwar Sadat held another round of talks with President Gerald Ford.
Diplomatic sources said it would take about two months to get the Middle East under control, and then the meantime, Sadat expects the administration to make one more effort through Secretary of State Henry A. Browne in an Israeli withdrawal on the Syrian front.
Egypt wants Geneva conference to resume
It was also learned that the administration has decided to ask Congress
Marijuana legality will be discussed
The decriminalization of marijuana will be discussed tomorrow in Topeka at a hearing the Kansas Legislature's Interim Judiciary Committee.
Expected to appear at the meeting are: Lance Burr, former assistant attorney general; Derek Berkowitz, Douglas County Superior Court Judge; Nicholas Ninger Foundation; E. J. Wolzasek, chairman of the department of pharmacology at the KU Medical Center, Judge Bernhard Stern, Chief Magistrate Court; and James Concannon, Washburn University Law professor.
CATFISH BAR & GRILL
12th & Oread
At a White House meeting, Sadat urged Ford to relax the administration's resistance to Falesine Liberation Organization participation in Geneva.
"I urge a dialogue between the United States and the Palestinians," Sadat told reporters later, "because the United States is the main party in this game."
for $750 million in economic aid for Egypt. An addition $8.1 million for Egypt in farm commodities, under the Food for Peace program, will be provided by the Agriculture Department.
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3 to 6 Mon.-Fri.
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He said the peace process would take a long time because of Israeli arrogance and because they wanted to impose their terms on the Arabs.
Lighting his pipe in a session at Blair House, Sadat paused and then said, "This is not what you need."
TILL 9:00 DAILY
He stressed the need for a U.S. initiative on the Palestinian issue.
'If we are going to achieve any global
•KU SQUASH RACQUETS CLUB•
•KU SQUASH RACQUETS CLUB
Opening Meeting
YELLOW
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If you already play, or are interested in learning to play, a demanding, intense court game, attend our opening meeting.
7:30 p.m.Wednesday October 29th
Place: Kansas Union Regionalist
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featureting a discussion of the game; a 16 mm. film; assessment of KU squash tournament plans; coffee and doughnuts provided.
for details call 841-5315 or 841-3279
BIG OCTOBER SPECIALS
Oct. 16 to Oct. 31
5 p.m. Till Closing Nightly
Bull & Boar
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OPEN FACE BEEF SANDWICHES
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solution for this problem it will not be reached without the Palestinians."
Ford had said at a White House dinner night that Monday night that he can be no peace until the legitimate interests of all peoples in the Middle East are taken fairly into
account." The administration still opposes a United Nations seat for the PLO until it is approved.
Satard urged Ford to strike "a deal" with the Palestinians and start a "dialogue" with them.
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MONO
4
Thursday, October 9.1975
University Daily Kansan
COMMENT Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
COMMENT Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
DRUG line needed
The Dial DRUG line, which made its debut in Lawrence in April, was recently criticized by the Lawrence City Commission for reporting that heroin was being used by Lawrence High School students.
Some members of the commission thought that by giving out such information they could describe certain drug "fantastic" digital DRUG line would promote drug abuse.
The drug line could be much more effective in meeting its goal of providing drug information if its operators took a less floppy attitude toward drug abuse. However, the need for the drug line is unquestionable.
The fact is that some people are going to use drugs, regardless of what a drug line is.
A recorded message that says heroin is available to high school students won't cause those who have never considered trying heroin to say, "Wow! I think I'll try getting high on that for a change."
If a high school student is actually using heroin, he is doing it to compensate for inadecquacies in his life. When such inadecquacies exist and the tendency to abuse narcotics is present at age 16 or 17, the existence of drug use will have no effect on whether the student actually tries hard drugs.
There are two ways of dealing with a problem. One is to try to bring it to attention, or to bring it to the attention of someone else.
By seeking to suppress the Dial DRUG line, the city commission is advocating the second alternative. If heroin abuse is a problem in the high school, it won't be solved if people refuse to admit or recognize it.
The Dial DRUG line is actually
rendering a public service by bringing the problem out in the open. If there are heroin addicts in the high school, they won't be helped unless people become aware that there is heroin abuse in the high school.
Drug laws will never be universally obeyed because they deal with questions of ethics. If someone sees nothing wrong with smoking pot or taking acid, chances are that the existence of a law won't stop him from doing it.
The city commission can deny the fact that people in Lawrence use drugs, but the denial doesn't change the fact that they do. This isn't a utopia where everyone is a law abiding citizen. Some laws here and there live by their own subjective ethics rather than a universal code of morals.
Since drug use can't realistically be controlled, the next best thing to do is to protect the lives of those who choose to use drugs.
Although lethal drugs are sold infrequently in Lawrence, there is the possibility that someone out to make a few bucks might substitute strychnine for mescaline. The Dial DRUG line frequent people from taking their last trip
Even though drug users are breaking the law, they are human beings with a right to live. If the drug line can save the life, it will have rendered a service.
Although perhaps the format of the Dial DRUG line should be changed, it shouldn't be discontinued. If the city commission votes to discontinue the drug line, it will be doing a great disservice to the community.
Jain Penner Contributing Writer
Jain Penner
Nothing about Gerald Ford's present actions reminds him of the past, so free is McClory's nature of that "corrosive cynicism deplored by men of Kaiser, who is actually the committee's adversary in the present struggle.
When Richard Nixon in the spring of 1974 ignored requests and defied subpoenas for his tapes and sent the committee to remove him, he heavily deceived transcripts, McCloyne amplied him.
So now he thinks it is wonderful that the CIA has spewed four volumes of materials to the committee and busy until the committee expires next January. The fact that it is not what the committee wants does not trouble McClary. "Always looks on the bright side."
Mary McGrory
WASHINGTON - The House Select Committee on Intelligence has the same problem as the House impeachment committee. His party is a fussy, amiable, building, sixterm Republican representative who, despite searing experiences with Richard Nixon, cannot bring himself to believe that any Republican president must keep anything from Conress.
"I am an optimist," he said sumily during the committee's deliberations about the next steen.
McClory's chairman, silver-haired, razor-tongued Otis Pike of New York, shook his head,
Just as he once saw Richard Nixon's stonewalling as a kind of military threat, Mr. McClory today divines in the CIA's refusal to provide information genuine desire to lead to its destruction.
Amnesiac stalls action
ground his teeth and broke into McClory's raptures.
"The reason I don't think we will get the material is because we haven't got it," Pike said sardonically.
McClory, in the end voted for two counts of impeachment, kept warning the committee that confrontation could be avoided. They also members go to the full House for support of their subpoenaes, they might lose. And if they go to court, they could lose a dlose time, which is, of course, what any the White House wants.
The members of the committee, who in general share a common interest in this CTA the "best intelligence system in the world" nor his
hope of White House compliance, voted 10-2 against the Clarence resolution to let the Clerk vote. "We only want it, not what it wants them to see."
Much damage was done to any residual good will by last week's arrogant appearance by the vice president Kissinger's State Department deputy and disciple, who could not conceal his resentment at being called down from the office of guarized by more Congressmen.
A beefy, belligerent man,
Eagleburger enunciated a doctrine that breathtakingly
shows the importance of advice to
"secretarial privilege."
The secretary of state, he told the amazed members, had decided that second-
level employees of the department could not testify. The argument made was that they must be spared public dersion for the bad advice they had given in confidence.
but the committee is following a course that shows that the underlings are being muzzled not because they gave bad information but because of information which was either brushed aside or cooked by superiors now badly in need of the confidentiality cloak. The history of the McCarthy era, ally evoked, was that the underlings were because they were wrong but because they were prematurely right.
House would regard the committee's request for a vote of confidence as "premature" seems more hopeful than realism and so he flung his glove to the floor without first having counted his troops.
McClory's fears that the
A decisive House vote of confidence, which could lead to a contempt citation for CIA Director William E. Colby, would eliminate for practical purposes the need of the FSA to court to use for its right to the documents. And it doesn't seem likely that in the face of House sentiment, Gerald Ford would take the initiative and go o to court to protect documents from Congress. He must occasionally be forced to box. (Bob) 1972 Washington Star Syndicate.
US.SPY
ACTIVITIES
HOUSE & SENATE INTELLIGENCE COMMITTEES
Readers Respond /
To the Editor:
Did you ever see the face of a person who'd just been told that William Shockley was going to debate his views with a professor here on the KU campus? The widening of the eyes, the excited half-smile = "good!" Indeed, what was Ward Harkayv's first reaction to the news?
Hypothesis: The vast majority of people at KU weren't looking forward to that debate because they thought it would be too painful for people to controversial ideas or any of the other commendable goals mentioned in Harkawy's editorial, "Cancellation Deplorable." In fact, I'm almost sure that the biggest problem in America has been exposed and discussed once or twice before.
Let's face it: the prospect of a debate between a convinced, "scientific" racist and a professor from this school was a difficult argument in which neither debater would, obviously, ever change views, on one of the most emotional subjects of our time, ending, with a little luck, in a screaming match between masters and shoving contests among the watchers! Ow, wow.
I, too, believe that racism must be expunged from our society. But the way to achieve this is through a better intellectual recognition, setting it up in a debate, and then showing how violently the vast majority of people at KU oppose racism in an atmosphere that is conducive to progress.
Ward Harkavay, of course, did give a great many people's automatic reaction to the cancellation of the debate. The answer is with automatic reactions is that they tend to be unthinkable.
Valerie J. Meyers Overland Park Senior
Open forum needed
To the Editor:
Before the first mention of his name in the Kani, many of the University community had never heard of William Schuyler, a founding of his purported theories, ranging from moral outrage to smug satisfaction for certain sectors of the white population. Most people were astounded that a scientist of Shockley's caliber would miss the good news he expressed reprehensible end. Others, pointed out that Shockley was a physicist, and dismissed his
Shockley's theory is that intelligence, as measured by the IQ test, is inheritable. In support of this theory, he cites scientific evidence from experiments in the fields of developmental psychology and genetics.
claims. They said Shockley wan't an expert in genetics and couldn't be taken seriously, not realizing that any scientist who wins the Nobel Prize is careless. He thought, regardless of the field.
Dr. Richard Lewontin,
professor of genetics at Harvard,
takes issue with Shockley's theories. Citing numerous experiments, he systematically refutes the claim that Shockley uses and subsequently invalidates the theory of inheritance of IQ.
This is the scientific method. Only those theories that stand up to scientific scrutiny over a period of time will survive. An open forum for all ideas, no questions, is necessary. Rehe前应 they may seem, is absolutely necessary if the method is to work. By canceling the Shockley-Goldsbay debate, the KU community has succeeded only in yelling louder against yellers in theory, rather than discrediting and forever silencing them.
Bob Hermann
St. Louis Graduate Student
SUA Forums fickle
To the Editor:
about leaving a kitchen *kitchen?*. His qualification that the debate would have been of little consequence can only leave us with the sense of security; it's comforting to know that such bright, perceptive, narrow-minded individuals have a hand in selecting speakers for SUA Forums.
The recent cancellation of the Shockley-Goldsbay debate points out the dual evaluation by which SUA Forums evaluates its speaker series. On one hand, the speakers "attackors" such as Bernadette Devlin, Dick Gregory, Daniel Berrigan, Barbara Munick, ad infinitum, as in invited, renumerated, hospitably received speakers. On the other hand, the maniacus" such as Shockley, Vern Miller, Ronald Zeigler, H. R. Haladem, etc., who are either shunned by SUA Forums, or treated in such a derogatory manner by the University staff, apparently apparent the prejudicial feeling that that person's ideas and viewpoints are invalid.
Bengston's remarks that the debate would have been socially divisible may be true, but no less so. He was not sponsored by SUA Forums. The difference, I suppose, is that the antagonism would have been reduced to one and the same "sacred" sector of society (do I bear someone saying something
Rogers' indirect broadside on what some would call the scientific method should redirect the University in its research activities. I had to convince them to evaluate facts on their merit (or lack of same) rather than their source.
As a matriter of clarification, I personally have no judgment as to Shockley's theories (with the exception of relating to semiconductor device technology). I have heard neither arguments for nor arguments against his theories, and it would be prejudicial for him to believe that situation without doing so. Can this not be true for others as well?
thousand dollars! That's a lot of money to spend on a debate on whether blacks are stupid (even though SUA apparently hoped for a clear negative), and they want the money on demonstrations of black brilliance. Do you realize that the money could have gone to the poets Imamu Baraka and Nikki Golovni or the musicians Archie Shepp and Ornette Coleman or maybe to Jacob Blake or Rizal Quatale? And then we would all have benefited.
Then I learned that the debate is to be paid for nonetheless, and that the cost is $2,000. Two
It was with initial relief that I read the report in Friday's Kansan of the cancellation of the Shockley-Goldsby debate. Although we do not oppose Shockley's right to speak, mainly for tactical reasons, we are still reluctant to spend money wasted on such rubbish. A debate on the genetic inferiority or non-inferiority of black people, indeed. That sounds about as worthwhile as reopening the discussion on whether the Earth is really flat or whether the Tear ruled by divine right. I was glaue to see this report and had been saved, as I figured it could run into $300 or $400.
Theory foolish
David Petrie
Pratt Graduate Student
To the Editor:
This is not to say that Shockley's ideas are insignificant and harmless. Far from it. This country is currently witnessing an upheaval in the polarization between these forces and the enemies of racism. The KKK and Nazis are organizing and recruiting, civil rights are under attack and the present economic crisis is hardest of all. The forces of racism range over an entire spectrum of methods and public faces, from the mobs in Boston which have brutally beaten blacks fortunate enough to be brought into their neighborhoods, through the President of the United States and other officials whose public
pronouncements encourage racist violence, to professors who are personally participate in lynch mobs or even use words like "nigger" in public, but who give moral support with their racial beliefs.
William Shockley is not just a nice professor with some screwy ideas. He gives academic justification to a brutal movement which seeks to prevent equality of education for black children in Houston and which attempts to roll back the paltry gains won in the civil rights struggle.
The Young Socialist Alliance does not contend that Shockley and others like him should be used in the teaching we have too much first-hand experience with the denial of freedom of speech and we know against whom it would later be used—with the promise that ways to use the sponsorship of the University and the activity fees of students.
Chris Sart
Organizer, Young Socialist
Alliance
Beware of old age!
If you are 20 years old, unsightly and overgrown—beware! The same reasons were given by the University of Kansas for the removal of the Russian olive trees around the Chi Omega fountain.
To the Editor:
Robin Walker
Robin Walker
Shawnee Mission Senior
Kerry Kapfer
Lawrence Senior
Firemen supported
To the Editor:
This is in reply to the opinion expressed by Jain Penner of the Kansas City, Mo., striking fireman. Penner should buy a stove to heat the room and enable her to see both sides of the conflict, as a very blased picture was provided. Therefore, I will present the conflict of the conflict. Some very important facts were omitted in the story.
The first significant fact that was omitted was the reason for the fireman's strike in the first place. Pemer states that "after several threats and warnings, the 848 firemen staged a walkout demanding higher pay. They wrote to her asking for $10,200." She neglected to say that the reason the fireman struck was to achieve pay parity with the public employee such as the police force.
The job of firemen is ever bit as dangerous as the job of policemen, and as such, the men are entitled to equal pay.
The article also fails to point out any of the other important facets of the dispute, except the fact that it created a public discontent. In addition, the fact that the firemen were completely ready to negotiate, arbitrate, mediate or take care of the dispute in any manner feasible. The only holdup was the failure to present an image as a candidate for vice-president, the mayor, Charles Wheeler, took an uncompromising stand and refused to negotiate until the mayor agreed thus enabling him to attain the bargaining advantage.
While it is true that public employees are forbidden by law to strike, the right to strike is the only weapon of organized labor that is powerful enough to bring management to the bargaining table. If the right to strike had been retracted from unions or union strikes, the working masses would have remained unorganized, repressed and working 12 hours a day for substandard wages. Therefore, it wouldn't be correct to punish
the firemen for expressing their sole weapon—the right to strike. Norman Spero Kansas City, Kan. Sentor
Judgment chided
To the Editor:
1
Does the University Daily Kansan news staff now plan to expand their sensationalistic tone and increase its cteditselling RU students? I presume that the answer is no because such details are neither interesting nor pertinent and instead, they are in a newspaper of this size.
In addition, despite the article in Monday's Kansan concerning a "stabbing," a more serious injury to a student in the same living group was ignored, presumably because it occurred during an intramural football game.
I must question the priorities of a newspaper which dedicates four inches of space to an unanticipated permanent consequence while in the same issue only seven lines describe the selection of new panhelenic officers, whose work requires a living environment of more than 800 students for the next year and beyond.
Cronite said live coverage of the speech would mean that any
By JOHN JOHNSTON Assistant Campus Editor
Ford's TV campaign checked
In a surprise, precedent-setting move Monday night, the CBS and NBC networks refused the request of President Ford for a prime-time broadcast of his message on tax cuts. Although the story received attention at the time, its effects are important contributions to election reform since Watergate.
The Kansas City Times chose to bury the story on page 44 of Tuesday morning's edition, but you can be sure the story was given a bit more attention at jobs in Washington. The action could have far reaching effects could have far reaching effects on the electoral process.
By JOHN JOHNSTON
Walter Crankite told his viewers Monday night CBS News reported President's message wouldn't be carried because Ford was a declared candidate for the presidential nomination.
Bill Blessing
Lake Quivira Junior
other declared candidate for the Republican nomination could demand equal time for his own "message" under regulations of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).
The action taken by the two networks is encouraging. The question of how much network activity has long been at the heart of the election reform issue. Challengers in the past have argued they didn't have the resources to power the campaign against president. The limits recently placed on spending have further
The network said when urgent situations arose, live coverage of presidential addresses would be provided.
It is difficult to decide when a president is using television or radio, when he is using it in the interest of the people. Presidents should have access to the news, but this right can be missed.
The equalizing effect of this
restricted their ability to compete.
Presidents receive enormous nightly coverage anyway, as they make their way along the campaign trail tiffing babies and shaking hands with the common man.
The danger of this situation was evident during Nixon's presidency. Nixon not only used television far more than any of his predecessors, but he dogged the confrontations of the press conference far more than most presidents. Through the use of television he could present his opinion unchallenged, from the confines of his office to the streets of Lincoln and pictures of his family as props.
move on the electoral process may be small, but it is significant and should be applauded. It's good to know that
all the "nattering nabobs of negativism" aren't sleeping. There are a few good watchdogs left.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas wesam-*
*and edu-tion. Postage paid during academic*
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Editor Dennis Ellsworth
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Debbie Gump Carla Young
Dobble Group John Johnson
Assistant Campus Editors John Johnson
Chief Photographer David Crawshaw
Staff Photographers George Miller III
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Sports Editor
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Anti-Sales Manager Lin-Richaye
Classified Advertising Manager Gary Burch
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University Dally Kansan
Wednesday, October 29,1975
3
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Applesauce
4 16 oz. cans $100
case of 24 $5.89
Whole or Strained SHURFINE
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16 oz. can 39¢
case of 24 $8.19
Early Harvest
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case of 24 $7.88
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4 16 oz. cans $100
case of 24 $5.89
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case of 24 $6.00
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16 oz. 49¢
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Cream of Chicken or
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cans $1.00
case of 24
$4.69
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6 10¾ oz.
cans $1.00
case of 48
$7.88
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46 oz. 59¢
case of 12
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5 6 oz. cans $100
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FALLEY'S FLUFF PACK
GROUND
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3-5 lb.
avg.
68 c
lb.
FALLEY'S FLUFF PACK
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Family Pack Fryers 1b. $49¢
Chicken Breasts ... 1b. $99¢
Armour Star Sliced Bacon ... 12 oz. $129
Ohse 5 varieties Luncheon Meats ... 12 oz. $79¢
Fischer Boy Fish Sticks ... 8 oz. $39¢
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Thursday, October 9, 1975
University Daily Kansan
5
KU girds for safety test
University of Kansas officials are preparing for state safety inspections and the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OSHA) which takes effect Jan. 1, 1976.
Gov. Robert Bennett announced Monday an inspection program for state institutions.
"During coming months, inspectors from the Department of Labor will survey various state institutions, meet with department personnel and work on a program of eliminating any safety hazards discovered during the survey," he said.
Calvin Williams, KU safety director, said he was studying all KU buildings and working with departments and KU's safety to improve safety standards and precautions.
OSHA, which already makes industries follow safety standards, will apply to universities next year. Williams said the university was "trying to get a jump on OSHA."
STATE EMPLOYES HAVE been eligible for workman's compensation for job-related injuries since July 1974. The state has a self-made system of disability, disability and accident death costs.
George Welch, manager of the self-immune fund, said about $18,500, five and one-half per cent of a state total of $300,000 of money, was paid to KU employees in fiscal 1975.
Bennett said, "An adequate safety program for all st ate agencies is essential if we are to keep deaunds on the self-insurance fund at a minum."
Martin Jones, associate vice chancellor for business affairs, said KU's budget for this year included $130,000 for insurance premiums for the state fund. He said most University employees had little, to worry about concerning inquiries on the job.
"WITH THE EXCEPTION of security officers and some maintenance workers, University jobs are basically low-risk," he said.
Williams said he had checked floor plans for all campus buildings to insure that adequate exits existed should there be a fire or a disaster required evacuation.
No money has been allocated specifically for implementing safety procedures, he said, but a six-member安全 committee advises him. Also, each building has a security officer. The University schools and departments have named safety representatives, he said.
"I have been trying to work with every department in the University to see that its safety needs are met," he said. "Every department should have a representative who can speak up and work with the representatives to inform everyone of safety procedures."
He said all Buildings and Grounds employees had already been trained in safety techniques.
Williams said he would attend two safety
conferences this year to learn more about what could establish safe working conditions.
"Many states represented at a National Safety Council convention I will attend will have safety plans drawn up," be said. "I will be able to trade information and ideas with others who are dealing with working conditions at colleges and universities."
He said he would try to emphasize training and information programs at KU that wouldn't cost a lot. Some universities spend more than $100,000 and still don't meet OSHA standards because they don't try inexpensive techniques, he said.
Witch said he would meet Friday with Lisa Ferguson of the KU Office of Staff Benefit to discuss what could be done at the university to reduce the number of job-related injuries.
"I think the University and all state agencies are making progress in the area of safety," he said. "I think the injury rate in the state can be further reduced if we study the problem more and develop better safety programs."
Bennett said there were 7.2 occupational injuries for every 100 state employees, compared to the national rate of 11 injuries for every 100 workers.
"Although we are pleased with these figures for the first year of the self-insurance fund, they must be viewed with caution," he said.
"The program has been in operation barely more than a year. Few claims were paid in the first six months of fiscal 1978 and it is possible additional accidents were not reported because of the late development of the program."
STEREO SPECIAL
SENNHEISEIR 414 List 49.75 Now 35.00
SENNHEISEIR 424 List 79.75 Now 57.50
DUAL 701 (with wood base & cover) List 400.00 Now 250.00
2-RECTILEAR IILa List 279.95 Now 167.50
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DUAL 1216 (with wood base & cover) Dual 217.85 Now 125.00
M91EDSHURE CART. Dual 54.95 Now 19.95
2-EVI6 SPK. (12" , 3-way) Dual 179.95 Now 75.00
RAY AUDIO
842-2047
13 E. 8th St.
--in the Interfraternity Council Office,
OFFERS REWARD
A good way to understand this world is to define your terms. This brings up the question of what we mean by the term of capitalism. The communists tell us that capitalism is the "exploitation of man by man." Yet, it is easy enough to see that this is the description of the slave society wherein the masters exploit the labor of their slaves.
Now then, one of the world's three great truths is that it is not possible to be and not be. Either something is or else it is not. And, if something is one thing then it cannot be another. Therefore, if society cannot be the description of slavery society it cannot be the description of our freedom. In our promote social inquiry I offer a hundred dollar reward to anyone who can give the true definition of our free society of capitalism.
Fred Obermeier Paola, Kansas
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4
Wednesday, October 29 1975
University Daily Kansan
COMMENT
---
Should Uncle Sam rescue fiscally rotten New York City from financial default? Many federal officials, with the exception of New Yorker Nelson Rockefeller, have said no, and for once I agree with the powers in Washington.
Let Big Apple rot
New York City politicians have consistently followed the principle of "more is better," even when funds weren't available to finance the "more." As a result, New York City has become a freeloader's paradise. For example, only in New York City can students attend a city university staffed by some of the highest paid professors in the country, and yet pay only $110 a year in fees. Only in New York City are one out of every eight people on the welfare rolls. Only in New York City can electricians and plumbers receive up to 78 per cent more money from the city than they can from the private employment sector. And before last spring's budget cuts, only in New York City was there one civil servant for every 23 citizens.
These excesses would be bearable if the city had as much money coming in as it was spending. Unfortunately, this hasn't been the case, and the city has made up for the lack of money by short-term borrowing, with a resulting short-
Those who have favored federal aid for the nearly bankrupt city have revived the "domino theory." (Where we have heard that one before? Vietnam? Cambodia?) If New York City were to default, they have said, cities across the nation would fall one by one until the entire country was in the clutches of an economic nightmare.
I don't buy that list of reasoning. Investors wouldn't stop buying municipal bonds entirely if New York City defaulted; instead, they would become very selective about cities they chose to finance. Those cities with sound financial practices would be rewarded, while those that have overspent like New York City would have to rearrange their fiscal houses in order to get financial backing.
term debt that has risen from $466.7 million in 1966 to $4.6 billion in 1975. If the city were to default, it would occur because of the city's inability to pay these short-term debts.
Would it be bad to require fiscal responsibility from our cities? I don't think so.
Paula Jolly
Contributing Writer
Treasury Department officials are testing the waters to determine whether American investors buy the idea of a two-dollar bill.
Bill to make economic encore
$2 comeback
$2 comeback
At recent Treasury hearings in Washington, D.C., Stephen Gardner, deputy secretary, explained the idea behind reviving the old duce, discontinued in 1966. First, he
said, the government would save as much as $27 million by printing two-dollar bills instead
David Olson Contributing Writer
of all those singles. Second, the two-dollar bill may be more popular now because it would
buy what a one-dollar bill did 10 years ago.
Gardner reassured those who stillliked the one-dollar bill that itwould remain the backbone of U.S. currency.
The big question seems to be whether Americans will use the immigrant restriction enforcement regulation of bringing bad luck. The deuce, or snake
eyes, is a jinx in gamblers' parlance.
"When a bill is unpopular, there just isn't any call for it," Gardner said. "If we bring it back, we'll have to have a good public relations campaign on its behalf."
Sure enough, the first idea was to tie the two-dollar bill to the bicentennial. Thomas
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COLLECTION AGENEY
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COLLECTION AGENCY
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Jefferson, whose stony countenance graced the old two-tone suit he wore, made a same treatment to the new issue. After all, Gardner said, Jefferson wrote the book *Independence*, didn't he?
Upon closer examination, the push to revive the two-dollar bills may be only part of an as-yet-unannounced plan by the Ford administration to cope with the cost of a bequest under control, why not at least make it more convenient? As the inflation rate continues, and dollars buy still less, the Treasury could our-dollar bills, seven-dollar bills and others ad infinitum.
That idea isn't as wild as it sounds. An early brainstorm of Gardner and his buddies was to issue a $2.50 bill.
One could easily envision other parts of the administration's make-inflation-more-convenient program. The equipment could ask employees at least two times a week if inflation continues. Grocery sack companies would be asked to make smaller sacks, so that it appeared the consumer was more number of sacks from the weekly shopping trip.
American consumers would probably be happier with a program that holds the line against inflation, rather than one that makes living with inflation easier. Still, it looks as if the two-dollar bill will soon hit the comebreak trail.
Kansan Forum from Gengbis Khan to autumn leaves
Cheap thrills hard to find in sterile era
It's getting tough to get kicks these days. Attila the Hun doesn't scourge Europe to massacre peasants any more. Genghis Khan no longer ravages the countryside by cattle ranching, and of the French Revolution no longer chop off heads for public entertainment. Life certainly is getting dull.
Nowadays, people are ecstatically thrilled by a doctored photograph of Jackie Onassis, an nose-blowing marathon that rates Guinness. Book Recommendations to audience who amaturally improvises a ballet down Haight Street. The wonders of technology seem to have purged the thrill of it all. Life has become so mechanized, sterilized and computerized that we twiddle our thumbs in hordement while the Vietnam war raged on and on.
OUR PLOTS MECHANICALLY pushed buttons to release napalm, phosphorus bombs, and anti-personnel bombs from planes so high that a view of the devastation and suffering down below was impossible. They didn't get their hands dirty. They didn't give blood spattered on their bodies.
THROUGHOUT LAST MONTH, the Pentagon released long-secret records detailing experiments that tested the militaristic usefulness of LSD and other drugs. American citizens were unwitting guinea pigs for these bizarre experiments. Several "research subjects" protested angrily when they were exposed to serums that induced hysteria, terror and disorientation.
More recent developments further emblazon this scenario of automated warfare. Electronic gadgetry and well-trained technicians policing the Snal buffer zone superficially accommodate an explosive weapon, but communications don't deactivate the fuse. For the unfortunate protagonists, hostilities will fester; but for us, pangs of conscience will be quelled.
Technology takes the guilt out of war. It also takes the heart out of life. So who were the survivors?
But the experiments were conducted despite *frail whimps of pain, tendered in mischief by the ruthless machinations of technological progress. Time marches on; Ford has a better horsepower and is bigger and better. These unfortunate, pittable giants pigs
Liz Nakahara
died for the betterment of America.
OUR SACRED MONOLITH, the Pentagon, wanted more civilized, sophisticated weaponry to wage war. We proud Americans don't want to bother with any of the tactics, but we don't. The Vietnamese and the savage Arabs so tastelessly indulge in.
Let us politely and gracefully spray chemicals on the enemy to make him vulnerable, drive him to suicide. Let us gingerly and daintily tamper with the environment to afflict enemy populations with fatal, lethal outcomes.
When we make the world safe for democracy, we don't kid us. We don't kid Americans. We Americans have ingeniously accommodated the inconveniences of war. We have, as a respectable commodity.
NO LONGER MUST WE suffer the abominable indignities of shedding blood, killing rabbits and affecting streamlined combat techniques. In this idyllic future, we'll wage war while attired in suits of silk, shoes and hairdies and by Sassoon.
We'll sit comfortably in a naugahyde chair and calmly confront a panel of buttons, a scattering of dials and a profusion of switches. As our computerized militaristic monstrosity systematically burns away all the bask in the comfort of our luxuries and watch gory crime shows on television.
AFTER ENVISIONING this hideous scenario, some people might wonder whether Gengich Khan was more merciful. He might have drooled as he slaughtered the Tartars, but at least one whack of his sword did not kill him and wrote in anagry for several weeks before succumbing to a drug-induced death.
Khan might have flailed his sword with flagrant abandon, but at least he confronted his enemy and looked him in the eye. He didn't sit comfortably ensonced in a gilded tower while horrendous suffering from a wound that merely crass barbarians disguised in a costume of civility?
Without a doubt, America is a technologically advanced country. How does it happen, how does cling to the vestige of a primitive condition—we stubbornly worship and cherish a tallman. The data, enlightened society, science are sacred cow. Is that civilized?
U.S. ARMS RACE
THE HUMAN RACE
SOVIET ARMS RACE
`I KEEP DROPPING THE DAMN THING!`
Rake stirs memory
Raking leaves seems like an innocuous action, doesn't it? Yet several days ago that harmless action bothered me, not because I was on the end of the rake, which I wasn't, but by myself. At my feelings and jabbed at the memories I hold dear.
A crew of buildings-and-
grounds men, bless their
industrious souls, were diligently
raking all the leaves from the
area bounded by Flint, Wescoe
and Bailey Halls. They probably were doing only what they were told, but I felt as if it
Leaves are a physical link to the past for me. Nothing makes the campus so beautiful as the pleasant contrast of greens, browns, reeds and oranges that leaves give us in the fall.
should indulge in a little civil disobedience by attacking them with their own rakes.
Who among us hasn't gambled amid leaves piled high in the family yard? Who hasn't kicked and shuffled through paths with a good friend? Who hasn't pressed and preserved a
You sentimentalists can imagine my feelings when I saw these leaves being gathered so they were dared jump and frolic in one of those piles. None set a match to one of those piles. It was plain, boring work with no hope of revealing the power of a leaf fire at the end.
leaf as a memento of a happy fall gone by?
My mind searched in vain for a memory of the smell of burning leaves. I knew these leaves would never warm anyone's heart on a cool autumn evening; they were, no doubt,
The teaching report
The Student Senate should be commended for its action last Wednesday, when it accepted the award of the Quality of Classroom Teaching and referred it to administrators and faculty committees for further action. It also recognized the quality of teaching at the University of Kansas, although high, could not be improved, and the commission's report could have provided a scientific discussion and chance.
The commission, established by the Student Senate at the request of Ed Rolfs, student body president, should improve communications with other government bodies. Much more need to feel about the report's purpose, research methods and conclusions could have been, and still might be, avoided by making these points clear. A formal, written statement by Rolfs, the commission advising the students, should have been drafted long ago and needs to be drafted now.
It is unfortunate that the report, up to now, has generated much more heat than light. Unless the report's recommendations are rationally aligned with the University government committee, this chance to improve teaching will be lost.
IT IS DIFFICULT TO say how to improve teaching; this isn't the place to evaluate the commission's proposals. But there are mistakes that have been made, and faculty representatives that can be identified now and that must be avoided in the future.
ALSO, IT SEEMS THAT the commission blundered in assuming that it should send its tentative conclusions to the Commission on the Legislature and the Board of Regents. It was a good idea for
destined for an incinerator or landfill somewhere.
Tom Billam
How unromantic! Doesn't anyone have a sense of wonder anymore? Are we all too adult, cynical and jaded to enjoy some of the simple pleasures of our childhood?
What is wrong with allowing the leaves to lie at rest for a few days or weeks, with allowing them to fall asleep; these small bits of heat, which
Maybe I'm living in the past but I think I'll go home, make a pile of my own and set it on my care to join in a memory?
the commission to let University groups, especially the University Council and SenEx, comment on the tentative report. However, absolutely no meaningful communication of comment at all came from the state officials. The mass mailing of the tentative report wasted money and caused many faculty members to view the report as political and making rather than as a sincere effort to improve teaching.
This isn't to say that nothing good can come from the report, nor does the blame for the report's problems rest solely on the commission and Rolfs. Indeed, they have invested a lot of time with teachers and department chairmen and, despite some faculty misgivings about the quality of the research, the commission's conclusions deserve to be heard.
SIMILARLY, ONE is at a loss when trying to understand why Rolfs sent the report to Chancellor Schweitzer to week before the Senate acted, asking him to "adopt and promulgate" the report's conclusions. Rolfs seems to be accepting that statement that improvements in teaching won't come without the support of the faculty. It is hoped that Chancellor Dykes will not miss these matters have studied the report.
Greg Hack
SCME FACULTY MEM-
BERS have to get a few things straight and stop letting their emotions, which at times have bordered on paranoia, control their perspective of the report. The commission didn't consider adequately all of the cases at KU, as some have charged. Rather, it commended it and suggested a few areas for improvement.
The faculty isn't being "backed into a corner," as one SenEx member felt. The commission knows it wasn't the right change against the will of the faculty, even if that was its desire.
THE FACULTY SHOULDN'T worry. The commission isn't a bunch of students trying to tell the faculty how to teach. Rather, it is a group that has done a job the students requested when they elected Rolfs, who promised to investigate this important area. The faculty should also expect the commission never existed, or to make its work something of lasting value.
The Senate acted correctly when it sent the report's recommendations to the proper faculty committees for consideration. Now it is up to them. Without rational consideration and action by the committee, the work will have been wasted. But if viewed calmly and with an open mind, the report could become a beginning, rather than an end.
letters policy
The Daily Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 300 words. All letters are printed on a single sheet according to space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed.
KU students must provide their name, year in school and hometown; faculty endorse their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
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6
Thursday, October 9,1975
University Daily Kansan
Slow start hampers Smith
You remember Laverne Smith, don't you? He established himself as the top season rusher in University of Kansas football history as a sophomore last year.
He's still running for the Jayhawks. But his performances to date, quite frankly, haven't up to the expectations of KU fans who were drooling over what they thought Smith might accomplish after last fall's
Inside Sports
by Yael Abouhalkah
Sports Editor
Through KU's first four games, Smith, a 6-100, pound Wichita junior, has gained 27 ounces for a 51.4 yards a game average. That's a far cry from last year's average of more than 100 yards a game.
But there are indications that Smith is snapping out of his early season drought. He rushed for 94 yards on a pass to Lehigh in the first half.
There are quite a few reasons for his sub-par statistics so far, Smith said Wednesday.
"IN MOST OF THE GAMES, the cornerback or the defensive end runs right on me even though he said.
1,1' UF's, in other words, are keying on Smith this year. They know the speedy Smith ran for 1,181 yards last year, including seven games of more than 100 vards.
There are other reasons Smith isn't turning up the league as he did last year. One is the emergence of Nolan Cromwell as a running quarterback. The other reason is that the team wasn't getting to carry the football as often as last year.
Last season he carried 16 times a game; this year it's down to an average of 7.5 a game.
"It's not really that much tougher this year," he said, "because last year, when I'd get the ball, there would be three or four guys on me. But I carried the ball more last year.
"LAST YEAR, WITH THE VEER, it was automatic
30
Laverne Smith
handing the ball off to a running back. I got the ball more. But now, with the wishbone, the quarterback can give a quarterback keeper, he can pitch to me or he can give the ball to the fullback.
"He can decide to do this at the line of scrimmage.
That's why I might not get the ball, if my play is too hard."
"To get some yards, I've got to run the ball."
Smith's speed helped him move for many of his record-setting yards last year. He got outside quickly,
then turned on that speed to outrun many ends and defensive backs.
But to some KU fans, it looked as if Smith wasn't doing that outside running very well this year. In the Oregon State game, in particular, he would run out of bounds and back into inside and get smothered for little or no gain.
CHARGES THAT HE'S AFRIDA of running at and over opponents are absurd, Smith said.
"When I'm on the field, I know what I'm doing," he said. "People in the stands don't know all of what's going on. I did well most times to get where I was going in that game.
"I'm not a fancy back. I run to where the hole is. If there isn't one, I try to find one."
Smith's immediate problem is KU's game this Saturday against the University of Nebraska. While the Jayhawks have the most potent rushing offense in the league, averaging 317 yards a contest, the Cornhuskers are the stingiest team against the run, allowing just 73 yards a contest.
"They've got a name," Smith said of Nebraska's defense. "People playing them get panicky. If we don't get panky and read everything right, we can beat them."
SMITH'S RIBS WERE INJURED in Kansas' opening loss to Washington State. That kept him from going full speed for a week. And Smith said he was still feeling the effects of that injury
"They're still sore," he said. "When I get right on them, they don't stop." Sometimes, but they're not stopping me from playing.
By no means does Smith consider this season a lost one. He still has enough games to show some of the brilliance that made him an All-Big Eight performer last year. But he talks about the season realistically.
"I wanted to lead the Big Eight in rushing and I wanted to make All-America this year," he said. "But the way it's going, I'm so far behind, I'm probably not going to do it."
"But I don't know if I care that much anymore. I want to win first. I want to go to a bowl game."
"I don't want to sit around and watch them on TV this year."
Kansas
Nebraska's "doubtful" offense has
its football coach Bud Moore plenty
lucky.
"They have a fine running attack and a good passing attack." Moore said yesterday. "It's tough to get ready for them."
Cornhusk runners Tony Davis, Monte Anthony and John O'Leary run behind an offensive line that Moore called both big and quick.
"We're just going to have to get quicker to do anything different." "We don't plan to do anything different."
"They're a quicker for their size than any team we've faced," he said. "We've faced some big people, but they are by far the quickest."
Nebraska
LINOOL, Neb. (AP)—Nebraska coach Tom Osborne said yesterday that split and Chuck Malto apparently is out of the game on Saturday because of a strained knee.
"Unless there's great improvement he won't play. Osborne said. "We expect him to be playing."
Also held out of Wednesday's practice was starting backyellow Tony Davis, who has a hip pointer. Davis is expected to return to practice Thursday.
Maupintour
Obsorne said no Nebraska defense had been set up specifically to stop passer Scott McMichael if he replaced Nolan Cromwell as the Kansas quarterback in the event the Huskers shut off the strong Kansas running game.
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Athletic program ends in black
KU's athletic program for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1975, balanced $70,415 in the black, Athletic Director Clyde Walker said at yesterday's KU meeting.
"Obviously we're pleased that we are now operating from a sound financial foundation," Walker said. "But while the financial future of our program appears realistic, we must be quick to point out that we aren't clear of money problems."
A new basketball scoreboard in Allen Field House might be ready by late August. But it's not the new football scoreboard in Memorial Stadium won't be final for a few months, he said.
Walker said contributions to the Williams Educational Fund had spurred the financial success. The contributions received by the Foundation were donated during Walker's two years at KU.
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Thursday, October 9.1975
'Tom' Veatch, generous alum, dies at age 89
Nathan Thomas "Tom" Vetch,
University of Kansas alumnus, died
yesterday in Kansas City, Mo. after a brief
illness.
Mr. Veatch, 89, co-founded Black and Veatch Engineering Co. in 1915. The company has grown to an internationally renowned engineering firm that employs more than 2,000 persons.
MR. VEATCH WAS NATIONAL president of the KU Alumni Association and served on the board of trustees of the KU Endowment Association, the Athletic Board, the Kansas Union Board of Directors and the Council of Progress.
Mr. Veach was a generous alumnus of the University and had been awarded KU's Distinguished Service to Mankind Award. Recently he was chosen to receive one of the first Fred Ellsworth Medallions for service to the University.
Mr. Veatch received a B.S. from KU in 1909 and the title of civil engineer from KU in 1924. He played football and basketball while at the University and contributed generously to the athletic and academic scholarship funds.
Services for Mr. Veatch will be at 10 a.m. Friday at the Second Presbyterian Church in Kansas City, Mo. Private burial services will be in Lawrence at the Weaver-Bullene family plot at Oak Hill Cemetery. The family requests that contributions be made to the St. Luke's Hospital Foundation for Medical Research in Kansas City, Mo.
Events ...
On Campus
TODAY: ROEBT COBB, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will address the Faculty Forum on "What's Going on in the College" at noon in the Library Room of the GADAMER will speak on "Metaphysics in the Post-Metaphylla Era" at 3:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. DESMOND GUNNESS will present a lecture and slides on "Irish Houses and Castles" at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the GADAMER will speak on "Metaphysics in the Post-Metaphylla Era" at 3:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. KUICE HOCKEY CLUB will meet at 8:30 p.m. in Parlor C of the Union.
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University Dally Kansan
Wednesday, October 29, 1975
5
Union seeks recognition
From page one
was necessary to form a union to negotiate with the city.
"I don't think a signature on a piece of paper assures anything," he said.
Peter Curran, 2309 Princeton Blvd., lead to the granting of recognition would lead to a rise in strikes. He said the city commission could do an adequate job of negotiating with city workers without recognizing the association.
"I am not an expert on labor unions," he said, "but my personal belief is that most citizens of Lawrence are opposed to the recognition."
He said that recognizing the association would result in higher taxes and would discourage new and expanded industries. The result of recognition, he said, will be compulsory arbitration. The city will lose control of its employs, he said.
Commissioner Carl Mibec said he didn't like the way Curran used arbitration.
"Some people think it's a dirty word," he said. "I trust arbitrators."
He said the commission used arbitrators to decide utility rates.
"Why is arbitration good for big business and bad for workers?" he asked.
. .
Commissioner Fred Pence said he was aware of the law.
Clark said the reason arbitration was used for utilities was that the reasons for a utility price increased need explanation. It is too complicated for the commission, he
Washington. Things like that bring out my red neck."
Commissioner Donald Binns said a law was pending in Congress that would force
all cities to recognize all emplyce collective bargaining units.
"It's taking away more of our freedom and rights," he said. "I don't know why the police are so aggressive."
Officer David Reavis, a member of the police officers association, said Curran was wrong about the increase of strikes when he was introduced to Mr. In fact, he said, there have been strikes.
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There were more strikes in the early 20th century before the recognition of labor unions, he said, than after their recognition.
Norm Forer, associate professor of social welfare and adviser to the association, said that historically there had been fewer strikes since the formation of labor unions.
1
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October 29 and 30 Kansas Union Ballroom
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The fair affords the University and Lawrence Community the opportunity to visit with representatives from various travel and recreation services, pick up free literature, view free films and recreation demonstrations and attend an information session on foreign travel and study abroad.
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Speakers on foreign travel and study abroad. Presentations given by Foreign Language Institute, Maupintour Travel Agency and SUA Travel. Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union.
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Thursday, October 9, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Utensil thefts cause price rise
Staff Writer
By BILL KATS
People who steal services, china and trays from food services in University residence halls and the Kansas Union evenly pay the price in the form of reduced services
J. J. Wilson, director of housing said yesterday that the thefts kept hall cafeterias from buying convenience items for their kitchens.
He said close to $20,000 was spent last year to replace utensils in the eight hall fireplaces.
Wilson said that inflation had played a large part in pushing the price of a car up.
At Gertrude S. Pearson-Corbin, 1,049
Lenor Ekdhall, director of food services for the residence halls, said the most popular items for theft last year were teaspoons and glasses.
Bad-check program swells prosecutions
The number of prosecutions for writing bad checks has increased ten times since a check investigator was hired April 1, David Boulger said. The Douglas County Commission yesterday.
In the time since the county attorney's
Aid applications now available
Financial aid applications and appropriate financial aid statements are now available.
Undergraduate students who want to apply for scholarships, government grants, national direct student loans and the college program can pick up the applications.
Applications are also available for law and graduate students who wish to apply for national direct student loans and the work-study program, and pharmacy students who wish to apply for a health profession loan.
The priority date for submitting an application is Feb. 15. However, students are encouraged to apply earlier to give the office of financial aid and scholarship access to applicants. Jeff Weinberg, associate director of the Office of Financial Aid, said yesterday.
Financial statements be submitted about one month before the applications, he said.
Applications for basic educational opportunity grants will be available in about 90 locations.
From page one
Shockley . . .
cellation, he was assuming that the debate wouldn't be beneficial to the University
"Any policy decision regarding something to take place in the future has to be based on anticipated repercussions," he said.
Bich Lindman, special events chairman,
voted against the motion to cancel the
The board still has the option to reconsider the motion to cancel the debate, but. But, he said, he thought most of the lawyers in the county voted to cancel hadn't changed their minds.
“If I thought more people on the board wanted to reconsider, 'I'd bring it up," he said. "But I don't think anybody's having second thoughts."
From page one
Senate . . .
enough tangible benefits to warrant further funding. One pointed out that the $3,566 came to about $3 for each student served last year by the organization.
Mary Lou Reece, student body vice president, voted to make a 30 to 30 tie only to find that she was out of order. After checking Robert's Rules of Order it was known his woman's power to make or break it the didn't usually apply since a tie vote defeated a bill.
The Senate vote against giving the Liberal Arts and Sciences School Council #765 for supplies and expenses. The amendment to fund the group was defeated by 49 votes, but approved, vice chairman of the Council, to convene the Senate of the group's critical need.
An amendment to cut allocations to the three undergraduate clubs was also defended. Flynn moved the groups be cut from their usual fund to fund undergraduate interest groups.
"There are fifty or sixty of them on campus and if we fund one we're going to have more."
Bill Billing, Senate parliamentarian,
said that each group had been funded in the
The Senate voted 54 to 26 to pass a resolution questioning the procedure behind the election.
Steve Cucovich, who sponsored the resolution, said the lot should have had to go through the University community before being approved.
The Senate filled two University Council seats and a seat on the University Judiciary Board despite some questions about one election's legality.
Jon Jossner, senator, said the present Senate couldn't elect anyone to fill the combined hold-over senator and University Council seat vacated last spring by Lewis Grassley. Only last year's Senate, he said, could elect last year's hold-over seat and Steve McMurray, Journalism senator, was elected to the other council race.
Scott Morgan, freshman class president,
was elected to the Judiciary Board.
teapoons disappeared last year along with 1,000 glasses, 751 knives and 600 forks, she
office has had the investigator, Berkowitz said, 106 check cases were opened. Between April 1 and Sept. 30, 40 persons were convicted and $31,222 was recovered in the case.
ALTHOUGH A CERTAIN amount of loss due to breakage and normal wear is to be expected, Ekdahl said, these figures are too low for most cases that occurred in the other halls, she said.
Only eight persons were convicted in 1974, Berkawitz said.
"The emphasis in check cases has changed from collection to a more vigorous prosecution for violations of the law," Berkowitz said.
Peter A. Whitenight, county commissioner, said he thought merchant response to the check program had been favorable.
The remainder of the cases usually go unsolved, Kennedy said, because some bad check writers move out of town or go to prison.
Berkowitz said that in 1974, 311 check cases were opened, eight persons were convicted and about $24,000 in restitutions was made.
"From talking to various merchants in the community," Berkowitz said, "I believe that these bad checks are the number of bad checks that are written in Douglas County and certainly it has cut down the amount of time between the writing of the check and the prosecution of it."
BERKOWITZ ALSO TOLD the commissioners that Kennedy's hiring gave the other investigator in the county attorney's office more time to work on other cases, and that it also eased the burden on the attorneys in the office.
Berkowitz said he thought seminars that had been conducted to teach businessmen how to protect themselves against bad weather, like storms, like those have been planned, he said.
Kennedy was hired under the Emergency
Job Program, a federally financed program.
Art Heck, county commissioner, said the commission hadn't considered making the job permanent after federal funds ran out. He said he considered the report submitted by Berkowitz on the program to be favorable.
BERRKOWTZ SAID BAD CHEW convictions resulted in penalties ranging from a fine of $8 to confinement in the county and binding on the past record of the offender.
"In general, I believe that the check investigator and the ensuing program have resulted both in a more vigorous pursuit of efficiency in law enforcement," he said.
Berkowitz recommended to the commissio-
tion, the special bad check
will be required to be completed.
Wilson said that even though silverware was the main item being taken, the largest monetary losses came from replacing china.
Some plates cost more than $28 a dozen,
he said. That is the cheapest serviceable
plate available.
Although thefts in Union food services present much less of a problem than thefts in residence halls, they are a definite hazard. The trustee, manager of Union food services, said.
SHE SAID THAT SHORTAGES of silverware and china sometimes made it necessary for people who were waiting for the cleaning of used dishes to stand in line
Sometimes trays and dishes are taken out of the cafeteria to be used, she said, and rather than return them, people will dump them into trash receptacles.
Scheetz said discreet methods were often used to steal food items, especially in the 1970s.
THE FEM DISHONEST PEOPLE will raise the prices for everyone, Scheetz and others.
Customers will put a cheese burger in a hamurger bag or put two hamburgers in a sandwich.
One of the problems residence halls have is that some people have chosen to take advantage of relaxed dining room policies, Wilson said.
"We don't like to make the rule that people can't take things out of their dining rooms," he said. "But one of the problems is the way we do, how the hook do we get the diaper back?"
The University of Indiana posts student monitors at every dining hall exit, he said.
This tactic has been employed on a mino scale at Olive Hall, where there is a checker at the main dining hall door, said Ciesis, Olive Hall food service supervisor.
But that has failed to deter anyone who really wants to take something out, she
Although no clear-cut way to stop theft
of copyrighted Tornel tried a
unique technique last May.
Ekdahl said that GSP-Corbin had an amnesty night in which residents were asked to bring back items they were carrying and asked. There was a party also, she said.
The response was encouraging, she said,
and about 50 per cent of the hall's lost items
It might be necessary to use the plan again this year because according to Ekdahl, the residence halls are already replacing stolen silverware.
STIGNUM ITALIC SET
Contains a fountain pen five
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manual all for only $5.00...
At art material & pen shops,
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Add 50 cents for handling.
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E
THE HISTORICAL ELDRIDGE HOUSE
Sunday Evenings 5:30 – 9:00 7th & Mass
STUDENTS & FACULTY
TIRED OF THE SAME 'OLE BURGER?
Try our delightful Sunday menu
for a change
TEMPT YOUR TASTE BUDS
Some samples include:
AVOCADO & PEAR SALAD w/POPPY SEED
DRESSING
ROMANIAN BROCHETT OF BEEF
w/RICE PILAF
CHICKEN APPLESAUCE
ITALIAN SCAMORZA OMELET
CREPE POULETTE
CREPES BOURGINONNE
English poet here tonight
Spender gave a reading of his poetry in the Kansas Urion.
Spender, who is also a playwright, novelist and critic, has been a professor of English at the University of London since 1908 and one of the most celebrated poets of the 1930s.
Unlike the poetry of either William Butler Yeats or T. S. Eliot, Spender said the poetry of the '30s and '40s began to deal with concrete subjects, rather than feelings.
They sought to convey their feelings without directly writing about them, such as
Widely renowned for his translations of Rainer Maria Rilke's poetry, Spender will speak at a symposium in his honor at 8 p.m. tonight in Woodruff Auditorium.
Why take the time to roll with two papers, and lick twice for one smoke? With double-width e-z wider you roll one, lick once and you're off! There's no faster easier way to roll your own. And there's no better gummed paper made. So roll with e-z wider and get off on the double.
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American Motorcycle Association
GATES OPEN AT 8:00 a.m.
NATIONAL
AMATEON
CHAMPIONSHIP
Mud Cross
National amateur cross competition for
The Amateur Championship
Sunday, June 12, 1975
125cc CHAMPIONSHIP
OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP
Baldwyn moto Cross Park
Lawrence, Kansas
$4.00
TICKETS
10 and under FREE
TOPEKA 1.70 KANSAS CITY
LAWRENCE
75 65 1-35
AJL 56-59 BALDWIN EDGERTON
56
BALDWIN MOTO-CROSS PARK
BALDWIN MOTO-CROSS PARK
2 Miles South / 1 Mile East of Ajl 56-59
OTTAWA
Practice: 10:00 a.m.
Races: 1:00 p.m.
NO
CAMPING
FACILITIES
A
A Wheelsport MIC Club Production
AMERICA FAN MOTORCYCLE ASSOCIATION
6
Wednesday, October 29,1975
University Daily Kansan
Council bill sent back to committee
By CHUCK ALEXANDER
Staff Writer
The Student Senate Finance and Auditing Committee last night recommended that an amendment to Senate Bill 050, written by the Academic Affairs Committee, be sent back to Academic Affairs to clarify the philosophy expressed in the bill.
In another action, Finance and Auditing approved a proposal that will allocate money to pay a part-time secretary in the Transportation Committee office.
According to Ed Rolfs, student body president, bill 560 is designed to consolidate all the funding that was previously done in several bills.
The bill also calls for a $2 increase in the student activity fee.
The bill drew fire from representatives of the GSC and the Student-Bet Association (SB).
Under the provisions of the bill, school councils will be divided into three classes, each having a certain degree of financial responsibility. The bill also has provisions for the school councils to allocate funds to student organizations within their schools.
Eilen Reynolds, executive coordinator of GSC, said yesterday that she objected to the bill because it would be a step down the funding ladder for GSC.
"We've got a line iter now," Reynolds said. "We no assurance of continuity (if we) at the moment."
SUA to offer advice on trips
For students interested in travel, the Union Railroad is the place to be this week.
Free pamphlets, catalogs, films,
demonstrations and talks on foreign and
domestic travel will be offered through
the College's SUA in its Travel and
Recreation Fair.
Gwyn Selby, travel fair chairman, said yesterday the objective of the fair was to acquaint students with the problems apprehended by the staff. Representatives from airlines, travel agencies, tourist offices and local businesses, will provide them with information and suggestions, she said.
Information on foreign travel and study programs through the University and local agencies will be provided in tonight's Hawkjay Room of the Union, she said.
Drawings for a free weekend trip to Kansas City, Mo., a $50 discount on the SUA ski trip to Breckenridge and a free trip to Germany are offered at the fair, she said. The names will be drawn Thursday evening.
Mike Forsyth, a member of the SUA outdoor recreation committee, said Thursday evening would be devoted to informal presentations by various exhibitors Scuba diving, sailing, canoeing, biking and raspelling will be explained and demonstrated. The club, with associations, he said. Two hang gliders and two sail boats will also be exhibited.
“This is a chance for a lot of experience and knowledge to be placed.” Forstry said.
BEAT
K-STATE!
BUY YOUR
POUND
THE PURPLE
PUSSIES
Buttons Now!
841-7476
Kathy Dugan, GSC member, said GSC needed to know how much money it was going to get each year to maintain organized programs.
Under the bill, $12,250 would be allocated to all the school councils. Every year, each of the school councils would risk getting less amount than it got the previous year.
Dugan said GSC wouldn't have any idea how much of the $2,120 would it get.
Accorning to Linda Trigg, SBA president,
SBA wasn't notified that it would be
included in the bill. Trigg said she hadn't
been told until she pulled a few hours before
last night's meeting.
Finance and Auditing said it would recommend that the bill be sent back to the Academic Affairs Committee because the committee hadn't talked to all the student groups specifically mentioned in the bill, and the bill didn't specify what student law organizations would come under the SBA's jurisdiction.
Speaking for the Transportation Committee, Steve McMurry, committee chairman, said now was the time for "KU on Wheels" to establish some continuity in its program because "KU on Wheels" would be seeking federal funding in the near future.
Mec Murray said because he couldn't always be at the office, someone needed to be there who could answer questions about the job and how to being able to do routine office work.
"That person is needed simply because he is as much to be done," McMurry said.
McMurray said that even though a secretary wouldn't be employed full time, the company could hire.
The proposal was passed after being amended to indicate that the person hired would work only for "KU on Wheels" and that the Transportation committee chairman.
The committee also heard a presentation from Dave Krobot, JKHK radio station owner of the New York office where JKHK planned to spend its money because some committee members doubted that JKHK needed all the money it was going to spend. JKHK has a proposed allocation of $8,750.
Krobot said KJHK needed to know where its money was coming from to fulfill its obligations to the FCC. According to Krobot, KJHK could depend on only $200 in outside contributions for at least four or five years after which he expects KJHK to be
WALT DISNEY'S FANTASIA TECHNICOLOR
THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE
"A Multi-media Masterpiece"
Look great pioneering venture"
—Newsweek
Hillcrest
WALT DISNEY'S FANTASIA
TECHNICOLOR
Eve. 7:20 & 9:35, Sat., Sun. Mat. 2:00
"It's the kind of movie Bogart would have stood in line to see"
—Rex Reed
Robert Mitchum
"FAREWELL, MY LOVELY"
Granada
It's the same two dudes from Uptown Saturday Night...
but this time they're back with kid dyn-o-mite!
SIBBAEY POITTER - BILL COSBY
JIMMIE WALKER
LET'S DO IT AGAIN
Tonight 7:30 & 9:45
Hillcrest
Final Week!
Elton John, Ann Margaret
Your success will never be the same.
Tommy PG
Tonight 7:35 and 9:45
Varsity
COLLEGE SNACK ON
MOMENT MONDAY & THURS.
Mahogany
Eve.at 7:30-9:30
Thurs., Fri., Sat., Sun. Mat.
af 2:30
"It's the kind of movie Bogart would have stood in line to see"
—Rex Reed
Robert Mitchum
"FAREWELL, MY LOVELY"
Granada
7:30 9:30
Sat. $4.50
7:30
Final Week! Elton John Ann Margaret Your senses will never be the same.
Tommy PG
Tonight 7:35 and 9:45
Thurs.-Fri.
Sat. Sun.Met.
Hillcrest
but this time they're back with kit dyn-o-mite!
SIDNEY PATTIER - BILL COBBY
JIMMIE WALKER
LET'S DO IT AGAIN
Tonight 7:30 & 9:45
Hillcrest
PG
It's the same two dudes from Uptown Saturday Night!
but this time they're back with kid dyn-o-mite!
SIDNEY POINTER · BILL COBSBY
JIMMIE WALKER
LET'S DO IT AGAIN
Tonight 7:30 & 9:45
Hillcrest2
PG
Varsity
RECEPTION · TICKETS AT
SOUTHWEST ABBEY LET
WASHINGTON, MASS.
PG
Mahosany
Eve. at 7:30-9:30
Thurs., Fri., Sat, Sun, Mat.
at 2:30
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If this sounds like you, sign up to interview with Famous-Barr today!
Famous-Barr, a division of May Department Stores Company, is the largest retailer in the St. Louis area. We hire approximately 100 entry-level executives each year and are looking for college seniors who are capable of becoming Buyers, Store Managers, and Divisional Merchandise Managers. Although a degree in Business is desirable, we hire from all Liberal Arts disciplines.
Wo wil be on campus Monday, November 3rd & Tuesday, November 4th.
Register at the Business Placement Office—NOW!
For Her~
the Sparkle
of your life.
Marks
Jewelers
817 Mass.
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NBS
established as a community station.
KJHK is on the air 20 hours a day and has a potential audience of 60,000 people, he
Floyd Miller, Anthropology Undergraduate Association (AUA) president, also made a presentation to the committee. Miller gave an item by item accounting of where the association's requested $3,700 allocation would go.
KU-Y presents:
Do Prisons Rehabilitate?
A discussion with two prisoners from
the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks at Fort Leavenworth
7:00-9:00 p.m., Thurs., Oct. 30
Forum Room, Kansas Union
partially funded by Student Senate
Wed Oct. 29 get out and dance to the Disco Bump sounds of HARD FREEZE
This week:
free state opera house
642 mass lawrence
Fri. Oct. 31 Sat. Nov. 1
CROSSWINGS
CROSSWINGS
SOPH. CLASS PARTY
All KU Students Welcome!
HAPPY HALLOWEEN
THE Billy Spears BAND
HAVE YOUR VICTORY CELEBRATION AT THE FREE STATE WITH BILLY SPEARS...HIS LAST PERFORMANCE IN LAWRENCE UNTIL DECEMBER.
Sat. Nov. 1
THE
Billy Spears
BAND
HAVE YOUR VICTORY
CELEBRATION AT THE
FREE STATE WITH BILLY
SPEARS - MISS LAST
PERFORMANCE IN LAWRENCE
UNTIL DECEMBER.
CON
PERSONAS
is a recreation in two acts by Paul Stephen Lim/ a premiere production/
An entry in the American College Theatre Festival.
Tonight thru Nov. 6 8:00 p.m.
William Inge Memorial Theatre
Tickets $1.75. Student tickets free with registration card University Theatre Box Office, Murphy Hall. 864-3982
Breakfast at McDonald's
69¢
(Plus tax)
McDonald's* serves America's breakfast favorites—fresh, hot and ready when you want them. And, of course, we offer steaming hot coffee, three juices and Danish pastry. Perfect additions to any breakfast selection.
69¢
Your choice of:
69¢ Scrambled Eggs with Sausage
Egg McMuffin
(plus tax with this coupon)
McDonald's
Hotcakes and Sausage
McDonald's
Limit one coupon per customer per visit. Offer good only at participating McDonald's in greater Kansas City,
Warrensburg, St. Joseph, Manhattan and Lawrence during regular breakfast hours.
Please present coupon when ordering.
Expires: Nov. 2
Thursday, October 9, 1975
University Daily Kansan
9
Drug council reorganized
Reorganization of the Douglas County Drug Abuse Council, which disbanded in July, is being completed today by the Douglas County Board of Commissioners.
Randy Schwering, planning coordinator of the council, said yesterday he would present a list of 25 prospective members to the commissioners: 20 chosen by local agencies and five chosen at large. He said the commission would vote whether to accept the members today.
The first meeting of the council will be Wednesday, Schwering said. The council will elect officers and will discuss forming committees such as an educational committee, a treatment and counseling committee, a criminal justice committee and a funding committee, he said.
Projects the council will consider this year, Schering said, are a library of nature and literature about about college education to help identify sources of funding; a referral
service to coordinate local agencies concerned with drug abuse; and a course on drug abuse to be offered for credit at the University of Kansas.
Schering said the course would include information on the history of drug use, common misinformation about drugs, pharmacology, smoking and alcoholism. He said different persons would teach each session of the course.
The council operated last year on a $60,000 grant for program planning from the Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services and matching funds from the county. Schering said. He said that this year the council would receive funding for program implementation in addition to the grants he received. The Council's Social and Rehabilitation Services has said the council can receive no more than $12,000 for implementation, he said.
The original drug abuse council disbanded in July after one year of operation because of organizational and operational problems. The problems started in June 2013 and were assigned from the council to protest the council's support from the Dial-DRUG program.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., yesterday cancelled his Oct. 23 show date at the University of Kansas, according to Brad Bradley, SUA forum chairman.
Bayh'cancels
Bayh, a contender for the Democratic
According to Bradley, Bayh's office said that Bayh's flight imk in Kansas City. Mr. Bayh also said the airport was one of the busiest.
presidential nomination, was speak at 3:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Plants and Pots
Bayh will attend fund-raising dinners in both Kansas City and Topeka, Bradley said. Bayh was to stop at the University of Kansas on his way from Kansas City to Topeka.
4 Blocks East of Mass on 15th
The Garden Center and Greenhouse
"7 ALONE"
Tom Laughlin as the "MASTER GUNFIGHTER"
"THE WILBY CONSPIRACY"
Eve, 7:30 & 1:40
Sat, Sun, Mast, 12:30
Neruity
Granada
10224 H-Regional 1950
Sidney Polter and
CONSPIRACY"
Eve, 7:15, 9:15
Sat, Sun, 2:04
Hillcrest
George Seale, Bilt Guild Group
"CALIFORNIA"
9-45
Summit
2013
"SHAMPOO"
THE WILD
PARTY"
Eve. 7:15, 9:20
Sat.-Sun. 2:05
Hillcrest
"THE WILD
DON'T MISS
"GIVE 'EM HELL
HARRY"
Berkshire Hathaway AIR (32.50)
live. 4:10 $10.50 Sat. Sun. Maid. 2:10
Hillcrest
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods. services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan bulletin. Please enclose job application to color, creed, or national origin. PLEASE RING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00
each additional .01 .02 .03 .04
AD DEADLINES
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.
ERRORS
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 months. Candidates can be asked in person or simply by calling the UR business office at 864-1535.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
FOR SALE
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
available now at Town Crier Stores. tt
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Western Civilization! Make sense to use them!
Makes sense to use them!
2) For class preparation
3) For class preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, you can buy them at the GRAMPHORE SHOP AT KIFTS. *if*
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 24-14 oz.
$6.99 can. $9.99 can. Malteger Salve.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonable Profiles; prefabricated, assembled and polished. Turguize. Salt-lime. Custom-made jewelry.
Now fire merchandise close-outs, etc. New selling huge grocery stock from a Chicago supermarket market with the same price at checkout stand. Open 9 a.m. and closed 12 p.m. Merger's Salvage Center, 628 Vermont. Mercury
We can make your stereo sound better--GUAR-
ER for audio in digital format. Detail at
Audio Systems, 97 E. 9th St.
30% Discount on all antique and used furniture,
dressers, cabinets, tables and products including canteau crests, buba and
wheels and rims. All furniture has a full lot of fresh fruits
rubber and big & tall. All furniture has a full lot of fresh fruits.
8 days, 7 am - 5 pm. W 61; h 431-839, 15pm
7 days, 8 am - 5 pm. W 61; h 431-839, 15pm
Past & Present Antiques. collectables
furniture. Low priced furniture. 1847 Mam.
985-869-048
Tremendous selection of guitars, amp, drums,
cable, bass and other accessories. Shop
Kit, Keyboard Studio, Choose from Gibbons
Amp, Amps, Custom trombone, and many others.
Amps available on custom trombone. Buy
Kit, Keyboard Studio, Keyboards Studio,
1496 W 2nd, 843-5077
1496 W 2nd, 843-5077
For Sale: 1974 Red Corvette, town car, 6400 miles.
$129.00 if练车, call Leo教你 18:30-5:00
1922
A Special sale now at Ray Audio, 18 E. 8th,
843-204-79. Stop by.
A.K.C. Black Labrador. Retrievers, nine weeks
outstanding blood lines. 75, 81-441, *BD*
outstanding.
KODAK STEREO camera f. 3.5, leather case $25;
KODAK STEREO camera f. 4.5, leather case $30;
POLAROID M201 auto flash, light, flash,
case, auxiliary (flood), flash, $25; $15-51-
400 p.m. (5:00), $18-75-81-100
Torquit.
For Sale. Alirequip 125i slide projector with two circular trays and stackerboard. Call 841-390-6799.
James Goe
"See us for your Imported parts needs"
M-F: 8:00-5:30 Sat: 8:00-12:00
304 Locust 843-8000
7:30-9:30
Foreian Auto Parts
For Sale: 23½" $Gitane 10-sp. sew-up. 843-2218
evenings.
Guitar-Gibson L6- 485. Excellent condition, hard shell case must $450. WIlb bargain. B14-07144.
1971 yellow 4-speed VOLKSWAGEN with roof, low mileage. 1972 bright green VOLKSWAGEN with roof, high mileage. 1971 TRIMS-TRI-6. Marion 4 speed; prized to move out 10-15 hawk VOLKSWAGEN.
73 Plymouth Dutter. Excellent condition. One year or two years of mileage. Reliable. Must see to appreciate.
71 Kawasaki 100. Excellent cond, very reliable.
71 Kawasaki 100. Immediately. Can be seen at 10:10
1975 Cimati Italian motorcycle, 160 miles per gallon, low miles. $301. Call 841-784-10. 10
Schwin 10-speed, one year old, just like new.
$100. Call after 1 p.m. 844-680-100.
10-10
French 10-second bicycle, Jeunet—26 "frameless"
Bicycle 15-second bicycle, Jeunet—24 "Jayhurwey Tower, Cars 841-7443"
10-13
SUZUKI 1972 5200c, new condition, only 1600 miles. Sasface for best offer: 843-359-1377
www.sasface.com
For sale. Dry fireplace wood. Free kindling with
call. Order alliany 843-0246. tf
Must sell Motorcycle, 71 Sturzi 350, 6800, in-
clude helmets. Call Rick Lumpkin, 410-296-3200.
3 *movel* 280 *bicycle*, new: **TYPEWRITE**.
4 *moveback* 150 *bicycle*.
5 *reflex T* $30 w/ $25m and $200m lenses; and
6 *braam fluid*; Argus I$1 Super B Camera w/zom-
zoom T* H underwater I $2 underwater. Nowe:
10-14 6219 eve
CAMERA OUTFIT - Miranda Body body and
armored 28mm. Smooth and Bendy. Call
Scott. 841-647-907
Sony TC-458 reel to reel. Lafayette LR-100 50 W
stereo reel, stereo disc, disks, tape recorder,
music sale, disk desk, dish cabinet,
sale items. Sat. & Sun. Oct. 11 & 12. 9-6:00-6
W 107. W 10th of Kasdan KD, Lawnward LK,
100 W
**50 Pontina Bonniville--very recently tunaed up.**
**30 Pontina Bonniville--pardable and便宜 little brake job. Contact**
**10 Pontina Bonniville--slowly driving**
FANTASTIC POTTERY SALE-All pottery item marked 50% off. Stop by and do your Christmas shopping. Stop by and Sun, Oct. 11 and 12, 8 a.m.-6 p.m. at 3807 W. 10th. week of Kadou 10-10
Lawrence, Kana.
24" Campania 10-speed, good condition, after 5
841-7750. 10-14
Ford Van 302 VB and Ac Butane hater. hater.
Bathroom cabinets, cabinets, cabinets, cabins,
bath 8.458-104. 10-10
10-10
Police scanner, midland mobile 8 channel. Accurate
28mm f. 2.8 lens for Nikon. 10-10
One left a quality system for $298. Samul recie-
tors it. A system that is better heard in耳
beat Audio, 13 E. 85th. 10-14
10 + 20 * Gal faucet, complete set-up, hood,
filter, pump, filter, Cali Jim or Perl
gdb-6386
Garage Sale: Six families, Community Children's clothing, books, some furniture, WW snow tint pottery, coke, coasters, a rug, rugs, shoes. Saturday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. No earlier Saturday, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. No earlier
Excellent Excelent
Coral Women's clothing. Junior size.
cheap. Call 841-251-1000. aaa. dresses. large
size.
12* B'-W B'-T VP, Fanatico, 1 year old, Needs minor
training. Also pair o' 6 speakers*, $30.15
B41-847 J41-847
$10-15
Baptist Performance Shop. 125W W 23rd St Moultonborough, NY 10547
JAGUAR JX400 125W Good condition. $2,900 or
$3,200
Repeat Performance店, 1422 W. 23rd St. Mont Verastile店 in Town. Sale on Town. 10-17
Wally Roid's N.A.P.A. Auto Parts
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
NAPA
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
71 YAWAHA 50 street bike, like new, 1380 orig.
milessia, 825 or best offer. 845-830-10-14
GERMAN CAMERA: 1.2mm, auto 5mm 2.8 and
3.5mm lens, leather case, light, 10-100.
119. Calm 842-1870.
NOTICE
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Let us do your printing while you wait at the Quick Copy Cent. Each copy costs $150, 500 copies - $41, 1000 copies - $39
COST PLUS 16%~Stereo equipment. All major
compatible systems. Phone or email item
or package. Call Dave. Phone $250.
16 Canyon Rally Sport 325 Svt. 4 New Comp
classified car, $5,000 or best offer. Mike
selling this week, $500 or best offer. Mike
selling this week, $500 or best offer. Mike
PHOTOGRAPHY Shooting Gallery Specializing in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. We shoot anywhere and any photography. We shoot anywhere and any photography. 841-289- 1.2 p.m. Tues-Sat. yy ff
Rent a piano. Buy or semester basis. Lawrence Rent Piano, Nental, 943-3008.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
pampas, lamps, televisions. Daily开放, 12pm.
12pm-7pm.
Need home for 2 year old black cat. Spayed, very playful, affectionate. 842-5748. 10-9
BEGE BERAL SALE-All brands $13.90刮pack. $25.50
BEGE Party supplies ice company. 6th & 8th
Seasonal.
KU Indian Club celebrates Dival Night—the festival of lights on 19th October at Kanus Anand University. The dimmed display followed by cultural show, the students' valuation and eight students' office and SUA office. 10-15
Friend-Absorbed kittens need good homes. Call 842-9941 or 842-6421 after 6.
See what Mary Kay Camesties can do for you
For appointment. Elise Fliyman. 1-877-593-1581
Repeat Performance Shop. 1422 W. 23rd.
Consignment Shop. Sale On Now! 10-17
WANTED
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
1. male roommate upperclassman or Grad Student
2. female roommate, utilizes Car Mark-
4155. Keep lying.
Shut-in graduate student has war game, winnens championship. Call 862-4073. 10.9
Natha a home for 14 female cakers. Takers must be 18 years of age and have a bachelor's degree or 8750 or 9780 or 8450. & booster's. Contact a114-263-5880.
One ticket to the KU-K-State game. Call 852-
6040. Ask for Tom Law.
Wanted: Male roommate to rent $138 at Jawaherkower Towers. Call 641-7442. 10-13
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment. Female nearby 75% share, mine 841-893-8653
9th & Iowa
Roommate wanted—nausea or female Share count
Bachelor's degree and utilizes furniture.
Call Howard 843-680-1920. 10-14
Karen's Bridal Shoppe
128 Minnesota Lawrence, Kansas
KWIKI CAR WASH 612 N. 2nd St.
2 Blocks North of Kaw River Bridge
Phone 842-0056 By appointment only
KAREN BARNES, owner Closed Fridays
Self Service or
Brush Wash
...
Need two tiketts to watch Jayhawks shove crops up Nebraska. 841-646-7100 10-10
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
RECREATION'S FINEST
Looking for good used LP's and stereos. Stop in at Recycle Store, 13 E. 8th Street in the Ray buildings. We are now having used album baskets. $80 on dancers. on shape. 842-2647. 10-15
4 tickets to KU-Nebraska game. Call Dave-845-
8998, will pay good money.
LOST AND FOUND
Wanted- Two tickets to KU-KState game Nov.
1. Call 811-3467.
10-15
BoBo is Lost . We want him but Ttcrew wants BoBo.
1981 Israel 1984 Jordan 2003 Child's child Piece keeps
that child. No longer!
FOUND: Baby gray kitten outfit Ellsworth Hall.
If you want her, call 864-1194. 10-9
Lost. Bait and white crocheted shawl. Victim of Snow. Call 842-7823 anytime. Reward. 10-14
Stouffer-Stout Place pacing Necklace with 4 charnes. Call and describe at 843-9098. 10-10
FOUND: Lady's self-windbling with silver band sandstone at Mr. Steak. Call 61-811-1801 and email sandstone@stewart.com
Found: just north of Robinson: Vulcan watch
Contact traffic and security dept. 10-10
Found: Gray and white kitten approx. 5 mos.
ID: 864-2712. 10-13
Found: University of Pittsburgh female class
ring. 127. Call Bob at 8359-2599 10-13
Wintertint: Found your black and brown Af-
ternoons at Lawrence Animal Shelter.
Kick up H: 10-15
Found in street between Wescoe and Malott.
186 or 843-641. Looked handsome. Date: 843-
186 or 843-641.
FOR RENT
Free rental service. Up to the minimum listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence. Lawrence, law.
Rental Exchange. 842-250-3600.
ATTENTION STUDENT BENEFITS: Drop in and
use the classroom (phone calls, phone beeper) at WEBSITES
(no phone calls, no phone beepers).
West of Hillcrest Bowl
2 bedroom apartement, all utilities paid. A/C on
ground, air conditioning, free parking, laundry facilities.
Apartment, furnished. wall-to-wall carpet, pan-
tition. Fenced. borders, borders KUF, down-
napped. No pets. $425-$750.
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m., Mon.-Sun
Meadowbrook for sub-lease immediately. 1
Bath furnished, water & gas water. 845-894-3091
Both furnished. Gas & water patio.
"Tires:-Batteries—Accessories"
Need practical experience with youth? Or credit?
hours How about i j reference? Male and female
students welcome to volunteer 1 hour a week. 15 program
stations available.
19th. & Mass.
Want to Work with Youth?
Call Boys Club of Lawrence after 3:00,841-5672
HOT RODS
Troubled where to have your car serviced this semester?
Call
DON'S AUTO SERVICE
842-0753
900 New Jersey
THE LOUNGE
9th & Iowa
a quiet corner
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
HELP WANTED
Two sharp wallacews. One full, time one-part
sculpture. Come by or call 843-6918 Mesh. Yokai-
Takaome. Come by or call 843-6918 Mesh. Yokai-
Takaome.
Draftsmans for detailing machine components. M.E., tech. students encouraged, float paper and design parts to work with machines and have work samples. Prior applicants need not re-apply. Cutler Repiving, Inc. Call 843-1254.
Hoboken—Area restaurant several evenings a week.
Williamsburg—Area restaurant in Lawrence, Area at 10th St.
Call 856-273-4900.
CASHIER Position available in Oread Bookshop.
Applications accepted October 9 and 16. Applicants
must be at least 18 years old.
Person needed to work daily Mon-Fri, for the Daily Kanran for mailing. Please meet qualification. Daily Kanran for mailing. Please meet qualification. 3:30 daily workable. 8 per hour. The Kanran is an急聘 Opportunity Employer. Call 10-44
TYPING
Experienced typist, IBSE. Takefle, thesis, discus-
dition and term papers. Call Pam Jemm
845-7979.
Typing—experienced in dissertations, theses.
Electronic materials, such as carbon, paper, carbon calliope. Calliope 843-8058.
Experienced typist—term paper, papers, thesis,
research. Proofreading skills. Spellchecking,
corrected 845-734, Mrs. Wright.
**THEISIS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is located in the quiet, quiet office of our Guatemalan office is fast and prices are reasonable. The website has a large selection of copies available.**
EDITING and TYPING. Prompt, relable, export-
able, flexible, reliable. Reasonable Rate:
Call 852-9127-12-10
Experienced typist will do themes, these dis-
tresses. Call 842-4543-2043 842-9978 Rivers Ave
Apt. 1265
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 10-13
PERSONAL
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION Meeting. Oppose and third THOSE of each month in Union. ORDER TO WAKE UP, PRESIDENT.
armadillo bead co
LIQUID SILVE
TURQUOISE
CORAL
INDIA
710 Mass.
NATURAL
BEADS
MACRAME
BEADS
M-Sat, 10-5—Thurs, 6-8
GAY COUNSELING
& RAP
lu referrals
info. center
or
864-3506
842-7505
NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC—Beginning thru advanced lessons in folk, rock, and clavier guitar, baddie, fiddler, mandolin, etc. Great teachers, rehearsals, performances, Marianne Stringed instruments 814-6817
Do not read this ad - I would like to rent your
phone number and 1-800-524-3767 for 10:00 p.m. 10:00
p.m. 10:00 p.m.
The Sanctuary is planning an art, paintings and craft show, sculpture display, jewelry, soaps and other craft materials of the deck at the Sanctuary. No charge for the deck. For arrangements, call 843-700-6848 between **b** - **a**.
BSR
SERVICES OFFERED
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION: Meeting April 17, 2014 at 10:30 a.m.
10614 89th St. #200, Burlington 542-952-8200, gayliberation.org
Repeat Performance Store, 1422 St. 3rd St. New & Used Clothing Sale On Now! 19-17
FOOD
MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutor
help you through course content 102,
103, 104, 105, 106, 117, 121, 122,
123, 124, 124, 141, 143, 166, 188; one-time test prep
regular sessions. Reasonable rate Guess
K-8471.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reasonably Profitted, price-
down on jewelry. Beautiful quality. Glamorous, elegant and comfortable. Turquoise. Sale!
Available at www.mayorks.com or by calling (212) 869-4375.
ENTERTAINMENT
THE CATFISH BAR & GRILL is serving ham-
burgers, roast beef sandwiches, grilled ham and
bread, potatoes, rice, vegetables 11:30 a.m. and 9 a.m. Pleater II 8:35 a.m. 4-Mon-Feb
Sunday breakfast 8 a.m.-2 p.m. 19-7
Horseback and Hayrack riding. 16 miles west on
Hawkeye 40, 847-8400. Spencer 10-31
RIDES RIDERS
Anyone interested in forming a carypool from Jeff. Co. to the KU campus contact 747-8340. 10-10
Bahäi Faith
the earth is one country . . . . . . . and mankind its citizens
Bahal meetings Monday----7:30 p.m.
Regency Room
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CENTERED
15 East 8th 841-2666
10:5 Monday-Saturday
AWRENCE
BIC
TEAC
BASF
DUAL
URPLUS
740 Massachusetts
B43
9500
"The home of LEVI'S Jeans"
A
UDIOTRONICS
THE STEREO STORE
UHER
SHURE
FISHER
SCOTCH
PIONEER
RADIO 1 TELEVISIONS COMPONENTS
CAPITAL RECOMMENDS
ROTEL
928
MASS
GARRARD
PANASONIC
CAPITAL
WHARFDALE
WHARFDALE
IDI CAR STEREO
CRAIG CAR STEREO
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, October 29,1975
Federal aid helps Med Center
7
By DIANE M. WILSON
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—A large amount of research is being done at the KU Medical Center, most of it funded by federal grants. Last year alone the Med Center received #1,307,484 in federal grants, Paul R. Oberb, dean for research, said yesterday.
Schloerb said that about $4 million was spent for supplies, equipment and other expenses.
One study funded by a federal grant is of kidney functions. The study is by Jane Grantham, director of the division of nephrology at the Mid Center. He has been appointed to the Institute of Health grant of $20,000 to $30,000 for several years. Scholar bore to.
Grantham's work is exacting because he takes a section of a tubule about two millimeters long and connects tiny glass tubes to each end, he said. He then puts known substances through the tubule and analyzes what happens.
Grantham said he had developed a
technique to dissect out a single functional unit of the kidney, a nephron, and a part of the urinary tract. In this case, take part of a single tubule, which is several centimeters long and about as big around as a human hair, and work with it under a glass lid. To test the blood plasma to get rid of waste material.
There are about one million nephrons in each kidney, Grantham said. They do an amount of fluid each day, about 150 liters of fluid from the blood through the kidney each day. Of that amount, only one liter day is discarded as urine. About 149 litres must be absorbed by the tubules.
Grantham said he had discovered a new function of tubules, aside from their known function of absorption of water and electrolytes. He and his team discovered that the tubules under some conditions secrete a strong acid, which is added to urine.
He said the secretion was noticeable in patients who had a kidney disease called polycystic kidney disease.
Grantham said he didn't now yet what his discovery meant. He is waiting for approval of a new grant to study the secretion aspect of tubules. He said he thought that polycystic kidney disease, characterized by blocked tubes, might be treated with a drug called secretin in normal tubules. He said it would be five to 10 years before he would know for sure, however.
prunes, cranberries and diet soft drinks that contain sodium benzoate.
Another research project funded by a federal grant, Schloerb said, is a study of turmerium immunology by Loren J. Humur, chairman of the department of surgery.
He said Humphrew was trying to find out if cancer antibodies could be transferred from one patient to another to produce artificial immunity. There is encouragement, Schloer said, to get better by getting better usually have antibodies against the cancer, while women with breast cancer who don't better get better have the antibodies.
Ways in which the University of Kansas could aid Vietnamese refugees were discussed with a representative of the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) Saturday, according to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
At a press conference yesterday morning, Shankel said that he and KU departmental representatives had met with Col. Jean Sauveague of HEW Saturday morning.
KU, HEW discuss ways to aid Vietnamese
Shankel said he told Savagee that KU had facilities to aid the refugees, including the intensive English Center, the Orientation Center, the department of Human Development and Family Life and the department of Psychology.
Stankel said he told Sauveguez that that refugee had been a refugee with language and cultural difficulties which he encountered in the United States and with emotional and family
"He said that the evaluation of a new computer system for KU was proceeding on schedule and that he expected reconnaissance from two companies in late November.
One of the committees is studying the different computers available to determine whether they can meet the needs of the University, he said.
The other committee is studying the "lifecycle cost," or the total cost of the equipment to the University over a period of several years.
For your listening pleasure
Wed. - Fri. - Sat. - Sun.
9-1
Open Road Ramada Inn in the Rubayyat Club 6th & Iowa
100
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansas Journal are accredited by an accredited or national origin. Please BINGE ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
$1.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
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.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowance 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 except exceeding three days. These can be placed in person or online, and the UDB business office at 864-3538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale!
"New Analysis of Western Civilization!"
Makes sense to use them -
21 For class preparation
21 For presentation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization!"
Makes sense to use them -
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-produce, you'll need to order from a distributor like the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. **tf**
HIGH PROTEIN horse meat dog food. 34-14 oz.
cans, $4.40 case, no discount. Merge Salad.
CUSTOM JEWELRY Reassable. Prices professional.
Slimmed. Silhouet cut and polished Turquoise, Satin-
toned leather. Handmade in New York.
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 than $29.00 each day. Mayfair's Salvage乳品, $68 Vermont.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amplos, drums,
basses, keyboards, basses, drum kits, and more.
Shop. Bose Keyboard Studies. Choose from Gibbon
Ampire, Kustom Green, and many others.
Amipure Kustom Green. Buy online for a gift
gift box. Bose Keyboard Studies. Shop.
Bose Ampire. Bose Keyboard Studies.
Big Discount on all antique and used furniture,
toys, games and accessories. Special offers
products including canoehouses crates, brushed and
polished wood tables, chairs, reels, wheels and lugs. Also full line of fresh fruits
and vegetables. Country Store, 308 W. King 843-419, illumination
Country Store, 308 W. King 843-419, illumination
We can make your stereo sound better—GUAR-
dering the quality of our two ear details.
Details at Audio Systems, 707 E. 91st St.
Past & Present Antiques. Furniture, collectables
Low price fitted. 1347 Mantel
865-904
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
James Gang Foreign Auto Parts
*'See us for your imported parts needs'*
M-F 8:00-5:30 Sat. 8:00-12:00
304 Locust 843-0800
Sales, Parts, Service
1811 W. 6th
HORIZONS HONDA
TACOS
Small size Radial Tree Sharply Protected ATR87-1 (B69) New; ATR87-2 (B69), ATR87-3 (B69), ATR87-4 (B69), ATR87-5 (B69), ATR87-6 (B69), ATR87-7 (B69), ATR87-8 (B69), ATR87-9 (B69), ATR87-10 (B69). Stonehill's 2* B92 Mass. (We the appliance store deploy the fire Department on Lapland, 10-28 worth's.)
RIDE-ON SPECIAL ON PRO-LIFE COMPANY
RIDE-ON SPECIAL on Pro-Life company
rider price $4.95, Front derailer $17.25. DERAILER
set both derailer, controls, cables, clips, etc.)
Brake cable clips (III) 99, Ceiling cable caps $1.50)
Brake cable clips (III) 99, Ceiling cable caps $1.50)
Pole plate $1.84, Regina Oro chaingar $1.82,
pole plate $1.84, Regina Oro chaingar $1.82,
BICYCLES, 1401 Massachusetts
843-8844.
Halloween and Autumn Headquarters. Country Corn, corn morsels, cornsails, dried peppers, stew, Indian corn, gourd, corn cobs, buttertum, and turbine squash: apples, and elder. For parties for party: Open 9 am - 11 pm. 842-3519 10-31
For sale. Dry fireplace wood. Free kindling with
Call anytime 843-80246. ff
$3.50 per Dozen
17' RCA color TV $250. Less than two years old.
1911 Learned-evenings. 10-29
Stress system bought in Japan over 1 yr or longer. For a short term, stress system may be sold for $500 or less (offer). IHD $249.99 for $500 or less (offer). IHD $249.99 for $500 or less (offer).
Pre-Columbian Jewelry. We have an exquisite collection of chokers and necklaces that we have to offer. All items are made in Carnegie, Bone, Ceramic, etc. From South America. If interested in buying or looking call Rory
Harmon-Kardon 1000 Dolphy cassette deck, exe-
vel Hardcover BASF CSP2 tape, will cope, 10-50
841-8700
Must sell immediately. Queen size Simmons boards $40 or box board. 864-231-212. Keep trying.
Samal 1600 stereo receiver the old time reliability of tubes electronics. $75. Gregs at 841-1088.
Casa de Taco
Kawasaki 500-1792-with Vettier fettering. New cylinders and rings, excellent condition. For sale in Japan only.
SPIERY-BREMINGTON FULL SCIENTIFIC CALIF-
ERS MEDICAL RESEARCH CASE, case II,
841-723-0200, after 5.900.
Complete set of darkroom equipment, including
camera dries, dryer 778 phone number: 842-1328
phone number: 842-1328
10-30
73 Yahama, 300 Endur. $600. Call 841-6995 after 10 or 1117 W 39th St. Tier. 10-30
1105 Massachusetts
GIF PHOTOGRAPHS: casual or formal, Indoor
B42-1799, Experienced kraftens. Vide Lab.
842-1799
**COPHOTGRAPHER** Complete Calumet view samplen
view of the camera 7 * Auto-Form. Enlarge
view from 45°. 853-2700
www.cophotgrapher.com
Halger Glider. Bill Bennett Delta Wing Glider.
Normally $700 will sell for $750. Call 1-833-625-2600.
STEREO CASSETTES, used Stones 25. $McCurtin,
kinks and more. 844-183M students. 10-30
Extra firm double size mattress box springs and bed. 843-6641 after 5 p.m. 11-4
WANTED
Local band needs practice room (hospital, storeroom, etc.). Willing to pay 81-4622 or 814-3950.
Wanted: female football ticket for any or all remaining games either online or on-road - 29-89
Doperseally do 4 to 8 tickets for KU-KSU football game. Call Mike, 843-247-100. 10-30
"The best beloved of all things in MY sight is justice," Bahal meetings Monday, 7:00 p.m. Regionalists Room, Kansas Union.
Bahai Faith
U-K State game tickets. Any number. 841-5551
1 Male roommate upperclassman or grad student
2 Female roommate 1 ullies Call Mark. HC 10-19
Keep trying
843-9880
Roommate wanted to share 3 bedroom house: 3
roommates to $70 a month, plus utilities: 5937,
5937.
Need male roommate for Jayawk屋 apartment.
Call anytime 841-7492 10-30
Wanted- one dorm size refrigerator in good condition. Call 874-6442 or 863-6372. 10-30
Male roommate wanted to share apartment with
Female roommate $6 month, 1/4 utilities A-
dain 841-868. 10-29
If You're Planning on FLYING, Let Maupintur
Do The Thing for You! (NEVER an extra cost
for airline tickets)
1. Male Roommate upperclassman or Grad Student
2. Female Roommate is utilizes Call
841-415. KeepTrying
Recent graduate desires two tickets to KU-KUS
game. Ten dollars each. Call 829-9492. 10-30
Hammond organ, sympherist, Electric piano, and Mellonton keyboard, has voice of The Theatre System and needs a bass guitar player Drummond or Rock Group, Call collect, 10-31 for Kevin.
Wanted: Renter to take over lease at Frontier Ridge from January to May 23. B1-691-6941
Depreserve) 2 Female romcommates needed immedi-
ately to be in the building. 3 Female
Jawwater Towers Aka for Linda or Linda 441-
Female roommate want. Jan, or end of Dec.
(Spring term). Own room. About $80 rent. Fairly
expensive. Room for 4 adults.
Female roommate for Jawahar Wower Towers. Immediately. Contact Marcia, 841-641-613.
COST PLUS 16%~Stereo equipment. All major
models require a 1080i TV or satellite
or items or packages. Call Dave. Phone 852-
743-9999.
NOTICE
**PHOTOGRAPHY** Shooting Gallery Specialising in Personalized Portraits in natural surroundings. Weddings, portfolios, and commercial photography. Phone: 814-239-6750, mail: 814-239-6750, tlf: 814-239-1234, i-phone: Tues.-Sat. **t**: tt
Rent a piano, monthly or semester basis. Law-
rent Piano Rental. MQ3-3008.
PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT! Use us do your printing while you wait at The Quick Copy Centrery. We can copy all copies to $351. 80 copies- $41. 100 copies-$49. 80 want you business at The Quick Copy Centrery.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Use furniture, dressers, clocks, televisions. Open daily. 12-5. 620-3377
Due to an error in the list of dendrograms and the lack of information about his mission to prepare its seeds on the Carruth Poetry Couch this poem attributed to John Nelson, the son of a prominent poet, is another contender. My apologetic to both poets for not sharing it.
Just received a shipment of bromelain plants.
Repeat Performance. 1422 W. 32d. 10-28
PHONE 843-1211
Top 100 45 rpm Records
Discount p'X
HILLCROFT CENTER
No Phone
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
travel service
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
SOUND
SUA / Maupintour
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Make your
now.
Groot on a bike
Thanksgiving & Christmas
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass.
Reservations
19th & Mass.
Book Sale Now. Save on cooking, art book,
sports books, gift cards, books Oread book.
Shop
TYPING
Stolen: Fender Musicmaster II 6-string electric body guitar, wrist strap, wristband, mature hands. Includes bass guitar and up. Also, home-made bass, solid body converted from 6-string, home-made malagony pick guard, ward is offered for return. No questions asked. Price is $299.00. 1201 Ohio 21. 841-7909. Dumbo: 11-3
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of
templates. Send $21 for your up-to-date 160 page,
order catalog. Request Assistant Research
@: #296, Los Angeles, CA. #9055. (823) -12-16
477-8744.
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is a service that provides all of our services in fact and prices are reasonable. We can help you build a website for your business.
Experimented typet, IB.M. Sectile, thesis,disi-
tion and term papers. Call Pfam Dens,882-5751.
*Tying-up*-experienced in dissertations, these. *Tying up*-experienced in dissertations, these. *Tying up*-experienced in dissertations, these. carbon ribbon. Call Lille, 842-908-9861
RECREATION'S FINEST
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Typing: Elite electric typewriter in my home.
Reading: Fromage attention. Mrs. H.
0088 11-24
www.elite-electric.com
Experienced typist—term paper, maps, note, misc.
documents. Send resume to spelling, spoonful
corrections, 841-854, M.I.R. (Mr. Wright)
I do damn good good typline. Pearl 469-4740 12-1
Experienced typifier IMB Sibble Computer. Rate up to
50% of the costs. (Call) 800-316-3212
Exp. typi, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
reports, letters, and spelling reading spelled
receipts Jon 814-3400
EDITING and TYPING. Prompt, reliable, experienced. Distributions wished IBM Selectrix.
Experienced Typid-themes, term paper, HTML,
e—IBM TIBC pleca. pleca. Linda B# 81-1148.
Linda B# 81-1148.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost; a blue and white checked billow hat at
hallway. Please call 105-4238
643-4320
to play it no how!"
Found White and yellow cat with collar on
back. Cat was purchased in St. Louis.
Found Blue wallet on 14th Street, Wednesday,
June 25th. Found blue purse on 2nd street,
Found: pair of cryogens in cloth case on Floor
Hal sidewalk. Identify in room 10. **10-28**
In room 10. **10-28**
"If we don't got it you didn't want
CONTINENTAL AIRLINES
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
9th & Iowa
1645 Tennessee
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
913-843-2788
Kelly Vogt
Campus Sales Representative
Lot: Tues. Oct 21. Red Bed in Summerland or
Containment contains account assignment.
Rudder-845-9278.
Found: Martha Greer. Red wallet with ID's. 84-10
4180.
Found: medium sized black dog, some white. Descri-
bto to claim -841-5338
Found. Rockwell S1R Calculator on the Oudaskid
rd. 22 Oct. Call 842-383 for collection. 10-30
LOST-11% silver and blue box Italian writing
in gold. Value Record $35,978.
Serial Number 8012964.
Lett: Math 102 Book in Waeac or Lindery
lost at 10:30 am in Waeac. Rewark Call:
1741
Lett: Math 102 Book in Waeac or Lindery
lost at 10:30 am in Waeac. Rewark Call:
1631
PERSONAL
GAS IS GOOD AND ECOLOGICALLY SOUND.
Meetings first and third Tuesday each month in
weekdays. Send resumes to:
call 842-9520 after 6 p.m. Counseling room 842-
9520 at 6 p.m. DANCE-NANE-2011
at 6 p.m.
NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC-Beginning thru advanced lessons in rock, folk, and classic guitar, bass, flute, unsoldin, etc. Great teachers, readiness to teach KUNSTIK-Manuel Mastジング-tonei, 811-6817.
Miles. Mother knows about us. See you tonight at the Inge Theatre, Rhoda. 11-6
Miles. Let's get married anyway. You see tonight at the Plaza, St. Paul, Sprague. 12-6
Milv. I love you still. You tonight at the Ignei Theatre. Jesse. 11-6
Guy: No matter what Lewis thinks, we all love you! you hate at G.SP
10-29
Women's Self-Health Free University Class beginning Oct. 23, 8 p.m. Pine Union–Union
FOR RENT
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
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Sengals TO THE CASHIER
Gifts and Jewelry 803.521.7699
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS; Drop in at the front desk (no phone calls, please) at WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY. (No phone calls, please.)
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MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 602, and 603. For course 604, visit http://www.math.tutoring.com/; 123, 124, 141, 143, 356, 588; One-time test preparation or regular sessions. Responsible call.
HELP WANTED
---
The Sanctuary Catering Service in now taking place at the 13th Street Bars, bartenders, and waitresses. Previous experience with caterers is needed. Precious cooking expertise is essential. Prerequisite: Successful job as a graduate. Please call Ace or Shailly at 843-560-2977.
FOOD
ENTERTAINMENT
Pumpkins, edible, apples, squash, tomatoes, lettuce, etc. Zara Dairy Products. We are authorizes to redeem food stamps. Ungle Milk's Farm Store. 421 E. 8th St. Open 7 days 8 p.m. 10-31
rourchesk and Hayrack ride 16 miles west on
Hawk 40, 887-3050. Spencer. 10-31
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Part-time--make money and have fun--jewelry
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Open 12-5:30 M-F 10-5:30 Sat.
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the GRAMO PHONE shop YP 800 TURN TABLE
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RECORD AND STEREO
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842-1544 SAVINGS ON JAMBOOK STEREO COMPONENTS
10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesdav. October 29,1975
On Campus
Events ...
TODAY: Roy D. Laird, professor political science, will discuss "the politics of World Hunger," at the FACULTY FORUM at noon 10 a.m. in The Royal College, 1942 Dearst Road, St Lawrence Catholic Center will sponsor "WORDS AND SILENCE," meditation for everyone, from 12:30 to 1 p.m. at Danforsh Chapel, Donald Marquis, professor of philosophy, will discuss "More Colloquies" and "Different Collections COLLOQUY," at 3:30 p.m. in 210 Blake Hall. THE STUDENT SENATE ACADEMIC AFFAIRS committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union to meet with students of Kansas (ASK). There will be a STUDY ABROAD meeting at 7 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. The UNIVERSITY SINGERS will perform at 8 p.m. in the University of Kansas COMMUNICATIONS INC., will meet at 8:30 p.m. in the Regional Library of the Union.
TOMORROW: MICHAEL PONCE DE LEON, New York City printmaker, will present a slide lecture at 10:30 a.m., in the Room Forum of the Union.
Announcements...
A WORKSHOP TO HELP STUDENT
WIVES advance their own education and
careers will be offered Nov. 4 by the Student
Services Section of the Division of
Education. A later workshop will be held
Jan. 5, 1978.
The CAMPUS VETERANS will have tables in the Kansas Union and Wescoe Hall this week to get responses to the Kansas Veteran Titution Bond.
Two DEBATE TEAMS from the University of Kansas tied for first place, leading the KU debaters to a victory in a match at Kansas State University last weekend.
Jobs open on Kansan
Applications for the positions of editor and business manager for the spring semester Kansan will be accepted until noon Friday in 10Ft Flint
Application forms are available in 105 Flint; the Student Senate office, 105B Kansas Union; the office of the dean of men, 228 Hollow Hall; and the office of the dean of women, 222 Strong.
The Kansan Board will interview candidates and select a spring editor and business manager Nov. 3.
---
GRETA GARBO
Camille
Nominated for an Academy
Nominee in the American
tragic portrait of Emilie in
this 1927 film directed by
Curtis Hukowin.
Tonight at 7:30. 75c
Thursday, October 30.
SIMON OF THE DESERT with Sylvia Pinal and
Claudio Brook 7:30-7:50
Friday and Sat, Oct. 31 Nov. 1.
Alan Bates and Geneva碧伟
In Palm Bay Dr. Broca's
NGO (NY) 2012
7:00 and 9:00, one dollar
Films presented by SUA in Woodruff Auditorium
To: K-State Students and Manhattan Taco Grande
From: K.U. Students and Lawrence Taco Grandes
It's K.U. K-State Football Time again and we of the Lawrence Taco Grandes, which is the Home of the Glorious "Seldom Beaten" Jayhawks, challenge the Manhattan Taco Grande and the K-State student body to our annual 1,000 Taco Bet on the outcome of the game. You will notice no insults this year, it's part of our "Be Kind To Animals Campaign."
The students of the winning school, upon showing your student I.D. will receive two Tacos free until 1,000 are given away. K.U. wins Free Tacos at Lawrence Taco Grandes. K-State wins Free Tacos at Manhattan Taco Grande.
Find it in Kansan classified advertising. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
WINDY CITY
S. U. A.
PRESENTS
Todd Rundgren's
Utopia
WINDY CITY
S. U. A.
PRESENTS
Todd Rundgren's
Utopia
FRIDAY, NOV. 14 — 8 P.M.
Allen Fieldhouse — Lawrence, Kansas
$6.00, $5.00
ON SALE TODAY
at
SUA Office (Kansas Union)
and
Better Days Records (Downtown)
A SUA/Windy City Production
WINDY CITY
S. U. A.
PRESENTS
Todd Rundgren's
Utopia
FRIDAY, NOV. 14 — 8 P.M.
Allen Fieldhouse — Lawrence, Kansas
$6.00, $5.00
ON SALE TODAY
at
SUA Office (Kansas Union)
and
Better Days Records (Downtown)
A SUA/Windy City Production
The Beach Boys
in Concert
AND
★★ Celebrate KU's Victory on Saturday ★★
TICKETS GOING FAST . . . BUY TODAY! '5-'6 Reserved
Tickets Available: SUA Office (Kansas Union)
Better Days Records (Downtown)
A SUA/Windy City Production
S. U. A.
PRESENTS
Todd Rundgren's
Utopia
The Beach Boys in Concert
The Beach Boys
in Concert
HOME MUSIC 07/28 1975 Coca-Cola
---
10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 9, 1975
13
KU's VD rate unchanged
By SARA HOLLAND
Staff Writer
Although national figures continue to rise, the number of cases of veneral disease among University of Kansas students has remained fairly stable, according to Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Memorial Hospital.
During 1974, the health center treated 59
students and nine students for
spinalitis. Wolffman义学
He said he didn't know the number of persons who applied, but the rate had been greatly increased.
There were 10,792 cases of venereal
in Kansas between July 1974 and June 1975.
During the first 39 weeks of 1975 there were 762,867 reported cases of venereal disease in the United States. For the same time period in 1974, 683,785 cases were
"IF THE 1975 FIGURES were multiplied by three or five, a more accurate number of persons who have venereal disease might be reached," Fred Dreste, representative of the epilepsiology department of the state health department, said Tuesday.
Many cases of veneerual disease are never reported. he said.
Wollmann said that thousands of students were tested for venereal disease but only a few were diagnosed.
Although the venereal disease rate is lower in the university of Kansas, students shouldn't be any less concerned about the possibilities of having the disease, he said.
Kay Kent, director of the Douglas County health department said the department treated 215 persons for venereal disease between January and August 1975.
MICHAEL WELL, LAWRENCE physician, said that venereal disease was transported not only through sexual intercourse but also by oral contact.
According to the health department, syphilis is caused by a germ called a spirochete and gonorrhea was caused by a gonococcus germ.
Kent said that symptoms of syphilis included kinks and called chancres and cracks on the skin. The ground are the same.
*Syphilis* is fairly easy to detect because a simple blood test can be given as a test for *Syphilis*.
Wallmann said that gonorrhea was difficult to detect because it wasn't possible to detect by a blood test and a bacteria culture had to be taken. Symptoms of the disease are a burning sensation on the genitals and discharges, he said.
Dresie said that eight out 10 women didn't show symptoms for gonorrhea.
if gonorrhea is left untreated, the results may be scarring, gonorrheal arthritis or pain.
Wellmann said that treatment for
wound cases included penicillin shots or
oral medication.
"IF A PERSON IS allergic to penicillin then alternative antibiotics can be used," he said. "Alternative antibiotics are increasingly used because the germ that causes gonorrhea is becoming resistant to penicillin."
Well said, that once the disease was treated treatment was fairly easy and unaffraid.
Persons with venereal disease should be reminded that follow-up treatment is important, he said, and that a second blood after the initial treatment is a good idea.
Wellmann said the test for venereal disease in cats is a health check that can be费用的 for medicine.
Kent said that all information about treatment of veneered disease at the health department is available.
"IF SOMEONE UNDER 18 seeks treatment for venereal disease, no information is released to the parents," she said.
Treatment at Watkins also is considered confidential.
Wollman said, "If a person has venereal disease, it is reported to the State Health department, but by statutes the records are closed and kept confidential.
"There is no recrimination to the individual."
Dresie said that incidents of venereal disease were increased in Kansas because of increased mobility of the population and a freer attitude about sexual relations.
"1978 should show a drastic increase for cases of veneer disease," he said.
Dresie said the largest group affected by
venereal disease contained persons between the ages of 15 and 25.
"THERE HAS ALSO BEEN an outbreak of venereal disease in the gay community," he said. "There is a greater reluctance by gay persons to seek help for venereal disease because of the embarrassment attached."
Wollmann said there weren't many unreported cases of venereal disease at the University because students felt free to get back to the health center for an examination.
David Clinton, Lawrence physician, said that he didn't treat many cases of venereal disease.
"Although the statistics may indicate otherwise, I don't think that the rate of death is higher for men."
More people are reporting it though, he said.
Erik Wright, professor of psychology, said that in a class he taught called "Human Sexuality," the class discussed venereal disease and the symptoms of it.
a *p* a person has venereal disease then he should seek medical help," Wright said. "Persons with venereal disease shouldn't panic or feel guilty and ashamed.
"Venereal disease often fools up personal relationships because persons are afraid to face the problem and seek help or tell their partners. Persons with venereal disease should recognize it as an infection, seek help and then go ahead and live."
Counseling and treatment are available at Watkins Memorial Hospital and the Douglas County health department Monday through Friday.
PLANT SALE
Good Bargains on Exotic Plants
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Open noon-11 p.m.
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Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358.
SUA Presents
TONIGHT
THE SUNSETS
PLAYING THEIR GREATEST HITS:
TONIGHT
25 or 6 to 4
Beginnings
Color My World
Feeling Stronger Every Day
Make Me Smile
Saturday in the Park
Lowdown
Wishing You Were Here
Harry Truman
Any Way You Want It
Brand New Love Affair
CHICAGO IN CONCERT
Thurs., Oct. 9th, 8 p.m.
Allen Field House
Tickets $4-$5-$6 Reserved Seat
Tickets on sale in the Kansas Union. Tickets will be sold in the parlors south of the Ballroom on Level 5. There will be a 10 ticket per person limit.
A WINDY CITY PRODUCTION
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.34
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
October 10,1975
FANTASTIC
Friday
Vote to be disputed on holdover senators
A challenge will be filed early next week with the University Judiciary Board questioning the Student Senate's right to replace holder senators.
"The election was improper and not within the Senate's power," he said.
Jon Josserand, college senator, said yesterday he would challenge the Senate's election Wednesday of Dierck Casseman, Invatha senior, to fill a vacated hollow "center."
With the exception of the challenge, there were few aftereffects of Wednesday night's long and occasionally heated meeting. Ed talked about the bad weather, said he would send the budget belt passed.
Josserand told the Senate before it voted that he would probably challenge the election. This Senate, he said, didn't have the men to elect holdover senators from the Senate.
Each Senate elects three holdover
KU program gives blind daily news
The program is a closed-circuit FM radio service to the blind and physically handicapped, and provides 2,400 listeners with current stories and entertainment programs.
the university of Kansas Audio Reader program will celebrate its fourth birthday Monday. And like most four-year-olds, it is suffering from growing ains.
Space also has become a problem. All the program's facilities are stuffed into a former kitchen in Sudder Hall, the building where KANU broadcasts from. Audio Reader is transmitted on KANU's free internet and digital receivers can pick up the broadcasts.
Audio Reader operates on a $41,000 budget, funded by the state legislature through the University. But that figure is only half of what is needed to operate the program and to expand its services, Rosie Rodriguez, director of the program, said yesterday.
AUDIO READER HAS distributed without charge 750 receivers to hand-capped people in the area, she said, and could easily distribute an additional 300 if the program had enough funds. Each receiver costs the program $70.
In addition, Hurwitz said, Audio Reader needs money for more recorders, recording tape, hired staff members and an updated broadcasting console.
Audio Reader has an engineer-in-residence to cope with some of the mechanical difficulties. Tom Fish, assistant director, handles any minor problems that develop with the equipment. Audio Reader also re-orders training assistance from KANU staff members.
SOME MONEY COMES FROM private contributions, she said, but the amount isn't
Hurwitz said the program had requested $90,000 for fiscal 1978, but didn't expect to receive any more than the present budget. The program was not strictly an academic program.
The financial problems arise because the program is a new and innovative service,
KU's program was the second of its kind in the United States when it was founded, and it was the first program connected with the University of Pittsburgh—published in St. Paul, Minn., is six years old.
The University's Audio Reader was founded by an anonymous philanthropist who invested $100,000 to get the service on its feet. The second year, the program was a line item in the state library budget. The university took over its budget in fiscal 1974.
Now, four years later, KU's program, like now, is another in the United States, is still trying to make it work.
THE ONLY OTHER similar program in Kansas is in Wichita. That program is independently funded, although it uses the same equipment in Wichita State University's radio station.
The scope of the Wichita program is smaller than KU's, but its problems are more serious, reports indicate. It depends entirely on private donations to keep it operating, although it is seeking state funds.
According to one report quoting Robert Dawson, vice president of the board of directors of Wichita's program, the director recently resigned because of the heavy tax burdens associated with terminated its weekend broadcasting because of a shortage of volunteer readers.
There are 24 programs across the country and they all may have similar financial difficulties. Hurwits said, but each is unique, because the programs kinds of services offered to the listeners.
See DAILY page nine
senators from its membership just before the new Senate takes over in the Spring. These three serve in the new Senate and on University Council.
Casserman said he would accept the seat.
The election, he said, is valid.
Cassman admitted he hadn't heard of the Senate filling a vacant holder set fire.
"It's not covered in the Senate code," he said. "We're just going to have to wait and see."
Bill Blessing, Senate parliamentarian,
said the electrical validity should be left up
until it is approved.
"The (Senate) rules and regs aren't very clear on this," he said.
Josserand is probably taking a good course of action. Blessing said.
Joosserand said he spent time in Green Hall yesterday to figure out exactly how to file his challenge. He said he hoped to have the challenge filed by early next week.
Rolfs said he was generally pleased with the wav the Senate会议 went.
Staff Photo by GEORGE MILLENER
A
"I especially liked the way the new students got involved and asked questions," he said. "I was glad to see them taking such an active interest."
Rolfs said, however, he was concerned about the emotionalism of some of Wednesday's debates. He was disturbed, he said, by the subjective way such issues as funding the Karsan and Douglas County Legal Aid were debated.
Attempts to add allocations for the Kansan and Douglas County Legal Aid to the Finance and Auditing Committee's budget recommendations were defeated.
The Finance and Auditing Committee, Roffs said, did an excellent job of preparing and presenting its recommendations. He said that although he didn't completely agree with the committee's recommendations he was still generally pleased.
Open air act
following a three-man 15-minute theatre performance in front of Dyche Hall Thursday afternoon, J'vain Mokewitk, or
member of the New Jerusalem Players of Jews for Jesus, mocks
the church's leaders and promotes homophobia. The three have
an audience of about 300. See story page 18.
Superheroes rule comics world
By BRUCE SPENCE
Staff Writer
Chances are that during your childhood, you were quite familiar with Captain Kangaroo and the likes of Daffy Duck, Bugs Bunny and Baby Huey.
The light-hearted comics are still around, but they seem to have taken a back seat to the superheroes who entertain them by BOP. The comic book is the victory over those villainous evildoers.
Well, the Captain is still around, but you probably won't find many of the comic book series he wrote in newspapers. The illustrated heroes of comic books today are a new breed—Daffy has given way to Spiderman and Bugs and Baby Huey who were replaced by the Creeper who is coming.
The superhero and horror varieties are
easily the best sellers in comic books, according to Charles Sherrick, assistant manager of the Kansas City, Mo., based company, the agency, which distributes comic books.
He said that superhero comics, which had been popular for the past few years, continued to increase in popularity and showed no signs of abatement.
Collector comics, which are reprints of old comic books, and special edition comics
Bv Noves, manager of the two Town Crier shops in Lawrence, said that the superhero comics, which outside the town are a regular feature for boys and men, ages 10 to 15 and 22 to 25.
THE PRICE IS UP to 25 cents for a regular comic and anywhere from 50 cents for a graphic novel.
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
HULK
THE THOR
THE DODGE
THE WARRIOR
MAN
EDITION
ACTION COMICS
JEWELRY
KILLIRAVEN
Adventure
Fred Cleaver, a computer programmer at the University of Kansas, is amid part of his research on the robotics that he collected the comics stole the early 1980s. He estimates the value of his collection at $50 million.
For example, a 1388 Superman Action No.
condition is worth up to $8,000. be said.
So the dime comic of the earlier years is now yours for $1.50, but the old original comic books are carrying much higher price tags.
George Marsee, a clerk at the Grandview Book Gallery, 820 Main St. in Grandview, Mo., said, "Some of the old comics run in the market" and even thousands of dollars on the market."
Marsee said that an annual price guide put out by Robert M. Overstreet set the prices of comic books and listed every comic ever made.
Comic book collections have really come into being in the last 10 or 12 years, Marsee said. There has been even more interest in comic collecting the last several years, he said, which made the old comic book trade quite good.
Shazam!
COMIC BOOK CONVENTIONS have been organized all over the country, including a small one last summer in Kansas City, Mo., Marsee said.
"I'm really not into trading too much because I haven't found that many people in Lawrence who are as serious of a collector as I am, and everything I have, I don't want to trade."
Fred Cleaver, a computer programmer at the University of Kansas, estimated that he had 4,000 to 5,000 comic books in his collection.
"They're too boring," one student said. Sharon Wilson, Lawrence graduate student, said, "No, I don't read them. At least I haven't since it was little."
Any student from the University who is male can apply for the Rhodes scholarship through the regional committee, Casagrande said.
He spends about $25 a month on comic books, Clever said, which he buys in bulk.
Cleaver said that a few of his comics were worth from $50 to $100.
The other Marshall candidates are Randy Altman, Prairie Village senior; Sarah Covill, Lawriston, N.Y. senior; Thomas Burcham, Lawrence senior; John D. Friedman, Manhattan senior.
EVEN KU COLLECTS the gody oldies. A cartoon collection in the Spencer Research Library includes a few copies of some underground comics ranging from "Jesus Meets the Armed Forces" to the "Fabulous Furry Freak Brothers."
"There isn't anywhere in Lawrence for a curious collector to go to fill in holes in his books."
Federal anti-discrimination laws prohibit educational institutions from making official recommendations for scholarships that are limited to one sex.
Werger Ward, Lawrence senior, and
Valerter Oglut, Birmingham, Ala., senior,
and John J. Meyer, Birmingham, Ala.
The other Danforth candidates, who will enter primary competition, are Cheryl Forbes, Valley Center senior, and Diane Hawley, Salina senior.
The Gilbert Collection, a private collection of first-issue publications and special issue magazines housed in the William Allen White Journalism Library in Flint Hall, contains from 30 to 40 old comics, including the first 19-cent issue of Looney
The Danfort Fellowship provides $2,500 a year plus expenses for support of doctoral studies for students who show promise as future instructors. Applicants for the positions are asked to name several schools where they are interested in studying.
"To escape reality," Steve Dooey, Clay Center freshman, said with a grin.
His preference is for Superman, Beetle Bailey and the Sunday comics, Doocy said.
Despite competition from television, the comic book is still around. So what's the answer?
The eight students were selected from 46 applicants, about 25 per cent more applicants than usual, according to Peter Lowe, who heads the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
"I enjoy comics for humor," Doocy said, and that kind of (superhero) stuff is too hard to digest.
Eight University of Kansas students have been nominated to compete for either Marshall or Danforth Graduate Fellowships for the 1975-76 academic year.
Eight students nominated to try for fellowships
About 65 Danforth Fellowships are awarded nationally by the Danforth Foundation of St. Louis, Casagrande said. KU has won 16 awards within the last 20
KU won't nominate any Rhodes scholarhain candidates this year.
Sheryl Moyer, Kansas City, Kan. seni, said that she had read her sister's Archie McGraw novel and read it to her.
Twenty-four Marshall Scholars will be selected nationwide in late February or early March. The Marshall Fellowships were founded by the British government in 1953. KU students have won 22 of the awards.
KU nominates DanFernick candidates on the student's population. It can nominate for student.
Marshall Awards fund two years of graduate study at a British university. Students who win the awards receive $2,500 and students amounted to more than $5,000 in England.
Staff Writer
By DIERCK CASSELMAN
Endowment group invisible on campus
East of the Kansas Union, concealed in a grove of trees halfway down the slope steep of M. Oread, the Kansas University Entrance. A large, arched entrance, the least visible organizations on campus.
The result of its existence, though, can be in nearly every aspect of the Univers.
"The feeling that I've received and that I had myself when I was a student was that the Endowment Association existed," Larry Heb, director of deferred giving, said Wednesday, "but where it was and who it was remained something a mystery."
Heeb said that the mysterious image wasn't intentionally induced.
Because the focus of the organization, University fund raising, is off-campus, he said, contacts with faculty and students are limited.
UNLESS A STUDENT RECEIVED a loam or scholarship, he probably has little reason to complain.
the organization's outward orientation is the basis of its survival.
Like the University of Kansas Alumni Association and the University of Kansas Athletic Association, the Endowment Association is a corporation registered with the State of Kansas and independent of the University.
Since 1893 when it became the first separate foundation at a state university, the association has accumulated an endowment of $47.5 million.
It has been the model for several university endowment foundations and has been ranked among the top 10 public school associations in the nation for the total amount of donations and bequests received annually during the past decade.
The association hires professional consultants to assist it, with investment.
SOME PEOPLE THINK the association in a financial "Santa Claus" that can fund the economy.
According to Frank Aydelotte, Endowment Association public relations director, more than 90 per cent of the donations the receptionists are received in their use.
Actually, Jim Martin, director of programming development, said, unless a gift is given with no restrictions on its use, it is not necessary for the program specified by the donor.
"It's much more appealing to donors, that the value of their gift, through wise investment, can, over a period of years, mean substantially more to the University," he said.
Several meetings a year are organized with alumni volunteers throughout Kansas, Colorado and Missouri.
The fund-raising efforts of the organization involve continual contact with potential donors to encourage solicit and have a general love for the University, the director of the Greater University Fund.
GUF is a program corsipposed by the EWDU association and the Alumni Asso-
sociation.
AT THE MEETINGS, Whitson said, the alumni volunteers try to contact all KU alumni in the area by telephone. If the students are not available enough, the volunteers travel door to door.
The goal of GUF is to obtain modest gifts from many alumni. He said the program's main thrust was to create a broad base of donors.
Last year 20,000 people gave more than $800,000 to GUF. Money collected by the program can be used in as many ways as there are donors, he said.
F five mailings are made each year. Donations may be made to the scholarship-loan and or for unlimited use, but, Whiten said, some donors make specific requests.
One woman gave money to GUF specifying that, on the day the Dykes moved into the chancellor's residence, a bouquet of flowers went to welcome Mrs. Dykes, Whitten said.
HE SAID THAT ON the proper day, Mrs. Dykes received the flowers, and that the remainder of the money went into the unrestricted gift fund.
The unrestricted donations are used for a variety of things, Martin said. Departments and agencies throughout the University make requests for the funds and the chancellor recommends how the funds should be used.
An example, Martin said, would be a department needing matching funds for a grant. If the University budget didn't provide for the matching funds, he said, the
See ENDOWMENT page nine
Local families' rifts spur Unification Church debate
Staff Writer
By STEWART BRANN
Six months ago Pam Fanshier and Jan Osborne were two typically frustrated University of Kansas seniors. Both were worried about finals and felt they were nothing—nothing that would have made front page news.
But six months ago the two roommates became interested in the teachings of the Unification Church, a controversial group that set off an unusual chain of events in the lives of both women. These women were born in Kentucky's eastern made their names familiar ones in conversations and headlines throughout Kansas.
The Unification Church is a Christian church that studies a new interpretation of the Bible. It is based on the theory that Christ died before He could complete His work on Earth, and that the Rev. Sun Myung Moon has been sent to complete the job by forming a perfect race.
THE CHURCH HAS BEEN accused of brain-washing its members into devoting their lives and property to the Rev. Moon and his church. Recent
controversy has arisen when parents of church members have had their children deprogrammed out of the group by a professional group that specializes in supposedly reversing the brain-washing.
The church has filed kidnapping charges against many parents who have attempted to deprogram their children.
The Unification Church in Kansas now has centers in Lawrence, Manhattan and Emporia. Several cases of deprogramming of church members have been reported by Barbara and Fanshier appear to be the most recent.
Both women became so involved with the church last summer that their parents chose to have them deprogrammed. Osborne's deprogramming has been completed and she no longer considers herself a member of the church. But the attempt to deprogram Fanshier was aborted and her religious convictions are perhaps even stronger now than they were before.
AFTER A LONG, TRYING AND exhaustive
summer for both families, two stories have unfolded with quite different conclusions.
Orbane was the first of the two women to become interested in the church. Last spring she was approached on campus by a member of the church and was asked to fill out a questionnaire about her religious beliefs. She accepted an invitation to attend one of the church's weekend seminars and then attended several other meetings and participated in church fundraising events and tea tues and terrariums on street corners and in parking lots in Manhattan, Lawrence and Kansas City.
"When I first joined, I was just ecstatic because of what the church appeared to be," she said last week. As she became more involved with the church, she had her religious feelings grew more
"I TOUGH I WAS VERY happy, and that I had a close experience with God," she said. "I had a sense of peace."
"I felt a tremendous responsibility to the world and had a feeling of importance. It was a good work."
As Osborne's involvement with the church intensified, her relationship with her parents and friends grew weaker, she said. Social activities and relationships with long-time friends at first took a back seat to church activities, she said, and later became almost totally meaningless to her.
"I felt like a little messian, setting a higher tender for the to fly to follow," she said. "I could go to my way."
"I LOVED MY FAMILY, but I had a higher purpose. I was programmed to put the church above
Oswine said that at the time she hadn't realized what was happening between her and her family and friends. But even if she would have realized it, the probably wouldn't have walked out on the church
"I couldn't camp on the church because of the responsibility to cop," she said, "especially when you were with your wife."
If Osborne didn't see the breakdown in familial relationships, her mother, Pat Osborne, did. Mrs. Osborne said that she and her husband were at first delighted to learn that something had captured
their daughter's imagination. But she said that as their daughter becomes more deeply involved with them, the child learns to
"HER WHOLE PERSONALITY changed." Mrs. Osborne said. "She just wasn't the same girl. Her priorities, her affections were all of a sudden channelled into the group."
Mrs. Osborne said her daughter's condition became obvious to them when she refused to come home to be a bridemaid in her cousin's wedding. Osborne had been very close to her cousin, Mrs. Osborne said, but she couldn't be persuaded to leave Lawrence long enough to attend the wedding.
"When I talked with Jan on the telephone before the wedding, I told her, 'I sounds to me as if they've been talking. And I'm not."
As she became more skeptical of the church, Mrs. Osborne began to study its philosophy and practices. She said she talked with former church members, parents of church members and deprogrammers to find whether what had happened to her daughter had happened to others.
See LOCAL page six
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
October 30,1975
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.47
A LITTLE WARMER
Thursday
BY IAN KENNETH LOUDEN
Beer definitely will be on sale in the Kansas Union after Saturday's game between the University of Kansas and Kansas State University.
The beer will be sold in cups, he said,
and distributed by Union personnel.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said last night at a meeting of KU
administrators and Lawrence city officials
that student organizations would sponsor
the sale of beer after the game until about
6:30 p.m.
"TheWheel has become a happening," he said. "It's an experience to get 500 people into a room that was made for 16 and try to get a beer."
Rick Von Ende, executive secretary to the chancellor, said he hoped the sale of beer in the union would ease the traffic at 14th and Ohio streets. However, he said, many people who sit in the Union Wheel, 507 W. Street in theSTRUCTURE must not want to drink beer in the Union.
MAYOR BARKLE CLARK said he and
According to McClanathan, the city could allow the expansion of the Wheel and the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio, which are present nonconforming uses. This classification means that they are commercial businesses in an area that is zonaed dormitory. As a result they can't be expanded without a change in the city ordinance.
Another possibility is the development of fenced-in areas, like that on the east side of the Wheel, to accommodate loitering patrons, he said.
UNFORTUNATELY, McCLANTHAN said, such an area would do little to discourage overly rowdy behavior and would fail to provide proper restroom
The most possible plan, he said, would be the development of a new university.
Dick McMianathan, city planner, had been congratulated to the student congresion at 14th and Ohio.
Garbage fuel study requires Regents' OK
By SHERI BALDWIN
McClanathan said the city and the University had several choices.
Plans for a trash-powered utility plant at the University of Kansas are awaiting a Kansas Board of Regents decision on construction of an engineering consultant for the project.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor and chairman of KU's Energy Study Task Force, said last night at a meeting of city officials and KU administrators that he hoped the decision would be made at the Resents November meeting.
KU administrators requested funding to pay an outside engineering consultant to study the feasibility of a burnable trash cans. KU also funded air-condition the University, Lucas said.
The city wants to expand the present city airport, which is north of Lawrence near Teepee Junction. However, the land around the present airport that would be needed for expansion is owned by the Kansas University Endowment Association, which said federal funding cannot be used to build an airport on land that is privately owned.
Money needed for expansion of city airport
City Manager Buford Watson told Lawrence City Commissioners and members of the University of Kansas administration last night that the city wanted to use federal funds, but it first needed to buy land for the airport.
Master plans for a new Lawrence Airport are complete, but the city doesn't know what to do.
Todd Seymour, president of the endowment association, said the land surrounding the airport was a source of revenue and the association didn't want to.
The endowment association leases the land the present airport is on to the city for
However, he said, the endowment
See AIRPORT page two
See GARBAGE page 11
"Normally one per cent of a proposed project's total expected cost is requested."
"The system we are looking at would cost $10 to $12 million."
Lacas said he had no idea how much the Regents would allocate for such a consultant. But he said the project would mean great savings for KU in the future.
At today's costs, we would save $1.2 million a year if we built an $11 million building.
Lucas said it would probably be next year before the Regents sent a funding request to the funders. The plant should also be included in funding requests in the fiscal 1978 budget, he said.
THE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH,
Education and Welfare is currently providing up to $50,000 to cities that are interested in the development of solid waste plants, Lucas said. Lawrence and the University might make a joint proposal for the HEW funds to support a study of solid waste plants, he said.
Lucas said his next step would be a visit to a plant in North Chicago that is very similar to the plant KU would construct. Two weeks ago he visited a plant in Ames, Iowa, that might serve as a partial model for the KU plant.
Lucas said that if 140 tons of trash were burned each day, University heating and cooling needs could be met. In a very cold winter, though the trash supply could run
William Smith, dean of the School of Engineering, studied various energy sources and designed plans for the garbage-battery request of the Energy Study Task Force.
Lawrence handles 100 to 120 tons of trash each day, but an unknown quantity of trash is generated daily.
KU HAS ABSORPTION-HEATING and air-conditioning systems that could run from the steam generated by burning trash, or just from heat exchangers, run steam turbines for electricity, he said.
"They don't like to take items such as re-trimming at the landfill, and to avoid plastic bags."
Instead of burning oil and gas, the system would burn only trash. Smith said.
related commercial-recreational zoning district.
McClanathan said such a zoning district would include most retail and service businesses that would servc as convenience facilities for students.
There are several areas that could be used, he said. Some developers already have expressed interest in the 12th Street and Oread Ave, area, he said.
Todd Seymour, president of the University of Kansas Endowment Association, said the Endowment Association owned much of the property on Oread between 12th and 13th streets and probably favor commercial construction.
McClANATHAN SAID THAT Jayhawk Tower, 1603. W 15th St., was interested in creating a delicatessen in one of its towers. It now is legal for a commercial facility like a delicatessen to be built in the area because of city zoning ordinances.
In addition, he said, there was interest in expanding the area near the Wheel and the Jayhawk into a type of small "Agglerville." The department's commercial area adjacent to K-State.
Commissioner Marrie Argeringer said establishment of such an area would be impossible because the people in the hills and nearby apartments would object.
McClanahan said something should be done because KU was the only Big Eight university without an adjacent commercial district.
MAX LUCAS, ASSISTANT to the chancellor, and said people needed to be reminded of their responsibilities.
"It's a mistake on the part of the public to think it means bars, bars, bars," he said. He said students could use small grocery shops, restaurants and retail stores.
McMianna said a special plan for 14th and Ohio would be worked into the Lawrence. Comprehensive Plan if needed. The plan maps future expansion for Lawrence.
Mike Davis, University general counsel,
said another problem was the inadequate
funding.
A SQUARE
OF MASTER
SPEAKERS
Slip showing
Staff Photo by DAVID CRENSHAW
in conjunction with the strike planned by the National Organization of Women yesterday, a group identified as the Women in Law put the statute of Jim Green in a woman's place. The first attempt was thwarted by the State and Security officers. After thwarting the first attempt from year to year from Shawnee, placed the slip and placard up to stay. See related story, page 12.
City officials will support transit study
Lawrence city officials told members of the University of Kansas administration last night that the city would help sponsor a project to create a possible mass transit system in Lawrence.
The proposal was originally presented to the Lawrence City Commission two weeks ago by Steve McMurry, chairman of the Student Senate transportation committee.
McMurray said the Senate had $2,000 to spend on a mass transit study and requested $2,000 from the city. He said the federal agency would cost about $3,000 for the study, which would cost about $30,000.
He said the Lawrence School Board had agreed to give $500 to the city to help with its water supply.
"The community will never be satisfied until we have a study." Watson said.
However, he said, there are some problems. A mass transit system might work on campus because of the expensive parking permits and the restricted use of parking areas in downtown. In the city, however, they are many available roads and parking lots, he said.
Mayor Barkley Clark said Watson only was considering the use of buses in a mass transit system. The study might recombine texts, walkways or bicycle paths.
People in Lawrence strongly feel that the present system is inadequate. Clark said.
University and the school board to work together," he said.
Commissioner Fred Pence said he was in favor of thestudent unless it resulted in a bus stop.
Watson said a bus system couldn't make money. The last one that did was during the World Expedition in San Antonio a few years ago. However, during buses will be con-
Watson said the next step was to let the student government know the city was interested in the study and would provide the necessary funding.
Computer class a battle of brains
By DIANE M. WILSON
Staff Writer
At 2 a.m. students with dark circles under their eyes move like automobiles through the computation center in Summerfield Hall. They force everything from simple to complicated research projects through the computer's memory and data banks.
COMPUTER SCIENCE isn't easy even at the beginning. There are about 1,080 computer science students, according to the Computer Science Council. Computer Science 200, the basic course.
C. S. 200 students receive each of their assignments about a week in advance, and complete them on time.
At first the students are eager, brightened and fresh. They design flowcharts and pretend to be the computer, tracing lines they will do, to see whether the program will work.
THE FLOWCHARTS MUST be translated into computer language, which for beginning students is Fortran IV, a language that only slightly resembles English. To write "If A=B then C=D," in Fortran IV, for instance, one must write "If (A.EQ.B)C=D." If even a comma is misplaced or left out, the noun won't work.
Next the students punch a computer card for each step in the Fortran IV program.
The lines of students waiting to use a keypunch machine are neither short nor fast-moving. The trick isn't in using the fast-moving keyboard, but rather in getting a place at the keyboard.
Once the punched cards for a whole program are put in order, the stack of cards is called a deck. The deck can represent at least 10 hours' work sometimes more.
A TABULATOR, FONDLY called the 407 is a machine designed to help students detect errors in their programs before the programs get into the computer. The 407 is the machine number. The tabulator prints what is punched on the cards so the student can read it and find errors. It's supposed to save time.
However, signs tapped conspicuously to the 407 "Do not attempt to remove any handwritten data."
DAVID CARILE, Caney sophomore said the 407 once malfunctioned when it was processing his deck, but he cleverly found
Cautious students also read the letter taped to the machine before putting cards in. The letter says, "While you are running your deck through the 401 it is a good idea to keep your finger on the STOP button. If the machine ceases to work properly you can stop it immediately. The 401 is not designed to stop automatically."
the STOP button after it had eaten only six cards.
To put the program into the computer, a student gives his deck to the dispatcher, another student, who feeds the cards into a machine labeled "Son of Jaws."
Son of Jaws is a card reader. It transfers information from cards into computer memories by shining lights through the holes in the cards. It reads each card twice if all of the result in the same both times the information is stored and the next card is read.
A student's enthusiasm could be dam-
The card reader snaps cards into its interior and spits them out again by a vacuum system. It sounds like a machine gun as it processes 900 cards a minute.
SON OF JAWS SOMETIMES gnaws on cards instead of reading them. When that happens the student can't advance to the keychain machine to go back to the keychunk machine.
When the student is safely in the computer, the student is left gloomily awaiting the printout. The waiting time until the printout is available is called turnaround time. The wait varies from 15 minutes on Sunday morning to 45 minutes afternoon. Toward the end of the semester turnaround time may take two days.
punished if he saw his program listed on a sign
and failed to work in a system
graph on a 10/9-10/9 time slot.
Such losses aren't unusual. Russell Williams, Birmingham, Al., aunior, a programming consultant, said the KU computer broke down at least once a week.
EVEN WHEN THE computer works, one's first printout is likely to be incomplete. Instead of answers to the problem, the computer sends notes like something went wrong and which means something went wrong and the computations weren't attempted.
The only clue to the trouble is a cryptic message like the one an Overland Park senior got: "ABORTED BY GELOAD, GET CODE 4." Two days of research disclosed that the message meant the computer had made a mistake.
Although the computer makes mistakes once or twice a day, Williams said, most errors are caused by inaccurate programming.
THE "COMPUTER only gave wrong answers once" he said. "That was during the first round."
If nothing else, computer science students will have enough used cards by December. They'll use them for spray them gold, in memory of the hours spent earning two hours' credit in C.S. 200
2
Friday, October 10, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Ford threatens '76 tax cut veto
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Gerald R. Ford lasted night to vote an election year tax cut if Congress sends him one without clamping a lid on federal spending.
Ford also said he didn't think it would be healthy for Washington to bail out any city that had irresponsibly handled its fiscal affairs over a long period.
Ford disclosed that he had cancelled a trip to Louvain ille next Thursday for reasons of presidential security and also because of the possibility of danger to others.
He said that there had been some turmoil in Louisville as a result of court-ordered, forced bunging to achieve racial balance in the city. Mr. Keller declared his own opposition to such bunging.
THE BUSING COVERTYSER has stirred demonstrations, and Ford said he had been advised to cancel the trip because of present circumstances in Louisville. Officials in Louisville said they expected large-scale anti-busining demonstrations.
During a nationally televised and broadcast news conference, the President said he was satisfied that he had a good manager and a good manager for his 1976 election bid.
Ford also said he wasn't going to move toward the political right in an effort to court conservatives who might otherwise win. The former California governor Ronald Reagan.
He said his record in the House and the
White House had been in the middle of the road.
"I intend to stay there," he said. "It's the area, where most Americans agree.
"THIS BASEN BEEN my record for 27 years in politics and I don't intend to deviate for any temporary political advantage," Ford said.
He said he had seen nothing so far that would lead him to give any answer but "no" to requests for aid for New York City, which faces the threat of defaulting on its bonds.
He said that he had heard of no congressional relief plans that would justify his approval, and that he had found no evidence for any legislation to bail out the city.
"I don't think it's a healthy thing for the federal government to bail out a city, and I mean any city, that has handled its fiscal load as time goes by, when time as long as New York City," Ford said.
FORD SAID HE HAD great sympathy for New Yorkers. He noted that Federal Reserve Board Chairman Arthur Burns has said he would favor federal aid if New York came up with a balanced city budget and with state guarantees that it would stay that
But Ford said if New York reached that point in solving its own problems it wouldn't be necessary for the federal government to get involved.
Dealing with his own 28 billion tax cut plan, Ford insisted he didn't aby from a
DIGEST From the Associated Press
PACIFIC RIVERS AREA
Soviet given Nobel prize
OSLO - Soviet dissident physicist Andrei Sakharov was awarded the 1975 Nobel prize yesterday, making him the second awarded Kremlin critic in the Soviet Union.
In 1970 te Nobel literature prize went to Alexander Sokhenitsyn, who has since been exiled from his country.
An earlier literature prize also displays to Soviet authorities was awarded to Bortis Pasternak in 1958. He was pressured into rejecting the prize and received the Cyrillic Prize.
Sakharov, the first Russian to receive the peace prize since it first was awarded in 1901, was cited for "personal and fearless effort of the cause of peace" and a call for greater unity.
The award, worth $140,000, was announced by the Norwegian parliament's Nobel Committee, which was understood to have discussed 50 candidates.
U.S. technicians okayed
WASHINGTON - The Senate passed last night a resolution that approved the stationing of 300 American technicians in the Sinai to monitor the Egyptian-Iraeli
The resolution, passed by the House 24 hours earlier, now goes to the White House where President Gerald R. Ford has been urging quick congressional action for more than a month to implement "a step toward peace" in the Middle East.
The vote was 70 to 18.
At his news conference last night, Ford again said that the American technicians sent to the Sinai would be civilians and would have no connection to the military.
Gas shortage predicted
TOPEKA-Kansas industries will need 400 million gallons of fuel to make up
to 54 billion cubic foot shortage of natural gas this winter, one of the state's energy
resources.
"In Kansas, the curtailment of natural gas supplies this winter will be concentrated on the large low-priority users, primarily industry and our electric generating plants," Robert J. Robel, Manhattan, chairman of the Governor's advisory Council on Energy and Natural Resources, said.
"Since these users will need to replace their normal supply of inexpensive natural gas energy with more expensive distillates and residuals, you can expect that, as a direct result of these curtailments, manufactured products and electricity will be more costly."
WASHINGTON—The Senate yesterday confirmed President Ford's nomination of Thomas S. Klepe to be interior secretary.
Kleppe gets Interior job
By a voice vote, the Senate gave its approval to the 56-year-old millionaire and former North Dakota congressman for the $60,000-a-year Cabinet pocket.
He will succeed Stanley K. Hathaway, the former Wyoming governor who resigned last July after slightly more than a month on the job.
Kleppen has been administrator of the Small Business Administration since 1971. He represented North Dakota for two terms in Congress in the late 1980s and twice in the early 1990s.
OCTOGINTA
75
politically unpopular election-year veto of the legislation without a ceiling on spending
the tremendous growth in federal spending. With no new laws, he said, the increase in federal spending next year would be $50 billion.
"I have said with great emphasis that the American people want a $28 billion tax cut and a $28 billion reduction in the growth of federal expenditures," he said.
Mount Oread Bicycle Club*SUA Office - Kansas Union -
Lawrence, Kansas
1-{913}-864-3477
Ford also scoffed at congressional complaints about his call for a combined tax cut and spending ceiling. He said Congress should be able to figure out a way to do it. It would also allow the imagination to accomplish that, he said, changes should be made on Capitol Hill.
Ford said his tax cut plan, tied to spending limits, wasn't aimed at affecting the national economy. The set of tax reductions now in effect on a one-year basis was applied to those taxes and the recessional-plagued economy moving toward a planned plan would replace these and expand them.
"I absolutely, without any equivocation, that if the Congress plays politics on sending me a letter to President Obama without a responsible restraint on federal spending, I wouldn't hesitate to veto it," she said.
THE PRESIDENT DISMISSED criticism that his tax program would be inflationary. He said he made his proposal to provide a meaningful tax cut and to get a handle on
Democratic congressional leaders have complained that Ford wants the tax cut and spending limit approved before he submits an immigration budget for the period involved.
The President said that had been done before.
In 1968, Congress passed President Lyndon B. Johnson's proposal for a 10 per cent income tax surtax, coupled with a spending ceiling for the new fiscal year for which Johnson had submitted a budget four months earlier.
Karami calls Arafat trip attempt to restore peace
BEIRUT—With law and order toterning on the edge of collapse in Lebanon, Premier Rashid Karami announced yesterday that Palestinian guerrilla chiefi cheaft Aiyar Arafat was coming to Beirut "to do his best" to help restore peace.
He made it clear there was still no question of resorting to the 18,000-man Lebanese army, which has stayed on the sidelines so far.
Karami made the announcement after he returned from a one-day trip to Damascus for meetings with Arafat, who is the chairman of the Palestine Liberation Army, Syrian President Hafez Assad and Foreign Minister Abdul Khalm Khaddam.
He said he sensed in Syria "un-
derestraint and suffering, to help me
capture the situation.
As he spoke, Beirut radio continued to report more shootings, more explosions and more battles between Christians and Moslems—some involving Palestinian guerrillas—raging unchecked across the battered capital.
After briefing President Suleman Franjieh on his talks in Damascus, Karami said he had agreed with Arafat 'to steps and measures for the restoration of stability.
Moslems say the Lebanese army is dominated by Christian officers. Officials fear that bringing troops in would spark open civil war.
The largest and most moderate guerrilla groups, including Arafat's Al Fatah and the Syrian-backed Saiqa, publicly profess neutrality and have joined Lebanese street patrols. However, increasing numbers of guerrillas have been seen participating in Beirut street battles on the side of the Moslems.
The guerrillas, armed heavily in recent years by Syria, Iraq, Libya and other Arab oil states, provide most of the firepower for the armed gangs of Moslem leftists.
the alliance of Moslems and Palestinians stems from a common religion and a common resentment of the Lebanese Christians, who constitute less than half the population of Lebanon but dominate the country's economy, politics and military.
Daredevils
Brewer and Shipley INVITE YOU TO A PARTY!!
Fri., Oct. 17th 8 p.m., Expo Hall Topeka St. Fair Grounds
Tickets '5 Advance '6 Day of Show
Outlets: Kief's—Lawrence Brothers & Sisters Mother Earth Joe Henry's
BEER WILL BE SERVED
Topeka
An R.L.-project:
concert prod.
Anniversary Celebration
Friday & Saturday
Cash & Carry
Specials —
Sweetheart Roses 12 for 1.99
Regular Roses —12 for 3.66
Carnations —10 for 1.99
Daisies —10 for $ 99^{\circ} $
Come in and pick up coupon for a free green plant from THE GARDEN CENTER
Flower Shoppe
Flower Shoppe
11th and
husetta
On the Flower Corner
841-0800
11th and Massachusetts
Buy a Box of Books at the Book Barn
Sat., Oct. 11 9:00-5:00
Sun., Oct. 12 1:00-5:00
1 Block West of U.S. 59 on K-92 Oskaloosa
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BUY A PEPSI AND KEEP THIS CARTOON GLASS
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2
Thursday, October 30,1975
University Daily Kansan
DIGEST
From the Associated Press
INFORMATION DEVELOPMENT
Ford returns to California
WASHINGTON—President Ford traveled to California yesterday, the home territory of his political rival Ronald Korenan, for two fund-raising appearances on the air.
Last month, two attempts on Ford's life were made while he campaigned in California.
Security arrangements for the President's visit were tight in Los Angeles where he spoke at a dinner last night. Security will be increased in San Francisco where
SLA member indicted
SACRAMENTO, Calif.—Steven Solih, a companion of Patricia Hearst, was indicted yesterday on bank robbery charges. Changes that he harbored Heave were
The 27-year-old house painter, who rented the house where Miss Heerst was found, appealed in a San Francisco federal court less than two hours after a grand jury here accused him of taking part in an April 21 holdup of a branch of Crocker National Bank. The robbery netted $150,000 and left one woman dead.
U. S. District Court Judge Sherill Halbert set bail for Soliath at $250,000. Soliah is already being held in San Francisco on $75,000 bail.
Riders stop bus hijacker
CHANUTE. The driver and two passengers on an interstate bus subdued a young man and turned him over to police after he terrorized the bus' riders for 13 minutes.
Michael D. Smith, 20, of Dearing, Kan., was arranged in Chanute City Courthouse to oblivion the bus driver and the 12 passengers on the groundwalk on the bridge.
Smith was hospitalized overnight at the Neosho County Memorial Hospital.
Smith was hospitalized overnight at the Neosho County Memorial Hospital. Credit for hospitalization was taken by the bus driver, Glen Payne of Cleveland, Okla. who told the Kansas City Star in a copyright interview, "He wasn't in too good shape after I gave him my famous kara chop."
18 hurt in London blast
LONDON - A bomb exploded yesterday in an Italian restaurant in a fashionable London district injuring at least 18 persons, according to Scotland Yard.
There was no warning before the explosion, which came after police questioned eight persons in connection with the latest outbreak of bombings in London.
The bombs have generally been regarded as the work of elements of the Irish Republican Army, which is campaigning to wrest Northern Ireland from British control.
Douglas hospitalized
WASHINGTON—Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas was admitted to Walter Reed Army hospital yesterday, a court spokesman said.
Barrett McGurn, court information officer, said Douglas was taken to the hospital because he had a slight fever. He said Douglas was resting comfortably and got up slowly to eat.
Lougas, 77, is now confined to a wheelchair because of a stroke he suffered last year.
Index shows slowdown
WASHINGTON--The government's index designed to spot future economic trends shows a moderate recovery.
The Commerce Department said its composite of a dozen individual economic statistics shipped nine-tenths of one per cent in September after climbing eight-fold.
Victor Zarnowitz, the University of Chicago Business Professor who helped redesign the composite index in May, said even if the figures continue to fall for the year, they are still a good indicator of growth.
Ford offers some aid
WASHINGTON—President Gerald R. Ford asked Congress yesterday to approve legislation ensuring police and fire protection and other essential services if
But Ford announced for the first time he will veto any legislation that provides federal debt guarantees or other financial help for the beleaguered city.
In a speech before the National Press Club, Ford proposed amending federal bankruptcy laws to prevent New York City's creditors from tying up the city's property.
He said that would make it possible for the city to use its remaining revenues, including federal revenue-sharing or special borrowing, to provide this protection.
New York Mayor Abraham D. Beane called Ford's proposal "nothing less than a declaration of deafness by the White House—a default of presidential leader-
Airport ...
From page one
association might later be willing to sell or trade the land. Crops are raised on the land, be said. The profits from the crops provide scholarships for University students.
Mayer Barkley Clark said city officials would plan to talk to the endowment management group.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said a good airport was necessary for the city. He said the University would begin to gather information about the new value of a new airport to the University.
Commissioner Fred Pence said it was
People don't realize the value of a good airport to the city, he said. They think that if they don't use it, the city doesn't need it, he said.
necessary for the city to sell the need for a good airport to the citizens of Lawrence. The citizens have voted against building a new airport in the past.
A good airport would bring more revenue into the city, Pence said. Now, he said, Wichita and Kansas City, Mo., get all the fees that aviators pay to use airports. Lawrence could use some of this money, he said.
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According to Lynn F. Taylor, dean of the school, the Kansas Center for Public Education Religion Studies will train teachers and conduct research in religion.
Taylor said last week that a facility for the center should be completed by late June. The center will be held in Smith Hall, and will include offices, study rooms and a forum area for meetings.
Phyllis Floyd, business manager for the company, said it would $b$ funded by a grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
According to Taylor, the number of schools offering courses in religion had been
The Kansas School of Religion has developed a center to promote the study of religion.
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Although the decisions were interpreted by many as a ban on religion in any form in public schools, he said, the decisions actually encouraged the study of religion.
These decisions made it illegal to practice religion in public schools, he said. The decisions also decreased the study of religion in public schools. Tavior said.
it would immediately respond that it
would had audacity in imagining that we
would lift it up.
Michigan, California, Wisconsin and Texas are the only states that certify teachers to teach religion, according to Tavlor.
He said that the new center would promote the objective study of religion in India and abroad.
The center is in the process of compiling a
UNITED NATIONS (AP)—Egyptian President Anwar Sadat made a formal request before the U.N. General Assembly yesterday for an early resumption of the participation in the conference with the participation of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO).
Sadat wants resumption of talks
increasing since 1963 when two Supreme Court decisions were made.
New York Mayor Abraham D. Beine
refused to give Sadat an official welcome to
the United States, where he is
U. S. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim and from third world diplomats, who recently pushed a resolution through a U.N.合谋, labeling Zionism as a form of racism.
curriculum for primary and secondary schools.
Beaume cited New York's large Jewish population in favor of the Zionism solution in reply to the FO administration's request to greet Sadat. Zionism is the advocacy of a Jewish minority group.
Taylor said, "No good public curriculum is now available. There are a few books at the secondary school level, but none at all at the primary level."
He said that material published by various churches would be used in the curriculum, but that the curriculum would be a publication of the center.
"We want to put together books without a slant," he said.
The center's curriculum will be ready for publication within a year, he said.
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According to Taylor, 92 per cent of secondary schools have some study of chemistry.
"Many times religion is taught in a bad way," he said. "The study of religion is not appropriate."
Taylor has been conducting summer institutes for public school teachers for several years. These institutes have been given to teachers around the state.
The instruction and curriculum offered by the center will help teachers to remain active in teaching.
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The institutes last two weeks. They include discussions, work sessions and instruction by KU professors and other lecturers.
Last summer, institutes in Garden City, Hays, Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan., were attended by more than 100 teachers. Taylor said that the program would continue this summer and expand in the future, if possible.
Buttons will be on sale in front of the Union today
According to Floyd, the Dane Hansen Foundation, Logan, Kansas, funds the institutes. The foundation offers scholarships that cover the cost of the session for the teachers. The scholarships are given to him on a first come, first serve basis, she said.
Taylor said that the program should spread across the state quickly, and that most church officials would support the effort. He said he could foresee no legal problems.
Teachers and school administrators had been receptive to the idea, he said. Teachers in the summer institutes had been imaginative and enthusiastic.
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Fridav. October 10. 1975
University Daily Kansan
3
Grievance group proposal given to Council
A proposal to establish an ombudman and an advisory committee on campus grievances was presented at yesterday's University Council meeting.
The proposal is to be discussed fully at the council's next meeting, which is scheduled
The Council's Organization and Administration Committee distributed the proposal so that Council members could be to debate and take action on it next month.
The proposed grievance committee will select a panel from which Chancellor Archer R. Dykes will appoint an ombudman, serve as an advisory group at the request of the ombudman and evaluate the work of the ombudman's office.
The ombudsman's proposed duties will be
to receive and attempt to resolve individual grievances of members of the University or other institutions within the University in response to experience from investigating individual
The proposal requires the ombudsman to have a comprehensive knowledge of University organization and procedures and experience in the six years' experience on the KU faculty.
The ambassador would have access to all administrative officials and, in accordance with law, to all University records. He wouldn't have authority to take disciplinary action, reverse decisions or circumvent existing University rules and procedures.
The same proposal came before the council at the end of last school year, but an agreement was reached.
Psychiatrist to end testing of Fanshier next week
It will be at least another week before Pam Fanshier, 23, 1975 University of Kansas graduate and member of the Unification Church, will be released from a Sept. 23 court order requiring her to undergo a psychiatric examination.
Jim Lawing, Fanshier's attorney, said yesterday in a telephone interview he thought Carlos Ruiz, a Great Bend psychiatrist hired by the court to examine Fanshier, would end his consultations with Fanshier next Friday.
Frederick Woleslager, Barton County District Court judge, ordered Fanshier to undergo the examination Sept. 23, but stipulated Fanshier couldn't come within 15 miles of Lawrence or Manhattan, where the church has branches. Woleslager lifted the deadline for a hearing, but the examination could take up to five weeks instead of 10 days to complete.
A hearing was scheduled in a Wichita federal court yesterday to allow Fancher's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fanshier,
Great Bend, and Woleslager to show why
Fanshier should undergo psychiatric
examination. Fansher's parents said they
thought their daughter had been brain-
washed by the church.
Lawing said he had asked to cancel yesterday's hearing in federal court because Fanshier wanted to allow the psychiatric examination to show her parents she hadn't been brainwashed by the church.
Lawing said Fanshier was in Great Bend yesterday consulting with Ruiz and has been scheduled for two more sessions with him next week. Lawing said Fanshier had moved back to the church's Lawrence branch, 700 Ohio St.
Lawing said he didn't know what would happen when Ruz presents the results of his experiment.
"It's really hard to say." Lawning said.
"We'll just have to wait and see."
Masked men rob woman
No new or old business was discussed or acted upon at the meeting, but the Council heard a report from its Planning and Resources Committee.
Three masked men entered a mobile home at 1408 E. 19th St. late Wednesday night and demanded money at gumpun from a University of Kansas student.
proposal' and the administration says,
'Give us a proposal and we will tell you
whether we will pay someone to be an
ombudman.' "McCow said."
The police said Krusen wasn't injured, notification of the incident is continuing, the police said.
The victim, Leslie C. Krusen, Leawed senior, told the police the gunman had asked several questions and had left with a stereo worth about $900.
in two other cases investigated by pnce early yesterday, two University of Kansas women were awakened by a flashlight being shined in their eyes by an unknown man.
The first incident occurred at 1220 Louisiana St. at 4:10 a.m. The victim there said a man entered through the unlocked door and asked the questions, then left through the same door.
The victim wasn't injured, the police said. The second incident happened at 4:50 a.m., while police were still investigating the first incident.
Donald McCoy, faculty Council member,
said inquiries to the administration had been informal and had produced no definite answers.
Joel Gold, faculty Council member, asked whether the administration had said anything about paying the ambulants, the year term and be eligible for reappointment.
"We're in a situation where we say to the administration, 'Tell us whether this will be okay.'"
The victim reported about the same story to police. She said a man entered through the front door, shined a flashlight in her face, talked to her, then left.
The police also said the second victim wasn't injured.
Gordon Wiseman, committee chairman, said the committee had discussed tactics to meet possible declines in enrollment in the future.
It is possible that the same man was involved in both incidents, police said.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 30, 1975
3
Ben City., .Kan.,
teachers.
could con-
future,
Med Center receives $11 million
They in and in her lec.
By DIANE M. WILSON
cent of study of
in a bad
on is not
ered by remain
should and that sort the no legal
ors had said. had been
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-The KU Medical Center has received more than $11 million in research and training grants in the past fiscal year, an increase of 47 per cent over the previous year. Paul R. Schloer, dean for research, said yesterday.
"The increase in research funding is despite curtailments in federal funds due to inflation pressures," he said. "The impressive increase in funds is a real medicaid Med Center faculty members who made the successful grant applications."
The Med Center receives several kinds of grants with some regularity, Scholeb said, including individual research and project grants, clinical research grants and institutional research grants.
RESEARCH PROJECTS funded by grants are numerous and varied. Schloer said. Current projects include research on pharmacologic interventions, functions, on development and perfection of drugs and medicines, on new diagnostic techniques, on classification of hormonal disorders, on psychiatric and behavioral disorders, on infectious diseases and on contraception.
The Med Center received $2,518,161 in research grants, he said, for 153 different projects. He said 248 applications had been submitted.
Federal capitation grants, awarded on a per-student basis, are used by the Med
Center to help pay the cost of training doctors. The grants were created to increase the number of doctors being trained, he said. The federal government gives the grants with strings attached. Federal requirements led to the Med Center's increasing its incoming class from 163 to 200 students this year, Schloerb said.
HE SAID THAT CONGRESS was now considering making capitation grants, about $1,500 per medical student, contingent upon 20 per cent of the first year students promising to practice medicine in rural Kansas after graduation.
The $1,100,000 in capital grants the Med Center received last year was $600,000 short of its request, he said. The underfunding caused increased tuition, cost and expense, supplemental money from the state legislature and a lot of worry, he said.
Training grants are help to give训 medical researchers, Schloerb said. The grant supports the staff's supplies and faculty salaries, among other things, he said, and the grants also helped pay the cost of training people in occupational therapy, dietetics, nutrition and research.
"WE MUST TRAIN people if medical research is to progress and survive," he said.
Two per cent of the national health budget is spent for research, he said, a percentage no corporation would consider large enough.
"We need a larger percentage for the
Hiked fuel costs predicted for KU
By BILL SNIFFEN
Last week's natural gas rate-increase could boost the University of Kansas' gas bill by about $7,800 this winter, but the extra cost won't present a problem if supplemental aid requests are approved by the state legislature.
"The cost increase was something we had expected, and had built into our request to the Board of Regents," according to Keith Herth, vice chancellor for business affairs.
The Lawrence City Commission last week granted a rate increase of 4.05 cents per thousand cubic feet of gas to the Kansas Public Service (KPS) Gas Co., Inc., effluent treatment plant in Fargo, N.D., an increase in the University's gas bill because of this price change.
Nitcher said yesterday that the expected increase in yearly gas costs had been $161,411. That figure was included in a supplemental aid request made to the Department of Energy Regents approved the request and submitted it to the legislature.
Those figures reflect both an anticipated reduction in consumption and an increase in
Last winter's KU gas bill (November,
1974-February, 1975) was $177,778. The total
gas bill for the 1975 fiscal year was $342,756.
NITHERM SAYD THAT the University's b
energy cost of heating is the winter coat of gas at $20,024. The estimate for
the entire year was $145,745.
"It's going to cause some problems. It's going to more of a problem than energy available."
According to Richard Perkins, maintenance engineer at Buildings and Grounds, 88 per cent of the University's natural gas powers the central power plant, which supplies heat to most KU buildings. Perkins said that there were exceptions, including one building at University and Fowler Hall, which has its own gas system
ACCOUNTING TO BOB Allison, KPS plant manager, the University is an interruptible server.
gas shortage, the University's gas might be shut off to supply individual consumers. Allison said he didn't expect a shortage of natural gas this year.
Twice last year the University's gas was shut off.
On both occasions the University had to rely upon its reserve supply of fuel oil. Nitcher said that 20,000 gallons a day heated the university buildings, at a daily cost of $7,000.
The Med Center also relies on a general research support grant each year, he said, because it can decide how to spend that money.
The supplemental request will be made at Gov. Robert F. Bennett's budget hearing on Nov. 18, an then before the House Ways and Spends Committee, to Del. Sandler, executive vice chancellor.
The University now has a reserve supply of about 500,000 gallons of fuel oil, Nichter gas.
"If the State legislature says no, we'll have some hard choices to make," Shankel said.
sake of our own health," Schobar said. The Fund Center received $2,518,163 from the agency.
Sankel said the University would then consider several options, including closing down research projects, shutting down research projects, increasing the semester break to keep buildings closed longer during the winter months, moving them out of dormition, or a combination of these measures.
Shankel said that if the situation became critical some of the nearly $500,000 in extra student fees that the University is seeking authority to spend could be used.
General research grant money has been spent for computer services, animal care and partial faculty salaries, he said. At UC Davis, he works with a faculty-elected research committee, which has given the money to individuals for research projects, he said. Those grants usually have gone to new young faculty members to help them begin research, he said.
IN ADDITION TO GRANTS the Med Center applies for, it receives grants from the Kansas University Endowment Association. Those grants are made available by private donors who determine how strings will be attached to them, be said.
some clinical fees collected at the hospital are put into the Endowment Association as corporation funds, which can be drawn for research, he said.
But use of the additional funds would require consultation from both the board of directors and the president, and add that
Endowment grants aren't included in the $11 million total grant figure.
Nitcher summed up the complex situation saying, "It all depends on the weather."
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TOPEKA (AP)-A prosecution witness said "Dick" Docking was the person he heard discuss a $20,000 contribution to his brother's 1972 re-election campaign when architects and engineers met with state officials in March of that year.
Charles C. Campbell was the third president of Richard Malloy College, the bribery center of Richard Malloy College, chairman of the board of Marshall and Brown, a Kansas City architectural firm and the anchor company of the combine Medical Center of University of Kansas Medical Center contract.
$30,000 gift focus in kickback trial
Malloy, 40, is accused of accepting a $30,000 contribution destined for former Gov. Robert B. Docking's 1972 campaign. Architects and engineers allegedly pledged to fund the initial $80,000 design contract on expansion work at the MED Center in early 1972.
Campbell said no contribution was sought from the firms who got the first phase of the contract. Mr. Campbell, in the struc-tion contract, worth $13 million, was awarded to his firm a year later. The second contract was awarded before an inquishment pertained into the award of the first contract.
Campbell had a charge of conspiracy to
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Former State Architect Kenneth R. McLain testified that the first conversation he had with anyone about the firm that received the Med Center contract in 1972 was with "Dick" Docking. McLain was the second witness called by the state.
Dick Docking is among those still charged with conspiracy to bribe Mallov.
in opening statements yesterday Robert Tilton, Malloy's attorney, said the defense evidence would show that McLain and a former architectural partner, Norbert J. Sidorikow, masterminded the scheme to attack Malloy so that he could have an prestigious business when McLain no longer was state architect.
Testimony resumes today, with Robert F. Brantd, former state secretary of administration, expected to be called by the state.
peace corps
commit bribery dismissed against him last Monday when one of his firms, Marshall Petroleum, charged the same bribery charge and was fined $5,000. He repeated much of the testimony he had given in an earlier trial that resulted in three several defendants in the kickback case.
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Campbell said at first that he was “quite positive” the contribution figure $30,000, being requested from the architects and engineers was mentioned by Dock Docking. He amended his attribution to ask it was his “best recollection” that it was Dick Docking.
At a meeting on March 2, 1972, at a Kansas City, Kan., motel, Campbell said, he recalled Dick Docking, then treasurer of his committee, talking about contributions.
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14
Friday, October 10, 1975
University Daily Kansan
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT
[ ]
Students create art from stone
Staff Photos by GEORGE MILLENER
Alejandra
Mary Swift, Des Moines junior, chisels an edge on her abstract sculpture.
1970
Taking advantage of the bright, Indian summer weather of the past few weeks, 14 students enrolled in a section of Sculpture I chipped away at the canvases and carved可vibe substances in their first carving assignment of the year.
They work in an improvised terrace behind Baltha Hall, near the annex to the museum of sculpture division of the department of painting, printmaking and sculpture.
One of the students won't be eligible, however. The sculpture project of one of the group, an Iranian exchange student, was stolen from the terrace last week. Frater, who described the theft as a "very recently that such thefts are a chronic problem for art students attempting to display their work.
Under the direction of Bernard Frazier, professor of painting and sculpture, the students will complete the sculptures and submit them for evaluation by sculpture and architecture professors and their fellow students. A grade will be assigned after the evaluation.
1950s
Student exhibitions in Strong and Murphy halls have had to be discontinued because of the rate of theft of the painted oils, drawings and sculptures.
While Terre Meinershagen,
Higginsville, Mo., freshman,
works on his free-form stone
sculpture, left, Paul Weber,
Richfield, Conn., sophomore,
begins work on a wood free form.
Where is "The Passenger?" The film, which stars American actor Jack Nicholson and Maria Schneider, the ripe young girl from "Last Tango in Paris," played in Kansas City, Mo. last spring. Directed by Anthony Hopkins, also the odd-on-favorite to win the Academy Award for Best Foreign Picture next April. Why hasn't it opened in Lawrence?
For that matter, why haven't Goddard's "Tout Va Bien" or Louis Malle's "Lacombe, Lacien" been here? Where are suspense films? What happens in Resnais's "Staviky", which stars Jean-Paul Belmondo and Charles Boyer?
The public tends to think of films that aren't American made as being austere and pedantic. The thought of wading through subtitles dissuades them from going, even though they can see the world in the subtled form.
Actually most of these films are available in English version. The new breed of foreign directors, like French film-maker Constantin Costa-Gavras (Z" and "State of the Union") has had the ability to shoot films in ways that will make re-dubbing the soundtrack for the international market easy.
"The Passenger" also has long passages in English. The fact is that very few foreign films make it to the local theaters. Yet 20 of the 77 films last October were of foreign origin. Reviews in nationally distributed magazines might be expected to arouse interest in potential viewers. But even with such ready made publicity, only two of those Python and Holy Grail movies—a Brief Vacation," have been screened in Lawrence.
Bernardo Bertolucci ("The Conformist" and "Last Tang in Paris") has completed "1900," a film that stars American actors Robert DNeiro, Burt Lancaster and Donald Sutherland along with an Italian supporting cast.
Part of the problem is the quality of the films. Outside the United States, most pictures aren't produced for international consumption. They must be processed in locations at a loss to put the national talents in a showcase between Hollywood imports.
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
Those that aren't more propaganda are usually inferior to the ones of the rest of the world's films ever reach the United States.
By BILL KATS Staff Writer
KANU plays bop cool and all that jazz
Although the era of Kansas City jazz has long faded, the Lawrence-Kansas City area is still getting its dose of jazz. It's no longer Charlie Parker, Jay Z, or the young junggam nightinghy in small clubs, but it's about the best next thing to it.
KANU radio is acquainting its listening audience with what was happening then and what is
happening now in jazz. Seven days a week the station has jazz programs, 35 hours to be exact.
JAZZ CAN JACK be heard on three KANU shows and on one KANU-produced AM program for another station. This gives
Since the birth of the station in 1923, jazz has been regarded as an integral part of the right alongside classical programming and the public radio station's regular features.
Foreign films alien here
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas Press, a copy is $10.00. Published at the University of Kansas Press, a copy is $10.00. Second-class postage paid at Lawnside or $18 a year in Douglas County and $24 a year in Laramie County. A semester or $18 a year in Douglas County and $24 a year in Laramie County. A semester, paid through the student activity fees.
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editors
Editor Dennis Ellsworth
Business Manager Cindy Long
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Australian Advertising Bureau Rocky Park
Assistant Advertising Manager Line Bermany
Classified Advertising Manager Gary Burch
Assistant Advertising Manager Debbie Service
National Advertising Manager Mark Winters
Associate Advertising Manager Debbie Watts
Advertising Photographer
SUA doesn't have nearly the financial overhead that must concern Commonwealth, but it still has to worry about making a profit. But SUA's situation is much more flexible. Instead of mickiming Commonwealth, when the film comes out, break new ground? The Mexican "Lucia" is the only foreign film made in the last five years that hasn't been here before.
four films were in town earlier this year.
listeners a full spectrum of jazz from morning until late at night.
He has done his show, The Jazz Score, almost continuously since 1988, when he began attracting a loyal follow with the Saturday morning show. The talent is still picking up new listeners left and right, at its 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. time slot.
Much of the credit for the thriving condition of jazz at the station must go to station manager Dick Wright.
Wright, a KU graduate, has helped mold two of the most successful jazz in on KANU's schedule. Jazz in the Night and The Jazz Scene.
For more than 20 years, the University had a free International Film Series that guaranteed the opportunity of attending and seeing recent foreign films. Since that series' demise two years ago, SUA has failed to fill the gap, and none of the local剧院 can be depended on to offer them. Without a series to educate new viewers and sustain the old viewers, the overall programming in Lawrance has grown. and the danger exists that the great audience might dwindle further.
Wright has always maintained a love for jazz, even though he started his career as an opera singer, winning a Metropolitan Opera regional audition.
Yet two weeks ago, Commonwealth drained the last few dollars from another release of "The Sound of Music," and SUA brought back "Larry the Arab," which had already been on TV. The market is still largely untested.
GROWING UP IN A household where Duke Ellington was regarded on equal ground with Enrico Carlo and helped the stuffy anti-jazz attitude by some music elists.
"I think my show is pretty much keeired to the real jazz lover," Wright said.
Wright said he wanted to attract new people into listening to jazz through his show. He needed to offer something for the listeners who wanted more than just background music.
When Wright and Shivers tired of doing the live show night after night, they began to for four young announcements with a knowledge of where to place them. The show is now announced by four students.
Indeed, his love for music shines in in each of his well-documented shows.
Wright and Shivers began the program in the summer of 1973 in the time slot which had been held by a rock show. They said the station made the move from rock to jazz for two reasons.
Wright also played a vital part, along with fellow staffer Gary Shivers, in the creation of the program Jazz in the Night, which is held weeknights from 10 p.m. to 2 a.m.
They said they could not compete with the Kansas City rock stations, largely because of the large amounts of money it would to support a rock record collector. The little jazz programming in the Lawrence-Kansas City area.
THE JAZZ SCENE IS a virtual history of the genre. One hour of the Saturday show is devoted to some style, musician or instrument important to the evolution. Wright's emphasis is focused on the bop and cool eras with which he grew up.
Jazz in the Night began on the strengths of Wright's 700-year record jazz collections. They alternated nights doing the call in show and attracted 30 to 40 musicians from jazz fans all over the state.
THE AUDIENCE FOR JAZZ is growing, Hammond said, and the new knowledge of jazz makes it impervious to attacks. He said a thorough knowledge of the styles and movements involved.
He has a good number of regular listeners, he said, including the author and leading prisons who sometimes write in requests.
Bob Hammond, one of the announcers, said the Jazz in the
SUA, even more than Commonwealth, should realize that there is an audience for these films. Two years ago, nearly 1,000 people flocked to Woodruff to see Pascal's "Decameron." The film wasn't initially well-adapted to a creative and suggestive campaign brought in the company. This semester, a single Thursday night performance of "Personal" drew 450 viewers.
Instead of repeating "The King of Hearts," why not take advantage of Commonwealth's overages and bring the Italian Drede, Alfredo." which stars a young Mirella playing "Enmannauelle," who not play Pasolini's bawdy and X-rated "Canterbury Tales!"
Hammond said the show acts as a type of general information clearing house for anything about jazz. He is liable to get a call from someone for a particular group, or requesting information on the development of a particular player.
He tries to expose the listener to as wide a variety of jazz forms as he can, Hammond said. Although he gets requests for many of his own performances, there are certain artists, like Ellington and Parker, that must be played in the course of a four-hour show. Nearly half of the cuts played on "The Night are
Nearly half of the cuts played on Jazz in the Night are requests, Hammond said.
Night still gets 30 to 40 calls a night, requesting records or asking for information.
In addition to these two shows, This Afternoon, a jazz show, is offered from 2 to 3 p.m. Sunday night Jazz in the Night spot is hosted by Wright from midnight to 2 a.m.
KANU also offers The World of Jazz from 7:06 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. weeknights, on WREN-AM, 1250.
Less than a quarter of those that come here are ever shown commercially outside New York and Los Angeles.
The films that survive these eliminations generally do so on the strength of their directors' names. Bergman and Fellini are strong enough that even their made-for-TV films get a touch of Lawrence. The drama of Francois Truffaut, Bertolouc and Costa-Gavras is seen throughout the country.
The films of Antonioni and Luis Bunuel are borderline. If one of their films shows commercial potential, then it might receive a limited release. However, much of what is vital
Lawrence, which has only five screens, is a key city. So foreign films are the last to be booked and the first to be bumped. "The Tall Blond Man with One Black Shoe" was
Furthermore, only a limited space is available for the smaller demand foreign films. "Jaws" opened in Lawrence before it reached New York, but Commonwealth's contract required the local theater to play it for a nine-week minimum run. Also, Universal, the distributor for "Jaws," undoubtedly received a guarantee from the chain to provide play dates for the studio's lesser products in key cities.
Instead of repeating "The King of Hearts," why doesn't SUA take advantage of Commonwealth's oversights and bring the Italian "Alfredo, Alfredol!", starring Dustin Hoffman? Instead of playing "Emmanuelle," why not play Pasolini's bawdy "Canterbury Tales"?
to serious students of the art is never offered by local exhibitors.
Lawrence's theaters are all owned by Commonwealth Theatres, which is in business to make a profit. Foreign films aren't considered good drawers.
This summer, Hillcrest Theatres showed Vittorio De Sica's last film, "A Brief Vacation." In one week, its gross was less than one-third of that of the re-release of "The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad" little better to encourage even the most conscientious of exhibitors.
Commonwealth is a chain, and most of the programming for Lawrence originates in Kansas City, Mo. The theater managers are in the curious position of being able to suggest titles, without having the power to choose them. "A Brief Vacation" played here at the end of the summer season, when the abbreviated student body and faculty members were tied up with finals and last minute preparations for vacations—not ideal conditions for testing the foreign film market.
SUA's showing of "Scenes from a Marriage" this weekend comes fast on the heels of its first exhibition of the same picture at double the price. The short four-month time span between Commonwealth's showing and the local theater managers. But "Scenes from a Marriage" was available from the national distributor for more than four months; it was shown in Lawrence.
It is unlikely that Lawrence could immediately support Bresson's beautiful, but pom-po-winged look, or even Mavakejev's sexy, delightful, but avant-garde "WR: Mysteries of the Organism." Those must be provided for SUA and the future.
scheduled last spring, only to be pushed back until it disappeared entirely. This week Bunnel's "The Phantom of the Liberty" was dropped to accommodate a third week of the overpriced "Give 'Em Hell, Harry."
Is SUA the salvation for foreign film fans? Hardly. The Popular Film Series this season films, an unusually high number. However, none of the selections breaks any new ground. Besides "Scenes from a Marriage," only Fellini's "The King of Hearts" was both a recent and a serious work. "The King of Hearts" was made in 1967, and "Emmanuele" is porno-chic. All
But let's demand and support the mainstream geniuses of the foreign cinema. Why not start with "The Passenger"?
Theater
TELEMACHUS CLAY—A work of a tribute piece of dated cement. Worthwhile, though, for the entertaining characterizations.
(Through Saturday, 8 p.m. Inge Memorial Theatre.)
Opera
(Opening Tuesday, Oct. 14, at Kansas City Lyric Theater, 11th and Central, Kansas City, Mo.)
LA BOHEME—Love and Jeath in the Latin Quarter of Paris, as seen by Glacoma Puccini in a poignant, melodic classic. The last of five productions of the 1975 Lyric season.
Exhibits
THE VISUAL ARTS AND
INTERPRETATIONS of the lyric and
interpretations of the lyric and
highly structured poetry of
Germany's Rainer Maria Rilke.
Coordinated with the German
International Rike Symposium.
(Through Nov. 30 in Museum of Art.)
CONTEMPORARY IMAGES—A gallery tour of prints and drawings produced within the past three years by artists in the Artist's Club. Artists include Claes Oldenburg, Rockne Krebs and Jasper Johns.
This Week's HIGHLIGHTS
Recitals
(Through Oct. 19 In Kansas Union Gallery.)
MALCOLM FRAGER—The University's artist-in-residence playing the piano and teaching
PHYLLIIS BRILL A
soprano, this assistant
performs with will perform
performances by Purcell, Schertb,
Debussy and Bernstein.
(8 p.m. Monday, Oct. 13, In Swarthout Recital Hall.)
in two master class sessions.
(Monday, 10 a.m. to noon and
8 a.m.) In two master class, 8 to
10 a.m. and 8 to 10 p.m. In swat-
ter Recall Hall!
EASTMAN QUARTET—THE Chamber Concert Series, this piano quartet halls from the fernstown Eastman School of Music
Films
(8 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 15 in Swarthout Recital Hall.)
MILLION DOLLAR LEGS-
were better in this big
in this screwball comedy,
possibly because the madcap
pace helps take the aid off of
their head.
CITY LIGHTS—The little tramp falls in love with a blind girl in Charlie Chaplin's most adoring comedy and social commentary. The comic highlights include the tramp's on-again off-aight relationship with an artist whose brilliant boxing match (1921).
A DOG OF FLANDERS—A Disney heart-warmer made
COMEDY SHORTS—Buster Keaton, Liam and the kicks in the road, ruthless through their routines in this ill-chosen assortment. The Kobe's best weapon is Keaton's weakest, and KEYSTONE HOTEL features the Kops after their most important matches, left for greener pastures.
THE MASTER GUN-FIGHTER-Tom Laughlin, the more conventional Jack," makes a depicts the frontier as a political and moral muddle. Naturally, his hero is a peace-loving slaughterfaintly slaughters everyone who interrupts his meditations.
SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE-IU Lillman and Joseph Ehrhardt as the ideal teacher of interdisintegrates. Originally shown in six, one-hour installments on Swedish television, this is much less harrowing than "Cries and Directed by Ingar Bergman."
before Walt died and the animals abandoned animals in favor of people. Shown with the animated PETER AND THE ANIMALS
GIVE 'EH MELL, HARRY—
A filmed stage production that
was adapted as Harry Truman. The script is so
shortsighted of the filming.
THE WILD PARTY—This film is based on a poem that was inspired by the Fatty Arbuckle case, its primary claim to fame is that it shows which gives a decent performance as the indecent herine.
THE WILBY CONSISTENCE
CONSISTENCE is erratically entertaining套牌
Michea Caine and Sidney Pollier. Unfortunately, they don't generate the necessary excitement to make it passable.
Check advertisements for locations and times.
4
Thursday, October 30, 1975
University Daffy Kansan
COMMENT Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Q
Money and crime
An answer to the problem of rising crime may be found in economics, a recent study says, and that's something to think about.
Issac Erlich, an economist at the University of Chicago, says his research shows that communities with better police protection, greater conviction rates and longer prison sentences can deter crime. Even more important, he says communities with high employment also enjoy a lower crime rate.
Erlich explains that the economist views the problem differently than the social scientist. The latter's view is that crime can be reduced by psychological rehabilitation of the criminal. The economist, meanwhile, sees the criminal as weighing options: Can he get away with his crime? What are his reasons for turning to crime? What are the alternatives to crime?
The economist sees the potential criminal weighing the costs and benefits of crime against the costs and benefits of paying it. The measure is the risk of getting caught.
Erlich's argument makes sense, at least when dealing with crimes committed for money, including burglary, robbery and mugging. As a sage old professor once to the root of a problem, "chereche la buck." The need for money or financial gain can be a prime motivating factor for a criminal. In his own mind, he may decide that criminal means suit his goals better than
legitimate activities. Of course, psychopaths who murder or terrorize without reason are excluded from this argument.
This economic view could lead to an entirely new approach to crime prevention. If high employment means less crime, increasing economic opportunities could have a direct effect on the crime rate in communities.
If government and industry can create enough jobs, the marginal worker may keep a steady job rather than turn to crime. Creating new jobs isn't easy, especially these days. But economists agree, high unemployment, particularly among young adults, will surely lead to a high crime rate.
However, merely the creation of jobs won't erase crime. Acts of violence defy reason; further study in this area is vital if we are to minimize those acts. We can also crises of economic opportunity can be attributed to limited economic opportunities.
Violent crime increased 11 per cent last year; crimes against property increased 17 per cent. Each year the crime amount to nearly $75 billion.
We can begin to change those figures if we concentrate on creating new jobs and opportunities for those who need them. Common sense dictates that if you want to work at jobs they find satisfying and rewarding, they won't turn to crime.
David Olson
Contributing Writer
Crosby Noyes
Kissinger old detente foe
Yet quite certainly the severest and most articulate of all the criticisms of a calculated policy of detente with the Soviet Union is Henry Kissinger. He wrote a number of writings on international affairs produced during his earlier incarnation as a Harvard professor, Kissinger repeatedly and emphatically underscored the futility and indeed the danger of trying to pursue a foreign policy of détente or relaxation of tension with our ideological adversaries.
The extraordinary transformation in Kissinger's thinking that coined with his colleague in 2014, to public official has been extensively- and somewhat maliciously-documented in a recent critique by Warren Smith, the secretary of defense for informer Defense
in Laired
continuing dissent
with the politics of detente
in the Middle East.
In his earlier published
works, Kissinger convincingly
ruled out the possibility of an
accompaction with the
"revolutionary" powers (Gurus)
and the Israelist Union which
insecurity in his view, could
never be relieved short of total
capitation by the non-
Communist world. He exhorses
to take control of about world domination at its face value, urging that the
defense of the free world must
be based on credible power in
both nuclear and conventional
WASHINGTON - The Chinese aren't the only ones to deploy Henry Kissinger's concepts of detente with the Soviet Union.
The secretary of state is confronted with a growing number of critics here and abroad. Conservatives in the State Department, Jackson accuse him of making deals that give the Russians what they want in the way of nuclear weapons, Western technology and food, without provoking the United States in return. Our allies complain of a lack of concern for their interests in his transactions with common adversaries. Russian dissidents berate him for his role to champion the cause of freedom within the Soviet society.
In this period of the late 1960s and early 1969s, Kissinger ridicules the notion that personal diplomacy—and particularly summit meetings—can accomplish anything when informed in formal matters. It is true that the writers pretend that problems of the complexity of those which have rent the world for a decade and a half can be solved in a few days by harassed men meeting in the full light of publicity." And he mustn't compromise its principles in the hope of buying a period of peace.
"Those ages which in retrospect seem most peaceful were least in search of peace. Those whose quest for it seems unending appear least able to achieve tranquility. Wherever peace—conceived as the avoidance of war—has been the
Kittens master people training
Feline arts
Of all the creatures that slither, stalk or crawl on the face of the earth, none has life so easy as the house cat.
Unlike their uneducated, uncultured relatives, the bedraggled alley cats who slink from trash can to trash can in search of food, the house cats in the neighborhood tendood greatly how to maintain control over the people they own. By the time a litter of kittens is ready to go out into the world, any self-respecting
Jain Penner
mother cat will have them well versed in the feline arts.
There are two basic lessons a kitten must learn if he is to become a successful house cat. The first is how to be cute. The kitten must know how to widen his eyes, how to meow appealingly and purr affectionately how to play and move around. The kitten move swiftly enough to nuzzle the hand his owner raises to strike him when he breaks a vase or knocks over a lamp.
The second basic lesson is humility. For a time, the kitten
must act as though he is grateful to his owner for everything–food, affection, even kitty litter. This means subjecting himself to such degrading things as purring, even when he is held in an uncomfortable position, and then the things must be endured, however, for they are stepping stones in a path that leads to a life of luxury.
When he has secured a place in his master's heart, the kitten has become a full-fledged house cat and is ready for the takeover. There are many ways a crafty cat can let his master know who the new boss is. He can start by totally rejecting his owner or allowing nothing less than his master's favorite armchairs. (If he's really brave, he can demand half of his master's pillow.)
He can ignore all of the cat toys he used to play with and begin digging through trash sacks for bottle caps, old newspapers and other treasures to toy with instead.
If his master isn't paying enough attention to him, the assertive house cat will be quick to learn that his master is reading a book or
newspaper, the cat will lie on it. If his master is trying to write, he will just fall, fails, the crafty cat will resort to the old standby that's guaranteed to bring his master to work. He'll sharpen his claws on the sofa.
The assertive cat always lets his master know exactly what he wants. If he's been getting that cheap, six-for-a-dollar, Brand X cat food, he will go on a hunger strike. His master, a dog, will immediately rush to the store and buy three or four different types of taste-tempting cat food.
Every now and then, any self-respecting cat gets a little tired of eating cat food. A brief strife between the two kinds of chicken or "people tuna," but a smart cat won't keep it too long. Even the most ardent cat lover, unless incredibly fed, will try to feed his cat caviar for long.
Another thing the house cat will put his paw down about is litter box sanitation. If his master has been negligent, the house cat may assertive cat will resort to drastic means to call attention
to the problem. One or two "mistakes" on the floor should be enough to make even the most thoughtless master take pity on his pet and change the litter.
At times, the meow can be even more effective than the parr. No matter touches the wall or that sad, it pewed “mellow”. No doubt he will stop what he’s doing, bend What’s that?
The smart cat will learn to meow in different tones of cat
As for detente as an end in itself, Professor Kissinger saw it as a temporary strategy to
voice so his master can distinguish between "Pick me up." "I want to go out," "I'm hungry" and "bored."
primary objective of a power or group of powers, the international system has been at the mercy of the most ruthless member of the international community. Whenever the international order has acknowledged that certain principles can be applied even for the safe peace, stability based on an equilibrium of forces was at least conceivable."
If the house cat plays his cards right, he'll never have a care in the world. Like finicky Morris, he'll have his people waiting on him hand and foot (or rather paw and paw). Even though the house cat is a true human entity, he demands constant attention from his masters, he rewards them amply with loyalty, love and a lot of patience. After all, they're only
Today, this reasoning is completely out the window. "Detente," said Kissinger in 1973, "is an imperative. In a world shadowed by the danger of escalation, it is an rational alternative to the pursuit of relaxation of tensions."
further long-range Soviet goals. "...Pieceful coexistence," he wrote, "is never advocated for its own sake. It is justified with the modern device to overthrow the West at minimum risk."
it owns down to a question of which Henry Kissinger you want to believe. But quite certainly there is no more to the mental metamorphosis that has taken place than the usual adjustments involved in the scholar-turned-statesman. For those who have doubts about the present course of American foreign policy, Professor Kissinger is a most eloquent witness against our present secretary of state.
(c) 1975 Washington Star Syndicate Inc.
WED
FORD'S WAR
ON INFLATION
THE
UNEMPLOYED
MEDIC! MEDIC! HOLD IT. HOW MUCH YOU CHARGE AN HOUR?
Readers Respond/Honors classes valued
To the Editor:
As one of the 620.7 "bright" students at KU, I would like to take this opportunity to tell Lee Gerstenhaer that his existence and presence are excused. I am very sorry that he views himself with pain and puts other students on my same category. I have a much higher opinion of the human race: I think each one of the 20,000 is
quite capable. However, I am not about to apologize to anyone for being more intelligent than me, and give the gift and I view it as such.
I believe the honors classes at KU deserve the "more experience" and sincere "You didn't study years of education in the public school system. I have been told not to work up to my
AND THEN THERE WAS CRIMINAL ABUSE OF POWER, MANIPULATION OF MONEY AND FEDERAL AGENCIES, LIVING TO THE PEOPLE, LACK OF ETHICS, DELETIONS AND ERASURE OF TAPES, SELLING OF AMBASSADORSHIPS, PERTURY, OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE, BURGLARIES"
AND RICHARD NIXON LIVED HAPPILY EVER AFTER.
WATERGATE
WATERGATE REVIEW
I have found the honors classes at KU interesting and stimulating. For the first time, I feel I am getting a quality education. The credit for this goes to the skilled and dedicated instructors I have. If the other students at KU can let me and 619 7 others like me have good honors classes, I am sorry. It is our right.
capabilities because it would "disturb the class schedule." listened to the seventh explanation of something that I understood the first time and done sheets and sheets of homework I didn't need to do in order to learn -and have had great patients. Why have I been subjected to such treatment? So the Lee Gerstenhabers of the world would have an education suited to their needs. Why can't I have an education suited to mine? Would Gerstenhaber really desire much and as fast as I can from the teachers best able to teach me?
Lise McElwee
Overland Park freshman
Senate lazy
10 the Editor:
Student senators don't appear to be responsible.
In the Oct. 23 Karsan we had picture on page one, "Red Sox, Reds and Senators." These senators were "performing" the important business while watching the World Series on television.
Because of Agnew, Nixon and Watergate, it has become increasingly difficult to take government seriously. I think student affairs of state shouldn't be considered or acted upon during a ball game. Student government should be a part of the election, is usually just plain hard work. Seemingly, a lot of new and even old student government members think that
I nope that our student senators, representing us students in OUR government, won't in the future try to see the university work for them, the tube, but will work for the University and not for their own personal whims and pleasures while conducting public student senates.
Jeffrey L. Latz Lawrence graduate student
representing the students of a college or university is a lark, a Sunday drive to Potter Lake or a party at the Dwuff尔磨林 Htt
Women athletes
To the Editor:
We were pleased to see in the Homecoming edition of the Kansan the articles concerning women's intercollegiate athletics at the University of Kansas. This program has been ignored by the Kansan too often in the past.
Your article described the program as being "skeletal three short years ago," but this program had sent and conducted national tournaments. We feel there are two reasons why
women's athletics grew into a strong program.
In the fall of 1972, the Department of Health, Physical Education and Recreation hired two women in the branch of women's intercollegiate athletics. Thanks to her efforts, funding of the program was increased many times over. She served as a delegate on the branch of the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women in regard to scheduling and policy, and gave leadership to the team that had been lacking in the past.
The Kansas University Endowment Association was a major supporter of the women's program during those "skeletal" years. During the years in 1974 it supplied funds for an Indianapolis individual who qualified to attend national tournaments.
Due to Drysdale's two years of determination and initiative, coupled with the Endowment Association's generosity, a group of college athletics at KU was built into a strong viable program.
Sara J. McBride
Lawrence graduate student
Judy Raney
1417 E. 15th St.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
and sundays in print, from August through
periods. Second-class postage paid at Law-
nifer station or $1 a day in Douglas County and $1 a
sunday or $1 a day in Dorchester County and $1 a
subscriptions are $1.35 a semester paid through
the university.
Dennis Ellsworth
Associate Editor
Debbie Carr Young
Campus Editor
Carol Young
Business Manager
Cindy Long
Assistant Business Manager
Jeri Kauld
Associating Manager
Roxy Parts
Mike
Publisher Business Advice
David Dary Mel Adams
Thursday, October 30, 1975
5
Pot possession rarely prosecuted
Although the number of arrests in Dougla County for possession of marijuana has been static the past three years, the number of people charged with Barkovitz, county attorney, said yesterday.
So far this year, there have been 70 drug cases and of these, 35 have been for possession of marijuana. Of the 35 cases, 28 have been prosecuted. Berkowitz said.
In 1971, the year before Berkwitz took office, there were 195 drug cases in Douglas County, or more than twice as many annual cases as in the years 1972-74. About half on those cases involved possession of marihuana.
Berkowitz, who was elected county attorney in 1972, established two basic policies early in 1974 that his office has used in dealing with drug cases in Douglas County.
THE FIRST POLICY, which Berkowitz says has worked well, involves deferred prosecution of possession of marijuana cases.
The second policy concerns procedures used by law enforcement officials in the state.
Under the first policy, if an individual is accused of possessing a small amount of marijuana, Berkowitz said, and otherwise has a good record, the county attorney's office offers the accused person the option of waiving his right to a fair and speedy trial
in exchange for a promise of "staying out of trouble" for six months.
Under this deferred prosecution agreement, as long as a person isn't involved in a serious violation of the law during the six month period, the possession of marjuria charges are dismissed, Berkowitz said.
MINOR VIOLATIONS such as parking tickets and traffic violations aren't common enough in the U.S. for prosecution agreement, Berkowitz said, but a charge of driving while intoxicated, commonly referred to as DWI, is a serious enough offense to review a possession of firearms.
In 1974, 119 drug cases were handled by the county attorney's office, and in 81 of those cases, marjana was the most serious drug. Berkowitz said.
There were 40 convictions in drug cases in 1974, Berkowitz said, and, when the number of deferred prosecutions is considered, the percentage of convictions is very high.
Berkowitz said $2 of the 1974 drug cases had involved simple possession of one or two ounces of marijuana, and the remaining $835 were either marijuana or asking in the sale of marijuana.
"WHEN WE DO DECIDE to prosecute drug case, Berkowitz said, "the actual conclusion is that we do not."
Under the second policy he instituted, Berkowitz said he had requested that the police not arrest Douglas County residents for possession of an ounce or less of marijuana, and send a report of the violation to the county attorney's office.
On Campus
The county attorney would, in turn, issue a complaint and have the accused person sent to prison. Berkowitz said deferred prosecution was then usually offered to the violator. Only once has someone turned down an offer for prosecution, even when the policy was started. Berkowitz said.
individual would plead guilty to a reduced charge of possession of marijuana, a misdemeanor, instead of contesting a felony charge of sale of marijuana.
Or, he said, a charge of sale of marijuana might be reduced to delivery of marijuana.
J. A. BURZLE, director of foreign studies at the University of Kansas, will serve on the National Screening Committee for the Fulbright-Hays American Graduate Program.
RICHARD L. SCHFEFLBUSCH, director of the Bureau of Child Research, will present his Educational Science Retreat, Multichannel Student (MCS) today at Temple University.
STEPHEN L. SEGBRECHT, Prairie Village junior, has been awarded a $400 scholarship for the 1975-76 academic year by the Sigma Phi Epsilon Educational Foundation.
Today: MICHAEL PONCE DE LEON, New York City printmaker, will present a slide lecture at 10:30 a.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. A program, "DO PRISONS REHABILITATE?" will be presented at 7 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. K.U. BACKPACKING AND MOUNTAINEERING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Union. K.U. SAILING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. KU-Y will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union. K.U. SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING CLUB will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Robinson.
JOHN POZZRO, professor and chairman of the Department of Music Theory, won an award from the American Society of Composers for composing works for jazz. He received his Master's degree in music theory.
Announcements . . .
In 1972, there were 106 drug cases in Douglas County, according to Berkowitz, and only 61 drug cases in 1973. He estimated that the drug possession of a small amount of narcotics possession of a small amount of narcotics
One reason for the large number of cases in 1971 was the drug raids conducted in Lawrence by former Attorney General Vern Miller, Berkowitz said.
Berkowitz said he favored the decriminalization of the use of marijuana, and had said so when he ran for the county attorney's office.
don't even 'lother to go through the (possession of) marijuana) procedures."
Events ..
"I suspect that in some cases, the police
"I think it's significant that the state legislature is looking into possible decriminalization," Berkowitz said. "I think it shows that the leadership of the legislature is prepared to take the proposition seriously."
Chet and Carole Harvey Present
FOR YOUR ENTERTAINMENT
ROCK'S
GANG
The Exceptions
Friday, October 31, 8PM-1AM
at
The Fairgrounds Expo Center
Advanced Tickets $3.50 At the door $4.50
Advanced Tickets Available At:
Team Electronics 23rd & Lousiana
SUA
FINE ARTS
photo club
memberships available at the sua office
gallery
designer — craftsman exhibit oct — 24 to nov 16
picture lending library
reproductions and originals available for rental beginning of each semester
poetry club
john nelson oct 31
4 p.m. music room
additional info. SUA 864-3477
BIG OCTOBER SPECIALS
Oct. 16 to Oct. 31
5 p.m. Till Closing Nightly
Bull & Boar
11 W. 9th
OPEN FACE BEEF SANDWICHES
$1.50
BIG OCTOBER SPECIALS
Oct. 16 to Oct. 31
5 p.m. Till Closing Nightly
Bull & Boar
11 W. 9th
OPEN FACE BEEF SANDWICHES
$1.50
Served with thin sliced roast beet, home-made dressing,
mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included.
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
NEW YORKER SUPREME PIZZA
Six Meat and Garden Toppings Reg. $5.25 $3.95
MISS. STREET DELI
TOEI MASSACHUSETTS
THE REUBEN
$1.75
Reg. $1.90
Specials not good on Homecoming evening
Distributed by Schumm Foods Bull & Boar
Mass. Street Deli New Yorker Schumm Catering
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
MASS STREET DELI
THE REUBEN
$1.75
Reg. $1.90
Specials not good on Homecoming evening
Distributed by Schumm Foods Bull & Boar
Mass. Street Deli New Yorker Schumm Catering
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
THE REUBEN
$1.75
Reg. $1.90
Specials not good on Homecoming evening
PEACE CORPS needs volunteers with experience or degrees in the following skill areas:
ART, BUSINESS, EDUCATION, HOME EC,
LANGUAGES, MATH-SCIENCE, MUSIC, PHYS ED,
SOCIAL SCIENCES
Recruiters on campus Mon.-Thurs., Nov. 10th-13th Placement in Union (Srs./grd sign up for an interview in Placement now)
WEDGE SHOE
Another of those JEANS, PANTS Shoes. By Buskens '19
The JILL. NAVY BLUE, CAMEL and DARK BROWN.
McCoy shoes
813 Mass. Street Phone 843-2091
shoes
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Psalm 2 and Acts 4:25
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
"Something is dead under the creek!" Certainly this is not a refined, cultured, or elegant statement! but it carries a message very forceful and easily understood. Disease is a serious illness that can cause death and disease, an epidemic and death! Clean out the creek! No same person will question these truths concerning natural water so necessary for our existence and life.
(Note: This column first appeared in newspaper circles 13 years ago. Through the blessing of God, 40 dailles and 2 prominent college papers, namely Yale and Princeton, are publishing the column. Partial list of cities include, Providence, Atlanta, Jacksonville, Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Richmond-Atlanta and other cities in Southeast and West.W.)
Until recently we never knew that Alexander The Great was badly defeated and ran away from one enemy. Probably his greatest victory was in the battle of Arbela, but a few days afterwards he and his army were running away from an enemy—figuratively, the enemy was something "dumped up the CPU!" Just after the great victory, Alexander the Great escaped to Egypt, elephants, elephants, etc., too many to bury, and so generals "Stink and Stench" utterly ruffled his army and put them to flight!
the mening that concerns us is “what is dead up the creep” in our church life, polluting “the water of life,” that “spring of water” which Christ told the woman at the well abut: “Jesus said unto him, Whose drinkest of this water (Lucifer) he shall drink?” This phrase shows that Jesus himself shall never thirst; but the water that I shall give shall be in a him all of water springing up into everlasting life.” John 4:13, 14. It is the privilege and duty of the Christian not only to drink of that water, but also to give to drink to the fainting people of the earth, so that they may not suffer any harm. Dante says the place in hell prepared for those guilty of “heresy” was one of awful stench and slink, from which there was no escape! (Folks who follow and swallow “heresy” better enjoy their perfumes and sweet odors when it is called today.) Do we wish to avoid such things? The apostle Paul asks, “manner means ‘choice’ or ‘to choose.’” in the Protestant Christian Church those guilty are the ones who choose to believe the notions and devices of their own mind and heart, or the commands of men, instead of “every word that proceeds out of our hearts.” So Paul says that those who make the choice of accepting or rejecting what the Bible says, but the Protestant Christian, if not a hypocrite or usurper, is one who has chosen to accept the entire Bible as the infallible Word of God, the only rule of “faith and practice,” and those who do not so believe.
Jesus Christ said to the religious and secular leaders who asked Him if He had brahmas or blessed children, “If I am a brahmas, we are considering, and the danger and death that result when it is polluted, when there are dead things in this stream! John 8:43 Christ said, ‘
In Malachi 1:6 we read: "A son honors his father, and a servant his master; if then I be a father, where is Mine honor? If by a bachelor, where is My fear?" He asks, "Why do you not believe in God?" He thought, "How can ye believe in me, which receive仇 him one of another, and seek not the honor that comes from God only?" If we do not love Jesus Christ, if we do not seek the honor of our parents, or our father, is he? "You are of your father the devil, and the lusts of your father ye will do. He was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the truth—for he is a liar, and an evil man." He said, "There may be a beautiful and terrible revelation and reason here why some spirits furtively object to carrying out God's commands concerning the murderer, to put him to death and take no satisfaction for sparing them." He says, "In our generation, said," "milwaukee will fight you if you abridge their privilege of going to hell!"
Saved folks should surely pray for those lost! "God forbid that I should sin against the Lord in longing to cure for you,"—1st Samuel 12:33. "You are of your own service," says theologian Gregory B. Williams. He is still in the business of 'casting out devils,' and no case is too hard for Him. Call on Him to deliver you. "Beware of false prophets," said Christ in The Sermon on the Mount. The Apostle in warning Timothy of a man who polluted "the water of life stream," spit into it open, and put Timothy inside; "Of whom shall I be?," says theologian John 14:5.
A noted English historian, looking across the centuries of English history, said: "The leapse of church discipline was a certain symptom of political and social change in England. The Church authorities, as is, are not going to discipline you. 'Do it yourself'—"the family and loved ones, your community, safe, your nation and your family."
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Friday, October 10, 1975
University Daily Kansan
5
Chicago nostalgia pleases crowd
By BILL KATS
Reviewer
In the late 1960s, Chicago stood at the rear of a movement that eventually led to the development of the
The movement was initiated by Al Kooper's original Blood, Sweat and Tears. Kooper's idea was to combine a jersey and a section with a standard rock 'n' roll band.
CON-
ally
stars
liney
they
sary
like it
The result was distinctive. Horn sections were no longer relegated to simple rhythm and blues style backgrounds, and indicate movements were constructed around them.
Citahook took the concept and explored it further, loosening up the rhythm section and creating a rock setting for the brass to play in.
The band gained virtually instant critical and popular fame with its first two albums "Chicago Transit Authority" and "Guitarist Terry Kath experimented with guitar feedback. The band's guff vocals gave it a gut appeal.
Indeed, the band has changed little in basic format since its primal beginnings.
Chicago is essentially the same group it was at its genesis. Only percussionist Laurid de Oliveira has been added to the original seven-man band.
Last night, Chicago scored with a battery of commercially popular songs at Aller and 7,000 was treated to what trombonist James Pankow called "primal Chicago."
Many of Chicago's newer tunes, which have attained wide recognition, retain most of the same elements present on its first albums.
Some of the newer songs received only polite applause, despite Pankow's pleading that they were a bit "ugly."
Last night, however, much of the crowd response was elicited by its old and proven songs "Dems Anybody Really Know Me" and "Colour My World." Me Smile" and "Colour My World."
The band couldn't stimulate the crowd during the first hour, but seemed to be on during its second hour after a brief intermission.
There are indications that the band is now
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
past its creative prime. Many of the tricks Pankow said Chicago would deliver last night were little more than glosses of standard rock 'n' roll.
But Chicago still has tethered musicians and is capable of generating excitement.
specialty, which is producing a unique brand of clean American rock.
Of all American bands, Chicago is the one you would probably pick if you wanted your guitar to sound like that.
They avoid the theoretical trappings of many of the new rock acts. Not a trace of
JACKSON WESTON
Staff Photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Chicago's Lamm
Chicago's Robert Lamm gives extra effort with "Beginnings" during the group's Thursday night performance at Allen Field House.
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glitter or eyeliner was seen on stage last night. Kath, with his Kansas City Chiefs jersey, looked convincingly like a refugee from a football summer training camp.
The only glitter on the stage came from a large script plexiglas "Chicago" outlined in small white lights that hung behind the band.
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The group's last time, "5 or 6 or 4," for several the crowd standing and cheering for several men.
The band relied to the thunderous plea, playing an encore of two songs: the Beatles' "Got to Get You Into My Life" and "Feelin' Stronger Every Day."
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6
Friday, October 10, 1975
University Dally Kansan
Troupe stages religious plays about Jesus' life
Three men dressed in leandrs and painted with stage makeup gave an open air performance for 300 students, faculty and others passing by Dyche Hall yesterday.
Members of the trio weren't drama students and their purpose wasn't to entertain. They were members of the New Jerusalem Players, a branch of Jews for Israel in Calf, Calif., based upon organization, and their purpose was to tell others about Jesus.
"We believe the gospel is the most important message there is," said Jahn Moskowitz, 26, a member of the players. "Advertisers use all of the arts to communicate the most meaningless things. We feel that drama can be used to communicate the gospel. After all, it is the most important thing."
According to Moskowitz, all of the members of the troupe were born in New York but now live in San Francisco. They were all born into Jewish families but had converted to Christianity within the last five years. Because of their faith in Jesus as the Jewish Messiah, Moskowitz said, some Jews had ill will toward them.
Reuben B. Rubin, 30, another member of the troupe, said that Christianity was a bad way to be born.
"A lot of Jewish blood has been shed in the name of Jesus, so there's a gut reaction to anyone who believes in Jesus." Ruhn said. "We've made us with people who shed Jewish blood."
Mokowitz said he be believed Biblical
Jesus was identical to Biblical
Christianity.
Rachmil Silverman, 27, another member of the group, said many Jews believed that to become a Christian was to lose one's identity.
"We came to know Jesus as our messiah and we didn't have to give up our culture to believe in Jesus as the Jewish Messiah," Silverman said.
When the troupe performed "A Carmination of Life" yesterday, many people paused on the sidewalk to watch. A few sought refuge from the bright sun under a nearby tree. The ants of the players, who performed virtually without props except for a walking stick, creep paper streamers and noise makers, drew laughter from the crowd. But they didn't have a laugh because Bible scriptures were quoted throughout the presentation and religious literature was distributed by the performers following the 15-minute drama.
According to Moskowitz, the players have traveled more than 30,000 miles since their tour began in January. Moskowitz said the team is focused on churches and on street corners. He said the tour would end when they returned to California next month.
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How is it possible to understand anything unless you know what is in existence to be understood? In order to promote scientific enquiry I offer a hundred dollar reward to anyone who can go beyond fire, wind, water and earth and give the identity, number and manner of all things existing in ultimate form.
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6
Thursday, October 30, 1975
University Daily Kansan
Local families
From page one
"the pattern was there," she said. "The cases were all carbon cones."
--she said, she then tried to deceive the deprogrammer into thinking that they succeeded.
At that point, Osborne's parents decided to take her to a deprogrammer before they lost contact with her completely. That decision involved a big risk, Mrs. Osborne said, because if the attempt had failed, they never have seen their daughter again.
"We were willing to take the chance
because we wanted our daughter's
freedom," she said.
Osborne's parents, along with two of her brothers, drove to Akeron, Ohio, where a group of deprogrammers were waiting for in a motel room.
THE DEPROGRAMMING WAS the most experience she ever had, Osborne said.
"The church instills a great fear of deprogrammers," she said. "They say you'll become very sinful, very fallen, if you are deprogrammed.
"The closer we got to (Akron), the more I was on panic. I knew I couldn't go through with it."
She did go through with it, but not without a fight. O馨oborn said she had escaped once before. She didn't go back, caught her before she could go far. Knowing she wouldn't get another chance to escape,
"I felt like a little messiah, setting a higher standard for the world to follow."
OSBORNE SAID THE deprogrammers had stayed with her constantly, explaining to her how she had been misled by the church.
But that attempt failed, too. She said one of the deprogrammers told her, "I can see the devil in you, and we're going to get him out of you. We're going to stay here if it takes three months until you get your own mind back."
"they talked to me about the church and showed me how the church had twisted the Bible around," she said. "Those consoled me and saved my life." And until she began question her beliefs.
"I finally opened my mind and admitted that maybe I was wrong," she said. "That was too hard."
Mrs. Osborne said that the deprogramming process wasn't the evil thing that was the problem.
When the family was on its way to Ohio, she said, her daughter told her tales of how the deprogrammers lied church members before the attack until they finally broke under pressure.
Instead, she said, the deprogrammers simply told Osborne and forced her to change the date.
OSBORNE SAID THAT THE
deprogramming had been a terrible
experience at times because of the mental
turnoll it put her through.
"Deprogramming is hell at times," she said, "but I can't think of a better way to get people out of the church. I'm just thankful that I went through it."
The transition in adjusting to a new way of life without the church has been difficult, she said, because she has had to re-establish values that was destroyed by the church.
"I REALIZE NO WOW THAT I had
I REALIZE with God," she said. "It was all a
thing."
Observe isn't bitter toter individual church members, she said, because most of them aren't aware of what the church is saying. But she does have some bitter feelings.
She said that the church had been a crutch for her because she was unsure of her identity at the time she joined. She had wholeheartedly adopted the church's values and philosophy, she said, and had let the group's leaders do all the thinking for her.
I hold a lot of the church leaders responsible for what they're doing to people," she said. "They're playing with people's minds, and that's not right."
"The church is a big rip off, really."
Despite her feelings now about the episode that the episode was a good learning experience,
"I realize now that I've got to live my own life—as Jan Osborne."
She said she was taking life a day at a time, not looking too far ahead. She is assisting in some deprogramming efforts in Ohio, working with people who are in the same position she was in just a few months ago.
OSBORNE SAID SHE wanted to return to Lawrence soon to finish a paper for a sociology class. When she completes that task, she realizes nothing she had decided not to do last May.
Her mother is lecturing on Osborne's experiences to various church and civic groups in the Independence area. Mrs. Osborne is thankful to have her daughter back, she said, and wants to do what she can to help bring other families together.
"If I can help just one person, one family, that's all I care about." she said.
The summer ordeal for the Osborne family is over. The family is reunited. It has time to relax and enjoy life. The relationship that had once been almost completely severed.
THE STORY OF THE Fanshier family hasn't evolved that way. It is a story of bitterness, confusion and uncertainty of what is wert to come.
Fansher got involved in the church soon after Osborne had joined last spring. Fansher, like her roommate, had no strong ties to the church and had many questions about her own life.
And like Osborne's parents, the Fanshiers were thrilled to learn that their daughter had finally discovered a religion that interested her. But as they learned more about it, they reading literature and talking with people, they grew suspicious of the organization.
After Osborne was successfully deprogrammed, the Fanshiers chose the same recourse to get their daughter out of the church. But Fanshier escaped from the deprogrammers and made her way back to Lawrence.
THE FANSHIERS OBTAINED a civil commitment to have their daughter detained for psychiatric examination. But she was released in August from Kansas Medical Center in Great Bend, her attorneys got a modified court order that released her from the hospital during the series of examinations. A final hearing is scheduled to decide Fanshier's mental competence.
Fansher is back in Lawrence awaiting the results of the examinations. She is confident that the court will declare her mentally competent. Her parents are hoping otherwise, because if she is declared mentally competent she can be held for further tests.
Fansher and her parents agree that the legal proceedings are a battle not of religious freedom but of individual looks at the proceedings in a different way.
Fansher's mother, Frances Fansher,
said that all she wanted was to have her
daughter removed from the church long
enough to do some thinking of her own. As
long as her daughter is with other church
members, the church does all the
thinking for her.
IF SHE'S ALLOWED TO think for herself, Mrs. Fanshier said, then perhaps her daughter will come to realize what the church is doing to her.
"We're concerned about her mind, not her religion," Ms. Fanshard said. "Worshiping God is one thing, but worshipping Jesus is another." Avior (the Rev. Mc) is another thing.*
She said she and her husband were trying to get their daughter out of the church because no one else could, particularly Fanshier herself.
"I don't think Pam could leave because the influence of the church is so great," Mrs. Johnson said.
But Fanshier she said she thought her rights as an individual were being stepped on by her.
"I GET THE IMPRESSION that I'm going to have to change," she said, "that I'm going to have to leave the church and give them their expectations or they're not going to go.
"That's their goal for me in life, but I will go ahead and goals for me. I have to follow my own path."
Fansher said that it had been her conscience that she had followed in joining the band. "We were very hardworking," she said.
"If I could find a higher truth, then I'd leave this church in a minute. But so far I haven't found it."
Fanshier said she could leave the church at any time if she wanted, and would do so without hesitation if she could find something better.
People leave the church on their own all the time, she said, and feel no contempt toward the church. The only people who are bitter toward the Unification Church are those who have undergone the deprogramming process. Fanshier said.
had pressure her into joining. Now that she said, she's the happiest that she's ever been.
"If I could find a higher truth, then I leave this church in a minute. But so far I haven't found it. That doesn't mean I'm goin't to stow looking."
"The CHURCH OFFERS hope for all mankind," she said. "Whether it works, I am confident."
"It has given me a very deep understanding of God that I never had before," she said. "It made me realize many things about myself that I really wasn't aware of before. And it makes me a stronger, more self-confident individual."
She said that if anyone was guilty of brainwashing people, it was the case of the United States.
"Compare the tactics used by Joe Alexander (a deprogrammer) and his people," she said. Alexander is the person responsible for Osborne's deprogramming.
"YOU'ARE FORCED TO listen and repeat what they say. And they'll keep you there, or warn them it takes. That is how I worried them. But if that I wasn't going to get out of there until either I convinced them of my conversion or actually started believing that they were
Fansahil said the deprogrammers and other critics of the church dealt with exorcism, but Mr. Hammond says the
"They lock you into a motel room; there's no outside stimulus from anywhere. The only people you're allowed to talk to are those individuals that they bring in.
"It's so obvious to me who's wrong."
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The church doesn't program its members to sever family ties, she said, but instead encourages them to maintain good family relations. In her situation, she said, because the legal action against her, she hadn't been able to maintain a healthy relationship with her family.
Pam Fanshier
"BECAUSE OF THE TEACHINGS of the church I have come to realize how important it is that they take them for granted, but now I realize what they've gone through to raise me, the sacrifices that they have made for me, the moral would be if I cut off all ties with them?"
"There's definitely a separation that was never there before and it's getting deeper and deeper and wider and wider the more they continue to work against the church.
Fansher said that if the court ruled in her favor, then perhaps she could begin improving the relationship with her family. But until that happens, she said, she'll concentrate her efforts on working for the church.
"When they hurt the church, they hurt me. But nothing they could ever do to me could ever destroy the love I have for them."
"D I L E Y TO GO HOME very much," she said. "Just because I joined the Unification Church doesn't that I don't want to go back and see my plants and my horses and my brothers and sister. I want to move ever, but it is just impossible at home."
"I wish we could have a normal relationship."
Fanshier said she would also like to patch
"Friendship goes deeper to me than just having different religious beliefs," Fanshier said. "My friendship with Jan and my parents goes deeper than that. The thing they have to learn is that I'm still the same person."
up the close friendship that she had for several years with Osborne. Osborne expressed the same desire. But both agreed that, considering the circumstances, reestablishing their relationship would be difficult.
Osborne said that Fansher had appeared to be normal when she last talked with her before the examinations in Great Bend. But she said Fansher was confused and didn't understand all that was going on within the church.
"I DO HAVE DIFFERENT religious beliefs and they're going to have to accept me with those beliefs. I'm still the same; I wish they would understand that."
"The worst thing is that we don't have a friendship because we don't trust each other." Osborne said. "But I still want to be her friend."
The rift over Fanash's religious beliefs has gone far beyond her family and friends. Much of the Great Bend community has reacted to all the publicity that has come from the legal proceedings. Lately church leaders have joined the churches have centered on the Fanash family.
SOME CLOSE FRIENDS OF the Fanshers are circulating a petition to be sent to the Senate and to demand that attorney general and state legislators demanding a federal investigation of the Unification Church. The church poses a threat to the national security of the petition says, but also to the entire country.
One woman who is aiding the effort said petitions had been circulating throughout the western part of the state, in other parts of Kansas and in Texas.
Stephen Sell, state director of the Unification Church, said there was strong criticism of his leadership when he was a relatively new religion and because it was still a small organization.
HE SAID IF MY meet with opposition when it first began in Korea and Japan, that but it was now looked upon no differently than other churches.
Sell said he couldn't understand why anyone would be opposed to either Fanshier's membership in the church or the church itself.
"It's a 20th century witch hunt."
"Pam's parents are holding her against
the wall," she said. "The people
people can close their eyes to that fact."
Both the attorney for Fansher and the attorney for her parents agreed that public support in Great Bend was running strongly in favor of Mr. and Mrs. Fansher's actions.
Robert Feldt, Fanshier's attorney, said he had received few, if any, cells or letters favoring Fanshier's side. He said his wife was involved in the court accusation of representing the wife.
FANSHIER SAID THAT the case had been blown out of proportion by all the publicity and that because of the strong reaction from voters it has been forced to continue their legal action.
"They feel like they have to follow the rules of this church, this church, no matter if it hurts me or not."
So the Fanshiers sit and wait, backed by an entire community, and hope for a court decision that would get their daughter away. The family is so completely altered their family life.
And Fanshier sits and waits in Lawrence, confident that the court will rule in her favor, and hopes that soon her family can be worse again, despite all that has happened.
Home subsidy rules to be presented today
Eligibility guidelines for the Douglas County Home Rehabilitation Program will be presented to the Douglas County Commission today.
According to the agreement, Penn House representatives will spend one morning each month in the city halls of Lecompton, Eudora and Baldwin, Coleman said. Homeowners may discuss home issues with the representative, if they are the representatives there, he said, or visit Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania St., any weekday.
THE GUIDELINES, HE said, will be used by members of Penn House, a local nonprofit service organization, who have volunteered to keep working home rehabilitation or loans.
If approved, eligible county homeowners outside Lawrence will begin getting home rehabilitation aid next week, Ernest Coleman, county federal fund consultant and co-author of the guidelines, said vesterday.
Coleman, said the guidelines were a necessary step in the implementation of $50,000 in home rehabilitation funds and $21,800 in administrative funds, which the county received Aug. 26 as part of a $225,000 community development grant.
The home rehabilitation program is designed to help low-income county residents improve the safety and comfort of their homes.
Tentative plans call for counseling to begin in Leptonium next Thursday, in September.
Money for the counseling program, he said, would come from the administrative department.
Although a formal contract between Penn House and Coleman Consulting Services, the administrative office for the county's courts would be opened to anyone who would be signed within the next few weeks.
COLEMAN SAID HE and two assistants
in his office, Virginia Ashlock and Barbara Wilills, recently met to formulate the guidelines. He said that, though there were no laws that regulated the making of guidelines, the guidelines were similar to those used by Lawrence.
The guidelines, contained in a four-page booklet, explain eligibility, types of repairs that may be done and grant or loan application procedures.
Coleman said a person must have own home for at least one year and must fall in love with someone else.
The eligibility of farm families will be determined by their net incomes, he said, because operating expenses must be considered to evaluate total income. All other families will be eligible according to their gross incomes, he said.
THE INCOME LEVARS vary, he said,
from $4,084 for a single person to $7,670 for a
family.
She said that because there was no county housing code, people wouldn't be required to improve their homes. However, she said insights into the possible need for a code could be gained through the counseling program.
Ocee Miller, Penn House director, said the guidelines would be geared to correcting health and safety hazards rather than home appearance.
Coleman said there was no law that required the county commission to approve a development fund. County was the only Kansas county to have received community development funds, Coleman said, commission approval would be required for all that might receive funds in the future.
If the guidelines are approved, copies will be distributed at a public discussion of the county community development grant at 7:30 tonight in the commissioner's meeting room in the Douglas County Courthouse, he said.
CON PERSONAS
by Paul Stephen Lim
William Inge Memorial Theatre
TONIGHT thru Nov. 6 8:00 p.m.
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A discussion with two prisoners from '
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Do Prisons Rehabilitate?
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, October 30, 1975
7
Butler muzzles offensive threats
71
Defensive tackle Mike Butler
Photo by CORKY TREWIN
A mischievous smile of pleasure spread across Mike
who excitedly enjoyed talking about
offering advice to the techie.
Butler is a mammoth 6-foot-6, 255-pound junior defensive tackle for the University of Kansas football team. He's been manhandling offensive tackles this year and leads KU's defense in tackles by a lineman.
At this particular point, Butter was talking about an offensive linemen in particular—Kentucky's Warren Bryant and Wisconsin's Dennis Lick. Both were considered All-America material by preseason pollsters.
THEY HAVE ANOTHER in common, too; they were outplayed by the less heralded Butler in KUYET's battle.
In Kansas' 14-10 win over Kentucky, Butler was
Sports Editor
Inside Sports
by Yael Abouhalkah
"I figured if I played well against them, then the pro scouts would start taking looks at me."
named the Big Eight's outstanding defensive player of the week.
"I feel like I had good games against both of them," Butler asserted. "I knew they were both supposed to be hot stuff. That got me psyched up. I was playing against guys high in the minds of pro scouts.
BUTLER DOESN'T LEAVE any doubt about the enjoyment he gets from beating his opponent. There are several ways to administer those thrashings—by sacking the quarterback, tackling a runner for a loss or by just plain physically whipping the opposing offensive tackle.
"What I like to know," he said, "is that their offensive coach and his players are going to go over the films and see that I beat their offensive tackle. That really fires me."
Now back to Bryant and Lick.
"We talked to each other a lot—I just laughed down his face a lot of times," Butler explained. "The only way to shut him up was to beat him physically. Then he's only talking trash."
BRYANT, A 6-FOOT, 32-39pund junior, was an all-Southeastern Conference selection as a sophomore. The Kentucky press guide describes him as "bick, quick to reversal." And, according to Butler, he also talks a lot.
The game against Lick, a 6-0et, 323-pound senior, wasn't as filled with banter, Butler said. But there was one play in KU's 41-4 romp over Wisconsin in which he made a tackle and Lick ended on Butler's back.
"I TURNED TO HIM and said I didn't mind him on my back, just as long as I was on the back of his runner," Buter said, smiling. "We just talked like that in the bus. Plus we saw a few other words that can't be printed."
Although Lick was the heavier of the two tackles, Butler said playing against Bryant presented a tougher play.
"He was more physical than Lick," Butler said. "I felt like I had a little better game against him."
"We had to see who wanted to drive who off the line of scrimmage. That was a bruising game.
"LICK WAS MORE OF A position player. He was more interested in just playing between me and him, than in being in that stance in that game."
Although just a junior, Butler has started to get recognition around the Big Eight as a premier defensive tackle. There wasn't much glamour for Butler last fall.
"Me personally. I felt that I had a good year last
meet and got much recognition. So I get my
new job, higher, higher."
BUTLER IS NATURALLY interested in playing pro football. He thinks he's got a good start toward getting the job.
"I know that, from what I've heard. I'm doing all
right this year," Butler said. "But I've got a bellva la
of improving to do. There are a lot of guys who think
they can make it in pro football. I want to be one of the
few who make it."
Butler holds one of the key positions on KU's defensive line, considering that he's one of the most experienced players there. That means some of KU's younger players look to him for some leadership.
play. Then helps them. But when we're all having a good game, I just try to do my part."
"WHEN WE'RE NOT DOING too much," Butler said, "they're maybe looking for me to have a good
Butler's season is far from finished. He said offensive tackles on the Oklahoma, Colorado and Missouri squads must be to see this year. But he plays against them last year, knows what to expect.
"I have some hard times coming up," he said.
But after watching his response to those so far this year, Butler is evidently the kind to relish such a change.
Sonics nip Kings by 1
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Rookie Bruce Seals hit a layup off a pass from Slack Witts with only two seconds to play giving the Seattle Supersonics a 92-91 victory over the Kansas City Kings in a National Basketball Association game here last night.
Sea teams with guard Fred Brown for 30 of Seattle's 36 third-quarter points in a period when Kansas City could only muster 21 and by as many as 12 points in that quarter.
Kansas City's Jimmy Walker brought the Kings back in the final period by scoring 11 of his 18 points. Larry McNeill hit a short shot, remaining for an 89-48 Kansas City lead.
The Kings had an 18-point lead midway through the second quarter, while Seattle was held scoreless for more than six minutes.
Watts and Seals then scored the final Sonic points to secure Seattle's third win in four games. The Kings are winless in two starts.
Nate Archibald, who finished the game with 25 points, hit two free throws to win.
BLOOMINGTON, Minn. (AP)—The Minnesota North Star sings a five-game National Hockey League losing streak here last night with a 24 shutout of the Kansas City Scouts behind the goaltending of Pete Lopresti
KC Scouts fall
Minnesota gave its goalie the only score he needed 35 seconds before the end of the first period, when Bill Goldsworthy scored a goal from Reid past Souris' goal Bill McKenzie.
Goldsworth assured the win for loPresti with only 49 seconds left in the game when he picked up a loose puck in the goal line. He Hicke up for his fifth goal of the season.
It was Lo Presti's second career shutout, the first this season.
KU trio leads in Big 8 statistics
Nolan Cromwell is still on top in the Big Eight rushing statistics. Two other University of Kansas football players lead the league in other departments.
Kansas halfback Laverne Smith is 10th in the league in rushing, with a 64.7 yard average, and fullback Norris Banks is 13th with 53.7 vards.
THE OTHER TWO Jayhawk leaders are safety Chris Golub, who leads with four interceptions, and Eric Franklin, who spares staff returners with a 23.8 yard average.
Golub, however, is out for the year after
suffered an injury in January of 35-19 loss to
the Rockies.
Cromwell, KU's quarterback, has rushed for 765 yards on 127 carries. Both statistics are top in the league. He's averaging 109.3 yards a game, which gives him a fairly healthy margin over Oklahoma State's Terry Miller, who's averaging 97.9.
the statistical department. No Kansas passer or receiver is among the top eight in the league. Cromwell is 10th, averaging 21 vards a game passing.
In total offense, Cromwell ranched thi-
with 130.4 yards a game. Colorado's Dave
Smith ran for 278 yards.
In team statistics, KU's potent ground game is averaging 289.3 yards, second behind Oklahoma's 308.3. But with the passing average of 28.9 yards, the Jayhawks are dragged to seventh in the total offense with a 318.4 yard average.
KU'S DENNIS KERBEL IS FOURTH in goals, with six of 12 kicked success.
Kansas fares slightly better in the defensive categories, despite that subpar defense against Kentucky.
KU's impotent passing game shows up in
THE JAYHAWKS are four in rushing defense, allowing 184.9 yards a game. The Hawks have no need to worry about the defense.
In scoring offense, the Jayhawks are sixth in scoring for a game, while their scoring defense is third.
Overall, though, the Jayhawks are third in the Big Eight in total defense.
KU's opponent this Saturday, arch rival Kansas State doesn't fare well in most games.
THE WILDCATS ARE last in rushing offense (172.0),七百 in passing (713.1), last in total offense (243.3) and last in scoring offense (11.3 points a game).
Kansas State is sixth in rushing defense (196. 6), sixth in passing defense (110. 6), sixth in total defense (307.1) and fourth in scoring defense (17.0).
Kansas
Kansas K-State
Kansas coach Bud Moore was unhappy with the Jayhawk passing defense and said he wanted to stop them.
"I saw too many passes completed against our secondary today and that isn't good with the poor injury situation that we have in the poor injury behalf."
KU hosts Kansas State this Saturday in Memorial Stadium.
Injured Jayahays returned in force to force Tom Dinkel, Steve Jones Franklin King and Kurt Knoff were back and practicing. More cautioned that Dinkel was the only
"They throw the ball a good bit," Moore said. "But I don't know that they'll be throwing it much more than they normally do. They aren't leading the league or anything, but they are more than adequate."
Couch Ella Rainberger said what was believed to be a simple ankle sprain for her hip. "She is fine."
MANHATTAN (AP)-Quarterback Joe Hatcher turned up at yesterday's Kansas State football practice as a doubtful starter for the game with Kansas this Saturday.
Rainberger reported that Hatcher's mobility during the 90 minute drill was good. If Hatcher is unable to start, junior Tom Merrifield will start instead.
K-State's chances against KU apparently suffered a blow when slotback Mike Harris, who had returned 13 kickoffs for 302 yards, quit the team.
"We definitely feel we will have to throw
him!"灵敏地 said. "This will be a
very well."
very endearing and very physicist game. The Wildcats concentrated on their kicking game in preparation for the Kansas kick-return specialists.
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University Daily Kansan
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Friday, October 16, 1975
7
Nebraska poses stern test for KU
By YAEL ABOUHALKAH
Sports Editor
It's been whispered by some students on the University of Kansas campus this week. Others, more bold, have readily stated as "I'll lead all team will beat Nebraska tomorrow."
Maybe. But, more than likely, maybe not.
A sellout crowd of 76,400 is expected for the game.
There are, of course, many reasons for the euphoria KU fans are feeling as the Jayhawks enter the .15 kickoff in Lincoln and they are clowning against the Cornukers' 4-0 mark.
THE MAJOR REASON IS the emergence of Nolan Cromwell at quarterback. Cromwell has Nebraska worried, NU coach Tom Osborne has admitted.
"Kansas has really got it going with Cromwell at quarterback," he said. "The wishbone can give you problems and this is the first time we faced it this year."
Cromwell has rushed for 481 yards the past two games. But that was playing against lowly Oregon State and a Wisconsin defense that leaked like a sieve.
In Nebraska, Cromwell and his supporting cast of running backs and linemen will be facing the second best team against the run in the nation.
KU coach Bud Moore realizes that
"THEY'LL PLAY THE option much tougher all the way around," he said.
"There's no question we'll have to throw the football."
The other big hope for a KU upset rests on the shoulders of the Jayhawk defense. That surprising crew has held opponents to just eight this year, the best of any Eight team.
Here again, however, the Jayhawks have yet to face a team with an offense the Jayhawks are not prepared for.
"They have two outstanding tailbacks," Moore said, "and two very fine quarterbacks, double-threat at the team." They have a very fine running game and a good pass attack."
THAT'S AN UNDERSTATEMENT. The thunk offense is averaging 35 point a game.
Offensively, NU is led by quarterbacks Vince Ferragamo and Terry Luck. Ferragamo has won the starting job from Luck. Both pass well.
The running backs who worry Moore are backlash Tony Davis, Monte Anthony and Dave Greenberg play onto the touch on the ball. He is played by Bobby Tatum, Larry Mushinskie and Curtis Craig.
Of NU's offensive line, led by AM-America center Rik Bonness, Moore said, "They're a lot quicker for their size than anybody else." The Rangers will play but they are the quickest we have played."
Photo by DAVE REGIER
58 97 8 13
MANNING THE KEY defensive spots for the huskers are Jerry Wied, John Lee, Mike Fultz and Bob Martin. Linebackers are Clete Pillen and Jim Wightman.
KU receiver Waddell Smith flys through the air after being upended by teammates in practice
Sports Shorts
CROSS COUNTRY HERE—Sill seeking its first win of the year, the University of Kansas cross country team takes to the hills today when it meets Southern Illinois University, at p.m. at the Lawrence Country Club. The five-mile race, which starts at a point just west of Concord Road near the clubhouse, is the only home meet for the Jawahirahs of women's team will run three miles against Ohio State University after the men's race.
SOCCCER CLUB-KU's soccer club will battle Missouri at 2 p.m. Sunday in Memorial Stadium. The Jayhawks' season record is 3-1.
WOMEN'S FIELD HOCKKEY-KU advanced its field hockey record to 7-1-1 with a 4-0 win over Emporia Kansas State College Wednesday. Marie Faust led the scoring。三 Tandy Carr and Donna Sullivan each team scored four-team invitational tournament this weekend on the fields at 23rd and Iowa streets.
Kansan Predictions
GAME ABOURAKAH QUAKENBUSH ZELLIGMAN FITZGERALD
Kansas at Nebraska 14-24 14-24 7-35 24-34
Bud Moore is going to see red during . . . and after . . . this one. Consensus: NEPRASKA
Oklahoma State at Missouri 21-30 21-27 17-21 21-20
Even John Wayne couldn't help the Cowboys this week. Consensus: MISSOURI.
Oklahoma at Texas 24-21 38-20 45-14 21-7
Longhorn coach Darrell Royal will be glad to return to his country-western music after this one. Consensus: OKLAHOMA.
Iowa State at Kansas State 17-14 10-14 16-17 10-17
The Wildcats will breathe a silo of relief after this one. Consensus: KANSAS STATE.
Colorado at Miami, Fla. 28-14 28-17 31-10 28-20
After two straight losses to Big Eight foes, Miami hopes the third time's a charm. . . It won't be. Consensus: COLORADO.
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Thursday. October 30, 1975
University Dally Kansan
Self-confidence propels Calgaard
By GREG HAC
Staff Writer
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, is a man with "self-confidence." Always smartly dressed, he moves surely and swiftly through a mountain of work every day, knowing he is making the right decisions. But perhaps he has overlooked the important climbed the administrative ladder at the University of Kansas in five short years.
Today, he holds more power than any administrator at KU, with the exceptions of Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
His constant motion is never wasted. He always works toward an objective. He is similar to an atomic reactor—an explosion under control.
Since becoming vice chancellor last May,
he has overseen the budgets of the College
Profile
of Liberal Arts and Sciences, all professional schools, all libraries and the museum of art, which make up 85-90 percent of the University's academic budget. In addition to academic policies, faculty appointments and resource allocations of about $30 million.
"I never planned on being an administrator," he said recently. "But about six years ago I decided to try it and see I must have liked it.
HE IS ALSO CHAIRMAN of the Committee of Chief Academic Officers and an ex officio member of the Sabatical Leave and Promotion and Tenure committees.
"It has its rewards and frustrations, but the rewards outweigh the unpleasant aspects. Some of the work is very mundane and tiresome, and it is frustrating when you don't have the resources you need to run programs as well as you would like to."
However he said he was satisfied with improvements in the general operating procedures at KU and with being able to contribute to the development of new programs.
"ONE OF THE REWARDS of my job is that, when I see a problem or an opportunity, I'm in a position to do something good," she said. "We can average influence at the university."
Calgaard, born 38 years ago in Joice, Iowa, has a life story of constant competition and achievement. He received his B.A. in economics at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa, in 1969 and was appointed a Woodrow Wilson Fellow. He received his Ph.D. in economics in 1963, both at the University of Iowa.
"I've always had a greater than average intellectual curiosity," he said. "I read almost voracious when I was young. I'm not sure I read very many classics then, but I knew everything about baseball when I was 12.
"SCHOOL WAS ALWAYS interesting and extremely competitive for me."
Calgaud said he has also been helped by axtremely retrospective memory—almost photographed memories of intellectual interests, including cultural交际 affairs and his first local political experience.
He was an instructor in economics at Iowa from 1960 to 1983, when he came to KU as an assistant professor of economics. He was a professor in 1967 and a full professor in 1972.
"I enjoyed and do enJOKE, teaching," he said. "I like to teach because of the contact with you."
"I'm not teaching now, but I'm going to try again next semester when I might have more time. You need to have time to work outside of class for teaching to be personally rewarding for faculty and academically rewarding for students."
he was appointed associate dean of the
Society of French Languages and
director of Oliver College in 1974.
WHILE HE WAS AN associate professor,
He was also a member of the University Council and SenEx, serving as SenEx chairman in the 1972-73 school year. He was also a member of committee that appointed Dykes in 1973.
One of Dykes' first actions was to expand off-campus courses, and Calgaard was appointed vice chancellor for the Outreach program in May 1974.
"With the Chancellor's encouragement, we have put more quality and quantity into the Outreach program," he said. "The University has a long history of off-campus courses. For 10 years we have offered courses in government credit and continuing education."
A SHIFT IN POLICY by the Board of Regiments two years ago removed restrictions on earning degrees through off-campus education and made it possible UU to expand off-campus courses, he said.
Under Calgaard's guidance, the program expanded rapidly. More than 130 courses are now offered, 25 per cent more than last year. About 75 of the classes meet in Johnson and Wyandotte county areas and most of the other classes meet in Leavenworth. In summer when knuckle
"I've enjoyed working with Outreach very much," he said. "It's a significant change, although not an entirely new one. We have opened the University's resources up to a wide variety of areas especially in math and science." "It's a University education any other way."
HE SAID THE PROGRAM will continue to grow and a master of business administration program probably would be added so in the Kansas City Kan. area.
"We may branch out into fine arts, journalism and other professional areas," he said. It really depends on the reality of opportunities, funding, faculty and staff.
Expansions in non-credit offerings such as conferences, institutes and professional career education were also possible, he said.
His work with the Outreach program appears to have been more than satisfactory, because he was chosen vice chancellor for academic affairs in May 1975 over a large field of applicants when Ambrose Sarjacks left that position.
Sankel said, "Dr. Calgard has provided imaginative and vigorous leadership in the program. He will be held at the University. The Chancellor and I are sure that he will continue to provide this leadership. We are sure that he will continue to be enhanced under his guidance."
CALGAARD'S AVERAGE WORK day begins at 8 a.m. and goes past 5 p.m. after dinner he rests until 9 or 10 p.m. and then works at the office morning, too, at the office Saturday morning, too.
"I would guess I work about 80 hours a
week," he said. "It is difficult to estimate, though, because so much of my social life is tied to my work. I attend a lot of functions that are classified as both social affairs and work."
Jerry Hutchison, assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs, said, "An awful lot of what Dr. Calgaard and myself do is plain, day-to-day operational work. His job is the closest of any job to the everyday operation of the University. There are high-quality instructors, the university keeps the academic side of the University going."
Hutchison said the transition from Saricks to Calgaard had been a smooth one.
[Image of a man with dark hair and a suit]
because Calgaard already had the basic knowledge needed.
Ron Calgaard
"There really wasn't that much dif-
ferent," she said. "I other, and I think that's good," he said.
But Calgaard is more than an administrative machine. He enjoys his leisure time, which is usually spent with his family, and he has dreams and aspirations.
Calgaard said he had no reservations about the career choices he had made, although he said one dream had been left behind.
"I have wondered why I went to graduate school, rather than law school," he said. "You know, I think I would make a better courtroom lawyer than most I've seen."
"It's not likely that I would leave KU," he said. "Right now I would rather be in Lawrence than any other place. I have very deep roots here and I see some excellent opportunities for the future here in my job. My family likes it here, too."
But he couldn't quite say he wouldn't consider it.
"At some point you make the decision on how high you want to go," he said. "Sure, I'd consider it if someone asked me to be president of their university."
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