Heavy enrollment blamed for persistent IEC faults
By DAVID HAUBER
BY DAVID HAUBER and BILL UYEKI
When Foster Hall, the former location of the Intensive English Center (IEC), was destroyed in August 1974, it was hoped that much of the concession surrounding it since 1972 also would be leveled.
Although the building was removed because its deterioration was a source of controversy, the essence of many of the charges brought by foreign students against IEC continue to crop up.
In February 1975, IEC Director Edward Erazmus resigned after more than 10 years as the center's vice president.
A new director, Michael Henderson, was appointed in September 1975.
Henderson said last week that he was going to speak to the IEC Advisory Committee today regarding some of the center's problems, which he said he thought still existed.
"I don't think it is one of the best," Henderson said of the center. "I think we could improve our
teaching methods and the type of help we give our students in adjusting to American university Life and I know, given ideal conditions, we can certainly teach them well. We are certainly like to have a lower student-teacher rate."
HENDERSON SAID he was going to be speaking to the committee on the subject of allowing IEC students to take University of Kansas courses and about them being admitted to the University.
"The students' problems are important to me," he said. "I'm going to do my best to explain the students how the system works while at the same time I want them to do to upgrade the quality of their instruction."
Foreign students interviewed last week both criticized and oared the IEC.
A group of Iranian students who learned English in Iran said IEC had helped them in their KU classes. But they said that IEC was good for students with no previous education in English.
ANTONIO ESCALONA, a Venetian student in his second semester of IEC courses, said that last
"I hope this (sameer), will be better than the one," he said. "The first day was so bad for me."
semester he had to wait four hours in line at Allen
Field House to enroll in IEC courses.
Escalona said that the majority of IEC instructors were good but that some were bored in the process.
Oswald Rodriguez Venenuela graduate student in business, said the final exam in IEC was difficult because class exercises and the final exam didn't cover the same material.
"If you don't get an American friend," he said, "you would be impossible to get English as a second language."
RODIGHUEZ SAID he thought that improvements in class sizes this semester would make
Some students weren't as optimistic about the center. One student from the Middle East said, "I studied English in my country but because I studied English in my country, if you have American friends, it helps."
He also said that he had a 3.5 GPA in his KU courses.
"In the end, there's no benefit," he said of IEC. An Iranian student said that she had a diploma in England when she came to KU from England. She said she still required to take IEC courses last semester.
KHAIDL AL KHIABIU, Oran second semester IEC student, said, "The main reason it is always they want to keep you in the IEC. They depend that you don't know what's going on."
He said the different classes in the IEC were almost the same in the middle levels. Most students were not interested in it.
"I think those people in the English center are cheating people," she said. "I heard that this English center is not attached to the University and they are charging people much (for tuition)."
Yoko Nagami, Nagano, Japan, senior, said she had taken one semester of IEC courses and that of the students who complained about IEC were the ones who never attended classes.
Last semester there was a mean average of 16 per cent absenteeism in IEC courses, according to the survey.
PARVIZ-FARZANEH, an Iranian student son he had just taken the proficiency entrance exam and gotten a B on it. He said that he was put in an IEC class and that his first homework assignment was to write the alphabet. He said that he had been promised a class change.
Jamshad Saberi, Tehran, Iran, junior, said most Iranian students were engineers and that most could understand formulae and computations without a very extensive vocabulary.
"We came here to study engineering, not English," be said, and added that he thought most Iranian students went home to find jobs after attending education rather than staying in the United States.
"Just as long as we can understand our engineering professors, we don't need to learn all that vocabulary," said Saberi, a civil engineering major.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
See IEC, page 5
SNOW
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, February 2. 1976
Russian says KU receptive
See page 3
By LYNDASMITH
Legislators from the Kansas House Ways and Means Committee will meet this afternoon with University of Kansas administrators to review budget requests before state budget hearings begin in mid-February.
With few exceptions, Gov. Robert F. Kennedy signed a law requiring legislature KU's staff to 1977 budget requests.
Bennett recommended what Chancellor Archie R. Dykes called Saturday the "top priorities" of the budget: a 10 per cent merit salary increase, a 12 per cent increase in tuition fees and an additional tuition funding and personal need as a result of increased enrollment.
IN A LETTER SENT to Dykes in late December, Bennett said most special students have been given his recommendation 'in keeping with your statement to me that the number one priority for higher education is the com- pletion year of the Regents' three year program.
The salary increase is the third part of Bennett's three-year program to raise KU's faculty salaries to the mean faculty salaries American Association of Universities (AAU)
THE UNIVERSITY has requested 74 new unclassified positions, 24.7 classified positions, and $1,372,071 for the 1,110 more Lawrence campus next year. Nilsson said.
Keith Nicher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said the OOE was all in place. He also included teaching materials and building and maintenance equipment. He said the general base increase of 12 per cent was the result of a boost of inflation and increased enrollment.
The $1,372.07 total will be reduced by $1,321, Nitcher said, to account for 2 per cent shrinkage in classified personnel and 5 per cent shrinkage in unclassified personnel.
Shrinkage, Nitcher said, is a figure representing the amount of money not used when positions remain vacant because of other deaths, retirement or other reasons.
Nichard said $28,400, or $24 for each student, for ODD and also been requested to provide $16,500.
HE SAID he couldn't predict whether the legislature would approve or reject the funds for increased enrollment but he said the requests were realistic.
"The students are here," he said, "and we have to have them ready." He said his arms, shoulders, and armies to handle them.
Nitcher said that if the 10 per cent salary increase weren't granted by the legislature, the University wouldn't be able to reach the median salaries of the AAU.
After two years of the Governor's three-year program, Nilcher said, KU ranks 18th out of North Central AAU universities at the time. He was a professor of professor level, 14th to the assistant
professor level and 11th at the instructor level.
"I if we don't get the 10 per cent increase," Mitcher said. "It will then be more difficult to grow."
OTHER RECOMMENDATIONS by the Governor are for $166,000 for library books and journals, the University's share in the Governor's proposal for library improvements in the six regents' institutions, and for $194,874 for increased utilities costs.
Bennett's recommendation is $16,000 more than the Board of Regents' request.
See BUDGET page five
Poll favors death penalty
By JOHN FULLER
Area residents who responded to a recent poll sent out by State Senator Arden Booth (R-Lawrence) favored mandatory prison terms for crimes committed with firearms and restoration of the death penalty. They also opposed removal of penalties for possession of one ounce or less of marijuana.
Booth, who represents Douglas and Leavenworth counties, said last night that he had received more than 600 responses to a newspaper questionnaire he had spent in New York City. He said he took the poll to find out how his constituents felt about 11 important issues.
Both said he concluded from the poll that an overwhelming majority of respondents favored the restoration of the death penalty for specified crimes and mandatory prison sentences for crimes committed with a firearm. Of those polled 71.2 per cent were charged with 69 percent favored mandatory prison terms for crimes committed with a firearm.
Because the poll was released during Christmas breast Booth said he probably would not be a member.
He said there was little indecision on the marjuan issue: 57.4 percent strongly disagreed with the removal of penalties for the marjuan or less and 26.9 per cent agreed.
section of the student population at KU as he could have.
Respondents also reacted strongly to the issue of public employees, including teachers
"They say loud and clear, 'Don't give public employees the right to strike,'" Booth said. About 68 per cent held that opinion while 28.8 per cent favored teacher's right to strike. Only 5.2 per cent were indifferent to the issue.
Booth said the responses he got would definitely influence his decisions in the legislature. Most respondents signed their names.
He said he had checked their addresses and was convinced of the poll's validity.
See POLL page 2
KANSAS JACKPINS
GOODDARD'S
NASH VILLA
on the closing seconds clicked off, it became apparent that the Jayhawks had a victory over K-State in the bag. Expressing his enjoyment during the final minute is Phil Doyle's signature move.
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
All right
Public views city reports
Lawrence city commissioners will continue discussions at 3: 30 p.m. today on two reports filed last month by a six-man committee that investigated charges of city mismanagement.
Meeting in a public study session, the commissioners are expected to comment on the second report, which was filed last Tuesday by committee members Dennis Smith and Alvin Samuels, both city employees, and Muriel Paul.
The second report, which was read at the regular commission meeting, said two months of interviews with city labor and management substantiated mismanagement charges, including alleged failure to enforce the police department, poor leadership in the court and sanitation departments and irresponsibility by City Manager Buford Watson.
The first report, presented to the commission Jan. 20, was signed by committee members Marnie Ararginger and Donald Bimbs, both city commissioners, and the bims of the City of Samulms, Smith and Paul refused to sign the first report, saying it was unspecified.
At a study session last Tuesday, the
commission examined findings and
gathered recommendations.
Charges of mismanagement have been made by the United Public Employees' Association, which several months ago and the commission to investigate city hall.
Today's study session will be held in the commission meeting room on the fourth floor of the First National Bank of Lawrence, 900 Massachusetts.
Med Center faults linked to inflation, budget
By BILL SNIFFEN
Staff Write
University of Kansas administrators yesterday called a legislative report on the KU Medical Center helpful and useful, attributed the report's negative findings to "unparalleled inflation" and a "severely restrictive budget ceiling."
The report, issued Thursday by the Kansas State Legislative Post Audit
Committee, said managerial improvement was needed in all five areas that the committee studied: housekeeping, laundry, facilities, dietetics and purchasing. The report also criticized the Med Center's record-keening.
The report made recommendations to improve overall efficiency and cut costs at the
"We plan to implement all the recom-
Summer job hunt is starting now
By LIZLEECH Staff Writer
BvLIZLEECH
Staff Writer
Maybe February seems a bit too early to be worrying about summer jobs, especially if one can be obtained through family or friends. But for students who don't have such connections, it might not be too early to start looking.
Many college students interviewed by the Kansas in the past week said they had started applying for summer jobs. Some others had applied but were counted, but who you knew. Others said they relied on employment agencies or University of Kansas services for help. And some businessmen interviewed said they were too early to apply for summer jobs.
It might even be too late.
BRIAN GAUDREAU, Wichita junior, said he got a job working in an oil field near Wichita through both friend and family connections several summers ago.
"That's the only way you can get a job and it's pretty depressing," Gaudreau said. Gaudreau said he was an accounting major, but he is being trying to land a job in a bank. But he said if he couldn't get the bank job, he could easily fall back on his old oil field job.
plication deadline for many summer jobs of interest to students already had passed.
MAX GEAREHART, area manager of U.S. Civil Service in Wichita, said the ap-
"This includes students who are enrolled in a specific area or have had experience in that field," he said. "For example, the Department of Agriculture-Forest Service might hire students for surveying, power control, forestry and recreation."
"Those positions required Civil Service written exams, and also includes tests for engineering and physics, for example," Gearheart said.
For clerical and white collar jobs, including lifeguard duty the application process is complicated.
Gearheart the closing date for federal jobs related to some students'
"Normally, summer jobs are filled by people in that area, and there isn't just that it takes a long time."
He said many students preferred to live at home during the summer because they couldn't afford to live elsewhere on summer salaries.
GARHEART SAID that there always are more applicants than it that it took them all those jobs were
Gearheart said the Civil Service had codes that restricted the hiring of relatives. He said that students should apply early for jobs, and that the Civil Service would
"I have seen a lot of instances of two applicants being pretty even in qualifications, but the one who knew him said, "he said, 'so I think it will help to apply early.'"
start receiving applications for the summer of 1977 in November 1976.
A ST. LOUIS FRESHMAN said she would begin her search for summer employment in two weeks because she didn't have any "connections."
Barbara Jerseen, Osawatamie freshman,
said that she already had applied for jobs at
several businesses, but that she hadn't
received any releges.
"There just aren't many jobs in small towns, and it always seems that Friends and Relatives are the main source of income."
BUT PAUL JACKSON, Wichita
sophomore think such con-
dition were necessary.
"I think anybody can find a job if they try hard," Jackson said. "I got mine after looking for only two days, and I didn't know anyone."
Annie Garretson, Wichita senior, said she had worked at a camp in Colorado for four summers because she had attended the camp as a child.
"Usually people who work there were once camper, because you can't find them," she said.
unless they really had a feeling for the camp." Garrett said.
STUDENTS INTERESTED in obtaining internships in their majors should contact placement directors in their schools in the near future, two deans indicated.
Frederick C. Madaua, placement director for the School of Business, said the school helped arrange internships for accounting majors in the past two years.
Because he hadn't met with students to explain the program yet, Madaus said he didn't know how many students would be placed.
"It's a very limited program and we'd like to expand." he said.
"I haven't gotten any replies yet, but industries usually start surveying their staff before hiring."
MADAU SAID he's just sent letters to 65 employees and helping them to hire accounting
"We are definitely expecting it to be better than last year because of the bad weather," said.
Dana Leibengood, assistant dean of the School of Journalism bandits job placement with the University of Texas too early to tell exactly how many students would be placed, but that they already were.
mendations we can afford." Hospital
administrator Merlin I. Olson said varderas
said he anticipated that between 50 to
see JOB HUNT page 3
Some of the recommendations would cost too much to implement, he said. The restrictive budget was one cause of the outage. It was Med Center's management, Olson said.
BECAUSE THE MED CENTER can't afford to hire need staff people, supervisors have difficulty performing all the jobs assigned to them, he said, including many record-keeping, a process criticized in the Post Audit Committee's report.
"We can't hire the people we need," Olson said.
Another reason for the report's negative findings, according to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, is the Med Center's low expenditures ceiling. That ceiling limits what the Med Center can spend from patient-generated revenues.
Also, he said, the state system of classifying public employees places hospital staff members at too low a salary level, and the email is that the jobs are no longer attractive.
Dykes said a managerial study would provide more depth than the Post Audit Committee's study, and said some private consulting firms had already been consulted on the proposed legislation of Regents and the state legislature is needed before a study can begin. Dykes said.
Gov. Robert F. Bennett said last week he would propose legislation that would appropriate about $200,000 to finance a study of the Med Center by a private firm.
WHILE A PRIVATE HOSPITAL can raise patient fees to support itself, Dykes said, and the same inflationary medical costs. The University requested an increase of $1.1 million in its expenditure ceiling last fall. It may be considered during this legislative term.
funds are available, and until the regents authorize such a study."
MAX BICKFORD, executive officer of the Board of Regents, said the proposed managerial study hadn't yet been completed. "The proposal is the regent's next meeting later this month."
Both Olson and Dykes agreed in general with the Post Audit Committee's findings.
"We feel the study was useful and helpful to the University," Dykes said.
Olson disagreed with three recommendations of the report, he said. One, the increased use of frozen foods would cost hundreds of thousands of dollars in freererequipment. Olson said. Another recommendation was to eliminate financial losses by buying frozen foods directly from the Center, Olson said, which basically meant an increase in food prices.
"If that were done," Olson said, "we wouldn't have any customers."
THE THIRD RECOMMENDATION that Olson disagreed with was that the Med Center have all its laundry done by outside workers. The team needed some laundry facilities of its own.
The Post Audit Committee found that the auditory department didn't "meet its goal of reducing errors in data."
The report also said the Med Center is paying more per pound for laundry work and cleaning.
DVKES SAID he'd been aware of most of the problems written in the committee's report for some time. His administrative realignment of Jan. 1, which gave Russell Miles, associate vice chancellor of the Med Center, control of housekeeping duties on campus, led to an increase in problems we'd recognized at the Med Center." Dvkes said.
"The legislature's post auditor (Richard Brown) noted in his report to the committee that the administrative realignment which was underway would be a number of the problems." Dykes said.
The realignment would help solve the managerial shortcomings that the Post has been facing.
2
Monday, February 2, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Picasso paintinas stolen
AVIGNON, France-Three hooded gunmet gunnen and bound three guards and made off with 119 unsigned Picasso paintings from an exhibit in the 14th century palace hall here, police reported yesterday. The thieves apparently had inside information and acted with split-second timing.
Art experts said the demand for unsigned Picassos made it impossible to estimate the full value of the paintings, which were loaded into a van in the palace courtyard Saturday night. They were part of an exhibition of 201 Picassos insured for $42.4 million, but police said the paintings were worth more than that.
"In the end they are probably worth nothing to the thieves because they are cataloged, photographed, inventoried and indexed, and the information has long been distributed worldwide," said Paul Puaux, director of the Avignon Art Festival who set up the show.
In sheer volume, the Picassos theft appeared to be one of the biggest art heists of all time. Police said the unidentified gunmen were probably professional art thieves, but in their haste to get away they left 17 other Picassos stacked near the foot of a stairway.
Carter leads Democrats
PORTLAND, Maine--Jimmy Carter led other Democratic presidential candidates Sunday in voting at lightly attended caucuses here. The caucuses are taking place on Tuesday, March 27.
Delegates favoring the former Georgia governor received more than 46 per cent of the 85 seats to the Democratic State Convention from Maine's largest city.
Uncommitted delegates accounted for nearly 34 per cent of the Portland seats. Former Sen. Fred Harris of Oklahoma got nearly 13 per cent; Sen. Birkhay of Indiana got three per cent; Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona got 2 per cent and Sen. Humbert Humphrey and Sargent Shriver each got 1 per cent.
CIA backs Angola forces
A British diplomatic correspondent reported yesterday that more than $20 million, mainly from the CIA, is to be spent on mercenaries in Angola.
Norman Kirkham, diplomatic correspondent of the Sunday Telegraph, quoted diplomatic sources in Zaïre as saying that $200,000 of American money given to the Western-backed National Front (FNLA) in Angola has already been sent to London to recruit mercenaries.
Kirkham said at least 300 Britons were joining Western-backed forces in Angola. The CIA had allocated $49.2 million in arms, other supplies and cash so far to the FNLA and UNITA forces and that more authorized money was still in the pipeline, he said.
Marines may cut forces
WASHINGTON - The Marine Corps is out-of-step with the times and must become "a costly anachronism," a Brooklyn Institute study said yesterday.
The golden age of amphibious warfare is now in the domain of historians." Brookings analysts said.
They contended the Corps "must shift its principal focus from seabearn assault a more appropriate sort, such as garrisoning America's remaining outposts in Europe and central Europe.
All plans would result in a smaller Corpus to the present 198,000-mm force. The study said reduction of forces would make them unable to rank with tanks from the previous decade and desertion and other disciplinary pressures.
Higher teaching salaries supported in Topeka poll
TOPEKA (AP)—More than a third of a group of 200 Topeka area residents contacted in a recent poll said proposed pay hikes of 10 per cent for college and university faculty members were agreeable.
And additional 25 per cent said they were in favor of a pay raise of at least 6 per cent.
A majority of those polled said the number and size of malfunction suits and damage awards had become excessive in Kansas.
The poll was conducted by Central
Telephone Topeka, for radio station
WIBR in Topeka.
FIFTY ONE per cent of those surveyed said they thought the number of malpractice suits had become excessive; 24 per cent thought they had not and 25 per cent thought they had.
ninety eight per cent of those polled they thought the legal profession was responsible for the medical malpractice crisis; 17 per cent blamed it on the medical profession; 21 per cent said they thought it on patients, and 23 per cent were undecided.
CONCERNING PROPOSED pay hikes for college and university faculty members, 35 per cent of those polled said they would go along with a 10 per cent hike; 8 per cent supported a pay raise from 6 to 9 per cent; 16 per cent favored a raise of 5 per cent.
cent; 8 per cent were against any increase in faculty pay, 3 per cent believed the increase should be more than 10 per cent, and 30 per cent had no opinion.
ON THE QUESTION of whether the present carrier balance of state funds should be retained: 48 per cent said it should be retained, and 52 per cent said taxpayers, and 10 per cent had no opinion.
Poll...
From page one
Other issues and citizens' opinions on
Agricultural land should be assessed on a u-value
strategy. Strongly stratified areas are strongly
disproportionately infested. Infeed rates are
0.25%.
- Motor vehicle personal property tax should be paid at
per strung. Strung prices are 3.4 per
County officials should be elected for year tenure. Councly agree 3.1 per cent. Strongly disagree 4.4 per cent.
The legislature should create a Kansas Authority to work through local units of government and authority in the state. It should rehabilitate low and moderate income housing in urban and rural communities. Strongly agree $8.4 per cent of the budget.
Junior colleges should be put under the Board of Trustees. Junior colleges should have a gross earning of 27.9 per cent. Centrally disregarded 6.4 per cent. In lieu of these,
- **Ranas** should enact some kind of medical malpractice law.
- **Strongly dismay** 26 per cent, indulgent 14 per cent. All are correct.
Kansas shall increase the gasoline tax to improve streets and highways. Stronger agree. 25% per cent.
K.U. STUDENTS:
bring this coupon
and a friend!
...only
at the Sizzler
Western Golf Association (WGA) of Golf, Ill., has filed a protest against Kansas property taxes with the Kansas State Board of Tax Annoals.
SUPER ONE CENT SUPERBURGER SALE!
REG. $1.49; NOW 2 FOR $1.50! Our superburger is a half pound of pure beef and fixings on a giant bun.
We include crisp French fries in the bargain. Now get two for one... plus a penny!
The association, which owns Evans Scholars House, 1942 Stewart, is requesting tax exemption for the house. University of Kansas students who receive Evans scholarships in honor of noted golfer Chick Evans live there.
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
Mon. & Tues., Feb. 2 & 3 5:30-8:30 LIMIT TWO PER COUPON.
Golfers teed off about land taxes
Records at the Douglas County treasurer's office show that the amount of taxes under appeal are $14,286, 050, which is based on an assessed evaluation of $40,650.
THE RECORDS also show that the first half payment of the taxes was paid Dec. 16. The is first year that WGA has been in office and lastught last July from Theta Taa fraternity.
Edythe Norman, the state treasurer, said Friday that if the state board of appeals ruled in WGA's favor, she would be able to refund the first half payment.
"Since then, there have been several attempts to question the true quality of exemption," he said, "but they haven't been successful.
ALLIED SAID HE didn't consider Evans Scholars House a social organization because its residents received scholarships from a charitable foundation.
Allen said social fraternities and sororities were tax exempt in Kansas until the late 1980s, when they were put back on the tax roles because of a court ruling.
The Evans Scholars Foundation was established in 1831 when Evans won the National Open, a professional tournament. As an amateur, Evans couldn't accept the scholarship because he had no money to start a scholarship fund to encourage golf caddies to go to collage.
"It (Theta Tau) was a social fraternity and that does not" qualify it as a tax exemption.
MILTON P. ALLEN, a Lawrence attorney who is representing WGA in the protest, said WGA would claim the house as an educational exemption.
tained the tax status.
The former fraternity house has 34 men living in it this year.
He said that the reason taxes had been assessed to the house was that it had been lower than before.
The appeal date is set for Feb. 24 in Topeka.
Cook said some of the dribblers stopped in the Friday, where governor Robert F. Peggitt met them.
Boys' Club profits from TKE trek
"I think that from the standpoint that we are building this as an annual charity, we are not doing it with our money."
Fraternity members dribbed a basketball from Manhattan to Lawrence, starting Thursday and finishing Friday. Local businessmen made pledges on a money-per-mile basis, said Daryl Cook, TKE committee chairman.
"Some semis came kind of close, but nothing really spectacular happened." Cook
President Mark Anderson to Bob Lee, vice president and founder of the Lawrence Boy's Club, at halftime of the KU-KState basketball game Saturday.
Cook said that he wouldn't know the exact amount contributed until he collected the data.
A dummy check was given by TKE
The Year of the Dragon
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StuEx last night began a move to block efforts to auction off the center circle of the old basketball court turn out of Allen Field House two years ago.
Center "K" sale opposed
The petition, which was advanced to the Senate by StudEx., said the circle should remain at the University because of KU's rich basketball heritage.
The petition, introduced by Ed Rolfs,
student body president, and Bruce Woner,
StudEx chairman, suggested that the circle
should be formed to represent the Panama
Union or the proposed satellite union.
Rolfs said the University of Kansas athletic committee 'omitted the ones who belonged to the letter,' *K*.
It was reported that bus-pass sales were up with an expected total of 3,000 to be sold for the spring semester. According to the university's statistics, this semester, 700 more than the fall total.
A bill prohibiting senators elected this spring from acting on legislation until after the Feb. 19 Senate retreat, where they learn that the procedure, was placed on the agenda.
In other action, the committee placed several bills on the Senate's Thursday evening agenda. Two of the bills call for a full student body vote on the construction of a university union and a student vote on the KUAC bill. The KUAC bill cut the $147,000 subsidy last semester.
13 E. 8th RAY AUDIO 842-2047
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SALE
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*Plot 253 35/35 wRMS $390 $235
*Lv 444 20/20 wRMS $250 $125
*Scott 318 60/53 wRMS $250
*Kenwood KR 4140A 60/60 wRMS $600 $375
*Kenwood KR 5340 25/25 wRMS $420 $250
*Electro-Voice 14*
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U.S. MARINE CORPS OFFICER PROGRAMS
You are under no obligation in our program until acceptance of your commission as a 2nd Lieutenant upon graduation from college.
UNITED STATES
MARINE CORPS
Officer Selection Office
United States Court House
811 Grand Avenue
Kansas City, Missouri 64106
Underclassmen joining the Platoon Leader Class Program will receive a higher starting salary upon graduation—we count time in school as time in service.
PLATOON LEADERS CLASS
U.S. MARINE CORPS
If commissioned, the obligations are:
3 Years for Ground
4 Years for Flight Officer
5 Years for Pilot
3 Years for Lawyer
No on campus training—only 2 six week or 1 ten week training session during the summer at Quantico, Virginia prior to graduation.
Upon successfully completing 1 six week training session, we offer $100 a month financial assistance during the school year, up to $2700 for three years.
With completion of all training, aviation people are eligible to receive flight indoctrination training that will lead to a private pilot's license.
The Marine Officer Selection Team will be located in the Student Union Feb. 2, 3, and 4. If you have any questions concerning the Marine Officer programs, stop by our display between 9:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. on the above dates. If you happen to miss us when we are on campus, call us collect at
(816) 374-3031 or 374-3616
University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 2, 1976
2
Russian observes similarities and differences here
By FRED JOHNSON
Staff Writer
When Viktor Sergeevich Maslav arrived at the University of Kansas in the first week of January, he saw some squirrels running around campus.
Those squirrels were roaming free and unafraid, Maslov said Friday. That, he said with a smile, convinced him that the people he'd meet here would be friendly.
Maslov is a Russian educator visiting KU from Leningrad University through the International Exchange of Scholars Program.
He is living in a studio apartment while staying in Lawrence. When interviewed, Maslov spoke through a translator. Peter Alkman, assistant instructor in Slavic languages and literature, because he speaks little English.
Maslov graduated from Leningrad University in 1950 and is a candidate for the doctor of philosophy degree in history of 19th century Russian literature. The degree Maslov now holds is the equivalent of a Ph.D. from an American university.
Maslov will be here throughout this semester and will return to Russia in May. He is teaching a course on the history of Russian literature of the second half of the
19th century. His students will study Russian authors including Tolstoy, Leskov and Chekhov. He also is teaching a Russian novelist to students and Russian language teachers.
Maslov said that he wasn't having trouble lecturing to his students, which must mean Russian literature and language were well taught at KU.
Only Russian majors and instructors may enroll in his courses because Małovie lectures in Russian. He said he had taught him English, but he'd never learned to speak it.
Maslov said he was learning some English by watching television. He commented that although the technical level of television programs was very high, too many programs emphasized violence, which he thought was bad for children.
The content of Russian television is more serious, Maslov said, and more current plays are shown. Russian television has a strong focus on one and is entirely educational, he said.
He said he thought KU students were at a special time happy and in good mood, the same time happy and in good mood.
Maslov also said there was little difference in the way American and Russian students spent their free time. Russians form clubs for sailing, skiing, acting and playing ball much like American students, he said.
The Russian school system has eight years of mandatory education, he said, and is more condensed than the American system. It is difficult to make exact comparisons, Maslov said, but a student who finished the first eight years in Russia would be equivalent to a high school graduate in the United States.
After the mandatory eight years, a student can continue for two years in the regular school system, then enter a technical school or a university, he said. A student can go to a technical school implemen- ting computer science, Msakov said, but his skill upon graduation is lower than those who go to school two extra years.
Students who receive government support while attending universities must pass a certain test.
He said a college student in Russia would spend five or five and one-half years at a university and have 36 hours of classroom lecture a week.
who fail the examination, Maslov said, can attend night school at a university, but they receive no government stipend.
Maslov said Russian universities had student representative bodies similar to the ones at KU. Every complaint against the university was made in the said, but it is discussed and kept in view.
Maslov noted that it's possible for the United States and Russia to have and maintain a friendly relationship, even though they find themselves on opposite sides of conflicts that erupt in many developing third-world countries.
Maslov said the best way for the two countries to achieve a friendly relationship was through the exchange of trade, teachers, students, information and culture. The United States and Russia should find general points of understanding that will lead to good relations and yet allow each country to retain its own character, he said.
However, Maslov said, any friendship
between the two countries' interest in
other parts of the world is unacceptable.
keep in mind is the good of the people in those countries, he said, and that can best serve as a guide.
Maslov said that although he preferred Russian food, he had eaten American food at the homes of his friends and had liked it. He said when he ate alone in his apartment he made Russian food from American products.
short time, Maslov said, he finds the climate pleasing and similar to that of Leningrad, where he was born and has lived in New York. He found Leningrad at this time of the year, he said.
Although he has been in Kansas only a
Maslov had he been well received by everyone he had met at the University. He had glad to find people at the University who had met when they were visiting Russia.
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EVENINGS 7:30 & 9:45
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WALT DISNEY'S
State bill would increase student loan money
Robert Redford
Faye Dunaway
3
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More money will be available for student loans if a student-tail bill passes the Kansas Board of Education.
the only cause are taxation regula
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Rodgers said passage of the bill would require the state government as an agency to be involved.
Education Act, should be introduced to the House this session, Jerry Rodgers, director of the Office of Education.
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40 students would have internships through contacts made by the school.
RALPH GAGE, managing editor of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World said the paper had employed interns in past summers.
Several students already have applied for this summer, he said adding that the university has a strong program.
Jerry Seib, Hays sophomore, said he wanted to get an internship with a newspaper and already had talked to one editor.
"The editor didn't know the paper's financial situation, so I don't know if you'll get it."
Ed Mills, manager of the Lawrence Job Opportunity Center, said some students succeeded in finding jobs completely on their own.
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"It's not useless for a student to apply now, but students will probably be told to come back later because the employers want them," he said among many people they'll be hiring. "Mills said."
HOWEVER, MILLS said there might be more jobs this summer because the present unemployment rate in Lawrence is between 18 and 20 percent, compared to last year's five per cent.
"But we normally get between 800 to 1,000 students looking for summer jobs and placement usually runs to about one-third of that," Mills said.
Employers usually don't know what their needs for the summer will be until school is nearly over, Mills said. He said many students working part-time during school decide in the semester to work full-time for the same employer during the summer.
--the federal Guaranteed Student Loan Program.
He said the major portion of summer jobs would be outdoors.
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The KU department of buildings and grounds usually hires students in the summer for landscaping, Lee E. Ousdahl, assistant director of physical plants, said. "But we don't accept applications until the 15th of March," Ousdahl said, "and they're usually applying for part-time jobs for now, and want full time jobs in the
OUSDAHL SAID Building and Grounds
usually hired between 50 and 60 students for
their training.
"We usually have approximately four times as many applicants as people we hire."
KU's Office of Student Financial Aid helps students find summer employment, said Rita Schrag, student employment counseler there. But she said she thought it might be too early for students to be looking.
"Students started looking for summer jobs in December, but employers will be waiting until students who are working for them must be before they will like anyone." Schrag said.
SHRIGA SAD I shouldn't be any more
difficult to find a job this summer than it
was when I first started.
"But to get a local job it takes a lot of leg work." Schrap said.
A secretary for the Lawrence Parks and
Recreation Department said at least 100
attendees attended.
She said jobs offered were for lifeguards, playground assistants and supervisors, day camp counselors, as well as such specialties as track and field and tennis.
"We don't know how many jobs will be available yet because last year's personnel must give us their applications first if they want to re-apply," she said.
ABOUT 10 PER CENT of the 200 to 300 summer applicants at Gibson's have been hired, Joleen Langlois, a Gibson's credit office employee said.
"We have to throw away the old applications every three months because so much time has passed."
Kevin Brady, manager of the Pizza Hut, said many students already had applied for it.
"I usually tell them to come back a few weeks before the semester is over because our help changes from time to time," Brady said.
USE
KANSAN
WANT
ADS
IF THE STATE BILL is approved by the legislature, money will be lent only to Kansas residents, he said. Revenue bonds would be issued by the Kansas Board of Regents to raise money for loans issued under the bill.
"I'll be great if this goes through," he said. "More students will be able to attend
In the 1974-75 school year, 1,062 University of Kansas students received financial aid through the federal program, Rogers said, but without it, the university would not have the Kansas Higher Education Act.
Students going to KU, he said, have fewer problems getting federal loans than do students going to other Kansas colleges. Students going to St. Louis colleges and colleges in Kansas, Roders said.
Rodgers said that Kansas students who couldn't afford college before would have an extra year in college.
UNDER THE FEDERAL bill, he said,
students and commercial lending institutions,
such as banks, are guaranteed that interest on a student loan will be paid by the federal government until nine months after a student leaves school.
After the nine-month period, students must repay the loan at an annual interest rate of seven per cent. Rodgers said he would be covered by the federal government.
federal program because of the risks and red tape involved, Rodgers said.
However, many Kansas banks are un-
willing to lend students money under the
"One of the problems was that the volume got so large that the banks' investments were out of proportion," he said. "With so many more students going to graduate, they take eight to nine years before the banks could get back any returns on their loans."
SOME STUDENTS defaulted on tweer roodgers, Rodges said, which involved much time and paper work for the banks before they were able to money back from the federal government.
Rodgers said banks would benefit from passage of the state bill because the state requires that if defaults and slow interest, payment be made to continue to make student loans under the proposed state bill, but the state would be an unhappy bank, the banks that don't participate in the process.
KERMIT CLARK, loan officer for
KERMIT CLARK, said that his bank
signed the state bill.
"We are so restricted by the federal bill." Clark said. "Red tape made it much more costly than the normal business arrangement."
William Terry, loan offerer for the First National Bank of Lawrence, said that his bank would generally support legislation that would make the responsibility for making student loans.
Terry said that the banks were losing money on the loans because money was going out to students faster than it was coming in.
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Enjoy the "King of Beers"
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THE JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 Ohio A CAMPUS TRADITION FOR OVER 55 YEARS
4
Monday, February 2,1976
University Daffy Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
RESERVED
CHANEL LORI
HOUSE NO.1
VISIT JOURNAL
10 AM
7 PM
NGL
Archie,come home
Where have you gone, Chancellor Dykes?
When you came to the University, we had visions of your walking down our tree-lined boulevard each day, shaking hands and calling each of us by name. They loved you at Tennessee for your toothy grin.
But now it seems that the only grin of yours that we get to see is from the pages of The Tepea Daily Capital or for college for alumni junkets to points East and West.
You keep telling us that we've got to improve our image to get funds from the legislature for "quality higher education. But we've been good kids don't you think we really concentrate on selling our programs, instead of our image?
You travel throughout Kansas,
and you go to high school
senior schools and equally
pressionable parents. But some people, such as your students, aren't so easily persuaded.
I've heard tell that some students are beginning to wonder if there really IS an Archie Dykes. We know that isn't your bicycle in the chancellor's parking stall.
We know you're busy when you're here—too busy, in fact. You shouldn't have to spend so much time giving squeeches away from home.
We've got an office of University Relations at KU. And the sportswriters of the papers in Kansas are nice且 aware to mention KU's name at least once a week. Some Kansans even talk about our academic achievements.
We think that the alumni and friends of our club are on their way onto their planes, unpacked.
By Betty Haegelh
Associate Editor
Please come home, Archie.
Ford arbitrarily calls programs inflationary
It's no secret that the performance of the economy under the Ford administration has been less than optimum. The President has said that the 1975 figures show a marked improvement and are thus encouraging. The datum that pleases him most is 7 per cent annual inflation during 1975. We have seen the last, he promised, of double-digit inflation.
Somehow it is difficult to share Mr. Ford's enthusiasm. In achieving a reduction in the rate of inflation, unemployment increased to over 8 per cent and gross national product declined in real dollars. That is to say the total value of goods and services produced, increases in dollar value due to inflation, declined. What's more, these things happened while the government was allegedly pursuing an expansionary monetary and fiscal policy.
MORE DISCOURAGING is the policy mix that Ford is proposing for this year. He seems to have returned to the old eclecticism made infamous by Richard Nixon. The President asks half a dozen economists what to do, receives six different answers and uses a random piece of advice from each of them.
This election year's program embodies a new political eclecticism as well, having something for every important group of voters. For the conservatives, there is an artificially low $894.2 billion limit on federal spending; for the middle class a $10 billion tax cut to fund government infrastructure and long-term investment in common stocks; for the farmers, a revision of the federal estate tax laws for family farms; for big business and the unemployed, an accelerated depreciation.
rate in industries with 7 per cent or more unemployment; and for the Pentagon, a $10 billion increase in defense spending.
FORD SAID the federal government couldn't afford national health insurance and that the private sector, not government, should be used to reduce unemployment. Thus his proposal is to give would-be employers a tax break in order to encourage them to work here. This is usually known as the trickle effect, probably because of the rapidity with which the unemployed receive benefits.
Criticism that such a proposal is a weak remedy for the ever-serial problem of unemployment is certainly warranted. But more disturbing is the deception entailed by casting social decisions under the guise of economic ones. Capitalizing on justifiably public concern over the economy, Ford simply dismisses such important social programs as national health insurance and increased aid to education as too expensive.
The truth is that dollars spent on such programs are no more inflationary than dollars spent on the military. Increasing the defense budget to over $100 billion a year, a record, can just as easily be called inflationary and unaffordable. The military budget doubled no doubt but low, even if there would be no excuse for arbitrarily classifying some items as inflationary and others as simply necessary.
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
As a man who values truth, openness
and wisdom, Ford should eschew such
saliification.
It's almost noon and the mailman should be making his daily stop soon. I probably won't get anything, but I always rush down to the mailbox to check, anyway.
Mailman brings joy, junk
The mail is important to me
Then last week I received a large box from Time-Life Books that I wasn't expecting. Surprise, surprise, surprise. The album an album and a huge full color
who Dave is, so I passed up the offer.
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
The People's Yellow Pages list what they believe in or, when they have doubts, as with other agencies, they mention them.
The organization of the People's Pages is superior to Regular Yellow. It not only divides down into the obvious topical categories but also has its own set of certain kinds of problems like jobs, health, landlords, etc. You only have to do much less.
Nobody got mail in high school. Oh, maybe some girls like it. Maybe away at college got letters. Other than that, you had to wait until you left home before you came to mail with any regularity.
Getting a mailbox is a big responsibility. If you want to keep it free from spider webs, you have to do a lot of letter writing. Regardless of how many close friends you are, there are many who will write you if you don't return the favor.
OF COURSE, after a year or two you'll receive mail from unsolicited sources. Somehow, everybody in the world learns how to write. They Marines wrote and said they "needed a few good men."
Several days before that I received a special offer to join a "plan which pays cash for burial and funeral expenses anywhere in the world." No doctor's examination was required and ages one to 87 were listed. The same sonnale mimeographed letter also said the plan would only cost a few cents a day.
Sounds great, doesn't it? There was also a P.S. at the bottom of the page that said, "If you mail the card within five days I'll see that you receive a copy." The guide—no cost or obligation." And it was signed by "David," Well, I don't know
book, "Railroads in America." There was a bill for more than $20 and a letter telling me that there was my book "as ordered" and that they hoped I would enjoy it.
THE GOOD THING about junk mail is that it's dependable. You can always count on getting it. People often complain about letters and pamphlets sent to the lost by the postal service, never to be seen again. I've never heard of a case of a piece of junk mail being lost, or even delayed. The same is true about bills. Another advantage is that out of the millions of letters the CIA and FBI open each year, one is a bill or a piece of junk mail.
Despite the many good things that come through the mail, there are frequent problems that plague postal consumers. Legend has it that mallaren are sleepy, snow and driving blizzards. Even with dogs hounding them in pursuit of blood, the U.S. postman is supposed to come through. Maybe it works the way in most places, but I wonder much luck with my mallaren.
LAST FALLI looked out our front window and saw that the postman had just arrived downstairs. I went down to the box a few minutes later to find a slip that said I could pick up a bag. Then I found the next day. The slip said the package hadn't been delivered today because no one was home. Well, I guess he must have been
AT&T's Yellow Pages take no responsibility for any listing. You can't even be sure that the names under the physicians category are even M.D.s. You can't have someone transfer's the work from your feet to your fingers, but the person it helps the most is the rip-off artist, the cheat and the fraud who is accorded the same respect as the legitimate merchant and honest mechanic. If you want to get you listed as anything you want in Ma Bell's directory.
tired that day, but there are other days when people send me letters mistakenly marked with Apt. 2 on them and he doesn't leave them because I live in the house, boxes in the apartment building and I'm the only Johnston living there!
The mailman isn't the only source of frustration. This year we've been harassed by stamp mailers waiting for the pickup and then find the letter in our box later, with the stamp removed. The mailer could be working his way through school. But at 13
cents a letter he could make a fortune and drop out of school before too long.
REGARDLESS of the hassles, students still open their mailboxes with the hope that "this will be the day." Perhaps more than any group on campus, seniors are interested in what the mail has to offer. Hundreds of rejection slips from proactive schools have named this time of year And medical schools send out a lot of notices telling students thanks but no thanks.
In the mist of all the rejections, there are a few positive
replies. It's hard to match the excitement of ripping open the letter that says you've been accepted to med school or that you will be working next summer.
As an institution that is proud
Despite my complaints about the mailman, the stamp thieves and the junk mail, I keep going back for more. You just never lose your wallet or your mailbox. In the time since I began this article our faithful malman has come and gone, and today he "delivered" I got a letter from the president two weeks ago, but at least I got something.
Readers Respond Save the center circle
To the Editor:
While at Allen Field House during the past enrollment, we became acutely aware of the need to sell our basketball court to sell the center section of the University of Kansas' old basketball court to the highest bidder. Needless to say, we were not unthinkable action, as were many other of the old basketball court by interested University students in a natural, but not the center circle.
THAT OLD CENTER circle represents a basketball heritage of which distinguished coaches, great players, spectators, students, and thousands belong to all those people who put something into it and seemingly should never be auctioned off in a situation that makes the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation look like an institution of University's temple of basketball. We question the actions of the crazed individual(s) who has obviously ignored University tradition by offering such an invaluable University heirloom for a quick buck.
Compare the quandary your walking fingers face to this entry in the People's Pages for the Co-Operative Garage . . . "Automobile co-operative of two women and three men. Serving VW Woman, Toyota, Honda. Costs jobs are almost all based on a flat-rate system, except electrical work which is straight time. Parts are marked up 25 per cent above net cost . . . Customers are welcome to stay and watch, or be instructed, but are reminded to be careful with and not abuse this privilege." That is a listing that tells you what you're getting into.
of its rich heritage in basketball, among other things, it makes a great deal of sense to retain the center circle to be incorporated in a new floor in the Kansas Union or someday in a satellite union. This is the place where people who are a part of it and who would appreciate what it symbolizes. If the highest bidder walks away with our heirloom, it will end up in a business lobby or the recreation room of KU's wealthiest alumnus. Undoubtedly, if that floor could talk, it would be the best place for those who have made and who are currently creating the rich heritage of which it is a memorable part.
In this bicentennial year when most people are reaching for pieces of their heritage, to gain a greater appreciation for those things that are close to them, it seems like pure lunacy for this reason. The priceless priciese heritage to the highest bidders. Ed. C. Roffs
Student Body President Bruce Woner StudEx Chairman
Faculty quota
To the Editor:
Despite the lack of an
adequate "role model" and aside from the predispositions forced upon me by my minority status (nontraditional student), I still feel the urge to comment upon the article dealing with minority faculty in the Jan. 28 Kansan.
THE OBJECTIVE of any faculty-recruiting program should be to provide the highest quality of instruction that is possible; any program that puts its major emphasis elsewhere is shortening the time that Mr. McIlhennan article is to the latter may (i) emphasize "may") be the case at KU.
The University of Kansas must be extremely careful that, in the attempt to recruit and retain a "quota-faculty" on the basis of sex and or racial grouping, it does not sacrifice the high caliber faculty to which our students have rightfully grown accustomed. The ugly discrimination." must not be allowed to subvert the honorable intentions of those who work to provide us an excellent faculty.
Mark Dickson
Atchison senior
Nicholas Von Hoffman
BOSTON—Let your fingers do the walking. The 1976 edition of the Boston People's Yellow Pages is out, and skimming through it shows you the uselessness of the directory published by the Ma Bell affiliates.
The People's Yellow Pages doesn't just list places of business by category the way the phone company's does. Mere listing is of scant help when you have a sick car and your fingers are numb. Do you want Auto Repair to XYZ Motors—"Specializing in shoddy work at the highest prices,"
Yellow Pages not worth walk
fishing around, but the little two- and three-paragraph essays also give you a clue to what you can reasonably expect or hope for so that shopping at a trendy disappointment experience.
Most of the enterprises listed in the People's Pages aren't profit-making endeavors. They tend to be either cooperatives or businesses" such as the universities" such as the aforementioned auto repair group or Tooth and Nail Carpenters, an exclusively women's endeavor. There are movers, plumbers, carpenters, hairdressers which advertise that they adjust their rates in accordance with the incomes of the customers. There are also some unusual companies like the Roxbury Dental and Medical Group, Inc., a group-practice enterprise which has
an all-patient board of directors.
Nor are the People's Yellow Pages a uniquely New England
The slant that comes through from most of the listings is anti-big government, anti-corporate capitalism, more anarchist than socialist, a respect for honest work done in a humane, small-scale setting where all employees are partners of employees. While Boston's large population of students and degreeed collegians makes the area fertile ground for this sort of thing, the numbers which must be involved in these hundreds of activities could run into the thousands. Add to them the quiescent sympathizers who aren't active because they're not working long time, and you are talking about a large and growing body of sentiment.
occurrence, although this is a region attracting many college-educated disgusted. Similar directories, of unknown size and quality, are being published in Arizona, Arkansas, California Utah, Buffalo, N.Y., and other places.
Other than the general revulsion and contempt for those who run the country or aspire to replace those who do, these people part company with the anti-government right.
They're skeptical that the restoration of primitive capitalism will make all things right.
They're trying to find forms, within which to do the world's largest bureacres of the public bureaucracies, but which don't kill off the beauty, utility and dignity for the maximum shekel. To this sentiment, the candidates characteristically say: "I don't want to say." (C) King Features
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
diaion periods Second-class postage paid at law-
erian post office $2.50 per semester or $6 a year in Douglas County and $1 a
year in Wichita County for a subscription to $2.00 a semester, paid through
the university.
Editor Carl Young
Business Manager
Rose Parris
WESTPHAL.
ИНГЕЙЮЯ
ШЕСТЕЛИ
САРПТАLIST
DOGS
Я.I.P.
'OH, THAT? IT'S NOTHING, REALLY; BUT IN THE NAME OF MUTUAL TRUST, WOULD YOU SEND
∆ FWER MORE SHOWS?'
the
the
ninnt
text
outes
outer
ever
the
I
I
got
fast
Monday, February 2, 1978
5
IEC...
From name one
SABERI SAID he had studied intensive English at Donnelley College, a small college in Kansas City, Kan. After that semester, Saberi said, he took five semesters of courses at Penn Valley Community College and KU, making all A's and B's.
Students can learn English on their own, said Saberi, who has taken courses in psychology, history and economics in addition to engineering.
Henderson said that the IEC operates entirely on funds it receives from tuition, which are out-of-state fees. It receives assistance from the University only in the way of space for offices and classroom space, he said.
The IEC BUDGET has grown from 21,300 in 1985 to $168,676 for fiscal 1976. It employs four staff members, 35 assistant instructors and eight conversation leaders
Charles Sauer, coordinating director of the center, said IEC could increase its teaching staff simply by allowing more students into the center.
"What we need for the students are more classrooms," he said.
This semester there are 255 students enrolled in IEC courses, so no percent increment is needed.
IEC STUDENTS receive KU ID's and registrations but aren't considered to be KU students until they have passed their proficiency exam, Henderson said.
KU's center is one of the largest intensive English centers in the midwest, be said. The centers closest to KU are in St. Louis and Colorado.
Henderson said that most of the IEC students attend other universities after studying at KU's center. The percentage of foreign students staying at KU after graduation is higher, because more programs are being sponsored at KU by foreign governments.
HENDERSON SAID requirements for IEC assistant instructors are that they be native English speakers, that they be graduate students and that they have taken a course in teaching English as a foreign language.
However, he said, many instructors are selected according to the best experience available at the time of selection. Consequently, he said, "I'll teach classes, are classes, are 'interested students,' he said.
Sauer said that frustration arose in students from the Middle East because they were self-confident about their English when they came to the United States.
On Campus
Events ...
TONIGHT: THE KU YOUNG DEMOCRATS will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. State Rep. MIKE GLOVER, D-Lawrence, will speak. The FRIENDS OF THE UNITED FARMWORKERS will meet at 7 in the International Room of the Union.
TODAY: THE WOMEN'S SOFTBALL team will meet at 2:30 p.m. in 124 Robinson Gymnasium. Tryouts will be 2:30-50 p.m. tomorrow through Friday. The WOMEN'S GOLF team will meet at 4 p.m. in the film room of the Allen Field House annex.
THE SOFIA SOLOISTS will close the Chamber Music series at 8 in Swarthout Hall. The 13-piece group has been together since 1962 and is conducted by Yasushi
W. STITT ROBINSON, professor of history, will discuss "The American Humanities Lecture Series" at 8 a.m. in the Woodford Auditorium on the Prairie.
Grants and Awards . . .
Capt. Glen M. Harden, KU graduate student in clinical psychology, has been appointed to serve as a mentor for his work in race relations with his Army Reserve unit in Kansas City, Kan.
Budget ...
From page one
requested $100,374 for the library development program.
Bennett's recommendation of $184,747 for utilities is $16,055 less than the average.
NITCHER SAID the University's request included $240,000 for fuel oil that the University would have had to purchase had there been a natural gas shortage. When it came to fuel oil, the university gas shortage, nonresidential users such as KU are forced to use oil for heating.
"That still leaves about a $200,000 and there's no way to get along without that."
Nitcher said the University would have to take the utilities funds from some other place in the budget if the University wasn't appropriated the money it requested.
"We might have to keep positions vacant, not buy more scientific or teaching equipment or postpone other kinds of expenses for supplies," he said.
OTHER PROGRAMS not recommended by Bennett for funding are Accelerated Water Resources Program, Bureau of Child Research, equipment maintenance and replacement, improvement of instruction, physical plant improvement, Project Women's Intercollegiate Athletics and television production laboratory.
All requests for capital improvements except the roof repair for Strong Hall were supported by the Governor. Bennett recommended $1,785,990 for the Law Center Building; $1,803,200 for the Visual Arts Center; $240,600 for the Computation Center; $4,600,000 for the Maltol Hall addition and $270,000 for the Robinson Gymnasium addition.
The University also has requested $85,583 to cover costs incurred as a result of increases in the number of credit hours taught during the summer session. Bennett didn't recommend this request to the legislature.
NITCHER SAID that, in the budget hearings, University administrators would try to convince the legislature to approve funds for Strong Hall. He said leaks in Strong's roof were causing further deterioration of the walls and ceiling.
Bennett also recommended $1,750,000 for premium and construction of the radiation station.
THESE STUDENTS can speak English better than they can read and write, he R.
This request, Nitcher said, will also be appealed in the legislative budget hearings.
"Many of them feel even when they come here that they can take University courses," Sauer said. "They are over confident and confident, they really can't read very well."
Oner IEC personal defended the center. Greg Mathis, conversation leader in IEC, said that some foreign students became upset when they were placed there for a job, and although they could speak English as well as their professors or advisers.
"they (the foreign students) can take a math course and understand what the teacher in saying because they've had a background in mathematics." Mathis said. "But they can't actually read the math book."
KATRHYN HODGES, IEC assistant instructor, said that many foreign students couldn't use simple sentence structures. They couldn't omit many verbs from a sentence, she said.
Students are taught simple, often over simple sentence structures, she said, which discourage many students who have seen the sentence structure before.
"We start with sentences like, 'It’s a pen,' or 'It’s a book,'" Hodges says. "Often we proceed in childlike steps, which are below the students' intellectual level."
Learning a language is more than just knowing the vocabulary, she said, because basic sentence patterns also must be learned.
"We want them to speak automatically," she said, "so they don't have to stop and read."
"Some know quite a bit of English, and some know next to nothing." he said.
GOFFREYE GATHERCOLE, IEC
assistant instructor, said there was a wide
range of skills.
There are two reasons, other than ability, Gathercole said, that students don't score well on the IEC placement test given at the start of each semester.
Some students know English well, but haven't studied it for awhile, he said. As a result, their test scores are low, but they learn language quickly in the IEC classes, he said.
BECAUSE STUDENTS must be placed in classes at the start of each semester, Gathercole said, some students must take the exam while not being fully recovered from jetlag. This is a situation that can't be avoided sometimes. he said.
Foreign students must have a complete grasp of English if they want to do well at American schools, said Gathercole, who is this country from England three years ago.
"People don't listen to foreign students who can't express themselves clearly," he said.
Gathercole said the average student could get through the IEC courses in two semesters. If it takes a student longer to learn English, it's because of the student's lack of ability, and not because the curriculum is bad, he said.
"If a slow student is in IEC for
"if a more semesters, he won't get
more semesters."
ministered grades arbitrarily, that students were being held in the center by low grades to support the center through their tuitions, that testing requirements were too high, that students didn't need all that the center had to teach them to be successful University students.
DURING ERAZMU'S administration,
students charged that the center lacked
the necessary equipment.
The center's problems, with students culminated in a demonstration against and with the use of the word "hate."
Committees were assigned to study the center's operation. Some changes were agreed upon, including the lowering of the passing grade on the proficiency exam from minimum to maximum. Professional teaching staffs were promoted and Foster Hall would be torn down.
HENDERSON SAID an innovation that he had made since being appointed was the separation of the student's proficiency grade from his class grade. He said that many students didn't understand why their class grades and efforts weren't counted toward determining whether they could pass the proficiency requirement.
On arriving in the United States, students attending American universities are required to take laws on proficiency exam. Headers state that the standardized English test used was the Michigan Test of English Language developed at the University of Michigan.
Some of the failures of students in the IEC stem from the kind of grading system it uses, he said. Although a student's IEC grades aren't figured into his KU GPA, Sauer said, students' parents put pressure on students; another concern of the学生, he said, was that they did not want to their embassies, which often provided their scholarships.
Students are placed into the levels of classes according to a placement test at the beginning of the semester taught are English Structure, Speaking, Understanding English, Writing and Reading. These courses are divided into elementary, intermediate and advance classes.
SAUER SAID that students taking the proficiency test for the first time usually scored in the 50 per cent range on the test. Students who have received the proficiency tests reach the 60 to 70 per cent range.
Students must get a C minus to pass the proficiency test, Henderson said, but the exam will be lower passing score take some IEC classes. He said the student's adviser worked out how many hours of IEC classes were required of KU classes the student could take.
Classes outside the IEC are determined in part by the number of hours that a foreign student must attend immigration laws. A fulltime load of classes, 12 hours, is necessary for compliance with the law. A student pays his tuition in a classroom and takes in IEC at and KU, Henderson waits.
Henderson said he was taking measures to improve the IEC, such as the purchase of about 82,000 worth of text books to be in school, and providing students to learn how to use a library.
Another change he said he was preparing to help IEC students, was an IEC-alumni feedback system to determine the effectiveness of IEC's programs.
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Law
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Tuesday Feb.3 Douglas County Bank
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Wednesday, Feb. 4 7:30 p.m.
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalm 2 and Acts 4:25
The first article appearing in this column almost 14 years ago made this statement: "Our trouble, the world's trouble is that we have a corrupt form of Christianity! A Christianity that has been shaved off its base, its foundation: THE LAW OF GOD! The first recorded words of Christ in the biblical word: Man shall not live by bread and blood by EVERY PROCEDURE out of the mouth of God."—Mat. and Luke 4:4.
“If we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged”—I. Cor. 11:31. In the same article the writer judged himself, saying that he was a professed Christian and member of an Evangelical Protestant Church, but he did not believe in Jesus Christ, or did not now believe as he did when they were taken; if science and modern knowledge and research with their wonderful accomplishments had so influenced him that he could no longer believe and accept the greatness of God, then he had been called Supreme Authority and infallibility of the Scriptures of The Old and New Testaments for faith and practice, then it was his duty and obligation to resign and get out of The Church. To deliberately remain in such unbelief and false pretenses was to join the devil and his hosts in their effort to undermine God’s power and to miserable wretches who have ever disgraced God Almighty’s earth, and it would be better to have a millstone hanged about his neck and drowned in the sea, as it would be likely that he is in the class of that man of whom he has been called the “firstborn of God” born.” For the bearer from meddling with God,”—I. Cor. 25:21.
A CORRUPT FORM OF CHRISTIANITY THAT HAS BEEN SHOVED
OF ITS BASE, OF ITS FOUNDATION: THE LAW OF GOD!
The devil got into the Garden of Eden and corrupted the faith of Adam and Eve! "Ye, haath God said," the serpent asked, casting doubt on the Commandment of God? The result of their corrupted faith was death and Eve! "And you have accepted this, I have that liberty and privilege, but I don't have the moral right to remain in a truly Christian Church. To do so indicates my integrity has got 'cancer,' and in the end it will do for my soul what an angel did for his son." The result of his corrupted God looked upon the earth, and, behold, it was corrupted; for all flesh had corrupted His way upon the earth. "The results of its corruption of God's day, or God's Commandments, was the flood of destruction in Neah's day!" But Neah found grace in the eyes of the Lord." This meant that he should have been corrupted by God. Neah found, being warned of God of things not seen as, yet moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house. "... He believed what God said, accepted the plans and specifications for the Ark, went to the terrible destruction and built the Ark along the terrible destruction and desolation!
In that day Noah was the only man who "found grace in the eyes of The Lord." But listen to what God now says to men and women of our day:
"FOR THE GRACE OF GOD THAT BRINGETH SALVATION HATH APPEARED TO ALL MEN, TEACHING US THAT, DENYING UNGOOLINESS, AND WORLDLY LUSTS, WE SHOULD LIVE SOBELYR, RIGHTEOUSLY, AND GODLY. IN THIS PRESENT WORLD: OOKING INTO MY BLESSED LOVE OF THE GREAT GOD AND our SAVIORS JESUS CHRIST; WHO GAVE HIM FOR US, that HE MIGHT RODEEMUS FROM ALL INIQUITY, AND PURIFY UNTO HIMSELF A PECUIARI PEOPLE, ZEALOUS OF GODWORKS!" Titil 2:11-14.
To you and me, the grace of God appearing to us, means that God has told us another flood is on us a way, of a fire of fire, to consume the world and its wickedness. It also means that He has given us plans and specifications for our survival in the fire with the Son of God—Daniel 3rd chapter. It is put might plainly above: "teaching us that," etc. Consider carefully and prayerfully everything the grace of God makes known to us concerning the future floods that will happen if we shove off the "firm foundation" of God's Commandments, even resisting and bucking the power of the greatest King of that day.
"For the eyes of the Lord run to and fro throughout the whole earth, to show Himself strong in behalf of them whose heart is perfect toward Him," and Chron. 14.9. We suggest that we may have "a perfect heart that knows through our feeble and weak efforts miss the perfect mark a long ways."
P.O. Box 405, Decatur, Ga.
30031
6
University Dally Kansan
KU defense keys 62-57 win over K-State KU still in title race Kansas guards shine
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Sports Editor
In a way, it was a typical Kansas-Kansas
State basketball game Saturday night.
Alen Field House was jammed with 18,500 people who spent much of the time on their feet. The game, although not particularly well played, was close and exciting. And, as usual, the home team won as KU prevailed. 62-57.
But in one way, it wasn't at all typical—the outcome didn't determine the Big Eight leader. In the past 10 years, either KU or K-State has won the Big Eight title nine times. Many of those championships were determined by the KU-KState winner.
BUT ALL THAT KUZI WIN was put it in a tie with the Wildcats for third place in the league race. Both teams are 3-2 and tril leader Missouri by two games. The Tigers dumped Nebraska, 62-57, Saturday to drop the Cornhoppers one game behind at 4-1.
The four leaders play each other again Wednesday night. KU travels to Nebraska, and Kansas State is at Missouri. A win by either the Jayhawks or the Wildcats would put them back in the race. A loss would put them in trouble.
Saturday's win over the Wildcats was a badly needed one for Kansas. A loss at home at this stage of the race might have been disasterous.
"This game was important in getting us back into the conference race," KU forward Norm Cook said after the game. "A victory is always nice. We can't afford to loss any
FOR THE FIRST TWO minutes, it looked as if the Jayhawks would blow the Wildcats off the court as they did here last year. KU, playing as well as it has all season, was awesome in reeling off the game's first ten points.
But that was the last chance KU fans had to breathe easily. Until Clint Johnson made both ends of a one-and-one with 45 seconds of the throw, they didn't win in doubt. Norm Cook added three free throws for KU and Mike Evans countered with two baskets for KStater to account for it.
K-State came back quickly after KU jumped off to its early 10-point lead and the Wildats led, 23-18, late in the first half. But the Jayhawks forced five K-States turnovers and scored the last eight points to take a 26-23 lead at the half.
THE SECOND HALF seesawed with KU
holding two-to-four-point leads throughout.
The turning point of the game may have
been a loss or victory.
Horb Nerbies hit a spinning jump shot and was fouled to give KU a 54-10 lead. He missed his free throw, but Kun Koenigis scored. But he back in to give KU a six-oil edge.
"We just couldn't get down the key shots," K-State coach Jack Hartman said. "They just wouldn't go down. We took good chances, we couldn't make them when we needed them."
The Wildcats got seven shots in their next three possessions but couldn't get the ball to drop. But the time Carl Gerlich made a three-point play on a follow shot, it was almost too late. Johnson's free throws on KU's next possession kiced the KU win.
K-STATE GUARDS Mike Evans and Chuckie Williams hit only 15 of 42 shots, well below their season average. Williams had six bad night, hitting only seven of 22 shots.
"That is one of the finer jobs of defense on Chuckie that I've seen anyone do," Hartman said. "Clint Johnson did a very good job. He played in the game, but he was covered to well."
KU got a big break when K-State's Gerick grabed up his fourth foul and went to the bench with 16:10 remaining. After he finished, he did a much better job getting the ball inside.
"We went into the game with the idea of going inside and letting Milt Gibson) and Cling (Johnson) shoot from the outside if we couldn't get it in," KU coach Ted Owens said. "We did have a size advantage on at least one man at all times."
The Jayhawks got good scoring out of their front line. Cook had 16 points, Koenigs poured in 12 and Noles added 10. Gibson provided outside firepower, hitting six prowls.
RANASSAST (57)
FG 4 FT RB PP TP
Dragga 4-12 0-3 9 7 8
Drange 4-12 0-3 9 7 8
Evans 5-20 0-3 9 7 6
Evans 7-20 0-3 9 7 6
Daniel 0-2 0-0 2 1 2
Bassett 0-2 0-0 2 1 2
RANASSAST (65)
FG 4 FT RB PP TP
Koosiga 5-18 0-3 8 3 12
Koosiga 5-18 0-3 8 3 12
Mackenzie 5-18 0-3 8 3 12
Mackenzie 5-18 0-3 8 3 12
Nolker 5-13 0-1 10 12 10
Nolker 5-13 0-1 10 12 10
RANASSAST (75)
BG 30-54 10-15 10 12 10
Walker to remain at KU
It's official now. Clyde Wake isn't going to leave the University of Kansas.
"I'm very happy at the University of Kansas and at the present time I have no intentions of leaving," he said. "I feel that I have obligations to many projects and
Walker, KU's athletic director, has been mentioned recently as a candidate for the athletic directorship at North Carolina. But he quashed all rumors this weekend.
people, all vitally important to the future of the Kansas athletic program, and that we have not yet fulfilled all our established goals."
The day after Walker made his announcement, North Carolina named William Cobley as athletic director. He will succeed Homer Rice, who left two weeks ago to become head football coach at Rice University.
Benson sets record as KU captures meet
Randy Benson wasn't happy about being placed in the "slow" heat of the 440-yard field.
Staff Photo by GEORGE MILLENER
But he was a lot happier after running a 6 quarter, which shattered the Kansas Association record.
Benson's performance highlighted KU's triangular meet win over Oklahoma and Nebraska. The Jaysha was finished with 79% and the Titans finished with 81%, which had 39%. Nebraska was third with 33.
Benson's time shattered the KU record of 48.1 set by Waddell Smith last season. Nebraska's Chuck Malito held the field house record of 48.2.
The reason for Benson's anger was that both Malto and Smith were also running the quarter Friday. They ran against each other and in the heat, and Benson was put in the first heat.
"When I came here, I was mad," Benson said after his record-breaking win. Waddell and (KU freshman Kewin Newell and (Mallo) were all in the second heat."
Smith tied his former indoor record with a
48.1 locking and Newell was third with 48.9.
But Benson's race outweighs them both.
Another top performance was turned in by KU freshman hardier Anthony Coleman, who won both the high and the low hurdles. He qualified for the Indoor Championship qualifying standards.
*Syracuse Marvel - 1. Syracuse State - 8. NYU - 1. Kansas
- 2. Kansas State - 3. Missouri State - 4. UCLA - 5. Kansas
- 6. Kansas State - 7. Missouri State - 8. UCLA - 9. Kansas
- 10. Missouri State - 11. University of Kentucky - 12. UCLA - 13.
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Alabama State - 394. Alabama State - 395. Alabama State - 396. Alabama State - 397. Alabama State - 398. Alabama State - 399. Alabama State - 400. Alabama State - 401. Alabama State - 402. Alabama State - 403. Alabama State - 404. Alabama State - 405. Alabama State - 406. Alabama State - 407. Alabama State - 408. Alabama State - 409. Alabama State - 410. Alabama State - 411. Alabama State - 412. Alabama State - 413. Alabama State - 414. Alabama State - 415. Alabama State - 416. Alabama State - 417. Alabama State - 418. Alabama State - 419. Alabama State - 420. Alabama State - 421. Alabama State - 422. Alabama State - 423. Alabama State - 424. Alabama State - 425. Alabama State - 426. Alabama State - 427. Alabama State - 428. Alabama State - 429. Alabama State - 430. Alabama State - 431. Alabama State - 432. Alabama State - 433. Alabama State - 434. Alabama State - 435. Alabama State - 436. Alabama State - 437. Alabama State - 438. Alabama State - 439. Alabama State - 440. 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OU. 84, II. Mille Murray. OU. 7.0. OU. 69, II. Mille Murray. OU. 7.0. OU. 69, II. Mille Murray. OU. 7.0. Field House records. W. Smithell, UA. 11, 5. Field House records. W. Smithell, UA. 11, 5.
Jake run--J), John Raceo, KU. 8:5; Jared
Stalzer, NU. 8:1; J. Vernon, UM. 8:3 M.
Mitt relay - 1. Kanada (Newell S 84) M. Benson (40.5, W. S 56) H. Juntaro (2. Nogata) J. Katsuki (3.3, J. S 5.1)
Women's relay - 1. Kanada (Newell S 84) M. Benson (40.5, W. S 56) H. Juntaro (2. Nogata) J. Katsuki (3.3, J. S 5.1)
High jump-1. Doug Philsah, NU, 61:0 (2) ebie (Swe)
High jump-2. Doug Philsah, NU, 61:0 (2) ebie (Swe)
jump high-3. Pleasant, EU, 40:0 (2) brian
jump high-4. Pleasant, EU, 40:0 (2) brian
McCalla, NU. 15/U. 14/U. Riffler, NM. 18/U. Ramsey, GU. 16/U. Marshall, MA. 20/U. Jenkins, WI. 19/U. Kalin, GA. 13/U. Mailman, IL. 14/U. Blankenship, IL. 17/U. Bianov, VT. 17/U. Tonskok, VN. 19/U.
Nicolaus, OU, 3-14; M.K. Wilk, KU, 2-4;
Bryan, OU, 3-14; W.B. Wilk, KU, 2-4;
2. Newtline
Milgrave, NL, 2. WIB-WILK, KU, 2-4;
hotel校函 jum jum 教師校函, Kuwait University, NM, 4834; k. 2. Nutritional Hotell School – Rauz University, Kuwait University, Sultanpur, Kuwait. School of Nutrition, Kuwait University, Kuwait.
**pard-run** 1. *Rin* Foshon, NU, 1.4.6; 2. Tommy McCall, KU, 1.5.1; 2. Jeff Russey, NU, 1.6.1
UO, 56-3; I. J. Pimblebee, KU, 79-4;
V. 3-1; M. Johnson, KU, 16-1; D. Takesi, KU,
16-2
KANSAS
15
Pole Vault: 1- Jim Johnson, OU, 16-1; 2- Tad Scales, KU, 1-
3. Tigman Lipp, OU, 13-4.
Milt Gibson's 12 points were a career high Saturday
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"THE ENTERTAINMENT MECCA OF LAWRENCE
--sophomore from Leavenworth, said. "Milf and I switched when we were in a man-for-men defense in the second half so that we could tell him how much I want that help shut them down."
Gibson still isn't sure other teams are going to respect him for his shooting.
KU guard Milk Gibson was not supposed to be able to hit the broad side of a barn. Kansas State's Chuckie Williams and Mike Evans were not supected to miss.
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Editors
"It looked like no one wanted to guard me," Gibson said after the game, "so I just went ahead and shot. I just haven't been looking for the shots. Tonight I did."
"It really makes a big difference when that first one goes in," he said. "It was a big confidence booster. I wasn't afraid to shoot after that."
Somewhere, something went wrong. The KU guard who couldn't shoot—he'd made only 35 per game going into the game, but also 28 per game against Williams and Evans, also known as the "purgile popups," "hit only 15 of 42 shots." As a result, Kansas widened the Wildcats, 62-57.
GIBSON CONNECTED ON six of 11 shots.
It was important, the first shot he took
"One game isn't going to make a difference. I'm going have to prove that I can shoot."
1401W.7th
Ted Owens, the KU coach, knew Gibson could shoot all along.
"Milt is a very fine shooter," Owens said. "He's just gone through a period when his rhythm was off and he didn't have a lot of confidence.
"We be been shooting well in practice and we've encouraged him to keep shooting. We've had a good turn out."
GIBSON ALSO HAD a big hand in stopping Williams and Evans. He and guard Clinton Johnson held Williams, who'd been scoring 22 points a game, to only 14 points.
"We were changing defenses which really confused them," Gibson said. "One time we used a zone and the next time a man-formant. They weren't sure what to expect in it."
Evans, even though he popped in 20 points, didn't score from the 15:09 mark in the second half until 37 seconds left in the game.
"Evans was driving and hitting those turnaround jumps," Johnson, a 6-4
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JOHNSON WAS ALSO shut down. He'd been averaging 14 games a game, but picked up the win over the Giants.
"I knew most of my responsibility was going to be stopping their guards," he said. "If that's what it takes to win, I'll do it. There was no way I was going to get into a shooting match with them (Williams and Evans)."
Johnson didn't have to. Gibson did it for him.
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Reg.
'3.25
Feed your family with our Box O' Shrimp
Vista RESTAURANT
1527 West 6th, Lawrence
842-4311
TACO TICO TACOS
5 for $1.00
through February 8
COORS on Tap
Glass 25¢
Pitcher $1.25
2340 Iowa
841-4218
TACO
TICO
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T A C O
T I C O
TACO
TICO
HOLIDAY Inn
LOVA
Monday, February 2, 1976
University Daily Kansan
2
Swimmers gymnasts win meets
The gymnasts record a season-high 183.35 points in defeating Western Illinois, 162.50, and Fort Hays State, 152.90. The swim team defeat Oklahoma 62-51.
Both the KU gymnastics and swimming squats were victorious Saturday in international competition.
The gymnastics squad swept first place in all six events over Western Illinois' lacrosse team.
Les Kerr and Jody Summers placed 1-2 in
Summers won both the parallel bar and big box events in scoring his career best mid-season.
Kerr, all-around champion with 47.30,
also won the floor exercise competition.
Summers said, "We've got to come up
other 10 points, and we'll be scaring the
kids."
the all-around competition with season best performances.
Gymnastics coach Robert Lockwood said, "The goal of our practice this week was to be successful. It's very encouraging to win this way. The team attitude is very good."
As the gymnasts performed in
the gymnasium, the swimmers swam vic-
cinal.
place Colorado Buffalooes and the fifth
Jayhawks.
The Jayhawks showed strong balance by
holding up every event except the 400
free-style leaps.
"We hit 20 of 28 routines today (Saturday), which is real good. That's 71 per cent."
But KU's major weakness was obvious as the Somers grabbed victories in five of the ten events. Senior Gary Kemp was the only Jeter win, and the Giants' victory, winning the 200 freestyle in 1:47.80.
toriously against Oklahoma in the natatorium.
The KU women's gymnastics team was also victorious, scoring a season's high 86.55 points in defeating Central Mississippi State.
All-around champion Angie Wagle led the Jayhawks in winning both the balance beam and the floor exercise competitions. Teammate Neville Neville was third in the all-around with third-place finishes in vaulting, balance beam and floor exercises.
about his team's chances to repeat as conference champions.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kauai are offered to students with limited hand-to-hand travel. PLEASE FLASH ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLIAT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
$2.00
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 864-5355.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-products, all components are free at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. 1f
We can make your stereo sound better—GUAR-
tage at Audio Systems, 307 E. 9th.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amps, drums, saws, keyboards, basses and other instruments. Shop *Rose Keyboard Studio* Chesapeake from Guitar Avenue in Windsor, OH. Amype, Kustom, Greco, and many others. Nice nite guitar rental
layhawk VW—2522 Iowa
"SPECIAL" MAZDA
1973 Low Mileage
CACA 4 sp
AM-FM Air
lavhawk VW -- 2522 low
COST PLUS 10 S- Stereo equipment. All major
instruments, amplifiers, headphones, etc.
items on line. Call Dave. Phone 862-754-
5839.
Quitting business sale—bargains! Everything from car washes to furniture, an elegant furniture, large building ware, and dice. We also have free laundry and veterables. We offer free delivery to all Alabama homes. (Hwy 40) 9-6, open 2-6. www.843-3149. - 2-9.
ECONOMY
1969 Squareback
Auto, AM-FM
Low Miles
1973 Pymtown Dblr, excellent condition-1
wheel, Huber, reliable. Must see to appraise
wheel, Huber, reliable. Must see to appraise
Javhawk VW-843-2200
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialties.
BELL AUDIO TECHNOLOGIES
ELECTRIC, 840-9360, 3900 W, 61h
ELECTRICAL DEVELOPMENTS
ACADEMIC BREACH RESEARCH FAAPPS Thousands of academic researchers from 28 states. Los Angeles, California. Call: (310) 472-6966. E-mail: faapps@aca.edu.
BOOK N003 - K723 Mpa Paperback, hardbacks,
comics, or price. Buy, will, trade. Recycle yo-
mme.
POP TOP
1970 Camper
4 Sp. AM Radio
Fully Equipped
Jayhawk VW-843-2200
Glenbush 2110 Turnip, Sherwon 7120 Receive-
ship. See 649. Only 3 meal. 2-2
$32. See 1305 Temp. Anil. 1
Our buyer just returned from the Southwest
Britain Trader. 701 Mass. Moom 803 - 10-Trap
Moom.
Learn how to make a quilt. Enroll now *Patchwork workshop* workshop, Feb. 7th, 9 am to 12pm, fee $8. Quilting workshop, Saturday, Feb. 14th, 9 am to 12pm, Patchwork, 708 Massachusetts, 645-703-0, 2-2
FOTION PLAZA coupon in your people book
in BOKONKO, #189 Vermont. Mem-
12-5
Bahai Faith
Use Kansan Classifieds
You don't have to be a Bazaar! to
Meeting 1st & 3rd Mondays, 7:30 p.m.
Regionalist Room, Kansas Union
*...
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER welcomes new and re-created books in your community. We can serve you in the coming month. We will be happy to help you locate hardcover, 12 price paperbacks, in our library or at your local archival, etc. We also offer prints, records, mags and printbooks. Come and browse we are also a Bookstore on Sundays 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun 1
King size waterbed, liner, and dark stained
basket. Best offer: 841-216. Keepying. 2-2
Craig 3512 car cassette player and 2 Audio
Roads 600 speakers, 757 Call 842-338. 728
1969 Impala, very good condition. All power. AC,
new tires. store new. Husky 841-6700. 2-3
1953 Bender Precision bass tone 3 year old KE
82-56 or Pat at 842-58 symbol Call Joe at 842-58
or Pat at 842-58
1 pair of Cerwin-Vega 211 speakers in great condition.
Call 643-2029.
Newly admitted medical students. I have a new
course in pediatrics and nursing and am preparing
for the book *RUM*: Good prepares. Avoid the
predicators for RUM.
1974 Corvette coupe, very nice, fully equipped.
23,000 miles. Call late events. 812-629-2-4
---
Anatomy lab - Practically new! (now) Holland-based
anatomy department for $50. Call in to Teopthe, 325-516-
Keep it real! For $90. Call in to Teopthe, 325-516-
CUTLASS S
GUILASS S
1972 One Owner
Bucket Seats
Full Power
Jayhawk VW-843-2200
Yashica Elektron K35 Rangefinder with wide angle-
microfiber lens 38-250mm like new Nikon Nikkor 50
m/250mm f4.5 lens
Excellent selection of Furniture & Used Furniture &
Made Furniture & Appliance Center, 70413
Dallas, TX 75026
CUSTOM JEWELRY. Professionally crafted gold and silver wire wreath, Minimalist square earrings, modern tazal design, organic form jewelry, large diamond design, compact diamond cutting.
Almost new stereo $100/has AM/FM radio. Call 848-6315
2-2
PHOTO 1 SUPPLIES including meter, contact Susan at McDonald's Thursday-Saturday after 8:25.
Drab Weather Weather have to have more drah hair. You can get it in a Rounded Round Drug Store. Reg. $25, nw of Round Cone Dr. Pharmacy. Reg. $45, nw of Round Cone Dr. Pharmacy.
FIAT
124 Sport 5 Sp.
AM-FM Stereo, Air
Jayhawk VW—2522 Iowa
Into Kinky feet? Colombian Boa
Approx. 3 feet, pets; good and very dooley.
2 inches.
**Samples—Nationally acclaimed women's sportswear. Size 9. Nationally. New shipment—over 300 pieces. 1/3 to 1/8 under the Retail. The Banner Ex-90 Oak, Binder Springs, Kraken. Tuxedo 2-5. 10-5.**
Pried to sell: Three pairs of skis 190' x 175'
17' Used once. #84-1038.
***
McIntosh C-22 preamplifier and McIntosh 225 power amplifier. McIntosh Clinic guarantees performance specifications and provides free maintenance. Higher offer above $495.84 - 873.75
Reverx A77 tape recorder with built-in speakers
Antique crown gilt wooden oak, rake,
antique crown gilt wooden oak, rake,
Antique walnut chest, 80. Portable B-W
television receiver, 15. Portable classical
guitar, made in Spain, $249.
Antique classical guitar, made in
Spain, $249.
73 Mazda RX3, Automatic, Air. Radr, console,
814-8650 Loaded with extra Musts 814-
8650
814-8650
FOR SALE! Snow Lion down coat ARK runs
for Sale! Snow Lion coat ARK runs
C $ 7144 Dialy coat, unisex 843-
629 C $ 7144
200m Lens 85-205w/filters, excellent condition
841-4137
2 Goodbye 13" arm belled radial snow树.
2 months old.码 $69 Call 841-8282. 2-6
Twain Reverb guitar amp. Excellent. $350. 843-
2970. 2-3
Must sell-1966 YW Sedan, Great engine, body and interior, Call Bettat at 867-208 or 867-486.
NIKON LEGEND 135mm f2.8. One month old, the perfect condition, $200 for best offer, I need
Garrard x-10 automobiles turntable with walnut
cabinet, dust cover $6 or best offer Call 286-345-
8889
WANTED
Roommate Wanted: Immediately, Jayhawker
Wants to help you get your room. Will cut tat month's rent by $550. Fully furnished, dishes, utensils, appliances furnished.
Diposit pay, shop by or ship by 841-7231. Ask 3
wkts. Call 612-2542.
Police scanner, Midland 8 channel. Mobile unit,
814-1422.
BOOMMATE: Male, exceptionally quiet large lizard 20-30 cm wide. Only someone who needs to study. No wizardids. Reptile. Not for sale.
Male. Roommate Needed - Nice location, front door to apartment. Please contact bus stops in front. Call Jan. 643-5320 between you and us.
Roommate wanted immediately. Female to share
3 bedroom suite, house, good location. Call 242-845-7601.
MALE ROOMMATE Warned Rent is $25.20 and
Near Campus. If interested, call 843-567
s867 after试.
Female roommate wanted until of semester.
Roommate on账页于 Feb 02
On账页于 A84-100
Ryany, Nage at 843-100
Male Remote mate to share 2 bedroom apt. in
3 dorm rooms. Call 2 blocks from backup.
Call after 5 p.m. p.m.: 832-2868.
Roommate: Frontier Ridge, $60 monthly, many advantages.送服务, indoor laundry, other company benefits.
Male roommate to Jayhawk Tower Apt.
Call 841-6137. 2-5
Need tutor for Chem. 624. Prefer grad. student.
h/hr. Call 814-6194. 2-3
Going oversite DESPERATELY need home-weather for 2 cats and 4 older kittens. Call 865-791-4030
Wanted Care and companionship for young children in a school schedule but you must provide transportation.
Middle female cellphone needs to 12 x
phones. Middle cellphone needs to extra privacy. To 26 x
482-890, 482-894. Pun. 2-6
Nested—easy going people to join two other
children. In the classroom, keep older a Derm. house. Close to campus and
downhown. No pets or black-lite posters please.
Please plus 1/4 inches or 2.5 inches.
843-540-764
Need female roommate to join two other girls in relaxed living atmosphere. 3dbm, duplex, scrap carpeting, carpet-like! $75 plus 1/2/m² or Chris, 84-6492 Call and talk to us! M-25
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in at
the library (or phone library) or at WEBSITES
WORLDWIDE (for phone calls, place at
WEBSITEWORLD.COM).
2) No 3 = bbm, apartment near campus; park-
ing area; office efficiency apartment, uni-
ties laid. 843-9679.
Roommate will share 2 hdr 8p, apt. central
4 blocks from campus. Call Don at 83
7581.
2. bdmr, all itul, paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfree. Free parking, a/c, pool, 843-1933.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
Rental Rentals in Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Rentals 843-250-8492
Absolutely need to nibble apartment. 1 bedroom,
2 bathrooms, from campus; very cheap. Call 841-7158 after.
Sorry, no refunds.
Subnet studio apt. $65 a month, utilities paid.
842-595-305
2-2
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
BORD
15 East 9th #4212
10.5 Monday, Saturday
Subleasing one apartment at Meadowbrook
Apartment has large bldg, large living & dinnertable
and a spacious balcony leading to balconies leading to living room & bedroom.
Are carpets are carpeted. Call 811-400-8200 $200 per month.
Room furnished with shared kitchen and outdoor space. A spacious apartment. Also efficiency apt for nearby town. No pet.
bdmr. apartment. One block from campus. Must be canceled by smoker. No parking with kitchen privileges. No Lynch Real Estate, 843-1001. 2-6
For aid, for 1 Grad or Faculty, $125 mo.
for an Advanced Certificate (normally)
129 after 4.30; John Ann Winthews.
Studio w/kitchen in exchange for housecleaning and babysitting 5 min drive from KU $44.00 Studio w/kitchen in exchange for housecleaning and babysitting 5 min drive from KU $44.00
LOST AND FOUND
Found advertisements are sponsored as a public service by the Bank of Maine State Bank, 5th & Kentucky and Malls Shopping Center.
One pair brown framed glasses, lost Wed. at enrollment in Alison. Renald Show Dive at Dave at 9:30 a.m.
Lot: Small female, red collar, red collar.
Rabt: lag, Linda. 643-7598. 2-3
Found: one small female dog. Black with white hair, pink eyes and cheek and belly. No tags. Call 814-4591. Call 814-4591.
Set of keys found outside Malott. Call and identify
841-6832 2-3
Least. One pair toroidal shell, photo brown eye-catcher in between URCENTLY NEXIDIX. Loa 15, $39.95. URCENTLY NEXIDIX. Loa 15, $39.95.
Lost Tuesday night at 13th and Delaware-
ware- in normal fist trader. Rewarded offer 2-2
841-617
Lett: A gray cat -Jim. He has 2 cuts over both ears. Hampshire, Cat. Kate, 749-6403
Hampshire, cat Kate, 749-6403
Found: small beagle & black male dog near community building Sunday evening. If no answer, give me a chance to ask.
Necklace: heart gold pendant lost between
Robinson and Maltot 1/28. Rewards 814-829 - 24
375
Leward. Maymary, a 5月男篮老将.
Rossard. Kentucky, Wednesday night-
Reward. 841-4855
NOTICE
Swap Shop. **620** Mass. Used for furniture, dishes,
clothes, telephones. Open daily 12:35-
84:37-337
Casabah Cafe serves the vegetarian inpatient spa at 8 a.m., then offers a Monday-Friday; Brunch Saturday, dinner seven nights a week until 8:30 p.m. Miller's Life and Munich Dark Bears on sundays - 803-835-2044.
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at the Quick Copy Center. Alice can print of your 1280x720 pages in 5 minutes! See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing needs at the Quick Copy Center, $88 Massachusetts.
E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive transportation provided. Drive work, pay labor, transportation provided. Drive work, pay labor.
Knitting, crochet, needlepin and crewel embroidery classes begin soon. Classes cost $23 plus materials and last 6 weeks. A $3 deposit is due by December. Delivery to: 2-31 board, 15 East 8th, 841-2656.
Thursday is DANNON YOUNG! Day at Round
Buffalo Store-Dash and Plain-Fashion-
848-0200 848-0200
BML=Munt Blau is open, 105° under new
window. The front door is closed.
charge) 3 m/hr, bmw 2 m/hr, p.w. less
than 4 m/hr.
charge) 3 m/hr, bmw 2 m/hr, p.w. less
than 4 m/hr.
Experienced typist—term papers, papers, mite. misc.
spelling. 843-634. Mrs. Wiley
843-634. Mrs. Wiley
Typing—*experienced in distortions, theses, *computers*. Mail resume. Pica, carbon ribbon. Call Leile, 843-808-988.
Experienced typist. I.B.M. Selective, thesis, discussion and paper terms. Call Pam Jenkke, $25.
Typist editor, IBM Pica site. Quality work.
Distributor, disertations from University of
Boston. 842-913-8771. 5-11
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable,
flexibility. A wide variety of job types have
already equipped B.A. Scaled Society
and College.
SERVICES OFFERED
TYPING
Exp. typist, IBM Selectric, paper term, paper types,
proof reading, proof reading, spelling correction.
Jenn. 641-783-2000.
TYPING for dissertations, thesis, term papers
and research articles. Send resumes to
dependsNe and associate. Call Harold or Linda
THEISI BUNDING-The Quick Copy Center is our business center. Our services are fast and prices are reasonable. Our BUSINESS CENTER is located at 510 W. 46th St., New York, NY 10024.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Lessons for macromats, country carving, table
decorations, and furniture design. New
Newport Museum Basketry Decorative Arts.
New York, NY. (0267) 354-1899.
Attention! Diving demonstration and first meeting of 16 participants in Karu Club with Thursday's session at the Cairns Aquatic Centre.
Palatale) a dance and art fiber studio 401-6729
and its tide dye, and screen printing, 841-7292
and its tide dye, and screen printing, 841-7292
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 111, 115, 118, 121, 124, 127, 129, 132, 134, 136, 138, 141, 143, 145, 147, 149, 151, 153, test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681.
Wanda Grammar at the Ramada Inn Beauty salon specializes in haircuts for men and women.
ELECTRONICS SERVICE-Professional, efficient
ELECTRONICS SERVICE-Professional, efficient
Cali Dave 842-2003
Cali Dave 842-2003
HELP WANTED
TFACHERS at all levels Foreign and domestic teachers Box 163, Vancouver, Wash. 98608, 2-42
Sign painter wanted for outdoor lettering job.
842-1225. 2-6
Hotels. Fine area hotels, some offering room service and private baths, die who will be in Lawrence year round "bart." The hotel is on the north side of the street.
KC STAR ROUTE CARRIER 6 days/week at $50
Bonus travel 30 miles per day. Benches for GOOD carrier
at $150.
AVON--Start off the new year with excellent earnings. Open territory in Lawrence and near Reno.
Bengals
Gifts and Jewelry
803 Mass
in The
Cabannah
THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
9th & Iowa
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
RECREATION'S FINEST
If You're Planning on FLYING, Use Maupitour Do The MORK For You! (NEVER Rent the票) for airline tickets
No one under 18 admitted.
West of Hillcrost Bowl
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
SUA / Maupintour now.
travel service
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass.
TROTTER
PATRONES DE L'ALTA
FREE
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS (50° Service Charge)
Phone 843-1211
With pass available at your ski-sports shop
at MONT BLEU
Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices vary by location. Equipment is required. Ladies are Ladies $1, Equipment $2. Tow carts $5.
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
3 p.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
ANNOUNCEMENTS
GIRL GATOR AND
GIRL GATOR
KING
BRIAN COSTON
GEORGIA
SHAZAAM
1035 Mass.
842-1521
if you don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGE'S
PERSONAL
Kiss Dry Lips bye-bye with Sea and SKL Skip.
Cissor Drip bottle at 804 at Ecston Hall
Store 801. Mass.
The NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney High School. The school has a big fellow teacher. Also blue, bluesgrapes, folk and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin and bass at great rock and guitar戏, Call 8817 08817.
SKI-Mont Bluer is open, 10% less, under new
regulations. 3 mils on K-10, 15 mils on p-9mm,
w-28mm, 24 mm on f-14. $79.99-$99.99.
midday. Rcv Mon, 8 a.m. United Minutes
center, 1294 Abuam, 843-943-006. Fee=$15.
2-6
Will give two AKC registered Siberian huskies
that were born in the United States and
separately. 843-408-191 for 2-4
huskies.
Vice Restaurant on West 6th St. open daily till
1 a.m. 2 a.m. 3 a.m. and Saturday: 2-3
"4711"-Napoleon brought it to Josephine-
Corner Corner brings it to you - 810 Mass.
Hell's Reason?
Carpool: (Lenexa/Lawrence) Have classes Mon.-Wed. 9:30-12:00, Tues.-Thurs. 12:30-15:20, Wed. 9:30-12:00, R. J. Barnes; 644-580 (Slucca), 306-313 Sarnfortferd or 888-684 (slucca).
Need ride: Topeka to KU. Wed. Thurs. 4:15
Early morning: Will share information. Elaine 235
Sunday 6:00 - 8:30
Employment Opportunities
TRAVEL
Secretarial position available. Must be able to
work 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Shoorthad abilities preferred. Apply BY THURS.
August 24th. Register at JobPlace.com.
Equal Opportunity Employer.
Counselors wanted. Western Colorado boy's camp, emphasize camp and retire. Send counselor a resume, working with children, required. Include self-addressed, child's phone number. Counselor must be at Campus. Dept. 1, Yellowstone, Colorado 81527-2. FAX: (509) 643-1500.
EUROPE ISRAELA:AFRICANASIA Travel Discounts
Taiwan First Avenue, Taichung. Tucke a 30084 (www.
tucke.com) First Avenue, Taichung. Tucke a 30084 (www.
tucke.com)
FOOD
Vista Restaurant on West 6th St. Open daily till 11
m. a.m. 2:30 p.m. and Saturday.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1368
10-5 Saf. - Taf.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
TACOS
$3.95 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
GRAMOPHONE
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion
Them Most Storey Components
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
WITH MUSIC CENTER, LENTRIFOND, ARCHITECTURE, $20.89 AUDI
8
Monday, February 2, 1976
University Daily Kansan
2.
Douglas County air rated clean except for particulates content
By JACK FISCHER
With few exceptions, residents of Lawrence and the Douglas County area can breathe easily, according to the Kansas Department of Health. The Douglas County Health Department.
Of the five pollutants monitored by the burean, only particulates in Douglas County exceeds the level permitted by the Federal Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) regulations, Howard Saiger, director of the burean, said Friday.
Saiger said the pollutant not in compliance consisted of any kind of solid particles floating in the air. The health hazard is low, but it is important that County area isn't known, but Saiger said the bureau thought most of it was from naturally produced pollutants, and didn't know from industry.
THE PROBLEM of particulates is endemic to most midwestern states, and there is little that can be done to control it, Saiger said.
Dick Hack, a sanitarian for the Douglas County Health Department, said that unlike various gases monitored by the EPA, particulates were heavier and tended to settle on a region rather than floating up and being carried off by wind currents.
Hack agreed that the particulate probably were naturally produced, and said that despite them, the quality of air in Douglas County was generally good.
Saiger said that in a 12-month northeast Kansas area including Douglas County, 24 of 60 monitoring stations had shown an increase in particulates, and that the rest of the stations had shown a decrease over a four-year period.
JAN SIDES, chief of technical services for the bureau, said there were two monitoring systems used to try to meet EPA regulations.
The first, called ambient air monitoring,
consists of sensing equipment placed on rooftops and at various rural locations that determines the amount* of particulates and sulfur oxides in the air. The second system,
contains a sensor capable of measuring the amount of carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides that are expelled by specific industries.
Sides said these pollutants were selected by the EPA for regulation based on studies of air pollution made in California, one of the areas in the country to conduct such studies.
Aside from particulates, Sides said only sulfur oxides had been monitored long enough to determine whether they had increased significantly.
In Douglas County and in the surrounding region there have been a slight decrease in the number of children.
SAIGER SAID the presence of sulfur oxides had been linked with respiratory
Ray Burgein, chief of engineering and enforcement for the bureau, said industrial
stacks were checked annually with emissions monitoring. In addition, he said weekly field reports of all the industrial sites in the state were filed by employees of the bureau to help determine whether additional checks were necessary.
Industries that aren't in compliance with EPA regulations for emissions are notified and given 180 days to comply. Saiger said. He if the industry can't comply within that time hearings can onward an set agenda before the module for the use of equipment needed to filter emissions.
Saiger said the only industry in Douglas County that wasn't in compliance with EPA regulations was the Cooperative Farm Chemicals Assn. (CFCA) in Lawrence.
Too many variances permitting the CFCA to continue operations have been granted by the bureau. Cogimus said. They could close the office and move to another motivation to meet the regulations, he said.
GEORGE COOGGS, legal advisor for the Sierra Club in Kansas, said the CFCA had been violating the EPA regulations since its inception in 1970.
SAIGER SAID the efficiency of the monitoring equipment wasn't known but that it must meet EPA guidelines because it was part of the program from the EPA during its annual checks.
New voting districts, drawn by the Senate Elections Committee, for freshmen and sophomores in the College of Liberal Arts were released at a meeting last night.
The five new geographic districts are necessary because freshmen and sophomores are no longer into colleges-within-a-college. Freshmen and sophomores previously elected student teams from their college-within-a-college.
Voting districts created
At present, the CFCA is waiting for a decision on its request for an extension on its variance from the Department of Health and Environment.
Demographics have a major concern in outlining the new districts, Bruce Woner, committee chairman said. The committee tried to have a balance between the students who live in residence halls and Greek houses in each district, he said.
District, which will elect five senators,
comprises: Alpha Chi Omega, Sigma Nu,
Delta Upsilon, Delta Gamma, Kappa Sigma,
Alpha Phi, Alpha Delta Pi, Delta
Delta Delta, Templin, Lewis, Hashinger
and McColburn hall.
District 2, which will elect six senators,
comprises: Tau Kappa Epsilon, Lambda Chi Alpha, Kiappa Theta, Alpha Kappa Evans, FiFi, NiFi, Evans, Ellsworth and Nainthalh seats.
District 3, which will elect five senators,
comprises: Pt Beta Phi, Phi Kappa Psi,
Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Alpha Tau Omega and Olive Hall.
District 4, which will elect five senators,
comprises: Kappa Kappa Gamma, Sigma Chi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Beta Theta Pi, Corbin Hall and all scholarship balls.
District 5, which will elect five senators,
comprises: Delta Tau Delta, Triangle,
Delta Chi, Sigma Alpha Epidaur, Sigma
Phi Delta, Delta Gamma, G.S.P. J.R.P. and
committing students.
Tentative voting hours for the February 18 and 19 election will be from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on on-campus polls and from 5 to 7 p.m. for district polls.
Final times will be decided Thursday.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.78
Tuesday, February 3, 1976
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Special focus on terrorism
See page 4
THOMAS C. RICHARDSON
CINEMATOGRAPHY
PETER A. HUGHES
Staff Photos by DAVID CRENSHAW
Questions and answers
The Lawrence City Commission continued its investigation yesterday of charges of city mismanagement in a special study session open to the public. Reverend Homer (Butch) Henderson, top right, a member of the six-man committee, raised the
questions that City Manager Buford Watson, bottom right, will have to answer. Police Chief Richard士叉塘 wadded the effects the investigation will have on his department as he read the report compiled by the committee.
City eyes mismanagement charge
Staff Writers
Bv JOHN FULLER
and BRUCE SPENCE
A second city study session yesterday on reports of alleged city mismanagement finished discussion of recommendations of the City Council to consider the alternate report next Monday.
The first report was presented to the Lawrence City Commission several weeks ago by half of a special city committee appointed in late November to investigate 24 charges of city mismanagement that were compiled by employee associations.
A 90-MINUTE study session last Tuesday
reviewed only the first seven of 12 recommendations of the first report, signed by city commissioners Marnie Argersinger and Donald Binns and the Rev. Homer "Butch" Henderson. The special six-man committee was split over differences about how the report on the city investigation was to have been presented.
CLARK said at the beginning of the session that the commission was discussing the first report not to set city policy but to iron out the recommendations so they could be compared to the alternate report recommendations.
The alternate report, presented last Tuesday by city employees Alvin Samuels, Dennis Smith and Muriel Paul, had been criticized by Angersinger as "destructive" that it took a harder stand on city problems and recommended stronger action.
The report recommended that city employees be evaluated regularly by an immediate supervisor or foreman and that employees allowed to review their performance.
Areas covered in the study session
vesterday were:
EMPLOYE EVALUATION
See MISMANAGEMENT page 5
House members tour KU
By LYNDA SMITH Staff Writer
University of Kansas administrators took a Kansas House Ways and Means subcommittee on a tour of the campus emphasizing areas needing improvements.
Members of the subcommittee were rep, James Cubit, R-Garnett, chairman of the committee; Rep. Walker Graber, D-Pretty Prairie; and Rep. Mike Hayden, R-Awwood. Lawrence, although not a member of the law enforcement, accompanied the legislators.
The Ways and Means Committee is to conduct hearings on KU's facial 1977 budget.
The University has requested $4.6 million for an addition to Malotl Hall. $270,000 for
an addition to Robinson Gymnastium and $1.8 million for the Computation Center in
GOV. ROBERT F. Bennett has favorably recommended these requests to the legislature. He didn't, however, recommend a $118,768 physical plant improvement request or a $154,068 request for equipment maintenance and replacement.
Cubit said he thought requests supported by the Governor would meet little
See related story page 2.
resistance in the legislature. For requests not recommended, he said, "We have to really think the Governor has overlooked something before we move to override it."
THE LEGISLATORS, accompanied by
Amendment proposed to state marijuana bill
BY MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
The author of a bill to legalize possession of small amounts of marijuana yesterday proposed to amend the bill to make possession a civil infraction.
The author, State Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, told the Kansas House State and Federal Affairs Committee through an aide that possession of up to two ounces of unclassified paper should be an unclassified misdemeanor punishable by a maximum fine of $100.
The amendments also state that possession of any amount over four ounces
Glover's side, Bill Craven, asked the committee to amend the bill to make a first conviction of possession of two to four ounces of martjuna a Class A upstairs, punishable by imprisonment a top down in a county jail or a $2,500 fine-or both.
The committee is hearing testimony this week and will vote either tomorrow or Thursday on whether to refer it to the floor of Representatives, Glover said Sunday.
A SECOND possession conviction would be a Class E felony, punishable by one to five years in the state penitentiary or a $5,000 fine or both.
Glover said current law states that possession of a firearm without bounty but that the law is not mandated.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, Executive Vice Chancellor Del Shankel, Assistant to the Chancellor Max Lucas and Executive Secretary to the Chancellor Richard Von Robinson, conditions at Malot, Robinson, Springfield Hall, Watson Library and Strong Hall.
"This is basically where we're trying to
compromise," he said.
The subcommittee was first shown conditions in Malott by Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry. Bricker pointed out classrooms, animal and organic materials and that Malott's library to show the subcommittee that we are really hurting for space."
He said he proposed that the bill be amended because he hadn't thought it would be accepted in its original form, or that it would require less than one ounce of marijuana.
The original bill was studied by an interim legislative committee in October. Although the committee didn't favorably recommend the original bill, members voted to prepare the bill so current laws were carried during the 1976 legislative session.
GLOVER SAID the amended bill would accept the basic concept of decriminalization and strengthen the laws against the would-be seller.
Under current law, he said, no specific amount of possessed marijuana is defined as illegal.
William K. Marshall, D-Topka, said he didn't know how he would vote on the bill, but perhaps would vote to send it into the House for debate.
Following testimony, committee member
"Hate to see young people get a criminal record over one marijuana cigarette," he said.
Rep. Randall Palmer, R-Pittsburgh, said, "If marijuana is truly harmless then I don't see any -reason why it shouldn't be decriminalized, but I am not convinced it
See GLOVER page 7
Bricker said that more than 800 students used the facilities in Malott, and that there was room for only 20 students in the lab at one time.
"We're pushing our upper limit," Bricker said. "We don't have reps flexibility."
Von Ende said the labs were substandard by federal regulations. Funds for labs are included in the hall's budget request, he said.
BRICKER DEMONSTRATED the need for equipment replacement by showing an out-dated weighing instrument to the subcommittee.
"It takes 10 or 15 minutes for each weighing," Bricker said. "Students can't get many experiments done if they are sitting around waiting a lot."
Dykes said the equipment indicated the need for a replacement and repair budget request.
Lucas said Malott's science library would be improved by the new addition.
"Now there's studying in the hall," said Iris, who was studying here again being smushed together."
See KU BUDGET page 3
Changing surnames a woman's privilege
Staff Writer
By KAREN LEONARD
S Shakespeare once wrote that a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. But if roses were called hightopershy, how many romantic sonnets would be written about
People's names are as important an
their their KI IDs or social security numbers.
It isn't surprising, then, to some persons at the University of Kansas that more and more women are retaining their maiden names after marriage.
ANN GRAHAM, graduate assistant to the dean of women, said recently that women realized that their husbands' last names are not her identity, especially if they were divorced.
Graham changed her own name from her husband's back to her maiden name when she filed for divorce. The name change was approved by the official divorce proceedings, she said.
Through her work in the dean of women's office, Graham said, she has helped six or seven women who wanted information on changing their names. The trend toward name changing seems to be escalating, she said.
CASEY EIKE, assistant to the dean of women, never changed her name after her
"I always knew I would never change my name," she said. "It's my identity. We included that whole idea in our marriage contract."
Graham said that even though the women's movement had had an influence on the trend towards the retention of maiden names after marriage, other reasons might have been more important. For one thing, she said, more women are marrying when they are maidens and not just accustomed to using their maiden names than women who marry when they are 18.
Also, women are now more likely to have professional careers and have established reputations under their maiden names, Graham said. If they were to change their surnames, she said, clients and business contacts might no longer recognize them.
Deanell Reece Tacha, faculty director of Legal Aid and associate professor of law, changed her surname to her husband's after she married a graduate of maiden name as her middle name. Tacha said that she had practiced law in Washington, D.C., under her maiden name, but she faced real problems because of her name change moving to Lawrence after her marriage.
THE MAIN PROBLEM with using her new last name, she said, has been maintaining contacts with old friends in other countries, and aren't familiar with her new last name.
Graham said that a woman who had established good credit ratings under her maiden name might lose it after she took her husband's name.
Grubham said a woman might decide to
see NAMES page 3
See NAMES page 3
Cohabitation: 'I live with him because I love him'
By PAUL SHERBO
Staff Writer
The story you are about to read is true. Names have been changed at the request of those involved.
If a Cornell University estimate about students is right, tonight at the University of Kansas almost 2,000 unmarried men and women will be sleeping in dormitories for two nights more nights a week for at least three months at a time.
The word is cohabitation. The people are students, and the reasons vary.
"I think mostly it was easier since I saw her all the time anyway," Bill said.
"I live with him because I love him," Debbie, a KU student, said.
"I was more comfortable that way," said Alice, now married. "I wasn't even like for purely sexual contact."
"I get sick of dorms and I want something a little less impersonal," John said.
The students interviewed also viewed the advantages of cohabitation differently.
"You might say it's financial, too," said John,
"taking a trip together, splitting costs."
"It's very nice to wake up and find somebody you can trust," Janet said.
"It's more for warmth than for sexual reasons," Alice said.
"IT'S MORE economical to live together," Debbie said.
The estimate of 2.000 cohabitants at KU is based on the Cornell study, which said that from 10 to 33 married women were in the study.
sincerity about their own relationships, a few said they doubted the sincerity of others.
"Most people live together because they think it's fun." Bill said.
"Some of it may be because people think it's
superstition, but they don't want to be thought of
as superstrict."
"Whatever the reason given for cohabitation, all those interviewed found problems..."
problems. Parents were mentioned as obstacles several times.
Although all the people interviewed expressed
Whatever the reason given for cohabitation, all those interviewed said they had encountered
"We hold radically different value systems," Jeff said.
"It made it easier for me for her to know," she said, "but it really upset her."
Debbie said that she regretted telling her mother about the relationship.
"I don't think they would've understood that it went beyond sex." Also said.
Not everyone had these problems. Bill said that his parents thought cohabitation before marriage
"They openly accept it," he said. "They actually advocated it."
Another of the problems students ran into was finding the proper living conditions. Some said they were in a cramped room with a small toilet.
But four managers of apartment house complexes in Lawrence said they didn't forbid cohabitation in their buildings.
"WE'RE INTERESTED IN securing the very best tenants possible." Andy M. Galyard, manager of Meadowbrook apartments, 15th and Crestline Drive, said, "because they make good neighbors.
I'm not nosy. I'm not looking around to see what they're doing. We treat all of our people as we do.
Janice Hodkinson, manager of Eldridge House,
seventh and Massachusetts, said there was no set
picture.
"it just doesn't come up here," she said. "I haven't had any problems, really."
Kathy Hayward, manager of Birchland Garden apartments, 19th and Tennessee, and Village Square apartments, 858 Avalon Road, said, "We really don't ask."
One apartment complex manager, who asked not to be identified, said, "Often times there's less room."
J. J. Wilson, housing director, said there was no official Policy on cobaltation.
"WE DON'T get into making bed checks," he said.
Wilson said the housing office neither encouraged nor interfered with cohabitation.
"if they want to do it, that's their decision," he
said. "I don't think there's too much im-property."
Wilson said there had been only one time when the housing office intervened in a cohabitation case. It involved two women roommates, one of whom had a regular sleep-in boyfriend, he said.
The situation grew bad enough that the two girls had to be separated, Wilson said.
Students interviewed said there were also personal problems within the relationships that had to do with them.
"If you say to yourself, 'God, I wonder how long this is going to last,' you start acting differently."
"The longer you stay with somebody, it gets into whether you like it or not. You both have to give
Of the people interviewed, one couple said they had married as a result of their cobaltation and
"Students concluded that the advantages of cohabitation outweighed the problems . . ."
other couple said they planned to be married soon. All that said there were definite advantages in cohabitation. Three people said they had decided not to get married as a result of their cohabitation.
John said, "I suppose one keeps looking for something a little better letter each time. You certainly know that."
AT LEAST two legal problems face students who cohabitate. One is an 187 Kansas statute that says that persons cohabiting are guilty of a misdemeanor and may be fined $500 to $1,000 or
imprisoned from 30 days to three months. The statute is rarely enforced.
The second problem is that of common law marriage. If two people living together pose to their friends as husband and wife and have present insistence on the fact that it may actually take a divorce to separate them.
THIS DIDN'T seem to cause concern among the people interviewed.
Society is accepting cohabitation more than before, Janet said, although the main reason people have to do it is because
There was reluctance to be interviewed on the part of some people. Two people refused outright and two more were interviewed who didn't want to be interviewed, only one student offered to have his name printed.
Each of the nine students interviewed said he didn't think cohabitation was for everybody. One said he didn't see any difference between cohabitation and marriage.
"Marriage is formalized cohabitation" he said.
"People still cheat on each other and people are still
in love."
Bill said he thought that an increase in cohabitation would lead to a corresponding decrease in the divorce rate. The divorce rate in the United States in 1965 was 0.25 per thousand, and in 1974 was 4.7 per thousand.
All students interviewed concluded that the advantages of cohabitation outweighed the disadvantages.
"They're the same problems as having a roommate of the same sex," Debbie said.
2
Tuesday, February 3, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Death penalty compromise
TOPEKA, Kan.—Two Senate committees announced late yesterday a com-
mission on a proposed death penalty bill.
The compromise agreement calls for placing in the bill capital punishment for the first degree murder of:
- Certain public officials, including the governor, lieutenant governor, attorney general, secretary of state and the judge of any court.
- Witnesses in criminal proceedings who are killed.
- Immates who don't fall under the other category of persons slain in a corrections institution.
Ruling restricts rentals
TOPEKA, Kan.- School districts have no legal authority to charge students for enrollment or supplies are equipment in special classes, such as shop classes,
He said the Kansas textbook rental law only permitted charges for textbooks, fees and supplemental charges.
If the ruling stands, it will wipe out rental fees some public schools charge for everything except the textbook rental.
Warning on abortion law
TOPEKA, Kam-, Robert C. Harder, secretary of the State Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, told a Senate committee yesterday that it would be a violation of federal welfare laws to prohibit use of state funds to pay for abortions for the poor.
Harder said if the bill were passed, it might cause the state to lose federal funds because it would violate federal standards.
the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services has taken the stand that because abortions are a legal medical procedure there isn't any legal ground for withholding payment of medical costs, just as there is no legal ground for withholding medical payment for an appendectomy.
The bill got a generally cool reception from the committee, but chairman Wint Winter, R-Otawa, said he would give bill sponsors a chance to be heard before a vote.
Atomic protection sought
WASHINGTON - A citizens' environmental group today asked the Nuclear
regulatory Commission to take emergency measures to protect atomic material,
waste and radioactive debris.
At a news conference, Nuclear Regulatory Commission staff scientists, Arthur R. Tamplin and Thomas B. Cochran, both opponents of plutonium-based atomic energy, said atomic materials now are inadequately protected, especially during reprocessing and fuel fabricating plants operated by civilian companies.
Tamplin and Cochran said a terrorist group could妨架 a crude atom bomb from small as little 10 kilograms, about 22 pounds, of highly enriched uranium or plutonium.
Pay hikes draw fire
TOPEKA-House Speaker Duane S. McGill asked yesterday for no more than a five per cent increase in faculty salaries to state colleges and universities.
Brennett proposed that the legislature hike faculty salaries by 10 per cent this year, the increase would not be felt.
McGill will give the recommendations in a letter to Rep. Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, in which he resisted his opposition to proposals by Gov. Robert F. Bennett on the issue of teacher salaries.
"It is possible that you might wish to devise a formula whereby no one receiving more than $2,000 receives any increase this week or makes it down proportionately." McGill said.
McGill's letter said that he was firmly convinced that Kansans didn't favor a continued increase of funds for post-secondary education.
MGill said he believed that holding the financial line of post-secondary education would "guard the state balances, avoid taxation and reduce the level of spending."
He said that no spending should be increased until a master plan was developed to assist the legislature in making decisions about education at a level acceptable to Kansans.
McGill also suggested "careful review" of the governor's recommendation for a 12
per cent increase for other operating expenditures for state schools.
"A casual perusal of this account would indicate possible reductions," McGill said.
On Campus
TODAY: "Haydn in America" will be discussed by IRVING LOWENS at 2:30 p.m. at Swarthout Recital Hall. Lowens is a music critic for the Washington Star News and a scholar and bibliographer of American music.
TONIGHT: TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE will have a dance class at 7 in 220 Robinson. "The American Revolution: Individual Challenges and National Identity," discussed by W. STITT ROBINSON, professor of history, at 8 in 500 Audruft Woodford.
The KU CHAPTER OF "ANGEL FLIGHT," a women's organization affirmed that the ORG received national affiliation at the Organizations area meeting last week in Lincoln, Neb.
WASHINGTON-Daniel Patrick Moyhan, who has been embroiled in controversy since becoming U.S. ambassador to the United Nations last year, resigned yesterday, telling President Ford: "It is time to return to teaching."
In a letter of reply, Ford accepted the resignation "with the deepest regret and reluctance," declaring that Moynahan had "failed to meet deadlines sufficiently and honestly" at the United Nations.
FLATTERY will get you NOWHERE
When a reporter remarked that a lot of Democrats were talking about his running next November against Sem. James M. Hudley, R.N.Y., Moynihan replied: "I'm not."
Moynahan told reporters at the United Nations, "I assume I'll be back in government one way or other some day. I'm going to do something," she ruled out an early race for the U.S. Senate.
When the White House announced his resignation, Moynihan was serving as secretary of state.
Moynihan quits U.N. to return to teaching
Moynihan dated his letter of resignation last Saturday and said it was the last day of office.
Although his resignation was effective immediately, Moynihan said Harvard University, where he will teach, had agreed that he might stay on at the United Nations to serve the remainder of February as council president.
"It is time to return to teaching," he wrote, "and such are the conditions of my job."
Ford's letter formally accepting the resignation was dated Monday.
The latest of several flaps involving Myohann came last week after he sent an email to a journalist.
Moynhan had served the Ford administration earlier as ambassador to
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He said in the same cablegram that he feared a large faction in the State Department "which has an interest in our performance being judged to have failed." He said this faction had leaked its assessment to news media and Congress.
Kissinger said there had been some criticism of Moynihan's outspoken approach to U.S. diplomacy within the department.
White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen told reporters that Ford had no advance notice Moyhan was sending the letter of inquiry to be circulated a successor would be named soon.
Last week Moyhan had maintained that he had been successful in efforts aimed "at breaking up the massive blot of nations, which for so long have been arrayed against us in international forums and in diplomatic encounters generally."
After Moynhan's cable appeared in the press last week, Nessen said:
"Pat is supported by the President, the secretary of state and the top officials of the SEC."
Words of praise from Ford and Kissinger
last Wednesday appeared at the time to hear
the governor's comments.
State Henry A. Kissinger and U.S. embassies. The cablagram complained about the lack of support for Moyhun's effort to encourage American voting bloc at the United Nations.
...or will it?
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Tuesday, February 3, 1976
3
KU budget requests
From page one
Hayden said after seeing the conditions in Malott that he thought the budget request for Malott was justified and that he considered it a priority item.
IN ROBINSON, Wayne Ossness, chairman of the department of health, physical
From page one
Names . . .
retain her own name simply because she didn't like her husband's name
Lamber wrote that surnames began to be used in England during the 13th century when more identification than just a Christian name became necessary. Last names identified the person by occupation, location, or father's name. A woman usually was identified by the same surname as her husband, but usually that of housewife and it was most convenient to identify her through her husband.
THE PRACTICE of a wife taking her husband's surname is more a matter of tradition than law, according to an article by Julia Lamber published in the Fall 1973 issue of the Washington University Law Review.
Lamber wrote, "There is nothing in our English heritage requiring married women to assume their husbands' surnames. Rather, choice, convenience and devotion to a fiction give us this custom. This practice is not invariable nor compelled by law."
THE SIMPLEST WAY to retain your maiden name after marriage, Graham said, is to just not change your name, and use the same name as you did before your marriage.
Tacha suggested that as further insurance, a woman should write to all her creditors, her bank, the Internal Revenue Service, the State Department of Revenue and the Treasury, with wish to inform them of her intention to retain her maiden name after her marriage.
If a woman has already started using her husband's surname and has decided she wants her maiden name back, back are two ways to change names in Kansas.
The first is the common law method, in which a woman simply starts using her maiden name again. Through balthicual use, she will become her legal name, Graham said.
The problem with this method, Graham said, is that if a name isn't changed through the courts, when a woman turns 65 and applies for social security she may not be able to prove that the wages she earned from her using her husband's name belong to her.
TO AVOID THIS, Graham said, a woman can have her name changed through a formal court procedure by petitioning the Douglas County probate court with an order stating her reasons for the change. The woman could also be ordered by the Douglas County Courthouse, she said, adding that a woman can either fill out herself or obtain the help of a lawyer or Legal Aid.
Graham said the court then required the petitioner to publish the name change in the legal news, such as that in the Lawrence Journal-World, for at least two weeks.
The latter is the best way to change names, she said. She suggested, however, that if a woman couldn't afford the court fees and newspaper ads, she could change them in a common law method and then change it through the courts as soon as she could afford to.
IRENE EMMA, professor of Spanish and Portuguese, said she went through the legal procedure of changing her name from her husband's to a surname she chose herself. Emma said she hadn't used a lawyer, but had poked around the law school library and the courthouse until she found name change material. She was also similar to her own. She said the process had cost her about $50 for court fees and newspaper advertising.
Wanita Whelle-Einhorn, assistant to the dean of men, handled the problem of a name change after marriage in another way. She and her husband, Robert, both changed their names before their marriage to a married combination of their two last names.
Crab lice infest even the nicest people
RID KILLS CRAB LICE ON CONTACT
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"Gym space is probably the most critical." Osness said.
One gym is used for both men's and women's intercollegiate activities, as well as intramural basketball games, Osness said.
Lucas said that although the floor and ceiling in Robinson had been repaired, Robinson's dance studio and perceptual motor clinic's still needed repair.
plans, two new gyms would be built on Robinson's west side.
Osness said that according to expansion
LUCAS, in describing Summerfield's Computation Center, said "everything connected with the computer center could almost be classified as makeshift."
the center's staff was in six different places in the University and supplies were in
Temporary study rooms have been set up in the military science building Annex to accommodate computer science students, be said, and the old refreshment area in Summerfield was changed into a study area.
Paul Wolfe, coordinator of the University computation center, told the legislators that
The new building would consolidate the center's supplies and staff, he said.
Dykes said the lack of space in Summerfield made the School of Business, which is in Summerfield, more difficult to accredit.
Woife said the center, used for both student and administrative purposes, was used for all courses.
In Watson Paper, Dean of Libraries Jim Rans pointed out cracks and water stains in the wood.
"We have to funnel them in and out of this area," he said, "and it gets pretty hectic." Shankel the filled hallway was an indication of inadequate library space.
"They have to study where they find a place," Shankel said.
Lucas said KU was the only institution under the Board of Regents that had spent all funds allocated to it for library development. He said money taken from other areas had also been used for the upkeep and purchase of books.
SHANKEL SAID there was a 21 per cent
inflation rate in the cost of books. The budget allotment for the library ($160,000) would be used to keep abreast of that inflation, he said.
on the floor of Strong, where visual arts classes and facilities are housed. Dykes said, "This is the best example I know of our students and making use of all available space."
Lucas showed the legislators deterioration in the walls and ceilings caused by water damage.
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4
Tuesday, February 3, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer
War on a small scale
with the start of the Winter Olympics in Austria this week, memories of the terrorist tragedy that marred the 1972 games in Munich are surfacing once again. Security is a major concern will be high under the threat of another attack by political groups seeking international attention.
Several weeks ago terrorists struck at La Guardia Airport in New York. The powerful bombs planted in luggage lockers resulted in horrifying death and destruction. Like the Olympic tragedy, the La Guardia incident shocked people and resulted in massive efforts to stop terrorist activities.
Incidents such as these are deplorable and should be stopped, but the very nature of terrorism makes it impossible to defend against such attacks. Guerrilla warfare can't be controlled by brute force.
The 17th century philosopher Thomas Hobbes said that while fear of war existed, man couldn't be at peace. War isn't found only in battle, he said, but also in the period of time in which man fears war and takes extra efforts to defend himself against his enemy. Thus, in a sense, war is a state of mind. To be at peace man must have no disposition for fighting.
Under this definition most of the world is in a constant state of war. And herein the only possible solution to terrorism lies, for terrorism is merely war on a small scale. Political groups seek their ends through bloodshed and violence. The destruction of terrorism can only be found in the destruction of the atmosphere of war in which it thrives.
In today's atmosphere of hate where
defense budgets far outweigh expenditures for peace, there is no real basis for fighting terrorism. As the Munich and La Guardia incidents indicate, the element of surprise that makes terrorism so shocking scares people. They realize that they, too, could be a victim of these senseless killings. Therefore, extraordinary efforts are taken to stop the killers. If comparable efforts were made to stop the millions of deaths that result from legalized wars, maybe some solution to the problem would come within reach.
But war is a distant concept to most people. The masses killed in war are somehow different than the persons who are murdered by terrorists. So war continues. And terrorism continues. And no solution is in sight.
There is no formula for curbing terrorism. Some countries believe in fighting fire with fire. Others believe in saving hostages at any cost. But the killing continues. A terrorist is like a cornered animal. He's afraid of nothing. He has lost his power to reason because he believes that he has no alternatives. He needs options that aren't present in a warlike atmosphere.
So it may sound idealistic to call for a world of peace, where trust and honesty replace fear and deceit, but that is the only possible course if this state of war is to end. Someone has to make the first move. A multitude of sins are justified in the event of war, but he is refreshing if a world leader introduced the concept of peace in the name of defense. It could prove to be economical in both dollars and lives.
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
History yields terror trail
By JOHN HICKEY Contributing Writer
The concept of terrorism is, in a historical sense, a relatively recent one. Only since the early 1960s, "terrorism" been in use. It was coined in reference to the reign of terror in which men, women and children were summarily killed or repatriated to the ruling faction.
Only in the past few decades has terrorism been recognized as a separate political weapon distinct from military power or social crime. Several factors are involved in the creation of an environment that terrorists are willing to try to hold hostages and detonate bombs in hopes of realizing political or social goals.
Most obvious is the new weapons technology that has greatly multiplied the harm that one person or a small group of people can cause. Increasing masses of people living increasingly closer together have become vulnerable targets for terrorists, and the rise of dividuals. The rise of democracy with its emphasis on human rights has prevented governments from acting with flagrant disregard for the lives of victims and hostages.
Yet history is far from devoid of examples of terrorism using such old-fashioned techniques as burning, beating and lynching. Witness the Ku Klux Klan in this century. When the agent of terrorism is the terrorist himself, it can significantly sanctions the actions of the terrorists, terrorism is likely to persist.
dollars. There was no popular base of support for rigorously enforcing the state laws against the things it did, and it rampaged until public opinion shifted far enough for the state to accommodate organized actions against it.
When the Klan was at the height of its power, it had more than five million members and an income of tens of millions of
When the terrorists make up a sizable portion of the indigenous population, the state is particularly difficult for the state to overcome. Examples are the Klan and the Irish American Army in Northern Ireland.
Sometimes, of course, a state may wish to exercise rather than exorcise terrorism. That was the situation in the French Revolution, whence came the Emperor Napoleon II, who was the ultimate resolution of the purpose of the United States in the war in Southeast Asia.
Failing to win the war by coverly supporting the South Vietnamese army or by direct military intervention along conventional lines, the military actions of some of the Vietnamese people in the hope of stopping the spread of communism to the South. It became a war of American technological terrorism with napalm, bulldozers, defoliation bombs and chemical weapons antipersonnel weapons押 against the Viet Cong's more primitive techniques of torture, arson, sabotage and murder.
Neither side could win because the United States had too much military force for the Viet Cong and the Cong had too thoroughly infiltrated the population for the United States to extinguish them. Finally the United States had short of money and money.
oppressed are usually clearly delineated when the state is doing the oppressing. Victims of terrorism against the state are more likely to be capriciously or randomly selected depending on where the terrorists detonate their bomb or takes his hostages.
Terrorism by a state is usually more severe than terrorism against a state. The
Terrorism by a state can be remedied if the persons running
liberties and safety from terrorists. The United States, for example, probably won't eliminate the constitutional prohibitions against illegal search and seizure and self-incarbonation in an attempt to keep its people safe from terrorists.
Advances in the peacetime use of nuclear energy have
powerful weapon ever used in any war against which the Japanese had no defense. They were terrorized into surrendering.
AUTHOR TAYLOR
the state come to their senses in if they are overthrown by those who exhibit better judgment. Terrorism against the state is often with, especially in times when more and more of the populace seems dissatisfied with the world political situation. In the most cities, citizens in the most citizens are to accept a trade-off between civil
Any use or threat of the use of nuclear weapons is a form of terrorism because these weapons are so destructive to both man and environment that to be placed in the physical
A DIRECTORIAL HAND OF CHRONELY O'CONNOR, COMMANDED BY GOVMENT FORCE BUT PREEMINENTLY DECARDED TO CHANGE
OPERATION OR ASSIGNMENT. ANNOUNCED JUNE 28TH.
increased worry over a possible new weapon for terrorists. Ironically, nuclear terrorism has been used only once—by the United States against Japan.
Faced with a long and arduous war, President Truman decided to transgress the boundaries of warfare as it had been known throughout history. Thus he unleashed the most
jeopardy of their holocaust is to experience terror.
Since World War II, other countries have developed many, more powerful nuclear weapons. These new weapons has ever been used. But the threat of nuclear terrorism by or against them becomes perhaps the greatest problem for man in this century.
Accord is panacea
WESTPHAL Spe. Terra
By MARNE RINDOM
Contributing Writer
In Vienna, six Palestinian terrorists seized the headquarters of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), killed three people and took 60 hostages, including 11 oil ministers. The Austrian government quickly met the demands of the UN to fly to Algeria, released their hostages and receive asylum.
Special Focus:
Terrorism
In Britain, four terrorists of the Provisional Irish Republican Army held a couple hostage for six days. The police held out, refusing to meet any of the demands. The terrorists released their hostages unarmed and surrendered.
WELL, IT KEEPS THE LITTLE DARLINGS OFF THE STREETS!
In Argentina, 500 left-wing urban guerrillas attacked an army, killed in the Army, warned of the attack, met the terrorists with heavy artillery. The arsenal was protected and 100 guerrillas were
As terrorist activities continue to increase, governments have been faced with the threat of a terrorist attack by the terrorists or meeting their demands. The issue becomes more complicated when the terrorists show signs that they intend to kill if it becomes necessary.
Attempts are now being made
Daily killings cease to shock
The Arab raiders slipped through the barbed-wire fence shortly after dark—armed with grenades, hatchets and spears across the barren Golani Heights to the Israeli farm settlement of Raman Magshimim, burst into a dormitory on the island and standup against the wall and shot him in the head. "How can you do this? We are not armed," another Israel teenager screamed. They snatched a smashing wrench with a hatchet.
Terrorism is a battle of nerves—the nerve of the brash terrorist who fervorously户 of their would-be victims. And it is waged daily in airports, markets and the millions around the world.
raid in Lebanon. Last month's killings in Northern Ireland brought the death toll to 1,409 since the tectonic violence erupted six and one-half years ago. There is no accurate estimate but reputable terrorist attacks in the MidEast.
prehension has become a way of life. Most terror attacks are not designed to eradicate any specific individual. Sometimes, they aren't even noticed as a member of a specific group. They are only concerned with killing.
By Betty Haegelin Associate Editor
The numbers involved have ceased to shock. Each day we
IRA gunmen flagged down a private minibus carrying 11
are bombarded by news reports of a bombing in Ireland, a kidnapping in Amsterdam, a commanded
MARK MAYER
Protestant workers home to the village of Bessbrook. They ordered the Catholic driver to "make yourself scarce," then
poured a fusillade of more than 100 rounds into the bus. All but one were killed. "My God," moaned the uncle of one victim, "I don't know what these people want."
For the most part, the terrorists are a confident group—confident because they control their activity. Seamus Twomey, one of the most notorious IRA fugitives, explained it simply. "How can a guerrilla organization ever be successful," he win. I just don't know whether I shall be see to it."
Western leaders have decried the use of terrorism against foreigners, Queen Elizabeth II urges firm subjects to "stand firm against intel and senseless extremism in other nations not only condone
but also support, encourage and harbor terrorists. Syrian President Hafer Fazal assaid said that "it is our conviction that they (Palestinian com- manders) conduct their battles from any part of the Arab homeland. And that includes Syria."
Increasingly, diplomats and representatives of conflicting viewpoints have been marked for murder. Ross McWhirter, co-founder and co-editor of the Guinness Book of Records organized a fund to reward the capture of terrorists. He found in the head and chest in the doorway of his burge.
Turkish ambassador to Iran ISrail罕ezre paid no attention when the Turkish ambassador to Austria was shot to death by three gunmen. "If they want to kill me,
they can shoot me in the street," he said. The next morning he was sprayed with aerosol from the car and are crossed at a bridge.
The list of dignitaries, notables and industrialists that are bit by these attacks could fill 20 pages—but still it is likely that the unknown that express the true horror of terrorism.
Al Humani, 13, and Yusef Dib, 11, left their village of Bayayaida in southern Lebanon to hunt birds with their hand-knives. They used a claw on a crest, 30 Israel jets screamed in over the Lebanese coast and the boys were shot down as they ran. In all, 199 men, women and children were raided that day on the Palestine refugee camps and nearby villages.
to reach an international agreement on the way to handle terrorists. The United States, which maintains a strong stand against terrorism, demands, has called for an international conference. U.S. officials point to the international agreement on sky-jacking as evidence of what can be said about Cuba and Algeria agreed to no longer grant asylum to skyjackers, occurrences of the crime diminished considerably. There is hope that the denial of safe havens for terrorists will be deterred as it was deterred sky-lacking.
Another effort is being made by the international ministers of the nine Common Market Countries, who are planning a meeting to discuss ways of combating terrorism. And the presidents of Venezuela and Colombia are in special session of the United Nations General Assembly to discuss the subject.
An international stand against terrorism, in the past, has been opposed by Communist nations, the Arab countries and their supporters. Tunisia is the only Arab state that has signed a U.N. agreement, approved two years ago, to establish Assembly, requiring prosecution or extradition of terrorists who commit crimes against diplomats.
But the seizure of the OPEC
ministers hit the Arab countries directly, leading some observers to believe that they might join a campaign against terrorism. Several Arab governments denounced the OPEC attack as rash and dangerous, and criminals. Even the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) condemned the terrorists.
The problem is far from solved though, because what is considered a terrorist by one country is all times, common and a battle for another. Recently the PLO has been allowed to join in the Mideast debate in the U.N. Security Council. The PLO's repressive activities could have been was asked recently what would happen if the United Nations couldn't reach an acceptable Mideast agreement and whether the world should anticipate an upsurge of Islamic extremism like Kaddoum replied, "We will not abandon our political side. We have no alternative but to fight and we can expect you will escape our societies... We will be good warriors and we are fond of you."
As long as some countries give into the terrorists demands and others offer them political asylum, the terrorists groups will find violence more effective than that of the terrorists and the terrorists pride for their warrior activities, may lead to increased violence in the future.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekly
column. Subscription prices vary by
period periods. Second-class postage paid at Law-
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Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--864-4810
Business Office--864-4258
Editor Carl Young
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Betty Hanggel Yael Abouhalkah
associate Campus Editor
Fair About
Associate Campus Editor Greg Hack Jim Bates, Assistant Campus Editors Jim Bates Photo Editor Dennis Porter Stuff Photographers David Cressman, Staff Editor George Millner, Allen Quakerbush Sports Editor Steve Schoonfeld Entertainment Editors Steve Schoonfeld Entertainment Editors Mary Ann Huddleton Copy Chiefs Janet Mature, Grean May Artist Alison Gwenn News Editors John Hickey Ben Anderson, Wire Editors Kelly Scott, Chuck Alexander, Contributing Writers John Johnson, Jim Bates
Business Manager Rosy Parris
Day Point
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Company Banking Litchfield Bank
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Sales Associate Sales Assistant
Classified Manager Debbie Service
Manager Promotion Manager Scotch Bust
Promotion Director Manager George
Assistant Manager Gina Jim Marquant
Assistant Manager John Martinez
John Martin
Publisher
David Diet
News Advisor Business Advisor
Susanne Shaw Mel Adams
Tuesday, February 3. 1976
বিভাগের মধ্যে শুরুতে একটি ব্যবস্থা নেই।
5
Mismanagement inquiry
From page one
that the city adopt a system for nonnying employees who aren't meeting job requirements. The system would set a standard for the number of times an employee be notified of inferior job performance before being fired.
GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE
CITY MANAGER Buford Watson said he and the city department heads considered the criticism of the city's evaluation system to be justified and recommended that the city require an employee evaluation every March.
Supervisors could evaluate employees more frequently than that, Watson said, but the March evaluations would consider job performance throughout the year.
The report suggested that the city explain to all employees the process of filing a grievance and that assistance be available when grievances are filed. The report also recommended that employees be allowed at least one peer at a grievance hearing.
Watson agreed with Argersinger that allowing a peer in a grievance hearing would keep the hearing from being what he called "top heavy" but added that the city manager accompanying an employee to a grievance hearing every time.
"I just don't want someone come in and saying 'I represent so and so,'" Watson said.
CITYVEHICLES
The report recommended that all city vehicles be strictly forbidden for personal use and that provisions for enforcement of such a policy be adopted.
When Watson said problems arose when trying to determine what constituted "personal use," Bims suggested the use of a lark book with all city vehicles
But Argerinsager pointed out that
they would move on, with the miles,
and we would power away.
EMPLOYE PERFORMANCE RECOGNITION
The report suggested that the city adopt some means of recognizing outstanding performers.
The commission generally agreed that some type of award to outstanding employees would have a beneficial effect on employees.
CITY PURCHASING AND
CITY FORCE ASSISTANT
ACCOUNTING SYSTEMS
"I mean, (recognition) in front of your peers can count just as much as money," he added.
The report recommended that the city manager review the present systems of purchasing and accounting to protect against misuse. A section calling for a clearer accounting of the one-half per cent sales tax was struck after the three endorsers of the report expressed satisfaction with Watson's accounting of the sales tax.
FIRE DEPARTMENT
The report recommended that the city provide fire inspectors a vehicle instead of requiring them to use personal cars and make paid in 26 equal payments during the year.
Watson said the city would check into obtaining a vehicle for fire inspectors to be on the scene of any incidents by the inspectors had evolved from a working arrangement to prevent their walking a lot while making inspections and monitoring cars. The city has required inspectors to use their own vehicles.
arrangement might violate a state law that disallows payment in advance of work.
The city will also investigate the possibility of the equal pay period, Watson and others.
Lawrence firemen work on a system of broken shifts, Watson said. He suggested rearranging the working hours more uniformly so that each present system of working every other shift
Workers allege more violations
Lawrence City Commissioners will again turn their attention to city employee grievances at their regular meeting at 7 tonight.
Norman Forer, adviser for the United Public Employees' Association and KU associate professor of social welfare, will lead a study on sanitation workers to the commission.
Forer said yesterday he would "deal with specific harassments, intimidations and threats in violation of the basic constitutional rights" of the sanitation workers. Such activity, he alleged, has intensified recently.
Declining to name those who might be responsible for the alleged harassment, Foreer said he wouldn't release the specifics of his presentation before the meeting.
In other business, the commission is expected to discuss the acquisition of a buildzoer, plans for an addition to the Douglas County Social and Rehabilitation Service building at 319 Perry and various street and sidewalk projects.
The true story that has captivated over 6,000,000 readers.
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for four shifts and then having four days off,
to working one of every three shifts.
It suggested that the board report directly to the city manager.
Samuels a captain in the Lawrence fire department, said Topeka firemen worked under the same working system as Lawrence firemen and suggested they examine the situation there to see whether Topeka's system could be applied here.
Use Kansan Classifieds
The report had recommended an internal security investigation of the police department and that a civilian review board be established for the investigation.
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Bins said he thought the investigating committee had "hunged the whole thing" by the allegations of criminal behavior and mishandment in the police department.
"What I would like to have seen was an internal investigation conducted in the same case," said I. was against that cloak-and-diameter operation of releasing a second report."
However, the commission agreed that these recommendations should be waived because the county attorney's office is now investigating the allegations of criminal conduct.
HENDERSON said the reason the allegations were termed "irregularities" in the first report instead of being listed in more detail as they were in the second one, was that the committee hadn't really documented any of the allegations.
Stanwick agreed that the investigation shouldn't be handled by the city compaigners were willing to cooperate fully with the county attorney's investigation, he said.
Watson said he and Police Chief Richard
Henderson said. "We aren't making them ourselves."
Binns said the idea of a civilian review board of the police department was his idea. He also favor of establishing a permanent board to deal with department and to do away with uncertainty and suspicion that existed in it. He would further review the policies and the administration.
Stanwick later refused to comment on the idea or on the report's allegations of poor working conditions.
Binns said he wasn't after citizens' complaints.
Watson said that most police departments were opposed to such boards. The boards that do exist, are mainly citizens' complaint boards, he said.
"We heard the allegations and that's it."
WATSON RESPONDED to a recommendation in the report of the commission on child abuse, welfare and health.
year of their hiring. He said a majority of the force had attended a three-day workshop at Merninger's Clinic in Topeka last fall, Psychiatric counseling was available to officers under stress related to their jobs, he said.
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On a student's budget that some designers say is "very tight," the only thing cheaper is thum
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Trains are dynamic. But how about ferryls, lake cruisers,
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To be a student, you need to lift a mini train types, think about Euralpass. Same places, same trains (First Class, though), in two-week, three-week, one-month, two-month and three-month passes.
To get a Student-Railpass, you have to be a full-time student, under 26. And both Student-Railpass and Euralpass are sold here through a Travel Agent.
Euralpass wont be able buy them. So plan ahead. We've got a big country waiting.
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Sounds like an incredible bargain. Please send me
free information on Student-Railpass and Euralipass.
Name___
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My Travel Agent is___
STUDENTRAILPASS
6
Tuesday, February 3, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Nuisances recalled on signing day
By STEVE SCHOENFELD Associate Sports Editor
Lloyd Sobek was relaxing at home one night last February when the phone rang. He was pretty sure it was a college coach on his way to the Big Eight football season. It was the Big Eight football season.
Sobek, a freshman tight end at the University of Kansas, picked up the phone and an assistant coach from a Midwestern university was on the other end.
THE CONVERSATION WENT something
away. She walked down to sign on
you," the coach said.
"Coach, I'm not interested," Sobek said. "I'm going to sign with Kansas."
The coach didn't listen, however, and spent the six hours driving down to sign Sobek, a senior at Lee's Summit, Mo., High School. Sobek didn't change his mind; the coach left empty handed, and Sobek enrolled at KU.
SOBEK'S STORY ISN'T too unusual. Of the high school seniors who will sign, one letter-signed student may have gone through the same routine last night.
College recruitters can be persistent. Just ask Sobek, nosegger Dennis Balajama, who played for the Knicks tackle Kirk Tuddus. They all went through it last year. And they remember it well.
One coach at an opposing Big Eight school just wouldn't take "no" for an answer, but I would.
"HE STAYED ARGUND late at night and twice even stayed all night," he said. "I didn’t like it too well because it was sort of a horror to do it, but I got up my bed and sleep downstairs."
Jackson, a 6-4, 252-pound from Maine, said he thought about giving the whole thing when I bought about giving the whole thing.
up and not going to school. It all didn't seem worth it."
Many of the players said the recruiters bothered not only them, but also their interns.
sports
"THIS ONE SCHOOL kept taking to my mother," Jackson said. "They tried to convince her that she should make up my mind for me and tell me to go there. Mom wouldn't do that. She wanted me to go wherever I wanted to go."
Tushua said one coach actually came into his high school and bothered him during the game.
"A LOT of RECRUTERS put on an act to get you to come there," the bobble said. "The one who talks best usually wins. I tried to be very quiet and tell them and tell them straught."
All of the coaches tried hard to sell the players on going to their particular school. Not all of their selling jobs impressed the KU players, however.
Balaiga said, "The whole thing was like a little game. They'd try to get you to go to their school by telling you a lot of stuff. Many times they weren't too honest."
"A couple of schools tried to get me to cancel some of my visits," Tushaus said. "They told me I should never go to KU because I could never win there."
"THEY ALSO TOLD that coach Van Zandt (Lance Van Zandt, assistant head coach and defensive co-ordinator), who was recruiting me, didn't stay at a school very long, and he just might be at our school in the next year or two."
Another player said the coaches disregarded other schools when they were required to play.
Tushaus said he was told by one coach that he would start for his school during his freshman year. Tushaus said he knew the coach used that line on all recruits.
Three of the four players said they were offered things they knew were illegal.
Sobek said, "Someone from one of the other Big Eight schools—he's on probation now—was talking to me about something when I told him I liked the leather jacket and I liked that shirt. But if you sign right now I'll get you a leather coat and a ring just like it,"
"ONE PERSON OFFERED me a car," Jackson said. "I knew right away he was putting on a show. A car would have been nice, but I knew the NCAA didn't allow it."
Balagma said he was offered money to sign.
"THIS COACH OFFERED it to me," he said, "I just couldn't accept it, and I told him that if I was going to come to his school some come without any extras being offered."
None of the players said the KU coaches offered them anything illegal.
When it finally got down to making a decision, players said it was tough decision.
"I'd list the coaches, the players and the facilities of each school I'd gone to and rate them," Tushua said. "I went to Arizona State, fell in love with the place and didn't go to leave. But then the next week I go somewhere else, and I'd feel the same way."
The players admitted there were fun times while they were being recruited. After a while, the fun began to wear off, but the recruiting wore on.
"Everywhere you wont you'd go to bars,
get plastered and rowdy," Balagna said.
That was great fun at first. But everything
was different, including the same thing.
I was glad when it was all over."
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL—KU travels to Maryville, MO, today to play Northwest Missouri State, the first of three road games for the Jayhawks in the coming week. Their next home game will be a week from today against Wichita State.
sports shorts
AUDIO
In a match preceding the KU-K-State game Saturday, the women capitalized on their opponents' efforts and trounced Corning of Topeka, 86-43. Karen Schneller and Adrian Mitchell led KU with 19 points each.
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---
Student Elections-Feb.18 & 19 Filing Deadline-Wednesday, Feb.4
Class officers will be elected for soph., jr., and sr. classes. 102 seats will be elected. Filing forms may be obtained in the Student Senate office, 1O5 B Kansas Union. The filing fee is $5. The Senate seats are open from:
Grad. School 21 Journalism 3
Arch. & Urban Design 2 Law 2
Business 4 Pharmacy 2
Education 7 Soc. Welfare 3
Engineering 6 LA&S 19
Fine Arts 7 Nunemaker 26
Senators from Nunemaker College will be elected from the 5 districts outlined below. Questions about the districts should be referred to the Senate Office at 864-3710. Get involved and vote on the 18th or 19th!
.NUNEMAKER SENATE DISTRICTS.
All Out of Town
G.S.P. Hall
J.R.P.
Chi Omega
Gamma PhI Beta
Sigma Kappa
5
5 seats
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Delta Chi
Triangle
Delta Tau Delta
Templin
Lewis
Hashinger
McCollum
Alpha Chi Omega
Delta Upsilon
1
5 seats
Sigma Nu
Kappa Sigma
Alpha PhI
Alpha Delta PI
4
5 seats
Corbin
All Scholarship Halls
Kappa Kappa Gamma
Sigma ChI
Kappa Alpha Theta
Beta Theta PI
Acacia
2 6 seats
Ellsworth
Nalsmith
Evans Scholars
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Lambda Chi Alpha
PhI Kappa Theta
Alpha Gamma
Alpha Kappa Lambda
PI Kappa Alpha
3 5 seats
Oliver
PI Beta PhI
PhI Kappa Psi
Sigma PhI Epsilon
PhI Kappa Sigma
PhI Delta Theta
Phi Gamma Delta
Alpha Tau Omega
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
City of Lawrence
state on covered printer ints
Tuesday, February 3, 1978
University Daily Kansan
7
Award-winning drama opens in Inge theatre
The first production of the semester for the University of Kansas William Inge Memorial Theatre Series will start at 8 tomorrow night in the Inge theatre.
The play, "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground," was written by William Hanley and won the 1985 New York Obie Award for Best Play.
The play's director, Anne Abrams, New York graduate student, said yesterday that the play was a tight, intense drama in which she characterizes these characters perform with each other, she said, countering, measuring and confronting one another throughout the play. Each of the characters feels guilt over the death of a loved one, she
The staging of the play on a circular stage heightens and intensifies the audience's involvement with the characters, Abrams said. The set is behind, above and around the audience, making the entire theatre a single environment, she said.
THE THEATRE floor has been raised on an incline to increase the intensity she said.
The play's setting is a candy store in the factory section of Brooklyn. The store owner is taking inventory one night in 1982 when a young man, who seems to be runaway from the police, enters the store. Later, a college girl looking for an abortionist comes in.
Lambriyin Helen Hedge, Brooklyn graduate students, plays the pregnant college girl. Hedge said that the play was cute and that she was excited about her role in it.
It is difficult for only three actors to carry a two-and-a-half hour play, she said, but it will be much easier.
Acting on a round stage is also challenging. Hedge said. Hedge's back will be to part of the audience at all times, so her body movements will have to be especially expressive, she said. Because the theatre's seating capacity is only 100 people, and the audience will be so close, Hedge said, every gesture and facial expression can be seen.
"THAT NICE, that's luxurious," Hedge said. "You don't have to shout."
Robert Smith, who plays the candy store owner, is a visiting professor of theatre from Western Michigan University at East Lansing. "I was a 'man with a story to tell,' a story rooted deeply and vividly in his nery sytem, a story he had not told anyone in 23 years."
Smith said he was pleased with the staging of the play. There won't be the
traditional 22 feet of space between actors and the audience, he said.
The part of the young black man will be played by Brayce Sayles, Aichron freshman.
Glover . . .
PERFORMANCES will "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground" will run from Feb. 4 to 13.
From page one
"I rather doubt that it will clear the House," he said
cannot have long range genetic damage." ONE COMMITTEE MEMBER, J. H. "Kleveres, R-Witcha, said he wanted to talk with Glover personally before he voted on
Neither committee chairman Carlos Neither committee chairman Carlos R-Bonner Springs, nor vice chairman Lloyd Buzz, R-Lawrence, could be reached for comment last night.
Glover said he wasn't upset by a recent poll conducted by State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, which revealed that 57.4 per cent of 600 people answering a newspaper questionnaire were opposed to decriminalization measures.
"You have to take their sentiments into consideration," he said, "but how many times do it have to be pointed out that society isn't always right?"
He said society had made great "great mistakes," citing prohibition and the Vatican's crackdown.
ANOTHER POLL, conducted in
Downtown Hosier, Missouri,
Superior, Neb., is released by
Glead, s.p.
Hobson polled county attorneys in 10 north-central Kansas counties, Glover said, and found four who agreed with decriminalization, two who would enforce his specifications, two who were indifferent to their laws and two who opposed decriminalization.
"I think if people back home will think about it, they'll know I'm doing the right thing," Glover said of the bill. "I share why we do it and that's why I'm introduced this bill."
LEGISLATORS, especially those in conservative areas, should impress upon their constituencies that the bill would be approved by members from criminal prosecution, he said.
Under the amended proposal, people will be subject to police apprehension, but may be cited as if they had violated a traffic ordinance, he said.
FRESHMAN CLASS MEETING
WHEN: Tues., Feb. 3 7:30-9:00
WHERE: Jayhawk Room on the 5th level of the Union
WHY: Find out what your officers plan to do with your dues. Also tell them any ideas you might have.
Class of '79 Officers:
Scott Morgan—Pres.
Leslie Green—Treas.
Russ Engel—V.-Pres.
Sue Rieger—Sec.
TIME TO
UPDATE
YOUR
IMAGE?
Goldnecker Optical
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Accommodations, goods, services and emp-
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client's personal information, custody
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custody of client's RING
BING card and passport.
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times
15 words or
fewer $0.20 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
$0.20 $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 Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
**round items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 861-4553.**
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
864-4358
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on your high hijack equipment other than factory 'dams' or out-of-products, the LESM is the best option at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIERFS. 1f
Tremendous selection of guitars, saxes, drums,
bassists, percussion instruments. Shop "Nose Keyboard Studios, Choose from Gibbons,
Acoustics, Kraton, Greco, and many others."
Armory Kraton, Greco, and many others.
After 1998, Nose Keyboards Studio,
armory a
COST PLUS 16% - Stereo equipment. All master disks are included in the package. Phone: Drive. Phones: 822-754-3000.
We can make your stereo sound better--GUAR-
RANT. We also have two earbuds. Details at Audio Systems, 307 E. Ferry
Quitting business, sale—bargain! Everything we need is here. We can order a large furniture. Large building full of merchandise. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. We also have plants. (Hwy 40, Open 9-6, seven days. Bid #83410 - 219.)
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERES Thousands of
tickets. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 180 page,
career calling. Research Assistant, Los
alto Iafo, Idaho 2206, Los Angeles, California.
4-123 (217) 477-8472
Alternator, Starter, and Generator. Specialists.
ELECTRIC, 843-969, 900-919, BELL AUDIO
ELECTRIC, 843-969, 900-919, W 40h
POTION RARLER coupon in your people book
LOCATED IN BIGKONG, $15 Vermont. Men-Sex-
38-40
J. HOOD BOOKSELLER welcomes new and re-used books we can serve you in the coming months. We will serve you in the coming months. We both handover and print, prate paperbacks, in most cases, and have a print photography, etc. We also offer prints, records, magazine prints. Come in and browse our areal all-inclusive bookstore. All are available Monday, 1003 Mackenzie Avenue, Montreal, Canada 1 418 762 4165.
1600 Impala, very good condition. All power.
stereo, new tires. Fire nuts. 841-6710. 2-3
833 Pender Precision bias, three year old K
Band 829 Precision bias, cymbol. Call Joe at Jae 828.
C for Bat at 842-7616
1 pair of Cerwin-Vega 211 speakers in great condition.
Call 843-2029.
2-3
Newly admitted medical students: I have a new four objective, 1000X oil immersion microscope and a three-volume reference book, all essential books for KUMC. Good prices. Avoid the bookstore kit off. Call Cerry at 843-2898. 2-3
1974 Corvette Call, very nice, fully equipped,
23.00 miles Call, late night, 2-4
9:45 AM
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Decorative Items. The Furniture & Appliance Centre, 794
Dunfermline Road, Glasgow.
Yakissi 8520 35 Rangginder with wide angle
60-250 mm 42.5 fm lens—like nikon Nikkor 50
90-250 mm 42.5 fm lens—like nikon Nikkor 50
200-700 mm 42.5 fm lens—like nikon Nikkor 50
Drab Weather Weather have to have a mean drah heat:
Rolling Hills Drust Store, Reg. $45.90,
Rolling Hills Drust Store, Reg. $45.90,
- All the Lawrence store stores have good prices.
* Some stores are open 10am to 7pm.
* Lawrence Bookstore, about 4 blocks west of Lawrence,
www.raymondbooks.com.
COST PLUS 10%
Into Kinky pets? Colombian Robin Boa.
Approx. 3 feet, eat good, and very douce. $25.
...
.
Samples—Nationally acclaimed women's sportswear. Size 9 samples. New shipment-over 300 sizes is under retail. The Banner Exchange, 300 Oak, Benchmark, Springs, Kus. Turs-10-5.
Priced to sell: three pairs of 190% 175%
175% used. Use #824. 183-106. 2-4
Revoct A77 tape recorder with built-in speaker
wire. Antique crown pump organ, oak, rear-
ward 500. Antique crown pump organ, oak, rear-
ward 500. Antique wainten tusk. 500. Portable W18-18
wireless guitar, classical guitar, classical
guitar, made in Spain, $150
FOR SALE 50mile Lions down coat. AKA tumour
removal kit. 7414 Dailey cassette. Unicyle X16.
186k, Rich
1923 WY. STANDARD BUG. RED, 45,000 miles
1923 WY. 842-6447 after 6:30 p.m. please.
2-5
71 Mazda RXS, Automatic, Air. Rrion, console.
814-4300, Loaded with extra Mats.
814-4300
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold and silver work. Miniature sculpture, conveniences, fine farm, any design can be executed. B.F.A. degree in stone, craft, large variety of unusual stones.
Zoom Lens 85-200w/filters, excellent condition.
841-1437
2-5
Twin Reverb guitar amp. Excellent. $550. 943-
2790 2-3
2 Goodyard 15" steel batten radial snow trees.
months old $4. Call 811-2589.
2-6
Must sell--1966 VW Sedan. Great engine, body and interior. Call Betty at 864-2077 or 864-4810.
2-4
NIKON LENS 135mm f/2.8. One month old, excellent condition, barely used. Perfect condition, $69 best offer. I need the perfect condition to fit my camera.
Garrard x-10 automatic furnishable with walnut
and duck cover. d40 or best offer Call 862
8690 and duck cover.
Police scanner, Midland 8 channel, Mobile unit,
841-4422, 2-6
Baldwin Electric Guitar--New strings, great string.
$175. Call 865-1841. 2-9
Clothing sale. Buy one at regular price, price
item 56c. Repeat Performance, 1422 West, 23rd
街。
1/3 off turpentine and coral jewelry plus
1/2 off turpentine. Repairs Performance Shop,
West 3rd
Red 2nd
"Found advertisements are sponsored as a publication. The state bank, 10 & Kentucky and Malls Shopping State Bank, 10 & Kentucky and Malls Shopping State Bank."
LOST AND FOUND
One pair brown framed glassed, lost Wed, Wet of 4581. In Allen. Reward. Call Dave at 2-300-6481.
Set of keys found outside Malott. Call and identify.
841-6832
2-5
Lost: Small female, part-collure, red collar, Toxica
knapsa tag Lhnda. 842-7579
2-3
Lott1. One pair tortoise shell, photo brown eyes
in-between. URGENLY "NEEDED!" Lott2. None
Lost: A gray cat--Jilim. He has 2 cuts over both ears. He is a girl. 2-3 Hampshire, call Kate, 649-7800. 2-3
Neck: neckace, gold heart pendant lost between
Robinson and Malot 1/28. Reward: 814-829, 2-54
Lott: Maynard, a 5 month old male beagle,
Kentuckie at Kentuckie Night
Wednesday, 8:41 – 9:30,
841-260-367.
Found: 1 key on a leather key ring behind Wescoe on keys. Call and identify, 8614-389-2. 15-8
Found: small hare & black male evening near countryside. Fully equipped. If no air con, free to arrive.
Found: T1 Calculator in 209. Blake. Call Rom. 2-5
863-740-746
Found: Pair of light brown rimmed glasses in flowered case. Call Tom. 842-6490.
Found: Pernille Saison found near 9th & Kem-
tucky. Call 843-9244.
2-5
Found. Before Christmas—man's watch. Call 842-5000 after dinner and identify
Found: Bag of laundry at 25th and Lazboybrick
Lane. Call 842-7268. Identify. 2-5
Found: Parker Fountain Pen on Frontier Ridge
Hill; Call and Identify 9.5
Found: Young orange tom cat in front of Snow
Call: 841-1300-1299
2-5
Would person who found C. Savage's bus pass please contact at 684-6739.
2-9
WANTED
BOOMMATE> Mab, exceptionally quiet large lerf
BOOMMATE> Mab, exceptionally quiet large lerf
boommate> someone who needs to study in Neiwitz
boommate> someone who needs to study in Neiwitz
Boommate: Wanted. Immediately, Jayhawker will give you a 60-day contract. Will cut t-month bill by $450. Fully furnished, dishes, utensils, appliances paid for. Must pay $1793-$1723. Ask I. No answer. Keep trying.
Roommate wanted immediately. Female to share
roomhouse bed, good location. Call 4-647-
3182.
MALE BOOMMATE wanted. Rent is $25.00 and
graduate course. Interview. If interested, call 822-
5977 after b.
Formal roommate wanted until end of semester.
Formal roommate wanted on Feb. 6.
2-5 mo.
@a843-1030
www.a843-1030.com
Gung overseas, DESPERATLY need home attention for 2 cats and 2 older kittens. Call us
Wanted Care and companionship for young
children. Schedule with the child you must provide transportation to and from school.
Male roommate to share Jayhawk Towers Apt.
Call 841-6137
2-5
Mellown female roommate needs to share 12 ×
12 rooms with extra fees. Privacy respects
843-680, 883-836, 883-840
Need female roommate to join two other girls in relaxed living atmosphere. 3 bdm. duplex,跪 carpeting, garage -nineet $25 plus tax,跪 carpeting, Gall and talk to sate in or Chris. 845-6492. 2-5
Needed two- easy going people to join two other girls and have a bed in a well kept older 5 bridesmaid. House, Closet, Cupboard, downstreet. No pets or black-lite posters please. $20.50 each plus ¼ units. Joe and Marcia $40.00 each plus ½ units.
Pat Read
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIA
Room 203 701 Mass.
842 1296 10:55 Tues. Sat.
10-5 Tues.-Sat.
Female roommate would immediately forpair
with campus $60 plus 1.7 utility $
843-791-791
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls, please) at WESTBEST MOBILE HOMES, 30 W. 8th st., Lawrence KS. 76052
FOR RENT
Free rental service up to the minute Littals of
Lawrence in Lawrence, Lawrence.
Rental Exchange. 642-298-3500.
2. bdrm, all usit, paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfree. Park free, a/c, pool, bc-483-4993.
bcdrm
30 sq.ft 3 bdm. apartment near campus; park-
ing lot; efficiency apartment, utility
tiles paid 843-9579
Roommate wanted to share 2 bd.椅, apt. central
1 Ubkei from campus | Campus D. et al.
5 Tuebei from campus | Campus D. et al.
Room furnished with, shared kitchen and bath
room, double en-suite shower, double
efficient apt for near male near. No府
house.
Female roommate wanted to share nice two-bedroom, apartment. One block from campus. Must be clean and preferred non-smoker. No pets. No children. Non-smoking. 2-6 Lynch Real Estate, 843-1001. 2-6
Fln. App. for 1. Grad or Faculty $125 m.
Appl. for 2. Grad or Faculty $125 m.
1939 after 4.30; Mrs. John Andrews.
2-4
Studio w/kitchen in exchange for housekeeping
baby-sitting, 5 min. drive from NU. KU.
7198 Fitzgerald Dr.
Sublease available immediately on 1 bdm. app-ur-
ment $165 monthly. Call 824-1455.
TYPING
Experienced typist. I.B.M. Select, thesis, dissertations and term papers. Call Pam Kain, 824-507-1234.
Experienced typist-term paper, theses, mice, mice.
Experienced typist-term paper, theses, mice,
spelled correctly. 843-6554 Mr. Wright.
I do damned good typing, Peggy. 812-4476. 3-2
Typing—experienced in dissertations, theses, papers. Send resume to: J.B. Lichtenberg, Pica. carbon calligraphy. Call us: 843-808-988.
Typist/editor, IBM Pica cello. Quality work. Email: typist@ibm.com. dissertations texts. S-11
842- 142- 917
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable,
sufficient labor, appropriate pay, legal
law, safe, electric, B.A. Social Science
background.
TYPING for dissertationses, those term papers,
photographs, slides, etc., which are dependable and accurate. Carry Harvard or Lindbeck.
Expt. typi, IBM Selectric, paper types, papers.
Env. typi, IBM Selectric, reading, writing spelled
coefficients, Jeann. 841-369.
NOTICE
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
lamps, lockers, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12:30
PM to 7:30 PM.
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, on the Quick Copy Center. can make copies from a large set of paper in action for all of your copying and printing needs. fit a 841-900. setts. 841-900.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
training from our certified driving instructor.
transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
Knitting, crochet, needlepoint and crewel embroidery classes begin soon. Classes cost $13 plus materials and last 6 weeks. A $5 deposit in due balance will be required at Crewel Board, 15 Easth 81, 841-2666.
Thursday in DANNON YOGUER Day at Round Corner Drug Store—Plain and flavors—801 Mass. 2-4 840-0200 SKI—Mont Bleu is open, 10% less loss
SKI-Mетель Blu is open, 106°C under raw water. It has a capacity of 80 liters/m². The unit can be charged at 8 m³/h, 10 m³/h, 15 m³/h, 20 m³/h, or 25 m³/h.
Attention! Opening demonstration and first meet-
talk Thursday, 6 p.m. p. 172. Robinson, he is
Friday, 6 p. p. 173.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
10th & 8th Bases
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CENTERED
15 East 8th, 844-2644
10:5 Monday-Saturday
ELECTRONICS SERVICE Professional, efficient repair of devices and portable TVs. Work with customers to meet their needs.
SERVICES OFFERED
Wanda Grammar at the Ramada Inn Beauty
Haircare in haircuts for men and women
842-900-8000
842-900-8000
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 142, 500, 558, 567. Regular students or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7651.
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Vita Restaurant on West Eighth St. Open daily
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THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Foosball
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2
Tuesday, February 3, 1976
University Daily Kansan
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
COLDER
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.79
Magazines now more accessible
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, February 4.1976
See page 8
Committee plans debate between Tasheff.Shapiro
A debate between student body presidential candidates will be jointly sponsored Feb. 10 by the Student Senate Elections and Communications committees, Kevin Flynn, communications committee chairman, said yesterday.
Both the Big 8 Room and the Jayhawk Room in the Kansas Union will be opened to make one large room for the debate. Flynn from 7:30 p.m. time for the debate is from 7 to 8:30 p.m.
MARCO PIZZA
The candidates, Tedde Tasheff, Wichita junior, and Dave Shapiro, Lawrence junior, each submitted lists of 10 persons who were the moderators of the debate. Flvyn said.
Bruce Woner, elections committee
creator, said the states had agreed
to the plan for $25.
The two lists were compared and Tom Curzon, senate executive secretary, was selected to moderate the debate, Flynn said.
Each candidate will have 10-minute opening remarks and the moderator will flip a coin to decide who speaks first. Wonderful questions will be fielded by the moderator and each candidate and his vice presidential running mate will have three minutes to respond to the questions.
These two committees already have the structure to organize a debate, he said. The committees have the resources to handle the arrangements and they can do the advertising to let the student population know that it is going to be conducted. Werner said.
Since a debate between the candidates is inevitable, it made sense that the Elections Committee and the Communications Committee sponsor one. Woner said.
ALPINE
Both candidates will have to answer each question, Woner said, to eliminate part of the problem of loaded questions being presented in the audience to trip up candidates.
The debate will generate interest and publicity for the Senate elections, Woner said, and when interest is up more people will vote. It will also give students a chance to look at the candidates' personalities, he said.
Flynn said the debate would let the candidates challenge each other on cam-paign.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER Make it with everuthina
Although this 16-inch pizza doesn't have it all, it certainly has enough, enough to fill that. By the time it's cooked and devoured, one or more pizza enthusiasts should be ready.
Mismanagement charges outlined by city workers
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
Workers' lives and livelihoods are jeopardized by city management including the Lawrence City Commission, Norman Forer, adviser to the Lawrence Sanitation Employees Association, told the commission last night.
At the conclusion of Forer's presentation, Mayor Barkley Clark denied the accusation, saying he resented Forer's role in her "aggritement" on the part of the commission.
Clark's comments were repeatedly interrupted by angry sanitation workers, who lined the walls of the commission meeting room.
FORER CHARGED that harassment and threats against sanitation workers have increased during the past 10 days and that an attempt was made to run down one worker with a bulldozer at the city landfill. He said the driver of the bulldozer appl
Forer said he would meet with Douglas County Attorney David Berkowker today to talk about the charges against him.
City officials are willfully trying to prevent the workers from organizing, he said, which is a violation of the First Amendment right to association.
He charged also that workers were dismissed from their jobs without due process, which is a violation of the Fifth Amendment.
FORER SAID he was representing the workers because a memo from City Hall had instructed that they forbidden the workers from bringing their grievances to the city commission. According to the memo, Forer said, workers may lose their jobs if they obey the order.
"I don't claim to have a monopoly on the truth," he said. "I've come to tell you what I've heard, what people have told me, what I heard, what people have told me. I believe to have a ring of authenticity."
"I don't think anyone here can claim they don't know what's going on. Not here. Not
CLARK SAID FORER was "totally dead"
CLARK SAID FORER trying to
prevent freedom of association
"Norman, you have become so
Pizza gets dough from students
In one week, the six pizza businesses in Lawrence combined use more than 5,400 pounds of dough, 3,400 pounds of cheese and flour to accommodate Lawrence's pizza eaters.
Maybe it's dinner time and no one wants to cook. Or maybe the bars have just closed and everyone has realized that he's famished. For whatever reason, University of Kansas students have helped make pizza-making an institution in Lawrence.
The pizza shops in Lawrence do most of their business between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m., and several owners said there was a second crowd between 9 p.m. and midnight.
No matter what form the urge for pizza might take, there is probably a pizza in Lawrence that will satisfy it. The gamut runs from a basic eight-inch cheese pizza with a 10-inch Pizza Pepper and a 18-inch pie, with 15 toppings, costing $12.00 at the Green Pear.
THE GREEN PEPPER's 16-inch pie has everything from pineapple slices to sauerkraut and Debbie Lessman, the Green Pepper, said they haven't sold any of them yet.
The managers and owners of Lawrence's pizza shop offered different reasons for the change.
Casey Johnson, manager of Shakespeare's pizza, said pizza was popular "because you can split it up and everyone gets some."
"It's a recreational food, Dennis Hirsch," manager of Ken's Pizza Parlor, said. People don't usually use pizza for a complete meal. They come in after meetings or football games to talk and drink some beer."
Only Henderson differed from the other owners and managers, saying the company was doing well.
Most owners interviewed said business remained about the same, even though the number of pizza shops had doubled to six over the last two years.
Four of the owners said that fall semester was the time of the greatest pizza consumption, and the other two said sales were about the same during both semesters.
*students don't do as much studying in the fall.* Henderson said.
The most popular toppings for pizza, the pizza shop owners agreed, are sausage, cheese and ham.
Gerald Durham, owner of the Campus
ideaseway, said it is a lot of food for not
much money.
Mike Miller, assistant manager of the Green Pepper, said that the crowds from
Johnson said that being a pizza lover can have its drawbacks. He said he remembered a night when he got sick from overexposure to the combination pizza: pineapple and olive.
Cross said that up to two slices from a 14-inch pie should be about the limit for a person on a diet, because of the calories pizza contained.
"But," Cross said, "I'm not saying that it's something you should eat all the time."
the football games are part of the reason for the increase in the niga business.
Both Lessman and Henderson said that about 25 per cent of the pizzas they sold were delivered. Durham and Kevin Brady, manager of the Pizza Hut, said that deliveries accounted for less than 20 per cent of their total sales. Johnson said that Tespease's delivered about 40 per cent of the pizzas because they have no dining room.
Jim Thompson, manager of the Straw Hat Paladin Palace, said they have no delivery service.
The pizza shop owners said deliveries increased on weekends and during final week.
Miller said that a true connoisseur of pizzas looks for a pizza that is even browened, with equal amounts of topping for each type. Because most of the pizza is also important, he said.
Marie Cross, associate professor of human development, said pizza is a nutritionally sound meal because it contains all the ingredients needed for a dough, meat in the toppings, milk in the
cheese and vegetables in the sauce and toppings.
Credit practices get low ratings
BY KELLY SCOTT
Staff Writer
In recent years, credit bureaus have come under fire for preventing women from establishing credit ratings in their own names.
In a study released in October 1975, the Kansas Advisory Committee of the United States Commission on Civil Rights announced that it would give equal consideration for credit as men do.
Anyone can be denied credit by a merchant, but women have been most susceptible to another factor that hinders granting of credit: no credit ratings at all.
A bill before the Kansas legislature would establish similar state guidelines for credit, Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said Monday.
IN ADDITION, the state law could save up to $200 in court costs and attorney's fees for women who take their complaints to court.
Glover is a member of the Commercial and Financial Institutions Committee, which drew up the bill and will sponsor it collectively.
A woman may be eligible for credit, but whether she is married, single, or divorced of both parents will determine her eligibility.
THE STUDY was made to determine how much difficulty Kansas women have in getting credit. Under the Equal Credit Opportunity Act, signed into law October 28, 1974, women are guaranteed equal conditional as men when they are creditworthy.
Glover said that even though the federal law had been in effect for over a year, it still has not been amended.
Married women are often either issued cards under their husband's name, or given a card in their name that accrues to an account. The Kansas Advisory Committee wrote.
"It it won't make creditors take undue risks," he said. "It would just require that they take the same risks with women as men."
BOTH THE FEDERAL LAW and the pending Kansas Equal Credit Opportunity Act say that credit bureau must offer that option. It also prohibits discrimination in the awarding of credit on the basis of sex, age, or marital status.
cards in their own names if they're married.
When that happens, who were formerly considered excellent credit risks because of their husbands and who had the responsibility for paying incoming bills for the family, could be denied credit at a store because they didn't have a credit history at all.
Problems a woman can have when one credit file is maintained for a couple often aren't evident until couples separate or divorce. Glover said.
One way to remedy this situation, Glover said, is to allow husbands and wives to request that separate files be kept with their local credit bureau.
"This woman has borne the financial responsibility for the two of them, yet she can be a partner to you."
"The classic example," Glover said, "is the wife who puts her husbands through law or med school, pays the bills, runs the bank, and then has her husband tell her goodbye.
UNDER THE NEW LAW, Glover said.
the woman would get a separate file, and
make for making those payments with her own
Wesley FitzGerald, president of the Credit Bureau of Lawrence, said he favored allowing people to choose whether it was wrong to automatically divide them.
"It wouldn't be fair to make them keep separate files," he said. "Some people don't
radicalized you can't even think straight," he said.
FitzGerald said that some women have called him requesting that they have their own credit file, although the vast majority of files are still merged.
FitzGerald said the Lawrence credit bureau has been separating files upon request, but that the Greater Kansas City Credit office, which covers suburban Kansas City, Mo., and parts of Johnson County, people to voluntarily compare their files.
GLOVER SAID he had few complaints from constituents about credit service in
Fitzgerald said he didn't know why the
secretary buried bureaus didn't give
senator flies.
Clark said, however, that the commission wanted to take action against those who might be harassing workers but that it would require evidence and evidence to support Forer's allegations.
"In Lawrence, there's a certain willingness to be progressive," Glover said. "But in Kansas City, they'll tell you to go fly a kite."
"the bill is not a mandate to keep a
person in prison without opening the
possibility if one person wants it."
"You can't hide behind union affiliation if you're not doing your jobs." Clark said.
Glover said one goal of having a Kansas law that paralleled the federal law was to set up an enforcement procedure in Kansas that was faster and cheaper than the federal
See CREDIT RATING page 2
Arguing that workers' grievances couldn't be debated at a commission meeting, Clark suggested "Force or resistance" to the draft of the bill up a draw of particulars. He said the bill should document the charges and include the names, places, dates and witnesses of the participants.
THE COMMISSIONERS agreed to discuss the evidence at a public meeting at 9 a.m. Saturday in the commission meeting room.
Forer said the workers may take the matter directly to federal court. Following the meeting, he said he would decide what to do within the next two days.
Commissioner Fred Pence said the workers should make reports that could be processed through the city's grievance procedure. His statement drew shouts from the audience that grievances would never reach the commissioners and that Watson had denied interviews with disgruntled employees.
FORER REPEATEDLY asked that he or worker representatives be allowed to participate in the meeting. Clark rejected the idea, saying the commission wouldn't enter into collective bargaining with the workers.
Watson vigorously denied the charge.
See MISMANAGEMENT page 2
10% faculty pay hike too high, McGill saves
By SHERI BALDWIN
House Speaker Dwayne S. McGill, R-Winfield, reinforced his move to cut faculty merit salary increases today by charging that the University of Kansas still could retain top-notch faculty members if salaries were adenately dispersed.
“It’s erroneous and wrong to pass the back to the legislature,” McCill said. “We don’t determine salaries. The fault lies with not creating a larger system of awarding merit salaries.”
McGill said, "Dollars alone are no criterion for top-notch faculty or the retention of a top-quality teaching staff in any institution."
McGill went before the House Ways and Means Committee Monday to urge a 5 per cent increase in the number of staff of a 10 per cent hike. Gov. Robert F. Bennett has recommended the 10 per cent increase as the third and final installment of his new Regents plan for upgrading faculty salaries.
After fighting for a similar 10 per cent increase in last year's legislature, McGill said he informed Bennett, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and Board of Regents members that the 10 per cent increase would be impossible to pass this year.
McGill said he was firmly convinced that Kansans don't support the salary increase because many members of the House had polled their constituents and found that a ratio of more than 2-1 would rather see it cut to 5 per cent.
The ratio was even more firmly against the increase in his own district, he said.
However, you can't even do an adequate job of intermingling the members of the Houssons.
McGill admitted that the questionnaires only had a question of "Do you favor faculty salary increase for institutes of higher education?" No further explanation was given regarding why the increase had been requested, he said.
"I don't have any question that any time you start running government by poll you're in awful bad shape. I wish I'd been able to provide information of that kind."
"I think I adequately reflect their sentiments," he said.
MGill said that he had polled members of the House in November and had received
MGill said he had seen no indication of records whereby KU is losing top-notch faculty because they can't be paid enough or because pay isn't enough to draw them
Dykes said, "I've spent considerable time with Rep. McGill to persuade him of the importance of our needs. I have another in a few days to talk with him mala!"
Much of Dykes's time in Topeka has been much recent contacting legislators, he says.
"Most are taking a position of wait and see at this time," he said. "A number of legislators have spoken out. It's very likely the Senate will approve the increase."
C
It's mine
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Keeping hold of the stick is all Tim Long, Lawrence sophomore, can do as his dog changes a game of fetch into a tug-of-war.
2
Wednesday, February 4, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Kissinaer notes precedent
SAN FRANCISCO—Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said yesterday that Congress would "increase the dangerous precedent" by cutting off U.S. support for Soviet forces in Afghanistan.
Kissinger made the statement in a speech at a joint luncheon of the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco and the World Affairs Council of Northern
Kissinger noted that the United States and its allies can and must prevent Mexico from using its power "for unilateral advantage and political expansion."
Kissinger warned the Soviet Union and Cuba that "this type of action will not be tolerated again." Cuba has about 11,000 troops fighting with the Popular Front.
Although he said the administration didn't want the United States to play the role of policeman to the world, Kissinger emphasized that "It can never be in our interests." He wrote:
Juru selection continues
SAN FRANCisco - A final pool of 36 prospects was selected yesterday for the jury in Patricia Hearst's trial on bank robbery charges.
If the peremptory challenges are exercised as quickly as expected, opening arguments in the much-published trial could begin today—two years to the day.
The selection of the 18 men and 18 women completed five days of closed-door interrogation by the trial judge. The next step will be challenges by both sides—12 for the defense and eight for the prosecution—that will leave the panel of 12 regular tumors and four alternates.
Ford adviser chosen
WASHINGTON—Rogers C. B. Morton was installed yesterday as President Ford's political right-leaning official and that only two months later, his administration and politics can be separated.
Morton said most of his time would be spent working with White House officials, councils and Cabinet members to make sure the President's policies were unchanged.
Since people are voters and policies are issues, he moves into a key role in Fors's campaign to withstand the challenge of Ronald Reagan for the Republican presidency.
Morton said Ford, like his predecessors, was entitled to have political help on the White House staff.
Ford reviews abortion
WASHINGTON—President Ford said yesterday he would oppose a constitutional amendment prohibiting abortion, but preferred one that would give women the right to choose.
"I do not believe in abortion on demand," Ford said in a television interview. But, he added that the must be some flexibility in the law to permit abortion in cases of rape or incest.
A House judiciary subcommittee on civil and constitutional rights begins hearings today on abortion amendments.
Senate leader says there'll be no rebate
TOPEKA (AP)—State Senate President Ross Doyne said yesterday that a look at demands on the state treasury had convinced him there would be no tax rebate or reduction vote by the current session of the Kansas Legislature.
Doyen, R-Concordia, spoke at a forum sponsored by the Kansas Association of Commerce and Industry on the 1976 Senate session.
The senate president even cosponsored with State Sen. Charles Angell, R-Plains, and State Sen. John Simpson, R-Salina, a bill to rebate 12 per cent of the state's income tax revenue for 1974. Those two senators argued for their bill before a Senate vote on it, but a few hours later Doven said he didn't think it would be passed.
Doyen earlier had said he thought state balances might warrant consideration of a one-shot rebate to Kansas income taxpayers from general revenue fund reserves, which were estimated to be as high as $170 million by June 30.
In remarks before the former state Chamber of Commerce's "Caucasus" 76*forum at a downtown Topeka hotel, Doyen said:
"The challenges facing us will take all this money, and I don't look for any refund out of this session of the legislature. We must demand before we consider any rebate."
Doyen had modified his early-session optimism about a tax cut of some kind by saying it would be the end of the session before the lawmakers could see just how much money was available to give back to the tavernaers.
Gov. Robert F. Bennett, a fellow appellant in the state law opposed any kind of tax reduction on wages.
Appering with Doyen at the forum were House Speaker Duane McGill, Senate Majority Leader John Carlin. Each spoke for 10 minutes on issues facing the legislature, then answered questions from the hundred business and industry executives.
MGill talked about a wide range of issues before the legislature, but made predictions about future events that could affect further state unification and creating a statewide district attorney system would be carried over to 1977 in order to help money to fun. the programs at this time.
Carlin suggested the legislature should be more careful about the programs it makes local units of government carry out but doesn't provide any funding for.
"We pass mandates, then forget to fund them and they usually wind up falling on the property tax," the House Democratic leader said.
Carlin also opposed putting the state's community junior colleges under control of the state Board of Regents, arguing it could mean the loss of local control.
Doyen said one of the more serious issues before the lawmakers was whether to approve a 50-year contract to sell the state's share of water in John Redmond Bay, where companies who want it to operate a proposed nuclear power plant near Burlington.
Doyen disagreed with that. He said local advisory boards would be created to advise the relegants and in this way local control could be maintained.
Doyen said it could affect the state's energy picture for years to come, depending upon whether the lawmakers approve the bill or require a full discussion of the matter this session.
The American Revolution gradually changed world thinking in favor of governments controlled by the people, W. Stitt Robertson and others, said last week in the Kansas Union.
Speaker says revolt shifted world thinking
In the fifth lecture of this year's Humanities Lecture Series, Robinson said that all Americans weren't celebrating the Revolution's bicentennial. One group, the Committee for Restoration to Great Britain, has called on American summons to the United States and is publishing papers such as "Yorktown and Watergate: Read to Ruin."
"New ideas were having revolutionary effects on American principles," he said.
But it has also brought the most exciting scholarship in years. Robinson said, causing a broader, more balanced view of the Revolution to emerge.
ECONOMICS WAS one cause of the Revolution, he said, though American merchants often benefited by the preferential markets the British gave them. But many British laws kept America from developing an independent economy.
There was also a secular shift in ideology based on the theories of Isaac Newton and John Hutton, who believed that there were more powerful than religion, he said, because these theories advocated rule by authority.
The main reason for the revolution, however, was to shift central political
This shift caused great personal disputes within the American families of the time. Robinson said. Father and son often clashed over inheritance, and they were the Revolution or the British government.
HE SAID AS an example that although Benjamin Franklin was a patriot, his son, William, the colonial governor of New Jersey, was a loyalist, faith to Britain.
authority from England to America, he said.
Many contemporary observers of the Revolution, such as Thomas Jefferson, estimated that one-third of all Americans would have died from complications another third were neutral, said Robinson.
Recent studies show that the number of patriots grew as the war progressed, but the loyalist troops were fixed at 20 per cent. The numbers were exchanged when they were exiled to Canada after the Revolution.
"It was a classic war between patrons and loyalists," Robinson said. "Patriots kept tar buckets and feathers close at bond."
BLACK PEOPLE, both slave and free, had to choose which side they would take during the Revolution. Early in the war, the British declared any slaves free that would fight for them, he said, forcing the English to attack the seventy-many blacks into service. Of the 300,000 American soldiers at the war's end, he said, nearly 5,000 were black.
Mismanagement . . .
From page one
"You lost that one three months ago," he said.
Forer said his purpose wasn't to push the commission into collective bargaining but rather to encourage rapid solution to labor-management problems.
"While you're trying to revamp things," he said, "It's possible that people might get it wrong."
In his presentation, Forer contended that:
—He had witnesses to personal insults and
atrocious words.
-Workers were deprived of their daily one-half hour work breaks.
—Workers were told to skip lunch or eat in their trucks on their way to the landfill.
couldn't be completed in an eight-hour shift.
— Workers were told to work at work early
General confusion existed in the department.
—Dennis Smith, president of the workers' association, had been taken to city hall and harassed by management. He had been denied witnesses.
- Workers frequently were threatened that they would be fired.
Workers were issued unwarranted reimbursals.
"In 10 months, nothing has changed," Fore said. "If anything, things have got worse."
Solutions to the problems, he said, are:—End "nepistom" by discontinuing the practice of allowing the members of the same family to be foremen.
Hire an administrator appointed by the commission to run the sanitation depart-
- Voluntarily destroy reprimands or refer them to an impartial arbitrator.
Voluntarily reinstate workers who were tired without due process or submit the request.
—Enforce the city's trash packaging ordinance.
-Send a memo from Clark to the sanitation department ordering the reinstatement of an eight-hour day, rotation of the hospital, and one-half hour lunch and break periods.
Send a memo from Clark that anyone from top management to line foreman who violates the workers' right to association should be immediately or possibly discharged.
PITCHERS
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Wednesday
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- Three Wings Lodging at the Nightward Ho Motel on the Strip
- Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 20 at 5 p.m.
INCLUDES:
—Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
PADRE ISLAND March 12-21
Cost $121^{00}
INCLUDES:
LAS VEGAS March 15-20 Cost $105**
- Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
- Seven Nights Accommodations at the Sand Castle Motel
- Private Pool and Fishing Dock
- Kitchenettes (fully equipped)
- Side Trip to Old Mexico
- Lifted State Bus Service
- Beer and Eats Party at Patro
- Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
SUA TRAVEL
INCLUDES:
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
Dillon, Colorado
March 13-19
Cost $137.00
INCLUDES:
GROUP FLIGHTS
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
in your group is planning a trip, see the SAU office about setting up a group flight. Stop by the SAU office and fill out a flight card as soon as possible.
- **Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation** (optional)
- Five Nights Lodging at the Lake Dillon Hotel Inn
- Four Days Skiing (Breckenridge/Copper Mt./A.
- Four Days Rentals (optional)
- Night Trip to Vail, Colorado
- Friday Trips for Bus Run Bike
- Cross Country Skiing Available
Donver . . . . . . . . . . . March 12
Chicago . . . . . . . . . . March 12
$101^{00}
It could take a federal court up to six months to rule in a credit case, Glover said, whereas a Consumer Credit Commission wouldn't take more than three days.
Credit . . .
"When you stop to think that these days, $40 an average per hour attorney's fee, it is worth it."
Strobbelen said she had few complaints from women about bad experiences with lacerations.
$ 6900
"We don't get a lot, but it could be that women don't know they're being treated poorly."
Call 864-3477
IF A WOMAN thought she had been wrongly denied credit, she could plead her case before an administrator of the Kansas Department. She wouldn't need a lawyer, Glover said.
From page one
HELPING STUDENTS GO PLACES IN A WAY THEY CAN AFFORD
The complainant could still choose to file in federal court, he said.
MAKING MORE WOMEN aware of their credit possibilities and introducing a fast, inexpensive grievance system could lead to better treatment of women as credit applicants, Carole Boone Strohbenbue, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, said.
Thursday, Feb. 5 12-5 p.m.
COUNCIL ROOM—Student Union
Rental Fees: Reproductions—75°
Originals—$3-$10
SUA Picture Lending Library
Deadline for sign-up, 10 Days Prior to Departure
LOUISE'S BAR
SPECIAL
Mon.-Thur.
3·4p.m.
Tues.Night
7·8p.m.
Schooners 55¢
Glass 30¢
But it all starts right here...in college...in the Air Force ROTC. Things will look up...so look us up.
No obligation, of course.
And after college, you'll receive a commission in the Air Force...go on to further, specialized training...and get started as an Air Force officer. There'll be travel, responsibility, and a lot of other benefits.
For entry into the 2-year program commencing in the fall 76 term, apply by the end of March 1976. Entry is limited and competitive. Inquire.Apply in Room 108, Military Science Building, or phone 844-647-66.
Next year you could be on scholarship.
An Air Force ROTC 2-year scholarship. Which not only pays your tuition, but also gives you $100 a month allowance. And picks up the tab for your books and lab fees, as well.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
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Wednesday, February 4.1978
3
Economy expected to lag
By FRED JOHNSON
Staff Writer
Although four University of Kansas business and economic professors don't agree on whether inflation or unemployment should be the government's main concern, they do agree that economic recovery will be slow.
The real danger facing the national economy today is that the government may overreact to the slow economic growth by overestimating the economy and start a new cycle of double digit inflation. Charles Krider, assistant professor of business, said Monday.
IT MAY BE SEVERAL years before it can be said that the recession is actually over, he said, but unfortunately a slow recovery will be necessary to prevent another round of high inflation.
"Ford's action so far has been good," Krider said. "He recognized inflation as the main problem and was willing to accept higher unemployment to reduce inflation."
David Sluenger, assistant professor of business, said it was difficult to predict what Ford and Congress do to stimulate the economy this year.
"Historically, election years are years of economic growth," he said. "The government usually stimulates the economy to make the voters to relect incumbents."
Shulenburge said that an economic growth rate of 10 per cent would be needed to lower the unemployment rate drastically by the end of the year.
THE UNEMPLOYMENT RATE has stayed at 3.3 per cent for some time while the labor force has been growing, he said. Consequently the rate of unemployment
isn't decreasing, but more people are employed, Shulenburger said.
Federal deficit spending in 1978 had helped the economy, he said, and had created a tax burden.
"The fear was that federal borrowing to finance the deficit would raise the interest rate and decrease the demand for money in the private business sector," he said. "That interest and the demand. The interest rate didn't increase and yet the private demand has been slow."
Krider said that borrowing money to create public service jobs only appeared to ease unemployment. If there is a demand for the money in private business, he said, government borrowing simultaneously creates a tax burden and unemployment in private business.
SHULENBURGER SAID public employment could become inflationary once the country pulls out of the recession. If the labor market becomes tight in the private business sector, he said, it could drive up wages and prices.
Sulmenburger said that when the country paled out of the recession, unemployment went up.
"The administration's target of 5 per cent is realistic," he said. "When unemployment rates are high, the government has to do more."
Ronald Olsen, chairman of the department of economics, said that it was difficult to reduce inflation and unemployment at the same time.
THE GOVERNMENT has to spend money or put it in the hands of the consumer to fight unemployment, he said. Inflation is fought by reducing federal expenditures, Olsen said, and limiting consumer buying power through taxation.
Olsen said Ford should concentrate on increasing employment. Inflation has been
Leland Pritchard, professor of economics, said that stimulating the economy, which some congressmen wanted to bring about more inflation and unemployment.
New senate studied
Ashton said the classified senate would
highest in the medical, food and energy industries, he said, which are the industries most needed by the unemployed and low income people.
About 100 Kansas legislators are expected to attend tonight's Fifth Annual Legislators' Dinner, sponsored by the Association of Residence Halls (AURH) at 7 in Lewis Hall.
Annual dinner fetes legislators
IF THE GOVERNMENT really wants to cure inflation and unemployment, he said, it must also provide a just tax system and introduce more competition in the price and labor markets.
"This hospitality dinner is a good way to host the Kansas state legislator of your choice and learn more about our state government," Beth MacCurdy, Leaward sophomore and dinner coordinator, said vearday.
All faculty are members of the faculty senate, and certain faculty members are elected to a faculty council to carry out day-to-day business. The students elect senators to represent them at weekly Student Senate meetings.
—requested that Evelyn Senecal, who is the liaison between the task force and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, discuss a possible means of funding for the new senate.
A University task force designated to study the possible creation of a senate for University classified employees plans to confer with representatives from the faculty and student senates to help decide on a structure for such a classified senate.
probably be a modified version of either the faculty or student senate. She said the task forced want to organize the new senate in a way that is easy to the existing University Senate Code.
Marilyn Ashton, administrative assistant in administrative information systems, who is in charge of the task force, said the force wants to find out from faculty and student senators the drawbacks of their senate structures.
—considered the possibility of permitting temporary members to sit on classified座位
Classified employees are not teaching university employees such as clerical and librarians.
MacCurdy said there had been no problems with the hostels and hosts for this year's dinner.
In other action the committee:
—announced that the committee of the law force would submit their final reports soon.
She said response had been so good that there were more students than needed to sponsor the legislators. Those extra would be used to greet and serve, she said.
Perry Sprague, Stafford, Tex., senior and reservation coordinator, said four Lawrence legislators were expected to be among those attending the dinner. Those members are representatives John Vogel, Lloyd Glover, Michael Glover and Senator Arden Booth.
It wasn't known yesterday that Gov. Bennett would be able to attend the dinner.
SLOW DANCE ON THE KILLING GROUND
A powerful experience in contemporary drama.
William Ingo
Memorial Theatre
February 4 thru 13
8 p.m.
8 p.m.
Ticket information----864-3982
ALLEY SHOP
6 Hour Sale! TODAY noon-6 p.m.!
8 Wool Coats with hoods
Were *57.50 Now $25.00
Large rack of Junior and Misses Sweaters 50% off
Rack of Catalina Sweaters 50% off
India Gauze Shirts
Values to *15 Now $9.90
All Shirts & Pre-Washed Denim Jeans 10% off
Many Other Bargains
SUA Presents:
TED NUGENT
& THE AMBOY DUKES
The Music of John Paul Jones
With Special Guests:
HEAD EAST
Saturday,Feb.14th 9 p.m.Hoch Auditorium Tickets:$6 General Admission $7 Day of Show Available SUA Office-Kief's ON SALE NOW!!
THE HAWK'S NEST
10. Interpret the data in a bar chart.
presents
Thursday, Feb. 5 5-6:30 p.m.
"The 11:30 Jazz Ensemble"
directed by Charles Elliot with featured trumpet soloist Jim Sellards, one of the top professional trumpet players in Kansas City, a KU graduate, returning to his alma mater.
Friday, Feb. 6 8-12 p.m. "Cargo"
Saturday, Feb. 7 8-12 p.m. "Mackender Lynch"
Coors on tap-Coke-Sprite-Peanuts-Pretzels-Popcorn 45c draws NO COVER CHARGE
level 2-Kansas Union
Produced by SUA
Selling something? Place a want ad.Call 864-4358
4
Wednesdav. February 4, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Oinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Movnihan mellows
Daniel P. Moynihan bit the dust at the OK Corral Monday.
He did it with a calmness much unlike the rest of his stay as the United States ambassador to the United Nations, announced that "It is time to teach" to teaching.
However, the erudite professor has, in his own way, been doing just that for the six and one-half months he has been at the United Nations. He has lectured the other U.N. delegates and the world on Zionism, the place of the third world in present diplomacy and myriad other topics.
Moynihan was given the UN position largely because of an article in which he urged Washington to take the offensive against countries that were making the United States a whipping boy at the United Nations.
He accurately described his plans when he presented his credentials to Secretary General Kurt Waldheim July 17
"This animal is not wicked," he said,
but when it is attacked it defends itself.
In doing this he called the General Assembly "the theater of the absurd," Ugandan President Idi Amiin a "racist murderer," a UN committee report on the 1975 islands "rubbish" and the 1875 U.N. session "an alarming disappointment."
Perhaps his most virulent U.N. speech came when the General Assembly approved a resolution Nov. 10 calling Zionism a form of racism. Moynihan declared that the United States "does not acknowledge, it will not abide by, it will never acquiesce in this infamous act."
"the abomination of anti-Semitism"
"the appearance of international sanction."
Moynihan spoke out when others were
afraid to comment and because of this has ranked diplomats in the State Department. Although he often expressed the sentiments of President Ford or Secretary of State Henry Kissinger, his speeches were just as likely self-inspired, which didn't endear him to his bosses.
Twice before, he came close to resigning when he didn't think he was getting the support he needed as the U.S. spokesman. In November, Moynihan withdrew a threat to resign when he received no initial support after the delivery of a speech by the British delegate containing a veiled attack on the United Nations and amidst the storm on the blasted heath," and said that whatever the United Nations might be, "it is not the OK Corral and I am not Wyatt Earp."
Just last week, Moynihan felt compelled to send a cablegram to Kissinger and all U.S. embassies saying that he was being opposed in his campaign to crack the anti-American bloc at the United Nations.
Ironically, Kissinger told a panel discussion in Los Angeles Monday night that America had better unify behind its "enormous potentials for chaos."
It was precisely this chaos that Moynihan was working in the United Nations to avoid. His tough-guy stand united many liberals and conservatives in his support. Thus many Americans were dismayed by the seeming callous attitude of Ford and Kissinger toward Moynihan's forcibly oppressive approach when Moynihan spoke or stepped out of bounds, that Ford and Kissinger had to answer, or stand up for his actions.
And when high noon struck Monday,
Moynihan had to do the same.
By Betty Haegelin Associate Editor
IMAX DUMP—LLL
TOO OFF TO SAVE AS
WE GET BACK TO THE
WHITE HOUSE.
Ford's feet not an issue
Just how clumsy is Gerald Ford?
It's hard to say, really. Nobody could be as clumsy as the increasing number of Gerald Ford jokes say he is. And although it is doubtful whether Ford is the coordinated marvel Ron Nessen seems to think he is, he still gets around very well for a 60-year-old man.
But even if the President were completely uncoordinated, it shouldn't be that important. There are more important issues in the upcoming election than which candidate is the best option and what unfortunate result to vote against Ford and almost any of them are better than "because he falls down a lot."
But a candidate's coordination—or other facets of his personality, such as how he dresses or talks or what kind of wardrobe he uses, is an important factor when deciding whom to vote for.
You could vote against him because of the budget, or Israel, or the CIA, or unemployment, or inflation. You could even vote against him because you don't think he's quite up to the job intellectually.
The present system of primaries, the 30-second profiles on the evening news
and the short commercial announcements don't really give the voter anything but the candidate's personality to decide on. The problem is especially bad when there are almost a dozen Democratic presidential candidates. Little but superficialities can be examined.
When one of these superficialities, such as Ford's clumsiness or Henry "Scoop" Jackson's dullness, is blown even further out of proportion by a press secretary's overreactions and by overreactions to these overreactions, it's surprising that there's any room left for issues at all.
A candidate's personality is, of course, impossible to ignore completely. There's nothing wrong with noticing, for example, that the candidate has an irritating laugh.
It would be nice, however, if people wouldn't vote against Ford just because they think he's clumsy, or—even worse—voted for him because they think people have been picking on him for being clumsy.
There's a lot more than that to worry about this election year.
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
Rv Tim Ratios
SAGNIAW, Mich.—All of us are at least dimly aware—it is impossible not to be aware of the impact of changing technology on our lives. But it is also important upon the political process? It is far more pervasive than is generally thought.
Leaders follow technology
That is the conclusion of a small group of scholars at Saginaw Valley State College who are spending this year in an intensive examination of technology and politics. Having heard from a number of students at Saginaw Valley State College of philosophy, they recently invited a Washington newspaperman to lecture. His was perhaps an application of the Hruska theory of judicial interpretations of government implications of this world deserve a little representation. The faculty members of Saginaw's Academy of Applied Philosophy are concerned, at bottom, with leadership. They believe leadership is a fundamental characteristic of a culture. If so, how is leadership encouraged and nurtured? Why does history reflect periods of active, passionate leadership, the quality of leadership periodically go into a slump? Their immediate concern is with American leadership during the past 25 to 30 years. In the view of many observers, the evidence of a correlation between declining leadership and expanding technology? Are our leaders so bewildered by the rush of events that we experience uncertain sound? The Saginaw scholar suspect this is true.
It is the custom of the academic world to speak of "political science," but politics is seldom a science. It is an art, not a science. The political leader, seeking office, must be skilled in communications; once he wins office, he has to deal with an astonishing variety of issues in the public domain, not, technology has blim down.
This past quarter century has witnessed radical changes in communication. Their impact is but dimly understood.
Sticks have many talents. If
By James J.
Kilpatrick
(c) Washington the Sundale
stations were on the air. We were newspaper and radio oriented and these media are very different from television.
When Harry Truman was running for president in 1948, the computer was no more than a primitive tool. The science of polling had not advanced greatly beyond the Literary
Or are they following sophisticated polls?
Over most of our political history, science has ranked low on the list of priorities in cerms. It was enough that a congressman had a rudimentary knowledge of swords and plowshares. Until recently, only scientists dealt with scientific issues, and their role was modest.
Today the role of television in political communication has assumed immense importance, but it is not so well known but also in defining issues.
If a stick is treated in a humane way, he is a very good pet. He is quiet and easily entertained. If you take him to a lake, he will float contentedly all afternoon. He is also a clean man who doesn't uncontrollably sap but this problem is solved with age.
expected to legislate on oil shale, coal deagnasification, the diseases of shellfish and the disposal of atomic wastes. Does his trumpet give an uncertain sound? It does indeed.
It is small wonder that today's member of Congress, looking at the legislative calendar, feels out of his depth. He has an impact of technology like a stone in his stomach. Somehow he is expected to understand and to demonstrate the quality of wise leadership in atomic fusion, solar energy, sulfuric acid, biofuels, supersonic transport and sequential contraceptive. He is
Television. The computer. The satellites. The hot line. What have they meant in terms of the political process? In 1949, as the period began, only 949,000 families had TV sets; only 50 TV
Would we have better government—better leadership—if our politicians were highly trained in chemistry and physics? It is a doubful proposition. The quality of political leadership can't be improved from a lack of flame. We will get better leaders one of these days, when our society again produces men and women of integrity, intelligence and honor, whose special gift is to understand the eternal conflict between liberty and control, and understand the rise of technology, fine; but they ought first to understand the fall of Rome.
1978 WITH SPECIAL FEATURES
BALONEY
BALONEY
Did you ever feel lonely and a pet rock just couldn't help? Maybe you need to broaden
Sticks say love me like a rock
CAMPAIGN '76
But the hardships were only beginning for the stick. Now as he lies upon the ground, people pick him up and throw him. Next thing he knows, a dog is chewing on him and carrying him around. Other sticks have marshmallows and are tossed into fires. Others are tossed into fires and destroyed.
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
one is long enough, he will gladly support his owner like a cane. Also, if he is gently
your horizons. There are all kinds of objects that are eager to help if you need a friend. For example, take a stick. Both you and the stick could benefit from a lasting relationship.
The Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. The student must provide their name, year in school and hometown; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
Most sticks have had a rough time and deserve to be loved. Think about it a minute. Even the act of becoming a stick is violent. Most sticks probably were leading contented lives as branches when, through the fire, humans they were broken off and to left live their remaining days as sticks.
Letters Policy
education
Associate Editor Yuel Campus Editor
Hobby Betallin Yael Aboulaholb
Business Manager Farigy
Assistant Binder Manager Advertising Manager
Cary Burge Buchsen
Published at the University of Kansas weekly
newspaper, KU Press. Subscription periods. Second-class postage paid at Law-
yone office or $1 a year in Douglas County and $1 a
semester or $1 a year in Douglas County. And $1 a
subscription are $2.00 a semester paid through the
university.
southern plantations have the southern charm and sophistication of the antibellium era. Also, some sticks are direct descendants from famous historical trees. In this bicolentennial year, who wouldn't be proud to own a relative of George Washington's cherry tree?
The list of fine points continues on and on. The versatility of sticks far outranked that of any rock. Now, I'm not saying that rocks are completely useless. They are a very ef-
sharpened at one end, he enjoys participating in games like cowboys and Indians.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
reactive weapon if you have the urge to throw them at someone. But even throwing rocks is more effective if you turn a forked stick into a slingshot. Besides, I don't know of a single rock that has led anyone to water.
people and placed in the mud. Sticks have a wide range of color combinations, family backgrounds. Sticks from oaks are often self-confident to the point of being conceited; weeping willow branches can be used for emotion. Poplars and birches usually have even temperaments and make fine pets. Some sticks have prestigious backgrounds that would make them especially suitable as descendants of the trees of the
So go out and find a stick you can love. It doesn't cost you anything. If you prefer, though, keep your rock and ignore the sticks. But remember the usefulness of sticks the next time you try to give someone the short end of your rock.
He loves playing an arrow to a spear. He can be shaken at people and placed in the mud.
Readers Respond
Hopeably, "hopeably" acceptable
"Hopeably," I had long been desiriful that I might never write to the Kansan. Desireable as I was, I could no longer withstand the impulse. As someone loving of the Kansan, I must maintain a balance between my affection for the past and my interest in the nowish and futurable development of the language. Still, I am brought up shortly when I encounter the formative years of "Hopeably"? Perhaps too much reading of the old Chicago Tribune, or an uncontrollable reverence for Time? A maniacal loathing of Edwin Newman? Some childly trauma during the formative years of this life will reach to this, I am sincerely hopeable that suchly occurrences will be cessant.
To the Editor:
Today, hopeably. Tomorrow, The Dayfully Kansish?
James J. Scally Lawrence graduate student
Editors Note—The use of hopefully is a vigorously debated topic by many lexicographers, including several interested professors in the School of Journalism. The term was meant to be hopeful, about which the American Heritage Dictionary says: "as used to mean 'in such a manner as to be
hoped" or 'let us hope', is still unacceptable to a substantial number of authorites." Theodore Bernstein, an expert on English usage, outlines the controversy in his book, "The Carefulness of Writing": "He carefully can't take the place of the phrases "it is hoped that," or "if hopes are realized". He ends his discussion by saying "... in English we can take care of a somewhat similar situation where the same kind of that calls for regret) as contrasted with regrettely (in a manner full of regret). But regretfully hopefully is not equal to the burden sometimes placed upon it. What is needed to overcome this, which is not here being nominated for the job."
The Kansan hereby makes that nomination.
Family law
To the Editor:
and married, by law you cannot receive family planning services. If you are under 18, single, sexually active and have parental consent to receive such services, you may not. If you are under 18 you may not receive any counseling or information on family planning, education, health care, and not married must be referred by the clinic to a licensed physician.
I believe that this law and its interpretation discriminate against single persons, low income and minority groups, and people with a history of age. Family planning clinics are designed to give high quality comprehensive care to anyone who needs or desires to prevent pregnancy; those who cannot afford the services of a private physician.
Welfare recipients can receive medical care through private physicians, and those in middle income groups or above are required to have care. What about those in between those two groups: young marrieds who desire to plan their families, or single parents who lack responsibility and wish to receive proper medical care, education and contraception information? These people have the right that health clinics can provide information, education and
treatment for venereal disease to those who request it, regardless of age or marital status, but now the law is being interpreted to deny these same sexually active people any information or devices to prevent unwanted pregnancies.
We should all be aware of what family planning clinics provide. Most family planning clinics follow HEM guidelines and use medical history and comprehensive physical examination.
There are also follow-up questioning, checks on abnormalities related to present or past medical or surgical problems, and referrals to other physicians. It is private physicians when necessary. The clinics also provide other education.
I am concerned about individual rights and needs. You may not need these services, but why should the state law mandate them? Why should they and want them? Where is the equality in our health care?
If you are a teenager, married or single, a parent, a single adult or a concerned citizen, please get in touch with your legislator and express desire to deny any additional information. Call the Douglas County Health Department, 843-0721.
Karen Edmister
Lawrence graduate student
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 4.1970
5
Co-op without new members despite new stability
By LIZ LEECH
Staff Writer
It's supposed to be less risky now to join Greek Management, Inc. (GMI), a cooperative organization here. Yet no new members have joined the co-op and Rick McKernan, director of GMI, says that he can't understand why.
MkCernan said Monday that the organization was financially stable now and had lowered the deposit for joining. The changes were intended to make it easier for fraternists and sororites to join the co-op, a non-profit organization.
The co-op was set up several years ago by the Interfraternity Council, (IFC) but now operates on its own, McKernan said. GMI is owned and operated by members of the fraternity he said, to save money through volume buying of food and household items.
UNTIL LATE LAST SEMESTER,
fraternities and sororites that wanted to join the co-op were required to pay a membership fee of $250. In addition, each house had to pay a deposit based on what it took to receive provisions for two months. McKenna said,
Since the co-op was in its early stages then, it was risky to join because the co-op could lose money. Thus, the members would lose money they had invested.
"The risk now is zero because we're stronger." McKennan said.
Instead of the initial deposit being based on the two-month provision bill, houses can be by paying what they usually would for one month's provisions, McKernan said.
AND, IF THE HOUSE prefers, it can pay a half of the deposit in cash and keep the remainder, he said.
He said that if a new member decided to withdraw after three months, GMI would lose its control and could not do anything.
"The houses that are in it now are so confident in the program that they are willing to guarantee that a new member would get its money back," McKernan said. "They (present members) are doing everything but buying the food for them."
SIX FRATERNITIES, the Lawrence Day Center and Evans Scholarship Hall are now members of GMI. McKennan said, "We had been made, no new groups had been made."
Two sororites recently considered joining the co-op, but didn't.
A spokesman for one of the sororities, who asked not to be identified, said her house had originally unanimously voted to join the co-op late last semester.
She said that the sorority's lawyer had
But the sorority didn't join because of financial complications and because of the mixed views of the sorority's alumni advisers.
examined the GMI program and had given his approval.
"We might have joined if our budget had been geared toward it (GMI) at the beginning of the year, but it wasn't," she said.
SHE SAID SHE SHE thought that even with the new change there was probably still a chance.
She also said that perhaps if one new sorrow joined, others might be more likely
She said she thought that sorority alumni advisers were less likely to let sororites try new programs than fraternity advisers because many of the fraternity advisers were businessmen who frequently were subjected to new ideas.
An advisor to the sorority refused to comment.
McKernan said he had seen the sorority's financial balance sheets and said he thought it was worth considering.
ROBERT TURVEY, assistant dean of men and IFC advisor, said he is a member of the GMI board of trustees, as a representative of IFC. He said he didn't understand why more groups weren't joining the co-oo.
"I have never heard a statement from that sorority clarifying why they didn't join."
Harriet Tavener, Alpha Chi Omega housemester, said that the sorority was financially unable to join the co-op this year.
The other sorbity that considered joining GMI was Alpha Chi Omega.
We're still considering because the program sounds like it's really getting in you.
PAM HORNE, assistant to the dean of women and Panhellenic advisor, said that she had been notified by GMI that she was the sole representative of trustees as a Panhellenic representative.
She said Turvey had told her she was on vacation but she said she wasn't very familiar with GMI.
"There hasn't any interest shown by the sorories and that's why it hasn't been a problem."
Turvey and Horne agreed that alumnin involvement in sorority and fraternity fostered a sense of community.
"I think sororities work more closely with their alumni, and I think that there have been alums, housemothers and sorority sisters who come home to his hesitant about food co-ops." Horn said.
Surveyed he thought members of
their groups had more control over their
budgets than those in the firm.
"And sorority women handle their money so well that they have dealt with the same purveyor for a long time and trust him," Turvey said.
HE SAID IT WOULD be hard for them to change.
"If we can document how you can buy the same product, same brand, same quality, a vendor and you can buy it cheaper from the store than you can join, I paint, it doesn't make sense." McKenna ST.
McKernan said living groups that didn't join the co-op were being illica
He said that if enough groups joined GMI, there wouldn't be a limit on products that were produced.
"It's frustrating that I can" spend more time trying to improve the co-op and what it can do, instead of trying to sell it to the groups," McKennan said.
GREG EK, PRESIDENT of Phil Delta
Theta fraternity, said his fraternity had joined GMI two years ago and was happy with the products and service it had received.
"It's hard to say how much we're saving,
but we've saved on furniture and food," Eek
"There're no doubt that we'll stick with it, and it should catch on." Ek said.
Ek said he thought that GMI members would stick with the program.
Kent Allingham, treasurer of GMI member Alpha Kappa Lambda, said he would be received initial deposit and money-back guarantee would prompt other groups to join the co-开
"We're saving money, but we also only have to pay one bill every month instead of paying all the different vendors," Allingham said.
ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA housemother.
Lilia Ross, said that she liked not having to "run all over town to shop."
"I had never heard of the brand of canned co-op apps, but I like it very much."
Many sorority housemothers and
widowers are not familiar with
Grace's in changes.
Freda Rodgers, Kappa Kappa Gamma
safety housemother who one has
to take care of.
"But if they contacted the house and wanted to present their program, I'm sure we should do it."
Kelly McCarthy, Gamma Phi Beta sorority president, said that she had beamed of GMI, but hadn't been personally contacted by the organization.
MCKERNAN SAID that he was pannman a presentation of GMI's program for all host countries.
Turvey said that the GMI philosophy isn't a hard-sell campaign.
"It's a co-op and it's there because people wanted to save money." Turvey said, "and it would be different if we were strictly a profit-minded business.
Use Kansan Classifieds
"It's a two-way street and they should be trying to save their groups some money."
On Campus
Events...
TODAY: THE GERMAN CLUB will meet to discuss "Karneval in Deutschland," at 3:30 in 4051 Wescoe.
TONIGHT: JOHN BOULTON, assistant professor of flute, will perform in the FACULTY RECITAL SERVICE at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
TOMORROW: A reception for GEORGE GILDER, author of "XURUS Suicide," will be held at 7 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Kansas Union. A reception for KEVIN FARRIS, president of the National Organization of Women, will be at 7 p.m. in the Music Room of the Union. It is sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women.
Grants and Awards . . .
KU debaters Frank Cross and Robin Rowland, Lawrence juniors, took first place in a tournament at Boston University, Cambridge, Mass., last weekend. Rowland
Debating at Baylor University, Phil Snow, Sugarland, Tex., senior, and Jim Prentice, Turon senior, took four places in the senior division. Prentice was fifth place in the junior division.
In the junior division, the team of Margaret Michels, Des Moine freshman, and Don Brockman, St. Louis freshman, took fourth place. Fifteen place went to the team of Kevin Fowler, Leavenworth freshman, and Kevin Fowler, Michels third place, and Steve Griffin, Lawrence freshman, fifth place.
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LITWIN'S
Student Elections-Feb.18 & 19 Filing Deadline-Wednesday, Feb.4
9:30-5:30 Daily; '11 8:30 Thursday
Class officers will be elected for soph., Jr., and sr. classes. 102 seats will be elected. Filling forms may be obtained in the Student Senate office, 105 B Kansas Union. The filing fee Is $5. The Senate seats are open from:
Grad. School 21 Journalism 3
Arch. & Urban Design 2 Law 2
Business 4 Pharmacy 2
Education 7 Soc.Welfare 3
Engineering 6 LA&S 19
Fine Arts 7 Nunemaker 26
Senators from Nunemaker College will be elected from the 5 districts outlined below. Questions about the districts should be referred to the Senate Office at 864-371O. Get involved and vote on the 18th or 19th!
NUNEMAKER SENATE DISTRICTS...
All Out of Town
G.S.P. Hall
J.R.P.
Chi Omega
Gamma PhI Beta
Sigma Kappa
5
5 seats
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Delta Chi
Triangle
Delta Tau Delta
Templin
Lewis
Hashinger
McCollum
Alpha Chi Omega
Delta Upsilon
1
5 seats
Sigma Nu
Kappa Sigma
Alpha PhI
Alpha Delta PI
4
5 seats
Corbin
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Kappa Kappa Gamma
Sigma Chi
Kappa Alpha Theta
Beta Theta PI
Acacia
2 6 seats
Ellsworth
Nalsmith
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Tau Kappa Epsilon
Lambda Chi Alpha
PhI Kappa Theta
Alpha Gamma
Alpha Kappa Lambda
PI Kappa Alpha
3 5 seats
Oliver
PI Beta PhI
PhI Kappa Psi
Sigma PhI Epsilon
PhI Kappa Sigma
PhI Delta Theta
PhI Gamma Delta
Alpha Tau Omega
Paid for by Student Activity Fee
City of Lawrence
6
Wednesday. February 4, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU hopes to add to Husker jinx
KANSAS 14 UTEP 24
Clint Johnson chases loose ball
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Sixth Edition
What does Nebraska coach Joe Cipriano
unit it will take for his team to beat KU
to win.
"If they (the Jayhawks) don't play," Cioriana said.
Actually, Cipriano was just joking. But he does have a right to feel jinxed. The Cornhuskers have lost the last seven times they have faced Kansas.
"I don't know what it is," Cipriano said. "When they get up against us, they get stars in their eyes and just think they have to show up to beat us."
KU coach Ted Owens, though, knows a win won't come that easily when the Jayhawks meet Nebraska at 7:35 tonight in Lincoln.
AT 4-1, NEBRASKA is second place in the Big Eight standings, one game ahead of Kansas. Missouri is on top with a 5-p record. The state will be knocked out from the conference ranks.
Nebraska has already lost one league game at home, 62-57, to Missouri last Saturday night. Another loss at home could be disasterous.
KU simply can't afford to fall another name behind the Tigers, who host Kansas City.
Last year, KU took sole possession of first place in the league with a win at Nebraska and went on to win its second straight conference title.
CPRIAPAN IS PROBABLY still having nightmares about that game. Nebraka led, 67-62, with 50 seconds left and seemingly had the game wrapped up.
But KU came back and tied the score, 67-67, to send the game into overtime. KU finally won, 79-77, on a jump shot by Danny Hunt with five seconds to go in the second overtime.
"We're still feeling bad about that loss last year," said Cipriano, whose team led
by 18 points in the first half. "That's pretty hard for us to forget."
"Actually, though, all we're trying to think about is playing well ourselves. I think it's been shown that any team can beat any team in the conference on a given night."
Against the Jayhawks, Fort has always been tough. He needs only 26 points in his next two games against KU to become all-time leading score against the Jayhawks.
NEBRASKA SHOWED THAT fact itself,
beating K-State in Manhattan. Jerry Fort
and Bentley went on to win.
"It's a big concern, that's for sure."
"We bring our concentration isn't going to take."
Nebraska's biggest threats up front are forward Bobi Siegel, who scored 17 points against Missouri, and center Larry Cox, who led teams in field-goal shooting percentage.
"They've both been doing a good job," Cipriano said. "But they aren't very big. They are going to have to play awfully well to hold their own."
KU'S SIZE HAS Cipriani concerned his Division of 7-6 F1, 6-4 Cox and 6-3 Allen Holder doesn't match up very well with the Balkers, glove, 6-10 K仁 Koenigs and 7-Paul Mokeki.
"They've always been big." Cipriano said of KU. "They've always been able to get on the offensive boards and get the shot back in. We can't let them do that."
Owens, on the other hand, is concerned about Nebraska's quickness, especially the defense.
"We have to be able to handle their pressure defense," Owens said. "They are smaller and quicker than we are. We've had problems with them the last two years."
BOTH KU AND Nebraska have had problems with their offenses this season. But both play sound, fundamental defense. They don't want to be surprised to see a low-sowing game.
"Who knows," he laughed, "it could be 40-30."
Injury interrupts Guinn's career
Associate Sports Editor
By KEN STONE
Every passing minute is a minor frustration for Keith Guinn because he can't do what he loves—jump over a bar set nearly a foot over his head.
Guinn, the University of Kansas indoor and outdoor record holder in the high jump, is recuperating from an operation on his left knee, his takeoff leg.
Surgery over semester break, which removed from his knee a piece of tendon the size of a finger tip, appears to have put an end to Guinn's long history of knee injuries.
That old pain first plagued him his senior year in high school. But it was in his right hand.
"AS LONG AS I bring it along slowly enough, we'll bring it back to full strength," Guinm said recently. "I haven't had any of the old pain that I had before."
It didn't really bother him much during track season. In the spring of 1973 he set a Kansas Relays high school record of 6-10 — his best leap of the year.
HE WAS JUST ANOTHER outstanding prep jumper when he was recruited by KU, one of almost two dozen high schoolers who had missed two years but in January 1974 he leapt against them all.
While battling for a rebound during a basketball game as a starter for Shawnee Mission North's varsity team, Gunn was bumped. When he came down, his leg was forced into an awkward position, and his knee tendons were twisted.
Competing in Oklahoma City, at the United States Track and Field Federation indoor championships, Guinn took his characteristically smooth, curved run-up, gathered speed, arched his back and scaled 7-2, a KU indoor record.
It was just the start of the indoor season.
Guinn is a freshman. He was looking strong in practice. And the field house there is filled with people.
GUINN ATTRACTED the attention of the meet directors of the Olympic Invitational indoor track meet. He left for New York as one of the best hummers in the country.
He returned to Lawrence hobbled. As he was warming up—just taking some relaxed and easy pop-ups—his knee went out again. But this time the injury was more serious. He began walking on crutches and couldn't turn for months.
Yet he returned to competition later in the spring. And the results, according to Guim's jump coach, track assistant Gary Penin, were all but miraculous.
"HE MADE SOME jumps that year off that leg that weren't humanly possible," Pepin said. "Some doctors thought he wouldn't be able to tump again."
But jump again he did. He finished his freshman year with a 6-11 outlook best. And although his right knee still was bothering him, he looked forward to his sophomore year.
The year started slowly. Guinn made jumps in the 6- to 10-gallon in the winter. He had an indoor best of 10- for fourth in the 10-gallon in the winter and stayed at a 10-gallon plateau about a month.
BUT THE DRAKE RELAYS marked a turning point last year. There, he won with a 2-1 jump. And a few weeks later he matched that height at the Big Eight outdoor meet in Norman, Oka. But then his knee, his left one this time, started acting up.
"I was so scared that the right would go out, that I put too much strain on the left, and then I came back," she said.
He had been putting more than the proper share of pressure on his left knee while practicing, while lifting weights and while jumping. Tendonitis developed there.
MORRIS
POP
Guinn made the AAU annual summer touring team by getting 7-2 again. He left for Europe. While in Russia, he had a recurrence of tendonitis. Guinn made only 6-4 at that meet in Klev. But the team doctors gave him aspirin, his knee felt
GUNN WOULD FELT a weakness in his left knee off and on for the rest of the year. In spite of the knee, he went 7-1 in qualifying for the NCAA championship and 6-10 in the finals, where most of the jumps were hammered by wet and windy conditions.
Keith Guinn
better and a week later he went over 7 feet in Prague.
GUNN COMPLETED his summer tour with a 7-1 jump at Durum, N.C. Three weeks later, after a rest at his family's summer home in the Ozarks, he blasted over 7-4 at the Pan American Games trials in Eugene, Ore.
Unfortunately, Guinn was again prevented from competing. This time it was a muscle pull in his right leg. And he returned to Lawrence for consultations with the KU team physician, Dr. John Wertzberger.
The diagnosis and decision to operate on his left knee came in quick order, and now he's looking to the future, which means only one thing right now: the U.S. men's Olympic Trials in June and the Games in July.
"YOU GET INTO this injury prone situation where people ask, 'What happened to you this time?' and it takes a lot of mental toughness to get this out of your mind." Guimu said. "I can't afford another setback. I'm so optimistic this time."
While Guinn is anxious to get back into competition, he said he's not taking any chances. Neither are the KU coaches. They say Guinn won't jump until Wertzberger does, he doesn't, Guinna must be to red-shirted this and compete independently.
Head coach Bob Timmons said yesterday, "We'll make no decision until very, very late. We're not going to take any chances at all. If it gets into the season, and if it looks like touch-and-go as to whether we should or shouldn't (let him jump), we won't."
Guinn who was ranked sixth in the nation last, year, sounds confident, however. Yesterday he had one of the best practices in months.
"Hey" Gunn exclaimed, "I was running today, and it feels really good!"
Football games changed
The Washington State game, which was scheduled to be played here on Sept. 11, has been moved to Seattle where the Jayhawks will open a new domed stadium, Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director, said yesterday.
KU football fans are going to have to travel to Seattle if they want to see the Jayhawks play Washington State next season.
Therefore, KU will play only five home games next season. The change was necessitated. Waugh said, because of contractual problems.
Waugh said KU football coach Bud Moore had okayed the changes. But because the season will start a week earlier, Moore will have to make the decision to practice earlier than usual. Waugh said.
Late rally lifts East to all-star win
Changing the site of the Washington State game prompted KU to move its game with Oregon State from Sept. 25 to Sept. 4. The Jayhawks will now open the season a week
PHILADLPHIA (AP)—Bob M. McAdoo, the Buffalo Braves' scoring machine, and Washington's Dave Bing led a final-period rally that carried the East to a 123-109 victory over the West in the 38th annual All-Star Association All-Star Game last night.
The KU players will miss four days of classes, Sept. 7-11, because of the change. There is no class on Sept. 6 because of Labor Day.
The East trailed 88-87 when McAdoo and Bing ignited a rally that outscored the West 18-6 in a 3-minute, 34-second span and gave the winners a 105-94 lead they never lost.
"Air travel out there is $15,000 round trip." Waugh said. "We'll save money by staying out there rather than making two trips to the airport, but we did this to try to save some money."
earlier than planned and will have an open date on Sept. 25.
KU won't return to Lawrence after the West Coast State team prepare for Washington State.
McAdoo, who has won the scoring title each of the past two seasons and was the NBA's Most Valuable Player in 1974-75, scored 28 points. East's 15-point score sporing, while Blake, who was voted the game's MVP, had six and Buffalo's Randy Smith had four.
The victory increased the East's margin in the annual All-Star game to 17-9 and marked the first time a team has won the championship. The West took charge in 1971, 1974, 1972
average, scored 22 points. Bing totaled 16,
all in the second half.
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U.S. hockey team pounds Slavs
INNSBRUCK (AP)—The U.S. basketball team battled its way into the Olympic championship division yesterday, and American speed skaters Sheila Young and Leah Poulus were come out to compete with Winter Olympic games, which onewear amid pasty today.
Officials pronounced these Games free of eligibility scandals as they prepared to officially open the 12-day festival of international competition.
Sub-freezing temperatures and sunny skies were predicted for the opening ceremony, when the Olympic torch will be brought into a stadium at the foot of Bergisl Mountain, where 1,400 athletes from 37 nations will march.
American medal chances got a boost yesterday when the hockey team convincingly slammed Yugoslavia 84 in the preliminary tournament that decides which six national teams will compete for Olympic medals.
Meanwhile, Young and Poulus, carrying the strongest American hopes for gold medals, worked on on the Olympic speed-skating rink.
"The world record last week gave me real confidence," she said. Miss Young, 25, the new principal at the college,
Place an ad. Tell the world. Call 864-4358.
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Wednesday, February 4, 1976
7
Staff Writer
Seniors seek jobs,grad schools
By ANNE SIGMAN
Seniors express everything from optimism to discouragement about job performance.
Some students interviewed Monday by the Kansan said they were concerned with finding a job, and they said they wanted jobs related to education or jobs they can use to build a career.
Pam Fulmer, Belleville senior, said she wanted a job with possibilities of promotion.
"I am interested in what I can do with my English degree, but when I read the ads in the Kansan, employers don't seem to be looking for English majors."
"I don't want to be job bopping the rest of my life," she said.
Fulcomer said that she hoped her father could get her a job and that she probably would have to get more training for whatever job she got.
MICHAEL F. MARSHALL, Kansas City
Kan., senior, said he planned to go to
graduate school after a year of working to
increase his job possibilities.
"I'm apprehensive about finding a job in physics and math and chemistry," he said. "I'd like to find something, but I've heard it's hard."
Other students also said they were going to graduate school to avoid the problem of finding a job and to improve their job when they were ready to look for jobs.
Marjorie Bordy, Mission Hills senior, said she didn't have the problem of finding a job. "I don't have any worries," she said. "I'm going to med school."
JESS REEVE, Shawnee senior, said he might go to graduate school. He wants to write, he said, but will probably go to work for a railroad.
"The job I get will be well-paying, but it's not exactly a comfortable job," he said.
Going to graduate school might give him a chance to get a job using his English language.
"Things just don't look that good," said Boc Crawford, St. Joseph, Mo. senior, a business major. "I'll probably have to take whatever I can get."
Some students said they didn't know what kind of work they would get.
If you don't have the cash to pay HAR block to do your income taxes, and filling out tax forms make you want to throw your pocket calculator against the wall. relax.
Program offers tax assistance
Beginning tomorrow, the University of Kansas Accounting Club is offering free income tax assistance to students at the Kansas Union.
The assistance is being offered in connection with the Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) Volunteer income tax assistance program, Ron Mather, Lawrence junior and coordinator of KU's program, said yesterday.
Mather said the main reasons the IRS initiated the nationwide program were to insure the necessary forms were filled out and to ensure that all taxpayers are aware of deductions and new tax laws.
He said the Accounting Club was offering the assistance as a public service but he said it was also good experience for accounting majors. The volunteers have completed courses in income tax preparation and recently attended a one-day seminar sponsored by the IRS to familiarize them with IRS procedures.
Mather said any question the volunteers were unable to answer could be forwarded by them directly to the IRS by a WATS telephone line furnished by the IRS.
Students wishing assistance should come to the Governor's Room at the Union on Feb. 5, 8, 9 and 10 between 1 and 4 p.m. each day.
Mather said each student should bring:
- This year's tax forms that he received in
January.
—the wage and earnings statements he received from his employers (Form W-2).
—the interest statements he received from his bank (Form 1099).
—A copy of last year's tax return, if available.
—Any other relevant information concerning his income and expenses.
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Elizabeth Lightstone, Coffeyville senior,
said she was optimistic.
"I hope I will be able to find something," she said. "I'm not going to be too picky."
A FEW STUDENTS said they had jobs waiting for them.
Michael G. Boyer, Overland Park senior,
said he was going into business with his
"I don't have to go out and job hunt," he said.
Janie Boyd, Larned senior, said she was on educational leave from her job. Boyd, 48, said she had came back to school to get a degree in music therapy. Even without the living around, she said, there are possibilities in job in her field besides the job she has.
NOT BEING PICKY might help a student find a job, but the College Placement Council, which surveys employers on the
Last year's journalism job market was the tightest it has been in the past seven years, said Dana Leibengau, placement manager at JPR. The company took many of last year's graduates two to three months to find jobs, he said, but the journalism job market will be considerably stronger in the coming months.
job outlook, has predicted a five per cent drop in available jobs from last year.
"There are jobs available if students want to be flexible," he said, "but the job market is not so large."
FRED MADAU3, placement director for the School of Business, said he thought a student could find a good job. Students have to learn how to find jobs, said, and they work harder to find jobs.
"the on-campus interview is not the only answer any more," he said. "Students have to be able to demonstrate that they
One way of finding a job is through the Student Senate Work Force. Larry Greenbaum, director, said students and prospective employers were matched up through a computer in the program, which is coordinated by the Senate and the administration.
"Student response has been poor," he said.
About 1,500 students, half the number contacted by the Work Force, have he said. Students can contact the business, he said, and send them resumes.
Greenbaum said students could get a pamphlet, "Job-hunting Tips," at the work force office, Room 101 in the Kansas Union, or in the Senate office. The pamphlet contains information on how to write a resume, he said.
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Cheerleaders win 3rd
The KU pompon squad has placed third in national pompon competition judged during the last football season by the International Cheerleading Foundation. The foundation is an affiliate of the National Collegiate Athletic Association.
pompon dance routines, rather than on cheers.
Don Baker, sports information director,
and Mackey that the judging was on岸,
said Monday.
Baker said the pompon squads from the California and U.S.A. placed first and second.
The KU squad placed seventh in a separate cheerleading competition in a survey conducted by the foundation last fall, Baker said.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
"THE RIGHT is the Word of God," said John Wesley.
Psalm 2 and Acts 4:25
"The Bible is the Word of God," said John Wesley.
"I beg leave to propose a short, clear and strong argument to prove divine inspiration of the Holy Scriptures. The Bible must be the invention of good men or angels, bad men or devils, or God."
1. It could not be the invention of good men or angels, for they neither could nor might make them. 2. It would not writing it, "vior nor could man be the Lord," when it was their own invention.
2. It could not be the invention of bad men or devils, for they could not make a book which commands all duty, bullets all sins, and condemns evil spirits.
3. Therefore, draw the conclusion that the Bible must be given by divine inspiration!
That is mighty strong reasoning and logic. Over 1700 times in the Old Testament appear the words "Thus saith the Lord," or similar phrases that state or indicate God Himself is speaking; and in the New Testament there are 850, or more, quotations from, or references to passages in The Bible that may be doubtful about the man's life not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeded out of the mouth of God-Search The Scriptures, for they testify of Me-The Scriptures cannot be broken." (This count was sparked by the statement to the writer of two young men who were studying for the Protestant Ordinary, but whose names were not known in error the effect that one of the Professors told his class that the Prophet Ezekiel was "neuratic," or in other words a "nut," more or less "cracked." The New Testament says he was "a holy man of God, moved by The Holy God," or in other words that we must check, and correct.) Can judges of age, and behold the Bible standing "The Rock of Ages," the great "Anvil" on which the hammers have worn themselves out, the great "Anvil" on towering over the wrecks of nations, generations of men, evil angels and supernatural beings in error please advise in order
One night about 200 years after the time of Luther, John Wesley listened as one read some comments of Luther on The Bible, from the book of Romans, and his heart became "strangely warmed" and he went forth to be a mighty instrument in the hands of God to greatly basken mankind and give him comfort. Luther was also sent to experiences as France had at the time of her revolution when the streets of Paris ran with blood, which revolution was greatly aided and abetted by mobs whose hearts had been "violently warmed and heated" by Voltaire who knew that Luther was the Bible, and the God of the Bible. John Bunny was another man who had felt those whose heart also was "strangely warmed" by reading the writings of Luther. Elisha the Prophet who was present when Elijah was taken to heaven without death, in a charlot of fire, and horses of fire, and who at the time received a double portion of God's Spirit, the account of his death occurred in 2nd Kings 31; his brother Buried near his grave when a band of the invading enemy appeared. They threw the body in Elisha's grave and ran. On coming in contact with Elisha's bones the dead man came back to life! It is interesting, instructive, and inspiring to consider the large numbers of men of God who were buried near his grave when it appears came to life by coming in contact with the "spiritual bomb" of Luther—Bunyan and Wesley were two of them!
Why not set yourself to get in the way to let God "touch your heart" by getting familiar with every word of God. If you think you are too old to understand, don't be afraid to tell all those around you that it took a big job? Did you ever hear the clang at the close of the year figure out how many "fickets" it would have to make in the new year, and on facing the enormous sum said, "it is too much, I want to learn," but he didn't give time, so got on the job and licked the oil without strain. Thirty minutes a day out of 1440 in every 24 hours - 60 minutes would not be enough for him given God's gift—given to reading The Bible can secretly would in a few years come true, and if you purpose to "do His will" -without which purpose no one can enter Heaven. He will give you what understanding is necessary as you read the Bible, and that makes everything failed, Christ, the Second Adam, came down and kept God's Word perfect, and impedes that perfect righteousness to all who believe in their hearts. Those men who have best known and obeyed God's Word have helped the factors in the salvation of their fellow men, and in blessing the world.
P. 0. Box 405, Decafur, Ga. 30031
SUA Forums Debate
George Gilder, author of SEXUAL SUICIDE: An Attack on Women's Liberation vs. Karen DeCrow, president of the National Organization of Women.
February 5,8 p.m. K.U.Ballroom Admission 50c
8
Wednesday, February 4,1978
University Dallv Kansan
Open stacks ease library crunch
By KELLY SCOTT
The nigging process of filling out a call slip and waiting for a magazine or journal from the periodicals reading room of an agency or company, causes because of a new open stack policy.
More shelf space has been added to the periodicals room to hold both bound volumes and unbound issues at the same location
Although recent issues of 188 frequently used magazines are still retained behind the
and unbound issues to the present are
reading room under the
library of Copperhead.
A complete computer listing of the periodicals and the system they are cataloged under is available at the checkout desk.
THE WATSON READING room switched to the Library of Congress catalogue system in 1970, Miller said, but the entire collection hasn't been converted. All new acquisitions
Miller said he hoped to use the area where
room would eliminate some of the spread,
Couch said.
Miller said newer microfilm reading machines aren't as loud as the ones on in use in the microforma reading room. He used in the microforma reading room machines depended on the library's budget.
Five center and five east are the sure levels that used to house all unbound periodicals. When the move is completed, five center will be used to store samples, back issues of irregularly circulated publications and foreign-dited magazines.
BLOOMSBURY
Staff Photo by DON PIERCE
Magazine access made easier by putting more periodicals on open shelves.
crack-out desk, Sarah Couch, periodicals reading room supervisor, said yesterday that the new arrangement will increase accessibility to the library's collection.
"People will still rip off some, but it's a risk we will take," she said.
THE MAGAZINES kept behind the desk that require the regular check-out procedure are those that are most heavily damaged and most frequently stolen. Couch said.
Kent Miller, serials librarian, said the decision to open most of the periodicals stacks made better use of the stack area where the magazines were formerly stored.
"It's freeing the stacks for 60,000 more books." Miller said.
The periodicals room may seem more cramped than it was before the additional shelves were installed, he said, but there are still 284 desk and table spaces.
IN THE MIDDLE of last semester, a turnstile was installed immediately inside the periodicals room door. People are always seen in the turnstile at the turnstile and exit through the lane closest to the check-out desk, which was moved in front of the door. Miller said people leaving the room had to pass the desk which made it easier to take magazines from the reading room.
The latest issues of the 188 periodicals that are kept behind the desk are still available.
mounted on the wall opposite the new desk.
On the right side of the periodicals room are magazines catalogued according to the Dewey decimal system. Couch said. In the reading room's southern corner, the bureau is at the rear of the Congress system. There are also three shelves near the old check-out desk that have uncatalogued materials.
Bound volumes dated before 1960 are kept in the stacks under their Dewey system. The volumes dated after 1960 are stored in a separate
the old check-out desk was as a microfilm
reading area,
Twelve of the most heavily used periodicals would then be kept on microfilm and in an easily accessible part of the library, Miller said.
Right now people must go to four different places in Watson to find the complete set of Time magazines. The bound volumes are in either the reading room or the stacks, and the albums are in the microform reading room or the current issues are kept behind the desk.
THE MICROFILM area in the reading
The fate of these odd periodicals will vary. Since the library deals in long, complete runs of periodicals, the value of odd, largely unused ones is small. They could be thrown out or sent to other libraries, he said.
COUCH SAID the few reactions she had heard to the new system were favorable and came mainly from faculty and graduate students who new undergraduates had been in to see it.
Miller said the decision to open the periodicals room had been reached jointly by Robert Malminkowsky, assistant director of the library, and himself.
ISN'T IT TIME YOU STOPPED WATCHING TV,
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DO COMPUTERS PLAY GAMES WITH YOU
"It's an experiment," he said. "If it's not set up right, we can suffer nasty losses. But if it's well done, we're winning."
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"When you think that less than 3,000 of 6,000 titles are well-indexed in the Reader's Guide, it takes quite some time to thumb through them. But you can get at the content faster this way."
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Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Couch said more workers might be needed to make sure issues of magazines are noticed.
"Maintaining the shelves will be more important than ever," she said. "We'll have to check the shelves more often for misshelved items."
Even though the new system is more complex, said she, worries about maintaining it.
MILLER SAID the old way of handling the checking out of periodicals was an older tradition. The problem of understaffing. A library worker could only help one person at a time, he said, so others in line had to wait. Many of the staff were unable with the new accessibility to the periodicals.
Couch said it would be the middle of the semester before the library could tell whether students were walking away with more magazines.
THE LIBRARY will pull more tides
inside the desk to the old check-out
saves.
The circulation policy of the periodicals room hasn't changed. The magazines kept behind the periodicals desk can't be accessed by anyone except to room use during the open hours of the library but Couch said she does allow exceptions in special cases.
市川沙老敏
時代平和三年
東京都府内
大阪府内
Standing Figure
of Woman
This original color woodcut by
UTAGAWA KUNI5ADE-Japan
original prints to be presented for sale
by MARSON LTD. a1
The Union—South Lobby Exhibit hours:
hours:
Feb. 9 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
Feb. 10 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
sponsored by SUA
TONIGHT!
K.U. vs. Nebraska
with Max Falkenstien
Exhibit hours:
7:30 p.m.
WIBW FM 97
Luncheon Specials ▪ 11:00 - 1:30
Pizza-Hut.
Deep Dish Spaghetti $ 99
Above pasta served piping hot with Garlic Bread
Thin N Crispy — any 10 *single topping* **51.79**
Thick N Thickure — any 10* single topping* **52.24**
Additional Toppings **10 each**
Cavatini deep dish pasta $1.29
Cavatini Supreme deep dish pasta $1.39
1606 W. 23rd St.
**Sandwichs**
Sandwich Supreme $1.19
Salami & Cheese Sandwich $1.19
Ham & Cheese Sandwich $1.19
Sandwiches served either not or cold with pickle
sauce $1.19
804 Iowa
Pizza Hut
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
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on CAPITOL
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It Sounds Incredible But Evelyn Wood Graduates Can Read Over 1000 Words Per Minute
You can do it, too. So far over 550,000 other people have done it. People who have different jobs, different IQs, different interests, different education have completed the course. Our graduates are from all walks of life. These people have all taken a course developed by Evelyn Wood, a prominent educator. Practically all of them have been college graduates equal or better comprehension. Most have increased it even more.
Think for a moment what that means. All of them — even the slowest — now read an average novel in less than two hours. They read an entire issue of Time or Newsweek in 35 minutes. They don't notice how much they are reading. Then they let the material they're reading determine how fast they read.
And mark this well; they actually understand more, remember more, and enjoy more than when they read slowly. That's right! They understand more. They remember more. They enjoy more. You can do the same thing—the place to learn more about it is at a free speed reading lesson.
This is the same course President Kennedy had his Joint Chiefs of Staff take. The same one Senators and Congressmen have taken.
Come to a Mini-Lesson and find out. It is free to you and you will leave with a better understanding of why it works. Plan to attend a free Mini-Lesson and learn that it is possible to read 3-4-5 times faster, with comparable comprehension.
FREE SPEED READING MINI-LESSON
TODAY and Daily through Saturday, Feb. 7
7:30 p.m.
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore
9th and Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Phone 843-6424
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 4.1978
9
Phone service provides advice on adult studies
They can call a toll-free telephone number from anywhere in the state for information on adult studies at the University of Kansas, Robert Senecal, associate dean of the division of continuing education, said Monday.
A new service for adults in Kansas interested in furthering their education began yesterday.
The service is called the inward WAT
visting and referral system for non-
traditional users.
Nontraditional students are adults over
THE TELEPHONE NUMBER is 1-800-523-6772. The service operates on weekdays from noon to 5 p.m. except on Wednesday, when it operates from noon to 9 p.m. Saturdays, the line is open from 8 a.m. to noon.
Vivian McCoy, director of student services for the division of continuing education, is in charge of the program in Lawrence.
the age of 16 not enrolled in high school or college.
placement advising and some course counseling, Senecal said.
The division of continuing education, can help adults advance in their chosen careers or find new careers they might prefer, Senecal said.
We're working hand in hand with Kaplan University and other state and national universities.
THE ADVISING AND REFERRAL system is one part of KU's role in the University of Mid-America, a league comprising five Big Eight schools that
combine resources in the field of continuing education, he said.
Joining KU in the program are K-State, Iowa State University, the University of Nebraska, and
Another part of KU's role in the league is the development of what Senecal called 'courseware programs' of continuing training for the Registered Nurses of Kansas.
Courseware program consists of written,
course materials and face course that deal with a profession's requirements.
"We can't yet afford the program for the course that the courses will remain the heart of our school."
SENECAL SAID the program was first considered when a random survey taken last year showed there was a need for additional training. There was related to general medicine for nurses.
Building boom is biggest ever
All construction activity at the University of Kansas and plans for additions to existing facilities and other projects awaiting state approval. Students must program in the history of the University.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor, said last week that although there was no indication of what action would be taken on the University's requests for state funds, he anticipated no problem with future building plans.
Currently under construction are the Helen F. Spencer Museum of Art, west of the Kansas Union, and the School of Law on the west side of campus.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said that, depending on the weather, construction on the museum and law school should stay below 60F, and it should be completed by the summer, 1977.
PLANS HAD TO BE redrawn and new bids accepted for the new visual arts facility, Dykes said, which put the building one year behind schedule. Bids on the new building will incorporate the remodeled Fowler Shops and all the art and design programs now located all over the campus. Dykes said the legislature will also be considering appropriation of funds for a new building at Robbins Gymnasium and Malet Hall.
PRELIMINARY DESIGNS for a $6.7 million addition to Robinson Gymnasium name a completion of fall, 1979. The funds are the proceeds of the funds by the legislature, said Dykes.
Construction on the computation center, at the southwest corner of Sunnyside Ave. and Illinois, should begin late this summer. The construction will cost for the $4 million project has already begun.
The addition of classroom, laboratory and office space will be added to the south end of Malott Hall, pending the legislature's action Dykes said. The Board of Regents has planned for the $1.5 million addition that should be ready for occupancy by fall, 1978.
Allen Field House will get a $200,000 addition to house KU's football program. The addition will be built entirely from private funds and will also provide additional facilities for women's athletics, Dykes said.
The federal government has awarded the University a $86,400 planning grant for a new training and continuing education. Dykes said the grant was one of only three grants made for such facilities. Site selection and planning were completed soon for the $9 million center.
KANSAN WANT ADS
HOW DO WE MAKE A GREAT STEAK GREATER?
Great Combinations
STEAK & SHRIMP
MEDITERRANEAN
$3.99
We start with UTSA. Choose best
naturally aged butter and tenderness.
Then we add waterless wrist
pump (12 oz) of cream cheese,
butter patties and paprika cheese
And serve light in your table
with spice butter crumbs and
tea bagged potatoes
Stew and粥 Mediterranean
A great combination and a great
taste. Mr. Stew's America's expert
Mr. Steak
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
841-3454
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
Accommodations, good, service and employ-
ment. Resumes to HR at 1234 Main St,
Washington, DC 20005. BRING:
CLAIRED LETTER, COSTLY CARD, BRUNG
AND MEMORIAL DEATH CARE.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
AD DEADLINES
1 ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These men can be placed in person or by calling the UDU business office at 864-5345.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prizes you see on your lift equipment, we want to keep the cloud-out product you will pay the least and one benefit at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFFES.
Tremendous selection of guitars, ampls, drums,
mandolins, keyboards, basses, synths. Shop • Hause Keyboard Studio. Choose from Gibbons,
Acoustic, Acoustic Deluxe, and many others. All guitars are new in box. Hause Keyboards. Store • Hause Keyboard Studio. 1983 • Bass • 843-780-5000.
We can make your stereo sound better—GUAR-
dering a pair of two ear devices. Detail at
Audio Systems, 207 E. 9th St.
COST **10%** - Stereo equipment. All major brands Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single items or package Register for free Kiss 85.00. Earnings 6 to 10. **689.00**. Earnings 6 to 10.
Quitting business, babe—bargain! Everything from new furniture to new computer furniture. Large building full of cherished dwellers. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. (Hwy 49, Open 9-6pm, given door #3814 - 310 (Hwy 49, Open 9-6pm, given door #3814 - 310)
1974 Carriveau course, vice nice, fully equipped.
230 miles. Call nightlights: 825-8756. 2-4-
800.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of
tickets. Send $1 to your up-to-date, 160 page,
mail order catalog. Research Assistance,
Research Assistance, Los Angeles, Calif.
90253
(213) 874-8874, Los Angeles, Calif. 4-113
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists,
BEL AUSTRALIA,
ELECTRIC, 843-9690, 3600 W, 4th H,
150 kVA.
Yakima Elkton 35 Rangerboard with wide-tablet
phone. Compatible with Apple II, Macintosh
computer 14.1-make-off. Call 843-300-24
or visit www.yakimodelkton.com
Excellent collection of New & Used Furniture &
Bathrooms. 100% Brand New. Trade.
The Furniture & Appliance Store, 794
Wickham Road, London EC2M 6AA
...
COST PLUS 10%
All the Lawrence stove stores have good prices.
Ours are cheaper. But we will triple the factory-warranty on any equipment you buy. All major brands.
Call Dave, 843-849-8991 for an upcoming event.
...
Drab Weather doesn't have to mean drab harbor!
A single center of emergency medicine at the nursing center Drug Sleve. Reg. $490, new year.
Samples-Ninety-acclaimed women'swear. Size 9 sample. New shipment-over 300 pieces, 1/3 to 1/2 und r.sr retail. The Banner XK Collection, Oak Bouter, Springs, Kk. 7-25, 10-5.
Priced to sell. Three pairs of skills 190's, 175's,
174's. Used once. 842-1036.
McIntosh C-22, preamplifier and McIntosh 220 power amplifier. McIntosh Clinic guarantees performance specifications and provides free reimbursement. Higher offer above $45-847-8735.
73 Mada RX3, Automate, Airt. Radr, connex,
481-5400. Loaded with must. Must
841-5400.
FOR SALE: Snow Lion lion coat. Akka训兽
For Sale: C 7414 Doherty cassette. Unicycle 8.
Snow Lion coat.
1973 VW STANDARD BUG. RED, 45,000 miles
1,710,854. 8424-447 after 6 p.m. please. 2-3
Zoom. Lens 85-205/witers, excellent condition.
811-4137
2-5
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professional crafted gold
design on custom jewelry. Custom
design, organic form, any design can
be executed. B.F.A degree. Complete stone cutting.
of various sizes. 841-383-8448,
0970.
2. Goodyear 13" steel bettled radial snow tires.
month old; $60. Call 841-2829.
2-6
NIKON LENS, 135mm f2.8. One month old, condition perfect. $299. Last offer, I need the best offer. $499.
Garrard x-10 automobile turntable with walnut
and distill cover, $40 or best offer (Cal. 862).
distill and cover $40 or best offer (Cal. 862).
Police scanner, Midland 8 channel. Mobile unit.
841-4422
Baldwin Electric Guitar—New strings, great condition.
$175. Call 814-1201.
Clothing sale. Buy one at regular price, second
item 50c. Repeat Performance. 1422 West, 23rd
街.
1. 3/8 off turquoise and coral jewelry plus
2. Couplem Restore Performance Shop
West 21st
24-6
Chance of a lifetimed 1989 Chevrolet Belair Excelsior condition. Call Gary Davis, Davids, 360-254-2777.
Graphicview 4x5 view camera, 20mm Extar lens
483-8759 holders. Excellent condition
483-8759
WANTED
ROOMMATE: Main, exceptionally quiet, large
room, with a computer to help someone who needs to study. Wizard window
is on the desk.
Roommate wanted immediately. Female to share
mice 3 bedroom house, good location. Call 614-
527-8292.
Female romancemate waited until end of semester.
Romance account on账. On Feb. 5.
Route Nancy at 843-100-362.
Male roommate to share Jayhawk Tower Apt.
Call 841-6137.
Goes overcase. DESPERATELY need homes at
attention for 2 cats and 4 older kids. Call 811-350-
7691.
Wanted Care and companionship for young
children. Must be able to schedule
but you must provide transportation
to all events.
Molly female inmate needed to share 12 x 12
bags, 82-690. 82-694. Privacy requests.
84-690, 88-836. Pam.
Needid—two easy going people to join two others in a relaxed living environment in a well decorated apartment downhill. No pets or black-late posters please. Please plus 1½ adults; Jon and Mani 824-5400.
Need female roommate to join two other girls in relaxed living atmosphere. 3 broom, duplex, garage "garage-chest" $72 plus 1/2 chair. Can negate. Call and talk to mate: 2-58 or, Chirp 8429, Callmep
female roommate wanted immediately for apartment close to campus $60 plus 1/8 usher
Roommate wanted for cooperative household.
chase to campus $30 includes food and utility
shelter.
Desperately wanted to buy: prizes of pictures of the Who concert in K.C. or will pay to use your negatives. Close-up pictures especially wanted. **512** Sturna BuraVA, Shawnwa Mission; **60205**
Copy of book "Political Parties and Political Reactions" by Mark A. Kushner; contact Mike Galloway, 843-675 or 843-770.
FOR RENT
Room furnished with, shared kitchen and bath
bedroom. Kitchen appliances appropriate for
male near town pear. No beds.
Bathroom. Wet room not available.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTERS MOBILE HOMES, 3409 W. st. DTE, Lawrence, K
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings in
Lawrence, Lawrence and Lawrence in Lawrence.
Rental Exchange 842-290-5761 842-290-5761
THE LOUNGE
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Indian Trader
Pat Read
2 bdm. all util paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Park free. a/c pool. 843-4993.
10-5 Tues.-Sat.
Farm Act. For 1. Grand or Family $125 mon-
tain, for 1. Child $60 mon-
tain; 10 after 4.30. Mrs. John Andrews.
4
Female roommate wanted to share nice two-bath, apartment. One block from campus. Must be older and preferent non-smoker. No pets. Also, bring your own privilege privileges. Lynch Real Estate, 841-101-6.
New 3 to 8 bdm. apartment near campus; park-
ing area; efficient efficiency apartment, utl.
address: 843-957-397
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Foosball
Studio & kitchen in exchange for housecleaning
& babywriting, 5 min. drive from KU, $84
3TPC, $196
To submit an immediate, 2 bellhour, furnished notice of the request for admission to the Union Quilt, great location, $175 call to 416-283-5000.
COURT HOUSE OF
CHILDREN
Crown
CHILDREN'S FOREST
CRESCENT
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SHAZAAM
We PRINT
ANYTHING!
Sublease available immediately on 1 bdrm. apartment. $165 monthly. Phone: 842-14535. 2-9
Two biennial, apartment newly carpeted, store and kitchen. Move to campus if the dugout is carpeted or better. Go to campus if the dugout is carpeted or better.
LOST AND FOUND
Attractive, clean, 6 baths, house, all carpeted, a private kitchen, dining room, family room, parking. Near campus, pavilion, park. Walkable to college.
"Found advertisements are sponsored as a publication of the Bank of Kentucky and State Bank, 5th & Kentucky and Malls. Shopping centers."
necklace, gold heart pendant lost between
Robinson and Malott 2.8. Reward 18:425-2 - 24
3
found: Small bighole & black mallow dog near com-
forted area; free to use. 843-707-2644;
free, to go good home. 843-707-2644.
2-4
Lost: Maynard, a 3 month old male beagle
brought to Kentucky, Wednesday night,
841-426-3000.
Found: i key on a leather key ring behind
Weepon on step C and call Identify, 8641-95-3
5-5
**found:** T1 Calculator in 209 Blake. Call Ron at 43-764.
a quiet corner
Found: Pair of light brown trimmed glasses in flowered case. Call: Tom, NM-6400-250
Found: Bag of laundry at 25th and Lazybay路
Lane, Call 847-7688. Identify: 2-3
flowered case. Call Tom, 842-4600 2-5
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Found: Parker Fountain Pen on Frontier Ridge
bus. Call and identify. 2-5
Found: Before Christmas—man's watch. Call 842-659
after seven and 2-5
Found: Female Names found near 9th & Kenton.
Call: 843-9424
2-5
Found: Young orange tom cat in front of Snow
Hall. Call 843-1059-1309.
2-5
Would person who found C. Savage's bur pass
contact of A. 64720.
Lost Friday afternoon in Herbes or Louses
Last Friday afternoon in brown's blue eye 6-16
Reward. Larry, 842-3057
TYPING
Small, white, small, harried dog, lost Saturday near
18th & Mississippi, call 842-6730. 2-10
Experienced typist-term papers, theses, mike.
Received 843-6543, Mr. Wright
corrected 843-6543, Mr. Wright
Typing--experienced in disintermediates, Dieses,
Friedrich, and more. Mail resume to:
Pieces, carbon ribbon. Call Leilis; 843-808-988.
Email: typingspecialist@msn.com
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable,
effective. Bach degree in electric B.A. Social Science
or 657-1902.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476 3-2
Typist editor, IBM Pica clite. Quality work
dissections, dissertations 9-11
842-842-9177 9-11
**TYPNING** for diathesis, then term papers
**TYPING** for dissertation, then term papers
**TYPING** for research paper, then
**dependable and accurate. Call Harvey or Linda
Exp. typif. IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
reports. Jam. 841-2069, writing appl. corp-
续, Jam. 841-2069
if you don't see it, ASK! >« KING GEORG'S
1 do damn good typing, Peggy, 842-4476, 3-
NOTICE
Wash Shop. 620 Mass. Used; furniture, dishes,
clothes, telephones, offices. Open daily 12pm.
643-327-377.
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at least in the case of making can make 5 copies of your 120 page thumbnail in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, 638 Mannesburg suite. 841-4900.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive transportation provided. Drive now, pay labor
Attention! Opening demonstration and first meet!
F. 5, 79 bpm. 172 Robbins. Be there at 3:45.
S. 80 bpm. 172 Robbins. Be there at 3:45.
Thursday in DANNON YOUNG! Day at Round
Store-Dill Store- and Flavor. 801. 634-
843-7200.
SKI-EM Blau It is open, 105°, less under new
weather conditions. The room is equipped with:
8 m³ Rum, 6 m³ Kubi, 3 m³ pien, 5 m³
water. Floor mat, 2m².
Laptop, iPad, TV.
Dear Cememor Sendir, I received your master's piece of creativity. I trust that you are actively employing the matter of your own unique writing and that you endear them indulgent letter-writing. Signed, Girl On Her Neck.
PERSONAL
Hatha yoga course for beginners and inter-
medial students. Ministry of Mental
Health, 202A Gordh. Beds #38-41. Fee $150.
Courtesy, 1294 Bedford Road, New York, NY 10016.
"711"-Napoleon brought H to Josephine-
Round Core, bring it you~you 801 Mass~
Square Core, bring it you~you 801 Mass~
will give two AKC registered Siberian huskies to a good home. We will sell racing and dad-rings, and help with training.
Would like to meet the girl that I never spoke with, but whose been on my mind since last Saturday, when I was her in the sixth street HDFL class last semester. Bqr. 714-726. 2-6 HDFL class last semester. Bqr. 714-726. 2-6
STUDENT VOLUNTEERS WANTED: 4 students needed to assist with the operation and management of a computer security facility; technical and managerial assistance during evening operations. Contact SAU offi-643-345-8243.
Thank you Sarah
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 901, 601, 002, 801, and 701. Registration requires a one-time code, 142, 500, 558, 728. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Rate calls 843-7681.
Wanda Grammar at the Ramada Inn Beauty Salon specializes in haircuts for men and women
MATH GOT YOU DOWN? If so, get help early.
104, 111, 119, Call 841-1866.
103, 117, 119, Call 841-1866.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
10th & 8th
19th & Mass.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
West of Hillcrest Bowl
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
No one under 18 admitted
RECREATION'S FINEST
We offer free consulting and reservations services
Planning a trip?
Let Maupintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
SUA / Maupintour now.
travel service
Phone 843-1211
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass.
FREE
With pass-available at your ski-sports shop
STAR
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS
(Service Charge)
at MONT BLEU
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
3 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices range from $100-$200. Monday and Friday Mondays are Ladies Nite, 51, Equipment rental. $20 per night.
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
Professional Research - form papers a speciality
Professional Research - form papers a speciality
Lawrence. Include your phone number. 2-10
FREE TAX ASSISTANCE: Governor's room in
the KU building. Offered by the KU Accounting
Council. 2-10
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Kise Dr. Lips bye-bye with fies and 52k Lips-
lip for 69 at 20am. Corner Drug Store, 801 Mass.
SKI-LIM Bleu is open, 10% less under new air. The waterproof jacket is compatible with a miT kit on K-10, 15, 19, 26 cm, weighing only 35 g.
The NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
has many instruments; 737 New Hampshire
bass a great instrument. The Jazz and Folk
and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin and
jazz jazzer and rock guitar and bass. Call
8181-0817.
HELP WANTED
sign painter wanted for outdoor lettering job.
842-1225
2-5
Part-time, no. night and nighttime fountain work
at vists At Vista Infl. 1257 W. 6th 2-6
Employment Opportunities *
AVON—Start off the new year with excellent business. Open opportunity in Lawrence and near New York.
Secretarial position available. Must be able to
work 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday through Friday.
Shorthand abilities preferred. Apply BY Thur,
Fri, Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, and Hrs.
K. Hanesam, K. Hanesam, K. Hanesam, E. Kowalczynski Employer
Oversee all duties - sympathetic to agreement.
Responsible for the planning, implementation and execution of the programme. Prepare briefs from international organizations, and provide support for international projects.
RIDES — — RIDERS
TRAVEL
Carpool: (LenexaLawrence) Have classes Mon-
day; 9:30-12:00, Tues.-Thurs; 12:30-2:00,
Friday. Carpool R. J. Barnes, 646-4500 (Barnes
School), 303-4580 or burnerfield #888-6841
(Lenexa).
X
Bengal's IN
Clubs and Jewelers
THE CAMBRIAN
EUROPEISHAEL^ABFRECAASA » Travel diwala
* First Avenue, Tucker Ge. 20048, (*6a*)
armadillo bead co
MACRAME READS
TEXAS
COUNTY
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10:5:30
large selection of sizes & prices Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
A PRO
PRO
AM Part Stop
1209 East 23rd St.
841-2200
TACOS
$3.95 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS:
GRAMOPHONE
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Steroo Components
02345678901
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
HOLIDAY SPECIALS 10/19-10/26
Pencil
Wednesday, February 4, 1976
University Daily Kansan
---
WOLF
Come To WOLFE'S
A REAL CAMERA AND PHOTO STORE EXISTS! Only 20 Minutes Away in a Fast Car
Canon TX The amazing SLR that's more camera for less money
Ask the pro who's used to handling the best—he'll tell you that the Canon TX is more camera than you may have bargained for at such a moderate price. You get a load of expensive-camera features, like center-weighted through-the-lens light metering, rugged breech-lock lens mount system, shutter speeds up to an action-freezing 1/500th sec., and much more. Yet, the TX is remarkable for its compactness and lightweight, adding ease of handling to the list. And—it's a Canon!
- Center-weighted metering
• Built-in photofile for accurate exposure
• Accessory level FD and FL lenses
• Breech-lock lens mount for greater rigidity and accuracy of focus
• Wide variety of accessories available
• Multi-slot take-up spool simplifies film loading
• Strong Canon construction that's built to last
Canon ZK
Canon TX
Retail Price 330°0
19999
At Wolfe's
with 50 mm. 1.8 lons
NEW
NEW Canon EF The ultimate electronic SLR
'Sophisticated' is an understatement for the Canon EF. It incorporates so many advanced features that it's almost a camera itself. The EF has a preferred automatic metering system, based on a silicon blue cell for superior performance in low light and instant shooting, a black lens for high-speed electronic and mechanical (1/2-1, 1000 sec. mechanical, 30-1 second electric) so that the battery fail, the camera is still completely operational at all normally-use speeds. The EF is a remarkable camera that must be used.
- Shutter-preferred full automation with a wide range of * Unique electro-magnetic shutter * Ultra sensitive and responsive Silicon metering cell * Easy multi exposure shooting * All metering information shown in viewfinder * Accept flash system * variety of software available
Canon
185.25mm
F3.5-4.5
USM
New only $39900 with 50 mm.
f1.8 lens at Wolfe's
OLYMPUS
OLYMPUS OM-I
35% SMALLER! 35% LIGHTER
At Wolfe's see the system
OM1 with
50 f1.8 lens 299$^{99}$
The new lightweight from Olympus. This is the first photographic system with over 280 accessories available to it, so it can be a photographer. 35% smaller and lighter than the New interchangeable focusing screens allow you to remove without removing pentaprism. The image pears 30% larger and 70% brighter than any other system lets you view, focus, and take meter aperture, make it easier to focus and compose. Plus, the open aperture, through which the system lets you view, focus, and take meter aperture, when the image is brightest. From 8mm to 1000mm deliver crisp, razor sharp time. A unique shutter-mirror design makes images incredibly quiet and shock-free. Shutter speed from 1 to 1/1000 plus "B" or "Self-timer."
Here is our Story
WOLFE'S Camera Shop is the most complete photo supply store in the midwest. In stock are a very large supply of exofix such as 135mm f1.5 telephoto lenses, Exakta microscope adapters, Kalart flash cards and #50 flash bulbs. Since we have all these really strange things, rest assured we know you do want. Such types include hundreds of filters, obscure Nikon adapters, and liquid print emulsion are commonplace at WOLFE'S. For film freaks we stock not only Kodak but GAF, Agh, H&A and Ilford film. For darkroom buffs we have enlarging papers in loads of frames, so you'll be able to see your photos in Kodak. The best way to summarize our stock is to mention that we had more than 65,000 items in the place when we last counted inventory
What
Why
WOLFE'S has such a big inventory because we sell so much. We have regular customers all over the United States. We even fill orders for AP staff photographers in Hong Kong. Beside the large selection, people visit WOLFE's because of the friendly service. The sales staff not only know how to sell but how to help. We may be one of the few stores who regularly tell people not to buy something and then show them a cheaper way to accomplish the same thing. You may find that we do this by asking WOLFE's staff are photographers and have valuable ideas to share. If you are confused about buying a camera or any product, WOLFE's staff will give you honest advice so that you make the right decision. We stock almost every brand so there is no pressure. We can make the sale because we have the equipment in stock no matter what you decide to buy.
How
How much will it cost to buy at WOLF'S? We answer the question with this phrase—a fair price. Only a jacassk would state and only another of the same would believe such phrases as "guaranteed lowest prices in the Universe." You don't need to flip out a student or faculty ID. You don't need to hassle us for a deal. Our customers are extended to handle our unique photo plans ask our salespeople about our unique paper purchase plan. We are showing you some prices in this ad which we consider to be especially attractive values at the moment. Remember, you will not be truly impressed until you visit our store.
WOLFE'S is open six days a week. Hours are 8:30 to 5:30 Tuesday through Saturday. On Monday the hours are 8:30 to 8:30.
When
Where
WOLFE'S is located in Downtown TOPEKA. Take the first exit from the turnpike at Topeka. Follow the expressway to the Central Business District and exit at 8th street. Turn left and drive three blocks to our store at 116 West 8th Street.
Conserve gasoline and your money—build a car pool to visit WOLFE'S. It's a great afternoon adventure for photo hobbies. As an incentive WOLFE'S will give the driver of a 3 person car pool a neck strap that we sell for up some people who like photography and drive over. (Limited to the first 50 car pools—expires 2/15/76)
USED CAMERAS
Our stock of Used Camoras changes so quickly we have not tried to list them here. We have Canon, Nikon, Pontax, Minolta, Konica, Yashica, Mamiya and more. At last count there wore 62 used Single Lons Reflox Camoras in our stock. HURRY OVER.
NIKKORMATFT2
Nikkormat
Here's a great new camera, precision built by Nikon, fast and easy to handle, and packed with outstanding features
- Nikon-designed "center-weighted" thru-the-tens meter system
- Shutter speeds to 1/4000th second
- Electronic flash synch to 1/125th second
- Built-in hot shoe for cordless flash unit
- Big, bright viewfinder shows exposure information
- Super-sharp Nikor multi-coated lens
- Accepts more than 50 Nikon system lenses and many Nikon accessories
Chrome body 199 $ ^{00}$ Retail 287 $ ^{00}$
199 $ ^{00} $
The new Nikkormat EL.
Nikkormat
NIKKOR-N.C A66 1:1.8G 1125247
Nikon
Who says a fine camera has to be a complicated camera? A lot of people think that a really good camera requires an operator with a pilot's license and an engineering degree. Now there's a camera—an incredible camera from the famous Nikon renowned Nikon camera, and its unrivalled precision too, but all you have to do to shoot perfectly exposed photos is focus and press the button! Exposure is fully automatic with reflex viewing lenses. And you can use any of more than 40 lenses to take great pictures, but the capabilities are but are afraid of fine cameras you owe it to yourself to come in and see the fantastic new Nikkor EL.
299 $ ^{00} $
Retail price 460°00 299°00 Body only at Wolfe's
"the camera designed to change the way you take pictures
FILM 380
mamiya/sekor
JS"
the mamiya/sekor DSX 500
Her a handsome new 35mm SLR that gives you the ultimate in creative control. Two separate open aperture through the lens exposures measure "Spot" and "Average" for perfect exposures in almost all lighting conditions. Spot allows you to capture all the way down the makeups and focus a breeze. And check these other great features. Shutter speeds from 1-1/500 sec. plus "B" for time exposures. Rubber grip on the body for non-slip handling.
only 199$^{99}$ w/f1.8 lens
WOLF TOWN
Wolfe's camera shop, inc. 16 West Eighth Phone 235-1386
DOWNTOWN TOPEKA
Tax hikes analyzed at KU dinner
Bv.JAY BEMIS
Support for a 10 per cent merit pay increase for University faculty members and mixed feelings about a one-cent tax hike on cigarettes were expressed by some state legislators at the Fifth Annual Legislators' Dinner at Lewis Hall last night.
About 110 legislators attended the dinner, which was sponsored by the Association of Unitarians (AAU).
Gov. Robert F. Bennett originally proposed that University of Kansas faculty members receive a 10 per cent merit increase in pay, but Speaker of the House Diane S. "Pete" McGill urged yesterday that the increase be limited to five per cent
LEGISLATORS interviewed last night said they didn't favor McGill's proposal.
"I definitely do not," said Arden Booth, R.
Lawrence and K. Harrison, of Palm Beach
parkside in Miami. "Mt. Browne (the people of
Miami) is my hometown."
Kansas) could be here tonight and talk to these young people I think it's the finest thing that has ever happened.
"I support full funding and think it is absolutely essential."
REP. MICHAEL Glover, D-Lawrence,
"I think the speaker and members of
the house of representatives need student
work in filling and retelling the
University's story."
"It's critical that we follow through with 10 per cent and try to reinstate some."
One program Glover said he would like to reinstitute a was a specified reading program.
"It would be for the more disadvantaged student and I think it's an area where, once helped, a student would be ready for any liberal arts course." he said.
Glover said that more classified personnel (state employees) were needed and
Rep. John Ivy, D-EI Dorado, said, "If we are going to compete with faculty increases in the rest of the country, I think we should continue with the 10 per cent increase."
that additional benefits for them were needed, also.
Other legislators thought the increase might be somewhere between five and 10
"I don't think I'm satisfied that 10 per cent is going through." Rep. Wendell Ladd, R-Overland Park and chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said.
"THERE GOING to be an increase, but it's difficult to say what it will be. Aid for secondary and elementary education, penal reform, salary increases for state employees and other needs have to be met at the state level."
Sen. Edward Reilly, R-Lawenworth, said the University had put a great effort to improve his program.
"But being a realist," he said, "I can commit myself to believe that a house of representatives elected every three years will support it. A lot depends on (state laws) and the sympathy of my constituency—and there doesn't seem to be overwhelming support."
"I feel strongly that we need to get on our cancer research," Doyen said. "I would like to see us known nationally for cancer research and we'll need adequate funding that will provide a facility and research for years ahead."
A BILL introduced Tuesday by Sen. Ross Doyen, R-Concordia, would increase taxes on cigarettes one cent. The revenue from the tax, about $2.5 million a year, would be used for cancer research at the KU Med Center.
One proponent of the cancer legislation is Booth, a chairman of the board for the
See LEGISLATORS page two
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.80
Thursday, February 5, 1976
Library construction okaved
By KELLY SCOTT
Staff Writer
A decision to begin planning extensive remodeling of Watson Library and construction of a new science technology museum in the first dayee by Archie R Dykes, chancellor.
The announcement was made to SenEx, which was charged with forming a facilities planning committee to develop a work program for the libraries.
An administrative group composed of Dykes; Shankel; James Ranz, dean of libraries; Ronald Calgard, vice candleman to the chancellor; and Ralph Christoffersen, assistant vice candleman for academic affairs, acted upon recommendations submitted to them in November by a committee of facilities advisory committees, Shankel said.
THE COMMITTEE recommended at that time that the University either abandon Watson Library and build an entirely new central facility, or that a second library be near the military science building to house the University's various science libraries.
Watson would then contain the social sciences and humanities collections.
The facilities advisory committee had estimated that a new building the size of this office would be
Getting funding for a project of that size was an unrealistic thought. Ravz said.
"With the Kansas Legislature the way it is these days," Shankel said, "the chances
Sankel said Ranz would be invited to be chairman of the committee to plan the construction and remodeling of the library. The people appointed to the committee, he said.
REMODELING of Watson should begin with updating the building's air conditioning, heating, wiring and plumbing according to Ranz.
He said some structural problems of Watson should also be alleviated. Tearing out certain walls and removing some concrete will lower priority in the remodeling project.
"We're trying for a lot of free, well-lit, acoustically-spacious space," he said.
Ranz said consideration should be given to moving the administrative offices, now located just inside the front door, to another room, and then to move the floor space for a large, open reading area.
Ranz also cited the need to add openings
windows of the stacks, and said stack areas
within the stacks should be used.
The binding department and storage area in the sub-basement of the east stack wing also needs to be made more accessible, he said.
2 students reported dead
Two KU students are believed drowned off a small island on the western coast of Ireland, today's (Dublin) Irish Independent reported.
Rick Mathes, Kinsley senior, and Ed Moll, Olathe junior, members of this semester's Pearson Humanities trip to Ireland haven't been seen for two days.
The two were reportedly walking along a tidal path Tuesday evening with two other students on Innisbofin Island when the tide was rising and they went for a dry ground, but Mathes and Moll were
Irish Army helicopters, local boaters and the Pearson group, which has been in Galloway County since Jan. 26, have searched the island and outlying waters twice, the Independent reported, but found only the coat of one of the missing students.
apparently carried out to sea, the paper said.
"All hope hasn't been given up," an islander told the Independent, but authorities said the pair would have been found by now had they made it back to the island. Authorities, however, are still searching.
REDECORATING and buying modern library equipment are other ways to improve libraries.
The library has been unable to take advantage of innovations in library equipment, he said, because it hasn't been able to afford and doesn't have room for them.
Ranz said he hoped the library could buy more media equipment, microfilm, maps and other materials.
Ranz said it would be seven years before the effects of yesterday's decision to begin to plan a new library and to remodel Watson would be enacted by the students who would use the libraries.
"The question is how we'll exist in the interim," he said. "The library has been starved over a period of time. We're now having to rely on people who are internal budget awards through the 90%"
WHEN THE NEW science library is built,
it will house the chemistry and physics collection now in Malott Hall, the biological sciences collection now in Snow Hai, the geographical and engineering collection in Malott Hall, the Natural Resources Library, and materials from the business school reading room. Other smaller departmental and branch libraries could also be consolidated, Ranz said.
Budget requests for an addition to Malott library, currently before the Kansas Legislature, are meant as a temporary solution. But the state would move into the new facility, he said.
"As I understand it, it's a badly needed intermime measure," he said. "I expect it would revert to some other use by the disciplines when the new library is built."
See LIBRARY page 5
THE RICHARD C. WILSON BOW TIE DANCE COMPANY
Entertained
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
In addition to dimer, Kansas legalists were treated to a song and dance last night by the Association of University Residence Hall at Lewis Hall. Rep. Ken Marshall of KSU was in attendance.
High GPA not sole road to jobs
By LYNDASMITE
Staff Writer
Frequently, they lose sleep, they cheat
and sometimes, they even commit suicide in
their dreams.
College students are notorious for agonizing over grades.
It's the high GPA, students say, that will land them a good job after graduation.
Some of the job recruiters said that outside activities pursued by the students were more important than good grades. Many students reported that积极性 greatly influenced hiring decisions.
But seven job recruiters on campus this week and four University of Kansas school placement directors generally agreed that new students should be given employers considered when hiring students.
EDGAR WELCH, senior petroleum engineer from Tulsa, Okla., who was on campus recently to interview engineering students for jobs, said he valued a student's extracurricular interests and personality more than his GPA.
He said a willingness to work with others and a positive outlook on life were essential qualities in a person he'd hire. These at-titudes, he said, can't be measured by grades.
"I vire students before with low G's," he said, "who have made good sense."
Wach said he also ranked personal appearance, self-expression, personality, leadership qualities and activities outside school higher than grades.
He didn't totally discount the GPA, however because he said it was one in five.
HE SAID he would hire a C student who had worked his way through school or had been involved in outside activities rather than an A student with no interests.
"But, if all other things were equal between us, would choose B. student?" We asked.
Donald Metzler, director of placement in the School of Engineering, said grades were
an important first impression to an employer. But after the first interview, he said, other considerations, such as work experience and personality, took precedence.
"Grades are one thing an employer can use to make comparisons," Meller said.
Companies have made studies, Metzler said, in which a positive correlation between "advancement up the ladder" and grades have been established.
"So the percentages are in the favor of the employer if he stacks with the student with a
HE ALSO SAID a positive correlation
between activity and extra-curricular
activities existed.
Herb Schroeder, director of elementary personnel in a Wichita school district, said he would offer a job to a student with a poor record and had worked his or her way through school.
He said intangible qualities, such as interest, willingness to work and in interest
in children, ranked higher than the GPA when he was hiring teachers.
"I wouldn't wint he an A student without vim
i and vigor and who wouldn't turn kids on,"
he said.
Schroeder didn't belittle the importance of grades, however, because he said they were indications of capability and achievement.
Usually, he said, people who do well in college also do well in teaching.
"BUT YOURE missing the boat by placing too much emphasis on grades," he said. "If that's all there was to it, we could have a computer and never look at the student."
Schroeder said a B average was probably the GPA he most desired in a student.
"With straight A students, I dig like the devil to see if they're well-rounded or just a girl with a boyish personality."
"I really check the C and A students. If a C reflects what he'll do in teaching I then
See HIGH page 3
KU bell rinaer
University Cardioneurotic Albert Gerken adjusts tension on a cable in the Memorial Campanula. Adjustments in cable tension
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
are made to compensate for expansion and contraction of cables due to temperature changes.
Carillonneur braves cold, fatigue to send bells' peal over campus
By GREG BASHAW
Staff Writer
The wind carried the clear peal of the Memorial Campanile bells for as much as a mile last night. A thousand people may have beard the bells, but the man who makes the campanile's music, Albert Gerken, never knows who's listening.
When he's perched 150 feet in the air in the tower's bridge, Gerken, associate professor of music theory, must overcome the cold out of the belled instrument.
"A lot of people think that a machine plays the songs on the carillon," he said yesterday, "but I hope I put more expression than that into my pieces."
Gerken plays the S3-bell carillon by pressing a set of oak levers and pedals arranged on a caver. These set into motion the linkage that strikes clappers against the cavern floor, as Perlany first gathered in the bells, controlling the claver was a challenge.
"WHEN IT'S COLD I have trouble working the pedals." Gerken said. "Sometimes when I'm through with my performance my less feel frozen."
Orchestrarating the carillon bells takes the talent of a musician and the touch of a surgeon. Gerken must ease the smaller bass instrument, the large bells lyers with a clenched fist.
"I play the carillon in balancing weights as much as creating music," he said. "You have to hit the bells hard enough for a clear sound, without overstriking. When you hit
them too hard you'll hear a dampened thud."
Although the pitch of the bells is permanently fixed, minor adjustments can be made to the striking mechanisms, Gerken said. The clappers often develop too much sway and cling to the bells when they strike, causing an imperfect sound, he said.
When the carillon needs minor mechanical corrections, Gerken puts on old clothes, scales the tower and begins fiddling.
"NO ONE in this area does carillon work," he said, "but two weeks ago we had a specialist from Washington, D.C., in to do a major overhaul."
"Some of the finer carilloneries will perform here this summer in a special
Gerken has played carillons since 1961, when he was earning a master's degree in music at the University of Michigan. He became a member of the Guild of carillonneurs in North America in 1982 and came to KU a year later. Besides the 50 members of the guild, there are only a few carillonneurs in the U.S., according to Gerken.
THE CONCERT programs, yet to be scheduled, will feature patriotic songs and a musical performance.
Gerken said the specialist adjusted the bell linkage and repaired some damage to the keyboard. The repair work, which will be completed in two weeks, will cost $3,500. Gerken said, and the keyboard alterations will make the carillon much easier to play.
Gerken favors classical music and foreign folk songs for his recitals because of their clear melody. There won't be any cannonball rock, he said.
"Pop music, unlike classical, requires a rhythm background that the carlson can't offend."
Occasionally, there's a 'meeting of musics' during Gerenkens's recitals.
"Once in awhile I compete with an unscheduled rock concert they have under the tower," he said, "That dampens my performance."
The KU carillon was built as part of the Memorial Campanile, built in memory of 250 former KU students killed during the war.
Contributions totaling $325,000 paid for the camcorder and its instrument
Bells range from 12 pounds to seven tons in weight. The largest bell hangs 30 feet above Gerken's keyboard and thunderstorms pass through his perch when he pulls its lever.
"On a callation, when you make an error,
it just rings and rings away," he said. "And
I've made some blantant mistakes that I think
everyone caught on to."
Gorken plays Wednesday evenings at 7 and Sunday afternoons at 3. He offers tours of the campanile to any person and to small groups by appointment.
2
Thursday, February 5, 1976
University Daily Kansas
associated press digest
Local persons in quake
Three vacationing Lawrence residents and a tour group of 217 persons from Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma were in Guatemala City when it was rocked by a massive earthquake that rolled through two other Central American cities and Mexico early yesterday.
Barbara Buck, Shirley Joseph and Mrs. Joseph's husband were unharmed when the quake shook the Carnoño hotel where they were staying. No Americans were injured.
Guatemala City was reported to be heavily damaged, but the main tourist area of the city and its airport reportedly escaped serious damage.
The military chief of staff of the Guatemala National Emergency Committee said about 2.000 persons were killed.
Keus gets Roy's support
TOPEKA—William R. Roy, former congressional representative from the 2nd District, announced yesterday he won't oppose incumbent Rep. Martha Keys for the 2nd District seat in the next election.
now, woman two terms in the house before to Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., in 1974, issued a short statement that said he believed his successor was Kansas' 2nd District congressional representative had done a good job and that he would support her in her bid for re-election.
He said his decision not to be a candidate this year in no way precludes races in 1778 and 1880, and said he would lean toward U.S. Senate races in these years if he
U. S. Sen. James B. Pearson's term is up in 1978, and U.S. Sen. Bob Dole, who actually defeated Box in 1978, will be up for re-election again in 1980.
"I very definitely still have an interest in politics," Roy said. "I don't intend to slow down too much."
Concorde flights okayed
WASHINGTON—Two U.S. airports were opened by Transportation Secretary Michael R. Porter Jr. and are the Concordance
numeric airport set for a 16-month trial period beginning March 31.
Coleman's decision would permit scheduled Concorde flights by British Airways and Air France from London and Paris into Duluth International Airport near Los Angeles.
As Coleman announced his decision, the Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. petitioned the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to review the order. John F. Hellegers, a lawyer for the fund, said he filed the petition with the court by telephone shortly after the announcement.
Coleman's decision with respect to Dulles is final, unless overturned by Congress or by a federal court, since that airport is owned by the U.S. government. The Port Authority of New York-New Jersey must approve the decision with respect to Kennedy, because that airport is operated by the Port Authority.
Liauor bill to be submitted
TOPEKA-An unexpected issue was thrown into the 1976 legislative arena yesterday when Sen. Bob W. Storey, R-Topka, announced he would introduce a resolution to submit a liquor-by-the-drink constitutional amendment to Kansas voters next fall.
The resolution may be ready for introduction Thursday, Storev said.
The Kansans for Modern Alcoholic Beverage Control, a Wichita-based group that published the last liquor-by-the-draft constitutional amendment in 1970, is the largest consumer advocacy group in the United States.
The liquor question was narrowly defeated in 1970, losing by only 11,000 statewide.
Book says Demos ignored break-in tips
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Republican counsel of the Senate Watergate committee says he thinks that several people, including Gov. Rick Snyder, have warned about the Watergate break-in.
Fred D. Thompson, the counsel, wrote in a book that the committee investigated illegal practices.
Thompson's book, "At That Point in Time," is the first one on Wategate written by an official investigator. It recounts his 18 years with the company and unanswered questions about Wategate.
Thompson said the minority staff spent months checking a private investigator's report that he overheard conversations in the spring of 1972 indicating that the Democratic headquarters in Washington, D.C., was to be bugged.
THE INVESTIGATOR, Arthur Woolstom-Smith, passed the information to William Haddad, editor of a neighborhood newspaper, Lawrence O'Brien, chairman of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) in a March 23, 1972, letter, which spoke of the sophisticated surveillance techniques now being used for campaign purposes."
Thompson says that O'Brien assigned
John Stewart, director of communications for the DNC, to follow up on the report and that Stewart, in 1973 a civil sultation, "recalled he received a telephone call from Woolster-Smith, preset to June 17, 1972, campaign would attempt to bus the DNC."
Stewart said he considered the in-
formation insufficient to act upon it,
thrombous meningitis.
THE BOOK also reveals that columnist Jack Anderson figured in the Thompson staff investigation through his long-standing friendship with one of the burglar, Frank Sturgis, and through information he got from Haddad.
Thompson said that more investigation of the matter couldn't be justified and that "the effort to find it might add to a finding of historical in-formation only" — we had played out the string.
The information was deemed too speculative by Sen. Sam Ervin Jr., chairman of the Senate Select Committee on the Debt and was not included in the panel's report.
"Did we have proof--proof beyond a reasonable doubt?" write Thompson. "The reason is that I am not a scientist."
Got The Munchies? Try This!
DOYEN, a non-smoker, said Tuesday, "Each penny of cigarette tax raises about $2.2 million in revenue and that would be enough to attract some genuinely powerful teachers to KU that we would need for a first-rate research program."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes told SenXe that Gov. Robert F. Bennett and he had conferred with the Ross Doyen, R. Doyen, in preparation for the preparation of a bill Dyoenas plans to introduce.
Dykes said strong support had been expressed for the bill.
Doyen's bill asks for a one-cent increase in state cigarette taxes to help create a larger cancer research program at the University of Kansas.
Dykes also commented on Speaker of the House Duane S. McGill's move to cut faculty merit salary increases from 10 per cent to 5 per cent.
However, legislators usually are reluctant to increase taxes in an election year. THE CIGARETTE excise tax is now at 11
The cigarette funds would help build up KU's cancer research program to rival places that specialize in cancer treatment and research, such as the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minneapolis, or Lake George Hospital in Houston. The University Administration Hospital in San Francisco.
The CIGARETTE excise tax is now at 11 cents a pack, which equals, or is slightly
"I STILL think there's an excellent chance of compromise or maybe even something beyond that," Dykes said of the way the committee is in the House Ways and Means Committee.
Both optimism and anxiety were expressed in SenEx yesterday over the Kansas Legislature's activity concerning a new bill that would research funds and the fiscal 1977 budget.
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Kansas Division of the American Cancer Society.
Dykes said Bennett had mentioned yet another memorandum the McGill planned to circulate which states that KU's capital improvement projects shouldn't be funded until long-range enrollment figures have been determined.
BUTTERFLY
LADY SAID his first reaction toward the bill will be supportive.
Legislators .
From page one
"I'm interested in it (the bill) because I've been active in the cancer fight for a long time, and sponsored a longtime banning bill last year, so could give this bill 100-per cent endorsement."
SenEx discusses cancer funds
Doyen said he wasn't concerned about additional across state lines because of the additional.
One legislator opposed to the cancer research bill was Fred Harris, R-Chanute.
"A lot of cancer problems are related to cigarette smoking," he said. "It would seem logical to support the research from that sort of revenue."
"I don't know that we need the money from taxing cigarettes," he said. "Doyen favors a tax rebate, too. So what he's doing takes some (money) and gives some money."
less than, the cigarette tax of surrounding states.
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Reilly said he was generally opposed to the bill.
There were 50 more students than were needed to help with the dinner, she said, which resulted in some of the legislators having two student sponsors.
"It was a little larger this year," she said, and everything went as planned without a problem.
"There are enough taxes as it is without increasing them," he said. "I'm in favor of cancer research, but I'm reluctant to support it." He said you have a big surplus (of state revenue)."
JENNIE DEATHE, Overland Park
promotes and dinner coordinated said she
was a member of the club.
"The reason it went so well is a testification of the fact that the administration had nothing to do with it." He pulled in a round of laughter from the audience.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes thanked the students for their hard work in planning the dinner and expressed his appreciation to the legislators for attending.
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KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AND STEREO
Capital improvement project requests include funds for the law building, visual arts faculty, computation center in Sumter and Robinson High School to Mastot Hall and Robinson Gymnasium.
McGill has also called a 12-per-cent raise
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE KANSAS I-913-B42-I544
for other operating expenses excessive. The fund would cover all University ex-operative costs.
Dykes said bids for the visual arts faculty were expected today. He said a total of 27 applicants submitted.
TO THE FACULTY AND STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Starting Monday evening, Feb. 9th, and continuing Monday evening there-
mally, the Bible Church in Basic Bible information will be taught at
the Grace Bible Church of Lawrence.
1) God and His Essence, i.e., Sovereignty, Righteousness, Justice, Eternal Love,
Omiptience, etc.
2) The Gods of the Trinity, i.e., the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
31 Man and his soul essence/ His fall and salvation. The original languages will be considered at the final authority on all matters. Pastor E. T. Rishin a man who was born in India in the year 1915. Pastor E. T. Rishin a man
The class will start at 3:00 p.m. and conclude at 9:00 p.m. The Grace Bible Lawrence Library on the south side of 23rd Street approximately 200 yards due to the intersection of 23rd Street and Anderson Road, green, rectangular Union building at the intersection of 23rd and Anderson Road, information, please inform Carletta (342-3447), Bonnie (342-347), or Bob (342-3295).
DANNY COX
AND
Jon Paul & Thomas
Friday & Saturday
February 6 & 7
$2.00
8:30
Off the Wall Hall
QASIS STUDIO
841-0817
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas
Off the Wall Hall
don't miss the
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17 W. 9th St.
841-7878
The ex-
ility id a
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 5, 1976
High grades...
From page one
don't want him. I never intentionally hire an average student."
Sam Seminoff, an elementary principal from Wichita, said he looked more for stability and maturity in a student at a high GPA.
"A GOOD or B student satisfies me just as much as the A student." Goffen said.
What is said about the student by his supervisors during his student teaching practicum is probably the most important criterion, he said.
An ability to get along with students and other people, and verbal expression are the next most important criteria he said, with grades at the bottom of the list.
Bob Hudgins, another elementary principal who was interviewing on campus this week, said a preponderance of C's and D's on a student's transcript would cause him to ask, "Has this student been wasting his time?"
On the other hand, he said, a straight-A
record does not indicate teaching ability,
other-
Herold Regier, placement director in the School of Education, said he didn't think training programs would enhance deployment screening process. The top priorities for evaluating potential teachers, he said, are student-teaching performances in job interviews. Grades come
Register cited an incident in which an education student with an emphasis in social sciences was hired as a junior high teacher. The teacher received only Cs and Ca's in morn courses.
"This person was hired because math teachers were much scarcer in supply and
Students may be voting to approve a satellite student union in the Feb. 18 and 19 Student Senate election. The Senate Services Committee voted last night to favor recommend to the Senate that the ballot be placed on the ballot for a student body vote.
Satellite union recommended for next ballot
The satellite union, which would be located northeast of Allen Field House, would serve Daisy Hill residence halls and the campus offices. Jeff Rhoads, committee chairman, said.
The proposed satellite union, a 40,000-square-foot structure, would contain meeting rooms, lounge and aeas, a bookstore and food and check-cashing services, he said.
The cost of the satellite union would be financed by 30-year revenue bonds, which would raise student tuition by not more than $6.25 for every student and $2.50 for summer semester. If the satellite union is approved in the spring election, Rhoads said, it will take three to four years.
The committee discussed the rationale for building the new facility. Wescoe Terrace is the only major food service available to Murphy Hall, Summerfield Hall, Robinson Gymnasium, Allen Field House, Learned Law school law building, the committee said.
There is also a large number of relatively new residence halls, fraternities and sororities in the west campus area not conversely located there. Kansas Union, according to the committees
Some committee members were concerned that a satellite union would take business away from the Union. But other members said that the new union would attract a group of students not presently using Union facilities.
The satellite union was first proposed in 1970, but no action was taken then. Since that time, construction costs have doubled, the committee said.
MADRE
SAD HOLY MOTHER
To -- Send Holy Nother -- Yo ImaShiTto
This original signed wood-cut by IO WIHASHIA—Japan (1917) is one of the many original prints to be presented for sale by MARSON LTD. at
The Union—South Lobby
Exhibit Hours
his employer was satisfied with the way he interviewed." he said.
Feb. 9 11 a.m.-7 p.m.
Feb. 10 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Gene Allen, employment manager for the Cessna Fluid Power Division at Hutchinson, said work experience was more important than a student's GPA.
sponsored by
"Someone with a lower GPA such as a 2.0 or 2.5 is sometimes capable," he said, "but maybe an outside job or military service lowered his GPA."
"There are ways to make a good grade," he said, "but not that much out of the course."
SUA
Aim学则应 hikook in account grd
milage aid saffer to kiook in account grd
"I would rather hire a B or C student from a tough school than an A student from an
Allen said grades were indicators of ability, but weren't "all inclusive."
Frederick Madaus, placement director for the School of Business, said grades were emphasized more than employers admitted.
"Companies want to say, 'We take each person and evaluate them as a person,'" he said. "This is more socially acceptable because society objects to quantifying, which is what happens when GPA's are used to evaluate someone."
Robert Giles, former executive editor of the Akron (Boon) Beacon Journal and editor-in-residence at the School of Journalism, said that in the six years he had hired students, he had paid little attention to GPA's.
He said grades were the best and easiest first indicators of ability. After an initial screening, however, grades become less important, he said.
"The top-notch journalists spend a good number of hours on the school paper," he said, "which will probably knock down their grades in other courses."
He said he didn't think editors as a group were very interested in a student's GPA.
Giles said faculty opinions about the student meant more to an editor than a teacher.
"IF A STUDENT worked hard in school, " he
will work hard in good up-tip that
he will work hard on the job.
Dana Leibengood, director of placement in the School of Journalism, said employers generally looked first at samples of students who were well-known. He said, is another important criterion.
Proof of leadership ability and work in general also out-rank grades in importance,
Cc
Dietrich Mackernau
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Council Room-Student Union
Come early for selection! SUA
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A
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4
Thursday, February 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer
SOCIAL SECURITY
ACCOUNT
INSUFFICIENT
FUND$
HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED IN 04/16/2023
FRED FRAYED
SIGNATURE Fred Frayed
FOR SOCIAL SECURITY AND TAX PURPOSES—NOT FOR IDENTIFICATION
A welfare transfer
Social security, probably the most regressive tax in the country, has once again placed an extra burden on lower- and middle-income groups. At the beginning of the year, payroll deductions for the service increased to 5.85 per cent, thus raising the maximum yearly deduction to $895, a rise of $70.
The system has served an important function since it began in 1939. More than 90 per cent of all employed persons are eligible for benefits, including retirement benefits at age 65, and a similar proportion of mothers and children are eligible to receive survivors' payments if the head of the family dies.
But the system is now operating in the red and the situation is expected to get worse. There are now more than 22 million people aged 65 or over. If expected increases occur, the number of people who will be aged 30 million by the year 2000 and 50 million by 2030. Money to handle the increases must be found.
One of the biggest problems inherent to the system is that while social security is being sold to the American public as insurance, it is actually nothing but a welfare transfer system. In insurance, the policyholder makes present payment for his future needs. In a welfare system, the "policyholder" makes present payments for somebody else's present needs. He then has to depend on future generations to do the same for him, and with the condition of the present system, this is not likely to occur.
Increasing the percentage each employee pays may sound like the simplest solution but in the long run it could cause more problems than it solves. During a recessive economic period, any increase of taxes can hinder recovery. As the taxes increase, the income available to spend on goods is decreased, causing a destabilizing effect.
Also, increases in social security deductions place an increasing burden on the lower classes. Taxes for the system are levied on annual incomes up to $15,300. Persons with wages above this level pay no social security on earnings past that level. And social security deductions are placed only on income from wages, salaries and self-employment earnings. The big sources of income for the wealthy, capital gains, dividends, interest and income from property—are left untaxed.
Alternatives have been offered to help individuals recover from uncom招 groups. The suggestions include:
—raising the taxable base of $15,300 or eliminating the base entirely.
allowing exemptions for such things as family size or high medical expenses. This suggestion would have the tax burden on the same way as federal income taxes.
—eliminating the social security deduction completely and paying for the system through federal income tax revenue.
Surely a plan can be worked out so that the system can continue to be funded without becoming a drain on the common working man. If the program continues the way it is going, with higher and higher percentages being deducted each year, the system will be met with growing opposition.
If the opposition gains enough support, the entire social security system could be in jeopardy. And if the system is discontinued, the problem will no longer be one of finances but of suffering. Too many lives, including many children and families, depend on the system. The problems must be corrected before complications and oppositions develop that could kill the program.
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
Highbrows low on morale
WASHINGTON - "It is quite true that we have a considerable number of graduates from Eastern colleges. It is also true that in numbers of degrees, Harvard, Yale, Columbia and Princeton lead the list, but they are closely followed by Chicago
... Stanford and MIT." Allen Dulles, former head of the CIA, discussing the social background and professional qualifications of the Agency's personnel.
Thoroughbreds though they are, the media report that spirits are sagging among the agency operatives.
"The mushrooming publication of names of CIA employees," a recent dispatch from Bonn tells us, "has the power to make the in already low morale of agency personnel overseas."
To show you how low things have gotten, let's go to the home of the CIA Station Chief in the white enclave on the outskirts of the city of Hambono, the capital city of Pangasinan, equatorial nation of Patong. Archibald Archway, B.A. Harvard 56, M.A. Yale 58, Ph.D. Princeton, is having drinks on the porch of "CIA House," as the Hambonianons refer to the Chief's dwelling, the largest and most opulent in city, which also boasted a Holiday Inn until an insurrectionation fact blew up the Arminta Bloodworthy Archway, B.A. Raddiffe 57, M.A. Yale 59, Promgent 60.
"I can't. I'm low, Minty, low, low. Nothing works for me anymore. The cyanide tablets in the head of the Patoise the head of the Patoise Liberation Front have gone stale. The lye and sulfuric acid
"Husband, dear," Arminta says. "you must buck up."
mixture we put in the water pistol of the Minister of Interior's son has gone flat. The trouble we went to, to get the pistol to boot it in his old dad's eyes. "says" the philt "Nothing."
proving they know who our agents are. It wouldn't matter except for these new nationalities that keep springing up, Polycarp. They don't even have countries. People wander around the world demanding the establish-
"Now, A.A., how were you to
By Nicholas
von Hoffman
(C) King Features
know the Minister of Interior were contact lenses? You did burn a hole in his nose. Won't handle them? And with that dreadful Senate?"
"Oh, shut up, Minty. Tell that guck housebuy of yours to get me another drink."
"Wog! A.A., he a wog. Remember, you are, you are as they as they constitute the figure of Polycarp Blenin, the KGB Station Chief, walking across the lawn toward them. The sadness of refined sadness about him
"Beloved enemy, A.A.,
unfolded forever. Yolpary addresses the
tones of profoundest condolence.
"Terrily sorry. I靠
I hop, dear friend, you
I think we got notik to do
with dis."
"My God, no! exclaims Archbrow. "If we can't trust you people in the KGB, who is there to trust?"
"You know wot is killink your bagents? Is it dis putting names of bagents in de nosepapers, Why you do dat silt tink?"
"The little pismires want to show off to their friends by
ment of countries that have never existed, never even been thought of, and if they don't get their way as quickly as they stamp their feet, they shoot one of our people. This last poor
man of ours was killed by a terrorist fanatic who's demanding nationhood for the Iuc of Muc."
"This publicity," signs Armita Arcbrow, "it's upset the children. Particularly that business about Castro's beard. They're as ashamed of their father."
"Show dem you medals, decorations, wot you did for your country."
"He's not allowed to, Polycarp, it's against the agency's rules. They don't let him tell an of the good thouls."
"Too bad. Me. I am Honored Pipe's Ship and member All Soviet order of de Dirt Trick, Second Class. Wow you got it?"
"Ah, holt friend, remember de good days of de Cold War. De were de times, no?"
"They made such glamorous movies about you boys," says Arninta.
"And nobody asked any questions."
No kvestions. Now dey laf at us."
"I know, Polycarp. Give them a lifetime of dedicated care, blackmilk and treachery, and this is the thanks you get."
"Hokay, mine friend, holt buddy, enough low morale. Le me 'give em a good show here in dis room.' We put on a good coat of Patioce. We put on a good one for 'em, make 'em forget lSD in de coffee doing恳 do you want to De stabilise ice or de unstabilize force?
"Well, I'll be the destabilizing force for a change, but it isn't going to help my morale."
I'VE GOT A FEELING THIS CAN RUSSE IS GOING TO BE BAD NEWS FOR US CIA AGENTS.
I HOPE YOU'RE NOT ONE OF THOSE SO QUEST TO CONVEY HIM JUST DEALIE WITH MAS ONCE, CHAIRMAN OF THE PEPBULAN NATIONAL COMMITTEE--
--YOU'VE GOT TO EXPECT SOME OF THESE PROCEDURAL MODIFICATIONS.
The owner of the eight-foot by eight-foot room also has quite a
Small bars inherit the crowds
If you see a bar in Lawrence you can be fairly sure that there was a bar there twenty years ago and that there will still be a bar there twenty years from now.
Oh sure, there have been some changes since 1956. The bars on Massachusetts change from the original Rock Chalk/New Haven/Ark/Cafait. Other bars have occasionally face lifts. Some don't.
The secret of KU bars' longevity is simple: be small. If you feel the skin is feeling they're one of the regulars. They'll feel at home in that bar and go elsewhere only on occasional occasion of scenery.
Not only that, but a small bar gets crowded faster. A party is in order and there is a saddlerily more exciting in an eight-foot by eight-foot room in a triple-wide trailer, which you can have a mirrored dance floor.
bit less overhead to worry about.
bars have neither dance floors nor room for a band or a disc jockey. They are tempted to stray from the fold.
People have told me that in other college towns with small bar systems, it's at times such as here they don't syndicate come riding in on
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
P. R. H. S.
several decades or so, KU students have liked their bars that way.
There is, however, a weakness in the KU system; a flaw that could at any time destroy it.
Whenever dancing makes a comeback—as it is now—KU's bar-going population begins to notice that their beloved small
white horses to take over with something new and shiny and hure.
These bars become "the place to go" and drive many of the smaller bars out of business. Then, after a semester or so, students get bored with "the place" and rush to a newer, bigger place as soon as it is built.
Perhaps this will happen in Lawrence. Already, the Free State has been bought by an out-of-state bar chain and rumors of a modernized disco have been heard.
This is what is happening in Manhattan. It's also happened in Hays and other college towns. And once you get on the disco roller coaster and the small bars are gone, it's hard to stop.
But it's far too early to tell whether the new Free State will be of the flashing floor-mirrored table kind. Even if it is, that doesn't necessarily mean it will be the place to go. The out-of-town invader should probably be surprised could be some unexpected competition—the Kansas Union.
The Union's Hawk's Nest, which has been featuring live bands and dancing on weekends this semester, is anything but difficult. The club is only by the draw, making specials on pitchers impossible.
The Hawk's Nest will probably never become the place to go.
The Hawk's Nest isn't really a threat to the traditional small bars. After all, it's only in business late on weekend evenings. The small bars still get the weeknight crowds—plus the people who don't like bands the people who don't squeeze into the Hawk's Nest.
What the Union can do, however, is destroy the novelty of dancing in a bar. It accustoms people to the idea of dancing as a weekend change of pace.
It also accustoms them to the absence of a cover charge, something a new shiny disco is rarely without.
So even if a new shiny disc does come, that doesn't mean it will necessarily become the place to go. Some of the small bars would survive. And, in the case of a new disc, you become an old, tarnished disc and there would be no reason to do any more now.
And the small bars would inherit the campus.
WESTPHAL
HUBIE'S "PLEEZDAZ PUNCH"
ELIXIR
WILL CURE:
Economy, T
Warts, Busir
Unemployment,
Zebraphobia,
Radiation Nausea,
Fever Etc.
YES POLKS, THERE ARE MANY IMITATIONS, SO YOU'LL HAVE TO BE SURE AND ASK FOR IT BY NAME: HUBIE'S "PLEEZDAY PUNCH."
Letters Policy
The Kansan welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 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.
An All-American college newspaper
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newaroom-864-4810
Business Office-864-4358
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
and on Sunday afternoons. Visit the
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yers' office. Mail $150 to the University
semester or $12 a year in Decatur County and $14
a year in Lexington County. Pay $20 for
subscriptions or $2.00 a month, paid through
the University's Student Aid Department.
Editor
Carl Young
Bette Heyglen
Assoc Campus Editor
Assistant Campus Editors
Photo Editor
Staff Photographers
Sports Editors
Associate Sports Editors
Entertainment Editors
Copy Chiefs
Artist
News Editors
Wire Editors
Contributing Writers
Yael Aboubakhab
Greg Jacobs
Jake Bates
Stewart Branwatt
George Drewshaw,
George Milne Hillman
Allen Quickenback
George Milne Hillman
Steve Schoenfield
Kev Support
Mary Attanasio
Amy Hunt, Hudsonington
Jane Maire, Mahoney
John Gwinn
John Hickey, Brendon Anderson
Kelly Scott, Chuck Alexander
Kelly Scott, John Johnson, Jip Bates,
Business Manager
Rory Parale
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Gam Group. Univsity Libraries
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Associate Sales Manager Dabble Service
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Jim Marquardt
Publisher
David Davis
News Advisor Business Advisor
Susanne Shaw Mel Adams
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5
Thursday, February 5, 1976
Library work
From page one
The only libraries on campus would be Watson, the proposed sciences library, Spencer, the law library in the new law building and the art library, which will move to the new Helen Foresman Spencer Art Museum upon its completion.
--une advisory committee, of which he was a member.
THERE IS A chance that Watson will take over the Green Hall stacks, Ranz said. He has put in its b贮 for the space and Ranz said anyone else who would be interested in it.
University Daily Kansan
The subject of branch libraries moving in one central library is controversial. Randi
Some departments have indicated they are opposed to centralization of branch libraries.
E. B. Cobb, associate professor of mathematics and chairman of the mathematics library, said yesterday that the math department was opposed to the library's inclusion in the new science library. The math library is now in 260 Strong.
"The way it is operated now we're close to the depths it's like a high dependent on the depth like a lab a ship."
Cobb said the math library was primarily used by faculty and graduate students.
Cobb said he had been assured that the math department would have the chance to discuss the library's plight with Shankel before the plans went further.
"Some undergraduates use it, but it's basically a research library," he said.
T. R. Smith, professor of geography and chairman of the University Senate Libraries Committee, said that he thought there were limits to what consolidation should be tried, but that it was favored by
He said the committee found out that the math library was closed to the public when Strong Hall was locked at night and on Monday, that it was inaccessible to the handcaneed.
Students will be able to rent original
cities and scenes from the Kansas
university to 5-12 students in the Kansas
university.
The pictures are rented to students for one semester by SUA. Original rent for from $3 to $7.50 and reproductions rent for 75 cents, Katherine Gleis, assistant director of the Union in charge of programming, said yesterday.
Ranz said the decision of whether the smaller libraries would be included in the new science facility would be up to the Senate libraries committee.
Art is available to KU students on rental basis
The collection comprises about 200 pictures, and posters are usually popular, she said.
The collection includes a wide variety of
posters, prints, lithographs and etchings from different time periods.
Rental money is used to buy more pictures, she said, and commission money from SUA print sales also purchases additional prints.
Men rescued from blaze
"I wear size 12 boots and I kinda curled my tees back and kicked the door hard about five times," Jones said. "It shook the
About 50 people checked out pictures last semester, she said. Pictures rented during the fall semester may be renewed, and a student may rent up to three pictures each semester.
Lawrence police officer Lloyd Jones saved two local men early Wednesday morning from a house fire, which Jones said he saw a half-mile away, blazing above some trees.
The men, Floyd Baxter and Richard Jessee, escaped from their home at 1512 E. 15th just before the bedrooms where they were sleeping were enveloped by flames and smoke. Jones alerted them to the danger by knocking loudly on their door with his foot until the men heard his warnings.
whole house so I guess they couldn't help but hear me."
Fire officials said the fire originated on the back porch when an extension cord overheated and ignited rags and wood on the porch.
He said he had begun to fear that the men were being overcome by smoke. When one of the men finally came to the door and knocked on it, he said, smoke poured out the door.
If a print lost, a student pays for it as if a book is lost from a book lost from the library. Gale's use.
"I had looked the other way as I was driving down the street they probably would be stunned.
Damage was estimated at $6,000 to the house and $2,000 to its contents. A car accident resulted in this damage.
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It Sounds Incredible But Evelyn Wood Graduates Can Read Over 1000 Words Per Minute
West of the Chi Omega Fountain
Think for a moment what that means. All of them—even the slowest—now read an average novel in less than two hours. They read an entire issue of Time or Newweek in 35 minutes. They don't read a book on their own until they tell the material they are reading determine how fast they read.
You can do it, too. So far over 550,000 other people have done it. People who have different jobs, different IQs, different interests, different education have completed the course. Our graduates are from all walks of life. Those people have all taken a course in our program and have practiced practically all of them at least tripled their reading speed both individually or better comprehension. Most have increased it even more.
And mark this well; they actually understand more, remember more, and enjoy more than when they read slowly. That's right! They understand more. They remember more. They enjoy more. You can do the same thing—the place to learn more about it is at a free speed reading lesson.
This is the same course President Kennedy had his Joint Chiefs of Staff take. The same one Senatops and Congressmen have taken.
Come to a Mini-Lesson and find out. It is free to you and you will leave with a better understanding of why it works. Plan to attend a free Mini-Lesson and learn that it is possible to read 3-4-5 times faster, with comparable comprehension.
FREE SPEED READING MINI-LESSON TODAY and Daily through Saturday, Feb. 7 7:30 p.m.
EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS
Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Phone 843-6424
THE
HAWK'S NEST
presents
Tonite, Feb. 5 5-6:30 p.m.
"The 11:30 Jazz Ensemble"
directed by Charles Elliot with featured trumpet soloist Jim Sellards, one of the top professional trumpet players in Kansas City, a KU graduate, returning to his alma mater.
Friday, Feb. 6 8-12 p.m. "Cargo"
Saturday, Feb. 7 8-12 p.m.
"Mackender Lynch"
Coors on tap-Coke-Sprite-Peanuts-Pretzels-Popcorn 45c draws NO COVER CHARGE
level 2-Kansas Union
Produced by SUA
midseason outerwear sale from MISTER GUY. all the outerwear from eight stores has been transferred to the lawrence store for a one week gigantic sale! all the season's favorites now on sale—including all the leathers, corduroys, and bench warmer styles. MISTER GUY still has a large selection of 3-piece vested suits on sale now for $9950.
open till 8:30
thursday nights
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920 mass.
6
Thursday, February 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
NU free throwing downs KU
KANSAS
00
KANSAS
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
Cook guarding Wildcat Saturday
That alone tells why the Jayhawks were nipped by the Cornhuskers. 57-84, here last night.
LINCOLN, Neb.—Look at the free throw statistics.
Nebraska: 25 of 31. Kansas: 22 fouls.
Nebraska made more trips to the foul line than
California, who were connected on 20 of 37
free throws in the second half.
MOST OF THE 7,832 fans at The Coliseum spent the entire game simply moving their eyeballs from one foul line to the other. And it was usually the Big Red they were watching.
"Look at that," said Ted Owens. University of Kansas coach. "They made 25 free throws, God, that凯
The free throws enabled Nebraska to move into a tie with Missouri for first place in the Big Eight race. Both teams have 5-1 marks, after MU's loss to Kansas State last night.
FREE THROWS PARTICULIARLY killed KU when it was ahead by six points, 29-23, early in the second half. The Jahawks kept fouled Jerry Fort, Nebraska guard, and between his free throws and buckets from long range, the Huskers had turned that deficit into a 41-33 lead early in the second half.
"We stepped doing what gave us the lead." Owens said. "We wanted to get the ball inside, but we started out by dropping it back on the ground."
THE HUSKERS HELD on the rest of the way, scoring almost entirely from the foul line. Nebraska's 12 list points were free throws. They didn't score a goal after Fort put them ahead, 45-35, with 8:44 to play.
But that didn't matter as long as the Huskers kept hitting from the line. Their free throws spiked a KU defensive performance that limited the Huskers to only seven field goals after intermission.
NEBRASKA ONLY MADE 16 field goals in the game, the fewest Kansas has allowed this year.
"They were penetrating." Owens said, "and we stopped them pretty well with our zone defense. But in the end they had to leave."
Fort, a 6-3 senior guard, was the chief thorn in KU's
defense and received 16 second-half points, including 10 from
the four.
moving, and as a result they got a lot of foul shots and a lot of offensive boards."
STEVE WILLIS, WHO DIDn't start the game because of the flu, also hurt the Jayhawks in the second half, but the Raptors' defense was better.
Cook hit three baskets at the end of the first half to send the Javahws ahead by two at halftime. 25-23.
"KU IS JUST MURDER inside," said Jce Cipriano, who attended those offbeat boards. That's their biggest strength.
The Jayhawks played brilliantly in the first half. Norm Cook, 8-6 junior forward, and Paul Mokeski, 7-foot freshman center, got behind the Huskers for easy buckets.
But in the second half, the Jayhawks quit working the ball inside.
Kansas scored only four points in six minutes, from 16-47 left to 10-48, in the second half. They scored only four more points during the next four minutes. By that time, they were behind by eight. 47-39.
ALTHOUGH UNHAPPY about losing, Owens was the Jamaican player to play and 10-8 against the Big Bight greats.
"The K-State win kept us in the race for the title," he said. "We would have been in great shape if we could have won."
KANSAK (64)
Cook FG PT PF BB TB TP
Cook 9-13 9-13 5 2 10 21
Koeniga 8-13 0-1 5 3 2 12
Koeniga 3-15 0-1 5 3 2 13
Mekonag 6-10 0-1 2 3 2 12
Gibson 6-10 0-1 2 3 2 13
Harbour 0-6 0-0 4 3 2 10
Harbour 0-6 0-0 4 3 2 10
Total 35-52 4-8 22 39 24
KanSAK (57)
Siegel 3-7 3-4 3 7 8
Hinder 3-7 3-4 3 7 8
Cox 4-6 3-8 3 8 11
Willi 4-6 3-8 3 8 11
Fort 5-16 11-14 2 3 21
Berkau 0-1 1-2 2 3 21
Harris 0-1 1-2 2 3 21
Kansas 16-39 23-33 14 38 97
Kansas 16-39 23-33 14 38 97
Officals: Irv Brown, Dick Sandor
Officials: Ivr Brown, Dick Sandor
Attendance: 7,852
Wagle is an all-around
By GARY VICE
By GARY VICE
Sports Writer
Freshmen ordinarily aren't expected to be team leaders. But Angie Wagle isn't an ordinary freshman performer for the women's gymnastics team.
Midway into her first season for the University of Kansas, Wagle has won the all-around competition in three of four games. She also teammate Rene Neyville in the other.
The all-around category consists of four events: vaulting, balance beam, uneven ladder and ladder jump.
HER COLLEGIATE SUCCESS has
squared off to an unde-
manded start.
Wagle was recruited from Kapau-Man, Carmel High School in Wichita by Ken Mayer.
"I watched her once last year in a high school meet and contacted her after that," Sullivan said.
WAGLE SAID SHE had been contacted by both Arizona State and Wichita State before the shooting.
Wagle said she became interested in gymnastics as a student in high school and then began to be the coach.
"Arizona was just too far from home," Wagle said, "and 'Wichita was too close."
"I learned most of the tricks myself then, using a padding beam," she said.
"I started working all-around in the summer and then competed in that event my junior and senior years of high school," Wagle said.
Wagle has advanced quickly for a gymnasium because of the hard work she puts on. She is also the most experienced.
"I LOVE GYMNASICS." Wagle said.
"You get something out of it. It's like being an actress or something. You get a neat feeling."
Besides capturing firsts for the Jayhawks, Wagle said her goal was to qualify championships this season. The nations will be in Boone, N.C., the first week in April.
To advance to the nationalists, Wagle needs greatly improve her scores this March at the NCAA tournament.
SNOW SAID of her chances, "It's within
gymnast
the realm of possibility, but it'll be tough" the realm of possibility, but it'll be tough" the realm of possibility, but it'll be tough"
To qualify for the national meet in the all-around event, a performer would have to score 36.0 or better in regional competition. To qualify in a special event, a gymnast must score at least 9.0 and place in the top three at registrals, he said.
Walgreens' season high in the all-around came last Friday against Central Missouri.
HER BEST CHANCE for a trip to the nationals appears to be in the balance beam event, Snow said. Wagle has shown promise of improving her top score of 8,35, he
"My favorite event is beam," she said, "I hate vaulting."
Wagle's long-range goals also include vaults.
"I hate to see someone perform bad gymnastics. I can't think of anything worse."
"Right now I'd like to be a high school
school, but only wrestlers, no pro girls," she
sayed.
American pair close to getting Olympic silver
INNSBRUCK (AP) - East German teams set records in both the men's and women's huge events yesterday, and a Colorado couple moved into third place in ice dancing as the 12th Winter Olympic Games opened in this Alpine capital.
In the first ice dancing competition ever held in an Olympics, Russia's Ludmila Pivlova won her third time world champions and the favorites here—took a strong early lead by winning the compulsory round. They easily took all three rounds remain, today and next Monday.
They were followed in second place by the Russian team, who was Mionkoeva, Andrei; Minenkov
Making a bid for an American medal were Coleen O'Connor and Jim Millins, silver medals at the 1975 world championships in Colorado Springs. They were in third place, very close to second, in the intermediate standings of the competition.
AIEEEE!!
K.U. KARATE CLUB
will open the season with a FREE DEMONSTRATION Come and see what it's all about. Beginners and advanced students welcome. TONIGHT Feb.5 7:30 p.m.
—Sport
—Self-defense
173 ROBINSON GYMNASIUM
—Self-confidence
—Physical fitness
N
—Self-awareness
—Inner peace
SUR TRAVEL
INCLUDES:
—Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
—The Nights Lodging at the Westward Hoe Motivation the Srip
—Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
LAS VEGAS
March 15-20
Cost $105$
PADRE ISLAND March 12-21
Cost $ 121^{00} $
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
**NOTES:**
—Record Trip Charter Bus Transportation
—Seven Nights Accommodations at the Sand Castle Motel
—Private Pool and Fishing Dock
—Kilichenettes (fully equipped)
—Trip Old Market
—Limited Shuttle Bus Service
—Beer and Eats Party at Padre
—Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
Dillon, Colorado
March 13-19
Cost $13700
INCLUDES:
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
GROUP FLIGHTS
- Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation (optional)
- Five Nights Lodged at the Lake Dillon Holiday Inn
(Breckenridge/Copper Mt./A.
Basin/Keystone)
- Four Days Rentals (optional)
- Night Trip to Vail, Colorado
- Friday and Saturday for Bus Ride
- Cross Country Skiing Available
Denver ... March 12
Chicago ... March 12
If your group is planning a trip, see the SUA office about setting up a group flight. Stop by the SUA office and fill out a flight card as soon as possible.
Deadline for sign-up, 10 Days Prior to Departure
$ 101^{00}
$ 6900
HELPING STUDENTS GO PLACES IN A WAY THEY CAN AFFORD
Call 864-3477
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Thursday, February 5, 1976
7
City workers file no grievances
No one from the Lawrence Sanitation Employees' Association complained to city hall yesterday, despite City Manager Buford Watson's request that they do so.
Watson and Asst. City Manager Mike Wilden said yesterday no workers had telephoned to make appointments to discuss grievances.
At the Lawrence City Commission meeting Tuesday night, Watson told the workers' adviser, Norman Forer, that he would grant interviews to employees who thought they had been harassed by city management.
Forer said yesterday he had previously urged workers to use the city's employee grievance procedure but they had been denied interviews. One worker, Forer said, was reprimanded last week for approaching Wildden with grievances.
University Daily Kansan
"T'S A FOLLY to say 'Come talk to me' when there's still a reprimand over someone's head who did just that," Forer said. "We need assurance people who file grievances will not be mistreated or criticized."
Dennis Smith, president of the sanitation association, said he's also previously encouraged workers to file grievances but hadn't been successful.
"There's a natural fear that if you file a prevenience you'll be blacklisted in the police," she said.
Both Forer and Smith said workers didn't have a clear understanding of the grievance process.
★ ★ ★
Charges apt to be filed
Charges probably will be filed today against a city landfill employee who alleged to run down or terrorize a co-worker. A judge ruled Douglas County attorney, said yesterday.
Berkowitz said the employee would be charged with aggravated assault if charges were filed. He declined to identify the officer until he could check some case details.
The charge against the bulldozer operator was made Tuesday night at the Lawrence Forer, consultant to the sanitation employees' association. Forer had promised at the meeting that he would take the charge of the assault" to Berkowitz for prosecution.
Forer said at the meeting that he had two witnesses who would testify that the operator who would testify at least a worker to 24 Forer. Downer connected the incident directly to sanitation department management. He said the operator apparently was protected by his phone.
orer met with Berkowitz yesterday afternoon to discuss the allegation.
Rock, jazz set for Hawk's Nest
Five nights of live entertainment, three disco nights and weekly performances by the KU Jazz Ensemble, followed by an annual weekend schedule for the Hawk's Nest this semester.
Live entertainment scheduled for February will be Cargo on the 6th, Mackender Lynch on the 17th, Millionaire at Midnight and OZ on the 18th, Rosewood Trio on the 27th and Cole Tucker on Kye on the 30th. Live entertainment on the 19th and 14th and again on April 15.
On Friday nights a patron may receive a discount on his first beer, Works said. It will cost 25 cents instead of 45 cents if a student has gone to that night's SUA film.
There will be no cover charge, he said, but next semester there will be larger shows.
Starting next Thursday, Works said, there will be a dinner special from 6:30 to p. 10.m. after the KU Jazz Ensemble performs. A large band and a salad and a small beverage will cost $1.25.
"After that, we're going to have an open mike for anything people feel they have to say."
Works said reservations for performances could be made in the SUA office from noon to 2 p.m. Students can sign up for dramatic interpretations, guitar playing or other performances, which will last 15 minutes, half an hour or longer.
Next Thursday, God's Own Jukebox, a blues, country music and comedy act of Greg Kesler and Roger Nolan, will perform from 7 to 9 p.m.
McQueen Jewelers
are now using the most advanced one-step ear piercing system today
Studs are made of non-allergenic 24 K. gold over one piece surgical stainless steel
Simultaneous insertion of pre-sterilized stud and attachment of clasps in less than 1/10th of a second
No appointment necessary
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"I don't think they (workers) know it or I don't care about it," Smith said. "It's part of our culture."
809 Massachusetts
843-5432
WILDGEN SAID all city employees received handbooks that explained the procedures. Everyone who has asked for copies of the procedure has received them, he said. Brent McFall, city personnel director, will help fill out grievance forms, Wildgen said.
Under the city procedure, a worker discusses grievances with his supervisor. If he is dissatisfied with the discussion, he then speaks with the department head.
Following the hearing, a report is sent to Watson. If the worker is still dissatisfied, he may appeal to Watson, who makes the final decision on grievances.
If he is still dissatisfied, he may request a hearing, which would take place in front of three persons: McFall, the head of another company; and an employee of that department.
FORER SAID the workers might take their grievances directly to federal court. A decision to go to federal court will be made in an order of the association's financial resources, he said.
On Campus
Events...
TODAY: A NOONDAY INTERNATIONAL for U.S. and foreign students will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1 a.m. in Alcove P of the Kansas Union cafeteria.
TONIGHT: PROFESSOR VIKTR MASLOSI, University of Leningrad, will present a slide lecture on present-day Leningrad and the 900-day siege of Leningrad during World War II at 7 at the Pkappa Theta house, 1941 Stewart University; Dr. Robert Saxon, Professor Emeritus of Law, will meet at 7:30 in the Robinson Natatorium. A free MEDITATION CLASS will be offered at 7:30 at the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread. THE NATIONAL LAWYER'S GUILD will show a film on the shooting of Black Panther Leader Fred Hampton and the following legal proceedings at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the University of California-Los Angeles, will speak at 7:30 in the Bier Eight Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: BORRIES NELEPO, Ukraine Academy of Science, will lecture on oceanographic work at 3:30 p.m. in the Anno Room of Nichols Hall.
Announcements . . .
The William Allen White School of Journalism has received 56 books from the private collection of Paul V. Miner, retired president and chairman of the board of the Kansas City Star. Miner was both editor and managing editor of the Kansan, 1932-33.
The KU Endowment Association has received a $2,000 gift in memory of Stella G. Hall, a 1929 KU graduate. The gift was established with proceeds from the estate of Stella G. Hall.
A "Calendar of Events," listing lectures, exhibitions, special events, theater productions, athletic events and other KU activities is now being offered by the Center for University Relations. To receive the free monthly calendar, write to "Calendars for University Relations, Box 229," University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60454.
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H
B
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SUA Forums Debate
George Gilder, author of SEXUAL SUICIDE An Attack on Women's Liberation vs. Karen DeCrow, president of the National Organization of Women.
February 5,8 p.m. K.U.Ballroom Admission 50c
8
Thursday, February 5, 1978
University Daily Kansan
Virtuoso shares Listz's legacy with KU students
By KAREN LEONARD
University of Kansas piano majors have been given a unique opportunity to reap the wisdom of a musical heritage that began with classical composer Franz Liszt.
Internationally renowned concert pianist Sequeira Costa, whose own master had been a pupil of Lissit, is teaching master classes in music as part of his job as visiting professor.
While Costa's profession has been mainly that of concert pianist, he has had two years of teaching experience at the Lisbon Conservatory in his native Porgul.
Albrough he plans to teach at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, N.Y., and in London after he finishes his doctorate. He will stay under staying at KU if he received an invitation.
"UP TO NOW I've really been enjoying my position here at KU." Costa said. "Lawrence is a change, but I've had enough of big cities. Italy is a mess. France is a disaster. And now I'm in a discipline and friendship and quiet. Lawrence is what I'm looking for."
Costa arrived here Jan. 26 after finishing his duties at the Seventh Viana da Moça.
International plane competition in Lisbon.
which is bred every two years.
Because of the violent political upheaval in Portugal, Costa said, organizing this year's competition had cost "years of his life."
"Even in the orchestra, nobody wanted to play," he said. "That's one reason I'm in the states. Everything in Portugal is in Europe, I want to work and the economy is a mess."
'ALLI WANT is to work. I know it sounds strange, but I don't feel I love a thing to my country. France and Paris gave me the prize which opened my career.
The prize to which Costa was referring was the Grand Prize De Paris, which he won at the age of 22 at the Marguerite-Tibau Tibau International piano competition.
After receiving the prize, Costa toured China and several countries in Europe, Africa, South America and North America. And he has more travel planned.
During a three-week period in March, Costa has concert performances scheduled with the Berlin Philharmonic, the Zagreb (Yugoslavia), Philharmonic and recitals in
Paris, Rome and Lisbon. He will also go to Prague during that period to record the events of 1915.
COSTA SAID he started studying piano at the age of six. He was born in 1928 in Angola. But at the age of five, his parents sent him to Lisbon to begin studying music. His parents had become aware of Costa's gift for music, he said, before he was five, when he learned to play the accordion and played from memory any song he heard.
Costa's first master, Viana da Motta, a pupil of List, was 70 when he instructed the students.
"I was apparently quite gifted, and there was no one in Africa who could help me at that," she said.
His childhood was a lonely one, he commented.
"I never knew what it was to have a friend or to go the movies." Costa said.
But, he added, this was during World War II, when times were difficult for everyone.
IN HIS YOUTH, Costa said, he had thought of careers other than that of being a pianist, and he had to go to school in the public school. But he had to give up that because he was spending seven to
Now, he said, he spends only four or five hours a day practicating and spends the rest of his time elsewhere.
eight hours a day practicing the piano, leaving too little time for studies.
Costa said music had been a great help to him throughout his life and he could find no disadvantages to his career. As a concert performer, he is interested in people and travel, he said, and he has also gained a lot from his close relationship with music. He said he thought that he understood people and their experiences, as a result of his understanding of music.
COSTA SAID that since he had been a lonely child, he had been a bit aggressive with people, but that his music had made him gentler.
This fact, to Costa, is the real value of music, and art in general. He said music made people more tolerant and more understanding.
"The best pianists are the kindest," Costa said.
If a pianist isn't good and doesn't make it, he will try to prevent talented young musicians from succeeding, he said. The great pianists will always do everything they can to help the young ones because they know how difficult it is to succeed. Cuesta said.
Guest geologist calls ocean floor best source for more U.S. oil
U. S. production of oil has dropped during the last decade because exploration efforts have focused on land projects rather than oceanic research, Hollis Hedberg, Merrill W. Hass Visiting Distinguished Professor of Geology, said yesterday.
"The easiest oil, which comes from the land, has almost all been tapped," he said. "The best sources for future oil for the Gulf of Mexico are the Sea and the Atlantic Continental shelf."
Hedberg is a University of Kansas alumnus (1925) and Professor Emeritus at Princeton University. He is also an officer of Gulf Oil Corp., the official resident of Gulf Oil Corp, from 1897 to 1894.
This semester, Hedberg is teaching a
masters' major, called
"Narrative Classification"
of linguistics.
He said exploratory ocean drilling had been blocked by the government's refusal to lease any sections of the Atlantic continental shelf to oil companies.
Environmentalists have said that accidents in ocean drilling could cause great oil slicks and pollution, Hedeby said, but environmental experts said 100 wells in the Atlantic without trouble.
Feminist,sexist to debate on women's roles
Admission will be 50 cents, and tickets are available at the SUA office.
DecCrow is conducting a campaign to inform people around the country about NOW, according to Tony Calao, a representative of the American Program Bureau, the Boston lecture agency that provided the speakers.
Karen DeCrow, president of the National Organization for Women (NOW), will debate George Glider, author of "Sexual Right in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union."
DeCrow is an author, lecturer and teacher. Her most recent book is "Sexist Justice." She is a lawyer and a 1972 graduate of Syracuse University.
Calao said yesterday that Gilder was concentrating on his third book. The premise of his first book is that a woman's place is in the home. Men are sexually inferior and must be attracted into the home by women to keep the men from running away. Gilder is part of the institutions of individualism and democracy," the book saves.
Brad Bradley, chairman of SUA Forums,
said Glide formers were being debated
in a high-level medical trial.
Calao said Glider and DeCrow hadn't debated while they had been with his company, but they had debated each other independently.
"They know each other," he said,
"They're not enemies."
There will be a reception at 7 p.m. in the Centennial Room of the Union for Glder and another reception at 7 p.m. in the Music Room for DeCrow.
Before oceanic drilling can develop, international boundary disputes must be worked out, Heedberg said. The United Nations has been working on a boundary law to define property rights on the oceanic floor he said.
Oil shale and secondary oil, two potentially great fuel sources, have largely been ignored in the search for more reserves, Hedberg said. Shale and secondary oil are found below surface reserves, in loose rock. Large quantities of water and heat can separate and carry on oil from the rock, an expensive operation, Hedberg said.
Even if much more new oil is found, the world will likely run out of all its reserves by the end of this decade.
At most, 1,000 billion barrels of oil can be said, "and with annual output at 20 billion barrels in 2015"
More emphasis must be placed on developing optional sources of energy, he said. Suspicions that large oil companies have delayed research on nuclear and solar energy in their own interests aren't true, Hedberg said.
Many of the large oil companies began
massive and development of these fuels
many years ago.
"The companies looked far enough ahead years ago, that the use of other inventions was inevitable."
$1.99 tax included
Special Dinners $1.99 tax included
Different Each Day
"They were used as whipping posts by the people," Hedberg said. "Instead of examining their own demands on oil, the public put the burden of the oil shortage on the major companies."
Each dinner served with egg roti,
egg drop soup, rice or fried noodles,
coffee or hot tea
Hedberg recently edited a book, "The International Stratigraphic Guide," which offers a global technical language for use by geologists in stratification and classification of stratified rock.
Virginia Inn
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Costa said he thought Mozart was the most universally appealing of the classical
WEDNESDAY
2907 W. 6th
THURSDAY
---
Although classical music is increasing in popularity through the influence of radio, records and television, Costa said, it still isn't widely appreciated.
"CHILDREN CAN play Mozart very well, and so can very old people. His music is very spontaneous, very simple. A very old person, with so much achievement, can play so fresh, like a child, with the profound knowledge of a human being."
"It takes a lot of understanding to follow the composer's intentions," he said. "It takes a lot of understanding of the philosophy to love our type of music."
JOHN WAYNE
ROOSTER COGBURN
...and the Lady)
Costa suggested that aspiring pianists
KATHARINE
HEPBURN PG
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--should study not only music, but all other things; and said they all helped in understanding music.
COSTA SAID he found his KU students to be about the same as students anywhere. Some are bad, some are mediciore and others are gifted, he said.
Costa added that he was generally pleased with his students, because they were willing to work hard. They understand what he and what he wants from them, he said.
1401W.7th
GRAD
"As long as they are willing to work hard," he said, "I’m quite happy."
GRAD STUDENT MEETING
Feb. 9, 7:30, Jayhawk Room, Union
GSC
1. Nominations for Grad.-Ex.
2. Constitutional
4. Pre-in-service training
5. Open forum
3. Taxation with representation
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
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Plant Sale
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Many to choose from:
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15th & New York 843-2004
University Dally Kansan
Thursday, February 5, 1970
9
By ANITA SHELTON
New policy lets elderly audit classes at KU
Staff Writer
Beginning this semester, persons 65 and over have a special status that allows them to attend classes without paying fees if they have the instructor's consent.
University of Kansas students may soon notice an increase in the number of elderly persons in their classes. The increase hasn't, however, happened vet.
Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that the policy was the result of a ruling passed by the Board of Regents last year, and that it would continue as long as the Regents didn't change it.
Council on Aging, said that he thought the program was good and that the main reason it seemed hadn't taken advantage of it this year was that they hadn't been well-informed.
He said those participating in the program wouldn't receive class credit or
People in the program are allowed to take part and toicipate in any of the class activities. he said.
"There wasn't a lot of publicity about it." Broughton said. "Even in our office, we didn't know all the things a person had to go through to enroll."
Cal Broughton, director of Lawrence's
Hutchison said announcements of the program appeared in the newspapers. A staff member of the Office of University
To enroll, the person must first fill out a card in the Office of Admissions and
Anyone who wants to attend classes this semester can still enroll. Dvck said.
Broughton said approximately 4,450 elderly people lived in the Lawrence district in the program might be greater if KU were to more advance next semester, he said.
The program is relatively new and not
Relations said a news release was given to the Lawrence Journal-World Jan. 22.
Hutchison agreed that the newness of the policy was probably one of the main reasons the program was unsuccessful this year. Hutchison said the majority of the program would grow over time.
Howard Walker, dean of continuing education, said he thought the program was
many people knew about it," Broughton said.
"People over 65 are certainly capable of learning new concepts and refreshing old ones."
KJHK-FM cans 'Top 40' format
After conducting a door-to-door survey in Lawrence last semester, KJHK-MF, the university of Kansas student radio station, the University of *top 40* music from its broadcasts.
Dave Krobot, station manager, said Monday, that the station was trying to expose listeners and disc jockeys to more artists and more types of music.
Krobot said station personnel thought many good artists received a lot of air play in their sessions.
"WHAT WE'RE trying to do is feature
and work that does not get as
much airflow."
The change should give the audience more experience with a greater number of speakers.
The survey, taken shortly after KJHK went on the air last semester, had a great impact. The results showed that
"The general idea was that most people were tired of hearing the same song over and over."
IN ADDITION to providing more continuity, the new format will instruct disc jockeys to put together shows and to adapt to other formats. Krobot said.
Ernest Martin, associate professor of speech and drama and JKHK faculty admits that his most recent experience of rock but would also include a lot of jazz. More concentration will be placed on programming and increasing consistency, he said, by making more into line with what students want.
"Progressive music" was the term Phil Poulos, assistant to the music director, used to describe the type of music KJHK would play.
"We're trying to push at least 20 minutes of our music an hour. Pauls said, 'Then I am going to show them how they don't jazz-show jazz that we'll be played.' Pauls mentionions such artists as Andy Mackenzie and James Cain.
"Last year you could turn on and tell who the jock was just by listening to his music." Poulos said, "but this won't be the case now."
BECAUSE THERE will no longer be any "top 40" music played, there will no longer be a request line, Pouls said. People can call in to request a particular song, he said, but the song will have to be worked in with the rest of the music.
"We had one call from a group traveling from California who said they had stopped outside Lawrence," he said. "They said they were traveling from California through Georgia and that, so far, KJHK played the best music they had heard on their trip."
Krobot that听 listeners response to the new format had been unbelievably good and that there were calls from listeners during the exposure at the station for the exposure to new artists.
KANSAN WANT ADS
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Each additional
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AD DEADLINES
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
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be painted in person or by calling the UKB business office 464-8338.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dump or out-product from the manufacturer, the GRAMOPHONE SHOP at KIFFES is the GRAEMOPHONE SHOP at KIFFES.
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Quitting business sale—bargain! Everything we sell is new and up-to-date furniture. Large building full of merchant. We also have fresh furniture and wetepacking. We also have fresh office furniture. (Hwy 40) Open 9-6, seven days 843-3140. E-mail info@chipmart.com
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Excellent selection of New & Appliance Furniture &
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COST PLUS 10%
- All the Lawrence street stores have good prices.
- All of Lawrence Street stores are open 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
- Business hours: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 10 a.m.-wednesday evenings.
...
Drab Weather have to mean drab haul!
Drab Weather at 10am.
At Round Corner drug Store. Reg $45.99,
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**Samples:** Nationally-owned women's sportswear. Size 9 samples. New shipment-over 300 pieces. 1/3 to 1/2 in. from retail. The Banner XKR. Oak, Burkholder Springs. Ksa. Tuxedo 10-5.
McIntosh C2 power c2 preamplifier and McIntosh 250 power C-128. McIntosh Clinch guarantees performance specifications and provides free support. His former highest offer above $495-$873.
19,730 VSTANDARD BUG. RED, 45,000 miles.
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AM Part Stop
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
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PRO
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large selection of sizes & prices
Mon.-Sat. 10:5-30
1209 East 23rd St. 841-2200
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
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SEASON 1 AND FOR MONTHS 2
shop
YAMAHA
FOR BAIL. Slim Lion Loon train. ARK turns rails
to the side. Hood rail. Coat hood. Bicycle.
Pick-up. C-7414 Delly cassette. Coach wheels.
825-359-0260.
Zoom Lens 85-205w filters, excellent condition.
441-4137
2-5
3 to 10 Times Loss Mortition
Than Most Storage Components
783 Mada RXS, Automatic, Air, Radio, console,
841-4300. Loads with extra Mids-2
841-4300.
783 Mada RXS, Automatic, Air, Radio, console,
841-4300. Loads with extra Mids-2
841-4300.
2. Goodyeen 13" steel belted radial snow tires.
2 months old. $60. Call 841-2829. 2-6
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold
and silver jewelry. Customizable, in-
ternational design, organic form, any design can be executed. B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting.
Materials of various unusual 841-385. 8f
0970
Police scanner, Midland 8 channel, Mobile unit,
841-4422
Garrard x-10 automobiles turntable with walnut bast and dust cover, $40 or best offer. Call 866-237-5260.
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
WALKING CENTER, LAKERS LANE, 210-874-9333
Baldwin Electric Guitar-New strings, great condition.
$175. Call 864-1201. 2-9
Clothing sale. Buy one at regular price, West
23rd size 50c. Repeat Performance, 1422 West, 23rd
size 60c.
Audio Components
1. off turfauce and coral jewelry plus
West 2nd.
Repulse Performance Shop,
2-6
West 2nd.
Chance of a hittead 1609 Chevrolet Belair. Ex-
actly call. Call Gary Davis. 8-24.
887-305-7500.
For Sale. JVC Direct Drive Turboable, $250 (2)
for Sale. XtraDrive, $179. Call 841-6735 between 5
to 8 o'clock. king size. Call 841-6735 between 5
to 8 oclock.
Graphicview 4x5 view camera. 20mm Ektar lens
hooks with holders. Excelent condition.
645-8759
Musical Instruments. Several 6-setting guitars, including Gibson bass and a few more, fitted with Gibbon bands, are one dedicate all ready to play.
Hiking boots—brand hardly—hardy Wear:
6-6.1, Always snow sealed. Seal 843-7089.
Stereo system: Dual, Saman; Receiver, 4 speakers.
Good condition $325. 841-5118 after 4 hours. 2-5
B劫培奏 trumpet for Good condition. If inter-
ested call 843-0531, after 3:00. 2-11
Sony HP-810 A Stereo system dual 1211 turn-
tower with 3—way speaker and 2—way
phone. HP-847-4753 for 2—line support.
Vintage 1968 Gibson 1-45 acoustic guitar
condition. $37. Cindy, 841-6858 after 6. 2-9
Hardwood Lambert and Pywood- Cut off pieces
of
FOR RENT
Free rental service. Up to the minimum litters of
lawrence. Up to the minimum. Lawrence.
with Exchange. 842-2500.
Room furnished with shared kitchen and hallway. Kitchen is equipped with dishwasher. Also, efficiency app for male users in new Town. No pests.
2 bdrm, all utl. paid, on campus. Furn. or,
free parking. Free parking. a/c pool. 843-493-993.
New 2 or a bdm; apartment near campus; park-
side access; efficiency apartment; usf
house; 843-957-699
Female roommate wanted to share nice two-bed, apartment. One block from campus. Must be clean and preferable non-smoker. No pets. Roommate must have private privileges 2-Lynch Real Estate, 843-1601.
Studio & babywriting in exchange for housecleaning and babywriting, 5 min drive from KU 82-44
Attractive, clean, 6 bdm, house, all carpeted. Family room, park. Near campus, paying 20% off services. Parking.
Two bldm, apartement, newly carpeted, stone and
floor, 120'x60'. Room in the basement (closet) 120'x60'. De ce du basement is at the dome of the apartment.
To submit immediately, 2 bfarm furnished
meeting space at 1630 Madison Ave. of Union, Quiet, great location, 1755 Calm Ave.
Subbase available immediately on 1 bdrm. apartment, $165 monthly. Call 824-1455. 2-9
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
LOST AND FOUND
"Found advertisements are sponsored as a publication and the State Bank, 50 West & Kentecki and Malls Shopping Centers."
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
Lost: Maynard, a 5 month old male beagle
Born: Kentucky, a 3 month old female
Ballpark: 841-745-3111
-Wilson
Found: T1 Calculator in 209 Blake. Call Ron at 843-740-745
2-5
Found: 1 key on a leather key ring behind Wesco on keys. Call and identify ID#1841-3, 25-6.
Found: Pair of light brown rimmed glasses in flowered case. Call Tum, 842-4690 2-5
Found: Female Sismae found near 9th & Kenbury. Call 843-9424. 2-5
Found: Before Christmas—man's watch. Call 852-
605 after 7 and identify.
*-*
Found: Bar of laundry at 25th and Lazybrook
Lane Call: 842-7656. Identify.
2-5
Found: Parker Fountain Pen on Frontier Ridge
bus. Call and identify. 2-5
Found: Young orange tom cat in front of Snow
Hall. Call 843-120 evening. 2-5
Lost Friday afternoon in Herbies or Louise's
brown cat's brown cat eye story.
Reward. Larry: 848-8037.
Small, white, long haired dog. lost Saturday near
10 & Mississippi. b住 842-7630. 2-10
Lost: Black and brown Male dog, about 50
Lost: Black and brown Female dog, about 2-
9-8 Island. Rocked. Bath. 841-713-681.
Pair of men's brown framed glasses and case.
Patrón de Men's Almidad of Allen Field House. 2-09
811-4823-6900
Found a new t-shirt in Blake Hall. Call Keh-
nd, and identify. 843-645-634. 2-9
WANTED
Firmate roommate wanted until end of semester.
Firmate roommate wanted on Feb. 6
route. Nancy at 844-1055
2-5
route. Nancy at 844-1055
Roommate to share Jayhawk Tower Apt.
Call 841-6137. 2-5
Going overaus. DESPERATELY need home安慰 for 2 cats and 4 other kittens. Call 617-532-8095.
Mellow female roommate needs to share 12 x
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10
Thursday, February 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
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A LITTLE WARNER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.81
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Cyclo-cross takes stamina
Friday, February 6, 1976
See page 10
Pair presents battle of sexes in SUA debate
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
By ANNE SIGMAN
Staff Writer
An audience of 500 applauded a feminist, beckoned her opponent, asked questions and made comments during a debate. "A woman came face it!" last night in the Kansas University.
Karen DeCrow, president of the National Organization for Women (NOW), argued for the women's movement and George Glerd. She argued that a woman's place is in the home.
Gilder gave the debate by explaining his theory that the home was the central arena of civilized society, in which childbearing was the crucial purpose and the link to future generations. The family and home were differented roles of men and women, he said.
THE FALLS OF MAN
GILDER SAID men dominated the market place and politics to compensate for his lack of education.
"Anatomy need not be destiny in 1976," she said.
DeCrow said the solution to the battle between the sexes was for men to become more like women and for men and women to become friends.
There is nothing healthy about women being dependent, she said, and feminism is going to end sexism and make having sex better.
GLDER SAID the chief problem of American society centers on the aggression of the single male, who commits 70 per cent of all violent crimes. He said men were more aggressive because of their biological make-up.
Men need to channel their aggression into the marketplace to validate their masculinity and thus their place in the family, he said.
DeCrow said happiness would be achieved when men and women were more relaxed and weren't driven to be proper men and women.
Role debate
ONE OF THE PURPOSES of the women's movement is to attain equal access to the job market, she said, and this will take a terrific burden off men.
Gilder cited examples of tribes studied by anthropologists and said that men couldn't survive without a large number of women, but that the reverse was true.
Karen DeCrow, president of the National Organization for Women, reacts to a statement by author George Geller during their debate on the role of women Thursday night in the United States.
Gilder said girls had no problems in
their lives. Some boys, he told,
businesses becoming men. Men
See BATTLE, page 5
2 KU students drown in Ireland
Staff Writer
By JOHN FULLER
A strong, rushing tide caused the deaths of two University of Kansas students Tuesday evening off a small island on the coast of Ireland, Irish authorities said yesterday.
The bodies of Richard Mathes, 21, Kinsley senior, and Edward Moll, 20, Oolathe integer were recovered yesterday afternoon from students' books from where the students were last seen.
MATHES AND Moll were among 60 KU students attending this semester's Pearson Integrated Humanities Program in Ireland. The group is spending the first two weeks of its stay on Inishofin Island, where the University invites them to study and join in the lifestyle of the islanders.
The KU Division of Information said that none of the other participants in the study were involved.
It said that parents who hadn't received word from their sons or daughters on the
trip shouldn't be concerned. There is a telephone and mail strike in the Republic of Ireland currently hampering communication with the area.
Professor Dennis Quinn, director of the Pearson Program, said yesterday from Ireland that the island itself wasn't so vast as expected, and the case were very unusual. He said that Mathes and Moll were experienced hikers and that two survivors who had been hiking with Mathes and Moll were pretty shook up and were defenseless. He refused to name the two survivors.
Mathes and Moll had reportedly hiked with two other students to a dangerous outcrop of rocks known as the Stags. The four had reached the rocks by walking along a strip of ground exposed during low tide. When the tide started rushing back in, the
QUINN SAID the accident wouldn't change the group's plan to stay in Ireland until May. The group arrived in Ireland Jan. 26.
two who survived quickly made their way back to the shore.
Local authorities said that apparently Mathes and Moll decided to wait until the tide went back out. It was almost dark when the incident occurred.
LOCAL RESIDENTS speculated that Mathes and Mol might have planned to stay on top of the Stages, which protrude above sea level at high tide, until they saw the ship. Their fear may have resulted in panicked. Their fear may have resisted in a fatal effort to get back to shore.
"Local people would never dream of going near the Stags," said an elderly islander. "In all my years on the island I seen only one person marooned there."
A FISHERMAN found the bodies of the students after an intensive two-day search by an Irish Army helicopter, the Pearson group and local boaters. The search began Wednesday morning when the two failed to appear on the island.
Senate defeats bill to put athletic subsidy on ballot
By CHUCK ALEXANDER
Staff Writer
a bill allowing the student body to decide whether to support an athletic ticket subsidy was voted down last night by the Student Senate.
Dave Shapiro, co-sponsor of the bill, said the Senate's action could raise football and basketball season ticket prices to $36-$16 more than last year's tickets.
Cycler Wake, athletic director, said he thought the absence of a ticket subsidy would cause ticket prices to rise. But he declined to say by how much.
The Senate cut its $147,000 student ticket subsidy to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation last year because the Senate said it was unfair for all students, through money collected from the Student Activity Fee, to pay for the pleasure of a few.
During an hour-long debate on the bill, several senators said that the decision of a subsidy should be made by the students. According to the defeated proposal, students would have been able to decide whether to participate in a semester in addition to a $7.75-a-semester activity fee. The $2.90 amount would have generated a $100.00 annual ticket subsidy.
Ed Rolfs, student body president, said the matter could still be decided by the student body at any time that a petition bearing signatures was presented to the Senate.
Sapiro led a drive in December to obtain the signatures. After last night's action, he
said he would resume the drive next week. Shipco said the December petition had 600
In other action, the Senate passed a similar bill allowing students to decide whether they wanted a satellite union on the west side of campus. According to the bill, the new structure would include food services, a bookstore, meeting rooms and lounge areas.
Under the hill's provisions, students would be assessed up to $13 a year through increased student activity fee's for up to 30 years to pay for the building. The question will appear on the Feb. 19 Senate election ballot.
Following the ticket subsidy vote, the remainder of the agenda was acted on by the Student Senate Executive Committee (StudEx) because a quorum couldn't be reached to finish the business of the evening.
StudEx denied a $2,955 request by the Black Business Student Council for guest speakers, conferences and office equipment because the committee thought the council would be interested in expensive channels. The council was granted $200 for supplies and expenses by StudEx.
Tom Curzon, senate executive secretary,
said StudEx can make decisions in place of the full Senate when a quorum was unavailable.
★ ★
★ ★
Polls set for election
Voting times and poll locations for the Feb. 18 and 19 election were set by the Student Senate elections Committee last right.
There will be five polls on campuses from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., both days of the election, Bruce Woner, Elections Committee chairman, said yesterday.
Polls will be in the Kansas Union, Summerfield Hall, on the fourth floor of Wescobie Hall near the west entrance and in the information booth on Jayhawk Blvd. in front of Flint Hall. The fifth poll will be in Blake Hall on Wednesday and in Learned Hall on
Thursday, the fifth poll will switch locations to make voting easier. Some residents want more voting opportunities.
THERE WILL be one poll in each of the five ninemaker districts open from 8 to 7 p.m. each night of the election, he said. Each district's poll will be in a residence hall one night and a Greek house the other night.
The committee still has to find about 150 people to work in the polls for the election, Woner said, but recruiting that number shouldn't be difficult.
Mrs. Bennett replies to the Rev. Taylor
By DAVE HAUBER
Olivia Bennett, the wife of Gov. Robert B. Bennett, had a few words about drinking and religion yesterday for the Rev. Richard Baird, a minister of careers, who called her a barmed媛迎
"Even in the Bible, if you read it completely, they say there's nothing wrong about people drinking wine," she said. "I really understand why it would be hard."
Mrs. Bennett attended an informal gathering in the Kansas Union yesterday, after which she gave a slide show of her leadership as governor of the governor's residence. Cedar Crest.
WINE WAS served at Cedar Crest a year ago during a visit by President Gerald R. Ford. The Wichita Sun quoted the Rev. Taylor as saying, "I think it is very sad to see him get killed in Kansas, for the first time in history the governor's wife was a barmal."
Miss. Bennett said a rose wine had been served at a dinner for Ford, and a steward had done the serving. She said the mansion didn't have a bar of any sort.
"I can't really believe that I could be a heathen," she said. "If my mother were living, she would say to have compassion for her son. I think even though he was a man of the cloth."
TELLING PEOPLE whether to drink, she said, was like telling the whole world what this man was doing.
"I think this is up to each individual," she said. "One has to use discretion and moderation with everything in life. To each his own."
Mrs. Bennett said that when she had come to this country to earn her citizenship she had respected the right of Americans free speech.
People have a right to their opinions, she said, and a member of a public official's family has to bear the brunt of public criticism. She said that she had adopted the philosophy "never, never give in" to criticism.
The Rev. Taylor wrote a letter of apology to Mrs. Bennett.
THE LETTER apologized for any burden that Taylor might have placed on Mrs. Bennett in her role as first lady but it didn't specifically anilose for his comments.
Some legislators, angered by Taylor's words, went so far as to demand that he be removed.
In a story published in the Kansas City Times yesterday, State Sen. Robert Storey, R-Topeka, said, "I think it is reprehensible that a man such as this has so little respect that he refers to the first lady of Kansas as a barmaid."
DUANE S. McGill, R-Winfield, speaker of the Kansas House, rose up on a point of personal privilege to criticize Taylor's remarks.
"This incident is a source of deep embarrassment to every legislator who has witnessed it."
Mrs. Bennett was asked whether Taylor was forgiven after he had sent his apology
Mary O'Rourke
"Well, I really don't hold bad feelings of anyone," she said. "When I put my head on the pillow at night, I can sleep, because my conscience is cleared of all hatred."
First ladu
Olivia Bennett during an informal gathering of the University Women's Club in the Watkins room at the Kansas Union. She later showed slides of recent renovations of the governor's official residence, Cedar Crest.
Malpractice maladies multiply for Medical Center
By BILL SNIFFE
Staff Writer
KANAS CITY, Kan.-It is the only medical center in Kansas that provides certain high-risk patients with care.
Unfortunately, in a complex lawyer-patient doctor game of malpractice tag, the KU Medical Department is using
"We tend to the more severe, the more complicated medical cases," Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said this week. "As a consequence, we are more subject to malpractice cases because the patients who come to the Med Center are hanging by just a thread." he said.
Charles E. Brackett, chief of the neurosurgery section at the Med Center, said that often patients with traumatic brain injury need to handle the patients' medical problems. The burn center, cancer treatment center, emergency room and heart surgery facility are examples of the Med Center's specialized and unique treatment facilities.
TREATMENT IS therefore more complicated and more risky he said, and exposes the Med to increased morbidity.
"It's pretty easy to treat the common cold," he said. "But when you're dealing with these other things, it's pretty easy for the patient to have adverse results."
malpractice suits against the Med Center, for claims totaling about $28 million, according to Lee Robertson, a law professor at UCLA.
APARENTLY, some patients think they have had adverse results, because there are now 14
Each of the lawsuits names the Med Center as defendant, and some name the Med Center's plaintiff.
"Qite often (theplainfits)'s expectations exceed reality," Dumn said. "They watch 'Marcus Welby' and they think that's what medicine is, and the doctors suffer."
"There are an increasing number of people who are questioning the value of the service they get," he said, "and sue when they feel they've been shortchanged."
"It's a matter of common practice that you ask for more than you expect to get," Dunn said. He is the sole lawyer defending the Med Center in 11 of the lawsuits,
The most recent lawsuit, for about $1.3 million,
was filed on two weeks ago, he said.
DUNN SAID one of the causes of the large number and size of the lawsuits was a consumer-
Michael Davis, University general counsel, said the publicity given large awards to patients in the program has led to an increase.
"Some lawyer-shopping goes on," he said. "Lots of people go from lawyer to lawyer; may be the fifth
INDIVIDUAL doctors, as well as the Med Center, are being sued. Dunn said.
The overall effect has been an increase in the Med Center's malpractice insurance rates for doctors. The Med Center doctors contacted by the Kansan infected rate increases, but said they weren't injured.
The physicians in the high-risk groups—anesthesiologists, orthopedic surgeons, neurosurgeons—experienced the highest rate increases; plastic surgeons and cardiovascular surgeons were "not far behind," according to a staff physician who asked to remain unidentified.
AL FUSON, vice president of R. B. Jones Insurance Co., said the increases, which averaged between 25 and 50 per cent, affected only those doctors with "excess coverage"—insurance coverage above the "primary coverage" of $100,000 for each malpractice suit.
Primary rates, Fusion said, differ by medical speciality. Annual primary rates of St. Paul (Mim.) Fire and Marine Insurance Co., one of the two hospitals in New York, constitute most of the Med Center's doctors (the other insurance company is Aetna Life and Casualty) include: an average of $218 for the lowest classified surgeons, $400 for radiologists, $530 for general surgeons, $960 for neurologists and $2,200 for neurosurgeons. Fusion said,
ABOUT A YEAR ago, five or six insurance companies offered malpractice insurance to doctors in this region, he said. But because of high awards to patients in malpractice suits,
malpractice insurance became unprofitable, Fusion said.
Consequently, all insurance companies, including St. Paul Fire & Marine, stopped writing new policies, he said, and some companies even dropped existing policy-holders.
St. Paul Fire and Marine has enacted a mortorium, and will only write new policies under "special circumstances," Fuson said. Doctors who already have primary coverage, and want to increase it to excess coverage, won't be able to, he said.
"EVER IF the claim isn't successful—the doctor is exonerated the insurance company may have to pay the cost of medical care."
And, bracket said, the cost or the "utense-
whether to the insurance company or to the doctors
themselves—is usually passed on to the "unfortune-
public."
BUT A STAFF physician said, "I think everybody practices defensive medicine.
For example, the physician said, if a woman came to him with a problem related to his special
Still another cost is passed to the on public,
pediatric said; the cost of defensive medical
practice.
Three Med Center doctors contacted—an anesthesiologist, a radiation therapist and Brackett, a neurosurgeon—and their specialties that extra preventive care was nearly impossible.
he would treat it, but, if a woman came to him with a lump in her breast, a possible sign of breast cancer, he said he would send her to another specialist.
"I if we see anything that that's not related to our field, we recommend that the patient go see another doctor."
DYKES SAID, "I think many doctors necessarily become extraordinarily cautious about the risk of infection."
“Consequently, they are requiring more tests, more judgment by specialists and more analyses of test results than they have ever done before. Obviously that adds to patient cost.”
A possible solution to the mla practice problem, a staff physician suggested, is "informed consent,"
Informed consent is the process of getting a patient's consent after a detailed explanation of what treatment is being done and why, alternative treatments, and the risks of both, the physician said.
"I THINK that that detailed an informed consent might be quite a curb to malpractice suits," he said. "It can be done in the same practice. When asked whether putting the informed consent in writing might help defeat malpractice suits, Brackett said, "There's no practical way of doing it." He added complications of any operation are innumerable.
See INFORMED, page 5
2
Friday, February 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Sirica suffers heart attack
WASHINGTON—U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica, who gained national recognition for his role in the Watergate case, suffered a heart attack yesterday.
Sirica, a month away from his 72d birthday, collapsed while delivering a luncheon speech about a lawyer's obligation to professional ethics. His audience was 270 alumni of George Washington University Law School, including many fellow judges.
"His face was flushed and he just keeled over straight into the rostrum," said Judge Bruce Mercher of the District of Columbia Superior Court.
Sirica had been speaking for 10 minutes.
A military doctor was summoned from another part of the building, the Army-Navy Club, and he administered mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. At one point, the doctor
Sirica was taken to the George Washington University Hospital, where he was transferred to the hospital's coronary unit, a spokesman said.
Anaolan reworks Red ships
A top official of a western-backed movement in Angola said yesterday that a fleet of Soviet ships believed carrying weapons and Cuban troops to aid the Communist-supported Popular Movement (MPLA) had sighted 30 miles off the coast of Lobito. Heavy fighting also was reported in central, southern and eastern Angola.
There was no independent verification of the claim of Soviet ships off Angola. The foreign minister of the Union for the Total Independence of Angola (UNITA) made the claim at a news conference in Lusaka, Zambia. His faction, which is allied to the National Front (FNLA) has lobbed it.
In Washington, U.S. intelligence sources said the Cuban troop airlift to Angola has been halted for more than two weeks, and six Cuban ships were sighted on route to Angola. Analysts were not certain whether the airlift had finally ended or whether they could tell it left open the possibility that there might be Cuban troops aboard the ships.
Cuban troop strength in Angola has been estimated to be as high as 11,000.
Top IRS men to testify
WASHINGTON—Treasury Secretary William E. Simon disclosed on Thursday that top Internal Revenue Service officials, including Commissioner Donald C. Alexander, will appear next week before a federal grand jury investigating the IRS.
Simon's written statement said only that the probe would focus on allegations made against the commissioner and the service. Sources close to the investigation said the grand jury apparently was investigating the suspension of an IRS probe into the use of Bahamian banks as tax dodges.
Simon said in September that the Justice Department had reviewed Alexander's role in the incident, and decided no action was permitted.
A justice department spokesman confirmed the scheduled appearances of Alexander and other officials but declined further comment. Simon said the offence would not be prosecuted.
Sources close to the investigation said the grand jury apparently was involved solely with fact-finding now, with no specific charges pending against any party.
Fake doctor pleads guilty
BILLINGS, Mont.- A Kansas man who masqueraded as a physician at a veteran's hospital for two weeks won't face additional criminal charges relating to the deaths of two patients, one of whom he treated with improper drugs, the U.S. Attorney's office said yesterday.
In a statement, the attorney's office said an investigation into deaths, which occurred at the VA hospital in Miles City during the time the Kaiser man, Benjamin Vick, was employed there as a medical doctor, revealed the patients died of natural causes.
Only one of the deceased patients was treated by Vick. The autopsy indicated death resulted from "heart failure complicated by numerous other diseases," the
Vick is to be sentenced Feb. 23. The 53-year-old bogus doctor pleaded guilty to federal charges filed in the case, and old U.S. District Court Judge James F. Wilson was charged with his own crimes.
Vick, who later revealed his medical background consisted of being a medical corpsman in the service and attending a Texas medical school for one year, began work at the southeastern Montana hospital Jan. 5. He was fired Jan. 22 after several doctors became suspicious.
Committee forwards sales tax proposals
TOPEKA (AP)—The assessment and taxation committee of the Kansas House reacted quickly yesterday to a plea by Speaker Duane McClintock, R-Winfield, and introduce his proposals for a referendum on a statewide sales tax increase.
The proposals will be sent back to the committee for further study after they have been accepted.
One of McGill's proposals is a suggested constitutional amendment that would provide for statewide referendums on proposed legislation.
THE SECOND PROPOSAL would increase the sales tax from 3 per cent to 4 per cent.
At the same time, the sales tax would be removed from food purchased for consumption elsewhere and from prescription drugs.
According to McGill, half of the revenue derived from the increase in the sales tax would make up the difference in state revenues resulting from the food and drug exemptions and the remaining half would go to local units of government.
McGILL SAID the exemption for food and drugs would probably cost the state $40 million to $50 million, but he said the exact amount couldn't be predetermined.
Approximately 50 million would be returned to the counties of origin, he said, in proportion to the amount of revenue raised there.
He said increasing the sales tax from 3 per cent to 4 per cent would produce approval.
Kansas doctors experience quake
MGill said that in the county it would be divided on a population basis between city,
WICHITA (AP) - By a quirk of fate, a group of vacationing Kansas doctors carried a load of medical supplies into Guatemala only days before a major earthquake shattered the Central American country.
The plan would have no appreciable effect on state general fund balances, he said.
Thirty Kansas doctors were among a tour group that spent 10 days in Central America.
A bill that would allow Kansas family planning clinics to distribute, without restrictions, birth control information and contraceptives is being opposed in the Legislature. However, local officials have expressed support for the bill.
An opinion issued by Attorney General Curt Schneider late last year interpreted the family planning law as applying only to those persons who are over 18 and who are married, or who have been referred to a physician, landing center by a licensed physician.
By DAVE HAUBER
Staff Writer
Family planning bill controversial
Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said renter-died "I think it's critical that Kansas has done."
He said that certain groups opposed to revision of the law, such as right-to-life, anti-E.R.A. and fundamentalist groups, were trying to prevent what would have been unimpeded approval of the law's change.
Since Schneider's opinion, opponents of restrictions imposed by the interpretation of the Second Amendment eliminate that discrimination. Tuesday, the House Public Health and Welfare Committee vote 9-8 to send a bill removing any restrictions on the law to the floor of the house for debate.
Children are going to experiment with sexual activities regardless of whether they are restricted by law from obtaining help at a family planning clinic, he said.
Some parents are afraid, Glover said, that promiscuity will result if restrictions on age are lifted. However, he said, the kids should be encouraged because the ones who are promiscuous already.
"They think it's suspiration of parental right by the state." he said.
The revision of the law, Glover said, is really an anti-abortion measure that was designed to inform those needing help so they can prevent abortion. The predicament of seeking an abortion
An underground network of obtaining contraceptives might be the result of an unvised law, Glover said, in which the elicited cille could obtain what they needed.
If family planning centers are eliminated, could said, the poor and uneducated would be better off.
Most parents who have contacted him have agreed with his stance on the bill, he said; but he added that it was a matter of conscience that he vote for it. He said he
He said that unless the law were changed, an unequal and undemocratic distribution of property would continue.
"I think I'd vote for this (law) no matter
that she said back home." Glenn said.
The loss of $2 million in federal money, Glover said, has occurred because of the disparity between the Kansas family and federal funding guidelines, he said.
The chances for the bill's success, Glover said, are reduced by the controversial and conservative atmosphere surrounding the efforts of those seeking its approval.
didn't fear any political repercussions from his constitution when he would seek reelection.
The Kansas family planning law is in conflict with Title X of the Department of Health, 515th St. NW, Washington, D.C. Subpart A of Title X, concerning project grants for family planning services, specifically states that "services will be provided by a woman in her 25+ creed, age, sex, parity or marital status."
The interpretation of the family planning law, Glover said, was sought by a county health official who saw the ambiguity of the law's present wording. Since the law affects the patients, he said, it was in the interest of their operations to clear up any uncertainty.
Operation of the family planning center in Douglas County, however, hasn't changed since the attorney general's interpretation was made.
Mike Waring, a consulting physician employed by the health department, said yesterday that the way the center had been handling its patients had been different only in that its patients were being reclassified to avoid the law.
“It’s an attempt to circumvent a discriminatory and very unjust law,” he said. “It’s definitely not to the interests of public health services.”
The law doesn't prohibit private physicians from prescribing birth control pills or devices. Wiring said, so patients are not protected by pay only the nominal doctor fee, of $1.
Waring said that a group of private doctors would meet on Wednesdays and would refer patients to each other so that patients needing their services got them. He said that there wasn't any age restriction on the patients he saw and that parents of minors using the center didn't have to be in the house for advice helping. A doctor's discretion, he said, determined whether any minor would receive birth control devices.
"People come to us because they know we are running the risk of getting pregnant."
Making information more available to people, Waring said, wouldn't cause any increase in promiscuity, as some opinion says. The distribution have argued. He said that
Coffee buyers ignore cost
Staff Writer
By CONRAD BIBENS
Coffee may be the second most populaire
beverage on campus, despite the fact that it
is often the least popular.
Most local grocery store owners interviewed yesterday said that coffee is a regular item of many students' weekly grocery budgets and is one of their daily tasks. The customers will give up other things, they say, before they stop buying coffee.
Coffee is a mild stimulant that helps a student, at least psychologically, get attention.
"I drink a lot of coffee in the mornings or when I have to study." Craig Ador, St. Louis junior, said. "I'll buy it even if it gets more expensive."
Although coffee prices have recently gone up in Lawrence, the grocers and restaurant managers said this had had little effect on their sale.
"Coffee went up last year nearly 30 cents a pound, from $19 to about $17," said Sam Foley. "I bought it for $4.50." Falley's "Sales are down a little, but not much, lot of people stocked up before the holidays."
The price for restaurants has gone up in many Lawrence restaurant as well, including Wendy's.
Two similar increases came to Safety about two months ago, said Gary Vanyul, the director of the company.
Marcia Shadid, Wichita junior, said, "I don't think the price is rising because I am affected me yet."
Jussie Meyer, assistant manager of
fruits, said prices of national brands
were higher than those in other
countries.
known for their 10-cent "bottomless" coffee cups.
Sambo's manager, Cliff Pash, said, "We had to go up to 20 cents for all you can drink, with what free sugar, cream and the overhead. It hasn't affected our business at the town in town for good coffee and we're getting the same faces in here we usually do."
Coffee is 20 cents at JB's Big Boy restaurant, but within a few weeks it will be 30 cents.
"I doubt if it will affect our business that much," said Mark Wilkinson, manager of JB's. "People come here mainly for the food, I told some of our regulars about the increase, and they didn't seem to mind at all."
One new restaurant in Lawrence has deflated prices for coffee on weekdays. At Country Kitchen Monday through Friday coffee is five cents for all you can drink.
"We take a loss on it but we use it to get people to come in and buy a pastry or something to go with it," said Jerry Olesen, the Kansas' supervisor of the Kansas City region.
"We used this special in our restaurant in Eugene, Ore., last year and really increased our profits," he said. "Good advertising is what it bumps down to. It's a gimmick but it's not a phony one. When you pay a nickel you get a cup of coffee."
Local grocery managers said retail prices for coffee had flattened out, but that sales were up.
Olsen said Country Kitchen would keep you on course on weekdays as long as it works.
Kent Wurtn, Overland Park junior, said,
When I run out of cups I get some more.
"It's a big challenge," he said.
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people coming to the center were sexually active already and that promiscuity was often the fault of the parents of minors for not counseling their children.
"I think that the current feeling of many, many people is that it (distribution to unmarried and under-age patients) promotes promiscuity," he said. "I think that is false. You are treating the condition that is already on your doorstep.
Raymond Schwegler, a gynecologist and obstetrician at Watkins Hospital, agreed.
"That's a common reaction in our culture; most of us would rather think we are controlling the condition. I'm not at all sure their opponents approach is realistic. Once people come to grips with that idea, I think the law will be forthcoming."
Dale Clinton, a local physician
specializing in birth control services, said that he would give any women who came into his office whatever medical service they wanted.
The Kansas birth control law, Clinton said, was a good one but was hampered by powerful and rich individuals who, usually for economical reasons, got themselves appointed to public service boards and stymied progress.
"There are plenty of people who don't want to see the population stabilized," he said. "We push forward three steps and back two steps."
Clinton said he treated any patient that came to him because he believed that if they were old enough to know how to get in with them, or were old enough to seek help to get out of it.
SATURDAY, FEB. 14
5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.
at UNITED MINISTRIES
1204 Oread
JAPAN NIGHT BANQUET
すきやき
Curtiski Dinner, Movies, Cultural Entertainment, Souvenirs
Tickets: '4 at SUA office
No Tickets at Door
GRAD STUDENT MEETING Feb.9, 7:30, Jayhawk Room, Union
4. Pre-in-service training
1. Nominations for Grad.-Ex.
GSC
3. Taxation with representation
2. Constitutional
5. Open forum
TO THE FACULTY AND STUDENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Starting Monday night, Feb. 9th, and continuing every Monday evening thereafter, students in Basic Bible information will be taught at the Grace Bible Church of Lawrence.
1) God and His Essence, i.e., Sovereignty, Righteousness, Justice, Eternal Love,
Omiipetion, etc.
2) The Gods of the Trinity, i.e., the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
31 Man and his soul essence/ His fall and salvation. The original languages will be considered as the final authority on all matters. Pastor E. T. Rhin. a man who was born in the United States and lived in New York City.
The class will start at 7:30 p.m. and conclude at 9:00 p.m. The Grace Bible School will be held on Sunday, March 12 from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. yards due west of Don's Seak House. We are currently meeting in the small, green, rectangular Union building at the intersection of 3rd and Anderson Road. For more information, please call Carletta (342-3447), Bonnie (342-2658), or Bob (342-2657).
Girls like it. Send the FTD LOVEBUNDLE BOUQUET
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Phone 843-3255
939 Mass. St.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 6.1976
3
Bo-Paul
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Exhausted
Robert Smith, visiting professor of theatre from Kalamazoo, Michigan, revisits Lambryn Helen Hedley, Brooklyn, graduate student, during the play "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground." The production is playing at 8 nightly through Feb. 13 in the William Inge Theatre.
On Campus
Events...
TODAY: The AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF AERONATICS AND ASTRONAUTICS Meeting will be at 3:30 in 2002 Learned.
TONICHT: The KU WOMEN'S SWIM TEAM will have a double nunz mess with Ohlahoma and Oklahoma State in Robinson pool. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will have a double nunz mess in Robinson pool.
SATURDAY: LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION will sponsor a Disco-Boogie at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
SUNDAY: THE KU ACCOUNTING SOCIETY will provide free income tax assistance from 1. p. to 4.p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Union. The KU WOMEN'S SWIM TEMW will meet Nebraska at 11:30 a.m. in Robinson Pool. The KU FOLK Dance Club will meet at 2 p.m. in 173 Robinson.
MONDAY: James Moeser, dean of the KU School of Fine Arts, will present a program of music at 8 p.m. in the Plymouth Congregational Church in
The BLACK BUSINESS STUDENT COUNCIL will meet at 6:30 p.m. in the Ronald Kloss Room of the Business School, professor at Hunter College, for a Forum Room in the Union.
Announcements . . .
Twelve members of TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE will perform in Wichita State University's annual Tau Sigma Dance Concert this weekend. The two groups will perform on Friday, March 28, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Wichita State Recreation Center.
The MT. OREAD BICYCLE CLUB will sponsor a 32-mile tour at 1 p.m. Sunday to Lone Star Lake.
JODI S. DEUTSCH, teacher-partner of Padaffia jo, a dance and fiber art studio, will exhibit her work at the Lawrence Public Library during the month of February. Deutsch's work involves stuffing fiber shapes that have been painted, tie-dyed. Weaving pieces and fabric creations will also be included in the show.
Grants and Awards . . .
ROSS E. MCKINNEY, professor of civil engineering, has been named the first engineer in the newly endowed N. T. Veach Professorship in Environmental Engineering.
It’s a Sweetheart of a Deal!
LOVE TAKES MANY FORMS
Send A Valentine In Print This Year
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
This Year Will
Have A Special
Valentine
Classified
Section of Fri., Feb. 13
Send A Message to Your
Special Friend.
IF SHE’S ALLERGIC TO FLOWERS
or
TOO FAT FOR CANDY
a CLASSIFIED AD IS DANDY
Let Someone Know How You Feel About Them.
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Wed, Feb. 11
Your Message Will
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Feb. 13
Although the federal government's largest student aid program has run out of money for grants, 99 per cent of the University of Kansas students promised the loans have received them, Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said yesterday.
However, he said the shortage of funds may have made that one percent who haven't received the funds more vulnerable.
"All we can tell them to is hang in there," Rogers said. "We can't speculate what will happen if the Congress doesn't appropriate additional funds, but the director of the regional office of education said he thinks the council will approve an additional objection."
Shortage hits student aid
Educational Opportunity Grant program in the U.S. Office of Education, said this week that the tight-money economy and the large enrollments last fall accounted for the net demands on grant funds this year. The university's inquiries in the previous two years, he said.
Personalized license plates bearing letters instead of numbers are owned by 71 people in Douglass County, Tom Wilcox, an adviser for Douglas County, said Wednesday.
Peter K. Voigt, head of the Basic
Voigt said the program had only $220 to spend on grants this year, but expect expended funds in the present time, about 800 colleges and post-secondary schools haven't received grants for their students and will receive one per cent of their requested amounts, he said.
License plates, formerly rows of more numbers, now can have a small variety of other uses. They can express your sentiments, give your name, advertise your business or cheer the University of Kansas Jawhaves on to victory.
Anyone living in Douglas County can get a personalized license plate on the date of renewal or up to 60 days before, Betty Leslie, deputy county treasurer, said.
Car plates get personal
Congress will either have to allow the program to draw an advance of $160 million.
By state law, the licenses can't be put on trucks or motorcycles.
ONLY
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for
15 Words
Let Someone
Know How
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Bring Your
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Wed, Feb. 11
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Feb. 13
A $2 reservation fee must be paid when the plates are ordered, Leslie said. This fee is collected by a 10% charge on the total bill.
which range from $10 to $20, depending on the weight of the vehicle.
There can't be more than six letters on the plate, Leslie said.
A July 1 federal law prohibits the state and county from releasing a list of persons with such plates, Leroy Beyers, head of titles and registrations for Kansas, said Tuesday.
Most people have their names, nicknames or the names of their businesses put on their plates. Wilcox said. Almost anything can be printed.
"It cannot be obscene." Leslie said.
Gary Skeet, KU police officer, said he hadn't encountered many personalized victims.
He said he hadn't any occasion when he had to memorize such a plate but thought they would be easier to remember than regular, numbered plates.
Ronald Fields, 28, who has written both a book and a play about his famous grandfather, will be a guest at a showing of vintage W.C. Fields films, and will give the comic actor, Ann Evans, director of the Lawrence Arts Center said Wednesday.
Rogers said that the University had applied for additional funds and that some students had received checks despite the lack of funds.
on next year's appropriation or pass a supplemental appropriation, Volgt said. If neither happens, institutions would be asked to reduce every award by 20 per cent.
The program, "A W. C. Fields Film Festival," is a benefit for the Lawrence Arts Center and is cosponsored by the center and SUA. Tickets cost $2 and are available at the arts center, 9th and Vermont, and at the SUA office.
There will be shows at 3 and 7 p.m. Sunday in Woodford Auditorium, Evans said. The films will be "The Golf Specialists," "Pool Sharks," "The Dentist," "The Barber Shop" and a surprise film.
Awards at KU totaled $338,388 last semester, Rogers said. A need for $330,000 was predicted for this semester to cover grants for returning students. However, Rogers said that twice the number of new students predicted had actually shown up, and the grants requested for this semester. Grants could be $13,000 for the school year. Rogers said.
Schools were asked to prescript the number of students that would be awarded grants, Rogers said. Last semester, the number of KU students who actually picked up grant funds was smaller than the number predicted. This is because the number was twice the size of the prediction.
W.C. Fields, the great comedian, died in
St. Michael's his grandson will be in Lawrence
School.
"This is really ironic," Rogers said. "KU is one of the last schools to enroll for spring and we're not having that great a problem. The problem is that the funds seem to be a bottomless pit when it is possible to borrow against the next year's allocation."
Fields will come with stories about his grandfather, along with memorabilia such as the top hat and cane Fields wore in most of his films. Evans said.
The problem with the estimates might be alleviated some by unclaimed checks, be said, and these would be redeposited in the grant fund to be used later.
The comedian's grandson is the author of the biography, "W.C. Fields by Himself," now in its ninth printing, which was a besteller in 1973.
Fields, who wrote a play in 1974 called *C. Fields; 80 Pro.* "plans a sequel to his story," he writes.
Next year, Rogers said, the program will probably operate on a reduced schedule as it has in the past two years when the program had surpasses. Instead of a maximum of $1,038 for the neediest students, the maximum will be considerably lower. He said he didn't know what that figure would be.
Grandson at Fields festival
Fields has appeared on numerous television and radio shows since he became a television producer.
His career goals, Fields has said, include "waiting for someone else in my family to become famous so I can continue the work of writing about my notorious relatives."
Drinking age bill before Senate
The age restriction for consuming cereal malt beverages in Kansas will change from 18 to 21 years if a Kansas Senate bill in effect last week is passed by the legislature.
State Sen. Wayne Zimmerman, R-Olathe,
said yesterday that some people in Olathe,
"who apparently had problems with some
beer," had asked for the bill's introduction.
The bill, No. 785, is no longer being considered by the Senate's Federal and State Affairs Committee.
Zimmerman wouldn't disclare the names of his constituents who requested the bill.
"One of our procedures is to do these things by request." he said.
Such requests usually come from petitions, individuals or general feeling, he said, and in this case several persons requested the introduction.
The proposed bill would amend Kanass
Statute No. 41-2704, he said, and the only
chief reason for this is that the state
The section of the statute that would be amended to raise the drinking age to 21 was passed in January 1976.
of age shall be permitted to buy or drink any of such beverages or about said place of
Any person under eighteen (18) years of age who purchases or attempts to purchase any cereal malt beverages in any licensed place of business shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof shall be punished as provided by law."
State Sen. Edward Kelly, R-Leaeworth and chairman of the Federal and State Affairs Committee, said the bill's hearing was on Monday at 8 a.m. in Room 629 of the Senate Chambers.
Reilly avoided comment on the bill before the hearing.
He did say, however, that the hearing would be open to the public.
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February '76
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Friday, February 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
心
'Lucien' warns us to remember
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
Louis Malle's "Lacombe, Lucien" is so casual complex that it gives the initial imitation of a larger aim than simply documenting the life of a young barbarian. But this impression quickly dissipates when an older man begins to begin quietly enter the story.
Lacien Lacombe, a farmboy in southwestern France during its occupation in World War II, decides to quit his job mopping floors in a hospital. The trouble is, he doesn't know what he should do with the POW, and he can't stay with his mother because her lover doesn't like him. So the boy must set out on his own.
When the local leader of the
underground, his former teacher, refuses to let him join the resistance. Lucien rides his bicycle to the next province. There, he finds a job working for the Gestane.
Traditionally, the man who turns on his countrymen in the city is considered the most despicable of all creatures. But Malle and his co-writer, Patrick Modiandi, don't mind getting caught up in a categorically反射 Lacien.
The boy is rough, maladjusted and something of a bully. He is very good at playing character, equally capable of killing a songbird with his shinglest and of being genuinely moved by the death of his horse. The boy's name is Gestapo headquarters is to betray his former teacher. He
does this in such an offhand manner that it is in no way malicious. How could he do that, if he didn't do it unwittingly. Nevertheless, this is how he wins favor and power, a member of the German police.
The main conflict in the film comes when Lucien fails in love with the daughter of a Jewish tailor. The opposing social backgrounds of Lucien and France Horn, the Parisian bourgeoisie who is often accused, both confuse and enrich the viewer's reactions to the problems faced by the characters.
In fact, neither the characters nor the viewer are allowed any simple choice. Lucas is "ultimately motivated." He is anomalously motivated. He is amoral rather
than immoral, and one suspects that his greatest fault is that he is too dull to ever puzzle out any of these issues.
The people around Lucien are really no better. Horn is both attracted to him and repelled by his hat. He has a new Jewish heritage and yet intensely worried about her father and grandmother. Her father is an avaricious coward. Every character in the film is afraid of her. They are warmly perceived as fragile human beings, too.
The actors in "Lacome, Lucien" are unknowns. Pierre Blaise, who plays the title role, is a fresh face who can establish himself as a co-star seemingly at will but hide everything behind a smoldering
mask whenever the scene calls for it.
The woman who plays the grandmother, however, is Theresa Gleise, whom Adoph Addison helped to create a great German actress. She responded by leaving the country, right after she mailed to the Fuehrer a letter in response to him that she was Jewish.
"Lacombe, Lucien" begins with a quotation from SantaYana: "Those who do not remedit the past are compelled to appear here is a reminder that the problems of the occupation are present today and that the ability to withhold all of others mustn't be coupled with a lack of commitment.
Fields' rare films come to KU
By WARD HARKAVY
Guest Writer
Stand in front of a mirror.
Take an average red potato and place it in front of your nose. If you were standing on the floor, you would now be W.C. Fields.
Fields' talent went far beyond the tip of his bulbous nose. He's been dead for 30 years, but his focus on each generation since then.
However, some of his short films are rarely seen. This situation will be rectified Sunday in Woodruff Auditorium, thanks to his Robert De Ronalos Fields; Robert De Flores, a film collector; the Lawrence Arts Center; and SUA.
It's likely that Ronald Fields and De Flores, both of whom talk about the man and his films, will be entertaining. But whatever they say won't match what of seeing W. G. C. Fields on film.
Four films will be shown Sunday at Woodruff; "Pool Sharks" (1915), Fields' first movie; "The Barber Shop" (1933), in which he plays a harried barber; the Goat Girl (1924), Fields' first sound film; and "The Dentist" (1932), a hilariously vulgar romp through the world of teeth.
Each of the four films is about
W. STEPHENHAL
Concerts
This Week's Highlights
(3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre)
KIP PAPKA LAMBDA CONCERTO CONCERT-Lynn Cortez conduct the University symphony orchestra in concertos and arias. Composers include Cipol, Ravel, Handel, and Amira.
DANNY COX WITH JOHN PINEK known in the area for his blues guitar, Cox appears with a guitar duo from Florida who did the recording.
20 minutes long, and all except "Pool Sharks" are Mack Samson. The team has a debt to Fields' long vaudeville career, during which
(8:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Off-the-Wall Hall)
(Through Feb. 13 in the Inge Theatre)
he developed his unique brand of comedy.
One of Fields' legacies to us is the wealth of identities be assumed on screen. In various
Theater
SACRAMENTO 50 MILES - KU Theatre for Young People presents a modern adaptation of a Grimm's fairy tale in which four animals run away from the witch, musicians in Sacramento, Calif. (2 p.m. tomorrow in the University Theatre)
SLOW DANCE ON THE KILLING GROUND-An intensive, tense study of personal violence, in selections, by William Hanley.
(8 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall)
Recitals
FACULTY RECITAL
FOR RECITATION
in the department of plano, will play works by Mozart;
will play Mannan and
Brian T. Griffen
FACULTY RECITAL-
James Moeser, dean of
the School of Fine Arts and chairman of the department of
Music for works by Bach, D'Aquin and Widor on the organ he organized.
(8 p.m. Monday at Plymouth Congregational Church)
Exhibits
PARIS; A COLLAGE—An interesting portrayal of Paris in the 19th and 20th centuries through its art. Major artists through its art. Casso, Chagai, Manet, Degas and Daumier are included.
DAY FOR NIGHT - Francois Truffaut's look at the old studio productions, he and he and he helped to destroy, is light, yet oddly touching. This Academy Award winner stars Valentina Torres, Jacqueline Blisset and Jean Pierre Leaud as members of the cast of "Meet Pamela" plays the slighty deaf director
(Through Feb. 13 in the Kansas Union Gallery)
ROGER SHIMOMURA AND ROGER GANEE 19-新 serigraphs by Shimomurai, sculpture in, his Sculpture and sculpture, in his "Oriental Masterprint Series." Twelve paintings by Gee, assistant professor of painting and sculpture, done in acrylic and lacquer on plexiglas with mirrors and non-reflective glass and nylon netting.
ROBERT DEMACHY
PROBERT DEMACHY
Photographs from the turn of
the century, which give
the effect of impressionist oil paint.
(Through Feb. 15 in the Museum of Art.
Films
CANARY—More a mystery than a horror feature. Pat Leml's featured Palm Leaf's a wonderful gothic style.
(Tomorrow through March 4 at 7 E. 7th)
THE LADY VANISHES
Michael. Redgrave
Richard. Search
the for the mysterious Miss Froy is one of Alfred Hitchcock's most iconic films, a giant studio work gives the picture the necessary gloss to
Starring Laura LaPlante
Creighton Hale and Forrest
Stanley.
THE BLACKBANK-George Sainp Sam Jr. a frumpy prince with a live up to his famous father's reputation. The纵平 slot hiesp the Mallete Falcon." That "worst bird" mutes Junior
ROMEO AND JULIET-
Zorre Franzelli '1988 film-production wear well, meaning that if you are going around, it won't lose any of its luster for you this time. Purists may wish that it would, but the film's quality has its benefits. Olivia Hussey and Leonard Whiting are beautiful at the lovers, even if John Mercuto is more effactive.
features and short subjects he was S. Quentin Quail, Sneed Herm, Elmer Prettywillie, Ambrose Wofinger, Eustace McGarge, F. Trostingh II, Frothingh II, Whipmade, Cubbert J, Twille and Egbert Souse (accent grave over the "e").
Check advertisements for theaters and times.
Despite the different sobriquets, Fields portrayed what was essentially the same character in his films. This person was usually hempced, bumbling, slightly dishonest and insensitive, little things such as putting his bat on, taking a nap or shyling.
Besides being funny. Fields wrote funny and absurd screenplays for many of his movies. His scripts were always very hard, always gave himself the best chance to be funny. But he
wasn't self-conscious and he never tried to be "important," as Jerry Lewis does.
Fields also appeared in works not of his own creation. He was a unique Micawber in "David Copperfield" and a rather startling Humpty Dumpty in "Alice in Wonderland."
Although a brilliant mime, Fields was at his best in sound films, whether he was grooming a "Godfrey Daniel!" or muttering appeasing words to the children of my kumquats! "in it's a Gift," It has been said about W. C. Fields that inanimate objects seemed to have a life and will all their own for him and that small children and dogs were his sworn enemies. But he must be a bit careful because he's been making them laugh for more than 60 years.
CARLOS MAYOR
Beware the cat's claw
Contessa the cat, played by Judi Sterling, Lawrence sophomore, gains the grudging respect of Beauregard the rooster, played by Beryl Benary, Newberry, S.C., graduate student, in the Theatre Department.
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
'Slow Dance' idealism fails as answer
By EVIE RAPPORT
By EVIE RAPPORT
Entertainment Co-Editor
This is the second production in the Inge Theatre series this year that takes us back to those days of idealism in the early 1960s when-as a nation we apparently thought we could make things right simply by deciding we could.
All we had to do, it seemed,
was to identify the problem and
then fix it. Our good intentions
were enough to see us through
moral, political or
economic difficulties in our
naths.
The first such production, Telemachus Clay*, performed by the young dreamer finally discovered that if you can't find happiness in your own back yard, you probably never lost it
The second, William Hanley's
Playwright Hanley constructed a situation in which the great moral questions of our time—civil rights, political morality and right to life—demonstrated what could happen if we denied our responsibilities to them.
"Slow Dance on the Killing Ground," which opened Wednesday night in the Inge Theatre, shows that one lives with the consequences of his actions for the rest of his life.
It's all terrifying sincere and meaningful, full of the gritty realism that delighted Ella Kazan and the Actor's Studio team. It's a sort of satisfactory attempt to resolve the issues it pretends to discuss.
The play opens in the tiny Brooklyn candy store of an aging German immigrant who's quietly moving through his
evening chores. In bursts an extravagantly dressed black dress- resplendent in his cap and bells and braid, wearing an extraordinarily wide-brimmed hat for years ahead of the fashions.
As they move through their edy introductions, we learn that each pretends to be something he isn't. Glas, the German, pretends to be a survivor of the concentration camps of World War II. Ranched by hatred and to be a survivor of the inner-city concentration camps of urban life.
They're later joined by a young woman, who pretends to be a cynical sophisticate able to force her daughter to pending abortion. She's in the store because she can't find the baby she needs. She was to meet the shady doctor
who promised to relieve her of her troublesome inconvenience.
The young black's in the store because he's hiding from the police. Despite his proclaimed genius, his IQ of 187, his knowledge of Kafka and Baudelaire, the only way he can solve his problems is by murdering his mother.
The German's in the store because he can't accept that he was sent to Germany as son in Germany to support Communism during the war, only to see his god—Stalin—join him with Hitler to destroy his army.
The actors responsible for portraying these characters do it ably, facing the challenges of intergalactic monologues and international diplomacy. Robert Smith, as the dusty and desiccated Glas, contrasts well
with the flamboyant jitteriness of Bruce Sayles, who plays Randall.
Lambriary the College Hedge, and Rosie the college girl, portrays the alternate cynicism and palate of her character with a that saves the show from its own simplistic sentimentality.
Director Anne Abrams moves the actors slowly and deliberately through their confrontations, using the depth available in the arena stage set with imagination.
But those strengths don't make up for what, finally, is the play's weakness. The answers it pretends to give are too easy, too obvious. But maybe we've all believed in the easy answers to the hard questions for too long.
'City of Lights' skines brightly in exhibit
By MARY ANN HUDDLESTON
MINT ENVIRONMENT
Entertainment Co. Editors
Paris, the "City of Lights",
shone most brightly, perhaps,
during the last quarter of
the 19th century. The brilliance
of its society acted as a magnet,
drawing from all over the world
artists and intellects who found
inction in their surroundings.
This gray, avant-garde world provides the setting for the game on display in the Kansas Union Gallery through Feb. 13.
The exhibit combines prints, photographs and posters, as well as books and artifacts, to give as much of the artistic flavor of Paris as possible. Most of the works are from the Kansas Museum of Art and private collections in Lawrence.
Although works from earlier and later periods are included in the exhibit, the works of the 1880s and '90s deserve the closest attention because they illustrate the uniqueness of Paris.
Some of the works are by major artists, including Pablo Picasso, although those are by only the only ones worth looking at.
Two color lithographs by Marc Chagall are included, "Champs-Elysees" and "Place de la Concorde." Both are from the 1950s but they display the brilliant colors and fantasies of
Chagall's first days in Paris before World War I.
A dry pointet by Picasso, "Saltinbamque," depicts a paucity clown drawn with the most pure and simple line. Circus people were popular contemporaries, many of whom settled in Paris around the turn of the century.
Among Picasso's friends were literary patron Gertrude Stein and artist Douanier Rousseau, leaders of the avant-garde that made its home along the hill, winding streets of Montmartre.
Here, and on the Left Bank,
artists, poets and men of leisure
met in cafes to thrash out the
intellectual questions of the day.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, a few years before, had depicted some of the gaudier, seamier sides of Paris. His two novels about Paris were characteristic of his work in their sketch-like qualities.
Toulouse-Laurence's theatrical subjects, "Marcelle Lender, en Buste" and "Oscar Wilde and Romain Coulus," must have spelled together successfully encapulated with the glitter and fantasy of the stage.
The lithographs by Honore Daumier are among the best work of the period, because they represent people because they represent amusingly the simple.
everyday scenes of Parisian life. The vivid expressions on his faces make his characters come alive.
Damier's best work in the exhibit is "M. Chose, premier saltimbanque d'Europe." It is a caricature of King Louis-Philippe as a pear balancing on a tightrope, the first clown of the tapestry made the lithograph in 1833, being released from prison for publishing prints damaging to the French throne.
Two Art Nouveau posters by Alphonse Mucha, "Job" and "Mona Lisa," by Bernhard as La Santaritane, are beautiful for their exotic women subjects, drawn with chalky lines in faces and complex, flat patterns.
Several photographs taken of Paris buildings in the late 1800s bear a striking resemblance to the Paris of today.
Jules Cheret depicts the
The cartoon sketches delightfully express the moral climate of the time, so different from the rigid Victorian sentiment in England and America.
Jean-Louis Forain's cover illustration for Le Rire, a popular humor magazine, is especially characteristic. Titled "Erennes uties," it shows a man asking his wife, "Are you as pleasant awakening? My mistress left Paris last night!"
However, not all the 19th century artists chose to portray the stylish world of cafes, operas or promenades in the Bois de Bologne. Some saw them in the lives of the poor of Paris.
carefree fervour of the 1890s through his swirling, dromed dressed figures in "Palais de Glace." His cancan dancers in "Moulin Rouge" give a taste of the ravis sky night life.
"Workers Leaving the Factory", a dark, smoky print. The neophile Alexandre Steinlen explains the apathy for the working classes.
Earag Chaine's "View of Paris" is a dismal look at the smokestacks and factories that exist on the outskirts of the city.
Charles Meryon has the largest number of works in the exhibit. Meryon was a close observer of Paris who interested in city scenes. "Le Strgey," a gaggle atop Notre Dame
cathedral, symbolizes what to Meryon was "stupidity, cruelty, lust and hynocris."
A few, but not enough, works by Americans in Paris are also included. Mary Hunton's "A Room in Room" portrays the clutter of an artist's studio or a student's room.
The exhibit also contains books written in the 19th and 20th centuries, mostly in French, and some beautiful examples of buildings such as La Renaissance crystal and Sevres porcelain. In spite of the variety of scenes and subjects the exhibit displays, it can only skim the surface of the Paris of old, which in many ways still exists. The museum's focus lifetime to understand the complexities that make up Paris.
However, "Paris—A Collage" makes an admirable start at describing the city. It should be possible to formulate a lot of how familiar he is with Paris.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
and on Friday nights in the afternoon. Second-class postage paid at Law-
yers' Office and $15 per semester or $14 a year in Douglas County and $13
per semester or $12 a year in Boulder County. Subscriptions are $2 a semester, paid through the
University of Kansas.
Business Manager
Roav. Parris...
Friday, February 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
5
Informed consent
From page one
"Suppose you signed an informed consent before you took a flight on an airplane; one where you required the airline company to list all the possible things that could go wrong.
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"YOU'D HAVE about an eight-volume OU'DS operations manual that explained the operations of each unit."
Brackett told the malpractice problem could be lessened by the filing of fewer
"Unfortunately," he said, "I think the adversary system is becoming a part of daily life and I think it's reflected in the hospital setting.
"Everybody's suiling everybody."
But Davis said, "One man his nuisance is another man's good cause. I think the image of lawyers chasing people to the hospital is an inaccurate one."
DUNN SAID malpractice cases were so severe that a lawyer could afford to try only a few.
"Sure cases?" do exist-doctors are
sure, and human beings make mistakes,
or not.
A doctor must graduate from medical school, must be certified by the director of his training program and must pass state board examinations.
But few professions require as much training and self-regulation as the medical profession.
In addition, most doctors read medical literature, attend post-graduate courses and, in general, "try to keep up" on their specializations. This year, for the first time, the doctor will receive a written examination, but only on a voluntary basis, Brackett said.
"WHETHER THAT sort of thing is going to become mandatory or not I don't know," he said.
"And there are disciplinary boards," he said. "Although I think it's about as difficult to move against a physician as it is to move against a doctor." In some legal obstacles to that, too, he said.
The staff physician agreed with Brackett. Hospitals are afraid to censure their doctors because they might be sued, he said. The doctor has been accused of criticize doctors for the same reason, he said.
THE ONLY solution to the malpractice problem with which administrators, doctors and lawyers agreed was a legislative solution.
There are now 16 measures in both houses of the Kansas State Legislature. Compared to other states,
-Lessen the statute of limitations from 12 years to four years.
- Place an upper limit on settlements.
- Place an lower limit on education.
a prerequisite for realigning.
- Place basic mlp.practice insurance on an "assigned-risk basis."
- Make it mandatory that judges decide whether attorneys' fees are reasonable.
- Allow the establishment of screening power to make to non-binding recommendation
- Add "professional incompetence" as grounds for suspension or revocation of a grant.
STATE SEN. W. H. Sowers, R-Wichita, said continuing education for doctors, a clarification of legal procedures in malpractice cases and a means of
monitoring doctors were necessary components of any malpractice bill.
Sowers, chairman of the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee, predicted that there would be a mparactice bill passed by the legislature this term.
Dykes said he was optimistic about a legislative solution to the malpractice problem.
"If there are 16 bills," he said, "the
fewest of them some of them getting through
is pretty good."
HASN'T V reached the crisis stage in
Kansas, he said, and most doctors
agree.
Kansas is still a pretty nice place to practice," one Med Center doctor said.
"It's a frightening thought—the thought of being sued for malpractice," he said. "The statistics make it inevitable. That's why we think about it quite a bit."
A ruling by the Kansas Supreme Court in 1965, ordered a re- hearing of the case.
Parks employs form association
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
The United Public Employees Association
The United Public Employees Association
(UPEA), soon will have a slurry
Courtroom sees film of Hearst as bank robber
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Patricia Hearst watched in a darkened court yesterday day as the prosecution screened a silent movie starring her as a bank robber, then heard two witnesses depict her as a profane and threatening bandit.
The movie, pieced together by the government from still photos taken by a bank camera, showed a bewigged "Tiana" brandishing a carbine at customers who tried to enter the Hibernia Bank branch while members of the Symbionce Liberation Army staged a holdup April 15, 1974.
The film ran slightly less than two minutes.
And, quoting from what it said was an SLA manuscript obtained from federal sources, the Chicago Tribune reported yesterday that Hearst apparently turned down a chance to return to her parents about a month after her kidnapping.
The defense contends that the oncefugitive heiress was in the bank as an unwilling captive. But two of her former underground companions, Bill and Emily Harris, said in Los Angeles yesterday that she had confided to her comrade whose decision to stay with the LAA after her kidnapping was "based on her own initiative and free choice."
In a copyrighted story from San Francisco, the Tribute said the documents included a passage purportedly written by Hearest in which she described efforts to persuade her captors to allow her to remain with them.
"After a couple of weeks, I started to feel sympathy with the SLA." Miss Hearst reportedly wrote: "I was beginning to see that I had to accomplish was necessary. . ."
Asked about the document, which the newspaper said it had withheld until selection by the F. Bailley office, chief defense man for the F. Bailley office, said some extent, its authority is in disuse."
Bailey told a news conference that his young client seemed to be satisfied with progress so far, despite testimony from two of the nine government witnesses Thursday that appeared to support the contention that she was less than a reluctant robber.
One witness, bank customer James Norton, said he looked down the barrel of Heart's gun and heard her utter a courtly he was too bashful to repeat in court.
About 15 employees of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department turned out last night at the Lawrence Community Building for a press conference to announce the formation of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Employees Association. The organization plans to hold a public meeting, firefighter, police, street department, sanitation department and water department associations in the UPEALa, a spokesman said.
The announcement came in the wake of recent charges of mismanagement of city
Terry Cook, one of the parks and recreation group's four appointed leaders, said he had worked underway for eight months. Some department employees have been affiliated with the street department association, he said, but recently to form their own organization.
Among those present for the announcement were Dennis Smith, president of the Lawrence Sanitation Employees Association; Alvin Samuels, president of the Lawrence Firefighters Association, and Norman Forer, UPEAL advisor.
Cook said he and three other employees, Willie Mitchell, John Clark and Kerry Pierce, spearheaded formation of the association and were appointed by co-workers to serve as the group's governing board officers will be chosen in a few weeks, he said.
Reading from a prepared statement, Pierce said, "Our employees have been neglected and abused for years, and we are in danger of losing our organization can these problems be solved?"
- Usable firefighters, which have poor broken caulon lights and leak carbon monoxide.
Pierce listed several problems in the department:
-Improper storage of dangerous chemicals and inadequate protection from pesticides
—No equipment operation training programs.
—Widespread favoritism.
—Inadequate first aid equipment
—Inadequate pay for employees who operate equipment.
- Irregular employee evaluations.
—An inconsistent merit system.
—Part-time help taking overtime work from regular employees.
—An inconsistent infit system.
—Abuse of overtime distribution.
Inconsistent probation policies.
- No provisions for uniforms.
— Irregular job posting.
Cook said two of those who didn't join were foreman. One declined for religious reasons, and the other thought his job as operator might be in jeopardy, he said.
Of the 21 department employees, Pierce said. 17 joined the association.
The association leaders plan to meet with City Manager Buford Watson at the first of next week, Pierce, to discuss grievances and their new organization.
Watson said last night that he would meet with the parks and recreation leaders as he had with leaders of the five UPEAL members.
Those who attended the meeting mostly asked questions about unsafe equipment.
Cook said he had worked with the department for two years and vehicle caution lights had been broken continually during that time.
Clark said he had taken the matter to the department superintendent, George Osborne, but the lights hadn't been repaired.
Several association members complained that they were paid laborer's wages when they operated heavy equipment. According to city guidelines, they said, they are entitled to operator's wages, which are 42 cents an hour higher than laborer's wages.
Forer said the same problem had occurred in the street department and was corrected through negotiations with Watson.
JOHN WAYNE
KATHARINE
HEPSURN PG
ROOSTER
Eve. 7:30-9:30
Sat.-Sun. 2:30
COGBURN
Granada
904-821-1350 - Saginaw W. 3780
Why is everybody after George Segal's bird?
GEORGE SEGAL in
WE PROMISED YOU THERE would be more if you would support them. I, E. will sponsor the BEST FOREIGN MAY last year as well as being a favor with the critics.
"THE BLACK BIRD"
(11 ft.) a falcon,
funny model.
"A knockout. Malle makele trumphantly!" - P.Kaei "A beautiful considerer film!" -取戮film" -V.Canby
Eve. 7:30 & 9:30
Sat.-Sun. 2:30
Varsity
BALMINE - Stephen W. JOHN
Hillcrest
PG
"BLUE WATER, WHITE DEATH"
LOUIS MALLE'S
FAMILY & FESTIVALS promotions only
FRANCO ZEFFREIELL
ROMEO
& JULIET
Every Eve, 7:30 & 9:30
Saturday-Sunday 1:05
"LACOMBE
LUCIEN" R
Every Eve, at 7:25 & 9:55
Sat. Sun.
Mai.
1:50
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
WHITE DEATH The Most Frightening and
The most tightening and
Fascinating Sea Adventure Ever
A CINEMA CENTER FILMS PRESENTATION
Every Evening 7:20 & 9:50
Saturday-Sunday 1:50 PG
Hillcrest
Hillcrest
空気美術館
with Jim Stringer on Guitar GREAT MODERN JAZZ
This original color woodcut by KEISAI EISEN- Japan (1790-1848) is one of the many original ornits to be auctioned for sale by MARSON LTD. at lt
TONITE: Tom Montgomery Trio
WOMAN WITH
PARASOL
Famous JAZZ trumpet player who has played with Stan Kenton, Doc Severinson, Marilyn Maye & others
Exhibit hours: Feb. 9—11 a.m.-7 p.m.
Feb. 10—10 a.m.-5 p.m.
SATURDAY: Jim Sellards
The Union—South Lobby
playing with the GASLIGHT GANG only at
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
843-8575 or 842-9458 926 Mass. Open at 7:00 p.m.
sponsored by
SUA
prohibiting suits against governmental agencies. Earlier, the court had declared the law to be unconstitutional. A second ruling is expected soon.
DUNN SAID a reversal of the court earlier ruling could nullify some or all of the lawsuits against the Med Center, but it wouldn't affect the cases in which individual doctors were being sued, Dunn said.
Dykes said, "Our concern is for both the University and the physicians as members of the faculty. A problem that affects one will ultimately affect the other."
Battle...
From page one
perform in the important aspect of sexuality, he said.
DECROW SAID the battle between the seakers would never end and while men were still fighting, they hadn't.
"I feel that a liberated consciousness will free a man from these anxieties," she said.
DECROW SAID she hoped that in the
because they wanted to get married
Glider and DeCrow debated in three 10-minute rounds and then answered questions fielded by Brad Bradley, chairman of SUA forums.
2
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FOR BOTH OF YOU
The TREK II by CLARK
is for those times
when you're on your own.
A brown waxy
leather lace-up
shoe with whipped
stitch trim
and crepe
soles.
Arensberg's
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819 Mass.
6
Friday, February 6, 1976
University Dally Kansan
THE ORIGINAL
ALLEN
FIELD
HORSE
BASKETBALL
COURT
FOR SALE
WITH A PIECE OF KANSAS
BASKETBALL HISTORY
2014 JUNE 31TH
12:30 LUNGE MINT
4-8 SETTER
4-6 SETTER
ON MARTHA STATEN
ON WILLIAM STATEN
ON WESTERN STATEN
ON WESTERN STATEN
ON WESTERN STATEN
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Circle unbroken
assumantbff planning to bid for the jump circle from Allen Field House's original court may be in for a surprise. Chancellor Arch R. Dykes has said the circle won't be opened until next month.
whether the "Big K" jump circle from the original Allen Field House floor puts a lump in your throat or brings back an injury because he is protecting her longer appears to be an issue.
Field house circle not for sale
Cancellor R. Dykes told SenXe
Wednesday that the Big K wouldn't be sold.
Clyde Walker, athletic director, said yesterday there were second thoughts after the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation Board decided to sell the circle to the highest bidder. The athletic corporation said it had considered after the basketball season is over, but Walker said the board has now said it had the right to refuse the highest bid.
The decision to sell the circle was made to help raise funds for additional renovations to Allen Field House and a Kansas State University building, which Walker said was still being planned.
Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director and former Kansas basketball player, said, "The floor sat for almost a year and a half and nobody worried about its retirement. I don't understand all the sentiment expressed over a wooden floor."
Student officials began a campaign a week ago to keep the circle at KU as part of a new Kansas Union floor or a floor in the satellite union, if it's built.
Students had brought ideas into the Student Senate office on how to keep the circle, Woner said. The ideas included soliciting one dollar donations from students, looking for a donor who would bid highest and lowest, and appeals to the Kansas Legislature to reclaim the circle or request that it stay at KU.
Ed Rollfs, student body president, said,
"We've had more calls on that than on anything else in several months. Most people just wanted to help."
Rolfs had said that the circle should be kept because this was the bicentennial year and KU's basketball history had made the circle an "heirloom."
Bruce Woner, StudEx chairman, said Dkw'd announcement meant those who
opposed the sold wouldn't "have to resort to other means to acquire and retain the
Students had brought ideas into the Student Senate office on how to keep the circle, Woner said. The ideas included soliciting one dollar donations from students, looking for a donor who would bid highest and give the circle to the University, applies to the College I赡iture to recycle the circle or require that it stay at KU.
Letters to the chancellor from student body officials helped to keep the Big K here;
Waugh said, "I don't remember Kansas basketball by the floor. The history of Kansas basketball isn't written in a floor; it's written in people.
Old Robinson Gymnasium (no longer nanking) and Hoch Axel Ausbreitl were rebuilt.
"There's perhaps more or as much tradition in Hoch as there is in Allen Field House. We don't have part of Hoch that we do we have part of Robinson anywhere."
Mit Allen, son of former basketball coach F.C. "Pooh" Lawrence and Lawrence attorney, said, "The Big K means Kansas University to me, nothing else."
"This is a commercial world we're living in. I want one bit upset about seeing the camera. I'm not."
Mitll Allen played on the 1936 team that holds the longest consecutive win streak in KU history. He remembered games played during a startup at noon for a p.a. game.
"The field house was a big moment," he said. "Dad had been campaigning for it for years."
Bill Lienhack, member of the 1952 Olympic basketball team and vice president of the First National Bank, said he thought he was going to play basketball highlighted in some room at the University.
Lienhard said he, too, had played in Hoch,
but remembered watching the opening
song. "I was just a little nervous."
Soap operas bubble in Union
By PAUL SHERBO
Staff Writer
Jill has sold her baby for a million dollars.
She refused to turn the baby over to Ms. Chipman.
This very personal family crisis has drawn a crowd of more than 20 watchers in the TV room of the Kansas Union lobby every weekday morning this semester.
Perhaps any one of those viewers can fill you in on the details of Jill's baby. Or you can go yourself to watch that scene with the Blesses! at 11:00 and "All My Children" at 11:30.
Sheryl Goldansky, Overland Park sophomore, she said only to watch her favorite soap opera, "All My Children," on Tuesdays and Thursdays.
David Petesch, McLouth junior, said he was "on the ropes" of a game and the Redskins' "almost every day."
Five students interviewed yesterday said they watched for different reasons.
"1 kind of get involved with the plot," he said of the girl who watches it day after day. "I draw a few."
Soap opera plots usually are very simple, she said.
"Everybody's screwing everybody else's husband," Goldsanky said.
She likes the program for its content, she said.
"I like the characters. Most of the time it
really cool," she said.
At about half-past the hour, a lot of people
From 29 to 26 students watch the three shows. One woman slept through "Happy Birthday."
leave and other people come in, Petesch said, because of class schedules.
Cecilia Robinson, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, said she watched "The Young and the Restless" every day because it was one of her favorites.
Soap operas depict situations close to real life. she said.
kevin Laux, Lawrence freshman, said he alternately studied for school and watched
"Happy Days." He studies through soap operas, he said.
"I really don't pay much attention to them at all." he said.
Three other people said they usually studied in the TV room when they were young.
Vilian Ungles, Satanita, Kan, *spam*, to watch "Happy Days" and to watch "The Young and
the Restless," she said she watched soap operas for different reasons.
"They're kind of silly," she said. "I used to watch because they're so ridiculous."
Ungles said she didn't think that real life was much like the daily crimes portrayed on TV.
"I never sat down to analyze it," she said. "I think it's extremely exaggerated."
Theatre treats pupils to musical
There is a 1 p.m. performance today of "Sacramento 50 Miles" in the University Theatre for first through third graders from Lawrence schools. A public performance will be presented tomorrow at 2 p.m. Admission is 75 cents.
The Kansas University Theatre for Young People will continue its presentation of "Sacramento 50 Miles" today and "Sacramento 3,000 area elementary school children.
"Sacramento 50 Miles" is a musical comedy written by Eleanor and Ray Harder. The production is part of a 23年 University tradition of producing plays to help grade school children understand the theater.
Jed Davis, director of the University Theatre and of both children's productions this year, said Wednesday that the plays were to be made in education eastern in Lawrence schools.
The production is an adaptation of a Grimm's fairy tale, "The Bremen Town Musicians." In the story, four animals run away from their owners and dream of
accrediting the town musicians in
bacremono, Calif.
The group never reaches Sacramento, but along the way it learns the importance of dreams and the beauty that comes from striving for them.
On another level, the production discussions on the commercial problem of old age and the transition to retirement are
The two men are joined by Benny Bartley, Newberry, S.C., graduate student, who plays Beauregard, the rooster Judi Tucker, and the cat, the cat; Neun Murphy, Topek sophomore,
The six member cast portrays four animals and two persons. Doug Walker, assistant Douglas County attorney, plays Rocky, a gold prospector. Michael Swan, Baldwin junior, plays Lodestone, his partner.
Lynch said this was her first time time performing for a children's audience. Such things as emotions, voices and gestures were introduced so she said, to appeal to a younger audience.
as Molly the burrow; and Jeannie Lynch,
Alexandria, the vase, as Joynah the dog.
Davis said that before the production of a play, a teacher's guide was mailed to elementary schools in the Lawrence and Douglas County to describe the production.
Sets for the production were designed by John Wagner, Mission Hills senior. Barbara Mounsey, Granville, Ohio, junior, designed the costumes.
Lynch said the production would be on tour through April 24. The show will visit Topeka, Kansas City, Kan., its suburbs and in Kansas. It will also go to Perio, III.
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The freshmen beat the varsity that year, Lienhard said and it hasn't been done since. The field house was filled and Chamberlain did the work, he said.
"That set the tempo for the field house," he said.
Haas Imports
Lienhard said another big night was KU against Missouri in 1972, when Bud
1029 Mass.
Walker said all Allen Field House
property belonged to the state. The wooden door was auctioned by the state and sold to a buyer.
The auction was publicized, he said, but evidently only the KUAC showed up.
The field house floor itself was cut into sections four feet square, and four feet by four feet.
Last year the new synthetic surface was installed. Waugh said the old floor was inadequate, had dead spaces and was worn from 20 years of play.
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A RURAL RESTAURANT IN MIDDLE EAST, USA. THE WOODEN WINDOWS AND OUTDOOR ARE FURNISHED WITH STOCKED WINES AND BOWLING Cups. THE SIDE PANELS Are Decorated With Flowers And Vegetables. THE CAFE HAS A RESTAURANT TABLE AND SIDE BOWLING Tables.
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University Daily Kansan
7
Friday, February 6, 1976
A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Loose Scarf
A loose scarf can be quite a problem when the wind is blowing in because it can easily get wet with an armful of blood or oatmeal. Poison, algae and grungy hair can also make it difficult to keep it on.
quickly remedied by two friends passersby. Temperatures Friday are expected to remain cold, with a slight trace of snow
Ford wants election law change
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Gerau R. Ford proposed to congressional leaders last night that members of the Federal Election Commission be appointed by the president with the Senate giving final approval.
The President also suggested the possibility of terminating the new election law or the commission, or both, in 1977 after this year's presidential election.
The purpose of that suggestion is to give Congress a chance to review and possibly rewrite the law as the result of experience gained in an election campaign.
The President summoned Vice President Nelson A. Rockefeller and several Senate members to the White House to outline his suggestion that the president aimed at preventing the commission from
The Supreme Court ruled last week that the election commission, created to implement reform legislation in the wake of the Watergate scandals, must either be restructured or on Feb. 29 cease exercising all but a few of its powers.
losing most of its power at the end of this month.
The court ruled that many of the powers and duties that the new law gave to the commission, such as the authority to institute civil law suits to enforce the law, were power exercises that could be occasionally exercised by federal officers appointed by the President.
The decision created an immediate
Four of the six commission members now are appointed by Congress and two by the president.
problem for Congress on whether to restructure the commission or let it lose most of its powers at the end of this month.
If the commission lost its broad powers, payment of matching funds to candidates would cease and, in the eyes of some authorities, candidates who received them no longer would be bound to observe spending ceilings in the campaign law.
Use Kansan Classifieds
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Select House Intelligence Committee approved recommendations yesterday to create a permanent watchdog intelligence committee and to require presidents to disclose all covert operations to it.
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liable to dismissal and criminal prosecution.
In the Senate, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger told a committee that he favored creation of a joint House-Senate watchdog intelligence committee. He opposed Congress' requiring that covert operations be reported to it in advance.
The committee also recommended that all U.S. para-military support of foreign troops as well as assassinations be outlawed except in time of war.
Kissinger said he thought that presidents and their aides should report such operations to Congress in advance, but that they shouldn't be prohibited by law from conducting any operation without telling Congress first.
Committee OKs recommendation for 'watchdog'
It voted to subject congressman who leak secrets jeopardizing national security to censure or expulsion. Staff aides who revealed classified information would be
BROADWAY SHOWSTAR
See Bob DeFlores and Ron Fields
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 8
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM / KANSAS UNION
show times 3:00 and 7:00 pm
ticket donation $200 to the Laurance Art Center and the SUA office at Benefit Arts Center
ticket donation $2.00
Pool Sharks / The Barber Shop / The Dentist (includes cut footage
A Surprise Feature !!!!! / The Golf Specialist
W.C FIELDS in rare films, and his grandson,
RONALD LEWIS with tales, memories, and memorabilia,
also
ANU ALIUM with a KAU alum
Friday noon on Channel 9 "Kaleidoscope" program. Portions of "The Golf Specialist" will be shown. Both gentlemen will be interviewed.
--text book dept., lower level
8:30-5 weekdays
10:00-1 saturday
The Lawrence Art Commission,
the Lawrence Art Center Board and SUA
FILM
--text book dept., lower level
8:30-5 weekdays
10:00-1 saturday
CLEARANCE BOOK SALE 50-75% off
Select group of discontinued text and trade books. Over 500 titles, wide variety of subject matter. Come in today. Sale starts Feb. 5 and continues only while stock lasts. All sales are final.
kansas union BOOKSTORE
---
8
Friday, February 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU championship chances fading
Associate Sports Editor
By STEVEN SCHOENFELD
Ted Owens knows exactly what his team needs to win the Big East must do; it's still gone to win the Big East.
"The only possibility of our having a part of the championship is with an 11-3 record." Owens said. "That means we have to win this season, even for a tie for first."
Only eight in a row. Doesn't sound too tough, does it?
First, the Jayhawks must get by Oklahoma, whom they meet at 2:10 tomorrow afternoon in Allen Field House. The game will be televised by Channel 4, and John Wooden, former UCLA head coach, will serve as guest commentator.
KU IS SITTING in fourth place with a 3-3 mark. But of all the contending teams, the Jayhawks' may have played the most formidable schedule.
"We've gone through the real tough part of our schedule." Owens said. "A win at Nebraska Wednesday would have put us in as good, a shine as anybody."
KU has already met two of the three
teams, teams-Nebraska and
Michigan. The Wolverines and
Michigan have won each game.
1974
Clint Johnson
played at Colorado, which Owens said is one of the toughest places in the conference to play. Five of their eight remaining games are at home.
HARVEY BROOKS
Herb Nobles
But that will mean nothing if Kansas loses to the Sooners.
OLHAMOA 12-4 in league play and 5-13 overall, but, Owens warned that OU's
"They lost in overtime against Colorado," he said. "And they lost a one-pointer at Nebraska. They are awfully close to being 4-2."
Oklahoma has a new head coach this
year. Her former was Bobby
King's top assistant at USC.
The Sooners may be burglaring at the Jayhawks, however. Forward Kevin Jones, the team's leading score with a 8.8 scoring ankle from a sprained ankle and may not play.
"We have some idea about Dave's style of play," Owens said. "Because his team is young, they have really worked hard on moving the ball and playing for the high percentage shot. They've been real patient with shooting over 50 per cent from the field."
THAT LEAVES OU with a front line of 6-8 Billy Graham and 6-9 Randy Gentry at forwards and 6-7 Rick McNell at center. They'll be giving up quite a few inches to KU forwards Norm Cook, 6-8, and Ken Coenig, 6-10, and center Paul Mokenkoi, 7-1.
"We need to use our strength and that mears going inside," Owens said. "We were there."
Donnie fights back after illness
Donnie Von Moore has had more than his share of heartbreak this season.
The University of Kansas basketball player came into the year with high expectations. He had been moved to center, supposedly his natural position, after playing forward his first two years here.
He was being counted on to provide leadership on this year's young basketball team. Along with Norm Cook
sidelines and watch while is teammates are on the floor. It's the first time for many years that he hasn't been on the court himself.
Donnie grew up playing the game on the playgrounds in Chicago. He was a star at Kenwood High School, and he readily admitted that it had not been for his basketball ability, he would probably still be on the streets of Chicago.
"Basketball has been my life." Von
By Allen Quakenbusb Sports Editor
and Clint Johnson, Von Moore was one of the few KU players with any varsity experience.
THEN, KU COACH Ted Owens announced that Von Moore had been sent to Watkins Hospital with a slight case of pneumonia. He was expected to miss a couple of games at the beginning of the year.
But his world began to collapse in the middle of November. It started innocently enough. He spent a couple of days on the sidelines in sweat clothes watching his teammates work out after suffering minor chest pains.
That disappointed a lot of KU fans. But it was nothing compared to the way they felt when they found out Von Moore had been in the medical Center because of complications.
And Von Moore's dream of having a good season had turned into a nightmare.
Von Moore spent the next month in the Med Center underwent surgery to relieve the congestion in his lungs. What began as a mild illness had developed into a major illness.
"ALWAYS THOUGH I'd play again until the doctor told me I couldn't play." Von Moore said. "I knew I was really sick, but I also figured I would be back."
It isn't easy for Von Moore to sit on the
Moore said. "You know how I missed it when I was sick. If it wasn't for basketball, I wouldn't be where I am today. It's what got me to college."
VON MOORE DOESN't want anybody to feel sorry for him. In fact, he would prefer that everybody forget about his existence, and even it like to talk about it anymore.
But during his stay in the hospital, he was more than glad for all the attention he received.
"People were so nice to me that it really got my spirits up." Von Moore said, "I really took my mind off the situation. I might have been pretty depressed."
"I always had somebody to talk to.
They were always so many people to see.
For a time, Von Moore's basketball future was in doubt. But he is certain he will be able to play.
After the disappointments of this year, Von Moore seems to have a right to feel a little bit down on the world. But that's not his attitude at all.
"After everything that has happened," Van Moore said, "I'm just glad to be out and around. I'm just thankful that I'm safe and can be around people again."
[Photo] A man sits on a bench, wearing a striped shirt and jeans. He is holding a cellphone to his ear. In the background, there are other people standing behind him.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Von Moore mans basketball phones
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LOVE TAKES MANY FORMS
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 6.1976
1
KU, Missouri track teams renew rivalry
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
A new element has entered into one of the oldest track rivalries in the United States, the one between the University of Kansas and the University of Missouri: The foreign athlete.
When the Jayhawks take on the Tigers at 7 on tonight the high-fast 220 oval in the Heares Activity Building in Columbia, all hills of the muddy area of MU's African sprinters and finishes.
Thad Talley, KU assistant track coach,
While MU's foreigners aren't 25-year-old African Olympians, they do appear to draw a sigh of disappointment from Talley. Is he jealous?
"The word no jealous, I don't want to say we have a negative feeling," he said. "It just means they've got good competition in the hurdles and sprints."
said yesterday, "Missouri has gone to
the foreign athlete. They have about six over
Not only does KU want to repeat its 72-68 victory of last year, it wants to take advantage of Missouri's fast track to record some good times.
We want to win, too. But we think we can win with the American athlete."
Talley said Missouri had a good track for their purposes to take in outdoor Championship games.
"This is the reason for Tuma McCall the governor and (Randy) Benson in the 60" he said.
McCall's usual race is the half mile and
They'll board a late flight there and take one to Pocatello, Ida., and tomorrow's idale of the champions, a meet which annually produces some of the best indoor markets in the world.
They, along with 600 runner Jay Wagner and sprinters Cliff Wiley and Ken Newell, will leave the meet early to rush to Kansas City International airport.
Benson typically spits the 440. Both,
however, have other things in their mind
that might be better suited to "odd-
ing."
Talley said, "The American indoor record in the 100 meters is 10.7. They (the meet directors) say Wiley's the best in the field. They want to break the American indoor record."
Despite the loss of quarter maddler Waddell Smith, who quit the team Tuesday, KU will continue to play.
The RU women's track team, guided by Gabe Palm, also will travel to Missouri tonight.
The meet directors there want Wiley to run both the 60 meters and the 140 meters.
Waddell Smith quits KU track
Jayhawk hopes of challenging the NCAA mile relay record were crippled yesterday when Waddell Smith, one of the top quarterbackers in college, decided to quit the University of Kansas track team.
Tad Thalley, assistant track coach, said,
"I got the word from the manager that he's
turned his gear in. That's all I know. I
haven't talked to him."
Smith, the defending Big Eight indoor champion in the 600-yard run and runnerup in the NCAA indoor meet last year in that event, said yesterday he was quitting because, "I was being looked at as a point man, not as an individual.
"I made my decision after coach (Bob) Timmons said, "You're going to run the 800 at Missouri, or you're not going to run. I'm made to made in a race that's good for me."
Smith, who holds the KU record in the 600 with a 1:10.1 clocking, said he thought the race would damage his chances for victory. The U.S. Olympic team later in the summer.
"I know it hurt me (running the 600 last year). I felt the 600 during football games. I can say I know I more about track than the one but I know more about Waddell Smith."
While retaining his track scholarship,
while maintaining his train on his until the
Olympiad, he will train on his own
the United States.
"This is an Olympic year," he said, "and everyone who thinks he has a one-in-a-million chance is going to be totally self-oriented."
Randy Benson, Smith's teammate and another top-flight quarter miler, said, "I tried to get him to stay out. I said, 'Outdoors is where it counts.'"
"It's really going to be a big loss. I think it is in mess. But he sounded of himself."
Smith said, "Sometimes you never know when a decision is wrong. You have to look at it five or six years later. I may be completely wrong, but I feel I'm right."
As a member of last year's KU mile relay team, which swept the Midwest Relays circuit, took second in the NCAA meet and recorded the ninth fastest time (30:5.6) in the race. In terms of the number of KU improving its times this year were hurt by Smith's decision to leave.
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Accommodations. goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kananan newsletter. All materials may be colored or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL.
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The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 864-3588.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-products, you can use them to improve the GRAMMON SHOP at KIEFS. tf
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Max Factor Gloss-all-flavors, plain and groomed at Round Corner Drug Store. 801 Mass.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishware,
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Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at age 12. The computer can make copies of your 120-page book, or take pictures in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Gift Center, MS. Massachusetts, suite 814-4900.
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furniture. 3 m³ on KIW-24, 6 m³ on pwm.
5 m³ on KIW-30, 7 m³ on pwm.
Dear Censored Sender; I received your master's degree of creativity. I trust that you are actively engaged in creating your own unique plenum into works of art as you write a letter-writing, Girl on Street N-26
discount on selected items during out-of-state travel.
2003. Edridge Room, 701. Mass. 10-5-Type T.
2004. Edridge Room, 694. Mass. 10-5-Type T.
Giganic State Gardens and Antique Sales featuring a collection of vintage planters, housewares, sporting goods, boots, furs, jewelry, crafts, toys, tins, knives, knives, baskets, vases. The Bargains bargains, Friday, February 13 (8:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m.) at Rockhurst High School, am to 5:00 p.m.) at Rockhurst High School, 246 East Road, Kansas City Missouri Admission is free.
Handyman Special. Possible Contract. Rebuild want it. The house needs work. Some repairs. Call 866-279-3555 to see it. Call cell Bob Lusiter at Havenly 1-800-455-2211 or Mike Penner evenings at 842-357-3900. 2-12
February Specials—Musk, Chemillery, Heaven,
every day; please have valentines. Round Corner Drug
Department.
Remember your Valentine. Feb. 14-Panthers
and Panthers Card. Four Corners Drug Store.
801-796-2544.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION RENOWNERS: Drop in at the entrance of the business center (no phone calls) where at WEBSTER'S home office you can visit.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings in Lawrence, Lawrence Rental Exchange. 842-250-7881. 842-250-7880.
3 new 2 bdm; apartment near campus; park-
ing area; efficiency apartment; us-
tities paid. 845-997-978
female roommate wanted to share nice twin-bedroom apartment. One block from campus. Mutt clean and preferable non-smoker. No pets. Located in a quiet neighborhood privileged by Lynch Real Estate, 843-1001.
To sublimate immediately, 2 baths, furnished
with large bedrooms. For conference rooms of Union Quel, great location, $175 call M.C. HENNESON AT (614) 238-8000.
Room furnished with shared kitchen and bath
kitchen. Additional appliances also.
Also efficiency apt, for male near town. No
pavement.
2 bdm. all, utll. on, campus. Furn. or
unfurn. Free parking, a/c, pool. 843-499-300.
Sublease available immediately on 1 bdm. apartment, $165 monthly. Call 824-1455. 2-9
Studio w/kitchen in exchange for housecleaning
babysitting, 5 min. drive from KU $4
dining room $7
Two dbm. apartment, newly carved, stone and
refrigerator. 1904 W. 32nd. Crescent. Height
apartment F. Close to campus. Bus at the door.
Cell (312) 765-486 or 862-444. 2-10
Attractive, clean, 6 bdm. house, all carpeted, 2 baths, living rooms, dining rooms, kitchen, family room, parking. Near campus, partially furnished, no pet Call at 5 p.m. #835-805
Rooftie attire for, one male only, 75%/no.
Dress code: 1-4th row, stadium at
Mainline. Call Bill at 835-1514
2-12
Two btm. furnished or unfurnished apt. avail.
Firmly located. Close to campus. Call 800-
841-3948 or 841-3948.
Large room for man. Private bath-in-attendance
2½ blocks west of campus. 843-7827. 2-12
TYPING
TITISH BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located in our office. Our services in fast and prices are reasonable. Our services include free shipping on orders over $100.
Experienced tech. I.B.M. Selective, thesis, dissertations and term papers. Call Pam Jenkins, $85.
Experienced typist—term papers, theses, mice.
Experienced typist—writers proofread, spelling
corrects 843-7260.
Master's degree 843-7260.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
**Typing--experienced in disartures, theses,**
*narratives*, etc. B.A. Psych. Doctor's PhD.
*New York, NY* b-8058
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable.
Req's college degree. Fax resume to:
john.mcmauris@bail.ac.uk
or john.pelletier@bail.ac.uk
B.A. Social Science
and two plus years electric. B.A. Social Science
and three plus years electric.
TYPING for illustration, then paper formatting and attention. Use of durable, dependable and accurate Carrier or Linda.
Typset editor. IBM Pice sitemaps. Quality work. Send resume to disksitte.com, call Joan. 942-321-9711. Call Joan. 942-321-9711.
Exp. typist, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
reporting on the effect of spelling correction.
Jorn. 814-3690
PERSONAL
"7111-Napoleon brought it to Josephine-
Louis Campbell sent drug store youil 811-Mass-
Care."
Hatha yoga course for beginners and inter-
mediate students. Ministers Ministry.
Center, 1920 Bread, 843-848-Fe-115.
Would like to meet the girl that I never spoke with, but whose been on my mind since last Saturday, when I saw her in the sixth street entrance of the building of HDLF class last semester. Greg, 841-7267, 2-6
STUDENT VOLUNTEERS WANTED: 4 students in training and the manager and management of the Hawkwomen's life worky力, technical and managerial assistance evening operations. Contact SAU offer 864-391-2700. Contact SAU offer 864-391-2700.
For all lost "Miss America" who feel life is passing you by. There will be an encounter given to us discussion with Betty Crocker titled When it comes along, why I should know it.
ENTERTAINMENT
Get your honey & Valentine Gift. The SUPER
GIFT includes jade with indelible illustrations,
manual $39. Fire! For $15.
Coffee House. The Fiery Purnaure 1116 Louisiana.
Friday and Saturday nights. 9 p.m.
Bengal
Jewels and Jewelry
And More...
LOST AND FOUND
"Found advertisements are sponsored as a publicity tool." The Bank, State Bank, 8 & Kentucky Malls Shopping Center.
Lost: Maynard, 3 a month old, male beagle
Won: Maynard, Kentucky, Wednesday night,
841-470-765.
Pat Read
Foreign Auto Parts
Late Friday afternoon in Herbies or Louise's brown cat's eye dome. Reward. Larry. 84-305-9771
Least: Black and brown Male dog, about 50
Height: 17-19 inches. Boundary Island. Cali.
Boulder Island. David, 8141-7183.
Pair of men's brown framed glasses and case.
Patrion of Allen Field Museum.
Mont. 81-4233. B-9
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
761 Mass.
843-1366
10-5 Tues.-Sat.
Small, white, long haired dog, lost Saturday near
10 & Mississippi. 824-673-8000
2-10
Discounts for Do-It Yourselfers with Student L.D's
Parts:
Found a new t-shirt in Blake Hall, Call Keith and identity # 843-6155. 2-9
SERVICES OFFERED
WANTED
Wanted Core and companionship for young
employees. Resume to HR department
schedule but you must provide transportation
Copy of book "Political Parties and Political Resistance"
Contact Mike Galloway. 843-675-0 or 843-270-
Contact Mike Galloway. 843-675-0 or 843-270-
Silver bracelet, name and inscription on back
of bracelet. Tues. 3-30-5-MAR 2016
Keep trying Identify
Desperately wanted to buy: prints of pictures of the Who concert in K.C. or will pay to use your negatives. Close-up pictures especially wanted. 3128 Buaira Hotel, Sawatwea Mansion. 66035.
Want to give your "You-poo" for Valentine's
day? Call the phone number 2-11
Lawrence. Include your phone number
2-11
Mellow female roommates need to 12 x
roommates with extras. Privacy respects
645-890-6800; 645-890-7300
MATH TUTORING—Competent. experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009, 010, 142, 500, 508, 657. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Rates call 842-7681.
Professional Research - form papers a speciality.
Research in the areas of law, accounting,
Lawrence. Include your phone number.
2-10
Tutoring in Math and Science, any age or grade.
*A+ Tourner Book*, 843-1245. 2-12
Found: Money pouce, brown leather. East wing
Strong. Identify contents. Call 843-1400-2-10
Wanda Grammaran at the Ramada Inn Beauty
Salon in haircuts for men and women
843-860-7000
--to play it no how!"
MATIH GOT YOU DOWN! If so, be help-eary.
102, 111, 115 Call 841, 691, 102, 103, 17
111, 115 Call 841, 691, 102, 103, 17
Male roommate, Park 25, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths,
Male roommate, Park 25, 2 bedrooms, not required, 2 baths,
plus utilities. 824-2914
Non-moving roommate wanted to live with
non-moving roommate. No pets allowed.
Carmel and campus and furnished - 485 including utility
and furniture.
IVAN'S 65 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories
JAMES GANG
Foreign Auto Service
Expert Repairs by Factory Trained Mechanics
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
Service:
843-5288
SKI-ANT Blue is open, 15% less under new
armour; 3 ml in K-10. on K-10. to 30 m.p. ppt.
and 30 ml in K-10. to 30 m.p. ppt.
THE NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
Museum has a great fiddler teacher. Alba blebs,
folk and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin and
jazz, jazz and rock guitar. Call 841-741-
8817
Get a Winter Hat with a Sollamp from Bound
Moment Complete hits, replace it
bullets-811 Max
Bullet-Moment Complete hits
Use your Book People Coupon at Round Corner
Drugstore-1 off- 800 Mass. 2-15
Employment Opportunities
Overseas Jobs - temporary or permanent Europe, Australia, S. America, Africa, etc. All staff required to be fluent in English. Free info - write, International Job Center, Dept. KA, Box 4490, Berkeley CA 94704. 2-800-625-1030
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Dry Kiss Lips bye-lose with Sea and Skilt Lips.
Contains 40 at 60° C for Dorset Drug Store. 801 Max.
HELP WANTED
AVON-Start off the new year with excellent earnings. Open 7 days, Lawrence and near 25.
RIDES ___ RIDERS
Part-time, lime and nighttime fontain work
available now at NVA Drive In., 12F7 W. 6th-24
TRAVEL
TACOS
Carpool: (Leneca Lawrence) Have classes Mon-
tue, 12-Thursday, Tues.-Thurs. 12-5:30-Jun-
9:30-12:00. Contact R. J. Barne, 684-8681,
newness School) 300-B Summerfield or 684-8681.
(Leneca)
1105 Massachusetts 843 9880
$3.95 per Dozen
EUROPEFISNAELAIFARCASA ASIA — Trova el
municipio en la provincia de Alicante, Tuever,
604 803 511 First Avenue, Tuever, G74 008
No one under 18 admitted.
Casa de Taco
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CATERING
15 East 8th, 841-266
10-5 Monday-Saturday
West of Hillcrest Bowl
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
RECREATION'S FINEST
THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
"If we don't get it you didn't want
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
YAHOO LIVE SUN
SUNSHINE CLUB
KING
CROWN CENTER
FOOTBALL
1035 Mass.
842-1521
THE MUSEUM OF BIRTH & BLOOMS
CROWN PRESENTS
CEEW-ALL
SHAZAAM
If You don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGES
Skiing
FREE
With pass-available at your ski-sports shop
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS (50° Service Charge)
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
at MONT BLEU
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
3 p.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices vary by location. Prices are Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. Mondays are Lades Houses, $1, Equipment rental. $2 Toward full cost.
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
BROOKLYN, NY - BROOKLYN, NY -
Torture
Struggling to get both bike and self up a steep incline, Kris Tilford tests the cyclo-cross course at Martin Park last weekend.
The cyclists came from as far away as Dakota, the first course at Lawrence's Martin Park last weekend.
They braved cold winds, steep inclines and declines, uncertain footing, log and stream obstacles and each other for a handful of merchandise prizes.
Some came with the most modern in cycle racing equipment. The winner brought a 12-year-old-age BMW.
It was a race where speed was secondary in importance. Balance and the ability to mount and dismount the bike with one fluid motion were premium abilities.
The two-kilometer course embraced most facets of the terrain of the park. The narrow, winding course took racers over logs and streams, through heavily-wooded areas and piles of loose leaves.
The Blue Hills Bike and Hike Club of Kansas City and the M. Oread Bicycle Club, co-sponsors of the race, vowed to hold the race no matter what the mid-winter weather offered. It could have been worse, but a stiff north wind and temperatures in the high 30s kept small fires popular.
Things warmed up, at least for the riders, when the race began. Tightly bunched at first, the racers jockeyed for position as the course left the first turn and descended onto the path through the woods.
As the race progressed, the gap between riders widened. The course became the competition for the racers.
After the speedy start, the racers were forced to dismount to cross a shallow stream. A few hundred yards later, they dismounted again to hurdle a log set a foot and a half above ground level.
The course then wound through the middle of the park, narrowing in places to pathways just inches wide. Before the backstretch came the hills. The first steep incline again forced a dismount as the matted leaves and steep slope dictated a gear not found even on a 10-speed bike.
Then came a short, but steep, decline in the course. Heavy braking was necessary to avoid a head-over-heels fall. Immediately preceding the backstretch was a rideable slope, which proved to be especially testing following the ride through the woods.
The winner of the feature race, as expected, was Tyger Johnson. Johnson, from Dakota, Iii, easily outdistanced a field of 14 riders. Johnson was a member of the U.S. team at the World Cycle-Croo Championships in Switzerland last January and was the highest finisher among the U.S. riders.
Johnson also won the Midwest Championships last December in Rockford, Ill.
Finishing two minutes after Johnson was David Conrad. Lawrence freshman.
Bike Race
Tightly spaced, the racers head down the first backstretch. As the race progresses, the cyclists are spaced widely apart.
I was very happy. I didn't want to leave the club. I felt like a champion and that made me proud. I wanted to keep going. I believed in myself and I knew that I was capable of achieving great things.
Jim May seeks shelter from the cold before the start of the feature race. Chilly at first, the racers finish damp with
TIM TOMLINSON
Dave Conrad wipes the sweat from his eyes after he finished a distant second to Tyger Johnson in the feature race. At left, Danny Capan performs a routine with the windmill.
Staff photos by DON PIERCE
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STILL WARMER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.82
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, February 9. 1976
Rolfs is among candidates filing for senate seats
See page 3
New plans bring acceptable bids for arts building
The new visual arts building came closer to reality last week when The Law Co., a Wichita based firm, submitted the apparent low bid on the $7.5 million project.
The Law Co. submitted a bid of $4,696,622.
The remainder of the $5.7 million appropriation will be used for architectural and engineering fees and a contingency fund that will ensure completion of the two-year building project. Lucas said.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
and Friday that 12 bidders submitted very
challenging bids.
"This indicated that not only were the beers favorable, he said, "but that they were flavorful."
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
8
The building is more than a year behind schedule because original bids exceeded available funds. All plans had to be redrawn and updated, including the new building, which will incorporate the remodeled Fowler Shops. The building will have a total of 145,560 square feet of floor space and will house all art and design creations in its former location throughout several campus buildings.
Lucas said that if bids had been too high again, the plans would have been altered so that they would not have been painted. Or, he said, extensive remodeling of the third floor of Fowler Hall wouldn't have been done or done because it had been omitted from the administrative offices.
The University has already evaluated the bids and made its recommendations to the state architects, Lucas said. The state should award contracts in one to three weeks, he said, after it makes its own evaluations.
A change of pace
Joan Reiber, director of the Hilltop Child Care Center experiences one of the lighter numbers of host children after demands from the February 2013 group at KU. See story, two pages.
Health insurance charge to increase for next fall
By FRED JOHNSON
Staff Writer
The cost of student health insurance at the University of Kansas may increase as much as 30 per cent beginning with the 1976 fall season. The former chairman of the student health advisory board.
The plan is offered by Blue Cross and Blue Shield this semester.
Student health insurance, which has 3.500 policyholders at KU, increased in cost by about 23 per cent between the 1974 and 1975 fall semesters. he says
SEGERRECHT SAID Friday he thought
SIGGERERCHT was semester “will be
necessary less than 10 per month”
Student health insurance now costs $125.20 a year for a single student from the beginning of one fall semester to the beginning of the next fall semester, and $251.88 a year for a student and one dependent.
Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Hospital, said the higher cost of student health insurance was due to the rising costs of hospital and medical care throughout the
country and not to increased rates at Watkins hospital.
Wollmann said that Watkins Hospital wasn't equipped to handle everything covered by the student health insurance plan. The high cost of medical care at other hospitals the student may visit for treatment cost of student health insurance, he said.
Discounts for faculty to end at bookstore
By ANNE SIGMAN
Staff Writer
The University of Kansas Memorial Corporation Board voted Saturday to end the university's student union in the Kansas Union bookstore by faculty members, staff members and departments.
William M. Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, said faculty would still be able to receive the patronage refund for cash purchases. The Union is supported by students' fees, he said, and the action will keen expenses down.
J. D. Chrestman, manager of the
A ROOM AT WATKINS costs $23 a day, he
room at other hospitals
costs about $48 a day.
City to change grievance system
bookstore, said charges were expensive to process. He said the convenience of charging was more important than the five per cent discount.
Staff Writer
A plan to use part of the profits from the Kansas University Bookstore to furnish a bookstore in the proposed satellite student union also was approved.
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
In response to recent complaints by city sanitation employees, the Lawrence City Commission agreed in a special meeting to unwearning to change its grievance procedure.
Meanwhile, leaders of the Lawrence Sanitation Employees Association said they would take their complaints directly to federal court.
"in such crucial issues as dog licenses," Forer said, "the (city) leaders are an effervescent wellspring of integrity, competence and civility, which promotes similar bubbling civil efficacy."
Norman Forer, adviser to the sanitation association, said yesterday that association leaders had met with attorneys and were raising money to pay legal fees.
"However, when it comes to those minor issues like freedom of speech and assembly and protection against assault, somehow I kind of prefer the federal courts."
charge that city leaders had violated Section 19-43 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871 by harassing sanitation employees and infringing on their right to form an employee association.
FORER SAID the court case would
The commission agreed Saturday to review all processed grievances, which will be filed with the department of Brent McFall, city attorney, instead of with department supervisors.
STUDENTS WILL vote whether to approve the satellite union, which would be in the Daisy Hill-Allen Field House area, in the Student Senate elections Feb. 18 and 19.
The employee, Tom Dougan, is being held in lieu of $2,500 bond after he allegedly attempted to run down a sanitation employee with a bulldozer on Jan. 28.
The commission will vote tomorrow night at its weekly meeting on a proposal to change a city policy that calls for immigrants any city employee charged with a felony.
THE COMMISSION is expected to alter the policy so a charged employee wouldn't necessarily be dismissed. That change might affect the job status of one sanitation employee charged last week with agravated assault.
"Wattkins will stay at the same rates as long as possible," he said. "I see no interest."
Forer said the grievance charges were improvements, but they were "too little and too late." He called the proposal to change the dismissal policy "selective usage of procedures" and an "appalling inconsistency" on the part of the commission.
SATURDAY'S SPECIAL meeting was to review evidence of charges made by Forer at last Tuesday's commission meeting of the deliberated harassment of sanitation employees.
Forer said the sanitation employees had decided to take their grievances to federal court after Forer informed them he had been barred at last Tuesday's commission meeting from the special meeting by Mayor Barkley Clark.
Forer said he then had received a telephone call from City Manager Buford Watson at 6 p.m. Friday inviting him and association leaders to attend Saturday's meeting. At that late time, Forer said, it "was humanly impossible" to assemble witnesses and present his case before the city commission.
"The city commission is trying to act as if the invitation (to appear) was open all the time," she said. "AT THE SPECIAL MEETING, Commissioner Donald Bins said Forer''s failure to appear was evidence that Forer couldn't produce evidence to substantiate his claims."
Despite turmoil in the sanitation department, Clark said, the commission has received compliments from Lawrence residents on recent sanitation service.
Watson said the city commission and city management had been subjected to 'reverse harassment' during the 10 months since the sanitation issue was first debated.
CLARK PROPOSED that the memorandum inform city employees that the commission wouldn't tolerate barassment of an employee for participation or failure to participate in a union or any other organization.
Clark agreed but said the commission wanted to be certain employees weren't being underpaid.
The board's proposal would allow $62,470 of bookstore profits from last semester to be used for a six per cent rebate and $22,270 to go in the Reserve for Expansion fund, which could be used in part for improvements in the bookstore and for the satellite library bookstore.
The satellite union would also be funded by $7.50 from each student's fall and spring semester fees and $2.50 from each student's summer session fees.
Warner L. Ferguson, associate director for financial affairs of the Union, said that expenses for the Union were higher than last year but that net income was also un.
'The balance sheet continues to reflect a healthy situation.' he said.
A plan for renovation and remodeling of the Union was presented by Dwight Brown, of Dwight Brown & Assoc., Architects, a Topeka firm. The plan includes a new canopy and an entryway and temporary terminating enlarging of the lobby and changes in the east entrance.
BALFOUR SAID the Student Union Activities (SUA) sales were particularly gradifying. SUA has been very careful, he said, in making $3,000,000 compared to a $3,400,000 loss last year.
Siegelbrecht said no definite changes in the student health insurance plan were planned for next year, although the Student Health Advisory Board had been reviewing parts of the plan to determine whether the coverage offered should be continued or increased in some areas.
A RESOLUTION was passed thanking the Board of Regents for amending its policies to allow the sale of cereal malt beverages in student unions. The resolution said the sale of cereal malt beverages hadn't presented any control problems in the Union.
ine prescription drug rider, he said, is one part of the plan that the advisory board recommends.
Segebrecht said the prescription drug rider covered the full cost of prescription drugs. The drug rider accounts for $27.68 of policy's total cost for a single student, he said.
QUESTIONNAIRES were mailed in late January to about 650 policymakers to determine whether students wanted the drug rider and whether the rider influenced their decision to buy health insurance, Secrebré said.
Sagebeck said that the majority of the questionnaires that had been returned were not received.
An open hearing is scheduled for 7 p.m.
Feb. 26 in the Council Room of the Kansas
Union to give students an opportunity to ask
about their health insurance plan, he said.
"I don't think there will be mop opposition to the druner rider." Seebbrecht said.
THE ADVISOR BOARD is considering extending hospitalization benefits for those suffering from nervous disorders or mental illnesses, he said.
Segebrecht said the advisory board was trying to determine what it would cost to extend the benefits from 30 to 60 days. The advisory board also will visit the mental health clinic in order to determine whether 30 days is sufficient time to treat most of the clinic's patients, he said.
SEGERECHT SAID the purpose of the meeting was "to see how much the insurance company is making and to see if they are getting a good deal for their money."
The advisory board will then decide what health insurance plan it wants to present to the Student Senate and then mail bid to the major insurance companies March 8.
The student health insurance plan and the lowest bid will be presented to the Senate in August.
Local boy makes good, thinks cartoonist's life easy
I
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Cartoonist Paul Coker and his dog, Pup, study some of Coker's work.
By KAREN LEONARD
Staff Writer
Nationally known cartoonist Paul Coker, who is in Lawrence to visit his parents, said recently that his style is so popular that job contracts were sent to him. He no longer has to pound the pavement with a portfolio under his arms he said. But he isn't too big. Big Sur region of California and works on his cartooning a few hours a day.
A distinctive cartooning style that can be recognized in magazines, greeting cards and television specials has given a Lawrence native an ideal job.
Coker said he was currently drawing for Rankin/Bass Television Production Corporation. Rankin/Bass produces seasonal specials, Coker explained, and he has drawn the characters, the costumes and the backgrounds for such animated Christmas specials as "Prost the Snowman," "Santa Claus" and "The Town." "The Night Before Christmas."
Along with his work as an illustrator for magazines and advertisements, Coker said, he has been a cartoonist for Mad magazine for several years and has worked "more or less steadily" for Hallmark cards during the past 20 years.
"Once you've established contacts and a style that's saleable, then it's much easier," he said. "If people want something done by you, they either write or contact you."
COKER, 46, looks every inch an artist with his silver-gray hair, neatly trimmed gray beard, blue jeans and holey sweat-shirt.
He said he had 'taught him had it so "easy" through which he now got work during the through which he now got work during the
See COKER page 6
ROCK CALK
A typical group of
A typical group of Coker characters
2.
Monday, February 9, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Vote close in Oklahoma
ORLAHAMA CITY—Former Oklahoma Sen. Fred Harris and former Georgia governor Jimmy Carter were deadlocked in early returns from state Democratic caucuses, but the largest block of delegates chosen by party members was uncommitted to any presidential aspirant.
While the results were far from definitive they may have signalled the end of the road for one candidate, Texas Sen. Lloyd Benten, who trailed both Harris and Gorsuch.
With nearly 70 per cent of the precincts reporting yesterday, 35.64 per cent of the delegates were uncommitted.
Harris had collected 19.89 per cent of the committed delegates and Carter had 19.87 per cent. Bentsen's delegates polled 11.97 per cent of the vote and Alabama
Meanwhile Bentman said yesterday in a statement telephoned here from Texas by a spokesman, that he is "taking a close look" at his campaign plans. The spokesman declined to answer specifically whether the statement meant the Texas senator might drop out of the race for the nomination.
Bensen, from neighboring Texas, had one of the largest campaign organizations in Oklahoma and spent heavily for media exposure.
But two weeks ago, after Bentzen finished fourth of five candidates in Mississippi with less than two per cent of the vote, a southwestern state to him said he if
RIots crinkle Barcelona
BARCELONA* Spain-Thousands of Catalans demanding home rule and political liberty defied police yesterday in the biggest antigovernment demonstration in the world.
Police fired rubber bullets and smoke grenades, bloodied demonstrators and police on honking automobiles but were unable to stop the protests that day.
Some sectors of the city were in a virtual state of siege. Several injuries and arrests were reported.
Police did not give an estimate on the number of demonstrators, but an organizer of the protest said in about 50,000 persons took part, and that the number was about 1,000.
The protest was the biggest show of opposition power, despite massive police precautions, against the new government since it took over after the death of Gen.
Czech details KGB spying
WASHINGTON—Consumer advocate Ralph Nader has been a prime target of Communist block intelligence operations in the United States, according to a report released Wednesday.
A high level defector from the Czechoslovakian intelligence service told the subcommittee that "a quite exceptional amount of interest" had been devoted to the investigation.
The defector, identified as Joseph Folk, told the subcommittee that in 1986 he had been ordered to arrange for surveillance of Nader's relatives in Lebanon.
"The Czech Service collected a file on him, his contacts with the government, and other people, and the power of his organization, and decided that it would be carried out."
He told the subcommittee the efforts of the Czech service were directed and coordinated by the KGB, the Soviet secret police, from Moscow. He said that other major targets of intelligence activity were the AFL-CIO, NAACP and the American Civil Liberties Union, as well as various government agencies such as the Defense Department, State Department, Justice Department, White House and National Security Council.
Funerals set for students
Funeral services for Richard Mathes, 21, Kinsley junge, and Edward Moll, 20, Lola senier, have been arranged for this week. The two KU students drowned last week in Ireland where they were participating in Integrated Humanities study program.
the funeral for Mr. Mathes will be 10 a.m.
tomorrow at the St. Nicholas Catholic
Church in Kinsley. Friends may call at the McKillip Funeral Home, Kinsley. Donations should be made to the Joseph R. Pearson Memorial Fund.
The funeral for Mr. Moll will be 10 a.m.
Wednesday at St. Paul's Catholic Church,
Olathe. The Rosary will be said at 8 p.m.
Tuesday at the Frey Funeral Home, Olathe,
where friends may call from 1 to 5 p.m.
Tuesday.
W. C. Fields's image as a hater of dogs children was engraaged, according to him, with a long list of reasons.
By CONRAD BIBENS
W. C. Fields called a timeless comedian
"He was really more jealous of them," Ronald Fields, 25, said Friday. "They'd come into a room and take attention from the coach, an injury, jugger, cartoonist and writer."
The younger Fields was in Lawrence this weekend to act as host for two showings of short films of his grandfather, called "A W. C. Fields Film Festival," yesterday's programs in Woodruff Auditorium were benefits for the Lawrence Arts Center.
RONALD FIELDS has written a best-selling biography, "W. C. Fields Himself," and a play, "W. C. Fields: 40 Proof." He said he drew most of his material from an extensive collection of letters and clipsings his grandfather left.
W. C. Fields died in 1946, three years before his grandson was born.
FIELDS SAID that his grandfather's success was based mainly on his character of a bumbling little guy who was punched around but always pulled through.
Another host of the programs was Robert
Dorene, film collector and former KU
student. He directed the 1980 film "The
River."
"He was an iconocrat—he loved to knock sacred things like religion and small children," he said. "People could identify with the character he played, a low brow who was still princely and stately, with a lot of class."
Comedy stars from the 30s, such as W. C. Fields and the Marx Brothers, are popular in the 70s, said the younger Fields, because of the stars' timeless talents.
"It was harder for comedy stars then," he said. "They didn't have sophisticated camera techniques to help the pace. It was up to them to be funny all by themselves."
HIS GRANDFATHER'S reputation as a heavy drinker wasn't very exaggerated. Fields said, although the comic is repaired to look like he lived in life in that I never had a hangover."
"When my grandfather was in the hospital dying of a liver aliment, his friends found him thumbling through a Bible," he said. "This was shocking for him. They asked if he was getting religion and he said no, he was just looking for loopholes."
Fields said that when he wrote his play about his grandfather, he portrayed the comic as having doubts toward the end of his career about his need for drinking. W.C. Fields might have been as funny without honor. he said.
"I don't respect booze, I just drink it," said the younger Fields, adding that he
HIS FAVORITE Fields firms, he said, is "It's a Gift" and "You're Telling Me."
"I had never seen 'You're Telling Me'
until Ron DeFlores showed me his copy of "Field. It said, 'It was he at his peak.'"
A feud between W. C. Fields and Mae West dates back to the 1940 film, "My Little Chickadee," their only film together, said the younger Fields. The reasons for the feud are vague. Fields said, but when he was on to a radio talk show with West, she refused to appear with him because of his name.
the comic's grandson said that he knew little about the upcoming film "W. C. Fields and Me." starring Rod Siegel as Fieldes. He asked him if Jim's producers had asked him for any help.
"Some of my friends have seen it and said,
'I am scared.' I said, 'I doubt if it the movie is very true.'
I don't know.
**FIELDS' BIGOGRAPHY** of his grandfather was published in 1973 and is now in its ninth printing, he said, and a sequel is nearly completed. His play was written in
"My father had started the book before he died," said Fields. "It really wasn't until after I had finished it and the first royalty was obtained." I realized there was money in this thing.
"If I didn't do this, someone else would who'dn't have the knowledge of W. C. that I do. But it won't be my life. I have a good book. I'll use it and I plan to make my writing fiction."
THE BEST W. C. Fields imitation, his grandson is, done by Richard Paul, the actor in his play. Fields said he himself did the worst imitation.
His favorite line from his grandfather's films, said Fields, comes from "It's a Gift." In that film, W. C. Fields is turning down the job and is while continuing to drink from his flask.
Finally a bidders says to him in anger,
"You're drunk."
W. C. Fields answers, "I may be drunk I will be crazy morning I'll be sober but will be crazy"
Smiling, Fields said, "I keep waiting for a chance to use that line."
Army salutes blacks in military history
Black soldiers will be commemorated at KU today through Friday during a Black History Week sponsored by the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission according to Maj. William Lang, professor of military science.
The week is part of a national observance by the Army of Black History Month, Lang said that will recognize the contributions of soldiers throughout this country's wars.
ROTC classes will observe the week by informal discussions in classes, Lang said. Other military posts that are better equipped for the recognition will be having seminars, race relation conferences and special entertainment, he said.
Hilltop marked by preschoolers
By ANITA SHELTON
Children aren't an unusual sight at the location of Hilltop Child Care Center in the
Hilltop, a nonprofit day care center, is in Wesley Hall behind the School of Religion. It provides an opportunity for both students and children to interact profitably.
The center began in 1972 after demands from the February Sisters, a feminist group that had been active for years, facilities available to students, faculty and staff members. Although the program is open to the community, students still have a hearing to Joan Reiber, director of the center.
REIBER SAID FRIDAY that the establishment this year of a one-half day care program gave many new options to KU students with children.
They can now leave their children for mornings only, afternoons only, all day Tuesday and Thursday, or almost anything that will fit their schedule. Reefer said.
Reiber, who has been director since August 1975, said the center now employed two students on work-study and were in the process of hiring three other students.
About 15 more teacher's aides are needed, Reibel said. Individuals can apply by coming directly to Wesley Hall or through Volunteer Clearing House, she said.
Last fall 194 students were involved with the center in some way, Reiber said. The largest percentage of these were parents of children at the center. Others have done work there as part of a final project for human development courses or psychology classes. Fourteen volunteers from design classes or children's literature classes, Reiber said.
STUDENTS ARE ALSO involved in the administration duties at the center, Martha Welker, member of the Board of Directors, said.
Welker, Lawrence graduate student, said the Board was made up of parents of students who were in the school students. The parents are elected by other parents according to the age group of their child, she said. The board also consists of teachers and interested community members, she said.
THE HOME-AWAY-FROM-HOME atmosphere seems to be one of the center's main priorities. House plants are located in the hallways and in the three- and four-year-old children have large
"Rather than having more concern with academics, it's more concerned with providing home-away-from-home care," Welker said.
Hilltop is a good center, Welker said. She
has a child there in the three-year-old group.
NOW IS
FILM WORKSHOP IS NOW ORGANIZING
A SUPER 8
YOUR CHANCE
Donna Hull, staff member, said she believed that the home atmosphere was especially important in working with the one and one-half to three-year-old group.
Sara Hendricks, who also works with the one and one-half to three-year-olds, said she thought that their rooms were more relaxed. Hendricks is a Hull wash dishes, drying clothes, while the children are there, which they say make the children feel more at home.
HOWARD KLINK, who said he had taught at every school in Lawrence, said the people at Hilltop seemed more concerned for the children,
"They really need a second home," Hull said, "because it's always been my feeling that I want to live here."
Call Jim at the SUA Office, 864-3477 Pick-up Info Sheet at SUA Window at the Kansas Union
TALENTS
WORK.
windows. The kitchen area is adjacent to the classes and cots are provided for the children. Male and female teachers and a few of them come feeling to the children, Reber said.
Operating costs have been increasing, she said. The center receives federal grants for such things as food but the only other money is provided by fees paid by the parents, she
Fees are decided by a scale slide, Laffin said, ranging between $2.52 and $7.55 per day. The fees aren't covering costs, so the client should some fund raising activities, she said.
FUNDS FOR RENTING the building, however, may become a problem if the Senate and University decide not to allocate funds for it. The discussions were discussed in July last year, Lafinn said.
She said the center care used the outdoors quite a bit by taking walks and visiting places such as the museums. Reibel said that once some persons had volunteered after following the children back to the center after an outing.
funds for the center are provided by fees which the parents pay, Molly Laflail, president of the Board of Directors, said. The University of Michigan offered Student Senate and the University, she said.
TO P
NG.
CREATIVE
"I's a really committee staff," Klunk said. "They seem to have the kids in mind."
SUA Officer and Board Interviews
SUA OFFICER INTERVIEWS MARCH 1,1976
President Secretary
Vice President Treasurer
SUA BOARD INTERVIEWS MARCH 8,1976
Fine Arts
Festival of the Arts
Films
Free University
Forums
Indoor Recreation
Public Relations
Travel
Special Events
Applications Available at the SUA Office
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JAPAN NIGHT BANQUET
5:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m.
at UNITED MINISTRIES
SATURDAY, FEB. 14
Sukiyaki Dinner, Movies, Cultural Entertainment, Souvenirs
Tickets: '4 at SUA office
No Tickets at Door
BOOT CUT JEANS BY LEE
Our Regular Low Price $12.75
$ \frac{1}{3} $ off on authentic western shirts $ \frac{1}{3} $ off on Lee denim lined jackets
Good Selection of
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Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Open 8:30 Thurs.
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BOOK SALE
Today through Feb. 21.
THOUSANDS OF HARDBOUND AND PAPERBACK BOOKS AT REDUCED PRICES.
Open Weekdays 8:30-5.
Saturdays 10-1
In The Student Union, Level 3
OREAD
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 9. 1976
3
Children learn ecology more than picking up cans
By GREG BASHAW
Staff Writer
Although it was early Saturday morning and a two-hour class was ahead, the 16 grade school students in Dyche Hall jumped around the lobby in antifurant behavior.
Their instructor greeted them, saying, "If you have any questions, cringe right in front."
A boy near the front pulled on his blue sweatshirt and said, "Are you gonna show us how to do that?"
Students enter senate elections
More than 150 students met last week's filing deadline for the Feb. 18 and 19 Student Senate elections, including Ed Rolfs, who was expected to graduate this spring.
Rufs declared his candidacy for senator from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, filing as a member of the College of Law. He also said that he could not be reached last night for comment.
Senate candidates from the Graduate School are: Arey Bowers and Rhonda Hyman, all running as independent candidates; Rylan Browne, all running as independent candidates; Chevrolet (Vot. Pop) Poadarae; Marsha Dahlgrin (Vot. Independent) Penn (VP) - Timothy Caron (Independent)
Candidates from the School of Business are will fill positions in various divisions, including:
David Dye (V.P. and Midi Tambaraun (V.F.).
Dave Dyer (V.P. and Midi Tambaraun (V.F.).
Terill (Ireland), Conde Henreil (Ireland), Al Berman (Ireland), Cornegie (Canada), Candice Denands from the School of Education, Barry University, Canada. Candidates from the School of Education, Barry University, Canada. Theresa McGee (G.G.), Theresa McGee (G.G.), Becky Pewell (V.F.), Shalam Saphn (G.F.), Stacey Bufet (V.F.), K.T.M., Makenzie Coallion (G.G.), Principal Coallion (C.O.), Carline Mills (TPC), Nancy Coleman (TPC), G.G., Margery Mackey (G.G.), Shery McKee (G.V.), and Marcy Dewey (G.V.)
Candidates from the Schoelk of Engineering. Jeff Hanes (NYU) taught graduate students in the Department of Veterans Furry (V). McJim Carter (V).
Candidates from the School of June Arts are: Jace Kern, Daniel Gershwin; Caroline L. Perry, Thomas Theraus (v. 3); and Robert Presley (v. 4).
Candidates from the School of Law (sec. Rob Scholz) must be licensed in their field or have an associate degree in Banking, Mba, Kids Home and Demoney programs. In addition, applicants must have a Bachelor's Degree in Economics or Business.
Candidates from the School of Social Welfare are Cathy A. Agnew, Debbie M. Arsenault, Amanda Grisham, David Frieder and Laurie Hulpert, all of whom were nominated to the 2018 Board of Trustees.
Other Liberal Arts and Seminole candidates are Bruce
Gray, David L. Wagner (C.C.), Steve Reeves
(C.C.), and Greg Morris (C.C.). Steve Reeves
(C.C.)
Candidates from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences include Dr. Mark Riggs (V.P., Katy High School), Dr. Faridald Feld (V.P., Kathy VanHalen (V.P.), Lois Kline (V.P.), Sarah Kunz (V.P.), Robert Koehler (V.P.), O'Sullivan (V.P.), Jim Pearson (V.P.), Richard Bathara (V.P.), David Timmons (College Foundation), Tarabasco (V.P.), Jeff Duff (College Commitment) Jon W. Heller (College Commitment).
Molly Wood (C. P. J. H.) Burch (Independent), John
Burch (C. P. J. H.), Edward Kelsey (C. C.),
Edward Kelsey (C. C.), Edward Kelsey (C. C.),
Linda Hadei (C. P. J. H.)
Candidates from the first district of Nuneman College (C.C.) have been Richard M. Miller (C.B., Benco Bowell (C.B.), Terry Shull (C.C.), Curt Baum (C.C.). Ed Duckers (P.V.), Randy Hatcher (C.R.), Cheryl Hauler (C.C.) and Debbie Redele (C.C.)
Candidates from the second district of Nunemanek Alligam (Nunakan), Mark Anthony (Nunakan), Allegam (Nunakan), Mark Anthony (Nunakan), John Pincinion (Nuncain), Mika Pierre (Nuncain), Mike Pincinion (Nuncain), Mika Towes (Nuncain), and Joliette (Independent), Tawes Towes (V., P. and Chi-Che Co-In) (V.).
Cardinals from the third district of Nassau College Challenge. (Bob Levesque, left, and Dave Haver, right) Danny Haver (V.P.), Sage Thiemann (V.P.), Thomas Timmons (V.P.) and Daniel Chandler (V.P.).
Candidates from the fourth district of Nunneman State University are: Katie Peele (V-F), Chad Sealey (V-P), Vickie Everlast (Everlast), Scott Erickson (Everleaf), Susan Starlegen (Everleaf), Sage Levine (Everleaf), Nancy Wachter (Independent) and eff. Shadwick Nancy (W-Teacher).
Candidates from the fifth district of Nusmanee College in Sarasota, Florida (Tim McCarthy, Expansion Jumai Banka) and Tim McCarthy (Expansion Jumai Banka), respectively (Expansion). Berenard McCarthy (Independence), Crala Serrano (Independent), Berenard Serrano (Expansion) and Betty McCarthy (V.P.)
THAT BEGAN" "To Be a Bug," the first in a series of Saturday children's programs at the Museum of Natural History. Ruth Genrich, the Museum's public education director, said she hoped the classes would prepare children's interest in the natural sciences.
"Kids are interested in science," she said, "but they don't always get the knowledge of nature that they need. There's a whole lot of stuff we do that makes ecological is, just picking up beep caps."
She said the children's programs would help youngsters acquaint themselves with the natural sciences by giving them an active knowledge of nature and animals.
Activity was everywhere in Saturday's class. The children rolled around on foam mats and tried to scrutinize displayed cases filled with mounted insects, including eight-inch cribbles that looked like bamboo shoots, an orange blue spider and an array of bright butter flies.
"I insects are just another kind of animal," the instructor, Marjarie Chorbie, Lawrence graduate student, told them. "You don't have to be afraid of them."
A girl stretched out on a mat near the back of the room apparently didn't believe the pennies in her change purse, twisted her cards and did anything not to look at the buses.
Chabot showcased the children as a sets of charts that illustrated the different parts of an insect. In the corner, a creevcat boy and his friend were more interested in experimenting with the water fleas filled with floating water fleas and covered its top with a baseball cap.
Chabot told the boys back to the group and told all that "bugs" was the wrong word to use when speaking about insects. There are as many different kinds of insect as there are people, she said, and people should try to get their names right.
"For instance, all you have seen from Chabot Island, actually the firefly's, and a few."
The pigtail girl seemed to dispute this fact. She vigorously shook her head and swung her purse in big loops above her head.
Chabot showed a tacked down scorpion flea specimen.
These fleas are found all over the
house. They are found. I use to catch
them in Connecticut.
"By the beach?" asked the black-haired girl in front.
"No, this was near some lakes, but they can be found by beaches." Chabat said.
"My Grandmother lives there by the beach"
the girl said. "You think she's got accorption
feelings?"
Then all gather around a box that held a few live dragonflies. The children took turns touching the insects' transparent wings and flying them around the room, shaking silly about the room on her mat, singing.
Chabot took a covered glass terrarium from a table.
"Now we'll play with a rare insect," she
said. "This one will surprise you. It'a giant
snake."
She put her hand into the terrarium and an eight-inch cockroach with a shell as hard as wood crawled onto her palm. The crewcut boy dived under the table.
SUA FILMS
Pink Flamingos
Mon.
3:30, 7:20, 9:30
Pink Flamingos
AN EXERCISE IN POOR TASTE
Virtues and directed with such beauty and
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present at the event.
Frank Flamingos has been
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1968, one of the most innovative
events.
Frank Flamingos has been
working with this talented duo since
1968, one of the most innovative
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DIRECTED BY
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STARRING:
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Tues.
7:30
Wed.
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The Diane Linkletter Story (No one under 18 admitted)
--held out her arm to take the insect. She began digging as the insect scaled her arms. Soon, the other kids ran over to take their turns holding and petting the roach.
The Cat and the Canary
The Lady Vanishes
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"I knew there'd be a bad part," he said.
"I knew it."
"Don't be scared," Chahot said, "This cockroach is from another country's woods. That's why he's so big. If you push on his back you'll hear him make a noise."
After class was over, the pigtailed girl was asked how she liked it.
"Boy, it was great," she said, "even better than cartoons."
Children's programs planned for the
future are "Strange Beasts of the Past"
Feb. 14; "The Buffalo of the Plains Indiana"
Feb. 21; "Flames and Kansas" Feb. 28
March 6; and "Animal Behavior" March 13.
The classes will meet from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m.
April 12-15 and 10:30 to 12:30
charge for each program and reservations
can be made through the Museum of
Natural History.
BACON
Don Chilito's
Texas Burrito
NOW ONLY
99c reg.
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Offer good February 9-12
1528 W. 23rd across from post office 842-8861
Selling something? Call us. The Kansan's ad number is 864-4358.
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Come to K.U. Bookstore
Wednesday, Feb. 11
9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
10:34
David Wand, official representative of Hewlett-Packard, will be present to answer any questions and demonstrate the capabilities of all Hewlett-Packard Electronic Calculators.
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6
Monday, February 9, 1976
University Dallv Kansan
Budget limits residence hall menu
By JACK FISCHER Staff Writer
Grumbling—and perhaps rumble stomachs—are a part of life for 3,800 students who live and eat in the residence balls at the University of Kansas.
With $1.60 to spend, the amount per day each student pays for food, it takes a lot of time and money to make this happen.
Members of food committees at various halls say they are pleased with the service rendered by food personnel, but disagreed about the quality of the food.
Amy Body, a member of the food committee at Lewis Hall, and Janice Zumwalt, who is on the food committee for Gertrude Sellars Pearson (GSP) and Corbin halls,
From page one
Coker ...
10 to 12 years he spent working in New York City
"Those contacts made in the city are the only reason I can do what I do now," he
Coker grew up in Lawrence, graduated from Lawrence High School (he drew the LHS 'Chesty Lion' mascot) and got his bachelor's degree in drawing and painting from KU in 1851. He then left Lawrence and went to Havay, where he made visual drawings.
After he left the Navy, Coker worked for a Kansas City television station.
HE THEN WORKED for Hallmark Cards in its Kansas City plant.
When he thought he had enough material, Coker said, he put together a portfolio and headed for New York City. He didn't have any jobs waiting, he said, but he did have a contract with Halmark, which would at least pay the rent while he was looking for work.
Coker said he was fairly well established profession and wasn't greatly affected by competition. He said, however, that cartooning was a highly specialized field.
"There aren't that many cartoonists needed." Coker said, and "there are a lot of them now."
FOR THOSE INTERESTED in a career as a cartoonist, Coker's first recommendation was that they get out of Lawrence and go to New York, Chicago, Los Angeles or to see the Hallmark people in Kansas City. That's where the market is, he said.
"in general," he said, "New York is the place where you can get the greatest variety of jobs. The art director there are always looking for new people."
Once there, Coker said, a person's success depends entirely on that person's talent and ability.
"I wouldn't say that ambition is more important than talent," he said, "but it's an extremely important element. There's absolutely no way to make it if you sit around and wait for somebody to discover you."
both said that the students they've spoken with thought the halls' foot had improved.
Although Boyd and Zumwalt said there had been few formal complaints about the food, Zumwalt said many of the students at GSP and Corbin said there wasn't enough food and wanted second servings of the entrees.
Boyd said the quality of food at Lewis was good for a cafeteria.
"You have to realize that a caterafer can't cook like mom does at home," she said.
"The food service is very cooperative," Boyd said, "If there's something the students want that can be done, they tell us hard to do. They can be done they try really hard to do it."
Bruce Dyson, president of Joseph R. Pearson Hall, and David Barclay, president of McColnum Hall, said the students they've spoken with thought the quality of the food in their hall had gotten worse since the beginning of the fall semester.
Dyas and Dan Kusenktai, chairman of the food committee at McColllum, said the students complained that the food was improperly prepared.
The most common complaints from McColum residents are that the food is too cold, too salty, too spicy or too hot.
Nevertheless, Kussekki said, many of the complaints are a matter of personal preference. But she added that the food secretried did a good job, considering the limitations they were faced with.
Barley said the problem of food quality in the halls was particularly difficult to correct because the residents didn't know how much service to know how it could be improved.
"The students could have more say in (eod preparation if they wanted to)." Barclay
J. J. Wilson, director of the residence hall system, said it would be impossible to individualize meals for students in the halls but that there was a wide range of different foods that could be bought within the budget.
"We need the students to clarify to us better what they want," he said.
At present, Wilson said, the food supervisors' judge students' food preferences from their experience with the program. In addition, the suggestions of the babys' food groupers
Wilson said it was unfair to call the food bad because taste was a matter of personal preference.
Rather, Wilson said, the food service is not specialized so that most students can afford food.
"We're not pricing dinners at $4 or $5"
"We're not providing that kind of food at $10."
Lenoir Ekdahl, director of the food services for the residence halls, said that the cost of foods had leveled off and that the cost of housing had adjusted to the present inflationary prices.
Ekdahl said all the residence halls had
similar meals in any given week. She said that she met with the food supervisors from each hall every week to prepare a master menu.
Variations on the menu in the residence halls on a given night are a result of differences in preparation and leftovers that each hall might have. Ekdahl said.
She said the food service's policy was to let leftovers in 24 hours or freeze them.
Ekdahl said that the quality of meat was probably the most difficult for the food service to control because the supervisors didn't have enough time to check all of each cut. So they had to add another, addition, she said it was difficult to judge the quality of meat when it was frozen.
According to these standards, meat must be at least 80 per cent lean. Ekdahl said.
She said the food service is credited for the cost of the meat by the company that sold it if the meat doesn't comply with the standards.
Laura Sample, food service employee at Hashinger Hall, said meat that didn't comply with standards was only served once or twice a year.
Anticipating an approximate six per cem-
increase in food costs by next year, Wilson
said he asked the Association of University
Residence Halls (AURH) to increase the daily price of meals from $1.60 to $1.75 for the 1978-77 school year.
The request has been approved by AURH, the chancellor and the Board of Regents;
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Tuesday, Feb. 10, 11:00 a.m.-TM Center
Tuesday, Feb. 10, 7:30 p.m.-First National Bank (9th & Mass.)
Wednesday, Feb. 11, 7:30 p.m. --Kansas Union Regionalist Room
901 Tenn. St. Gill Bldg. 842-1225
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, February 9, 1976
On Campus
Events...
TODAY: SAU will present an exhibition and sale of fine arts from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the south lounge of the Kansas Union. SAU will present the KSU Fiction Club from 8 to 6 in the United Ministries Building. The KU SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will present the KSU Literature Club from 8 to 6 in the Union. There will be a meeting for ALL CANDIDATES for the Feb. 18-19 elections at 7 in the Big 8 Room of the Union. OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will include the Baptist Student Center, 1629 W. Ishburn, 1920 W. Middleton, THE GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL, and THE JOURNAL OF AWAKENING. AWS, professor of philosophy of the City University of New York, will lecture on "Principles of Structural Materialism" at 8 in the Forum Room of the Union.
Announcements...
Applications for housing next fall in KU's SCHOLARSHIP HALLS are due Feb. 15. Applications can be obtained through the Dean of Men's and Dean of Women's offices. Selection for housing is based on financial need, academic success, student's interest in cooperative living and personal goals.
The offices of the DEAN OF MEN and the DEAN OF WOMEN are sponsoring an Assertiveness Workshop Feb. 15, to 1 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
DELTA DELTA DELTA sorority is accepting applications for two $250 scholarships. All full-time undergraduate women are eligible to apply. Application forms are available at the Delta Delta Delta house, 1830 Oxford Road and are due by March 1. For further information call 843-6410.
A SHORT COURSE, "Remote Sensing Aerial Photographic Interpretation-Terrain Analysis," will be offered March 15-19 at Nichols Hall on the West Campus. The course will be taught by Douglas S. Way, associate professor in the graduate school of design at Harvard University.
Grants and Awards ...
KU'S INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES has received a contract from the Kansas Department of Economic Development to study housing in Kansas. Prof. Herman Lujan, director of the department, will be the project director.
Valentine Anthony, Singapore graduate student, has been invited to present a paper on the National Congress of Human Sciences in Asia and Africa to be held in Mexico City.
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In recent days, Vermont's only nuclear plant was closed; three General Electric Co. nuclear engineers resigned, and the project manager of a plant under construction in New York state resigned—all because of safety questions.
THE SHUDTOWN OF THE $216 million Vermont Nuclear Knee Power Corp. plant was ordered Jan. 26 after computer stress tests by GE, designer of the $40-megawatt plant, indicated the reactor's failure might not stand the strain of an accident.
Plant officials said that if the system broke down, radioactive steam would be released into the plant building, but little would escape outside.
HOWEVER, HENRY KENDALL, a nuclear physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said the result of a crash on a scale unknown to a peacekeeper is an immediate death for most of the 55,000 people who live within an 80-mile radius of the plant and radiation sickness, cancer, outbreaks and lingering effects over a much wider area.
PLANT OFFICIALS have acknowledged the no solution is in sight of the structural design.
The engineer who directed the tests that resulted in the closure, Richard Bridden-baugh, was one of the three GE nuclear engineers who resigned last Monday from the division of the company that builds power plants.
BRIDENAUGH SAID the Vermont tests his power that him nuclear power was put on hold.
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Bridenbaugh, joined by the other two GE scientists in defecting from the nuclear Friday for an immediate safety check of the nuclear power plants to see if they were safe.
AFTER THEIR NEWS conference Friday, the men met with officials of the U.S. Regulatory Commission, which is responsible for regulating the nuclear industry.
The NRC issued a statement after the engineers said saying the engineers' main objective
Report replies heard tonight
The Lawrence City Commission will meet at 7 p.m. today to discuss a report filed Jan. 27 by three members of a six-man committee that investigated charges of city mismanagement.
The commission is expected to refer to letters from various department heads in answer to charges and recommendations in the matter. Paul, Alvin Sammels and Dennis Smith.
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February '76
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SUA TRAVEL
LAS VEGAS
March 15-20
Cost $10500
INCLUDES:
—Three Nights Lodging at the Westward Ho Motel on the Strip
—Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 20 at 5 p.m.
PADRE ISLAND
March 12-21
Cost $12100
JUDES:
—Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
—Seven Nights Accommodations at the Sand Castle Motel
—Private Pool and Fishing Dock
—Kitchenettes (fully equipped)
—Side Trip to Old Mexico
—Limited Shuttle Bus Service
—Beer and Eats Party at Padre
—Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
Dillon, Colorado
March 13-19
Cost $13700
INCLUDES:
INCLUDES:
—Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation (optional)
Five Nights Lodging at the Lake Dillon Holiday Inn
—Four Days Skiing (Breckenridge/Copper Mt./A-
Basin/Keystone)
—Four Days Rentals (optional)
—Night Trip to Vail, Colorado
—Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
—Cross Country Skiing Available
GROUP FLIGHTS
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
If your group is planning a trip, see the SUA office about setting up a group flight. Stop by the SUA office and fill out a飞牌 card as soon as possible.
Denver ... March 12
$101^{oo}$
Chicago ... March 12
Deadline for sign-up, 10 Days Prior to Departure
$ 6900
Call 864-3477
HELPING STUDENTS GO PLACES IN A WAY THEY CAN AFFORD
8
Monday, February 9,1978
University Dafly Kansan
Sooners wreck KU hopes,
COLLEGE
Sooner Eddie Fields drives past Clint Johnson
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
The Kansas Jayhawks won't win a third straight Big Eight basketball title.
Oklahoma took care of that, upsetting KU, 84-63, Saturday before a disappointed Allen Field House crowd of 10,870 and a regional television audience.
"It would take a miracle for us to be in the team," KU coach Ted Owens said after the game. "I think it was a mistake."
Kansas, 3-4 in league play, is now three full games behind conference leaders, Nebraska and Missouri, who are died with 6 at the time, only one game behind the leaders at 5-2.
NOW THAT THE Jayhawks are out of the race, Owens has changed his goals for this season.
"I'm not concerned about where we finish," Owens said. "All I want to do is for us to play as hard as we can the rest of the team." He didn't bother me. Not playing well does.
The Jayhawks never played well
sure they were juggled around and
never looked sharp.
"We were just as sluggish as we could be. Owen was better. We played tight and never."
SLUGGISH OR NOT, it still looked as if KU would win the game until freshman John McCullough hit two free throws with four seconds to play to give the Sooners their first victory in Allen Field House since 1963. The Jayhawks had numerous chances to salt the game away, but failed every time.
McCallugh was fouled by KU guard Clint Johnson as they and Billy Gray, a 64-Hour Coach, were caught in the lake.
64-63
loose ball after Oklahoma's Cary Carrabine missed a shot from the corner.
OWENS DIDN'T AGREE with Menz's call.
Referee Ken Kurtz, who was standing right on top of the play, didn't call a foul. He made a pass to the other official, came storming in from his court and gave Johnson his second foul.
McCollough, the game's leading scorer with 20 points, hit both shots of a one-and-a-half shot.
"I don't think there was any question that Graham knocked Clint Johnson out of bounds," Owens said. "The films, I think, will show that. I don't know how McCullough even got into the act. It was a very marginal call."
"McCullough's a good free throw shooter," said Dave Bells, Oklahoma's first team coach, who has led his team to three straight Big Eight wins. "But more importantly he'a a gutty kid. I've seen good free throw shooters clutch in that situation. That's why it's important to have a gutty kid shooting."
SIXTEEN SECONDS EARLIER McCullough was fouled by KU's Ken Koenigs and hit both foul shots to the Sooners within one, 63-62.
All Karsas had to do was hold the ball for 20 seconds. They couldn't.
KU's backcourt pass was deflected by McCallough into the hands of Eddie Fields, a 4-0 GU player. The Sooners worked the ball through two passes to shot and then his contours' 1-of-1 flown.
But as Owens knows, it wasn't just the official's call that beat the Jayhawks.
"The game shouldn't have been won on
Owen's side." Owens said. "We didn't
play well. That."
WOMEN'S SWIMMING—The KU women's swimming team easily dominated its double-dual competition against Oklahoma and Oklahoma State, but lost to Nebraska in meets this weekend in Robinson Natatorium.
The Jayhawks topped Oklahoma, 102-27,
and Oklahoma State, 94-35, on Friday. They lost a dual meet to Nebraska, 65-50,
westerday.
sports shorts
Propos wont both the one- and three-meter diving events.
Cathy Call and Laurie Propst led the Jayhawks in their victorious effort Friday. Call won both the 200 individual medley and the 100 freestyle in addition to swimming relay teams. She won the individual medley in 2:20.2 and the freestyle in 16:9.9.
Call also did well against Nebraska,
capturing first place in three events. She
won three freestyle events: the 100 in :56.5,
the 200 in :82.3 and the 500 in :92.6.
MEN'S TENNIS-KU's tennis team defeated Arkansas, 5-4, and Southern Missouri, 6-1. Clarke, KU's number one player, won both his matches. Jeff Thomas, the number four player, didn't lose all weekend, winning two doubles matches with his doubles partner, Mark Hosking.
WOMEN'S TRACK—The KU women's track team defeated Missouri, 56-51. Friday at Columbia. The Jayhawks won six of 12 winners. The winners were Nancy Bissell, mile run; Nanette Lee, 60-yard dash; Connie Lane, 600-yard run; Cessera Russell, 444-yard dash; Jessie Riddle, shot put; and the mile relay team.
10
TAKE A BIRD
This original signed Color woodcut by UMETMAZO AEZCH-Japan is one of the many original prints presented for sale by MARSON LTD. at
The Union—South Lobby
Controversy surrounds final call
Today & Tomorrow Only
SUA
sponsored by
Sports Editor
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
JOHNSON WAS OBVIOUSLY upset by the call. But he wasn't the only KU player who had a few choice words about the game. When they fouled out, was also a little perturbed.
"I don't know what happened," Johnson muttered. "He called it late, too. I had the ball and was throwing it back in bounds before they called anything."
"On my fifth foul," he said. "I just put my hands straight up. That's all you can do in a
After 39:56 of basketball Saturday afternoon, the outcome of the KU-Okahoma game came down to a judgment call on the part of one referee.
Johnson, sitting motionless in front of his jocker with his head down, admitted that he was not on the bus.
situation like that. But they called it anyway."
Clinton Johnson, battling for a rebound with Oklahoma's John McCullough and Billy Gorski, were able to make 30 seconds to play and KU leading, 63-62. McCullough made both ends of the one-and-one, KU could get off only a 40-foot shot by Herb Nobles and Oklahoma upset Kansas,
THE MAIN ORJECTION was that the foul was called not by Ken Kurtz, who was right on top of the play, but by Jerry Menz, who was stationed near half-court. If there was a call to be made, Owens and Johnson argued, it should have been made by Kurtz.
But the issue wasn't quite that easily resolved. Both Johnson and KU coach Ted Owens had a few words to say about the call, which was controversial at best.
"The other ref (Kurtz) was standing right there," Johnson said. "He just shook his head and didn't say anything. The other guy (Menz) called it."
"The calls really hurt it at the end," he said, but our play early in the game could have made things worse.
Koenigs, though, wasn't about to blame the referees for KU's loss, which ruined hopes the Jayhawks had of claiming a third straight Big Eight title.
To shut off the Sooners' inside game, the Jayhawks played a zone through much of the second half. But the patient Oklahoma offense nicked it apart.
PARTICULARLY DISTURBING to Koenigs was the ease with which Oklahoma got the ball inside against the much taller Jayhawks. Despite their lack of height, the Sooners got 51 points out of its muchmalized front line.
"Our ineffectiveness inside (defensively) really did hurt us." Koenigs said. "They set a lot of picks and stuff underneath, and we do a good job of fighting them."
JOHN WAYNE AND KATHARINE HEPBURN PG
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Time after time, Cary Carrabre is laid open on the wing to shoot a 15-foot jump shot.
"WE WERE GETTING hung up." Milt Gibson said. "The forwards weren't coming out and covering the wing, and they kept shooting them in.
"They were getting a lot of shots inside, too, because of their penetration and ball movement. Because they were smaller, we had to be on our toes, but we weren't."
The Jayhawk dressing room was like a tomb after the game. The players sensed that only a miracle could bring them the league title. No amount of words could express the frustration they felt at being in the race in such a humiliating way.
"There's really not much I can say." Herb Nobles said. "We know we should be haunted them. That's all I can say. We just weren't reacting."
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ayhawk
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ROOSTER COGBURN ...and the Lady] Openside
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Select group of discontinued text and trade books. Over 500 titles, wide variety of subject matter. Come in today. Sale starts Feb. 5 and continues only while stock lasts. All sales are final.
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University Daily Kansan
Clifford Wiley set an American indoor record in the 100-meter dash, the University of Kansas set a school and all-time Big Eight mark in the mile relay and Jay Kue to highlight the KU record in the 600-meter run to highlight a highly productive track weekend.
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
Wiley, Wagner and relay on record binge
The weekend started slowly. Kansas lost a dual meet with Missouri Friday night in Columbia, 76-63 where the goal of Bob Crawford was to qualify people for the NCAA Indoor championship.
It almost didn't happen. Despite winning seven events, Kansas was able to qualify only pole vailer Tad Scales for the NCAA toped 16-7% to break his own meet record.
The next day, however, at the Idaho State Meet of Champions, in Pocatello, Idaho, KU ranked runners in the 600, 850 and mile race, qualifying one for the 60-ward dash.
But that disappointed 60-yard dash runner, Cliff Wiley, who later came back to slash the American indoor record in the 100-meters.
"I wasn't paying much attention to the record," Wiley said. "I yesterday was 'nothing that hard to break. They had to have someone break it, and I was the one."
Wiley's time of 10.4 erased the old mark of 10.7, which was first clocked in 1938 and has been equalled three times in the rarely run races. He never made that impression by his winning time.
Randy Benson sped to an easy 47.8 in the 440 on the fast, 220-banked board Pocatello track, but also said he could have run much faster.
"I felt I should have run a little faster than that," he said.
"I was really pretty disappointed," he
said. "Doesn't that sound bad?" They had me
boxed!
★ ★ ★
In other action at the Pocatello meet, McCall qualified for the NCAA meet in the half-mile by taking second with a swift 1:52.1. And Wiley placed second and Newell added a third in the 60-meter dash, with times of 5.66 and 6.7, respectively.
Pacific Coast Club, running on the same track five years ago, holds the record with a
In the Missouri meet, Steve Rabbholt came a personal record of 61,1 but lost to Josh Kearns in the Missouri freshman Nat Page. John Roecke from a mile from the start to earn his best, a 8:40.
Kansas placings at Columbia
jash-1. Smith, 6.2: 2. Jackson, 6.2
60-yard dash -1. Smith, 6.2; 2. Jackson, 6.2.
300-yard dash -1. Wiley, 3.8; 2. Jackson, 3.9.
460-yard dash - 3. Wagner, 45.7.
480-yard dash - 2. Cromwell, 11.6; McCail, 11.4.
Mccail, 11.4.
1,000-yard run - 1. East, 21.3.
1,000-yard run - 1. West, 21.3.
Two-run mile - 1. Monroe, 6.5.
Two-run mile - 1. Monroe, 6.5.
400-yard low-hurdle - 2. Colman, 6.5.
400-yard low-hurdle - 2. Colman (Cromwell anchored in)
half turn - 2. Mathew, 4.1!
But Hurdler Anthony Coleman had his winning streak broken as Missouri's Randy Hicks wan both the high and low hurdle events.
Kansas placings at Pocatello
80-meters dash 2 Wiley 6.4f 3 Normail 6
High jump—2, Rainbolt, 6-11,
Triple jump—3, Burke, 6-11.
2008 1967 75 masas 63
Team score: Missouri 75, Kansas 63
Kansas National Football League
Shot put-1. Guvarvac, 57:4; 3. Podebarac, 56:3%
Pole vault-1. Scales, 16:7ÿ
record was 10.7 by four runners).
40 yard dash -1. Benson, 47.8
40-meters dish - Wiley, 6.86; Newell, 6.7.
80-meters dish - Wiley, 6.86; American record; old record was 10.7 by four murmurs.
600 yard run - 2. Wagner, 1.10. (equals KU record by
Waddell Smith In 1975).
**Reliary relay - 1. Kamaas, 3.1:1.4. Neevell 4. Wagner, 4. Wagner**
**Kamaas, 3.1:1.4. Neevell 4. Wagner, record. old break records of 3.1.1. set in 1975.**
**3.1.1. set in 1975.**
The 1:10.1 mark in the 600, accomplished by Jay Wagner in taking second, tied the KU record set by Waddell Smith last year in the preliminaries of the NCAA indoor meet.
The other Jayhawk record came in the mile relay, where the team of Kevin Newell, Wagner, Wiley and Benson recorded the longest time. The KU best was delivered the KU best by almost two seconds.
WE FIX IT LIKE YOU
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The mile relay almost turned into a game of rollerball, though, according to Benson, whose 46.8 split anchored the team to victory.
Instead, he helped the squad come within two seconds of the world indoor record. The
"It was really weird. Idaho State (the host school) was talking about knocking us around. We got rollerbladed around for the first two legs." Benson said.
KANSAN WANT ADS
MONDAY
Idaho State attempted to do just that, but Wiley, who learned about the rigors of indoor running after being disqualified at the NCAA meet last year, didn't fall off.
Feed your family with our Box O' Shrimp
Wiley said, "Tuna (Tommy McCall) told
me he heard a guy talking about how they were knocking to knock us off the track. That was the first time I ever felt that.
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Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months. Items can be placed in person or simply by calling the URB business office at 664-1358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hifi equipment, you will pay for dumps or close-out products. you will pay for the dumps or close-out products at the GRAMOPHONE店 at KIFS
Tremendous selection of guitars, armpits, drums, basses, keyboards and basses. Shop 'Rose Keyboard Studio. Choose from Gibson, Amperex, Greco, and many others. Ample Amperex, Greco, and many others. Shop 'Rose Keyboard Studio. Choose from Gibson, Amperex, Greco, and many others. 1420 W. 23rd - 94-3097
We can make your stereo sound JEET-URBAR
and make it sound from two earbuds. Delirk
at Audio Systems, 207 E. 19th St.
COST$ 166-1960. House equipment. All major
outside phones. Cell Phones. Flatscreen TV.
W. A ward phones. Calv. Dvds. Phone 854-
722-3110.
Quitting business sales—bargain! Everything we love, cost us used furniture, an affordable furniture store, and a discount center. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. We provide fresh fruit and vegetables. (Hawy 40) Open 9-6, weekdays 82-343-2100 2-23
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specs.
BALD BELL AUF,
ELECTRIC, 836-900, 3200 W, 6'h.
BATTERY, 836-900, 3200 W, 6'h.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of cards. Send $15 for your up-to-date, 160 page, mail order catalog. Research Assistance, Los Angeles, Los Angeles. Calif. 902-433 (213) 874-8747.
Excellent installation of New & Used Furniture &
Exhibits. The Furniture & Appliance Center, Toulouse.
The Furniture & Appliance Center, Toulouse.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold
and silver miniature sculpture, conventional
design, and custom-made earrings. Execu-
sively executed B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting.
A variety of unusual stones 814-8883 or
843-9070.
Baldwin Electric Guitar-New strings, great condition.
875, Call 684-1201.
GraphicView 4x3 view camera, 200mm Kitar lens
view camera and film viewers. Excellent condition.
845-8729
For Sale JVC Direct Drive Towable, $290 (2)
For Sale JVC Direct Drive Towable, $290 (2)
Call 541-6753 or 6758 between 8:00 a.m. and 11:00 p.m.
www.jvc.com
Musical Instrumenty; Several Eating gaiters, musical instruments; several singing gaiters; Gibbon bans; one guitar all ready to play; the bass guitar all ready to play.
Chance of a lifetime 1690 Chevrolet Belair. Excellent condition. Call Gary Davie 843-572-5930.
Hardwood Lomber and Plank - Cut off pieces
Hardwood Lomber and Plank - Cut off pieces
Services Center 600 N. St. (North Lawrenc
Services Center 600 N. St. (North Lawrenc
Hikiki boots=brand new--hardy wear.
size 6-16%. Already snow sealed. M94-3038.
*
bairt trumpet for good. Good condition. If inter-
cepted call 843-5081 after 3:30. 2-11
Sony HP-610 A Stereo system dual 1211 turn-
tables with Wi-Fi connectivity. Speaker
B: 481-7473 after 5pm. Spm.
- 21
Must sell HP-70 Financial Calculator Bests offer.
Leave message at 842.7287.
2-12
Vintage 1616 Gibson J-4 acoustic guitar
condition. $375. Cindy, 681-6288 from 6
9-29
I pail of Davies Scholl, 190's made in Austria,
for a job in Germany. I sold for $150 and
oil bought for $650. I will sell for $150 or
oil bought for $325.
FENDER TWIN REVERB AMP. Ampet brand
powered by Bose. Calibra Calls at 841-6729.
Ponder speaker.
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
THE GRAMOPHONE
1891 100 FOR STATION A. 4
THE ARMOR OF Famous BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
the
GRAMOPHONE
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion
Than Most Stereo Components
STATE OF
THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
Max Factor Lip Gloss—all flavors, plain and frosted at Round Corner Drug Store. 60% Max.
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
WALL SHOPPING CENTER
LANE ARRANGED 1-800-524-0444
Portable Smith-Corrane "Corrane 700" manual
20 years old, two year old, but
842 - 85898
2-13
PV-500 two Alice speakers with stands, mikes.
Call 841-2441 2441me.
2-13
FUR SALK. Seal skin, moustak, rabbit. 35% off.
Organic shampoo, lotions, massage oils, and
organic shampoos, lotions, massage oils, and
organic shampoos. Balanced and biodegradable
able. See -POTON PARLOR $819 Vermont.
Hour 12-5.
FOR RENT
350-240 four. Late "74 excellent condition; under
6,000 miles. $995. 841-7471. 2-11
ATTENTION STUDENT RENNERS: Drop in as aud
request. (no phone, call only) attend at WEBTERRS
(no phone, call only) attend at WEBTERRS
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
rentals in Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exchange, 642-209-8355.
2 new 3 $ bdm; apartment near campus; park-
ing area; efficiency apartment; utility
titles paid. $83-878
2. bdrm, all util paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfree. Free markup, a/c, pool. 813-493-793.
Room furnished with shared kitchen and bath
room. Kitchen includes sink, dishwasher.
Also apology apt. for male nurse Neptown. New
appartment.
Sublease is immediately on 1 bdrm. apartment, $165 monthly. Call 824-1455. 2-9
To address immediately, 2 bdrm. furnished
two bedrooms, two baths. Includes quiet,
quiet of Quincy, great location, $175 mo.
Room in suite with large closet.
Attractive, clean, 6 bdm, house, all equipped. $1950/mo. Family room, family kitchen, Newport, pa. Private family room, Newport, pa. Private bedroom.
Two bbm. apartement, newly caroped. stone area
with large terrace. Departement for apartment
d'os de chamonix. Bus at the door.
Pierre & Antoine. 96400. 124885.
Rooney attic air for one male, only $75/mo.
Rooney attic air for two males, 1st edition - stadium 2-12
Valine Calls Bill at 843-1541.
Two bbm, furnished or unfurnished apt. available 8300 or 841-2348. Close to campus. Call 8300 or 841-2348.
Large room for man. Private bath-entrance.
2% blocks west of campus. 843-7827. 2-12
NOTICE
Swap Shop 620 Mass. used furniture, diaries,
books, ebooks, televisions.开放日 12-5.
843-377-397
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at which point we can make 5 copies of your 120 page notebook in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Computer. 688 Massachusetts. 841-4900.
Email now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation provided. Drive now, pay later,
transportation provided. Drive now, pay later,
transportation provided. Drive now, pay later,
SKI-Mont Blu is open, 10% less under new
condition. It has a storage capacity of
3 ml. On Kilo, it is 5 kg and 4 mm wide.
It is suitable for swimming.
Handyman Special, Possible Contract. Rebuild what it wants it. The house needs work. Some repairs to the home, some electrical work to see it, telephone call, Li-Fi card, library card, 814-1860, or Mike Pennen averages at 842.95.
40% discount on selected items during our event.
20% off Eddie Riddle House, 701 Main, 10-5th St.
SECRETISTS only few have mastered. true friendship, love, forgiveness and understanding promised by these members of the pampilsby by mail. no cost or objection. Mail box 8067, Topeka, KS. Discover 2.9.
February Special—Musk, Chantilly, Heaven
February Special—Musk, Chantilly, Heaven
every Valentine Round Corner
every Valentine Round Corner
Remember your Valentine Felt. 14-Panbunches
remember your Carda. Round Corner Drug
Box, 801 Mile.
TYPING
Bengals IN
The Cathedral
Gifts and Jewelry
800-321-9555
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located at 2635 W. 10th St. NW in Chicago. Our services are fed and priced are reasonably accurate to the actual prices charged by our customers.
Experienced typist. I.B.M. Solicitie, thesis, discussion paper. Call Pam Kennis. 8647599.
Experimented typic-term paper, these, misc-
pressing, printing, spelling, printing,
correcting, 843-044. Mrs. Winters.
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
typein-experimented in dissertations, thesis,
book, journal. Pice, carbon ribbon: Call Leslie, 843-8058.
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reassurance,
emergency care, electric B.A. Scaled Services.
Careers Apply
TYPING for disarticulations, these term papers are written in a plain, legible and acceptable and accurate. Call Harvey or Linda
Typist/editor, IBM Picarite. Quality work.
Typing in drafts, dissertations, briefings.
8-11
Books: 842-937-819
Kep. typi: IBM Selectric, term paper; books
Kep. typi: IBM Selectric, proof reading, spelling corrected;
Jenn. 813-400-9500
S. I.L. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (pica). Prompt, efficient service. Themes: dissertations, term papers. Phone: 913-264-8944. Streich. 2-27
Employment Opportunities
Oversea Jobs - temporary or permanent. Europe, Australia, S. America, Africa, etc. All job types 800-242-1999. Executive and Executive Assistant jobs. Job Center. Dept. KA. Box 4400. Berkeley Ca. 9407-25.
Students make money up to $36 per week; time at home addressen mailing. Companies sell direct mail, information regarding opportunities with these companies, advertising Bonus Advertising Bar 1127, Atlanta, Ga. 30345.
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINER
$12,000
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement with one of the top 30 companies in a. S. Degree campus with one of the top 30 companies in a. S. Degree campus, benefits cap exemptions, profit sharing benefits, capital contributions, fee waivers, Kansas City, Mia. Mcphitre (861) 224-7111.
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE. If you enjoy helping a young couple to help us at our summer camp, please provide a new loving couple to help us at our summer camp on an Adoption Counseling course. Provide a private vacation cabin, completely furnished with a luxury of $180 per month; moving dorms; cleaning rooms; e.g., women’s swimming; light housekeeping; summer camp in September; two weeks between August 15 and September 15 depending on your schedule. Please apply IN WRITING TO the Hayward Community Center. Send resumes to Hayward CAREERS (IN WRITING TO) by mail. Reference when you write. Otherwise your time will be taken.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH GET YOU DOWN! If so, get help early.
39. 101, 114 Call 841-7696.
30. 117, 118 Call 841-7696.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10-5 Tues.-Sat.
IVAN'S 65 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
SHAZAM
WE PRINT
ANYTHING!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
BEST CARED
15 East 8th 841-265
10.5 Monday, Saturday
FREE TAX ASSISTANCE: Governor's room in
the building. Reqs. 3 yrs. exp. Offered by the K.U. Accounting
Department. 2-10
LOST AND FOUND
Tutoring in Math and Science, any age or grade.
Arthur Parker, 848-1345.
2-12
Professional Research - term papers a specialty.
Lawrence. Include your phone number. 2-30
lawrence@vipc.org
MATH TUTORING - Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 010, 012, 142, 200, 558, 657. Regular lessons or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7851.
"Found advertisements are sponsored as a publication." State Bank, 8 & Kentucky at Malls & Shopping Centers.
Lott: Maynard, a 5 month old male beagle.
Russell: Kentuckee, Wednesday night,
841-747-600.
if you don't see it, ASK! »« KING GEORGES
Pair of man's brown framed glasses and ear
ties. Allied Field House.
81-10238. 81-10238
Small, white, long haired dog, lost Saturday near
10 & Mississippi, call 842-6730.
2-10
Least. Black and brown Male dog, about 50
hours old. Brooklyn. Bridge Call, David. 841-7165
Found a new t-shirt in Blake Hall Call Keith and识买 843-605. 2-9
WANTED
Silver bracelet, name and inscription on back
of bracelet. Tues, 3/10-5/4/2012
Keep identify
Trying to find it
German Shepherd Huskie Cross pupry. Female 10 weeks old. Lost last week around 12/13.
Found. Mourn pouch, brown leather. East wing
identify. Identify contact. Call 815-2400-
p.m.
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Dedemerly wanted to buy: prints of pictures of the Who conset in K.C., or will pay to use your negative. Close-up pictures especially wanted. **6123 Biora Hall, Shawnee Mound, M-20** **6405**.
Copy of book 'Political Parties and Political Reactions'
Contact Mike Gallaway 841-675-8 or 841-770-702
Non-smoking roommate wanted to live with
you in a spacious apartment on campus and furnished - $65 includes utilities.
Need a tenant. Call (801) 234-7914.
Male roommate. Park 25. 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
Male roommate. Park 25. 2 bedrooms, not required.
+ plus ushirts. 823-291-9
RECREATION'S FINEST
Imported car
service problems?
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
SEE ...
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN
9th & Iowa
500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444
Jewish Male to share mine. Keep Kesher.
Splits 1/15mo, utilities. Call Ringer 842-3828-2-15
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
The NEW SCHOOL of INSTRUMENTS, TRI New Hampshire
has a great gift. instruments, TRI New Hampshire
and classic music, banjo, mandolin and
electric jazz and rock guitar and bass. Call 841-262-7500.
SKI-MT Blue is open, 10% loss, under new
condition. The 8m trip on K-10, 10m, p.m.
weekend; the 2m trip on K-10, 9m, p.m.
weekend. $8 mkt per day.
Use Your People Book Coupon at Round Corner Drugstore* 15% off -801. Mass 2-13
Get a Winter Tank with a Sunshade from Round Cordriage. Complete kits, replacements
PERSONAL
ART SHOW AND SALE. BAPTIST CENTER.
1829 W. 19th. OFFANDABLE ART-WOOD AND
MUSIC. Hours 4-5 Mon, thru Sat, 7-34 thru
3-5丹. Beginns Mug, Feb. 9.
2-13
Get your honey a Valentine Gift. The SUPER
manual 389. Pce. Import 1.475. Mass. 232.
manual 389. Pce. Import 1.475. Mass. 232.
MIDNIGHT MASS FRIDAY 13th at Jawahry Fertility Station in front of St. Mary's Services, both Parish - Orthodox and Catholic, nursing, candles, flowers, a weather room, birthing room, sacrine. New members welcome. 2-13
HELP WANTED
AVON--Start off the new year with excellent student work. Lawrence and nerd talk. Mrs.ells, 842-642-642.
Noble models needed during the following times:
Tuesday and Thursday. 8th to 12th.
Tuesday and Thursday. 12th to 14th.
EUROPEISPHAELAFRAICAASIA --- Travel data
www.epa.int/en/travel_data/1458961/first_Avenue, Tucker, Ga... 6044 (461)
-- First Avenue, Tucker, Ga... 6044 (461)
A
PRO AM Part Stop
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
PRO
1209 East 23rd St. 841-2200
TACOS
$3.95 per Dozen
a quiet corner
1105 Massachusetts 843 9880
Casa de Taco
THE LOUNGE
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Planning a trip?
Let Maupintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass.
Biking
FREE
With pass -- available at your ski-sports shop
at MONT BLEU
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS (50' Service Charge)
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
3 p.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
miner East of Lance off K 1
Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices
are $189 for one room, $249 for two rooms,
Mondays are Ladies Nite, $1. Equipment rental: $20
per month.
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
19
Monday, February 9, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Police modify policy
A communication breakdown between the University of Kansas Police Department, a KU freshman and the Lawrence Police Department has resulted in a change in the way in which felony reports will be handled by the departments.
Lawrence Police Chief Richard Stanwix announced last week that the KU Police Department would now send written copies of its reports on felonies such as burglaries, car thefts and robberies to the city police. He said the reports would be kept on file by month and would be available to citizens at the police station.
THEY NOTIFIED Lawrence police and put out a bulletin on the car, logging it in a statewide computer information bank and available to all law enforcement agencies.
Roper's insurance agent later went to the city police to see whether the car had been recovered. They told him they had no written record of the car theft.
A complaint by Jeff Roper, Wichita freshman, prompted the policy change. Roper's car was stolen recently and he reported it to KU police who, according to Mike Thomas, director of KU police, followed the usual procedure for reporting a stolen car.
When the agent informed Roper of the situation, he complained to Thomas, who said KU police had had previous problems with the city police denying knowledge of the reports. He said the KU dispatcher had made a note of the call, and if the city police knew nothing about the car, KU police didn't know why.
Lawrence police said Roper shouldn't have jumped to the conclusion that they knew nothing about the car simply because they didn't have a written record of it. They needed an insurance agent should have gone to KU police to see whether the car had been recovered.
There are more than 200 stolen vehicles listed in the computer, police said, and the recovident are usually the result of spot chasing or tags against the information stored in them.
Starving college students who haven't seen anything as large as a five-dollar bill in a long time will soon be relieved from the monotonous portrait of George Washington.
Roper said he wondered how the city
could have answered his car if they claimed
to know nothing about it.
$2 bill to try comeback
THE POLICE did have a record of the stolen vehicle, although it wasn't a written record available to the public, a police spokesman said. The record was in the vehicle that stores information about wanted criminals, stolen vehicles and other items.
The Federal Reserve Bank will begin shipping new two-dollar bills to local banks, the Fed will also issue single, money department manager of the Federal Reserve Bank in Kansas City, Mo.
The bills will carry a portrait of U.S. president Thomas Jefferson on the front and a picture of the signing of the bill of independence on the back, Tuggle said Friday.
If the two-dollar bill is accepted by the public, he said, the number of one-dollar bills in circulation could be reduced, cutting the cost of printing and transporting them.
The shipping date was chosen because it is Jefferson's birthday, he said.
Tuggle said the one-dollar bill accounted for per cent of all U.S. currency in circulation.
Use Kansan Classifieds
It will take six-to-eight months to determine whether the bill is accepted by the public. Tuggle said. He predicted that the bill would be boarded by coin collectors.
The last two-dollar bill issued was a U.S. note, he said, and collectors might want to save one of the new federal reserve notes to have a set.
GREEN PLANTS
BEST SELECTION IN TOWN
The Garden Center and Greenhouse
4 blocks East of Mass on 15th 843-2004
13 E. 8th RAY AUDIO 842-2047
---
AKAI
A.R.
B.S.R.
BASF
CRAIG
DUAL
DYNA
E.V.
KOSS
LENCO
PILOT
ROTEL
SONY
EIC.
You Can't
Go Wrong
Buying
Advent Products
We've never seen Advent market a product just for some fast dollars, or in imitation of someone else's, or because the name could sell it, or a "line" with lots of models to get at everybody's budget.
Everything we know of has come about after some real questions were seriously asked: "Is it a wholly new and different kind of product that ought to be around? "What will the company do? "Does Advent have any special ability or reason, make it?"
That kind of thinking is obviously different than just making a decision to buy or calculate the profit for an item, be it a car, psychiatric care, or psychiatric equipment; people all like it.
Our current Advent's products is the Advent Speaker. it will present your story dramatically better than many, more expensive systems, and so dynamically better to you.
SPECIAL:
EVR 4X4 20/20 RMS list price $250 - Sale $125
Plot 23/33 37/35 RMS list price $390 - Sale $125
Price
1776-1976 BLOOD IS LIFE SOME THINGS NEVER CHANGE
+
DID YOU KNOW that your generosity guarantees free blood to every brother,sister,& family member of every KU student- EVEN YOUR FAMILY!
GOOD USED ALBUMS
BOUGHT
REGISTRATION:
Feb.10,11,12,13
10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Robinson (main hall)
Wescoe Terrace
Union (main hall)
Feb.16,17,18 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
UNION BALLROOM
DONATION:
NAZARENE FIRST CHURCH
HELP KU - MAINTAIN a contribution quota to retain this privilege
-SAVE a student's life in the O.R.
-SAVE you or yours in time of need
KAPPA SIGMA
DAVE SHAPIRO &
MARK ANDERSON
Support the Blood Drive
B'NAI B'RITH
HILLEL FOUNDATION
PI BETA PHI
DELTA GAMMA
ALPHA PHI
CATHOLIC STUDENT CENTER
ST. LAWRENCE
ALPHA GAMMA DELTA
CHI OMEGA
SIGMA KAPPA
GAMMA PHI BETA
PHI KAPPA THETA
k o p h
a s c i n b
t u r C t u
a p l s d i
r I R
m i n s u f
s i n
Ku
KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.83
Tbe University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, February 10. 1976
KU prejudices observed to take several forms
See page 7
1976
AFTER
SUNDAY, JULY 28TH, 1976
(1)
WESTERN INDIAN STATE UNIVERSITY
Staff photos by DON PIERCE
I've got it, I've got it, I've . . .
Real reasons, third year law student from Lawrence, draws a bead on a pop fly during an impromptu softball practice east of Robinson Gymnasium yesterday. Much to
Leslie's digust, the ball pops from her glove and falls to the ground. Her teammates' friendly razzing prompted the wordless response, right.
City, employs approach solution
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY and JOHN FULLER
Staff Writers
Orderly discussion, something that's been lacking in recent public meetings concerning city mismanagement allegations, is called for the most part last night at city hall.
The Lawrence City Commission, city staff and employees, and the three authors of a second mismanagement report, filed Jan. 27, chipped away at their differences and moved toward correcting alleged offenses by city management.
Although they reviewed about one-half of the report, the commissioners were unable to take binding action. But they agreed to recommendations that the office of Douglas County Atty. David Berkowitz investigate the following charges:
-Sanitation routes were prepared for another city by Lawrence sanitation employer
—Overtime hours were fabricated in the sanitation department.
——A sanitation employee was illegally discharged.
The commission plans to discuss the remaining half of the report at 7 p.m. Feb.
The commission favored recommendations of increased safety precautions in all departments, increased health information and enhanced training on two-way radios in sanitation trucks.
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager,
said efforts were under way to set safety
up.
Mayor Barkley Clark suggested that City
Manager Buford Watson meet Thursday with representatives of Blue Cross & Blue Shield to discuss increased hospitalization coverage.
Clark also said two-way radios would be available in hotels, where budgets were prepared for Brazil, 1977.
Most discussion concerned recommendations that Donald Purdy, sanitation department superintendent, be removed from the department and that Arnold Wiley, street superintendent, be placed in a job that doesn't require leadership skills.
Muriel Paul, one of the three authors of the report, said Purdy should be removed from the department because he allegedly assaulted a sanitation employee in 1974.
Watson, who termed the assault allegation "simple horseplay," said Purdy shouldn't be replaced because of the incident.
WATSON SAID that a former city employee had snapped Purdy with a towel. Purdy, Watson said, then grabbed the dog, "bear hug" and they tumbled over a desk.
After working there several days, Watson said, the employee requested transfer and then resigned. A while later, he said, the employee applied for workman's com- mendation and he allegedly received in the scuffle with Purdy and was awarded a $2,000 settlement.
The employee worked for several days after the incident, he said, and then began working with the company.
Paul said the version she heard through mismanagement investigations was that they had been used.
furnace and "nearly choked the man to death."
In his own defense, Purdy said he was recovering from a heart attack at the time of the incident and weighed 155 pounds. He said he couldn't have "assaulted a map half my age."
Norman Forer, adviser to the United Public Employees Association of Lawrence, said that employees in the sanitation department went to work fearful for their lives.
Watson said he had heard rumors that some sanitation employees were carrying guns to work. The problem had been corrected last April, he said, when he a
COMMISSIONERS Donald Bimba and Margersinger, who both were members of the original six-man committee that investigated mismanagement charges, said they hadn't heard of any city employee fearing for his life.
police officer and George Williams, director of public works, informed employees they would be fired if they were caught carrying concealed weapons.
Concerning Wiley, Watson suggested that he remain as street department superintendent but that he agree to attend the meeting. The commission favored the suggestion.
See MISMANAGEMENT page 5
Director chosen for Med Center
By BILL SNIFFEN
Robert B. Kugel has been appointed as the new executive vice chancellor for the KU Medical Center, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said last night.
Kugel, now vice president of health sciences at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, will make the final deadline for appointment this afternoon. Dykes has
"We haven't been able to get all the details worked out," Dykes said. "We have the plan."
But Kugel has accepted a verbal offer, Dykes said, and final arrangements will be made before an official announcement is released.
Kuwei, reached in Albuquerque, said that he expected to begin work as the Med center's new executive vice chancellor of the institution. That was he delitched at his appointment.
"KU has got a lot to give for it," he said. He said the Med Center's fine reputation, its building expansion programs and the Wichita branch had attracted him.
"It's fair to say every major medical center has its problems," be said. "And malpractice suits are a universal phenomenon."
Kugel said he was also aware of the Med Center's recent problems, including a halt in heart surgery and a nurse walkout, both in December, and the $28 million in malpractice lawsuits against the Med Center.
The Med Center has been without an executive vice chancellor since the resignation of William O. Riele last spring, and he is now required to find a new executive vice chancellor.
Kuel said he had no specific solutions to the Med Center's problems.
Kuel said the search committee had first communicated with him last July.
Kugel said his approach to solving problems was to meet with all parties involved in the problem, and obtain suggestions from them to solve it.
"But," he added, "sometimes that's very difficult to do."
The latest contact he had with the committee was about two weeks ago, Kugel said. Then, he was informed that he was the president for executive vice chancellor, he said.
Since Rieke's resignation, David W.
Explosion victim regains vision
He was listed in fair condition last night at the KU Medical Center, according to a MedCenter report.
Earl S. Husser, professor of chemistry,
he visited Burman at the Med Center
yesterday and Burman had regained vision in one eye but couldn't yet see properly out of the other. A doctor said it was too soon to determine the eye had been damaged permanently.
Huyssen, who was called to the scene of the accident, said that Burman was trying to isolate a peroxide compound for an ether solution. He obtained the unusual nature of the explosion.
The police said that witnesses in a neighboring lab in Malott heard only a "poof" or "pop" when the explosion occurred. They called 911, but no one answered. Burman's cries for help, the police said,
"A peculiarity of a peroxide explosion is that it can explode with great force and
causes a lot of damage, even though it just gets a lot of damage, he said. "Even though it didn't sound like a stick of dynamite going off, you can lift it at the lab the kind of damage it can do."
Anand C. Burman, Madison, India, graduate student, was working alone in a lab where he was conducting exploded in his face, KU police said yesterday. Burman was temporarily blinded and was severely burned and cut on his face, arms and body.
Huyser said the explosion occurred because Burman was trying to hurry the experiment and tried to go one step ahead of the proper procedure.
Huyer said he had been at KU for 16 years and had never seen a serious illness.
He said Burman should have been wearing the protective gear, including safety goggles, that students are required to wear in all experiments and during dous experiments or chemicals in the labs.
Before going to New Mexico, Kugel, $2, was dean of the college of medicine at the University of Texas.
A University of Kansas chemistry student has recovered partial vision after being temporarily blinded in a laboratory experiment. The estimated $1,000 damage in Mallott Hall.
Robinson called Kugel "an excellent selection."
Robinson has been acting executive vice chancellor for the Med Center,
A native of Chicago, Kugel attended Dartmouth and the University of Michigan. He earned his medical degree in 1946. From 1951 to 1962 he was an instructor in the Medical School and in the University Medical School and at the University Hospital in Ann Arbor, Mich., from 1926 to 1953.
At John Hopkins Medical School, 1955-65, Kugel was an assistant professor of the Child Development Clinic. In 1963 he developed Iowa from 1956 to 1963. From 1963 to 1965, Kugel was a professor at the Brown University College of Medicine and joined the University of Nebraska staff in 1965.
Kungel has been a member of the President's Committee on Mental Retardation and a member of the board of the Omaha Association for Retarded Children.
Kugel has three daughters. He was married to Dorothy Bowie in 1950.
Candidates to air views in debate
Tedde Tasheff and David Shapiro, student body presidential candidates, will meet in open debate from 7 to 8:30 tonight on 28 and Jayhawk Rooms of the Kansas Union.
The debate is jointly sponsored by the Student Senate Elections and Comm
Bruce Woner, elections committee chairman, said yesterday both candidates
Each candidate will make 10-minute opening remarks, he said, and Tom Curzon, Senate executive secretary and debate moderator, will flip a coin to decide who speaks first. Curzon will field questions from the audience, and each candidate and his running mate will have a total of three questions to respond to the question. Woner said.
The candidates will have five minutes at the end of the debate to summarize their position.
Both candidates will have to answer each question, Woner said, to eliminate part of the problem of loaded questions being planted in the audience.
Curtzon said he expected the debate questions to be diverse. The University's faculty members and administrators are two probable subjects, he said. The Senate's role and that of the student body president and vice president in this area also are likely to be discussed, he said.
Tasheff, Wichita junior, and her running mate, Steve Owens, Salina sophomore, are campaigning as the Vox Populares coalition
Stapiro, Lawrence junior, and his running mate, Mark Anderson, Fairway senior.
Ruling on baseball clause could hurt KU players
By KELLY SCOTT
Staff Writer
Professional baseball's reserve clause is in athletic limbo, the result of a recent ruling that could spread from the major leagues to the minor leagues. Major league baseball played at the University of Kansas.
IN ADDITION to upsetting the current balance of professional baseball, this decision could close the door on KU baseball players' chance to win spots on major league team rosters.
Judge John W. Oliver's decision in district court last week upheld the ruling by baseball arbitrator Peter Seitz that players can play out their options to win a game after failing to reach contract terms with the club.
Floyd Temple, head baseball coach at KU, says he thinks the decision will lead to bidding wars for the most talented players and hurt younger, untried players' prospects for major league contracts.
"The average guy has no bargaining power," Temple said.
Oliver ruled a negotiator such as Seitz had have the power to make a decision on the renewal clause, a subject closely related to the reserve clause. He argued that the point of departure between club owners and players
Seitz case the decisive vote on the three-man arbitration board that affirmed the contention of pitchers Andy Messersmith and Jim McNally that the renewal clause in the standard major league
THE RESERVE CLAUSE has prohibited a player from contracting with another club even if his contract expired, unless his club's owners traded or released him.
contract could bind them for one year, only after they failed to sign a contract with that club.
This interpretation of the renewal clause drastically undercuts the power the reserve clause has had to bind a player to one team indefinitely. If the decision stands, it will mean the end of the reserve clause and its 54-year history of controversy.
If a player doesn't agree to the terms of his contract, the board said, he must play for the team that season. If at the end of the season he still hasn't made a free agent and can negotiate with other teams.
"The interpretation undercuts the reserve clause's power to bind a player to one team."
decision. Minor league as well as major league players have the power to declare themselves free players.
All professional contracts could be affected by the
Several KU players and coaches fear the decision will lead to reluctance on the part of owners to initiate a relocation.
According to a recent editorial in Sports Illustrated magazine, an owner spends $400,000 on a player from the time he signs to the time he reaches the major leagues.
With the owners' money tied up in attracting the superstars, Temple said, there may not be enough money to buy a car.
about whether to go to college or to sign after finishing high school.
Temple said he thought that more players would enter college but that the bonuses given to the best players when they signed out of high school could be astronomical.
RUSSEH SEHON, scout for the New York Mets and a part time coach for the KU baseball team, said that although the better players would always be sought, they were not more selective in the average players it signed.
"The marginal players are out of luck," he said. "They'll be much more limited in their choices.
"Some individual players are making it hard for the present crop of kids coming up."
Rob Allandier, Roger Slagle and Brian Rhodes are three KU baseball players who think their chances of breaking into the big leagues could be lessened if the reserve clause is struck down.
Slagle said the decision favored the superstars of the sport.
"IT'S DEFINITELY to the benefit of the better ballplayer," he said. "It's going to make things hard on the mediocre players, but good for the star."
Allinder said, 'It's good for players like Messmernith and McNally, but the owners won't be putting enough money for people that are just good.
"When I didn't think it was going to affect me. I thought it (the reserve clause) wasn't good. Now I thought it was."
Rhodes said, "The decision is bad for the organization of baseball. It may be good for the organization."
going to know their investments now. I'll hurt."
Said he thought the owners would have to "throw the game" away because of the systems. He said teams such as the Los Angeles Dodgers, who relied heavily on their minor league systems, could stand to lose from the decision if it needed minor league players from contracts to one team.
Allinor was drafted by the Texas Rangers when he graduated from high school, but he said he didn't sign because they didn't offer him enough to pay for his education.
"The marginal players are out of luck. They'll be more limited in their choices."
Stagel has been drafted by the Philadelphia Phillies and, more recently, the San Diego Padres.
All three said they wanted to play professional baseball for a living, but were aware they might not
Rhodes, a lefthander, was drafted by the California Angels when he graduated from high school, but was convinced by his high school coach to attend college.
Almost all players must pass through the minor leagues on their way to major league teams. For
He was first drafted when he left Hutchinson Junior College, but decided to play for KU instead. Whether he signs with the Padres depends on the team's decision and the player recovering from recent arm surgery. Slain said.
Sehon said the minor league were essential to give players the confidence necessary to play the major leagues.
some, a baseball career ends in the minors. But for other the minors are the stepping stone to a major league.
BUT THE MINOR leagues could be seriously affected by a reversal of the supremacy of the reserve clause. Sehon said, because ball clubs could cut down their farm systems.
*Why would they want to spend money on a whole minor league club for a few players who could play well?*
*What is the best way to do this?*
College players are already at a disadvantage, Sehon said. Ball clubs are more interested in signing prospects to contracts after they finish high school. The Bills are also seeking 18 and have the maximum amount of playing time.
RHODES SAID he realized that going to college takes a gamble on his chances to play pro
Rhodes said that although he wanted 'pretty badly' to play baseball, he would be satisfied with his team.
"If you aren't ready by the time you are 22, they don't want you," he said.
"I just want to try," he said. "I don't care if I make it as long as I've had the chance."
Yet, in view of the court decision last week, blibs, Allinder and Shagle may have even roughened their case.
2
Tuesday, February 10, 1976
University Daily Kensan
associated press digest
Sebelius decries ruling
WASHINGTON—Legislation that would exempt the American Legion's Boys State and Girls' State programs from compliance with federal sex discrimination laws will be introduced in Congress, Rep. Keith Sebelius, R-Kan., said yesterday.
Sebelius issued a statement in which he said that a rulings law the Department of Health, Education and Welfare that the programs violated the law "is a good example of how some bureaucrat can take big government to a ridiculous extreme.
term.
"The whole business would be ludicrous if it were not for the fact this ruling jeopardizes an outstanding youth program and that the taxpayers' dollars are being wasted on foolishness," he said.
Adulteru decriminalized
TOPEKA- The Senate narrowly passed a bill yesterday that removes adultery from the list of punishable offences in Kansas.
The bill won Senate approval, 21-12, and headed for the House, while a companion measure outlawing marriages between two homosexuals also passed, 39-0. They were among 10 measures given final Senate passage and forwarded to the House.
Helmet law challenged
TOPEKA-Motorcycle riders over 16 years of age would no longer be required to wear protective gear a bill approved yesterday by the Transportation Department of the Kansas House.
The measure retains a requirement that motorcycle riders continue to wear protective eye coverings.
The state's helmet law has met opposition from many motorcycle cyclists the legislature has resisted efforts to get it. A lawmaker been in the minority says the highway funds supporting lawing
New isolationism foreseen
WINFIELD—Errors in diplomacy and increasing domestic and economic tension has prompted an international isolationism in the United States, Sen. James B. Reynolds, R-Nev., and Sunday.
Pearson told students at St. John's College here that the new calls for isolatism carried the names "reassessment" and "limits of power," but had the effect of lowering academic achievement.
Patty tells of attacks
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Patricia Hearst tested yesterday that her terrorist kidnappers sexually assaulted her and forced her to leave the building. The bank-broking revolutionary "Tania," the
"Did William Wolfe do anything to you?"
Bailey then asked.
In a dramatic day of testimony with the jury arrest, Hearst said William Wolfe, the Symbiontes Liberation Army "soldier" for whom she once declared her love, was only the first of a number of SLA members to attack her sexually.
"Did you have any affection for William Wolfe?" asked her attorney, F Lee Bailey.
Heart paused and appeared to swallow
a small, wet sputty, sooty, almost
inaudible, he measured an inch of it. He assumed me was dead.
Bailey asked her if Wolfe was the only person who assaulted her.
Balley asked her where Wolfe's sexual assault took place.
"in the closet," she said, referring to the cell-like closet in which she said she was. "The girl was always here."
Waffe died with other SLA members in a fiery Los Angeles shootout one month after the bank robbery for which Hearst is standing trial.
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Bradley, a Republican, has lived in Douglas County for 18 years and is married to William Bradley, a local veterinarian and a graduate of 97 School Board. They have five children.
Lack Londrecht, a Lawrence businessman, will serve as Bradley's campaign manager. Gilbert Gliges and Polly Miranda will be vice chairmen and Biller Terry, loan officer of the Lawrence First National Bank, has been selected as financial manager.
—NOTICE—
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
1. Attend a TRAINING SESION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below
FROM: John House, Student Senate Treasurer
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
remained as a member of that board until 1974.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following times:
FEBRUARY
2 declare candidacies for county commission
FRIDAY, February 13, 2:00 p.m.
Beverly Bradley, Route Two, Lawrence, and Robert Neis, Route One, Eudora, have announced their candidacies for the Douglas County Commission.
No other sessions will be held this month.
Contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for one of these sessions, or for additional information.
She was graduated with honors from Kansas State University in 1953 with a
funded from the Student Senate activity fee
Neis is seeking the county's District No. Two position, now occupied by Commission Chair Todd Dixon, in the District No. Three seat, now occupied by I. J. Stoneback. Heck is undecided on whether he will run for re-election, and Stoneback said he wouldn't seek another term.
The county primary will be in August,
followed by November's general election.
Three covers western and southern portions, including some of Lawrence and all of Kinsella.
Nels, an independent, is a lifelong resident of Douglas County and is employed as a farmer. He is married and has five children.
District two covers northern and
northeastern parts of the county, and District
He is also a director of the Kaw Valley State Bank in Eudora and a member of the board of directors for the Eudora Lions Club.
Neis was chairman of the Douglas County Planning Commission from 1964 until 1968, when the county was zoned and combined with Lakewood. He served as Douglas County Planning Commission. He
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Tuesday, February 10, 1976
University Daily Kansan
3
UFW sympathizers set boycott
Bv DAVE HAURER
a boycott of Dillon's stores to force recognition of the problems of California farm workers was scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Saturday by the Friends of the United Farm Workers (FUFW) at a meeting last night.
The meeting in the Pine Room of the Kansas University Unified by 19 persons, including 2 UFW members.
James Lumsden, Kansas City area FUFW director of boycotts efforts against nonunion grapes, head lettuce and Gallo wine, said that recent actions of California growers preventing FUFW elections dicussed the threat to growers only way the growers in California would respond to the UFW's demands would be through a boycott.
"The only thing we want to do is to translate heat very quickly back to the growers." Lumsen said. "Realistically, we want to knock the hell out of them."
IT WAS DECIDED at the meeting that Dillon's stores would be the focus of the
group's boycott because they were popular shopping places for Lawrence residents and students. Some group members had reservations about picketing the stores because of Dillon's responsiveness to shopper needs.
The group decided to advertise its boycott with flyers, a table in the Kansas Union and a 15-minute film on the plight of farm workers to be shown from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday in the Council Room of the Union.
The problems of the UFW and its battles with Teamsters and California growers date back to 161, when Cesar Chavez, UFW leader, began fighting for the right of the UFW to represent farm workers, Lumsden said.
RECENTLY, Lumsden said, funds for the California Agricultural Labor Relations Board, which oversees fair labor acts, ran out, and pressure brought by growers on legislators caused the board to be disbanded because that workers can't have elections, he said.
was for a successful boycott that would force the growers into calling for legislation to allow elections for a farm workers' union. Mr. Nixon said, the labor relations board folded.
The hope of the FUFW, Lumsden said.
Mike Fry, Wichita senior, said that he had become interested in the cause of the farm workers while he had been doing a field project for his social welfare class. He said that he had asked Linda to be to the show and discuss action that could be taken.
"AGRICULTURE is the last stronghold of not accepting workers' rights to bargain," Lumsen said. "The growers have decided they're out to screw us again. We here in Lawrence have to build up an effect boycott to put pressure on the growers in
Lumsden said that he and four other FUFW staff members are concentrating boycotts on the Kansas City and metropolitan areas including Lawrence
because most of the food stores were in those areas.
Edward Dutton, associate professor of social welfare, said that he had spent last year helping farmers to market their family farmers and helping them to make their farms economically sound. He said he was concerned about the growing tendency of agriculture to state into large agribusiness corporations.
THREE YEARS AGO, Dutton said, a different FUW group buy codified Sawafee supermarkets as here as part of a national safety to sell only lettuce. Safewae to sell only union lettuce, he said.
Dillon's will be notified of the FUFW's proposed action, the group decided. Lumsden said that once a store decided to sell only union lettuce, the store could deal with markets that would provide the store with lettuce it needed.
FUFW said that it would seek the support of MECUA, a campus Chicano organization to help him.
On Campus
Events...
TODAY: The WILLIAM ALLEN WHITE FOUNDATION will have its annual business meeting
TONIGHT: THE COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
Announcements . . .
WILLIAM DUELLMAN, curator of the division of herpetology of the Museum of Natural History and prehistory, systematics and ecology, was elected to a two-year fellowship at the Systematics and Ecology Department.
JOHN ERICKSON, professor of French and Italian, has been appointed State Department lecturer to the Middle East and North Africa.
SIGMA GAMMA TAU, National Honor Society in Aeropace Engineering, has voted to name its national honor student award for SAnnd. Aides, professor of
DONALD MCOY, professor of history, has been appointed to a three-year term on the NATIONAL ARCHIVES ADVISORY COUNCIL.
Balloons for the vacated office of vice president of the KU AMERICAN
COURT OFFENSORS are due by 5 p.m. Wednesday in the
lunghuest office, 428 Blake Hall.
Grants and Awards...
DENNIS ELLS WORTH, editor of last semester's Kansan, has won a $250 prize in the Journalism Award Program.
Correction...
A textbook, Comprehensive Pediatric Nursing, co-edited by MARTYE BARNARD and MARIILYN CHARD, nursing instructors and clinicians at the KU Medical Center, has been designated the "Book of the Year" by the American Journal of Nursing.
BENITA BOCK, a candidate for the Student Senate from the School of Pharmacy, was incorrectly listed as Benita Beck in yesterday's Kansan. JOHN FINUCANE, a candidate from district two of Nunemaker College, was incorrectly listed as John Finucine.
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Begins the new year with a Free Demonstration of the Arts of Self-Defense, Self-Awareness, Physical and Mental Coordination.
Tonight Feb. 10 7:30
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(Learn to become One with the universe. Smile and have fun!)
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Coast Guard to start sea class
The course will be at 7:30 p.m. It will deal with the techniques of equipment maintenance and equipment repair.
A new night class, sponsored by the U.S. Coast Guard, will meet on Thursdays Feb. 19-April 23 at the Community Building, 11th and Vermont.
There is no charge for the course. A textbook must be purchased, however.
People interested in the course can attend more information by attending the first session or by calling Harry Bennett at 843-350 in the daytime or 843-9183 in the evening, or Larry Marcum at 542-2827 in the evening.
GRADUATION DAZE.
CLEAR UP YOUR FUTURE IN THE 2YEAR AFROTC PROGRAM.
What's up after college? That question is enough to get a lot of young people down.
Air Force ROTC college graduates have that worry, too. But their immediate future (and longer if they choose) is much more secure. As a commissioned officer, there's a chance of being called toPromotions. Financial security. And really, lots more.
If you have two academic years remaining, there's a great 2-year AFRTOC program still available to you. Look into the details. We think you'll be pleasantly surprised. And pleasantly rewarded.
For entry into the 20-year program commencing in the fall of 2018, please submit a completed and complete five required Applies in Room 108, Military Library.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
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4
Tuesday. February 10, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Cut-rate professionals
Traditionally, lawyers, doctors and other professionals have not advertised their services. In fact, their professional lives are filled with a ban on such competitive practices.
But later this week, the American Bar Association will consider an ethics code change that would end the ABA's prohibition of advertising by its members. Although the Federal Trade Commission has sought to allow much more transparency and anti-trust activities and consumer groups have sought it to lower prices, there is no assurance that the ruling itself wouldn't cause greater problems.
THE ABA HAS discussed a change so broad that it would allow all forms of advertising, including newspaper, radio and television ads. It's not hard to believe that in the foreseeable future we could be faced with "Cut-rate Divorce Specials," "Two Tonsils Out For The Price of One," claims of "Seventy Straight Wins in the Home Court" and clearance sales on Darvon.
In fact, with the present carnival atmosphere of home-grown TV advertising, it wouldn't be long before someone would come up with:
"Hey, y'all, I want YOU for mah customer at Uncle Jim's Wills and Deals Store! We guarantee to get you out o' any murder tape to 'spinpin'吓你 o' any murder tape to KK! AND letgit Divorced quicker n' Tammy Wynette c'n sing the song at Uncle Jim's! So
don't be a fool and play the stool before you check with US!''
SOUND FAR-FETCHED? Perhaps, but many members of the ABA and medicine's counterpart, American Medical Association are afraid of just this end. "Widespread advertising is only going to be done by the inept and incompetent," said Leroy Jeffers, a Houston lawyer.
And even if the advertising were done in a more decorous manner, there is no proof that the general public would be able to accurately sort it out.
"Patients simply have no basis to sort out truth from fiction if the various claims and counterclaims of medical advertising are to be allowed," said Holman, an attorney and former secretary of the Judicial Council of the AMA.
NO DOUBT, the professional organizations may be exaggerating the possible backlash because of selfish greed. Supporters of advertising say that open competition would help to lower prices. But low cost shouldn't be the prime consideration when looking for a surgeon, in whose hands you place your life, or a lawyer, in whose hands you place your freedom.
General information on fees and specialties should be available in some form. But opening the Pandora's box of information can be a move that all of us would soon regret.
By Betty Haegelin Associate Editor
Athletic subsidy: pro and con
Student voice necessary
Those who oppose the Student Senate ticket subsidy to the athletic corporation tacitly assume that the issue is whether everyone should help defray taxes on college basketball and football games. They quickly conclude that those getting the benefits should do the paying and, therefore, that there should be no subsidy. That is the way Americanism is supposed to work, they say.
But is it? Certainly that isn't the way the Student Senate works. All sorts of diverse campus organizations, which are run by students, receive student activity fee allocations from the Senate. True, most of those organizations don't get nearly so much money as the athletic corporation does, because they do benefit as many students.
ACTUALLY THESE Senate allocations amount to a form of taxation. The theory of taxation is that a government decides tax monies should be for programs of general social benefit or to benefit people in some special class. For example, the state legislature provides money for the state benefit of the general benefit the University of the General Kansas and because the legislators wish to benefit a special class of people by subsidizing their education.
As a tax, the Senate subsidy would be justifiable if it were beneficial to the whole student body or if ticket buyers deserved a subsidy. The latter condition is highly debatable, but the former can easily be seen to hold.
COLLEGE ATHLETICS has become
big business. Witness the new KU scoreboard with its Phillips Petroleum and McDonald's advertising. Scheduling is becoming dominated by a scramble for TV money. The big question is whether title ones within the NCAA. Athletics seems to exist almost independently from the academic community.
Yet in another sense, universities are increasingly dependent on athletics for public relations, national recognition and interaction with alumni. If students are to be actively involved in the culture and are to maintain a degree control and influence over it, they will be necessity be involved in athletics.
THE BEST way to keep the athletic corporation from becoming an autonomous arm of the University free to arbitrarily impose its will with little constraint from students is to keep participation integrally involved.
That is what the ticket subsidy helps to do. And in so doing it benefits all students.
The performance of this year's football and basketball teams has indicated that next year could be a banner year for KU in both of these sports. It would be a shame for success on the court and the field to be tempered by failure in the stands. If the loss of the subsidy should cause student participation to drastically, the athletic corporation might have to further subordinate student participation to professionalism. By John Hieckel
Contributing Writer
For years now, the Student Senate has debated the athletic ticket subsidy. Some years it has increased the subsidy, some years it has reduced the subsidy and this year it has finally cut it completely.
Cut wouldn't hurt KUAC
The main problem with debating the virtues and vices of the subsidy is that very few people debate it ever know. When people argue about figures are confusing and can be twisted, people usually just ignore them and argue from personal greed: if they buy football and basketball tickets they get vested in and if they don't, they oppose it.
Those who support the subsidy say that it is a good thing because it benefits the majority of KU students. They say it's better to give $147,000 to an organization that serves 11,000 students than split it up among smaller service and academic groups that don't serve nearly as many students.
THAT IS PROBABLY the only way the finances can be debated. The real increase in ticket prices won't be nearly as large as the apparent one, since the ticket buyer, although paying $10 or so more for a season ticket, would also be able to buy an airtime at the University of Kansas Athletic College without the subsidy. But ticket buyers would undeniably pay more than nonbuyers.
The main reasons for cutting the subsidy are not financial, but philosophical.
THIS WOULD be a good argument except for one thing—the athletic corporation doesn't need the money. The money it gets from the subsidy makes up a very small part of its revenue. This is why has said that if the subsidy were abolished, the corporation could always get the money somewhere else.
Why give what is almost a quarter of the total student activity fee to a group that doesn't need the money when you workworthily organizations do need it?
Well, some say, the ticket subsidy increases the student voice in the athletic corporation. But we're paying the subsidy not, now to mention being represented on the athletic board, and that the university signs students have much say when it comes to rearranging basketball seating or making up a budget.
CUTTING $14,700 from the athletic corporation's budget doesn't really hurt it at all. Cutting $200 from the budget of most campus service organizations is less costly than having a phone or none. Cutting $400 means the difference between life and death.
The student activity fee should be used to finance projects and groups that can't exist without it.
Otherwise, the student activity fee becomes a Robin Hood in reverse; taking from the poor to give to the rich.
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
BA
"YES, MRS QUIMBY I'M AWARE OF THOSE SCARE STORIES ABOUT SOME OF THE BANKS BUT BELIEVE ME, MY MONEY IS AS SAFE HERE AS --- MRS QUIMBY NOT IDENTIFIED ON THE BUILDING..."
Report arms Ford critics
WASHINGTON—The Ford Administration has gone and bought and paid for a study substantiating what its right and left-wing critics have been beating it over the head with. Reagan Wallace and Harris Reagan and Harris class use of this work commissioned by HUD for the preparation of the 1976 Grow
cross-purposes and to be insulated from effective control by elected officials, was in part a consequence of the proliferation of (federal) categorical grants-in-aid. To reduce the fragmentation of the fund which results in costly duplication of services, parochialism and competition
By Nicholas von Hoffman
(C) King Features
100
Report, which the executive branch is required to give Congress every two years.
The Reagan people, who seem to be having some trouble defending their candidate's proposal to transfer $20 billion worth of Federal activity to the states, should enjoy the part that says that: "Federal major contributors to make the nation's domestic problems . . . the proliferation of local government agencies, boards, commissions and departments, each with specialized objectives which often seem to work at
federal programs seemed sometimes to foster it . . . federal assistance to states and localities distorted spending priorities as communities sought to obtain federal dollars a project-by-project approach to community problems."
The report was prepared by Peter C. Labovits & Co. of Washington with assistance of the giant consulting and research of Arthur D. Little of Cambridge for unearthing it before it was burned, shredded and rewritten goes to Al Louis Ripkins, an
infatigable HUD staffer who puts in IMPACT, the best and longest-lived underground government paper, on his own time. (Subscriptions to IMPACT are available for $5 a year at P.O. Box 23126, Washington D. C. 20024.)
George Wallace can find confirmation from the Ford Administration of his campaign theme that the big losers of the Seventies are middle-class working folks: "The rapidly rising costs of living and a drop in real disposable income since 1970 have made the financial picture and outlook of middle-class families
... these families have begun to feel that they have lost control over their destiny. By the age of 18, parents from American families ... found they were priced out of the new housing market. ... Only the top 16.5 per cent of the families ... had the income to buy a new home of even the median price level compared with 21.5 per cent one year before property taxes rose 6.3 per cent. Unlike the rich, middle-class families do not have access to tax loopholes to cut their tax liabilities. Unless the poor, they lose the financial income family rise as fast as inflation, the increased tax bite
of higher tau brackets results in a decrease in purchasing power because the customer class is finding that it has to run faster just to stay in place." George Wallace may say it "works, but with no more clarity.
For Fred Harris, there is ammunition too. It comes in the form of confirmation of a large jump in the number of families under the poverty line, up to 15 million people. Who are the people being pushed back down out of the lower middle-class? "The bulk of increase in poverty occurred among white persons, the majority of whom were white persons below the poverty level increased by almost eight per cent . . . There was no significant change reported in black poverty levels, but the poverty below the poverty threshold remained substantially greater than that for whites . . ."
The distress of the white ageed continues, even among those who own something of value: they have paid off their mortgages find themselves unable to meet the rising monthly costs of utilities, property taxes and fees, and are out of their low, fixed incomes.
has been over for five or six years now, but not some of the most important elements that caused the racial upheavals of a decade ago. The 1970s have progressed in the reduction of black poverty in contrast to the significant downward trend observed during the 1960s, the overall decline in the number of families relative to white families has actually delimined since 1970."
Even granting that '74 and '75 were exceptionally bad years, there's nothing about this report which can be called new news except its source. It was handed in in December so that the higher-ups in the Administration had time enough to kick it over to the White House to speak. If it had gotten there, it's comforting to hope it would have had some effect on the formulation of Ford's zero-zilch non-program.
The Second Reconstruction
But if it hasn't dissuaded the Ford people of the delirium that Mother Nature will cure us of whatever ails, it's meat and drink for his enemies. A word of caution: It's one thing to tell the people that Harris and Harris as to what's hurting and another to think they have any practical idea about what to do about it.
There have always been men who are dreamers, devoting their lives to excellence. In a study just completed, I've discovered that this drive can also be found in other people, and even imitate objects.
Omelettes like heaven for both egg and eater
My research focused specifically on the egg. I found that eggs, like humans, do have a special role as satisfied just being included in a meat loaf. Others reach out and yearn to be pained and hidden in the grass on Easter Sunday. But the greatest honor came when we found a graceful grace the plate of some hungry gourmet as an amolette.
You may think this sounds ridiculous. Why, you might ask, would any egg in its right mind rather be an amelite than an ornate one? You have the question, you've obviously never had an amelite.
Since those early days, countless recipes have been
Omelets are among the most versatile of all foods. They can be eaten at breakfast, lunch or supper. They're even great if you get the munchies late at night. They are generally the main course, but there are other options used as desserts. And some people even eat cold omelets on picnics.
The Romans also enjoyed this form of egg and they provided the word from which omelette is derived. They combined eggs in honey (mellita) and sprinkled it with salting omeletilla with pepper.
Letters Policy
The forerunner of the omelette is traced to ancient Egypt. Eggs put into Egyptians in a slime and whirled them around at such a speed that the friction makes them enough heat to set the eggs.
The Kanan welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters he type-written, double-spaced and no longer than 400 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.
developed. This great variety is another of the omelette's outstanding characteristics.
Scanning through an omelette plate, I see a lobster cardinale omelet or the red pepper and anchovy variety. Or it may be that your favorite is the spinach and ham, smoked salmon with cream cheese and meat with hard sauce omelette.
These recipes are all in the
omelette pan you know it's time for the filling.
This is where the creativity comes in. You can fill your omelette with a mixture of ingredients as you desire. Omeletes are a great way to get rid of leftovers. Any cheese, any vegetable, any meat, almost anything you want. A cookbook author, has potential as a filling.
And don't be afraid of the
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
After wipping up a few eggs and a tablespoon of water (water makes it fluffier than milk) you're ready to make the base for your creation. When the eggs begin to harden in the
book and so are many for conventional varieties such as cheese omelettes and mushroom omelettes. But the most exciting thing about an omelette is that it allows the filling to be poured. You can make any kind of omelette your stomach desires.
But even if you don't like chili, omelettes still have a lot to offer.
unknown. One of the best omelettes I ever made was the result of experimentation. The omelette was cold, and remembered there was some hot chili dip left from the night before. I spread it on the eggs, folded them over and came up with an omelette that in my omelette that was excellent.
In fact, you just can't beat 'em.
An All-American college newspaper
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--684-4180
Business Office--684-4238
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
daily period. Second-class postage paid at Law-
erian station or $18 in Douglas County and $10 a
semester or $18 in Chicago County.
Subscription fee $2.00 a semester, paid through
the University of Kansas.
Editor Carl Young
Cai Young
Campus Editor
Associate Editor
Yael Abougdiah
Associate Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editor Grace Hack
Assistant Campus Editors Jim Bates,
Steven Browne
Photo Editor Diance Drieman,
Peter Packerers Dave Greenwald,
George Millennium, Allen Quainhonkel
Sports Editor Allen Quainhonkel
Associate Sports Editors Steve Schoenfeld
Entertainment Editor Mary Ann Hudsonel
Mary Ann Hudsonel
Copy Chiefs Mary Ann Hudsonel
Mary Ann Hudsonel
Jam Maturel, Glenn Meyer
Artist Allison Glen
News Editors John Hickey Matthew Anderson,
Thomas Dentney
Wire Editors Kelly Scott, Chester Alexander,
Contributing Writers John Johnson, Jim Bates,
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Gary Birch Linda Brooks
Gary Burrell
Classified Manager
National Advertising Manager
Assistant Director
Assistant Assistant Manager
Assistant Assistant Manager
Assistant Assistant Manager
John Marquart
Joseph Jones
Publisher
David Dary News Advisor Business Advisor Susanne Shaw Mel Adams
University Dally Kansan
Tuesday, February 10, 1976
3
Mismanagement
From page one
"I think it was pretty obvious Wiley came to this committee with a chip on his shoulder." Bins said. "There is certainly improvement in his leadership abilities."
Throughout the study session, Commissioner Carl Mieck said there wasn't
--enough evidence to satisfactorily debate charges and recommendations.
Argeringer said the evidence should have been presented at a special meeting Saturday morning, at which Forer was expected to present a bill of particulars substantiating his recent charges of harassment in the sanitation department.
Local improvements on city agenda tonight
Plans to imply we Lawrence, which include everything, from attracting new businesses to up+ adding public safety, will be held at public meetings at its regular meeting at 7 p.m. today.
The meeting is in the commission's room on the fourth floor of the First National Bank.
Candidates file for class offices
More than 25 students have declared their candidacies for class office, including one slate of unopposed candidates running for senior class offices.
Class officers will be elected during the Student Senate elections Feb. 18 and 19. Freshman class officers will be elected in the fall.
The candidates for senior class offices are: Bill French, president; Stefan Van Keppel, vice president; Marianne Maurin, secretary and Dorothy Schloer, treasurer. All are members of the Vox Populares (V.P.) coalition.
Candidates for junior class president are Todd Hunter (V.P.) and Mark Booth (Action). Vice presidential candidates are Dave Ramirez (V.P.) and John Benge (Action). Becky Young (Action) and Cindy Ossman (V.P.) are running for treasurer, Nancy Weidensau (Booth) Action) and Nancy Wideansau (V.P.) have declared for secretary.
Candidates for sophomore class president are Tom Byers (SOS), Joe Ruysser (Feb 19th), Russ Engel (V.P.) and Steve Conklin (College Commitment).
Sophomore class vice presidential candidates are Tom Eldon (SOS), John Tonger (FEB 19th), Ralph Munyan (V.P.) and Patti O'Brien (C.B.C).
Candidates for sophomore class secretary are Sandy Smith (C.C.), Susan Rieger (V.P.), Juline Milne (FEB 19th) and Nancy Alberg (SOS).
Sophomore class treasurer candidates are Sheri Sigman (SOS), Leslie Green (V.P.), Page Heaven (FEB 19th) and Jeff Erksen (C.C.)
FORER, who said last night he thought Clark had barred him from Saturday's meeting, didn't appear then. He announced Friday, that sanitation employees would take their complaints directly to federal court.
Among items to be discussed is the "Goals for Lawrence" program, which is the product of nearly two years of survey conducted by the Citizens' Advisory Council (CAC).
The commission is expected to consider the citizens' report in connection with Plan 95, a comprehensive plan prepared by the Douglas County Planning Commission.
Jack Landreth, CAC immediate past president, said yesterday that the citizens' goals for Lawrence were business and economic development, education, government, health and social services, housing, planning and zoning, public safety, transportation and communication, recreation and utilities.
In other action, the commission will consider approval of the city's community development budget for fiscal 1976-77, which begins July 1.
THE CAC, Landreth said, was established at the request of the city commission to determine citizen priorities for Lawrence development.
Clark said, "I wasn't aware that this was marrotte type thing and people couldn't take it."
A city policy that requires suspension of any city employee charged with a felony will also be discussed. The commission is expected to change the policy so that an employee who has been fired by Manager Buford Watson deems his employment in the best interest of the city.
A proposed budget of $529,000 has been prepared by the community development staff and calls for these expenditures: $10,000 for housing engineering; $100,000 for housing rehabilitation; $15,000 for housing surveys and planning; $13,000 for Lawrence improvement associations; $80,000 for administration; and $6,000 for a contingency
An agreement between the state of Kansas, an engineering firm and Douglas County on engineering contracts for Clinton Parkway, a proposed four-lane highway between Lawrence and Clinton Reservoir, will allow it to consider allocating $1,000 for engineering a two-mile section of the road, which will pass through Lawrence.
The report recommended that existing federal and state funds for officer training should be selected, something Watson and Stamix asserted they had done to the best of their ability.
SUA OFFICER INTERVIEWS MARCH 1, 1976
SUA Officer and Board Interviews
Vice President Treasurer
SUA BOARD INTERVIEWS MARCH 8,1976
Forer said, "The city commission is not a Star Chamber. People have a right to
Festival of the Arts Indoor Recreation
President Secretary
The commission told Wabon to study the feasibility of providing free psychiatric care to officers under duty-related stress and to report his findings to the commission.
Public Relations
Travel
Free University
Watson disagreed with the report's recommendations that the department should strengthen its detective branch and develop special units for juveniles and drug law enforcement. He said a recent study showed that the department was already too specialized for a city the size of Lawrence.
Special Events
Fine Arts
The procedure for promoting officers was explained in reference to a recommendation that objective civil service criteria be used as the basis for promotions.
A proposal that a minimum competency, to be demonstrated in quarterly tests, be offered for all fire fighters was reported to have been approved by the fire department regulations being printed.
Ruth Robbins, Des Moines, Iowa,
sophomore, will have to undergo painful raibes inoculations if a large setter dog that bit her near campus isn't found soon, a Watkins Memorial Hospital spokesman said yesterday.
Authorities search for dog
Applications Available at the SUA Office
The dog bit Robbins while she was jogging in the 1800 block of Naismith Saturday morning. She was treated at Watkins for a puncture wound to the hip.
it is known whether the dog had rabies, and if it the dog is found then not be
Robbins may be able to start for several days before the inoculations start, he said.
The animal was described as a large setter of a mottled tan and brown color. Persons who may have seen the dog are asked to notify the police immediately.
Films
The historical Elderidge House is the only restaurant of its kind in Lawrence. The hotel's atmosphere tells you this is a very special place. It is where you take people on a romantic date.
who are special to each other.
Valentine's Day '76:
THE ELDRIDGE HOUSE CLUB AND DINING ROOM
This Valentine's Day will be one of those times. For the occasion, we will be preparing a meal that reflects our love for you and your manner of courtesy and efficiency, and will—as always—prepare your food with care.
This Valentine's Day—
memories.
Let Eldridge House be part of your
Forums
7th and Massachusetts - 841-4666
Dining memberships available
OREAD BOOKSHOP
BOOK SALE
Today through Feb. 21
THOUSANDS OF HARDBOUND AND PAPERBACK BOOKS AT REDUCED PRICES.
In The Student Union, Level 3
Open Weekdays 8:30-5,
Saturdays 10-1
OREAD
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Pizza Hut
Luncheon Specials • 11:00 - 1:30
MONDAY THUR FRIDAY
Pizza Hut' Salad $ .45 Deep Dish Spaghetti $ .99 Above pasta served piping hot with Garlic Bread
Pizza Thin N Crispy -- any 10' single topping $ .179 Thick N Chewy -- any 10' single topping $ .224 Additional toppings 10' each
Sandwiches Sandwich Supreme $ .119 Salsa & Cheese Sandwich $ .119 Ham & Cheese Sandwich $ .119 Cavaint deep dish pasta $ .129 Sandwiches served either hot or cold with pickle and potato chips
804 Iowa 1606 W. 23rd St.
Pizza Hut
Mount Oread Madness
Watch Wednesday UDK for Details
H
THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
1420 Crescent Road • Lawrence, Ks. • (913) 843-4633
GIRLS AMATEUR NIGHT
$300.00
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For Winner of the
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2nd 75.00
3rd 50.00
4th 25.00
Show Time is 10:00 p.m.,
Tuesday, Feb. 10, 1976
Girls Sign Up in Advance.
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March 15-20
Cost $105⁰⁰
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 20 at 5 p.m.
LOCATIONS:
- Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
Three Winds Lodging on the Tripp
Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 20 at
PADRE ISLAND
March 12-21
Cost $121°
INCLUDES:
—Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
—Seven Nights Accommodations at the Sand Castle MODEL
—Private Pool and Fishing Dock
—Kitchenthefts (fully equipped)
Side Trip to Old Mexico
Linie Series Bus Service
Beer and Eats Partly at Padre
Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
INCLUDES
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
Dillon, Colorado
March 13-19
Cost $13700
GROUP FLIGHTS
INCLUDES:
--Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation (optional)
Five Days Lodging at the Lake Dillon Holiday Inn
--Four Days Skiing (Breckenridge/Copper Mt./A-
Basin/Keystone)
--Four Days Renaults (optional)
-Night Trip to Vail, Colorado
-Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
-Cross Country Skiing Available
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
If your group is planning a trip, see the SUA office about setting up a group flight. Stop by the SUA office and fill out a flight card as soon as possible.
Denver . . . . . . . . . . . March 12
Chicago . . . . . . . . . . . . . March 12
$ 101^{00}
Deadline for sign-up, 10 days Prior to Departure
$ 6900
Call 864-3477
HELPING STUDENTS GO PLACES IN A WAY THEY CAN AFFORD
6
Tuesday, February 10, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Wiley refuses to let success go to his head
By KEN STONE Associate Sports Editor
MINNESOTA
Recordholder Cliff Wiley
Friends and classmates of Cliff Wiley greeting him by that name wendy day.
They were calling the University of Kansas spinner "Congratulations," "Fine job," "American record holder!" and "Hew. great job at Idaho. man."
Just back from a weekend during which he competed in five races in two states, Wiley wasn't letting his new American record in the 100-meter dash swell his head.
"TI MEANS NOTHING by itself," said Wiley, whose 104 clocking in the rarely contested dash was three tents of a second old record and two tents off the world best.
"I need to back it up. Look at the guys who
wrote me. I never heard of those guys before."
Wiley was not kidding, unless you happen to be a fan of Bob Dardenkite, a member of the New York Athletic Club who ran the game when they were days when blocks were defy dug holes.
SPEAKING OF obscure record holders, Wiley pointed out that the world record holder in another rarely run sprint race, the 2006 Olympic gold medalist, a paleasman for Seats-Rebuck in Chicago.
"I'd really hate to see that of 10 in the 100-meter be the highlight of my season," Wiley said. "It sounds good to say, 'I'm an American record holder,' and it sounds
"IF I DON'T RUN well the rest of the season, I'll have to discard the whole season with the record. It would mean nothing to me."
good to other people, but I've got to back it up.
Wiley, Baltimore, Md., sophomore, said he would like to use the record as a "catapult" into the rest of the indoor track season, which consists of three big meetings: first a team practice with the Big Eight indoor meet a week later and the NCAA meet next month in Detroit.
"A GOOD SEASON for me," Wiley said,
"wouldn't necessarily another Big
Eight championships (Wiley is the defending 80-yard dash tiltlist). It would be an NCAA final spot in the 60, coming outdoors and making the 200-meters in the Olympics."
But Wiley still needs to qualify for the NCAA 60 first. By this time last year, he had run the qualifying time of 6.1 seconds on at least three occasions.
"I've just had one good race this year, the 100" be said, "That was my first decent meet for a good meet at Alabama City that got to get a 8.1 as soon as I step on the track."
BUT THIS HEAT, he's been running 6.2s, about a yard slow. Although he's won two races at 300 yards and contributed a 47.6 leg on the mile relay, his only short dash victory came in the 100 meters Saturday at Pocatello, Idaho.
Having conquered what he called "the concentration problem that I've been having," Wiley said he was ready to run 6.1. He also said "would be the beginning of my season."
THERE'S NO QUESTION about how Wiley would like his outdoor season to end, either at the finish line on the artificial field or in a sunny spot. "I sit there, and watch the Winter
Olympics, and they'll put on a commercial about the Summer Olympics," he said. "Min, that's two months away. I'm the one about getting good 200-meters in and making the team."
Sure would beat working at Sears.
words silence
over every Wednesday 12:00 - 1:00 pm for forth chapel
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Special Dinners $1.99 tax included
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—Dick Vermel, who coached UCLA to an upset victory in the Rose Bowl over Ohio State on New Year's Day, said Sunday to coach the Philadelphia Eagles.
Different Each Day
NFL's Eagles hire Vermeil
Each dinner served with egg roll,
egg drop soup, rice or fried noodles,
coffee or hot tea
MONDAY
Tonight, KU will play host to intrastate rival, Wichita State University. The game starts at 7 in Allen Field House.
This weekend, the team will travel to Manhattan to play in the Big Eight tournament.
With the Grandview loss, KU's season record fell to 11-10.
Chicken Chop Suey
The announcement, which was made by Eagle's owner Len Tose, said that Vermille had been given a five-year contract. It ended a coast-to-coast search for a successor to Mike McCormack, fired after the last day of the 1975 season.
Earlier, however, the Jayhawks defeated Drake University, the 79-69 in des Moines
Adrian Mitchell shot in 29 points and accounted for 15 rebounds, and Viette Sanders added 23 points but the University of Kansas women's basketball team lost to Grandview College Saturday, 87-80, in Des Moines, Iowa.
Women cagers split 2 games
TUESDAY
Green Pepper Steak
WEDNESDAY
Fried Almond Chicken
THURSDAY
Sweet & Sour Pork
FRIDAY
Beef Chop Suey
Seniors and Grad. Students:
kansas union BOOKSTORE
GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS
order your
Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
Feb.11 & 12 Wednesday, Thursday
2907 W. 61h 843-3300
Virginia Inn Restaurant
THE sirloin
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February 14,260-1976
Saint Valentine's Day really has little to do with the Saint himself. In actuality, we owe this day of flowers and sonnets to young Roman girls and birds.
The holiday began as a religious observance of the feast of Luperealia. Celebrations included purification and fertility riles along with men drawing love letters from a large urn and then courting the girl whose message they'd drawn.
In later years, there was a belief in England and France that February 14 began the mating of birds. This notion suggested that lads and lasses choose lovers and exchange gifts which have sin
6
February 14 began the mating of birds. This notion suggested that lads and assess choose lovers and exchange gifts which have since come to be known as virginates.
By coincidence, the martyrdom of St. Valentine fell on February 14 in 260 A.D. He wrote a farewell note to his jailer's daughter which he signed "from your Valentine."
From that year on the traditional celebration of lovers has been known as Saint Valentine's Day. Through the decades, flowers have become a symbol of love, fertility, and sweet-hearts and are now a Valentine's Day tradition in themselves.
On Valentine's Day, 1976, you have a choice. You can send a dozen red roses (secretiy—of course) or simply take a fist-full of daisies. Whichever you choose will be perfect for your Valentine—we promise. Not only will we give it our professional attention so you know you're getting quality, but you will be giving it your love. And after all, what more can a Valentine be?
Flower Shoppe
Fred & Jan Pence
1101 Mass.
841-0800
9:00-5:30
FIAT
FIAT IS THE BEST SELLING CAR IN EUROPE
FIAT
John Haddock Imports wants to see FIAT become the best selling import in LAWRENCE! Come in and see the reasons why . . .
FIAT 128 The car that made VW develop the Rabbit.
FIAT 128 has all the features of the rabbit but is priced hundreds of dollars less.
[Diagram of a black sedan]
FIAT 131 A FIAT designed with the American driver in mind . . . lot of room for 4. . . and a comfortable ride combined with traditional Italian qualities of excellent handling and braking.
FIAT X19 and 124
SPORTS SPYDER
The best combination of appearance, handling and comfort in the sports
PORSCHE
car-field. FLAT 124 is a handsome traditional sports roadster. FLAT X19 has been acclaimed the most exciting car in its field.
COME SEE THE FULL LINE OF FIATS AT JOHN HADDOCK IMPORTS AND SEE IF YOU DON'T AGREE!
John Haddock
IMPORTS
Full service Fiat dealer.
Specialized parts and
service technicians.
23rd and Alabama
Ph. 843-3500
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 10, 1978
7
Prejudice called mild
By PAUL SHERBO
Staff Writer
When William Shockley spoke on campus last semester, his controversial theories touched off a series of reactions. Charges and countercharges of prejudice at the University of Kansas were in newspapers for several weeks.
But various authorities at KU say that there are milder and subtler prejudices at work on campus than outright hatred of certain races.
The most recent affirmative action statistics, for April through October, 1975, listed 16 complaints at KU of sex discrimination seven complaints relating to national origin and five relating to race. There were also inquiries concerning discrimination because of physical handicaps, negotiation, age and other factors.
In the same period, there were 27 complaints of unfair employment practices, four complaints of classes not open to all students and four similar complaints about sexual harassment. There were also inquiries about financial aid and scholarship discrimination.
THEO FIGURES may be misleading, Bonnie Ritter Patton, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, said yesterday, because they indicate campus prejudices only in terms of those people disturbed by their actions. The numbers also may be deceptive because Affirmative Action's former title of Affirmative Action for Women, Patton said.
Patton said she defined prejudice as prejudgment of a person or group in the affective domain.
"I would guess that people of both sexes, all races, all classes are prejudged in one way," he said.
Shirley Harkiss, assistant professor of sociology, said she hadn't observed overt ICPs.
"That doesn't mean that prejudices
don't exist," she said. "The presumption is
that everyone is aware of the issues."
Most people tend not to worry about prejudice as long as there are no overt signs of it.
NORMAN YETMAN, associate professor of sociology, said, "You can have prejudice without discrimination; you can have discrimination without prejudice.
"It doesn't have any impact until it is discriminatory. Some kind of discriminator behavior."
Jacob Gordon, associate professor of African studies, said he thought prejudice against African women.
"I think we have prejudices in every society," he said. "KU is not excluded from the
"If there were not prejudices, there would not be an affirmative action program."
Prejudice is difficult to deal with in a midwestern state such as Kansas, Gordon said, because it is subtle. He said that prejudice should be eradicated by
educating people about each other's problems.
Gordon said he didn't think the problem could be solved by ignoring it...
"We ARE all American," he said.
"Small problems grow into large problems," he said. "I don't want to go back."
A black student involved in several campus and city human rights organizations who asked not to be identified were here and widespread hidden prejudices on campus.
"There's a systematic exclusion of minorities from various positions," the statement reads.
awareness of the problem is the first step toward doing something about it, he said.
LORNA GRUNZ, assistant dean of
woman, said that not all prejudices were
needed.
*Prefjudice is something that is a difficult process. It’s *K*’s learning process and it’s a very difficult one.*
Prejudices, or generalizations about people or groups, may never be done away with.
"This is something that we always have to strive for," she said, "because of the subtility of our blinders. I don't think we have an equitable situation at KU right now."
KU, in general, doesn't try to help the number of minority groups it recruits to adjust.
The dean of women's office tries to help women by providing moral and financial help, she said, but it doesn't restrict itself to helping only women.
"WHEN WE see that there is something that requires some question, she said, "we feel like we can change."
"We should have men in all roles. We should have women in all roles."
Roger Eisenbenger, director of Hillel, said there was some anti-Semitism directed toward the estimated 700 to 1,000 Jews at KU.
"The campus is very Christian oriented," he said.
Eisenberg said he was concerned about classes on Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath, and students passing out Christian literature.
"I have been stopped half a dozen times in campus," he said, "by people trying to say things."
"That to me is a very dangerous anti-
Soviet, even worse than the German
holocaust."
DEBBIE KRUNEGLEN, co-chairman of the Student Senate Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee, said the Student Senate was making efforts to understand minority situations through the recently formed minority affairs board.
She said the board was for the Senate and not for the problem of prejudice on the KU.
"Prijudice is not just on the KU campus," she said. "It's every place."
Alfie's UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 6th & Maine
"Try Our Fish Today Just for the Halibut" YOU MUST ASK FOR KU SPECIAL
WEE BIT— 1 Pc. Fish 'n' Chips $1.19
1 20° Soft Drink
1 Order Mushrooms (rea.'1.64)
Mon.-Tues.-Wed. — BEER $1.00 Pitcher (5 'til Closing)
"WE FRY HARDER"
Good 'til Feb. 18th
Esh&chips
—proposed that a copy of the proposed GSC constitution be included in the next graduate student newspaper, along with a final graduate students to vote on its ratification.
Try These: Fried Cauliflower—Pastrairn—Roasted Beef—Clam Fries
TIME TO
UPDATE
YOUR
IMAGE?
Goldnecker Optical
Distinctive Eyeware
742 Massachusetts
845 98
The Graduate Student Council (GSC) voted unanimously yesterday to have the Graduate Executive Council (GradEx) affiliation from all University departments and to set terms of employment for teaching assistants (TAs) and assistant instructors (AIs).
vestigating the possibility of training TAs and AIs would issue its final report next
GSC asks clarification on KU jobs
Bob Chiovietti, Lawrence graduate student, said points that needed student assistance for hiring, termination of employment, work conditions and the grievance procedure.
- nominated three persons to run for the Student Senate.
—proposed that GradEx contact the Graduate School Council, the Graduate Assembly and the College Assembly to ensure that graduate student seats on those bodies were filled.
—announced that the GSC committee report requesting fee wavers for TAs and testers has accepted last semester, has been resubmitted to De Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kananan are offered to all students who wish to LEASE HIRD ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAT HIRN
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times time
15 words or less $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00
equalitional word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
-nominated nine persons to run for GradEx.
Chiovetti said that Grad Ex probably
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Via Wednesday
EACH BOTHitional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
would appoint a committee to investigate the matter.
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.
COST **+** 10%~Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single items or package. Register for Call Drive. #638. 639n. Earnings 6 to 10. **ft**
FOR SALE
—announced that its committee ini pair of Davos Skis, 18% made in Austria,
$375.00; ski jacket, 25%, made in Austria,
$450.00; Bough for $365.00 will sell for $185 or
$285; ski boots, $450.00 will sell for $215.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These add can be placed in person or the UDK business office at 604-535.
Quitting business *bile-a-bargain!* Everything
from furniture to antique furniture, all-
ure furniture, large building furniture
disease. We also have fresh fruits and vet-
gables.
(Hwy. 40) Open 9:36- seven days, 8:34- 328.
(Hwy. 49) Open 10:36- seven days, 8:34- 328.
In other action, the GSC:
We can make your stereo sound better. -GUAR-
er details at Audio Systems, 307 E. 9th.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS- Regardless of any prices you see on your hifi equipment other than factory dump or close-out products benefit at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFE5.
Tromendone selection of guitars, amp, drums, bass, synths, keyboards. Shop Hose Keyboard Studios, choose from Gibbons, Tromendone, Green, and many others. All guitar strings from Green, and many others. Guitar string kit. $295.00 Keyboard Studios, $249.00 Keyboard Studios, $249.00
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of topics. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 168-page order catalog. Request Assistance. Los Angeles, Calif. 9025-4 (213) 477-8744.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
BELL AUF ELECTRIC, 835-906-3900, 9200 Wch (E)
ELECTRIC, 835-906-3900, 9200 Wch (E)
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Home Improvement Products. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704 N. Walnut Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90026.
CUSTOM JEWELRY. Professionally crafted gold and silver sculpture, conventional design, organic form. Executed by B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting. Variety of unusual stones. 814-3883 or 843-0707
For sale - VC Direct Format, Curvature, $20 (1)
for sale - JVC Direct Format, Curvature, $20 (1)
for sale - JVC Direct Format, Curvature, $20 (1)
For sale - Cs. Call 641-6758 between 9:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m.
864-4358
Chance of a Milfett 1969 Chevrolet Belair. Rx.
Call number: Call Gary Davis, 850-241-2100
$850. 850
FUR SALLE. Seal skinf, makruak, rabbit .25% off
organic shampoo, lotions, oatmeal, oils and
Musical Instrument, Instruments 6-string guitars,
Gibson banjo, one dulcimer all ready to play.
Gibbon banjo, one dulcimer all ready to play.
PV-600, two. Alice speaks with stands, mikes.
Cuit 841-2414 anytime.
***
Portable Smith-Corona "Cornair" 700" manual
portable two years old, but rarely used
Bail 924-85889
2-13
Bat trumpet for sale. Good condition. If inter-
called call 843-0581 after 3:00.
2:01
Hardwood Lumber and Plywood - Cut off pieces
from hardwood to fit your needs.
Services Center, 600 N. 31st Street (North Lawrenc-
tion). (800) 754-2929.
Must sell HP-79 Financial Calculator. Best offer.
Leave message at 842-787-212.
2.12
Max Factor Gloss-All flavors, plain and frosted at Round Corn Drug Store. 801 Macadamia Ave., Brooklyn, NY 11205. (416) 357-9400.
FENDER TWIN REVERB AMP. Almost brand
speaker for Sony TVs. Fender speaker.
Speaker caller. Call Me at 817-920-4567.
Honda 320-four. Late '74 excellent condition; under
6,000 miles. 995-814-7471. 2-11
Sony HP-610 A Stereo system dual 1211 tuner
Bose HD 7000 Series 2.5" speaker 2:11
Bose HD 487-4752. Spm. p. 2-11
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
800 845-7123
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Double Bed complete with mattress, box springs and frame. Good condition. Gt 742-82580. 2-12
Expedition Parka-National Outdoor Leadership
Large, Large. Fiber IIll. BII-8432 - 8437 m²
10,000 sq ft.
1688 Pontiac Caterina, excellent condition, all-wheel drive. $250 or best offer. 4-12 months keep trying.
3-7 years keep trying. 2-12
Slide-rule Calculator in excellent condition. Call 841-294-2500 at 3.30 p.m. for more information. x-16
193 VW Fastback, auto, air, radio, 56,000 miles
Best offer. 841-6846
2-13
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and talk us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTERSTONE MOBILE HOMES, 9 W. 6th St., Lawrence, KS
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exchange. 842-2500.
Room furnished with shared kitchen and barns for male. Borders KU & near town. No pets. Also efficiency apt. for male near town. No pets. 843-5787. ff
2 bdms, all util paid, on campus. Furn. or-
unfree. Free parking, a/c, pool. 843-993-1093.
New 2 to 3 bdm apartment near campus; park-
ing facility; efficiency efficiency apartment, unit;
843-757-9371
To subdue immediately, 2 bfer, furnished
by Union. Quick, great location, $175 call
Union. Quot, great location, $175 call
Two bake, apartment, newly carpeted, store and office apartment. Floor to ceiling to compete. Bus at the dorm. Office on second floor.
Attractive, clean. 6 bdm. house, all carpeted, 2 baths. 1 living rooms, 4 ining rooms, kitchen, family room, parking. Near campus, partially furnished, no pupil Call after 5 p.m. #843-6050
Roody apt. att. for one male, only $75/mo.
Roommate required.
Mail Call at 831-1514 to
2-12
Large room for man. Private bath-entrance:
2/1 blocks west of campus 843-7827. 2-12
Rooms available in a, cooperative house, $40
and above. Room size: pool table, water table,
dry good, dry good. Width: 2-1/2,
height: 3-1/2.
1 bdm. furnished apt. available immediately in
University Veracr. 8423 - 8493 - 1433, 2-16
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at the library. You can reproduce your 120 page thesis in 5 minutes! See action in for all of your copying and printing instructions. Quick Copy Center, 684 Manassas suite. 814-4900.
SKI-1 Mont Bleu is open, 10% less under new
Montant. Free beginners lessons (56 service
charge) 3 m.l. East on K10. 3 p.m. to 10 p.m.
weekdays. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sat-Sun. 842-235. 2-13
20 discount on selected items during our open house. Room 204, Bedridge House, 701 Mass. 10-5 Taste.
February Special- Musk, Chantilly, Heaven
Special- Haze, Glen Stuart, Haverford
phase 1 Valentine, Round Corner Heart
phase 2 Valentine
Remember your Valentine Felt. 14-Panthers
Brown Cardboard Cards. Round Corner Drill
Boxes. 80 Max. $1
SECRETS only few have mastered, true friendship, love, forgiveness and understanding promised by Jesus. He execlipt his pamphlets by mail. No object can bind her with name and address. Discovery 2-13 box 508, Tynecastle, Kameson 2-13 true demonstration and first
Overseas Jobs - temporary or permanent
Europe, Australia, S. America, rfc, etc.
$600-813/month. Expenses paid sight-
less. Postmaster's salary. Dept,
Dept, KA, Box 4490, Berkeley Ca 94014, 205
Employment Opportunities
YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL
THE CREWEL
THE CREWEL
15 East 84th 612-200
10.5 Monday, Saturday
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
843-1306 10-5 Tues. Sat.
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement in the field of credit card processing with one of the top 30 companies in U.S. degrees offered by SANJET, Inc., including expeness, profit sharing and bonus, fee paid, guaranteed income, suite ks4e, Suite Ks4e, Mkc, #6481 (B15-21-95), Mkc, #6481 (B15-21-95).
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE. If you are tempted to help your family need a young marriage couple to help us at our summer job, try to provide a private housekeeping cabin, completely furnished, nowing, more upkeep, weeping, carpentry, dining, newning, general upkeep, wearing coats and shoes, keeping dishes, etc. Time period. June 1 to July 3. Duties. For this job, the later the better your convenience. For us, the later, the better! Cert. 1000 Sunset Drive, Lawrence. Please give us your written write you write. Otherwise your wage is wasted.
TYPING
Students make money up to $85 per wk/part time at home address envelopes. Companies provide information regarding opportunities with these information regarding opportunities with these information Advertising Bldg. 1127, Atlanta, GA 30336 812-345-7878
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
$12,000
THERIS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is located at 300 E. 2nd Street, NW, in our Ourpetive in fast and affordable pricing.
Experiential typeiist, I.B.M. Selectic, deux-litres and term papers. Calm Fam., 484-759. f. 7599.
Experienced typist-term paper, papers, mite, note.
Specialized typing skills. Spoken and written spellings,
483-806, Mrs. Wright.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable,
conductive, and reliable. BS or equivalent,
some law, jp.electric, B.A. Social Science
and/or foreign equiv.
*Typing-experienced in dissertations, theses, and publications.*
Pica, carbon ribbon. Call Leile, 843-868-968.
*Typing-experienced in dissertations, theses, and publications.*
LOST AND FOUND
S. L.S. TYPING SERVICE Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (piaa). Preamble,魄落 client服. These. dissertations. term phone 013-869-2044. evening 2-27 Streich
Typist editor, IBM Pica filec Quality work
workbook Illustrations, Desertations works
Nail. 822-917-3927
Exp. typid, IBM Selectric, term paper three,
three-quarters of pages reading spelling printed
Jean, 841-309-2600
"Fund" advertisements are sponsored as a publication for Bank of America. Bank of America, 509 & Kentucky and Malls Shopping Center.
Small, white, long laired dog, lost Saturday near
18 & Mississippi, call 842-6730. 2-10
Lost: Maynard, a 5 month old male bengale
from Kentucky, Wednesday night.
Injury: 841-470-3521.
Silver bracelet, name and inscription on base:
823-1107 SUNSET Tues. 3:00-5:00 426-1107
keep identifying Leary
THE LOUNGE
Found: Money pouch, brown leather. East wint
identify. Identify contents. Call 643-859-1200.
p.m.
German Shepherd Huskie Cross pup. Female 10 week old, last lost week, around 12H 47M
Found. One of keys Prt. afternoon from west of Wesco. Case claim, in 111 Flint. 2-18
Lost: Black wallet in Allen Field House Feb. 5
2-13
Need ID's back
WANTED
Copy of book "Political Forties and Political Debt"
Cook, John G. 943-675 or 847-720
Contact Mike Galloway 943-675 or 847-720
Departedly wanted to buy: prizes of pictures of the Who concert in K.C. or will pay to use your negative. Close-up pictures especially wanted. 3129 Buria Theater, Shavivine Mansion 66205. 8410
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Male roommate. Park 25, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
Male roommate. Park 25, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
not required. Required.
usufit员: 842-2914
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Jersey City Mall to shoeburrow, Miami Beach KooKoKo
Jersey City Mall to shoeburrow, Miami Beach KooKoKo
Call 850-264-7144
Non-smoking roomsmate wanted to live with
you in a campus and campus-based building, including utilities,
and have internet access.
a quiet corner
Joseph Male to share house. Must keep Kober.
Mother to stay home. Must have 2 bedrooms.
Home mobile II home 60 or 84 jeep. Would like to live in a luxury apartment. Adventure female with TWA PA (7-13) for travel in Europe over Spring Nancy, $485/week.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATIT GOT YOU DOWN! If so, go help early.
102, 105, 111, 115, 117, 141, 849-1869.
Professional Research - term papers a speciality
Professional Research - term papers a speciality
Lawrence. Include your phone number. 2-10
Lawrence. Include your phone number. 2-10
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006. Math Tutoring offers 142, 500, 558, 627. Regular lessons or one-time upreparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
PREE TAX ASSISTANCE Governor's room-
Cash Offered by K.U. Accounting
Offered by the K.U. Accounting
2-10
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Tuiting in Math and Science, any age or grade.
Arthur Parker. 942-1345.
2-12
Want to give something "You-purchase" for Valentine's Day? Call us at 1-800-325-6456 or Lawrence include your phone number. 212-783-9222
SKI-1 Mont Bleu is open, 10% leas under new management - free beginner lessons (50 service charge) 3 m. East on K-10, 3 p. M-10, p. M-weekdays, 10 a.m. to 14 p. M-weekday. Sat-834-6233, 2-13
THE NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney has a great fiddle teacher. Also, alto saxophone folk and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin and clarinet, rock and guitar band. Call 816-8517.
Get a Winter T伞 + a Sunlamm from Round
Complete Kits. replacement kits -801 M5
-802 M5
Use Your People Book Coupon at Round Corner Drugstore—15% off. 801 Mass. 2-15
ART SHOW AND SALE BAPTIST CENTER
1629 W. 19th, OFFARDABLE ART-WOOD AND
ANIMAL WORK-MAN. Hours 9-5 Mon, thru Sat, 7-3
Thurs, 2-5 Sundays. Begins Mon, Feb. 9.
PERSONAL
MIDNIGHT MASS FRIDAY 13th at Jayhawk
Hotel, Parking Attn: Jessica,
Parking Option: No-Drive Bottle,
candle, basket,
Portrait Option: No-Drive Bottle),
phone: 516-205-7420,
sarahie. New members welcome.
S-13
The Vail family is long enough to
measure my Valentine's heart.
Have you ever tried to love all the people? 2-18
For your humpy a Valentine Gift. The SUPER
manual includes:
$39.99 Per I import, 147 Mass.
$59.99 Per I import, 268 Mass.
Compromise is only half-victory. Better temp-
erature, better compromised McGills McGilley III.
2-12
been required to be voted into the people' 246
Articulate any service which is required to be voted into the people' 246
not eligible for the APS investment program
and will not be awarded a PSP grant.
HELP WANTED
AVON- Start off the new year with excellent training at Lawrence and Lawrence and 206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-206-207. Mr. Ruffs, 812-812-812-
Nuke models needed during the following weeks: March 10th and Thursday, $500; April 1st and Monday, $300. The CNES materials manager, Eric Leroux, will be available on Wednesday.
Secretarial position, part-time. Afternoons,
4:30-10:00. Monday-Friday. 2.20 per hr. Must be able
to type office experience. Apply from
by mail. daily, 18:15.; Mass. Schumn. Foods
7337
2-16
ENTERTAINMÉNT
UEROPHRE BRAELA*AFHRCAAMA — Travel desk
UEROPHRE BRAELA*AFHRCAAMA — Travel desk
First Avenue, Tucker, Ga. 60841. (60841-
51) 212-7988.
armadillo bead.co
Now available once again exclusively for your listening and dancing pleasure that "Super D.J. J" and "STEVE LALLERNE" host 843-7102 or 843-9964 or 2-12 concerning party reservations.
RUCKY
MURDER
10TH JULY 1965
710 Mass. 841-794
MACRAME BEADS
BEADS large selection of sizes & prices Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
RECREATION'S FINEST
"If we don't got it you didn't want
to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrost Bowl
No one under 18 admitted.
Foreign Auto Parts
JAMES
Foreign Auto Parts
Discounts for Do-It-Yourselfers with Student I.D.'s
Parts:
843-8080
9th & Iowa
Foreign Auto Service
GANG
Expert Repair by Factory Trained Mechanics
Service:
843-5288
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
0
Tuesday, February 10, 1976
University Daily Kansan
@
FALLEY'S
RODEO ALL MEAT
WIENERS
49¢
12 oz.
pkg.
limit-2 pkgs.
Rodeo Golden whole SMOKED HAMS...or half Falley's Fresh-No Limit WHOLE FRYERS...lb.
2525 IOWA
NEXT DOOR TO GIBSON'S
OPEN 7 a.m.-MIDNIGHT—7 DAYS
PRICES GOOD TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 10-FEBRUARY 15
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
$1.89
lb.
49 $ ^{ \circ} C $
69c
Falley's Fresh Fluff rack
Ground Beef... 3 to 5 pound avg. $69¢
Heel Cut
Round Steak ... lb. $129
Sliced
Rodeo Bacon ... lb. $159
Rodeo
Sliced Bologna ... 16 oz. $99¢
Five Varieties
Ohse Lunch Meats ... 12 oz. pkg. $79¢
Swift Sizzlean ... 12 oz. $149
By the Piece
Wilson Braunschweiger lb. $79¢
Hot—Medium—Mild
R. B. Rice Sausage ... 16 oz. $149
Booth
Shrimp Sticks ... 14 oz. $149
$ y 29
$159
99c
79c
$149
79c
$1 49
FALLEY'S
TANG
BREAKFAST DRINK
27 oz. $1.39 regular $1.85
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 15
COUPON
MILK TANG
TANG
UPON
FALLEY'S
C. C. Biggs
KEEBLER COOKIES
14½ oz. 79c regular
97c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 15
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Country Kitchen
LOG CABIN SYRUP
regular
24 oz. $1.03
79¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 15
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Country Kitchen
LOG CABIN SYRUP
regular
24 oz. $1.03
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 15
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Glade Solid
AIR FRESHENER
regular
6 oz. 49c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 15
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Glade Solid
AIR FRESHENER
6 oz.
39c regular
49c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 15
COUPON
Borden's Ice Cream 88c /2 gallon
Ice Cream
88c
Van Camp
Pork &
Beans
3 16 oz. $1
cans
3
3 16 oz. $1 cans
Borden's Sherbet... $ \frac{1}{2} $ gallon 88 $ ^{\circ} C $
Kellogg's Granola Bars... 9 oz. 59 $ ^{\circ} C $
Nabisco Pinwheel Cookies 12 oz. 79 $ ^{\circ} C $
French's Chilli-o Mix ... 1 $ \frac{3}{4} $ oz. 19 $ ^{\circ} C $
Old Milwaukee Beer 6 pack $129 12 oz. bottles
Twin Pack
Pringles
9 oz. 79c
POTATO CHIPS
Yogurt
3 8 oz. $1 tubs
Meadow Gold
MR. PIBB—TAB
Coca-Cola
64 oz.
bottle 69c
3 lb. $339 can
Boden's Orange Drink ... 64 oz. $59^{c}$
Family Size Cheer...171 oz.$3^{99}$
Liquid Ivory...32 oz.$89^{c}$
Comet Cleanser...21 oz.$39^{c}$
20 oz. 59c
Welch's Grape Jelly 20 oz. 59c
64 oz. 69c bottle
Maxwell House Coffee
Coca-Cola
With Other Purchase
3 pound $129 can
Crisco
Chef Boy-ar-dee Beefaroni 15 oz. 2 for 89c
Chef Boy-ar-dee
Spaghetti & Meatballs...15 oz. 2 for 89c
Swift Premium Chili...15 oz. 2 for 89c
Food King Applesauce...15 oz. 5 for $1
Food King
Whole Purple Plums...29 oz. 49c
Food King Pears...29 oz. 49c
3
Cigarettes... All brands & sizes $3.99
Cheerios Cereal ...15 oz. 79°
Falley's Glazed Donuts...Doz. 99°
Kraft Koogle ...12 oz. 3 for $1
49c
MARGARINE
49°
3 lbs. $1 quarters
Parkay
Food King
Cut Green Beans...15 oz. 5 for $1
Libby Fruit Cocktail...16 oz. 3 for $1
Libby Golden Corn...16 oz. 3 for $1
Contadina Whole Tomatoes $14½ oz. 4 for $1
Food King Hominy...14½ oz. 5 for $1
Food King
Great Northern Beans...15 oz. 4 for $1
Chicken-of-the-Sea
Falley's Lo-Fat
gallon $1.09
Milk
Frozen Hash Brown
Potatoes
Kraft
32 oz. $1
pkg. 3 for 1
32 oz. $ 89^{\mathrm{c}} $
Pillsbury
CHUNK LIGHT
7. 5 oz. 10c tube
Miracle Whip
Bright Red Radishes... 2 6 oz. pkqs. 33°
Tasty Green Onions... 2 bunches 33°
Cherry Tomatoes...pint 59°
Sno-White Cauliflower...head 49°
Solid Green Cabbage...lb. 12°
Jumbo California Tangelos 20 for $1
Tuna
Biscuits
Franco-American
Spaghetti
6 $ \frac{1}{2} $ oz. 59 $ ^{c} $
4
Franco-American
Spaghetti
4 15 oz. cans $1
California Navel 138 size
SUNKIST
Oranges
20 for $1
Red or Golden DELICIOUS
Apples
20 for $1
Sunny day
PLEASANT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.84
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesdav. February 11. 1976
Wine popular with students
See story page 2.
COURTNEY
Statt photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Candidates debate
student body presidential candidate debate in the Kansas Union. Before the debate, Tom Curlon, student snappy executive secretary (secret, left), brief Vox Papers coalition members and former state senator from Iowa, argued that
Mark Anderson, Insight coalition vice presidential candidate reads notes over the shoulder of presidential candidate Dave Shapiro during a break in Tuesday night's
Societies face Title IX problems
Staff Writer
By SHERI BALDWIN
The dean of women's office has made efforts to force single-sex honorary societies and professional women's bodies, the student body officials charged yesterday.
Jon Lossner, member of Sachem Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, said, "The Dean of Women's office is now making improper claims and is reading things into Title IX before official guidelines come down. The committee has worked without due process, and thereby jump the gun to intimidate the groups into going coed before a decision is made."
TITLE 1X of the Education Amendments
Act of 1972 barred the University of Kansas
from receiving any education under this law.
Surgery report expected today
A special committee appointed to study the condition of heart surgery facilities at the KU Medical Center by Chancellor Ar-
nold P. McNaught was expected to release its findings today.
The committee was appointed last late year after charges by Robert Res, chief of cardioarthritis surgery, that the Med. department surgery facilities were inadequate.
organizations that discriminate on the basis of sex.
However, KU groups don't have to admit members of the opposite sex until a court or KU's Title IX review committee rules that they must.
The review committee on non-athletic organizations, including the single-sex honorary societies, is still writing its evaluations of various organizations affected. Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director and committee member, said.
SACHEM, FOR senior men; Mortar Board, for senior women; Owl Society; for junior men, and CWENS, for sophomore men are the four single-sex societies affected.
Other single-sex professional fraternities such as Phi Chi Theta, women's business society, and Delta Sigma Pi and Alpha men's business societies, are also affected.
Joosserand said, "We talked to women in Martar Board. They really didn't seem to know why they went coed. They said they were happy with their coed life," said Joosserand said, "why not now and be progressive."
BRUCE WONER, StudEx chairman and Sachem member, said, "Everytime we ask questions about this we continue to hear feedback," she added. "Saves these organizations must go good."
Ed Roldt,身学生 body president and Sachem president, said "the letter" was a misrepresentation of Chancellor Archie R. Hicks. The Dykes' committee ruling at this time. The Dykes'
letter said he would make a decision with
Counsel Mike Davis when there was a rulin
Dykes is scheduled to make an official ruling in July.
SHEERE MILLER, Mortar Board president, said her letter from Dykes was a reply to an inquiry from the Mortar Board national president. Miller said the letter had prompted the KU chapter to report at the national convention that an ultimatum has been issued to comply or not be allowed to exist anymore.
Miller quoted Dykes from the letter: "To remain in compliance, the chapter cannot be unanimous on the decision of the conference on Oct. 17 (1975). Of course, should the delegate votes to retain single-sex membership policies the University as required by law would have to withdraw its affiliation."
"I REGRET that this problem has occurred, for I am sure the framer of the original federal legislation did not foresee that organizations such as Mortar Board would be affected by regulations arising from the law."
Mortar Board voted to go coeducational nationally at the conference because of 17 campuses where similar ultimatums had been issued. Miller said other Big Eight chapters, including Kansas State University and the Universities of Nebraska and Iowa, were among those without ultimatums. CWENS has also gene coeducational
RICK VON ENDE, executive secretary to
the chancellor, said Dykes' letter simply recognized the wording in the TITLE II document. Neither Dykes nor Davis could be reached for comment last night.
Tia Pickrell, president of Phi Chi Theta,
said she and a member of the society's
Candidates air issues, opinions
See TITLE IX page 2
By MARTI SCHILLER
Tedde Tasheff and David Shapiro, student body presidential candidates, faced the issues and eyed each other in open debate in the Kansas Union last night.
The candidates spoke on the issues of the proposed satellite student union, the Kansas University Athletic Corporation (KUAC) ticket subsidy and Lawrence Gay Liberation, Inc., before a crowd of about 100 persons.
Tasheff said her experience and enthusiasm for the Student Senate were inseparable and she was well qualified to represent the student body. Tasheff, a senator for two years, said her work with two different Senates and student body helped to ensure that she was as qualified as Shapiro, who had only been a student senator for one year.
Each candidate and vice presidential runningmate made open remarks. Tedde Tasheff, Wichita junior, and her running mate, Steve Owens, Salina sophomore, the coin toss and spoke first.
SHE ALSO SAID she knew the committee structure and which committee to ask for her.
Tasheff said personal education was important and the student body president should be a good student as well as a good administrator.
Her coalition, Vox Populares (Latin for people's voice), hopes to get freshmen senators more involved in the Senate and to inform them from being a non-essential, she said.
Owens said he saw two new rules for the student body vice president in addition to the one she had already passed.
The vice president should be an adviser to first term senators, letting them know their opinions are being sought after and listened to. The vice president does the done through one-to-one communication.
OWENS SAID the vice president should
be the chief lobbyist for KU students in the Kansas Legislature. He pledged to push for funds to extend library hours and to increase support for women's athletics.
Shapiro and his running mate, Mark
Kelley, were senior, followed with
their opening remarks.
Shapiro, like Tasheff, emphasized experience as his main qualification for president. Shapiro said his experience in University government was broad.
Shapiro said he had experienced residence hall living and had gained insight by working with the deans of men and women as the president of Olver Hall. He also gained experience serving on the Association of University Residence Hills (AURH).
SHAPIRO SAID the major plank of the Insight Coalition's campaign platform was faculty accountability. Because students aren't allowed to enroll if they have an unpaid parking tickets, faculty members required to pay their parking fines, he said.
Shapiro said faculty members also shouldn't be allowed to check out books from Watson Library for extended lengths of time. He said that many professors had access to the library owned by their own books, and that the practice was denying students access to those books.
ANDERSON SAID the vice president's job involved administrative and public relations skills. The Senate in the past hadn't had common goals or been a very well-defined leader. Anderson said the vice president should be able to get everyone to work together.
He said the vice president needed to find out what services students wanted for their money and also needed to let the legislature know about KIT's needs.
Both candidates were in favor of the UUC ticket subset and last year's UUC ticket subset was too long.
See DEBATE page 3
Development budget OK'd by city
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
The Lawrence City Commission approved the proposed community development budget for fiscal 1976-77 last night after listening to skeptical members of the Lawrence Landlords Association (LLA). Kola Andrews, community development
Kyle Andregg, community development director, presented a $529,000 budget, $5,000 of which was earmarked for a housing survey.
BILL Lemes, LLA representative, said that the death would be due to death about lavance housing needs.
City Manager Buford Watson said the survey was needed because 1870 census reports, which provided housing information, weren't adequate for planning in
Lemes said he particularly opposed the proposed survey, which the League of Women Voters suggested, to determine whether students and University of Kansas students.
Mayor Barkley Clark said the survey
would be useful in acquiring federal funds for housing development.
The proposed budget calls for these expenditures: $25,000 for the Haskell Loop, $10,000 for the housing rehabilitation, $10,000 for surveys and planning, $13,000 for Lawrence improvement associations, $80,000 for aid development, $5,000 for housing fund and $5,000 for the housing survey.
State planners will review the total budget and send their recommendations to the Department of Housing and Urban Development, expected to approve the budget around June 1.
In other action, the commission said last night that it intended to adopt both the development outline prepared by the Citizens' Advisory Council, and Plan 95, a proposed development plan prepared by the Lawrence-Douglas County Planning
Clark said that if there was a conflict between the two plans, the city would abide
Clark said both plans were needed and suggested that the planning commission integrate the "Goals for Lawrence" in Plan 95 wherever possible.
Public hearings on Plan 55 begin today at 7 p.m. in the Community Building, 11th and Vermont. Hearings also have been scheduled for next Wednesday and March 3.
The commission also took action so that any city employee charged with a felony won't automatically be suspended from his job.
The commission amended last night a longstanding city policy so that such employees may remain with the city at the discretion of City Manager Ruford Watson.
KU, Haskell trying to bridge gap
By BILL UYEKI
Artist Writer
See CITY page 6
by Plan 95, which would be the legal document for the city.
Mike Davis, planning commission chairman, said the "Goals for Lawrence" program was an outstanding document but wasn't tested with Plan 98 zoning specifications.
Staff Writen
The American Indian student population at the University of Kansas has always been small, even though Haskell Indian Junior just a few miles from the University.
Out of this semester's enrollment of 21,368
students, the American Indian population is
less than half that of the United States.
Some Indian students at both schools have sad—and still say—there are three main reasons for this. First, the reasons are fear of prejudice from KU students, the University's reputation at Haskell as being difficult for Indian students in applying for financial aid.
Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, said recently that the university has schools to improve communications between them. These efforts include recruitment drives at Haskell and orientation programs to create interest in KU at Haskell, he said.
HOWEVER, administrators at both schools are optimistic about increasing the number of KU recruits from Haskell, one of the largest funding bodies funded by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BAI).
Bill Burges, dean of instruction at Haskell, said that recently, Haskell students interested in KU had received little assistance from the University.
THE ADMINISTRATION of Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, he said, brought about a "dramatic change" in the attitude toward higher education where we organized effort to bring them to KU.
Hutchison said a recent recruitment drive with ULEI effort to attract Haskell student
LORETTA FLORES, Anadarko, Okla,
senior, and Witcha-Pitawane Indian,
participated in last semester's recruitment
campaign that was optimistic about
the futures of the drive.
In the drive, KU faculty members and department heads went to Haskell to talk with students, Hutchison said. The drives were for five consecutive weeks last semester.
Haskell was a high school and trade school, Burgess said. In 1970 it became a community college, and added a liberal arts program to its vocational and technical
BURGESS SAID that in the past there had been a close association between Haskell and KU, but that it had been lost through the years...
This semester there are 1,001 students at Haskell, he said, representing 110 tribes from 32 states. Half of the students are in vocational training, and half are in vocational training, he said.
HASKELL STUDENTS haven't had favorable opinions of KU students, accuse them of being 'sloppy'.
*I found a tremendous amount of faculty and staff who are interested in getting involved with the program.*
"Just in the past one-and-a-half years,
this association has started to come back,"
Flores, an assistant to William M. Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, said she worked as a liaison between the two schools and had a good relationship between the two schools.
students at Haskell thought KU students were "rich, huskell class slubs."
American Indian students at KU, most of whom Haskell, has had a history of differ-
In 1972, the Committee on Indian Affairs (CIA), along with the Association of Mexican American Students, (AMAS) charged that KU's Supportive Educational Services and the Office of Minority Affairs to the exclusion of other minority groups.
In 1974, CIA joined MECA, the campus Chicago organization, in filling a complaint with the Department of Health. Education not responding to the demand for not responding to the student's needs.
The two groups had presented to the administration a list of demands in which they said they wanted more minority faculty members, more minorities in administrative positions, and more financial assistance available to minority students.
Last summer, the CIA evolved into the Native American Alliance (NAA), whose members emphasized the importance of the name Native American, instead of Indian.
ACCORDING TO the regional office of
ACCORDING TO the regional office of
an action has been taken on the complaint.
"We were the native Americans," David Brown, Lawrence junior, and member of the Arapahoe tribe, said. When Columbus discovered America, Brown said, he thought he was in the Indies, and named the natives "Indians."
EDGAR HEAP of Birds, Wichita senior and Cheyenne-Arapaho, who was a longtime volunteer.
See INDIAN page 5
WESTERN PASTEURS
Native art
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Native art
DePaul tribe, works on a painting for one of his classes in the
Delaware school of Fine Arts.
2
Wednesday, February 11, 1976
University Daily Kansas
associated press digest
Ford sians defense bill
WASHINGTON—Expressing deep disappointment at a provision prohibiting military funds for Angola, President Ford yesterday signed a compromise $112.3 billion defense appropriation bill.
billion dollars ensure money for defense operations for the 15-month period which sept. 30, and is $6.6 billion less than Ford had originally requested.
The most controversial section of the bill was the ban on U.S. military assistance to Angola. Rival factions are engaged in war there, and a Soviet-backed uprising is taking over the hand.
Bentsen drops out of race
AUSTIN, Tex.—Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Tex., withdrew as a national contender for the presidency yesterday, saying he would confine his campaign to his home state.
After studying the results of the early caucuses, I do not think it would be either useful or productive to continue campaigning across the nation," Benton said in a news conference.
sultanate. He said he would work now toward piling together a united Texas delegation for the Democratic National Convention in July.
Bentsen said he would concentrate his energies on serving Texas and the nation in the Senate. He will seek re-election to the Senate this year, he said.
Guatemala hit by typhoid
GUATEMALA CITY—Doctors in outlying areas of this earthquake-devastated country pleaded Monday for serum to an outbreak of typhoid and other intestinal disorders caused by spoiled food and contaminated water.
The emergency relief committee said 15,035 bodies had been buried, and unofficial sources said the final death toll might exceed 20,000. An estimated 40,000
Some business activity returned to the Guatemalan capital, but workers refused to enter the taller buildings for fear of new earthquakes and continuing aftershocks. Two more mild aftershocks rocked the city Monday but apparently caused no new damage.
Lockheed can't fund repayment of loans
WASHINGTON (AP) - Lockheed Aircraft Corp, which did outweigh $20 million in payoffs to foreign government officials, has agreed to sell the company, guaranteed by the federal government.
U. S. Comproller General Elmer B. Stea, in a Jan. 30 report to Congress, said that the bank's managers had worked through 1979 that were "sufficient to maintain the company's stability, but insufficient to liquidate its guaranteed bank loans." The bank's maximum time provided by law," he added.
The report also said that Lockheed's management was worried that publicity about the company's foreign bribes would harm sales overseas.
Staat's revelation followed testimony last week in which a C. Kotchian, Lockeck the chief operating officer, told a Senate subcommittee about the details of many officials, totaling millions of dollars, to foresee officials' effort to assure sales of company planes.
Sen. Frank Church, D-Idao, the chairman of the Senate panel, yesterday told members of the Japanese Diet (the Japanese parliament) that he didn't know
the identiry of Japans government
oficiaries at Lakeland Lock&Key
Church said subcommittee records didn't disclose the identities because Lockweed officials testified they were unable to supply the names.
Church said he didn't intend to pursue the inquiry further because he involves other church groups as witnesses.
re expressed confidence in the ability of the Japanese government to conduct its own investigation.
Church met separately with Dunsel Sato, a Diet member and representative of the governing Liberal Democratic Party, and with a group of six representatives of the Socialists, Democratic Socialists and Koralen opposition parties.
All had been sent to Washington to investigate disclosures made in hearings last week that Lockheed had paid some $12 million in "commissions" in Japan, and that about $2 million was passed on by Lockheed agents to Japanese officials.
Church said he informed the Japanese delegations that the subcommittee had no more information from hearings in executive session or from public hearings.
Wheat crop deteriorates
WASHINGTON (AP)—The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), said yesterday that the nation's winter wheat because of drought in the Great Plains.
In Kansas, the top wheat producing state,
in the nation, its harvest would be the
smallest in eight years.
Although experts say there is little chance that the United States will run out of wheat, a sharply reduced crop could help drive up prices of grain and consumer food prices.
According to the department's Crop Reporting Board, the condition of winter wheat, as of Feb. 1, was "below normal" in most areas of the country.
"Kansas wheat prospects are good in the eastern third of the state but poor to fair elsewhere," the board said. "Low topsil moisture and short vegetate cover left
many wheat fields subject to erosion from strong winds."
The Kansas Association of Wheat Growers estimated that the state's 1976 harvest would be 250 million to 273 million bushels, down 21 to 29 per cent from last year's crop of more than 350 million bushels.
A related USDA report Tuesday said that dry weather had continued since Feb. 1 and that in the past week the Great Plains' crop had still suffered from "dry soils and virtually no snow cover" to protect it from the wind.
Although important as bread grain, wheat doesn't affect consumer food prices as much as corn and other livestock feed grains. A skimpy wheat crop, however, can make fair prices of other grains upward and make it more expensive to feed livestock.
In Lawrence, a bottle of wine can be bought for $1 to $20. Students can make it themselves with anything from elderberries to the finest French and German granges.
Some students are even earning
the credit edit by fermenting a gallon of
it for them every week.
Cougars are buying more higher quality wine, and they know what they want when they buy it.
Pat Whitehair, manager of Mann's liquors, and posed that what sales were up was because the prices had been down.
Wine is an increasingly popular drink among students and they know more about it.
DEXTER·ITY
"Guys buy it when they're with a girl that they haven't taken out very often," Whitehair said. "They buy it for the atmosphere it lends; it has more class than
Wine merchants in Lawrence offered
wines for wine's popularity
students.
Although more male students come in to buy wine, Whitbaird said, female students make up the majority.
"Girl come in and buy more expensive wines for guys, usually when they have a girlfriend."
A clerk at Underwood's liquor store agreed that a date was frequently the day of their birthday.
Perhaps the most surprising reason for buying wine came from Fred Frey co-owner of Wine Country.
"It's good for socializing," she said. "They can take it with a bottle, a candle and an eclipse. What can they do?"
"Students say they buy wine to spil while they study," he said.
Although he agreed that more wine was being sold, and that people are more familiar with various wines. Frey said that he favored Ripon wines, such as Boones Farm and Riobie.
Other students, however, bypass the retaliator altogether and make all the wine
The three liquor merchants agreed that students usually spend between $2 and $4 for dinner.
DEXTER
Bob Jarvis, Leavenworth senior, said he had two gallons fermenting in his kitchen. He added that the gallons were
Staff Writer
A MAN IN A BUILDING CITY
We help you hike around town with the greatest of ease and the greatest of Dexters. Rugged and ready-for anything leathers with long wearing lug soles. And, they feel as good as they look.
DEXTER
McCalls
Hard Work in our Shoes
829 Mass.
Bv JACK FISCHER
Jarvis said that after about four months he would have wine of about the same quality as he could buy at a store and it would improve with age.
Wine's popularity is fermenting
the basic equipment to make one
allon of wine can be bought for $8.
If the allegations are valid, Shankel said the problem would be discussed.
Dil Alderson, dean of men and adviser to Sachem and Owl Society, said he would advise the groups to select their members to participate with the TIX IX information in mind.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said he had heard that possible pressure
coming from the dean of women's office
was a threat to the honorees who
discussed concerns with him.
Mortar Board and CWENS had found reasons in addition to Title IX for being coeducational Horne said. A broader spectrum of contacts after graduation, opportunities to work with men and the lack of opportunities his honorary were among the reasons.
McCallis
Two & Fourth Avenue, New York
Horne said she couldn't emphasize enough that both the Mortar Board and CWENS decisions weren't dean of women office decisions.
829 Mass.
PICKRELLSAID, "She (Horne) told us if we didn't comply we'd be considered a non-University group, would have to pay rent on meetings and have no faculty adviser.
Pickrell said that she and her adviser were told to act now because they eventually would have to and that all opinions were coming from the chancellor's office.
Roberts said that the most popular concentrates were Chablis and Burgundy, but that, for more money, exotic wines, beers and spirits, Johnisburg Riesling, could be made.
Gary Roberts, an employee of the Wine-Art store in Shawnee Mission, said their most expensive kit costs $21 and could produce five gallons at a time.
Roberts said almost any wine that is made commercially could be made at
The only legal requirement for a person in Kansas who wants to make wine at home is that he write to the federal government for a free permit.
"She didn't want us to try to get more members through an all-girl membership
John Pence, an enforcement officer for the state Bureau of Alcoholic Beverage Control, issued a Liquor Control Act exempted the making of wine for home consumption from its controls.
Title IX . . .
From page one
national executive council met with Pam
vice president to the dean of women,
with her
PITCHERS
$1.00
with any pizza
all day
Wednesday
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
PIZZA
1/2 Price or Loss
★ Ties Values to $ ^{5}10^{00}$ for $ ^{3}5^{00}$
★ 1 Group Sweaters Values to $'18^{00}$ for $'5^{00}$
Woody's GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE
★ Dress Shirts $6^95
★ All Outerwear Suits
& Sport Coats
Woody's Men's Shop of Topeka is going out of business,
EVERYTHING MUST GO! Tremendous savings on a store full of
quality men's clothing, with quality brand names. Everything
must go at Woody's Giant Going Out of Business Sale.
★ 1 Group of Fashion Jeans & Dross Slacks Values to *'400* for '995
Bankamericard
Master Charge
For students with a background in organic chemistry, and some understanding of biochemistry, the University offers courses in which the processes involved in making wine.
James Akagi, professor of microbiology,
teaches his students in Applied
Microbiology each biochemical change involved in changing grapes to wine.
Akagi said that the students used grape concentrate, warm water, yeast, and tannen, which helped the impurities to settle. The strain of yeast used has an im-
portent effect on the ultimate flavor of the wine, he said.
Woody's
925 Kansas Ave.
Iopoka, Kans.
The students in the class also study other kinds of biochemical processes in foods, ACDS.
During the course of a year, bacteria in the wine converts the acids to other weaker acids and the flavor becomes smoother, he said.
After the end of the semester, Akagi said,
he tells the students that they should allow
the wine to age for a year because acids in
the wine cause its flavor to be harsh.
1) State Colleges Coordinating Council. One minority representative is needed immediately to serve on this board composed of members of the Board of Regents, faculty, Senate presidents, student government president, and trustees. An interview will be required on February 16. (Saturday). An interview will be required on February 16.
2) Minority Affairs Advisory Board. Three or four minority students are needed to serve on this important University board which deals with all aspects of minority affairs at the University. Students will be selected on the basis of their application. Deadline is February 16.
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
Minority Affairs Subcommittee Announces Openings on Two College Advisory Boards
Applications may be picked up at the Student Senate office. Room 108 on LaTeX, the University of Texas completed applications to the same, you may call me, my cell number: 212-456-7890.
Spring BOOK SALE
Hundreds of quality hardcover and paperback books
40% to 75% off Thursday, Friday and Saturday
FRIDAY &
THURSDAY, 9 a.m.-9 p.m.
ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center
SATURDAY, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
9th & Iowa
Phone 843-6424
—NOTICE—
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: John House, Student Senate Treasurer
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
1. Attend a TRAINING SESSION conducted by the Student Senate, Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following times:
FEBRUARY
FRIDAY, February 13, 2:00 p.m.
No other sessions will be held this month.
Contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 844-3746 to sign up for one of these sessions, or for additional information.
funded from the
---
Student Senate activity fee
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 11, 1976
3
Oklahoma part of Tallgrass bill
By KELLY SCOTT
Staff Writer
Supporters of a Tallgrass Prairie Park in Kansas may have to share it with Oklahoma if the National Park Service selects a $2,900 acre site that stretches from northern Oklahoma to the Flint Hills in southern Kansas.
A bill proposing the Kansas park was introduced into the U.S. House of Representatives in July by Rep. Larry Winn, R-Lawrence.
The park service has narrowed 87 possible sites from across the country to three, but only detailed plans for the area including part of Osage County, Okla, and the eastern slope of the Flint Hills have been issued.
Charles Stough, president of Save the Tallgrass Prairie, Inc., said yesterday that five persons from the organization who were involved in the management would study the three sites and write a report of them within 60 days. The Oklahoma-Kansas site hasn't been
The Oklahoma-Kansas site hasn't been officially chosen, he said.
Sough said the group had hoped to obtain a public hearing so that they could testify before the Insular Association subcommittee of the Senate, where the bill is now pending. In the House, where the bill is now pending.
James Hamrick, associate professor of botany and Lawrence Sierra Club chairman, said the progress of the park proposal could ston there.
Rep. Joe Skubitz, R-Kan., is the ranking Republican on the house subcommittee and he opposes Kansas land being taken up for a park, Hannrick said.
"Every year (Rep. Larry) Wun put the
yearly year Skullbuck shoots it
down," he said.
Skubals, the other Kansas congressman and Sena. Robert Dole, R-Kan., and James L. Bickel, R-Kan.
Congressmen and senators from other states, where the Sierra Club has supported national parks, have worked for the parks, Harris said.
Winn is the only Kansas congressman who supports the park.
Only five families live on the Osage
land, and they said, and they are
lesses, not owners.
He said that maximum oil recovery of any oil deposits beneath the land in Kansas had already been made. In Oklahoma, however, there is opposition to the park because not all potential oil lands have been explored, he said, and there may be trouble in obtaining the rights to the land from the Osage Indians who now own it.
Hamrick said another argument against the park was that it would drastically reduce the amount of farmable land in Kansas.
Skubatz thinks his district, which includes the area that would become a park, is undergoing major changes.
"Environmental groups in Kansas don't have the vote clout they carry in Colorado and Wyoming," he said. "At least, not as much as they do to invests in the western part of the state."
One advantage that the bill might have this year, Hamrick said, is that the park
Debate . . .
From page one
SHAPIRO SAID that $10,000 was a more realistic allocation and that there should be some balance in the amount of money the senate allocated to organizations.
Tasheff said that student representation on the KUAC board wasn't what it should have been and that the Senate's commitment to KUAC should be redefined.
Shipard, as chairman of the Senate Sports
Board, was a representative on the
KIUAC board.
BOTH CANDIDATES were in favor of some sort of satellite union facility.
An $7.50 increase in student fees for the next 30 years wasn't a completely unreasonable way to finance the new building, he said.
Shapiro said that, because of the 99 per cent occupancy of the Daisy Hill residence halls, and the locations of the new law building and new fine arts facility, west campus had a definite need for the services a satellite union would provide.
STUDENTS COULD have a restaurant, bookstore and check cashing services for students.
Owens recognized the west campus needs, but said that $7.50 was too much to ask students to pay when they could have essential services for $4.50 a student.
The candidates were asked to reveal any skeletons they had hidden in the closet.
Shapiro took his flight to Madison, Wis., paid for by KUAC, was a potential skeleton. He defended his action of accepting the trip by saying it gave him a chance to be an alumnus for the University. He insight into the workings of the KUAC board and was similar to the Kansas Honors Banquets because it gave him contacts with alumni.
Tasheff, Anderson and Owens said they had no conflicts of interest.
Tasheff and Shapiro favored a better campus transportation system. They both attended the Senate Transportation Committee conducted by the Senate Transportation Committee would lead to Federal funding and an agreement with the Lawrence City Commission for an expanded and improved
TASHIEF SAID she would support an increase in the student transportation fee, which subsidized KU-On-Wheels, to fund the transportation study or to support the present system.
Shapiro would support a fee increase if a federal funding bid by the Lawcity Commission for a city-wide bus system failed.
Kansas State University recognizes the campus gay liberation movement. The candidates were asked for their response to questions about harassment and firing, Lawrence Gay Liberation, Inc.
"It's a very touchy subject," Shapiro said.
SHAPIRO SAID the group shouldn't be recognized or funded.
Tasheff said the Senate shouldn't recognize the organization until the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs did. It shouldn't be funded because many of the people the organization served weren't KU students, she said.
service has narrowed its consideration to three prime park sites.
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The bill's opposition has become localized, Stough said, and could weaken. Harrisck said the Sierra Club had hoped Skubtz would provide land and water yet, but said that Skubtz had recently announced plans to run for re-election this fall.
The bill's opposition has become localized. Slowly said, and could weaken.
The issue of the Tallgrass Prairie Park in Skokitty, a local issue in Skokitty's district, he said.
being 'soft' on pro-park people, ' ' he said
They actually acuse candidates of
s out on pro-park people," he said. Also, candidates that the Club learned were thinking of running for Skubie's seat to the park than to the park with Skubte. Hamrick said.
If Skubitz retired, a Kansas representative wouldn't be on the subcommittee. The bill, if recommended favorably, would proceed to the House Interior and Imaginal Affairs Committee, where representatives from states that might be favorable to conservation issues would consider it, Hamrick said.
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Wednesday, February 11. 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
THE HAWKESON SPORTS BASEMENT
Spring awakens
And it has come again, verily peeking out from among the mundane February days. Spring, or at least its imposter, has called to make us wistful, dreamy and hopeful of better days and brighter skies.
It is almost certain that this brief interlude we are now enjoying will end all too soon. The last frost of winter hasn't yet been seen this year.
But while it lasts, we can enjoy the warmth and feelings of "to hell with it" that invariably arrive when we walk, cut classes—and we throw frisbees.
In fact, the frisbee has almost come to symbolize the arrival of spring at KU. The round disc is a reminder of our past—a past filled with good times and good friends. The frisbee has been to this generation what yo-yos and jacks were to previous ones. The great man never loses touch of his childhood.
It is reassuring that such a
phenomenon as spring should continue to amaze and inspire people century after century. Gaius Valerius Catullus wrote simply that "Now spring brings back palmy warmth." Emily Dickinson said that "A little Madness in the Spring is wholesome even for the King." But Richard Eberhart perhaps expressed the feelings of young spring best when he said, "This fevers me, this sun on green, On green glowing, this young spring."
So be fevered—there's good historical backing and evidence.
Do something crazy, something impetuous. Go ahead and whistle while you walk down Jayhawk Boulevard, or sing if it hits your fancy. Take advantage of the warmth that's here for all too short a time.
And when the frost comes again, if it is already creeping in, something that can be dealt with
-The Office Cat
WASHINGTON — The old rule prevails: when man bites dog, that's news. Former Sen. Eugene McCarthy, may the saints join in? He's a little news. He has his teeth into Common Cause.
McCarthy bites watchdog
media," warned the two exalted ones, "to measure candidates' performance against the enclosed standards." They asked McCarthy for a written response.
In case the matter had slipped your mind, McCarthy is a
The identical letter went to other avowed candidates for the presidency. Their flatterul
By James J.
Kilpatrick
(1) Washington Star Syndicate
(C) Washington Star Syndicate
"We will be calling on our members,the public and the
candidate for president of the United States. He is the most refreshing candidate in years. He is the candidate of No Party. His nomination is therefore not an obviousventional candidates are skittering across the land, desperately wooing the voters, McCarthy is at home, finishing a book on the ideas of Alexis de Lesseps, seriously speaking, the two of them deserve each other.
Back in November, McCarthy received a letter from John Gardner, chairman, and David Cohen, president, of Common Causes. These two enunciations, in response to the criticism wished to remind McCarthy that many political campaigns had become more exercises in "image manipulation and issue evasion." Their supremacies told McCarthy that new standards of integrity, responsiveness and accountability have been Messrs. Gardner and Cohen had prepared such a list of standards. Copy enclosed.
responses soon came pouring in. Birch Bashy wrote that he had no hesitancy in subscribing in full to the Common Cause organization. Joy Benten assured their motives and conduct would be consistent with their goals. Jimmy Carter delivered his wholehearted endorsement. Fred Harris sent three single-spaced pages of text to Jackson, which Jackson said he had directed his staff to see that the goals were achieved. Gov. Milton Shapp declared his strong endorsement and delivered his pledge of adherence. Sargent gave him two pages of fulsome allegiance. Mo Udall sent three.
Alas, the royal highnesses of Common Cause got no such success as Mr. Carney served turned the letter over to his campaign chairman, Ronald Coccome, who responded to John Gardner by return mail as
know who the blazes you think you are. As a campaign we are responsible to the voters and not to the people in our境遇 our actions and motives. We do not need you to do so, and we know the people of this country do.
"I find this communication insulting. I don't mind telling you that if any citizen controls your cellphone over your arrogance, I don't
"In short, you can take your enclosed standards and stuff them in your ear!"
Welles' Lee majestue. King John was not amused. Gardner delivered himself of a pertentous conclusion: McCarthy "must disagree with the standards or he cannot live with certainty." No other possibilities had occurred to El Supreme.
Said McCarthy: "John Gardner has the distinction of being the first person in 25 years of public life to question my own leadership. John Gardner to meet him 'in any public forum to discuss Common Cause's campaign standards, his record and my record—and my standards'." The moment, the matter stands.
Clean Gene has taken the same blunt approach to demands from other quarters that he make public his income yearly. He works 16 years, along with his medical reports. He proposes to be the judge of his own integrity. If John Gardner is so hipped on reports, disclosures and statements, he or own, or show them in his ear.
It is high time, it seems to me,
that a few men and women in
public life stood up to the
arrogant demands of the new
inquisitors—including the
inquisitors. The press, the
businessmen, so on, at least in recent memory,
was Sen. James L. Buckley of
New York. He once told the New
York Times where it could go
with its impudent interrogatories.
Right on, McCarthy! There are some of us who doubt that it is truly necessary to know and be prepared to handle Humphrey or the lower bowels
of President Ford. Even presidential candidates are entitled to some privacy. McCarthy's tax returns may be of interest, requesting to know that he's deep in Tocquegua's ideas.
CLEAN
GENE
WESTPALH
Thieves cash in on stolen art
A picture is said to be worth a thousand words. But for three thieves in France, 119 Picassons could bring $4.5 million.
Industrious criminals throughout the world are discovering how to win business. The workers in a luxury business. Since World War II, more than 44,000 works of art have been stolen from Italy alone. Of this number, 26,000 have been taken in the past nine years.
The robbery of the Picassos from the Palace of the Popes at Avignon, Jan. 31, was the biggest, but one of the greatest. But the robbery was only one of a series in a country where nearly 5,000 master paintings are stolen each year. Within the last two weeks, a precious 14th century Italian Louvre, and 125 Picassos prints valued at $50,000 disappeared from a Paris art gallery.
police recovered 25,000 pieces, but this was only about one half of the number stolen. In May it was a major Matshef Girl in Britain who was shot dead on its signature of frame, leaving Matshef's signature dangling on a flap of
When art thieves steal a masterpiece, they are stealing more than an expensive commodity. Most of these works are in the public domain, so there is no amount of money. They are an expression of a particular
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
all artworks would discourage thieves because it would make the sale of the art to legitimate dealers impossible.
But thieves have found a new way to cash in on the stolen property. Many of these artworks are insured for huge sums of money. Thieves are now finding that the insurance company ransom a ransom to reimbursing owners for the full value of the artwork because the ransom is generally much less. As long as museums and insurance companies ransom the ransom amount, the thieves continue to make their livings at these illegal endeavors.
canvas from the stretcher. The painting was never recovered and it can never be replaced. Authorities, seeking to cut down on the number of robberies, have new ways to protect the artworks. It has been suggested that a systematic cataloging of
Authentities are looking for other means of protecting artworks from robberies. The problem is of particular concern in Italy where security is lax and famous works are
Readers Respond
prevalent. One suggestion has been to move the artworks from churches to museums where security is tighter. Another is to use stringent proof cases or employ proof cases or employ other stringent copyright measures.
The sad part is that many of these artworks are never recovered. From 1970 to 1972,
These measures may help protect the works, but at the same time the art lover will end up suffering. Whether the viewer must see a distorted view of a glass-enclosed vantage point where the object is held by an armed guard, the aesthetic value of the work will still be diminished.
culture and an artist's emotions. Although they can be copied, copies can never replace the original. The works are a legacy of times past but not forgotten.
Review misses point
To the Editor:
Not meaning to be sarcastic,
we have been really impressed
with Eve Rapport's wide
knowledge of theatre and
literature. But it does seem a
shame that she should employ
her knowledge at the expense of good reviewing.
It was Rapport, one may recall, who began her review of the play "Consponsors" by saying, "Like Woodcott Gibbs, I distrust puns." Well, like Albert Schweitzer, we distrust
What has developed is a situation where the masses must suffer the consequences for the actions of a few. And as the robberies continue, one can expect that until one day valuable artworks will be locked in vaults where they are of value to no one.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekly
publication, The Journal of Science. Published
periods. Second-place postage paid at Law-
erian post office and $15.00 for a semester or
$18.00 in Dean's County and $19.00 in
Beech Creek County subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through the University of Kansas Post Office.
An All-American college newspaper
Editor
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor Yael Abukhak
Hazel Bargell Assistant Campus Editors Jim Bainan Assistant Campus Editors Stephen Bainan Photo Editor David Jefferies Sport Editor George Mitchell Joy Kueker Associates Sports Editor Steve Stone Entertainment Editors Mary Amy Huddleford Copy Chiefs Mary Amy Huddleford Jane Maita May Gibson Artist Allyon Gleen News Editor John Hickey Brent Anderson Wire Editor Kelly Scott Chuck Alexander Contributing Writers John Johnson John Bates
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reviewers who draw nonsequitur parallels between themselves and very famous people.
NOW RAPPORT informs us that "Slow Dance on the Killing Ground" is "full of the gritty realism that delighted Elia Kazan and the Actors' Studio." She lets us know, however, that she herself is not to be so easily surprised. The author does so in a review that seems to miss the whole point of the play.
Obviously, whether Rapport missed the whole point of "Slow Dance" is a debatable topic. What is not debatable is that her play contained one of the shabby characters she played. She gave away two of the most important plot twists, moments that had obviously been saved for the end of the movie, with the specific purpose of surprising the audience. Since this review appeared after only the second night of the 10-night run, Rapport was undermining the playwright's purpose for the people who will see "Slow Dance."
As was said above, doubtless Rapport is very well read and very intelligent. But it would be more useful to spend more time analyzing the plays she sees, and a lot more time studying up on good review-
Valerie J. Meyers
Overland Park senior
JoAnn Multhill
Perry senior
...I SEE THE ΔRΔB TEAM HAS ΔRRIVED.
WESTPHAL
WESTPHAL
n e c o f w n
University Dally Kansan
Wednesday, February 11, 197
5
Indian complaints
From name one
"I'm sure it wasn't intentional, but maybe an oversight." Burress said.
This problem was solved about 18 months ago, he said, when University officials went to the central BIA office in Albuquerque, N.M.
BROWN SAID that to receive aid from both BIA and KU's Office of Student Financial Aid, Indian students must apply to both offices. The University doesn't guarantee that BIA will match the amount provided for each student by KU, he said.
Jerry Rogers, director of the Office of Student Financial Aid, said Indian students an excellent financial program through ALT "that wasn't available to other students.
Sometimes students who hand in applications late make excuses about why.
THERE IS no special program from his office for Indian students, he said. They have to apply for on a regular schedule, and if not on time, they will not get on their financial, not ethnic, background.
Also, some minority groups have problems with the applications forms for financial aid, Rogers said, because their parents may not have had much education, and the forms are long and difficult to fill out.
A STUDY BY the Office of Affirmative Action showed that Indian students in fiscal 1975 years comprised less than one per cent of the applicants for federal aid from the Office of Financial Aid. It also showed that Indian students received less than one per cent of all allocated federal funds, which didn't include their own BIA grants.
One Haskell student described the trouble he had setting financial aid.
"We can't award a certain number of scholarships or aid to each ethn group." *K.*
MARTIN LEVIER, a Potawatomi-Kickapoo Indian in his third semester at Haskell, said that he was accepted to KU last October. He took his forms into the gymnasium and took them out (i.e., and the forms were then sent to Shuwnee, OKa, where Leviere said, he was OKa.
To be eligible for aid from the BIA, a student must be at least one-fourth Indian.
His eligibility was proven at Shawnee, Levier said, and his forms were sent to the A regional office in Anadarko, Oklah. LaRue said he hadn't heard from the office since.
Charles James, regional director of the BIA office in Anadarko, explained why some delays may occur in the government agency.
"We have to establish a control on financial aid or else it gets completely out of hand."
"We have to go through bureaucratic procedures," James said, "because we never have enough money for all the applicants.
ACCORDING TO Burgesk, Haskell
students permit education in KU,
social work at KU.
Will Coleman, supervising counseling psychologist at Haskell, said that KU also attracted Haskell students in prelaw studies and fine arts.
Not all students want to go back and help their people at their reservations; he said.
they go back and help their people at their resorts in Andalusia. According to a study he did at Haskell, Coleman said, 98 per cent of Navajo tribe migrants in the north have vocational vations to their people, but 30 per cent
of Creek tribe members want to return to their reservations.
THE CREEKS, are one of the five tribes who are no longer concentrated on ranching.
Coleman said that not all Haskell students did well at KU, and he knew of Haskell students who had not done well at KU.
"It depends on the individual," he said. Some of our students can go there to KU.
Baker University and KU don't have enough people who understand the ways of Bakers.
"At a higher education level, there should be more humanism, more understanding," Coleman said. "On the whole, I think the difference between KU and Haskell is improving."
OTHERS AGREED with Coleman about the growing relationship between KU and Haskell.
Pat Melody, instructor in speech and drama at Haskell, said frequent visits from KU theatre faculty had helped build interest in theatre and drama at Haskell.
Many Haskell students go to KU and major in theatre, because of a good relationship established by KU faculty members, said Melody, who received undergraduate and master's degrees in theatre at KU.
BURGESS SAID, "We've always had people who wanted to be messy, but we knew that the pieces together."
One of the "pieces" is the Community College Transition Program, the result of cooperation between KU's Office of Admissions Affairs and Haskell's administration.
The program, originally designed to give students from small rural high schools a two-week summer orientation at KU, was created to include junior college students, Burges said.
IN THE NEW program, students who stayed at KU during the summer could gain eight hours of credit, he said. One good part of the program, Burgess said, was that the attendees the summer orientations were not obligated to attend KU in the fall.
14 All Haskell students who attended the 1975 summer session are now at KU, he said. About 30 students are expected to participate in the program this year.
"The person who has been instrumental in helping native American students has been Vice Chancellor Balfour," Heap of Birds said.
Burgess said a different attitude at KU awards Haskell accounted for the improvement.
THERE HAVE been three native
American students, including Flores,
who began their studies at Yale.
Most NAA members said KU was becoming more helpful, but many complained about the transition from Haskell to KU.
Dawna Riding In, Gallup, M. N., junior, and a Pawnee-Wichita Indian, said that she last 38 hours when she transferred to KU's football team because "the courses weren't equivalent."
There is a totally different atmosphere in KU classrooms, compared to Haskell," she said. "Here, students compete for attention. At Haskell, nobody talks at all."
BROWN SAID, "$Some Indian students
form a class, and they are
forced to be by professors."
Another problem for Haskell students coming to KU is the image of KU being compressed. The image is
Robert Dumont, Kellog, Idaho sophomore and a Flathead Indian, said some people had told him that going from Boys Town to Oxford"
"I stayed out of school for a year because everybody told me how hard and bikU KU
"ITHINK there's a lack of awareness of what's going on at Haskell," he said.
The courses at Haskell are comparable, if not better than at KU, said Dumont, who said he had a 3.7 overall grade point average.
was," said Secondine, who has a 4.0 average after one semester at the University.
Brown, a prelaw student majoring in
"People think Indians get a free ride through school, when we really don't," he said.
There is also a misunderstanding about the Indian student's finances, he said.
journalsism, said, "KU" overblowed, and Haskell's underrated."
BURGESSaid one problem at KU was the University's fail to adopt the new public higher education institutions, in which each student were split between the BIA and the institution.
To pay college costs, the Indian student has to "fight through the BIA," he said.
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6
Wednesday, February 11, 1976
University Daliv Kansan
Educator teaches teachers job hunting skills
By ANITA SHELTON
Charles Stuart, superintendent of schools for the Clay County school district, is the educator in residence" at the University of Arkansas at Pueblo. During the week, Stuart will visit classes;
During the week, Stuart will visit classes,
lecture and conduct seminars.
Stuart said yesterday he would visit approximately 15 undergraduate and graduate classes in areas like music, art and learning theory.
During the classes, Stuart said, he will answer students' questions.
He will talk to between 300 and 400
and will counsel individual
individuals when possible.
Stuart, who received his M.S. in school administration in 1982, said the focus of the
M. G. BURGESS
Charles Stuart
visit and especially the seminars, would be who planned to enter the sash market.
He said the seminars would give information about preparation for interviews, and it might be useful to get acquainted with them.
I TAX on those who plan to apply for jobs will also be discussed. Stuart said.
Stuart, who has been superintendent of Clay County U.S.D. 379 since its unification in 1966, said his advice for those applying for jobs as teachers was to know the community for which they were interviewing. Being yourself is also important, he said.
Stuart talked about the profession of teaching.
Stuart said the personal interest shown to him by a teacher inspired him to become a teacher.
"Every child wants to feel he's liked or loved, and needs to succeed at something." Stuart said. "It's the teacher's job to make sure that happens."
Stuart, a teacher for seven years, reacted favorably to the School of Education.
Stuart said he thought the "educator in residence" program was good.
Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said he thought updating was
"The whole idea is for me to come as a practitioner to perhaps give a more up-to-date look at the situation for students," he said.
"I have been extremely pleased with the student attentiveness, the quality of their questions and their desire to understand," he said. "I feel good about what I've seen. The atmosphere here gives me a good feeling."
Scannell said the program also helped demonstrate the respect the school had for the teachers and administrators of the state, and their efforts.
The "educator in residence" program was established in 1972 as an enrichment activity for KU students and outstanding practicing educators of the state.
"I guess all schools of education are concerned a little bit about maintaining close contact with the real world," Scannell said, "and we feel that by bringing an active, engaged community into schools to this campus that we can benefit from the opportunity for interaction."
HEW threatening states
Scannell said educators were nominated for the program by various professional organizations, and a University committee made the selection. An honorarium is paid to the educators in association to the educators during the time they are in residence, Scannell said.
Instead, the administrators regard the HEW charees as unfair.
"we both use the same facilities; we both have the same instruction," he said. "There is no point in that."
"They say that we are sexually discriminating because the boys and girls don't meet together." Marguerite Rice, Kansas department secretary of the Human Rights Commission, doesn't meet together, but we certainly haven't had any complaints about it."
Though the programs don't receive federal funds, they are assisted by state high schools and KU, which do receive federal funds. The students under the legal constraints of Title IX.
But Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 prohibits the use of federal funds for programs that are sexually abusive. Boys State and Girls State programs are.
Dino Spigarelli, executive director of Boys State, said that, although the programs were separated by about one week, they were essentially the same.
Too many discipline problems would arise if the two programs were held at the same time, using the same facilities he said. And, because most of this summer's students have already been selected, this summer's allars have been set. he said.
Boys State, which draws from 900 to 1,300 boys from across Kansas, will begin May 30.
Girls State, which begins in mid-June usually draws fewer than 400 girls.
Mary Plaik, former director of the American Legion Auxiliary-sponsored Girls State, attributed the lower number of girls in her class to more supervisors were required for girls.
"Parents expect a little more supervision of girls," she said. "That may not be true in our culture."
THE HEW charges of discrimination prompted Rep. Keith Sebelius, R-Kan., to propose legislation that would exempt the Boys State and Girls State programs from Title IX. Organizations such as the Boy State College Foundation and America are exempt from Title IX.
The Sebelius proposal would provide the same status for Boys State and Girls State.
J. J. Wilson, director of residence hall housing, said the $45,000 generated from the two programs was a boost to the University's residence hall maintenance.
"In terms of the whole budget, that's not
he said. But 'It is a sizeable kill
of money.'
City ...
Watson, who supported the decision, said he wouldn't suspend an employee if his continued work was in the best interest of the city.
From page one
The employment of two men, one charged last week with an attempt to run down a sanitation worker with a bulldozer, and another charged in a barroom incident yesterday morning, will be considered soon, Watson said.
Seniors and Grad. Students:
order your
GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS
Feb.11 & 12 Wednesday, Thursday
kansas union BOOKSTORE
Students are benefiting from the program, Scannell said, and feedback from graduate students has been especially good. Stuart is the student who must be given to be successful. Scannell said.
"They have the broadest view of the school system," he said.
Other educators who have spent a week on campus include a high school principal, an elementary teacher, a school teacher, a school counselor, a curriculum director and specialists in health, physical education and special education, Scannell said.
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We need teachers this semester for courses in massage, horticulture, ceramics, macrame, & auto mechanics. If you want to share knowledge in any other interest area, or would like to teach any of the courses listed above, contact us at 864-3477 or drop by the SUA office.
SACHS
K.U. Premedical—Predental Society presents:
An informal discussion on Problems and Motivations in the Health Professions
Dr. Chediak, Psychiatrist at the Burt Nash Mental Health Center, will speak and answer questions on this subject. All are welcome.
Time: 7:30
Date: Wed., Feb. 11
Place: Big Eight Room
(paid for by student activity fee)
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 11. 1978
7
B&G makes clean sweep of KU
By FLORESTINE PURNELL
Last night two workers thoroughly cleaned all the bathrooms on the third floor of Learned Hall. They cleaned the chalk boards and vacuumed the cappel.
Yesterday, students have seen workers sweeping the steps at the main entrance of Strong Hall, passed another worker with a load of trash in Flint, or walked around someone buffing a stairwell in the Kansas Union.
The few workers a student may notice are part of the 375 buildings and grounds employees that maintain the University's facilities, Lee Ousdahl, assistant director of the physical plant and the Buildings and Grounds Department, said yesterday.
"Most of the work that our people do isn't recognized," Ousdahl said. "Our main purpose is to generally maintain the structure we have, and make noticeable when something isn't done."
Then, Ousdald said, people will call in with a maintenance problem. That's one way the office finds out what needs to be done. Then you determine where a group of workers will go
after the supervisors have made a daily survey of the campus, Ousdahl said.
Ousdahl said that there were two main groups of workers in Buildings and Grounds. One group, the grounds crews, generally takes care of the grounds, trees and buildings. The grounds雪的snows sands the streets and does a minimum of outside work in winter, he said.
The other main group of workers takes care of the buildings. Within both groups, Ousaid said, are skilled workers, such as carpenters and plumbers, who work inside and outside.
It's possible to find any type of person working for building and grounds, Ousdahl said, and there is a balance of younger and older workers. They all work eight hours a day, five days a week, except in cases of emergencies, he said.
"They are all people who want employment," he said, "and now the turnover among the unskilled workers isn’t as high as before. This is when people were moving around more."
Ousaidh said his turnover, which had been a problem in the past, was less now
Heavy snowfalls, breakdowns of equipment vital to University operations, and power failures are emergencies which allowed overtime hours. Ousdahl said. Power failures should be scheduled from 6 am to 3 pm, or 2 p.m. to 11 p.m.
On Campus
TODAY: SEN JAMES PEARSON, R-Kansas, will speak and answer questions from 12:30 to 1:20 p.m. in 104 Green Hall.
TONIGHT: Albert Gerken will give a CARLILON RECITAL at 7. The KU PREMEDICAL-PREDESTAL CLUB will meet at 7:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Jack Winerock will give a FACULTY RECITAL at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Events . . .
TOMORROW: ALLAN SHAPIRO, professor at the University of Haifa, will speak on "The Family in the Israeli Kibbutz," at 1 a.m. in 2 Fraser Hall, GOV. (807) 439-3525; 104 Green Hall, Charles Stuart, superintendent of schools at Clay Center, QUESTION-ANSWER SESION for education majors from 3 a.m. to 4:30 in 301 Haile.
Applications for the University's MINORITY AFFAIRS ADVISORY BOARD may be obtained at the Student Senate Office on level 3 of the Union. They are due on or before May 1, 2017.
Applications for the minority student representative position on the STATE COLLEGES COORDINATING COUNCIL are due Saturday, Feb. 14, and may be obtained at the Student Senate Office on level 3 of the Union.
Announcements . . .
Correction...
From 10 p.m. to 8 a.m., watchmen are on duty. Skeleton机械 crew work on buildings.
JIM PARKER, Assets Coitation School Senate candidate from the School of Business, was incorrectly identified as Jim Parks in Monday's Kansan. A Kansan story Monday reported that KU students had placement priority at the HILLSTOP program, which is a student achievement program number 175 when Hillip received federal approval and was made open to the public.
For a University of this size, much equipment is used. There are around 30 trucks in use by buildings and grounds personnel, but only one car, Odaushi said. The trash, ladder and wench trucks are the most commonly seen of the University trucks.
For summer work, there are about a dozen rider mowers and more than 15 power mowers, in addition to all of the trucks in use. Usdushal said that because of the large amount of extra work and equipment used by these machines, many temporary workers were hired.
Harold Bilch, supervisor of grounds and landscaping, said the amounts of sand and gravel used in the construction are
"We have sometimes used four times as much sand and salt as we have this winter." Blitch said. "But then, we get the biggest part of our snow in February and March."
Bilch said that during winter, grounds crews were on call 24 hours a day. Sometimes it is necessary to call people at 4 a.m.
Ousaidh said that Buildings and Grounds personnel are sometimes seen doing minor remodeling jobs. For larger jobs, the University will hire a contractor.
Residence hall areas aren't unset Buildings and Grounds care, Oduaiah said. The housing department takes care of its own walks and maintains its own buildings.
Student learns sight to return
A chemistry student who was blinded in a laboratory explosion Saturday night in Malet Hall Halt was told yesterday by Medical clans that he will soon regain total vision.
Anand C. Burman, Madison, India, graduate student, said last night from the Med Center that doctors told him he would have to see normally within a couple of weeks.
Burman was injured when an experiment he was conducting exploded in his face. The explosion caused $1,000 damage to the lab. Burman said he could remember nothing about the explosion until a minute or so after it happened.
Burman said he got the scis of his life when the experiment exploded.
He said he had made a mistake in not wearing the protective gear, such as safety goggles, required by the chemistry department.
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THE HAWK'S NEST PRESENTS
HAWK'S
Thursday, Feb. 12
5:30 THE K.U. BASKETBALL BAND to Director: JIM BARNES
7:00 "Everything from 'In the Mood' to the Moody Blues'"
7:00
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FRIDAY & SATURDAY, Feb. 13 & 14 8-12 p.m. Disco by KJHK FM-91 DISCO SERVICE
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level 2--Kansas Union
Produced by SUA
8
Wednesday, February 11, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Javhawks hop on comeback trail
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Sports Editor
A lot of fans have given up on the KU basketball team this season. The question to be answered is whether the basketball will give up on itself.
Tonight's game with Iowa State should go a long way toward answering that question. Tip-off is 7:35 p.m. in Hilton Coliseum at Ames.
3
NSA
sports
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Nebraska by three games with only seven to play.
KU's Paul Mokeski and Herb Nobles will try to stop Iowa State tonight.
KU Coach Ted Owens reminds the rest of the season isn't going to be easy. But he's coming to terms with it.
"THEY (THE PLAYERS) must dig into their resources and just decide to work hard and come back," Owens said. "At this point, we are simply going to improve and be the best."
KU's preseason goal was to be Big Eight champs for the third season in a row, but Owens would now be satisfied with a first division finish.
"I think we can still salvage something from this season," Owens said. "We expected more, but I think a first division win would be important considering our youth and experience."
FIRST ON KU's comeback agenda is Iowa State. And there isn't a much easier place to start. The Cyclones are 25 in Iowa, 29 in Illinois and 36 in Iowa. Iowa State, 68-60, at Lawrence last month.
"I don't think there's any question that they (low state) have made considerable improvement since we last played them," he said. "They have some victories under their belt and obviously are playing with more confidence."
The key to stopping the Cyclones will be
shutting off their fast break. Led by guard Hercule (Poulson) lily and forward Art Carle (Cohen), the game is on.
"THEY'RE A GOOD breaking team," Owens said. "They can get a lot of easy baskets if you, don't get back on defense each time.
U.S. Olympic surprises continue
INSBRUCK (AP)-Dorothy Hamill established herself as the gold medal favorite in women's figure skating, young Dan Immerfall won a bronze speed skating medal for his cheering, flag-waving mom and the U.S. hockey team stunned Finland under the underdog Americans continued to provide surprises at the Winter Olympic Games.
The U.S. hockey team became the favorite for the bronze medal when they upset Finland, 54, in a game which had the Austrian crowd roaring "U.S.A., U.S.A." The Americans fought of a frantic finish by Finland and got an assist from a Russian team who allowed a Finnish goal that would have played the game at 54 with two minutes left.
The hockey team was jubilant after its first victory of the Olympics. The triumph avenged 9-4 and 9-2 defeats at the hands of the Fins in pre-Olympic competition.
place finish in the men's giant slalom ski race.
"We want to control the tempo of the game and not get in a run-and-shoot game"
"WE FORCED THEM into mistakes and suddenly found they were human," U.S. Coach Bob Johnson said. "Steve Sertich's shot was decisive."
The day's other major surprise was supplied by two Swiss bricklayers, Heini Hemni and Ernst God, who won the gold medal at the Olympics. Their victories sent Italian艺 Gustavo Thoeni storming off the slope, pushing his team over the newsmen. He had a firm lead after.
In their first meeting this year, Clint Johnson held the high-eccorting window without a face mask.
Meanwhile, to no one's surprise, the mustans and East Germans dominated the tense.
In the front court, Johnson is KU's biggest concern. He's a big, strong rebounding forward who gets downcourt quickly on the fast break.
To stop those two—and Iowa State-
Owens steps that KU must do three things.
"We have to do a good job of rebounding,
and we must get back on defense," Owens said.
After 21 events, the Russians led the medal standings with 10 gold, four silver and six bronze. Because of their lead, a Russian newspaper said these games had proved the superiority of the socialist system of training athletes.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
Russia's Raisa Smetina won the 10-kilometer women's cross-country ski race, and Russia Evegn Kulkov won the men's race. The Russian team was "while fighting the flu and a high fever."
EAST GERMAN EXPERTS Hans Rinn and Norbert Hahn won the two-twose luge race. They careened down the artificially refrigerated course in 1:25.6.
The Russians, Communist block partner,
East Germany, was second with six golds,
and it is possible that Russia was
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Sertish of Virginia, Minn., scored a crucial goal that broke a 2-12 tie in the second period. Steve Jensen of Middleton, Wis., scored twice.
The United States, which has now equaled the medal total it reached at the Winter Games four years ago, was a surer team with one gold, three silver and four bronze.
Immeralf, 20, of Madison, Wis., won the bronze medal in men's 500-meter speed skating at the U.S. national championship, works two jobs to support his skating and music training, cheered and waved an American flag. When the race ended, she helped her team compete long, black fur coat and embraced him.
And 18-year-old Philip Mahe of White Pass, Wash., turned in a surprising fifth-
Call Jim at the SUA Office, 864-3477 Pick-up Info Sheet at SUA Window at the Kansas Union
More U.S. medals are likely to come. One seems certain to be won by Bem, Hailman, 19, of the United States, who is competing Tuesday in the compulsory figures part of the three-phase figure skating competition. In doing so, she beat her arch-rival, Diane Neumann of The Netherlands, who placed third.
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Isabel de Navarez of West Germany finished first in the compulsions but wasn't considered a threat to Hamill or de Leueun at all. He was mistaken, which counts 50 per cent in judging.
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"Even though we are not in first place, beating de Leeuw in figures is just as good as winning," said Carlo Fassi, Hamill's coach. "If she can do well in the short program and the free skating, she has the gold medal."
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Wednesday, February 11, 1976
9
Nobles adjusts to Kansas offense
By GARY VICE
Sports Writer
Herb Nobles came to the University of Kansas with the reputation of being an authority on the subject.
There was never any doubt that Nobles, a 6-7 junior, had the talent to play Big Eight basketball. However, whether he could fit into the team's offensive style of play was a big question.
Nobles has critics who still insist he has having difficulty adjusting to KU's diverse student body.
"I'll admit I was having a little trouble at first," Nobles said. "I even began to wonder if I ever be able to understand the offense. But I decided to just stick it out, and I think I've become accustomed to playing this way."
HIS COACH FOR the previous two seasons, Jeff Simms, directed a run-and-gun offense at Johnson County (Kan.) Community Junior College.
"Coach Simons had drills we'd go through every day," Nobles said, "filling the lane, moving the lane and working on the fast-break.
"I'm pretty contained now, but playing at the University of Kansas has added another dimension."
"This is the only place where I haven't started," Nobles said, "but I'm happy where I'm at. I'm getting some good playing time."
One of those dimensions is his role as the Jayhawks' sixth man.
NOBLES HAS BEEN averaging 30.1 minutes a game at his forward position, third on the team behind starters Norman Cook and Clint Johnson.
While Nobles' scoring average of 12.3 is far below the blazing 26.5 average output he registered last season, he is the Jayhawks second-leading scoring player into tonight's game against Iowa State. Only Cook, who is known for clipping this season, ranks ahead of Nobles.
On the other end, Nobles has pulled down 132 rebounds, an average of 7.3 a contest. Most notable of his play has been his toughness. Noble usually leads the squad in that department.
"I TRY TO play hard on defense. Coach
O'Neill stresses effort on both ends of the
counts."
In last Saturday's loss to Oklahoma, Nobles injured the thumb on his right hand. He has had it taped during practice this week.
Nobles said, "I jammed it against the
backboard sometime in the first half. I don't know how bad it is."
Nobles, a former high school All-America from East St. Louis, averaged 25.2 points a game in his senior year. Following that season, he played one year in the metropolitan St. Louis area.
WHILE PLAYING HIGH school ball,
Nobles twice plained against Cook.
As a college freshman, Nobles had wanted to play for Kansas. That season he watched a KU game with Clint Johnson, then a senior at Leavenworth High School.
"The first time we met, I didn't play him much because I got into four trouble early." Nobles said. "And the second time we played against each other, Norm didn't play much after the third quarter because he had four fouls."
Johnson said, "We told each other at that game that we'd both like to go to KU. I remember telling Herb 'Till beat you there.'"
Now that he's playing for KU, Nobles said, he enjoys it.
Smiling broadly, he said, "I like KU fans. I've been to Nebraska, Colorado and Oklahoma State, and I don't think their fans compare with ours, the old faithful blue."
Jets pick Holtz
NEW YORK (AP)—The New York Jets yesterday dipped into the ranks of college football for their new coach and gave Holtz of North Carolina State a fiveyear contract to turn around their stumbling National Football League club.
"He was strongly recommended by football teams at all levels-players, scouts, college coaches and pro coaches," said Jets General Manager Al Ward, who is running the game. "Everything about him checks out. There is something about Lou Holtz that just clicks."
Holtz, 39, leaves N.C. State after four years in which his teams compiled a 33-12-record. He inherits a Jets team that struggled through a 4-14 season in 1975, the second-best club's 16-year history. But he is excited about the opportunity to coach in the NFL.
Holtz used a form of the Veer offense at N.C. State but said he thought the Veer offense, where the quarterback must be able to run, might not work with the Jets. He added that he had no history of knee trouble and isn't as mobile as many other NFL quarterbacks.
"To me, the great delight in coaching always comes in creating and not in maintaining," he said. "I'm a little sad when we get into a state where we had an excellent program. But I am delighted with this opportunity, and I'm happy to be here."
Women squeeze by Wichita
By KRIS ECKEL
Sports Writer
Karen Schneller hit from the outside in the last three seconds of the game to lead the Lady Jayhawks to a 69-48 victory over the Shockers last night at Allen Field House.
The winning shot came after a series of turnovers by both teams. The Shockers lost their chance for a sure victory in the last 30 seconds by missing two free throws. The Jayhawks got the rebound and came down into a goal. The Shockers knocked the ball out of bounds.
Guard Marc Pardi brought the ball in
Kansas, passing to Schmelter, who shot.
**Credit:** CBS Sports
Although the score was tied several times during the game, the Jahywahs seded lion.
Victie Sanders helped keep Kansas in the game the first half with eight steals. But the final victory was largely the result of a team effort in the second half.
Adrian Mitchell was the big gun for KU in the second half. Held to only seven points in the first half, Mitchell got hot and scored 17 points in the second half to lead the Javwhws with 24 points.
KU played tough defense after intermission and held Marguerite Kearlee. The Shockers' center, who scored 18 points in the first half, to only four in the second half. Another three steals by Sanders pulled KU out.
KU coach Marian Washington said she didn't expect the game to be quite as tight as it was, but that she was glad to have a victory in such a situation.
The win over Wichita State puts KU 2-1 in conference play, right behind K-State. The loss from the Cottonwood
"I feel we have to k-Bate K-to get into the regional, and I definitely feel we have to k-Bate K-to get into the regional."
The Lady Jayhawks lost to the Wildkittens in Allen Field House earlier this season. KU will travel to KState this weekend for the Big Eight Tournament.
In addition to leading the team in scoring, Mitchell also pulled down 12 rebounds. Schwellner, who led Kansas in rebounding, scored 43 points on the Jayhawks, while Sanders chipped in 14.
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*Menu*.
Come to K.U. Bookstore
Wednesday, Feb. 11 9:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
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Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358
10
Wednesday, February 11, 1976
POLAND
Tell mom
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
A housemother's duties are more than just making the house run smoothly. LaVey Maxix Lakier (center), housemother of one of our daughters, is a dedicated housemother.
(left), Niles, Mich., junior, and Boe Goering, McPherson junior,
graduate in small problems or just to talk about sports,
one of Lokks's colleagues.
Stuart Awbrey, publisher of the Hutchinson News, was elected president of the William Allen White Foundation at KU yesterday.
White foundation selects officers
The annual meeting of the foundation trustees also elected Emerson Lynn, Jr., publisher of the Jola Register, first vice president of the Journalism Foundation, Coffeille Journal, second vice president; Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, director; Dana Lebengood, assistant dean of the journalism school, professor; McCoy, University controller, treasurer.
Sixteen trustees were re-elected, and five new ones were elected. The new trustees are W. Davis Merritt, Jr., executive editor of the Wichita Eagle-Beacon; Don Sharra, president and general manager of the Network; Eugene Lambert, president and general manager of the Eagle-Beacon; Marion Krebblief, Bolitha Newspaper Service, Inc.; and Lloyd Ballhagen, assistant general manager, Harris Newspaper Group.
Fire in Union just hits closet
A fire in a Kansas University broom closes,
night did 84 damage to the contents of the
broom.
Officials said the fire was apparently caused by a smoldering cigarette.
Life's a rush for housemothers
By LIZLEECH Staff Writer
It's rush weekend at a fraternity house. The housemother for the fraternity has seen to it that the 18th century house is in the lawn mowed, and the hedges trimmed.
"So far so good," the housemother tells herself as she and several eager rushes are escorted into the dining room for a quiet evening meal.
But then, in the corner of the room, drops of water begin to fall from the ceiling. Drops become buckets as the ceiling pours forth gallons of water from a broken pipe above
OUTSIDE, the skunk that lives between the fraternity and a sorority next door has decided to compete with the aroma of the roast beef that was about to be served.
Most housemothers are women who have been hired to live in sororities, fraternities or colleges.
Granted, that doesn't happen to every housemother every day at the University of Kansas. But five housemothers said it would lead to a few similar small-scale catastrophes.
Most of them said they were called "Mom," and that they enjoyed close relationships with the young people they lived with.
"I mend seams and sew on buttons for
them and sometimes talk with them about
them."
ELSIE ESCENHEIMER, housemother of Sigma Chair fraternity, said, "My door is always open because we (housemothers) are really just a mother for the boys.
"I'm a freshman at this," she said, "but I don't know that housemothers should be a sort of source."
Sandy Roush, Phi Delta Theta fraternity's housemother, said she was enjoying her time there.
"Usually by just talking about something,"
"or (the student) can formulate their own"
"argument."
GERTRUDE SCHENCK, housemother for Kanaa Alba Theta soretor, said:
"I hate to see them graduate because I hate goodbyes, but I do hear from some of the guys who were there."
All of the housemothers interviewed said they took their jobs because they liked working.
Eschelbenheimer said, "I think it keeps me young, because the youth are such a great force in my life."
Another "freshman" housemother, LaVey Maxine Louk, said her background had influenced her decision to become the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority housemother.
"I SPENT THREE years as a navy officer during World War II," she said.
She said that, rather than police the girls in her sorority, she acted as a hostess.
"I like the organizing of meals and working with a budget, but I really get a kick out of going to the barn dances. I love it and so much fun since the Navy," she said.
MOST HOUSEMOTHERS are elderly or
younger women for housemothers,
who have younger women for housemothers.
one of them is Elizabeth Green, 26, a
graduate student at the University of
Michigan. Miller Scholarship Hall
The housemother image is older than I am, and the girls call me "Mom" when they are sick.
Green said she served as an adviser to the girls as well as an overseeer of the physical operation.
HER AGE makes it easier for girls to talk about school, boyfriends and parents, Girls
However, she said, her age has caused problems, too.
"Parents were kind of anxious about leaving their children with someone young,
and they may have a hard time accepting it (her age)," she said.
Several housemothers who have lived with young people over a period of years said they had been seen changing social trends and attitudes.
"During the late '60s, there was a rejection of the establishment," said Mrs. Pirolli Myers, housemother at Beta Theta Pi fraternity for the past 12 years.
"BUT I THINK skorrites and fraternites are coming back," she said. "There was a time when a girl or boy couldn't say they were in a sorority or fraternity."
Roush said that she could remember when girls couldn't get into a car with a man
"It was unthinkable that she would ever drink spiritus fermenti," she said.
She said she thought housemothers should have open minds because attitudes have changed.
THE HOUSE MOTHERS agreed that their lives as housemothers were rewarding and enriching.
"It's a fun job, because where else does our employee bring you roses and call you Mrs. Wade?"
Schenck said being a housemother was always full of surprises.
She said a young man had streaked through her sorority when a large proportion of the members were present.
"You know, I'm always ready to come back after summer vacation to broken Coke machines, bad plumbing, and my girls," she said.
KWIK SHOP
1714 W.23rd
Hot Coffee
Hot Chocolate
Hot Sandwiches
Snack Items
Cold Beverages
Self Service Gasoline
We're here when you need us
Open 7 a.m.-12 p.m.
The Lady
The Lady Vanishes
Vanishes
Margaret Lockwood
Michael Redgrave
Wed., Feb. 11 at 7:30. 75°
Thurs., Feb. 12
Fellini's JULIET OF THE SPIRITS
7:30. 75*
Fri. and Sat., Feb. 13-14 MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS 7:00 and 9:30. $1.00
Presented in Woodruff Aud.
SU
TRAVEL
LAS VEGAS
March 15-20
Cost $10500
-Three Nights Lodging at the Westward Hoate Mop on the Strip
-Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 20 at 5 p.m.
INCLUDES:
—Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
PADRE ISLAND
March 12-21
Cost $121$
INCLUDES:
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
-CLUBES:
-Keep Trip Charter Bus Transportation
-Three Nights Accommodations at the Sand Castle Motel
-Private Pool and Fishing Dock
-Kitchenettes (fully equipped)
-Side Trip to Old Mexico
-Lit Series Shirt Bus Service
-Beer and Eats Party at Padre
-Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
INCLUDES:
SPRING BREAK SKI TRIP
Dillon, Colorado
March 13-19
Cost $13700
GROUP FLIGHTS
INCLUDES:
—Road Trip to Charter Bus Transportation (optional)
—Night Fights Lodging at the Lake Dillon Heliad inn
—Four Days Skiing (Breckenridge/Copper Mt./A.
Basin/Keystone)
—Four Days Rentals (optional)
—Night Trip to Vail, Colorado
—Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
—Cross Country skiing Available
If your group is planning a trip, see the SUA office about setting up a group flight. Stop by the SUA office and fill out a flight card as soon as possible.
Denver . . . . . . . . . . March 12
Deadline for sign-up is Feb. 12 at 5 p.m.
Chicago ... March 12
$ 101^{oo}
Doudline for sign-up, 10 days Prior to Departure
$ 6900
HELPING STUDENTS GO PLACES IN A WAY THEY CAN AFFORD
Call 864-3477
BARRY
LYNDON
"Best Film of the Year"
NATIONAL BOARD OF REVIEW
Wrote for the screen and directed by
STANLEY KUBRICK
starring
'RYAN O'NEAL' *MARISA BERENSON*'
PRODUCED by **James M. Warner** *Hillcrest Communications Company*
Eve, at 8:00 only
Sat. 5:30, Sun 9:30
Hillcrest 1 Theatre
J. Wayne Katherine Hepburn in "ROOSTER COGBURN" PG
Tonight 7:30, 9:30 (ENDS THURS.)
Granada
Eve. at 7:30, 9:30 (ENDS THURS.)
George Segal in "BLACKBIRD" PG
Eve. at 7:30, 9:30 (ENDS THURS.)
Varsity
Sue Capu, Harry Thadman savored his new Royal Fasp PG
his new Royal Fasp PG
Malcolm McDowell Eve. at 7:30, 9:30
Sat.Sun. at 7:30
Hillcrest2
LONDON UNIVERSITY OF LONDON
"Rarely has so much truth and power been captured in a film"- Rex Reed
HEARTS AND MINDS R
Eve. at 7:30, 9:25
Sat.Sun. 3:00
Hillcrest2
LONDON UNIVERSITY OF LONDON
Varsity
NOBLAE ... September 17, 1964
Sea Coast - Harry Flashman
surrendered
his wife to the cops
Royal Flush PE
Malcolm McDowell
Eve, at 7:30, 9:30
Sat. Sun. at 2:08
Hillcrest LE
HEARTS AND MINDS R
The Hillcrest
Eve. 7:30, 9:25
Sat. Sun, 2:00
hired in a film
13 E. 8th RAY AUDIO 842-2047
You Can't
Go Wrong
Buying
Advent Products
AKAI
A.R.
B.S.R.
BASF
CRAIG
GOOD USED ALBUMS &
We've never seen Advent market a product just for some fast food. So we have to adapt it in a way that could be said if, or a "line," with lots of模具 to get at everybody's needs.
That kind of thinking is obviously different than just making
product to sell, or calculating the profit the traffic will bear, or
buying in. It's more about understanding the data.
Everything we know of has come about after some real questions were seriously asked: “Is it a wholly new and different kind of product that ought to be around?” What will the company do? Does Advantet have any special ability or reason to make it?
One result of Advent's products is the Advent Speaker. It will take competition with absolutely any speaker system of any price or size, with sound dramatically better than many, more expensive systems. $250 pr.
SPECIAL:
EVR 4X 20/20 RMS list $250 - Sale 12$
Plot 23/35 RMS list $390 - Sale 12$
Plot 23/35 RMS list $390 - Sale 12$
ALL STAR REVIEWS
February '76
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
SUPREME PIZZA
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
$3.95
Six Meat and Garden Toppings
Reg. '5.25
Coupon Expires 2/29/76
★★★★★★★★★★★★★
MASS. STREET DELI
SMOKED
SAUSAGE
95¢
Reg. $1.35
Hot
or
Mild
Coupon
Expires
2/29/76
SANDWICH
★★★★★★★★★★★★★
The Bull & Boar
The Bull & Goat
Roast Beef—BBQ Ham—BBQ Beef
or any 2 meat combination
Sandwich Reg. $1.65
$1.35
Coupon Expires 2/29/76
★★★★★★★★★★★
NEW YORKER
1601 MARSHACKBROTH NY
INDIVIDUAL
LUNCHEON PIZZA
$1.25 Reg.
$1.50
★★★★★★★
"The Best Pizza this side of New York"
25' extra for most or garden topping Special served 1:00 until 4:00
11:00 a.m. till 4:00 p.m.
daily
Eugene Environics 2/26/18
Coupon Expires 2/29/76
Distributed by Schumm Foods Bull & Boar Mass. Stroot Dell New Yorker Schumm Catering
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 11.1976
Donor sign up begins today for blood drive
Blood donors can sign up this week for the KA
Interferometer, which peels 1P, 1G and
KaPi in a drive.
About 800 donors are needed to reach the drive's goal, Maribeth Olson, Panhellenic coordinator, said yesterday. She said that they need to have any problems reaching the goal.
William M. Balfour, vice chancellor for
student affairs, will make the first donation,
to The Royal Society.
About 360 volunteers will type forms, distribute refreshments and be "donor chairs."
The procedure takes about an hour and
half, and orange drink and
pollen after the treatment.
Blood type, blood pressure, medical history and temperature are taken and a donor buddy is assigned to stay with the donor.
The blood will go to the Wichita Regional Blood Program. Through the program, KU students and their families are guaranteed free blood.
The blood.mm will be at the Union from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Feb. 16 and from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Feb. 17 and 18. There will be a dressing station for all pointments and another for walk-in donors.
Advantages of diploma are debated
A college degree may no longer be the automatic advantage it once was.
In the September issue of Change magazine, Richard Freeman, professor at Harvard University and J. Herbert Holmolon, professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, said that the advantages of a college education had decreased since the late 1960s.
"in five years (1898-1974)" Freeman and Hallonner said the "college job market has been more attractive."
Frederick Madaus, placement director for the KU School of Business, said yesterday that he disagreed with some of his predictions, although he had not read it.
"It may be true in terms of employment rates but probably not regarding enrollment," he said. "It used to be that any warm body with a degree could walk in an office and get a well-paying position. Now they have to show they can do the job."
Philip Rankin, director of the KU Em-
ployees, said that job requirements wore strict.
A more competitive job market might have positive advantages, Maude says, because most jobs go to the students who don't "just skip through."
Rankin said the Civil Service recently had begun to require minimum validation for graduates seeking jobs, which means that a potential state employee has to show that he has experience and high quality training to get a certain job.
Freeman and Hollomon gathered statistics that indicated that college graduates' average wages in 1969 were 25 per cent greater than the wages of persons having no college education. This difference dropped to 10 per cent in 1974.
From 1969 to 1974, one-third of all male college graduates and two-thirds of all female college graduates had to accept a bachelor's degree because there were few jobs in their fields.
Fewer male students enroll in college today than in recent years although female student enrollments remain stable, Freeman and Hollomon said.
The study also indicated that the rate of recent unemployment among college graduates had increased at the same rate as national unemployment and that the length of this unemployment was longer than that of other workers.
KU students interviewed, who seemed serious in their studies, didn't seem to question the relative worth of a college degree.
"The goals he set for myself can be best achieved by going to college," said Kris Balloon, Olathe junior. "These goals include a good education and a good job."
"I't worthwhile, though less so than in past years," said Rob Gilford, Kansas City, Kan., senior. "A degree will help with your work, but it can't sit around. You have to keep busy."
"College sure beats the hell out of working," said Jeff Brunton, Topeka junior. "I couldn't see getting just a B.A. in liberal arts and sciences, but in a specialized field like law or medicine, you could make a fortune."
One reason Freeman and Hollowman gave for the decline in the value of a college education, a decline they said would remain for some time, was that the decline of economic growth left fewer jobs that require a college degree.
Another reason they said, was that too little growth in other parts of the economy left fewer new jobs available for graduates. Long-term demand for college graduate education in the early 1970s and the number of new graduates seeking employment increased.
Except for graduates in engineering and computer science, Freeman and Holomon predicted, there will be no upturn in graduates' economic status until 1980.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment
for residents in the City of San Diego.
CLASSIFIED PUBLIC PUBLIC HASHADRA BURNS
1450 WEST 2ND STREET SAN DIEGO CA 92103
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDE business office at 864-1535.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hh equipment, the company will take out products, you will pay the lead fee and be billed at the GAMMOPHONE店 at KEIFS.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amples, drums,
saxophones, keyboards, and bass. Choose from GIBBON
Shops, How Keyboard Studies, Choose from GIBBON
Shops, Amager Kronen, Green, and many others.
Amager Kronen, Green, and many others.
182 W 23d, #M-9397 Rowe Keyboards Studio
182 W 23d, #M-9397
We can make your stereo sound better--GUAR-
ment it in two lower two ear Details at
Audio Systems, 200, E9. 11
COST 166~Stereo equipment. All master
orders $250 plus shipping. Phone 843-765-6900.
IP V A phone (phones C.I.A. Call, Phone 843-
765-6900). IP V A phone (phones C.I.A. Call, Phone 843-
765-6900).
Quitting business sale—bargain! Everything goes. Antiques, collectibles, used furniture, antique jewelry, handmade crocheted clothes. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. (Hwy 20) Open 6-9 a.m. 843-314-2-23 (Hwy 20) Open 6-9 a.m. 843-314-2-23
ACADEMIC BISSEARCH PAPERS Thousands of papers submitted for publication in various journals.
4915 West 23rd Street Los Angeles, CA 90027. Call: 955-682-8988.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Spezialstücks,
ELECTRIC 841-9600, 3800 W, 6 hp.
ELECTRIC 841-9600, 3800 W, 6 hp.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Electrical Supplies. Makes the Furniture & Appliance Center,
704 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10022.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold and silver wire. Miniature sculpture, convex diamond beads. Jewelry made by executed B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting of various uncut stones 841-3883 843-079
Sony HP-610 A Stereo system, dual 1211 turn-
table, 3.5" speaker, aftermarket 48-1275 at
48-1275 after 5pm. 2-11
Bach trumpet for sale, good condition. If interested call 843-8511 after 3.90.
2-11
Musical Instrumenty: Several 6-string guitar,
two mandolin and a violin.
Sustainably Glossen Ban, one designer all ready to
shine. Glossen ban, a dot-mandolin all ready to
shine. Glossen ban, a dot-mandolin all ready to
shine. Glossen ban, a dot-mandolin all ready to
Double Bed complete with mattes, box springs and frame. Good condition. $70, 842-2886, 2-12
dust sell HP-70 Financial Calculator. Best offer.
save message at 842-7287. 2-12
1970 WF Fastchk, auto, air, radio, 56,000 miles
best offer, 811-8464
2-13
TWIN TWEN REVERB AMP. Almost brand
ow. Tube type with two regular
kinds of connectors.
Max Factor Gloss-all flavors, plain and frosted at Round Corner Drug Store. 800 Mass.
Pevoy-600, two Alice speakers with stands,
mails: 841-281-2414 time.
2-13
Portable Smith-Corona "Corail" 100' manual
Portable Smith-Corona Two years old, but rarely used
Bali 642-8588
$2 - 15
FUR SAL. Sea skin, muskrat, rabbit, 35% off on all fur coats. We also carry a full line of wool felts and wool fabrics. Phi-halated and completely biodegradable BOKONO - POTTON FELT. 819 Merino BOKONO - POTTON FELT. 819 Merino
Expedition Parks-National Leadership
School, Large, Fiber Filz II, 642-8537 affil-
sion.
Side-rule Calculator in excellent condition. Call 841-3264 after 5:30 p.m. for more information.
1968 Ponto Catalina, excellent condition, nir
conditioning. ect. $500 or best offer. nir
conditioning. 2-12
Honda 350- four. Late '74 excellent condition; under
6,000 miles. $995. 814-741-741.
2-11
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
1209 East 23rd St.
841-2200
PRO
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
AM Part Stop
GRAMOPHONE
A
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Loss Histortion
Thus Most Storee Gemmments
1 pair of Davits SBSs, 180% made in Austria,
$499.99 each. 2 pairs of Davits SBSs, 180% made in Austria,
$799.99 each. Bough for $650 will ask for $350 or $650
and for $650 will ask for $350 or $650.
Motorola Megaphone, two seven inch sealed beam chrome lights, electronic police-ambulance conexible, concave 75 wt. meter, midland pocket speaker, Tecno 140A inpaced. Call 841-218-12.99
Thomas Monterloy 371 organ with Mogpurg
instructor. Mail resume to Mogpurg
Phone 856-292-8000 for information on
computer病毒 Browse 856-292-8000. For informa-
tion contact Monterloy at 856-292-8000.
SEAKERS-6 x 6 j Tennison coxnever been
Paid $25,000, asking $49,000. Johns $48,139.2-17
Calculator for sale. Brown Brain, excellent
receiver, reasonable offer. mail to:
bidner.841-8194 j2-13
bidner.841-8194 j2-13
93 Triumphe GTPE, 24 miles per gallon, radial
track. GTPE, good condition. 824-6791-7701
for Touring
Brownhide a-way bed in excellent condition.
Very good mattress. Firm Press $41. Call 841-292-1212
STATE OF THE ART
Camera lens for Minoita. 20mm Vibrilar, 35mm
Minoitar; 40mm Vibrilar, 60mm Vibrilar.
Call: 842-930-001 for 5:00, ack for Riat: 2-17
Women's size 5 suede jacket (rust) trimmed in rabbit Sallom worn. Nice N41-825M. Keep
Kustom 202 bass amp. Good condition. Call 842-9084 6 after or see at Richmond 2-17
Classic records for sale at About 180 $ Use
$350 $350 turretable. $110 new, rotary.
$412 - 365. $412 - 365.
NOTICE
1974 Ford Mustang II. 29,000 miles, excellent condition.
Call 912-732-5850. Topeka, 1:50 p.m. (e-mail) margo.davis@nissan.com
Swap Shop, 620 Maa. Used furniture, dishes,
clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-31.
838-3377
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at the Quick Copy Center. We'll take your photos in 3 minutes! See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing needs at the Quick Copy Center, 888 Massachusetts.
SKM—Mont Bleu is open, 10% less under new
conditions; 3 ml of KIT on K19 on 10-p.m. week,
8 p.m. week, 4 p.m. week.
SAM—Mont Bleu is open, 10% less under new
conditions; 3 ml of KIT on K19 on 10-p.m. week,
8 p.m. week, 4 p.m. week.
Audio Components
40- discount on 60GB hard drive. Listing for:
80- room, 23rd floor. House, 701. Mass 10-5. PARKER
200. Eldridge house.
February Specials—Musik, Chantilly, Heaven
Give a glimpse of Valentine's Round Corner Dug
give a glimpse of Valentine's Round Corner Dug
Remunber your Valentine Feb. 14, Punamburs
Round Card. Corner Drug Cards.
$60.10 Mk. $59.99
SECRETES only few have mastered, true friendship, love, forgiveness and understanding promised by our team. All pamphlets by mail. No cost or objection. Mail ad with name and address. Discover 2-13
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
MILLE SHOPPING CENTER LORRISBURG 8107 564-0446
Announcing the Catab Cafe's special Sunday event, the Catab Cafe will host a dinner only. Each week's meal will be a 4 or 5 person course; we will have guests of great interest by taking evening reservations to see you on Sunday. We are 14, 15 and 16 years old. BeneBourguignonne and our current member byvily or information at Catab Cafe. 803 NW 29th Street.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT BENTERS: Drop in at
ATTENTION STUDENT BENTERS: Drop in at
WEBSITES: WeBSITES: WeBSITES:
WHOME HOLIDAYS: WHOME HOLIDAYS:
WHOME HOLIDAYS: WHOME HOLIDAYS:
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
rentals in Lawrence and Lawrence
Rental Exchange. 842-250-9677.
New 2 to 3 bdm; apartment near campus; park-
ing lots; energy efficiency apartment; pt.
843-9797
2 bdrm, all allt, paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Parking: a,/c pool. 843-1993.
Boom furnished with shared kitchen and bath
room. Kitchen is equipped with
appliance apt for male rear town. No p-
ersonalized kitchen.
Bengals in
Culver and Jewelry
Castle Mall Carlsbad
Rossie attic, apt for one teacher, only $75/mo.
Russell's 12th grade student, tuition at
Maine. Call Bill at 83-154-1514
2-32
1-4 bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
ly room or campus $35 and up; bd_824
or $420-8200
Room available in a cooperative house, $40 and
room available in a cooperative house, $40,
dryer, good people, 842-9421
Large room for man. Private bath-entrance.
2% blocks west of campus. 863-7827. 2-12
1 bdm. furnished apt. available immediately in
Terrace Hall, Terrace 629, 829-223, 849-133, 2-16
Employment Opportunities
Sublet 2-bdrm, apt. at Frontier Ridge, AC, carpeted, laundry, bushy room. Furnished or unfurnished. Clean and quiet. Free dishes, librarians, subscription. Avail. Feb. 20, 17-27
752
Oversee Jobs - temporary or permanent. Europe, Australia, S. America, Africa, etc. All travel expenses covered. Free write-into. International. Depot, KA A 400, Box 8490, Berkeley CA 94704 2-25
Students make money up to $30 per wk/part time at home address envelopes. Companies sell them in bulk and provide information regarding opportunities with these companies, and $10 to $80 Advertising Box materials.
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement in hospitalization for highly symptomatic patients within a year of diagnosis. Doctors required. No neap treat. Exception benefits, care plan and policies. All residents. North Kansas, Mia. M, 480-611-3255 (bi: 212-539-0566).
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
$12,000
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE: If you enjoy writing and acting, use the special help you need. Meet us at www.hopkins.com to help us at our summer job on a Adriadocade area lake. We have staff to hire you, train you, and a salary of $160 weekly "Men's" artistry, painting, etc. Women's diction, light-history, biography, and art history, between August 15 and September 19, depending on your availability. WRITTEN BY PHILIP C蔷, Clerk, 100 Sunset St., Pittsburgh, PA 15217. References when you write. Otherwise your time will be taken.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
School of Music will have a great little
gift here. Also blue, blues and
classic and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin
and electric jazz and rock guitar and
band. Call 841-835-6200.
SKI-Man-Blu is open, 10s less, has under new
orders. $28 for 3mil on K-10, 15mil on K-10,
jacketed. $34 for 3mil on K-10, jacketed.
Get a Winter Tan with a Sunlamp from Round Corner Driggers. Complete kits, replacement kits and accessories.
Use your people Book Coupon at Bound Corner
Drugstore- 15% off -801 Mass. 2-13
AMM AMM AMM
SKI Equipment Sale. Skis, boots, binders and other gear $617.7, after 6 First Class fees (basis only) 2-17
Celebration of Love. Came and shared in an evening of fun, singing, saint dancing, an anthology story of St. Valentine will be followed by a celebration
HELP WANTED
Mide mule needs needed during the following times:
Monday and Tuesday, 10:30 AM - 4:30 PM. Contact Maryanne
McLean at 518-729-1367.
Wednesday, 4:30 PM - 8:30 PM. Contact Maryanne
McLean at 518-729-1367.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
AVON-Start off the new year with excellent training. Meet Mr. Selby, Lawrence and 209, Mr. Selby, Lawrence and 209.
Secretarial position; part-time. Attendance:
4:30, Monday-Friday; 2.20 per hr. Must be able to,
type, office experience help. Apply through
daily,烈ly, TPI; Max Schumma Foods;
7337.
2-16
Addresses wanted immediately! Work at home or in New York. Send resume to American services, 1401 Winniford Blvd., Suite 320, NY, NY 10024.
Research assistant in Dept. of Chemistry, Term is for 2 months, March and April 1998, full or half term. Must have a computer programs to investigate surface topology of solid materials, Siblind commensurate with experience, up to ten years. Experience and expertise in computer programming, a knowledge of analytical geometry and statistics, and proficiency in selected applicants should connect B. K. Lee, 12, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, and undergraduate references, textures and images. The applicant or is committed to equal opportunity and affirmative action. Applications from women and men are welcome.
TYPING
Experimented typist. I.B.M. Thebic. thuis- dilii and term papers. Call Paum. 543-759-1799
3799
TREISH BINDING--The Quick Copier Center is located at Treisch Auditorium. Our service is fast and precise, with quick delivery of stocked copiers.
SHAZAAM
KING OF PRESENTATIONS
DEER SLAW
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SHAZAAM
We Print ANYTHING!
Experienced typist—term papers, theses, misc
notes, and correspondence, spelling,
music correction, 844-734, Mrs. Wright
Typing - experienced in dissertations, theses,
manuscripts, etc. IA in Psych. IB in魂电.
350-496, 712-838.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reusable,
professional software elective B.A. Scaled Sch
Educ. B-0614
Typist editor, IBM PCsite. Quality work.
Designs, writes, distributes papers.
842-915-8727 5-11
Exp. typist, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
collaboration, letter writing, spelling correction,
reception. Jean. 841-2690
LOST AND FOUND
S1.5. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (pieces). Prompt, efficient service. Themes, distortions. Phone: 813-964-2984, evenings; Susan Streich.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service. The State Bank, 98 & Kestocky and Malls Shop advertising is held at 1049 Broadway.
Lost: Maynard, a 5 month old male beagle,
Loan: Kentucky, Wednesday night,
Reward: 811-470-696.
German Shepherd Huskie Cross puppy. Female
10 weeks old. Last last week in 12th &
8th grade. 9 hours.
Found One, set of key Fri. afternoon in front of Wescoe case. Claim in 111 Flint. 2-13
Lost: black wallet in Allen Field House Feb. 5.
Dive IVD back. 2.13
imity of Earley Field Description approximately
10% of Earley Field 442-873-6500 5-14
plowed. For more info see 442-873-6500.
www.earpark.org
plywood. For more info call 843-7625. 2-13
House key 15th and 15th Marathon. Identify and
verify the address.
2-13
Found Linda's Watch. Identify and claim
claim between 10:10 am and 10:15 pm.
2-14
MACRAME BEADS
ALABAMA
MUNICIPALITY
if you don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGE'S
large selection
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
Imported car
imported car service problems?
SEE...
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN
HAPPY BIRTHDAY WILD BILL TOWNS! 2-11
Gel my honey a Valentine Gift. THE SUPER
Girl your mom will love.
Mini $39. Import $47. 65
Mini $39. Import $47. 65
J. R.D. Yes.Call us and ask for Strobl. 2-11
Have you ever tried to love all the people? 2-16
500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444
MIDNIGHT MASS FRIDAY 13th at Jawahry Fertility Station in front of Strong, Services both Kranpor Orthodot, Nevr-Druide, Roles, candles, candlesticks, soap dispensers, soap saffirice. New members welcome. 2-13
WANTED
D. Master~Will I ever live long enough to make you my Valentine? I love you.
2-13
Susan, most people go to church on Sunday, not
Tuesday and Friday. Pat. 2-11
Discounts for Do-It-Yourselfers with Student I.D.'s
Comprison is only half-wicket. Better temp-
room, better complaint, compromise. 3-12
McGuire McCallum III. 3-12
Foreign Auto Parts Discounts for Do-It-Yourselfers
JAMES
JAMES
Jewish Male to share house. Must keep Kobrin
Split $18/mm, utilities. Call Roger 682-2580, 2-13
Male roommate. Part 25 2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
Male roommate. Part 25 2 bedrooms, not required, 4 plus utilities. 829-321-9700.
SERVICES OFFERED
Parts:
843-8080
have before June 1st. Call GI-8794 (KC) 3-12
advertise female with TWA Pax 75 (TX)
advertise female with MSC Pax 75 (TX)
call Pax 75 or MSC Pax 75
Call GI-8794 (KC) 3-12
ENTERTAINMENT
Anxious or nervous when taking exam? Does it
have to be taken under a treatment program?
Call 845-2630 between 5 and 10.
Non-smoking roommate wanted to live with
you in a furnished home on campus and
comms and furniture - $55 including utility
bill. No pets allowed.
9th & Iowa
Let Maupintour
TRAVEL
travel service
MATH GOT YOU DOWN! If no, let help early.
107. 625. Call 841-8996.
110. 111. Call 841-8996.
123. 2-17
a quiet corner
EUROFREISKAALA-FARFCASIA = Travel denied
Kinderen First Avenue, Ticeke. Gt. 30044. (284)
www.freiskaalafarfcasia.nl
Pat Read
Indian Trader
Want to give your "You-ride" for Valentines
Day a special touch? Include your phone number
2-11
lawyer. Include your phone number
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 901, 602, 603, 854, 855, 857, 858, 859, 861, 142, 190, 558, 627. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7841.
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Tutoring in Math and Science, any age or grade.
Arthur Parker, 642-1345. 2-12
Now available only on one and exclusively for your listening and dancing pleasure that "Super D.J.," "STEVE LALLEREN" and "SAVE LAWRENCE" 847-752-104 or 849-966-096 concerning part reservations. D=2-13
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843 1964
10.6 Sat. Sat
Phone 843-1211
THE LOUNGE
Do the LEGWORK For You!!
1105 Massachusetts 843.9880
Casa de Taco
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
TACOS
Expert Repairs by Factory Trained Mechanics
Planning a trip?
$3.95 per Dozen
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
Foreign Auto Service
GANG
Service:
843 5099
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
SUA / Maupintour
bicycle
MARIA
FREE
With pass--available at your ski-sports shop
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS (50° Service Charge)
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
at MONT BLEU
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices are based on room size. Mondays are Ladies Nite, $1. Equipment rental. $2 Towel
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
RECREATION'S FINEST
"If we don't got it you didn't want
to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl
No one under 18 admitted
No one under 18 admitted
9th & Iowa
Wednesday, February 11,978
University Daily Kansan
SEE EUROPE THIS SUMMER! This year we have the CHEAPEST airfare from KANSAS CITY!
SUA
TRAVEL
SUMMER FLIGHTS 1976
(1)
All Fares round-trip only taxes included, subject to change due to CAB, IATA and fuel increases
ELIGIBILITY: Affinity Groups and Affinity Charters are open to Students, Staff and Faculty of the University of Kansas (KU Medical Center included). Immediate, dependent family members are also eligible
Kansas City to Paris
London to Kansas City
June 16-August 12 *39175 *
Pan-American Airlines—Affinity Charter
'38475 pro rata share of charter,'400 Administrative,'300 U.S. Departure Tax
Chicago to Luxembourg
May 25-July 20 *388⁰⁰*
Icelandic Airlines—Group Affinity Open return anytime within one year of departure available on this flight. $ \star $ '381 $ ^{\circ} $ Airfare,'4 $ ^{\circ} $ Administrative,'3 $ ^{\circ} $ U.S. Departure Tax
Initial Deadline March 12
Sponsored by: Student Union Activities In Cooperation with the Office of Study Abroad
All Flights FAA & CAB Approved
For further information on these and other charter programsDrop by SUA, 4th level, Kansas Union, or call 864-3477
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS summer study abroad '76
ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1285.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Henry Snyder Department of History or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
FRANCE
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1325.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Robert E. Anderson
or Professor John R. Williams
Dept. of French and Italian
or Office of Study Abroad
108 Strong Hall
MUNICH-HOLZKIRCHEN
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1325.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Henry F. Fullenwider Department of German or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
GERMANY
EUTIN (Schleswig-Holstein)
DATES: May 25 to July 20
COST: $1325.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Ian Findlay
Department of German
or Office of Study Abroad
108 Strong Hall
ARCHITECTURE ENGLAND & SCOTLAND
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1350.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Dean Charles Kahn School of Architecture and Urban Design or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
mexico
DATES: June 7 to July 31
COST: Average $390.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Mike Doudoroff Department of Spanish and Portuguese or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
SPAIN
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1250.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Irene W. Emma Department of Spanish Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
DATES: June 14 to August 17
COST: $2150.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Joseph L. Conrad Department of Slavic Languages or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
RUSSIA
_YUGOSLAVIA_
DATES: Approx. June 14 to August
12
COST: Approx. $700.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Joseph L. Conrad Department of Slavic Languages or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
SPONSORED BY OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD
OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD
108 Strong Hall
864-3742
Application Deadlines and Financial Aid Deadlines Vary: Contact the Program Directors Immediately
For other information on these programs or other opportunities to study abroad, please contact
In Cooperation with SUA Summer Flights
*Cost subject to change due to fluctuations in airfare and/or currency valuations.
1975
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Pearson pauses
In a Noon Forum speech in Green Hall, Sen. James Pearson Held questions from about 130 students and faculty members. The questions covered a wide range of topics, including abortion and the treatment of women with an STD.
The Kansas Republican waded through about 20 questions in a Noon Forum speech at Green Hall yesterday, on topics ranging from abortion and Angola to world hunger and the energy crunch.
For almost 50 minutes, the dour expression on Sen. James Pearson's face rarely changed.
Bv YAEL ABOUHALKAH
Pearson talk casual, caustic
Pearson interspersed his comments with low-key humor that brought rilping laughter on several occasions from the crowd of about 130 law students and faculty members.
"I would like," Pearson said at the session's outset, "to either respond to or evade your attack."
He then proceeded to do just that, sidesteping several questions by bluntly saying he "didn't know" about certain issues. But he also expressed disbelief and insistence about several issues raised by students' questions.
The session had a casual atmosphere, with Pearson standing behind a lectern and answering questions at random. Some of the students munched on lunches; others popped open canes of soda.
"I noticed with some amusement that the President took that position recently and everyone disliked it," Pearson said. Smiling, he added, "So that makes me think it was the right decision."
Although admitting that abortion would be a very big question in elections this fall, Pearson chastised voters for making an emotional issue take precedence over what he called more important topics, such as the budget, the energy crisis and foreign relations.
He said he would support a constitutional amendment that would让 each state decide its own immigration policy.
Covert aid and action to stop the Communism movement in Angola received harsh words from Pearson. He said the Vietnam war should have demonstrated that small-scale aid often escalates.
"If you're going to have aid, let's not do it covertly," he said.
Foreign aid should be dispensed only when it is in the national interest, he said, not just to save face. Food, Pearson asserted, shouldn't be used as a display of wealth; rather was referring to several instances of the United States holding food from foreign countries to try to preserve those countries to adopt American viewpoints.
This is tragic when we're trying to move toward diplomatic good will between the haves and the harbors.
The World Food Conference of November 1974 came at a time when many nations were worried about hunger.
Pearson mildly criticized what he called the small- like approach the United States was taking toward developing a program to deal with energy shortages.
"Actually, a good deal of that was hysterical and, he said, by large and most of the talk the waiter had."
"We still don't have a strong conservation program," he said, "and we still don't have a strong program where we encourage production so we don't have to rely on foreign energy so much."
Pearson warned that nuclear expansion would have to be carefully planned. He said he opposed the random distribution of nuclear plants to foreign countries, especially those in the Middle East.
However, Pearson said he thought he would support the planned nuclear facility at Wolf Creek
Pearson said the Senate was pouring money into the development of solar energy.
"$10 billion—that's no token effort, even by Washington standards," he said.
Activities of covert agencies such as the CIA and FBI should be monitored by a small panel of House personnel, he said, and the committee should be involved in monitoring activities without having veto power over them.
"Punishment sent."
—He could make no specific cuts in the defense budget.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Vol.86 No.85
He foresees either increased payroll taxes or a dinning into general revenue funds to pay for the military.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
2 Med Center doctors quit Reis, Hannah call investigation 'whitewash'
Thursday, February 12. 1976
The four members of a cardiothoracic surgery nurse team which worked with Reis and Hannah also charged that the evaluation had been unthorough.
By BILL SNIFFEN Staff Writer
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Heart surgery in the KU Medical Center, scheduled to resume Monday, can't because the two hospitals at the Med Center have resumed.
The two doctors called the evaluation "a well-orchestrated whitewash."
The surgeons, Robert L. Reis and Hammer Hanmah III, quit yesterday after an evaluation of safety conditions in Med Center operating rooms and intensive care units failed to support their claims that the facilities were unsafe for heart surgery.
BUT THE MEDICAL ID did report that "from our limited observations, equipment does not appear to impose restrictions on peri-operative care." The study was as the two Med Center doctors had claimed.
CHANCELLOR ARCHIER DYKSES, said, "I know nothing about those charges. I think the reputation of the men who came into the University is being questioned."
Dykes, in a statement released yesterday with the panel's report, removed Reis from his position as chief of the cardiothoracic surgery section, while praising him as "one
Reis also said he had quit but hadn't yet written his letter of resignation.
"I view this as highly irresponsible."
Hannah said, "I have submitted my letter of resignation. I'm going to find a place where I can work."
Dr. Frank Masters, associate vice chancellor for clinical affairs, has been appointed acting chief of the cardiothoracic surgery section.
The three investigators Harold Laufman, Institute for Surgical Studies; David Sabiston, Duke University; and Henry Schubert, Duke University. The School found the intensive care unit's air handling system to be "substandard" as Reis and Hannah had charged. The committee suggested that patients recovering from surgery should be placed in isolation to prevent infection.
THE INVESTIGATION into the heart surgery halt was ordered by David W. Robinson, acting executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, after Reis and Hannah refused Dec. to perform any further heart surgery because of alleged unsafe conditions.
of the country's truly distinguished cardiothoracic surgeons."
He heart surgery can't resume until new heart surgeons are found, Robinson said. The search will begin immediately, he said. "That's what they wanted. We really had."
Hannah said that if the unsafe conditions had been eliminated earlier he wouldn't have done it.
Both doctors had criticized the air-changing capabilities of the operation rooms. HWE specifications recommend 25 air-chains an hour. The Med Center's equipment must expose patients to 12 times an hour, with exposures to higher risks of infections. Reis said.
but the committee's report states that,
"although 25 changes an hour may be
desirable and optimal, it is not the
minimum required."
MOST CARDIAC OPERATING rooms have equipment allowing 12 air changes an hour, the report said. And KU's infection rate is low.
Hannah said the report had imputed it was all right because most hospitals do it that way. He disagreed with that philosophy, he said.
Reis and Hannah had also criticized the placement of infectious patients with patients recovering from heart surgery operations in intensive care units.
The report recommended that patients recovering from heart surgery operations be placed in isolated rooms to prevent infection.
The specialists on the panel made two visits on two separate days. The total amount of time spent with Reis and himself was about one hour. Hannah said.
Hannah said that decision could have been long before the Dec. 1 heartbeat.
"IT WOULD HAVE required the stroke of an administrative pen," Hannah said. "That's all it would have taken for us to have gone back to work."
But both Reis and Hannah, as well as the four members of the cardiothoracic surgery nurse team, attributed that finding to a lack of thoroughness by the visiting panel.
The report didn't support Reis' and Hannah's claims that operation room equipment endangered heart surgery patients.
"This committee was virtually hustled through here," Reis said. "Doctor Hannah and I had virtually no input in this. It's the most ridiculous thing I've ever witnessed."
THE FOUR NURSES of the cardiothoracic surgery team said they weren't contacted by the committee members (all one said, "we have to work here")!
"The panel did not talk to anyone else in that department," one nurse said. "If they had talked to us, we would have shown them how to do it." The team was operating for awe, that needed repairs.
Another nurse said the nurses weren't consulted or contacted by the panel because "we'd tell them the truth. We've always been off somewhere else whenever somebody comes around. It's just another coverup like any other coverup."
"BUT THE WAY things have been going around KU," a third nurse said, "we weren't surprised that they tried to keep us in the dark."
Report says surgery OK
—A glass sliding door on a cabinet containing sterile equipment had been cracked for about six months. "Mysteriously, it turned up fixed the day of the investigation.
A couple of the nurses said the committee's two tours were staged:
—A cleanup operation was ordered by Mary Bortz, assistant director of surgery, the night before the panel's first visit, one of the three patients to be cleaned because of the night's light operation schedule. The end result was that the two operation rooms and their connecting rooms were "cleaner than usual, but not usually very clean," a nurse said.
—A supply of 78 heart valves was seen by the committee and cited in its report as "that a large investment has been made by the hospital for present time." Reis said that supply was the largest he had seen at the hospital in three years. Reis said the valves cost about $300
It took five to 10 minutes to fix," a nurse said.
"That's very unusual." he said. "It's strange we had it now."
REIS SAID the parallels were misled "They scrubbed that place from top to
See DOCTORS page 11
Dickes said a new director of the cardiothoracic surgery section would be appointed.
- air changes in the operating rooms (12 hours) are at a safe level for heart arrest
Societies' status remains clouded
—Temperatures in the operating room are also at a safe level for heart surgery.
Charges that the dean of women's office has attempted to force single-sex professional and honorary societies into work, according to people who both denied and renewed were here.
- the intensive care unit's air-handling system is 'substandard' - the patient appears to be undergoing treatment.
Equipment in the operating rooms is adequate for the safe performance of care.
By SHERI BALDWIN
Pam Horne, assistant to the dean of women, said she had not delivered ultimates to CWENS, Mortor Board and Phi Chi Theta that they go coeducational to comply with Title IX of the Federal Education Amendments Act of 1972.
Results of the study of cardiothoracic surgery indicate:
Reconsideration would be given to creating a separate department of car repair.
The University of Kansas is barred by the act from giving "significant assistance" to organizations that discriminate on the basis of sex.
—The infection rate in operating rooms at the Med Center is low.
Charges were reiterated by student members of Phi Chi Theta and Sachem, senior men's honorary society, that the dean of women's office was attempting to conform the groups without due process and intimidate them into going coed.
CWENS and Mortar Board were former sophomore and senior women's honoraries respectively that are now coed. Phi Chi Theta is a woman's business society.
Questions were also raised concerning a task force set up by the dean of women's office to determine CWENS' guidelines for coeducational memberships.
Jim Willis, Salina sophomore and member of the task force, said, "Pam Horne did definitely tell me CWENS had to coeducational because of 'TITLE IX.'
Wills said the dean of women's office had asked Don Alderson, dean of men, for names of people who could serve on the council. He said he believed in the possibility of a sophomore men's
Those charges had been narrowed to point Horne, who is also adviser to CWRE.
boniorary society, and Alderson had his name because of that.
There is no sophomore men's honorary society, he said.
He said he hoped an administrative solution would end the dispute. As a first step, Dykes he, had removed Robert L. Reis from his position as chief of the car company. He also failed to establish inability to perceive our medical center as an institution of limited resources."
Wilms said the task force wasn't set up with approval from the Student Senate.
Dykes also said the "infighting" which has plagued the Med Center in recent years.
Pinkston said she was shown a copy of a letter from Chancellor Archie R. Dykes to Marton Board on the Title IX issue, stating support if it retained single-sex membership
Laura Pinkston, CWENS president, said, "I'm really for the concept of the task force. I think if it had been initiated through the channels, then everything would be in order."
Wills said the task force was meant to have equal representation from all living groups, but has nine women and four men. Three of the men are Greeks, he said.
"We just took that as writing on the wall that we had to so coq." she said.
Pinkston said that Mike Davis, University counsel, had told Bonnie Ritter Patton, chairman of the Title IX self-evaluation committee, that CWENS had made a "reasonable interpretation" of Title IX's application.
"I don't recall having written any letters to the dean of women's office about the matter," Dykes said. "I have had complaints expressed to me from students."
Dykes said his letter to Mortar Board was merely quoting from the Title XIX legislation and the proposed resolution.
Ed Rolfs, student body president and Sachsen president, said the Student Senate is in charge of setting up regulations to define what student organizations are. He said that students should be violated with the dean of women's office, assuming the Senate's responsibilities.
KANSAS CITY, Kan—Canceller Archie R. Dykes, in a statement regarding cardiorhythmic surgery at the KU Medical Center, said yesterday a special panelists' report indicated that open-heart surgery could safely resume at the Med Center.
The Med Center's equipment, although "something less optimal, is similar to that in use in many other cardiothoracic units around the country." Dykes said.
See DEAN page 1?
By KAREN LEONARD
A dozen long-stemmed red roses have traditionally made up the most popular bouquet for Valentine's Day, Gladys Garter, head designer for Nye's Flowers, said yesterday, but they will be in short supply this year.
'Be mine' said with roses, cards
By BILL SNIFFEN
Mixed bouquets of field flowers have replaced roses in popularity, she said, because they're bright and cheerful, longer and cost less than roses. Most mixed bouquets cost between $10 and $20, she said. Costs are $22.50 a dozen.
The gas shortage has forced greenhouse owners to reduce the size of their rice crops.
If you want to say it with roses this
Valentine's Day, you had better not cry.
"I'll probably be working overtime until I am, tonight and tomorrow night," Garcia said.
Staff Writer
But other types of flowers are plentiful and Lawrence Florists report that business
Garinger said most customers preferred to spend from $8 to $12 on a bouquet.
Although mixed flowers are popular with most women, men still ask for roses, she
Don Randel, manager of Owens Flower Shop, said his business increased three or four times during the Valentine's Day weekend.
Chad Lawton, manager of University Floral, said be expected to sell about 2,000 roses over the Valentine's Day weekend, with a general increase in business from 500 to 600 per cent more than a normal weekend.
"That's about the only type of flower they're familiar with," she said.
"Every Valentine's Day, our flower is almost completely consumed," she said.
Lawrence's greeting card dealers report the Valentine's Day is the busiest season for the card makers.
Bev Noyes, manager of the Town Crier, said that taste in Valentine cards varied between customers of the downtown store and customers of the Malls shopping Center store.
Student customers who shop at the
downtown bookstore prefer humorous cards, she said, and the Malls store doesn't even carry humorous Valentines. The Malls offer a variety of middle-age clientele, according to Noves.
Tina Black, Oread Bookstore employee,
said sentimental Valentines were selling
already.
She said people liked to buy cards that were cute but infessive.
"Anything that says 'the world's greatest lover' on it will flop," she said.
One of the first valentines to sell out had a picture of an irritable little dog on the cover and a caption that read, "You'd better be a bit fierce or I'll bite you on the leg," Black said.
If taste in flowers and cards are changing, Valentine's day candy sales seem to be heading up.
Richard Raney, owner of Raney Drug stores, said customers were still buying decorated, heart-shaped boxes of assorted chocolates. He said he expected to have his biggest season ever in Valentine's Day candy sales.
*Sales are already at more advanced levels than they have been in previous years.*
Valentine interruption
INFORMATION CENTER
William L. Kelly, associate dean of admissions and records, was sarruried during meet day by a singing valentine
Staff photo by DON P!ERCE
presented by Alison Richey, Shawnee senior, and members of Alpha TK sorority. The sorority will be presenting the valen-
tial awards to all students who complete this year.
2
Thursday, February 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Kribes haunt Lockheed
WASHINGTON - The backlash from Lockheed Aircraft Corp.'s payment of letters to win freedom sales was continued yesterday.
Japanese government officials have decided not to place a $1.3 billion order for antisubmarine planes with Lockheed because of the payoffs, the New York Times
The Japanese Deputy Prime Minister said in Tokyo that Japan would ask the U.S. government whether it had the names of Japanese government officials who allegedly received about $2 million out of $12.6 million Lockheed said it spent in Japan for sales promotion purposes.
Frank. Frank Church, D-Idaho, chairman of the Senate subcommittee in which the Lackland payments were reported, and Tuesday he didn't know the names of the lawmakers who had paid for the program.
Carter gains supporter
TOPEKA-Robert Brock, former Kansas Democrat party chairman, said yesterday he would support former Georgia governor Jimmy Carter.
"Jimmy Carter appears to be right for the times," Brock said in announcing his support for Carter. "He is a nuclear scientist, a farmer, a successful businessman."
Brock, who managed former Rep. Bill Roy's unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Senate in 1974, had been considered friendly to Sen. Blyde L benten, D-Tex., until Benten was removed from office.
Brock said Carter was the only candidate emerging from the large Democratic field who had support in all parts of the country.
Brock's wife, Louse, is Carter's Kansas cochairman. Brock will become Kansas finance chairman of the Carter campaign.
LOS ANGELES—Lee J. Cobb, vrstalsite stage and film character actor, who won accolades as Willy Loman in the play "Death of a Salesman" and weathered the congressional "Red-baiting" climate of the 1950s, died Wednesday at his home. He was 64.
Lee J. Cobb dies at 64
A coroner's spokesman said Cobb died at his suburban Woodland Hills home at 11:42 a.m. of an apparent heart attack.
Cobb rose to the heights of his professional career with his 1949 performance in Arthur Miller's "Dearth" of a Salesman" on the Broadway stage.
Four years later, he was sold to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee and was then elected to the Communist party. Cobb later starred in the TV series "The Virginian."
TOPEKA-Kansas college students who graduate this year have responded in large numbers to the Kansas Employment Security Division's "Sheepkin-sheepkin" campaign.
Job program popular
The project started in 1975 with the support of Gov. Robert F. Bennett and the cooperation of the Kansas college president, Kent said.
"This year's Sheepskin will feature students of 1976 Kansas college graduates, including private school students, who will be available for employment," Kent said. "The register is mailed directly to more than 10,000 Kansas employers. A separate edition is published for teaching positions."
Kent said more applications were expected before the March 1 deadline.
"Students with degrees in engineering, health arts and accounting will be in great demand this year," he said.
FDA bans red dye
WASHINGTON—The Food and Drug Administration banned Red Dye No. 2 yesterday, with the ban going into effect today.
The artificial dye, which is used in hundreds of foods, drugs and cosmetics, can't be used in any product unless processing already has started.
The FDA based its decision on an agency scientist's report made at the end of the study. The research team had statistically significant more dangerous tumours than those that weren't been tested.
Red Dye No. 25 sometimes mixed with outer cues to produce snakes or brown and purple may be used to make both cake frostings and fish appear whiter
The FDA announced that the ban would go into effect today and that any products manufactured with it after today would be subject to seizure or recall.
KC likely to remain GOP convention site
KANSAS CITY (AP) -The housing chairman of the National Republican Party said yesterday the possibility of the GOP shifting its presidential nominating convention to another city had lessened considerably.
The chairman, June Gibbs, made her assessment following a meeting of city officials and hotel and motel executives. The meeting was called following reports that the August convention might be moved to September. A convention commitment of 15,777 rooms,
"Based on the spirit of what I've seen here today, I'd say the convention will indeed be held in Kansas City," said Mrs. Gibbs, of Newport, R.I.
Mayor Charles Wheeler Jr. said, "the situation is improving all the time. I don't think we're in any danger of losing the job," he maintained the spirit of this meeting today."
Representatives of nearly every major hotel and motel in the five-county greater Kansas City area attended the meeting. After hearing statements from city officials, the executives were polled to see how many rooms they would guarantee.
City officials said they hadn't kept a running tally of the results of the poll, but enough rooms appeared to be committed to mushing the city over the ton.
Miami, New York and Cleveland had made renewed bids for the convention.
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TOPEKA—House Speaker Diane McClure told the Rev. RICH E. Richard T. Jr., yesterday to leave McClill's name on the book "Dedication of Freedom" from alcohol
McGill tops dry list
The Rev. Mr. Taylor quoted in the Wichita newspaper from a letter he had received. The letter referred to Mrs. Olivia Bennett, the governor's wife, as "a barmaid" because alcoholic beverages are now served at the governor's mansion.
MGill and other legislators became upset with the Rev. Mr. Taylor last week when an interview with the leader of the Wichita newspaper, published in a weekly Wichita newspaper,
The Rev. Mr. Taylor said he had asked McGill whether he wanted his name removed from the declaration. McGill was among the first to sign the declaration, which the Rev. Mr. Taylor is circulating statewide to attain signatures.
The Rev. Mr. Taylor wrote Mrs. Bennett a letter of apology, but said the term "barmaid" wasn't his. The leader of the Dry Factor regretted repeating the term. The later interview.
The Rev. Mr. Taylor said yesterday he still was friendly with McGill.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 12, 1970
3
Area radio tempts diverse tastes
THE BEGINNING OF DUBBING
Bv GREG BASHAW
Staff Writer
With the aid of automatic cueing, Darrell Morgan, Lawrence special student and disc jockey at KANU radio, listens listeners
of his "This Afternoon" program a smooth transition between
both. Turntables are controlled from the panel in front of
the console.
Spinnin' discs
With the wide diversity of radio station formats available in the Lawrence listening area, there's a good reason to be a dial spinner. Area stations tempt musical tastes ranging from classical to jazz, with live, taped and even automated broadcasts.
Lawrence's only commercial FM station, KLWN (106), features "album oriented rock," program director Mike Schmidt said yesterday. KLWN's songs are selected for an audience that prefers more sophisticated music than top 40 stations play, he said.
Schmidt said tastes of Lawrence listeners were hard to gauge because of the rapid speed at which they eat.
"If there's an excellent single on the top 40, we'll play the album version of it," Schmidt said. "The album cuts are longer and not hacked up like the singles."
“It’s hard to pinpoint an audience when half of it leaves in the summers,” he said. Because of this turnover, KLWN tries to convince his students of the musical interests in its programs, he said.
"We play a bit of country, some rhythm and blues and a little jazed-up rock," he said. "And we'll give unknown or local music if they've got a good quality record out."
SCHMIDT SAID KLIW had begun its current format six years ago, when most FM stations billed themselves as "beautiful radio," but the new FM stations would continue to grow in the next decade, while AM stations would have what he called an "information format."
"Because FM has the ability to carry stereo sound and bring out the highs and lows in recordings, it's the natural choice for a musical format." Schmidt said.
Tom Crabtree, program director for TWBIM-WA (808), Topeka, a station that has developed an information format, agreed to participate in theinate musical programming in the future.
Crabtreet said WIHB was primarily a "talk" station that featured occasional interviews and audience participation shows.
"People like to hear music but not commercial noise, and so much of what is heard is in the background."
CRAFTREE SAID he selected the few songs aired on WBW because they were more relevant to his audience.
O. W. Cunningham, assistant general manager of KRSM-FR (103.3) Kansas City, said that many listeners expected his station to keep them company by playing requested songs, but that this was imminent. He added one of the many fully automated stations in the area, recorded its programs one week in advance of airtime.
KPRS BECAME fully automated last year to cut down on operating expenses, Cunningham said. KPRS 'four disc jockeys' and 'ten players' would then feed them by tape into a computer.
The computer automatically plays and switches tapes during the programing. Cunningham said, KPRS's four disc jockeys were trained to listen for when then feed them by tape into a computer.
The disc jockeys are given autonomy in music selection as long as they stay within "a broad contemporary rhythm and blues range," Cunningham said.
KPRS's audience is primarily black, he said, although station studies have shown that many teenagers from other ethnic groups are among the station listeners.
Complementing the station's musical format are black network news and black podcasts.
"The four other black-owned radio stations in the United States all run programming similar in content to KPRS," he said.
The University of Kansas' KANU-FM (91.5) offers an alternative listening service for people not satisfied with other stations, the Dahringer, KANU program director, said.
The station showcases classical and jazz music, Dahringer said, along with syndicated National Public Radio programs. Two of KAUN's most popular programs, he said, were the symphonies and "Jazz in the Night," a lesson book that jazz showed ever night at 10.
"We have an especially loyal jazz following," he said. "The jazz shows are part of the joint effort between the announcer and musician because so many requests are taken."
DAHRINGER SAID he thought this rapport between the station staff and the listening audience was the most appealing feature of KANU.
Dahirring said KANU had one of the widest listening ranges in the state.
"We're received in the entire area from Kansas City to Lawrence to Topka," he said.
A station with a more restricted format and scope is KFKU-AM (1250, Topeka). The station rents facilities from WREN, another location, and broadcasts for only 50 minutes a day.
"WE'RE THE ONLY station in the country that uses another station's transmitter to broadcast," "Stu Jagoda, program manager," on paper, in assets, we don't even exist."
KFKU plays top 40 music and an occasional personality piece or new feature,
Jagoda said he and another KU student were the only station employees. No news is used on the programs, he said, because the station records its broadcast tapes a week in advance of airtime so they can be sent to Topeka.
University," he said, "and gives students a chance to get some experience doing actual work."
"Mostly the station just promotes the"
Another station that utilizes recorded tapes instead of live disc jockeys is KMBR-FM (10) Kansas City, Bob Minter, KMBR's program director, said the station's programming was prepared by Bonneville Broadcasting Consultants of New York
JAGODA SAID the 52-year-old station was the oldest in Kansas. It broadcasts afternoons from 1:35 to 2, and evenings from 7:05 to 7:30. Monday through Friday.
City. These programs feature "beautiful music" selections and are purchased by more than 40 stations throughout the country, he said.
He said that in the next few years radio programming would be more varied.
"With this wider market," Minter said, "You're going to see you an even greater deal."
"But on FM there'll always be music and more music. That's the bread and butter of
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4
Thursday, February 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Ontions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
In their opinion Beer's a bad idea
REPRINTED FROM THE JAN. 28
MANHATTAN MURCERY.
Regardless of what you may have read or heard, there has been no final and official decision about selling beer on the Kansas State University campus.
That action, however is expected to come before the week is out when KSU president Duane Acker acts on a recommendation (6-2) of the Student Union Governing Board that malt beverages shall not be sold, despite the option to do so granted last year by the Board of Regents. It is hardly likely that Acker would go against such a strong recommendation—and especially so since all indications pointed to an even heavier negative vote had more members of the board been present when the action was taken.
At the time the Regents declared their policy of local option on beer sales, we expressed generally an opinion of no particular alarm if K-State did take an affirmative action—that stance being based on our strong belief in the rationality of beer pricing and staff which could be charged with exploring the possibilities and proposing procedures, if any, for sales and consumption.
So too apparently, did Acker, who rather than making an immediate and personal decision promptly appointed a consultant. You also recommendations are now in hand.
This action probably was not satisfactory to the extreme thinkers on the issue, including the small minority who wanted to tap the keg immediately apprehensively flooded the presidential office with letters and calls in verbal volleys against the sale and consumption of beer on the campus.
Thus Kansas State has once again demonstrated the administrative wisdom for which it has become well-known and respected in the handling of controversial matters. In this particular case, it happened to be the emotional issue of beer sales that could easily have gotten out of hand. With the help of a colleague from the same effective procedure (getting genuine campus input) that have calmed the waters in the past, yet another potential crisis has been avoided, thanks to practicing all-campus participation rather than giving mere lip service to it.
It is, of course, to the credit of the KSU administration that it was not to be stamped into action in either direction. While we still believe that through proper controls, beer sales probably would not unduly disrupt the campus, schools in the state system like the University of Michigan headlong to establish birtubes, paid—and are still paying—the price for their unplanned and precipitous actions.
Beer sale was clearly a matter that required special study by those directly affected and the recommendation awaiting President Acker's action, in our opinion, is not only conclusive but obviously well thought out from the perspective of those who know the situation better than anyone else. The KSU president should be proud to have such solid ground for his decision.
We daresay they are lamenting having been so eager to "get with it." It is a moot point now, but those institutions followed the KSU process they'd probably be having fewer problems, even in the event beer sales were initiated. (The Kansas's emphasis added.)
In our opinion
Beer idea not bad
from the land of Aggleville comes an editorial slamming University of Kansas officials for quickly authorizing the Kansas Union to sell beer.
The "get with it" attitude of University administrators who "rushed headlong" to establish a "bierstube" in the union has caused some problems, but implies, but exactly what problems the union has encountered is specified never
BUT THE EDITORIAL does not say that despite a random sample of students that showed 38 per cent for and 28 per cent against beer sales in the K-State Union, those "judicious and effective procedures" have determined that there will be no beer at all in the K-State Union. In the same way, those of the union said they favored allowing beer in their union for private parties.
It is implied that the issue of student union beer sales, could have "gotten out of hand" without "judicious and effusive preparation," being taken at Kansas State University.
The implications that KU officials the beer business are, simply not true.
The Union Board of Directors has considered for several years the possibility of selling beer. When the Regents approval came, student and staff members of the Union Building Use and Program Concept Committee
presented guidelines for selling beer in the Union, which were then approved by the Board.
THE "RUSH" THE editorial mentioned came not from a hurried desire on the part of the Union's directors to sell beer, but from a need for quick solutions. But the Union helps relieve the crowd problems at 14th and Ohio after home football games.
The crowds at the taverns in that area were disturbing residents so much that the Lawrence City Commission asked them to buy beer sales in the state's student unions.
AND WHY WAS KU singled out for attack in the editorial? Fort Hays State College started selling beer in its union and in a residence hall recreation center, but no mention was made of that.
The editorial cheap shot from the Mercury came during a legislative session that will determine how much money the state colleges and universities will get for the next fiscal year. Supporters of higher education in Kansas should be working together on important issues such as funding, not bickering about trivialities such as student union beer sales.
Yes, Manhattan Mercury, KU students and officials have "paid-and are paying" for beer in the Union. It only costs about 40 cents a glass.
By Carl Young
Editor
Assault on pruderv
The Kansas Senate took the first step Monday toward bringing the state into the 20th century. It passed a bill legalizing sodomy and repealing the state's adultery and unlawful cohabitation statutes.
The law, as its sponsor Sen. Elwain Pomeroy, R-Topeka, describes it, would "get the state out of the bedroom" by decriminalizing sexual acts between consenting adults. Cases involving an unconsenting party or sodomy for hire would still be illegal. Also, sexual acts with animals would be replaced in the statutes by bestiality and would be illegal.
THE PASSAGE of the bill can be considered a qualified victory for individual freedoms. But a damper is placed upon that victory when the vote, in accordance with consideration. The result can hardly be considered a blow to this state's prudence.
of marriage licenses to two persons of the same sex was also passed by the Senate Monday. But under the provisions of the first bill, criminal penalties for cohabitation and sexual acts between consenting adults without regard to sex would be removed from the law. The new law allowed to live together but they wouldn't be allowed to call it a marriage.
THE LAW as it stands now has caused few problems because it is generally ignored. After all, how could the police effectively enforce such a law without having surprise bed checks or using other ridiculous methods? But even though the present law isn't enforced, it is dangerous because it doesn't prevent a law enforcement official from arranging an attack that doesn't like the circumstances of a particular case. The Senate bill would prevent arbitrary enforcement.
A second bill prohibiting the issuance
The issue isn't settled yet. The bill must be approved by the House of Representatives and signed by the governor before it becomes law. Maybe then Kansas can really get out of the bedroom and stop worrying about who is important there, there are many important matters that the state's legislators and law enforcers. They shouldn't waste their time worrying about individual morals.
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
Alice replied, rather shyly,
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An Excerpt From:
Malice in
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TV news a schlock job
WASHINGTON — David Schoumacher, the long-time much-respected correspondent for CBS and ABC News, has left the networks to become an anchorman at a local Washington, D.C. The brief station. The prestigious job. Anchor people. Anchor people in "major markets," as the industry revealing calls big cities, make a quarter-of-a-million dollars a year.
Schoumacher brings knowledge, class and decorum to local news, an occupation that is often closer to vaudeville than the ballet casting Magazine reports that Max Roby, for 15 years the anchorman on KOMX, St. Louis, and a gentleman who bought it was a man who petted on the air with the rubber chicken."
"THE LATER WAS featured in a station promotion that had him reciting his nightly news sign-off to his (actress) wife in bed," the magazine said. Thus life does lift the art of Ted
Baxter. Mr. Roby, it need not be said, is doing his act here骤. Last April, another St. Louis television station hired as their news director a chap who had been head writer for the
Q. All I know is what I read in the papers, so I guess I'll just have to take your word for it that some Senate officials are saying that every one-in-a-while the Senate has to vote on something
the contrary, news is a hot commodity. It is estimated that daily newspapers reach 60 per cent of most stations' revenue but even that is misleading.
(C) King Feature
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Station managers have
A. Because student government isn't quite that simple. Sure, there are just dozens of students who want to debate stupid issues are debated for a ridiculously long length of time, but important issues come do up now and then, and it's your job to argue the very least, you should care which ego is running the show. Not only that, but there really are people in the Senate who honestly want to help students
Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour and producer of the Glen Campbell Goodtime Hour. Considering Ronald Reagan's background, this may be the shortest to cover the campaign.
I'll just use a simple portrait with no specific features to represent the person.
THESE EFFORTS ARE not made to induce people to watch otherwise dull news programs that TV stations are forced to show. They are often with the Federal Communications Commission. To
discovered that the size of their audience for the later primetime, network entertainment shows is strongly influenced by how many people watch the preceding local news programs. It is said that no station with a weak local news operation can be ahead of its competitors in the contest for highest overall ratings.
MANAGEMENT HAS found out that news doesn't have to be boring. Actually, it has many
Election unexciting but worth considering
Q. What do you mean, Bates,
you're going to vote in the
Senate election? You're not
running. You're not even Greek
A. Yes, q. that's true. And I realize I'm going to be part of a minority, but I suppose I can't help it. After all, I do work on the Kanan and I did cover the Senate as a reporter.
Q. Can't help yourself, huh?
A. I guess.
Q. So why should I want to know anything? I'm carrying 17 hours this semester, and I've been at work for two years on social life. Why should I be concerned about a stupid bunch of Senate politics changing one thing one year and changing it another year just to gratify their own eos?
Q. I suppose you're going to give me a lot of crap about how I ought to be voting and don't I care about how my money is spent and don't I care about the University.
A. Not really. No offense, but you probably wouldn't know anything about the candidates or the issues any way.
that concerns me—the bus system, for example. OK, so the Senate is worth something. Suppose I decide it's worth my time stopping at a voting booth in Wescoe or someplace.
Q. What are they like on the issues?
A. Closer than they then think they are. Both are in favor of the ticket subsidy and against joining a lobby with the other
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
Suppose I vote. Give me a quick rundown on the candidates. Are they worth anything? What are they like?
A. You're totally crazy if you expect me to give you the complete political and psychological profiles of Tadese Tashé and Dave Shapiro in this short of a column.
Q. Try.
A. TASHEFF, Petra T,
definitely has got more Senate
experience than Shapiro (she
has probably been on just about
as many committees as anyone
in the history of KU). Her
strong point, though, is her
intelligence. She always seems
to know what she is doing.
But she also seems rather cold and
has trouble talking with students in
the superficial one-on-one way
a candidate has to. Still, she
is very, very competent.
Q. And what about Shapiro? A. SHAPIRO, David, has only been in the Senate one year; B. He has been very important, you consider important, he has also been president of Oliver Hall and a Senate committee chairman. His strong point is that he is a very smart man. He is pretty good with people.
Kansas colleges. One important difference between them is that Tasheff thinks the present president, Ed Rofls, did a lousy brush with the phrases it less bumpy in. Edroh thinks he did a good job.
Q. Your candidate profiles haven't exactly filled me with a holy desire to get out and vote. It doesn't sound to me like it would make much difference whether I voted.
A. Maybe not, Q. but I wish you would. If more students voted this year, even 30 per cent of them will vote the election the most issue-oriented and exciting in the history of the Senate.
Q. How?
A. Because it would mean an end to all the backroom politicking. Candidates spend as much time now worrying about which house their running-mate should be from as they do about anything else. It almost becomes a kind of game. Maybe if people other than you are in power and Kansan reporters voted, there would be more reasons to vote.
Q. That sounds like a backward way of doing things.
A. Maybe that's because it is.
elements that make it more interesting than that which is called entertainment. The sex appears in the dramatic show is permissible for news shows. Under the rubrics of sociology or lifestyle, some other materials may also appear the TV reporter can come close to damn well showing it all. That's how the massage parlor moved from being a quirky place to an accessible status of a national problem.
A good news story also par-takes of the suspenseful continuity of the soap opera. Tune in the same time tomorrow to find out what happened, but, unlike that episode, it's a prime time—with the news you can't be sure of a white hat victory.
THE BAD GUYS DO win, which makes the program ever so much more interesting and the occasional triumph of right and justice ever so much more satisfying.
There are complaints about the quality of broadcast news. Compared to a New York Times reporter, 19 out of 20 local TV news people are illiterate, uneducated puff-heads, innocent of art and ignorant of science, history or political science. They differ from sportscasters only in that they stick their chewing gum behind their ears when the little red light goes on.
BUT KNOWLEDGE OF the subject is a handicap to most broadcast journalists, for it can complicate the task of reducing a news item to 40 to 50 seconds of speech. The essential tasks of a broadcast reporter are theatrical and logistical.
An ability to get cameras and crews to the right spot is a skill that must be developed, think up entertaining diversions and then performing them. The last several years have seen the media report how people never report. They're always
doing little skits showing you what it's like to be a laundry man or a pimp.
THE CLOWN REPORTER to cover the clown politician, the vaudevillian with a press pass provokes the worried concern of those whose standards of journalism are the same as the clown. The hard-dash has never been the norm. The reporter as hack, hero and ham is the creation of the newspaper business, and schlock journalism existed before the invention of the vacuum tube. Tasteless, wilted and sick, it lacks far less harm than Charlie and all the other Ivy League tunes with good taste.
ONE DOES WONDER,
though, where we are going to
get enough news to broadcast.
We're going to have a new
standard. Many stations
give you two-and-a-half hours
with the possibility of yet
more TV and radio networks
add an extra 30 minutes
to their nightly shows.
In addition, there is radio news and the all-news radio station which began in the big cities but is now in places you wouldn't believe. NBC is currently serving 58 all-news radio station in towns like Rochester, N.Y.; Truxton, Tenn.; Wichita Falls; Richmond, Va. How are they going to generate enough material locally to keep the folks entertained? They're not.
THAT'S WHY THE definition of local news has been pushed back to include rooming house fires and gas station holdups one thousand miles away from the Angola crisis, because we're certainly getting more war news than there are wars. Every time an Arab mug another Arab's cannel in the Sahara, they tell us it's Morocco versus Nigeria and settle back from the war crisis. And that's the way it is. Thursday, Feb. 12.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Published at the University of Kansas weekly journal, *The KU Journal*. Periodicals postage. Second-class postage paid at lawrence.semester and $1 a year in Douglas County and $1 a year in Kansas City. Subscription fee $0.00 a semester, paid through the subscriber's account. One a semester, paid through the subscriber's account.
Editor Carl Young
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor
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Associate Editor
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Yao Anshihua
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Greg Hack
Assistant Campus Editors
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Don Pierce
Staff Photographer
David McKinnon
Sports Editor
George Murphy Jau Kooher
Associate Sports Editors
Ken Stone,
Associate Sports Editors
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Copy Chiefs
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Westphal
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Jolene
Thursday, February 12, 1976
5
Age hinders some from drinking
By JAY BEMIS
Staff Writer
Underage people trying to get into Lawrence clubs and bars aren't always successful, local owners and managers report.
John Wooden, owner of the Wagon Wheel Cafe, said yesterday that such persons were on nights on nights of high school football basketball games or district tournaments.
He said that although a doorman checked identifications on Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays, the Wheel's busiest nights, and when trying to buy beer on opright nights.
He said it was obvious which people were underage.
When asked whether catching anperson hurt his business, Woodland said, "If it was my business, I wouldn't."
"Sometimes they'd come in and ask for pitchers, and we don't even sell pitchers," he said.
SKIP COUNDS, manager of the Jayhawk Cafe, said his tavern checked anyone questionable. A doorman is needed on site to verify identification of an operation to check identifications so yurt
He said those without identification were asked to leave immediately.
Rolfs vetoes hockey bill
"They usually do leave right away because they're fairly embarrassed," he said.
Ed Rolfs, student body president,
yesterday vetoed a bill that would have
allocated $3.861 to the KU Ice Hockey Club,
and the veto was referred to StudEx.
The bill was passed Feb. 5 by the Student
Senate.
Rfals said he would recommend that StudEx allocate $1,000 to the club. He said he couldn't justify giving the club $3,861. The university received only $1,543 from the Senate.
Rufs said that $1,075 of the allocation would have gone for traveling and subsistence expenses, and that this was in agreement with Senate budgeting philosophies.
"IN MY FOUR years in the Senate, I can never recall allocating funds for suburban schools or student organizations. My feeling is that if the Senate provides a substantial percentage of the total costs, the participants will incur some personal expenses." he said.
Rofs said the Senate wasn't acting responsibly when it passed the allocation. The Kansas University Athletic Corporation ticket subsidy debate earlier in the meeting was cut off before a roll call after the allocation passed showed that the Senate didn't have a guorum.
Tom Hansen, Overland Park sophomore and president of the club, said each member of the club had already spent at least $200 to cover club expenses.
"THEER SEEMED to be a Barnum and Bailey atmosphere at the meeting that did not lend itself to responsible and deliberate action." Rolfs said.
Hansen said Rolfs' veto may hurt Lawrence's chances to get an ice skating rink. An investor had been waiting to see whether the club would get local support before proceeding with plans for a $1.5 million skating facility, he said.
Coons said the Hawk tried to be firm in making persons leave, but not so firm that the persons wouldn't back when they finally turned 18.
There is a tradition of persons from Topeka and Kansas City trying to sneak into the Hawk, Coons said, especially when a player from Kansas City plays football or basketball in Lawrence.
ITS EASY to speak into the Hawk on college students. A large number of college customers, he said.
"On a Friday, we probably catch five to 10 persons," he said. "Some might not have I.D.'s and be legitimate, but they have to go home and get one."
Coors said fake identifications were usually "very obvious or very good."
"If it looks like one (fake I.D.)," he said, "we usually call the police and let them handle it. Probably just a small percentage of them are fake, though."
Don Ticknor, manager of Ichabod's Inc., said when he shrank an unearned person, he just asked them to leave without moralizing to them.
"I'll just tell them, 'Nice try, but I can't do that for you,'" he said.
Jerry Gilmore, manager of Herbie's Tavern, said he usually spot-capped for L.D.'s using his own discretion. A lot of people who are regular customers at Herbie's usually know which persons are underage, he said.
"CRACKING DOWN (on underage persons) is for the authorities," he said. "My only job is to try to prevent them from drinking."
Glimore said it wouldn't be the tavern's problem if someone presented to false I.D. A. Glimore said it wouldn't be the tavern's problem if someone presented to false I.D. A.
“It’s their fault if the police raid the place or something,” he said.
Private clubs have similar problems.
Luke Kieltyka Jr., manager of the Carriage Lamp, said checks depended on who the person was. The Carriage Lamp is a supper lamp. Children are admitted with their parents.
"IF A GRADUATE student brought in a chick under 21, neither of them could stay," he said. "He might buy one drink, slide it across the table, and then buv her one."
Kieltyke said that, in his seven years of managing the club, he had two major raids by police. One might have been set up, be said, and the other was a routine check.
In the alleged set up, Kieltyka said,
"a detective came into the club and went to a
bathroom."
"He then told me I was serving a girl who wasn't 12 and we had a discussion," he said. "We talked about the future."
To J.H.: Noping your 21st is
hubbling with joy!
W. W. Waterprises
Playin' that old time music
MAD JACK
& the BLACK LABELS
TONITE OFF the Wall ONLY 8:30 $1.50 737 NewHampshire Now on Tap OLYMPIA "Beer doesn't get any better"
KERRI KEPLINGER, an employee at the Sanctuary, a doaerman was used on Fridays and Saturday to be sure I.D.'s and membership cards had the same name.
(Alcoholic Beverage Control) in Topeka, he haven't heard anything from them, though, because he couldn't prove that the girl was drinking."
Usually, people turned away are from Lawrence, she said, and many customers from the Stables, a bar downstairs, try to get into the Sanctuary.
"We tell them they have to leave and can't even sit here, because they'll just have somebody else buy their drinks for them," she said.
Keplinger said that one time a stranger gave her an I.D. and a membership card with the same name, but she knew the person whose name was on them.
The Eldridge House checks primarily for membership, because member must be 21
to have a card, according to Doug Ninow,
club manager. Checking the identification
is mainly up to the discretion of whoever is
working, he said.
The Flamingo Club was also interviewed, but to comment on its identification procedure,
---
Schooners are coming to the Hawk Monday, Feb. 16
Minority Affairs Subcommittee Announces Openings on Two College Advisory Boards
1) State College Coordination Council. One minority representative is needed immediately to serve on this board composed of members of the Board of Regents, faculty, Senate presidents, government president, and other members of the Board. February 14th (Saturday). An interview will be required on February 16.
2) Minority Affairs Advisory Board. Three or four minority students are needed to serve on this important University board which deals with all aspects of minority affairs at the University. Students will be selected on the basis of their application. Deadline is February 16.
Paid for by Student Activity Fees
Applications may be picked up at the Student Senate office, Room 105 B on Level 3 of the Kansas Union. Submit completed applications to the same.
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6
Thursday, February 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
00
Guards beat ISU, 61-53
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Sports Editor
By ALLEN QUACKENBUSH
Cook scored 11 last night
If there was shooting to be done by a guard last night, Iowa State's Hercy Iley did not.
other Mit Gibson and Clint Johnson had other ideas. The University of Kansas guards, who even shot well from the back, were shut out on a shooting exhibition in the first half.
THE WIN MOVED the Jayhawks' record to 11 in league plus 11-0 overall. Iowa State was on top.
Gibson and Johnson combined to bomb in
nine of 12 first half shots to lead KU to a 81-
win victory.
Iowa State came out in a zone defense, obviously intent on forcing the KU guards to shoot. It seemed like the ideal strategy. But Nor Johnson had been shootin' well.
But KU coach Ted Owens had no complaints about their play yesterday. In addition to shooting well, Gibson and Johnson also did a good job of running the KU fast break and combined to hold the high-scoring Ivy to only eight points.
IVY, THOUGH, WAS severely hampered by a badly pulled groin muscle, and was forced to sit out much of the second half. Despite the injury, Ivy moved into second place on the all-time Iowa State scoring list behind Don Smith.
The Jayhawks hit a blistering 58 per cent from the field in the first half and took a 10 point lead into the locker room. But during the game, KU's shooting touch turned ice cold.
The Jayhawks went almost eight and one half minutes into the second half without scoring. Ken Koenigs finally managed to score with an unnolled layup at the 11.23 mark
IOWA STATE, however, was doing no better. Art Johnson, who led the Cyclones in scoring with 18 points, hit a field goal to open the half. But, like KU, the Cyclones
She moved into a nearly insurmountable lead entering tomorrow night's finale, the one he'd been waiting for.
INNSBURCK (AP)—America's Dorothy Hamill, shaking off a nasty fall in practice, all but locked up the women's figure skating gold medal with a brilliant performance yesterday, and effervescent Rosi Mittermaier of West Germany made a bid for Olympic history with her second gold medal of these Winter Games.
Hamill, 19, and bidding to follow in the golden path of former American winners Peggy Fleming, Carla Heiss and Tenley Lester. The former head of the women's future skate yesterday.
Mittmeriaer, who also won Sunday's downhill race, will seek to win her third gold medal in tomorrow's giant slalom. Twice before in the 52-year history of the Winter Games, a man has won all three Alpine gold medals; no woman has ever done it.
While Hamil seemed to have secured America's second gold medal of the Winter Olympics, his team had a bundle of energy who is the most popular skier on the World Cup circuit, won her second gold medal with a victory in the snowboard competition and unprecedented third victory in her sport.
For the first day of these games, the surprisingly strong American group here failed to win a medal. On the same day, the Russian team Russians also failed to win a gold medal.
The U.S. team finished a surprising sixth in the cross-country relay race, with Bill Koch of Guillford, Vt, registering the third fastest leg of the day.
It was the best U.S. placement in Olympic relay races since the event was introduced in 1938, and it followed Koch's silver medal in the 30-kilometer cross-country race.
Harmil, of Riverside, Conn., has been plagued by stage fright and falls throughout her 11-year career and she fell while executing a sitspin in practice yesterday.
During this period, KU went into its spread offense in an effort to draw the Cyclone defense out of its zone. With about 10 percent of their losses, man-to-man, and Koenius went to work.
That apparently took some of the pressure off as she skated nearly perfectly in the short program and surged into the race. She stood, standing between her and a gold medal.
went the next eight minutes without a point,
missing eight shots and throwing the ball
WITH PAUL MOKESKI on the bench with four fours, Koenigs was playing the post position. Putting his height advantage to good use, Koenigs scored ten of his game-high 21 points in a six-minute stretch in the second half.
Sten Stensen of Norway won the men's 5,000-meter speed skating race in a light snowstorm with Dan Carroll of St. Louis finishing sixth for the United States.
Hamill skating brilliantly near taking Olympic gold
RANNAS (61)
| | FG | PF | PP | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Coors | 4 | 7 | 10 | 13 |
| Koneigs | 8 | 9 | 10 | 21 |
| Makowski | 6 | 9 | 10 | 21 |
| Johnson | 8 | 9 | 10 | 21 |
| Alcantara | 8 | 9 | 10 | 21 |
| Nohles | 1 | 2 | 5 | 4 |
| Burckhardt | 1 | 2 | 5 | 4 |
| Sanders | 31 | 30 | 30 | 30 |
IOWA STATE (52)
| | FG | PF | PP | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Johnsen | 4 | 7 | 10 | 13 |
| Parker | 1 | 2 | 5 | 4 |
| Taylor | 1 | 2 | 5 | 4 |
| Tivy | 4 | 0 | 1 | 2 |
| Smith | 4 | 0 | 2 | 2 |
| Brookhain | 4 | 2 | 2 | 1 |
| Butkus | 0 | - 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Total | 31 | 30 | 30 | 30 |
RANNAS
| | FG | PF | PP | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| RANNAS | 39 | 34 | 31 | 31 |
Mike Benjamin and Dae Smith came off the Iowa State bench to spark the comeback attempt, scoring eight quick points between them. But it was too little too late .
KU. SHOWING GOOD poise down the stretch in winning its second road game of the year, hit 10 of 12 free throws in the last eight minutes.
Koenigs, playing one of his best games of the year, led the scoring with 21 points. He also scored high with 12, Norm Cook had 11 and Johnson 10 in KU's balanced attack.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 12, 1976
7
Tom Hedrick's voice inimitable
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
The radio voice of Tom Hedrick just goes and flows. Listen. The Voice of the Jayhaws picks up the action at a recent basketball game:
"Jump is controlled by Kansas. Norman Cook back to Mokeki. And down the line comes Milt Gibson, 11-28 to play in the half. Mil's in the right forecourt, looks for Big Mo. Bounce pass on the deck.
HEDRICK TALKS LIKE he says some players shoot: "like a whirling devilv."
"He gets it to Ken Koenings," Hedrick never pauses, "puts it up a-boat, too, off太 fat. Mokeki rebounds, follows, gets it! 'He's not six.'
HEDRICK ALKS LIKES he says some players play him. His play-by-play game description ceases only for stats, percentages, player profiles, time left in the half, score, analysis and a bit of opinion. You won't learn it by "duh," "ah" or "um." It's uncanny.
Hedrick away from the microphone is no different. The 41-year-old veteran sportscenter can turn on the enthusiasm he'd never cranked up, there's no stopping him.
WHEN ASKED WHAT he decided to return to Kansas (he had been Voice of the Jayhawks from 1980-1966), the sandy-haired announcer with a penchant for coining words and nicknames was off for the rages:
"I wanted to spend my life in a place where I wanted to live the rest of my life. And I've taken the posture that you can achieve it in a so-called non-bleg league market."
He continued without pause, "I've always liked the University of Kansas best. it gave me my start after I went to college like me in 1966). My wife went to school here. My
P
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Sportscaster Hedrick
daughter was born here. I just like the people the best. I like, the atmosphere."
STILL MORE HEDRICK: "I like the academic life; I like teaching class (radio broadcasting). I like doing music playing-play-behavior. I don't love it--I love it."
Hedrick must be sure of himself. He's tried about everything a sportscaster could try.
Hedrick has been a voice of the Kansas
City Chiefs, the Nebraska Cornhuskers and the Cincinnati Reds. He's announced three Super Bowls, scores of Texas Rangers baseball games, the NCAA basketball championships and ABC's Wide World of Sports.
AND SINCE JULY of last year, he's been back at KU, where he earned a master's degree in 1958. It's not hard to tell he's back.
"We all have certain expressions we we Hedrick said. I think that good. I tip my hat."
Who else could slip in "Incoln Continental," "the pressure Cooker" and "Big Norm"—three of his nicknames for Ms. Grace? (one more one of his pet expressions?)
"If you're going to say a guys's name, 1600 times during a basketball season and a thousand times during a football season . . . ," his voice trailed off in a short sigh. "I am going to create a sentence. "There is an entertainment quality involved in this," he said.
AN EXAMPLE OF that quality came in Hedrick's halftime interview with Chuck Neinas, Big Eight commissioner, last Saturday.
"Now Chuck," Hedrick began, "let ask you, leading-off-wise, a very important question. We've obviously got a great race. In your opinion, does anybody, schedule-wise, maybe have an advantage?"
Neinas' answer was unimportant. The question provided ample entertainment.
"My style is my style, and it's unacceptable." Hedwig said.
Who, responding-wise, could argue?
Scouts to skip if sales worsen
KANAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The president of the Kansas City Scouts said yesterday the National Hockey League club would not remain in Kansas City next season unless a drive to double season ticketholders to at least 8,000 was successful.
The seriousness of the Scout's financial situation was disclosed by Edwin Thompson, Scouts president, at a meeting called Tuesday to discuss the support of business and civil leaders.
Lawrence E. Smith of the Greater Kansas City Sports Commission described the hockey team's plight as a double-edged emergency for the city. He said if the队 failed to get a broader base of financial support it would leave the city.
"The only way the Scouts can operate in Kansas City next year is a ticket drive with help from the business community to sell 8,000 hours of attendance hadn't come up to expectations."
If this happens, he said, the city will be in the perilous position of paying its debt obligations on the arena. The Scoots, an expansion franchise in its second year with the NHL, are the arena's principal tenant at $252,000 a year in rent and concessions.
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8
Thursday, February 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU coping with Title IX
By DAVE HAUBER
Guidelines intended to end sex discrimination at the University of Kansas are expected to be submitted sometime in March by Title IX subcommittees studying employment and admissions.
The subcommittees will combine their findings of any sex discrimination at KU into one report by the Title I Self- Evaluation Committee. This committee be needed for approval to a steering committee comprised of Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Mike Davis, University general counsel; and David Robinson, vice chancellor. KU Medical Center.
THE INFORMATION to be sent to the steering committee is all part of a self-evaluation called for by the Title IX Education Amendments of 1972. This self-evaluation must be completed and approved by July 21, 1976.
the steering committee may send the recommendations of the Title IX report back to the self-evaluation committee for further revision, Bonnie Ritter Patton, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, said yesterday.
The legal stimulus for all this committee activity is based upon the federal legislation of title IX, under the jurisdiction of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HFWA), which prohibits sex education in public federally funded educational institutions.
SINCE COMPLIANCE with federal funding standards is of financial concern for institutions of higher education, the issue of reconciling the traditional operations of schools and departments with that of the requirements of HEW is a sensitive one.
Recently, HEW suspended all new federal contracts with the University of Missouri at Columbia because HEW said the affirmative action program there was inadequate. The holdup is preventing #1.5 contract with the Veterans Administration.
The University of Missouri case isn't an isolated one, according to a story in the Kansas City Times. The university is among schools specifically, St. Louis University and Washington University in St. Louis, had run into problems due to unequality of their affective date of TIX IX guidelines, which was July 21, 1975.
The charges made by HEW against the University of Missouri were that "it did not include an analysis of the work force from which employees may be drawn, a utilization study to show how many women and men are employed," and it contained no goals or timetables."
RESPONDING TO the timetables of Title IX is the present concern of KU's self-evaluation committee. It has been working toward finishing its report to meet the July 21 deadline required by Title IX. HEW has required study of any sex discrimination from all areas of the University to be completed within one year after the effective date of TIX IX guidelines, which was July 21, 1975.
After the self-evaluation committee has made its findings, the steering committee has one month to consider the report before sending it back for any revision.
It now appears that the work of the self-evaluation committee will be finished in about a month, according to Tom McNamara. The committee is formed civilization and a committee member.
Jerry Waugh, chairman of the treatment of students subcommittee, said findings on the athletic department's operations were surprising. "It would be concluded in a couple of weeks."
WAUGH SAID THE committee studying athletics was looking at the kind of funds available to athletes and whether they were best distributed according to TITLE IX
The self-evaluation committee's working definition of discrimination is: "Any act which can reasonably be interpreted to be prejudicial to the welfare of educational employment and participatory opportunity by all persons where that act is based upon considerations that are not essentially related to the pursuing of employment or education, and considerations are a person's race or sex."
Waugh said, "All we are doing is pointing out the discrepancies and saying, 'University of Kansas, what are you going to do about it?' "
ATHLETICS
Athletics is one part of the University that will be largely affected by the self-evaluation committee's findings. A source of controversy in the past has been trying to understand the impact that Title IX will have on athletics, whether it means that women will be able to play on teams with men in contact sports.
Revisions were made in Title IX by President Ford and Congress last April, that provide for separate teams in athletic programs where competitive skills are a requirement. Teams play a contact sport. The revisions still give schools the alternative of having a single team open to both sexes. If separate teams are offered, the revised Title IX states, athletic departments may not discriminate on the basis of sex in providing
THE KEY TOHOW Title IX will affect
programs in the state. Program
definition of "equal opportunity"
"Equal opportunity" is a term which "addresses the totality of the athletic program of the institution rather than each sport offered," according to a memorandum released last September by Peter L. Gould, director of HEW's Office for Civil Rights.
Fonds allocated to men's and women's
sports may not necessarily be equal, but
those doing the allocating must consider the
interests of all participants in the programs.
See TITLE page 9
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Thursday, February 12, 1976
9
Title IX
From page eight
Athletic scholarships also must be distributed in an equal manner, so that students interested in athletics can qualify for funding. Some of the factors that Title IX looks at when inspecting an athletic program are:
- Sports selected and how well they reflect the interests and abilities of both sexes
- Provision of supplies and equipment.
- Game and practice schedules.
- Travel and per diem allowances.
- Coaching and academic tutoring op-
portunity families and the assignment and pay
off.
- Housing and dining facilities and publicity.
Locker rooms, practice and competitive facilities.
The athletic department, unlike other areas of the University, has until three years from July 21, 1976 to comply with Title IX guidelines. This was included in the revision of Title IX because athletics were thought to require more changes.
"It can't be a waiting period." Waugh
hinted at the three-year period. "It has to be
a movover."
SCHOLARSHIPS and FINANCIAL AID
In addition to athletics, Title IX is concerned with financial aid and foreign education.
Sex is prohibited from being a determination in awarding financial aid. Provisions have been made to allow scholarships to be awarded from sex-restrictive and non sex-restrictive sources. If enough aid isn't available through non sex-restrictive sources (such as a Kansas honor scholarship) for members of one sex, such students are awarded scholarships from sex-restrictive sources or Summerfield scholarship) either be limited or that funds be obtained from somewhere else to make up the difference.
Foreign scholarships, such as Rhodes scholarships, are exempt from Title IX because, the act says, Congress didn't intend to end such programs.
Schools are allowed to award single-sex scholarships, but they must make other foreign-study opportunities available to students of the other sex.
Physical education classes are allowed separation of sexes during participation in contact sports. Grouping by a student's ability is also permitted.
ADMISSIONS
It is forbidden to base admission to the library on the basis of sex. Title XII prohibits disclosure.
- candidate criteria (specific tests)
- application of sex-based tests or selection criteria
- data collection, populations
University Daily Kansan
-Application in a discriminatory manner of rules concerning marital or parental entitlement.
Granting of preference to applicants
based on their attendance at particular institutions if the preference results in sex
--in the Different Shopping Center
-Discrimination on the basis of pregnancy and related conditions.
-Setting of quotas for number of men or women admitted to any school.
However, T1X calls IX for the recruitment of a new patient, and remedy the effects of past discrimination.
- Access to and participation in course
activities and extracurricular activities,
including internships.
TREATMENT OF STUDENTS is covered by Title IX in the following areas:
—Use of facilities and comparability and availability of housing.
-Eligibility for, and receipt or enjoyment of, benefits, services and financial aid.
EMPLOYMENT IS covered by Title IX as follows:
- Job classification and structure.
—Employment criteria.
— Job classification and structure.
— Fringe benefits.
-Compensation.
Effect of state and local laws or other requirements.
—Pre-employment inquiries. Frm or call: 800-735-6222.
Another area affected by Title IX is honor societies. Honor societies are specifically prohibited from maintaining sex-restricted activities and are not required to follow guidelines, honor societies must either lose the benefits of an adviser and free meeting space or accept members of the opposite gender.
Fraternities and sororites are exempted from these restrictions.
DONALDSON, WHO works on the employment subcommittee, said, "We (the committee) have had to ask a lot of hard questions. Fortunately, Title IX has a lot of leeway. It gives institutions time to change."
Patton said, however, that if change isn't forthcoming, complaints against the University can go through three channels: (1) the university's internal procedures of HEW and the courts.
HEW enforcement, however, is lacking,
Patton said.
Ken Dodds, assistant to the University general counsel, said KU was hoping that Mr. Tuchmann's compliance with Title IX by the self-evaluation deadline. He said that any problems of noncompliance by departments would be handled through administrative
"There isn't any muscle that's exercised in
the consistent way," the under-
studies said. "It's not a matter of gravity."
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10
Thursday, February 12, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Israeli rights called strong
By CONRAD BIBENS
Staff Writer
Although Israel is in a state of perpetual seism, the concept of basic human rights is still strong, a visiting Israeli teacher said last night in a speech in the Kansas Union.
Speaking to about 15 persons in the Walnut Room, Avraham Shapiro, of the University of Haifa, said Israel's record on human trafficking was unblemished, but it was exceptional.
Shapiro, born in New York and educated at Yale and Harvard universities, emigrated to Israel in 1955. His lecture was sponsored by the University Institute In-land Law Society.
In Israel, one can be held in jail without trial for an indefinite period, Shapiro said. This practice, called administrative detention, is rarely done and is used against people likely to be dangerous to security," be said.
FEWER THAN 50 people are now impounded under this law, he said, and most wouldn't be held very long. Those who were not dangerous will be deprived. he said.
Administrative detention is usually used against Arabs, who are part of the 16 per cent of Israel's people who aren't Jewish, Shantro said.
He said, however, that the program wasn't apprt on an ethnic basis but on an Asian one.
"We do have security problems because of a national ethnic minority that's identified with an external enemy," Shapiro said.
Arab citizens of Israel are able to vote and elect office, he said, and, although not subject to the military draft, they can volunteer for the Israeli army.
Shapiro said he knew of an Arab colonel in the army and an Arab mayor in Nazareth.
"WE TYR to avoid the excesses of other nations, such as the United States' mass imprisonment of American citizens of Japanese descent during World War II," he said.
There is prior restraint of the Israeli press on matters of national security, such as troop movements, Shapiro said. But in other contexts, he has the right to publish what it wants, he said.
There had been a law proposed in Israel that would have limited the right of the press to publish unofficial diplomatic talks. The United States, pushed by the United States, was rejected.
"It was ill-considered," he said.
Though Israel has no written constitution, the Israeli people have great respect for the Israeli law.
"The law is written with a capital 'L'," he
said as if it were handed down from Mount
Mount Everest.
Avraham Shapiro
ISRAELI LAW was based originally on British law, Shapiro said, but in recent years American precedents have gained some influence.
For example, Shapiro said, in the early 1960s a government move was made to stop the use of nuclear weapons.
Communist Party. The Israeli Supreme Court ruled that the paper could continue to publish under the "clear and present danger" doctrine.
This doctrine, established by U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Willem Holmes, said there couldn't be any prior restraint of a newspaper unless its publication was a clear and present danger to national security.
Staprio said that there wasn't any official separation of church and state in Israel, but that there was complete freedom of religion and speech. His rights are paid by the government, he said.
THERE IS NO civil marriage service in Israel and agnostic couples must fly to Cyprus to get married, he said. Many Israelists want a civil marriage ceremony
"We used to say that couples who flew to Cyprus were married by 'Rabbi Makarios,'" Shapiro said. Makarios is an engineer and former president of Cyprus, he said.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 12; 1976
11
Doctors ...
From page one
bottom like it's never been scrubbed," he said. "It's like getting dressed for a party." The panelists got an inaccurate picture of the operating rooms' condition; he said.
For example, he said, during the investigation two balloon cups (devices that aid the heart's pumping of blood) were at the center. During the panelist's two visits. That might have given the panelista a picture of a well-supplied operating room, Reis said.
But within a week after the second tour, the balloon pumps were gone—they had been on loan from the manufacturer, Reis said.
ONE NURSE SAID another possible reason for the alleged inaccurate picture was that the panelists hadn't contacted the cardiothoracic nurse team.
"We could have told them that the air conditioning might go off in the middle of a cloud."
Another nurse said, "It seems to me that you understand the conditions we work under every day, you would talk to girls who work in the clinic (or the conditions) change from day to day."
"We could have told them we couldn't, at times, hot water to heat the patients; at times, cold water."
But one of the four cardiothoracic nurses said, "Our supervisor (Bortz) who never spends any time in the (operating) rooms, doesn't know what to do," she probably didn't know what was wrong."
SHE SAID THAT while sometimes the air conditioning system was working well, at other times it would be either too cold, too warm, or shut off entirely while being repaired.
"These things you can't tell by walking through an area," she said.
One nurse who did accompany the patients on both tours was Bortz, Robinson said.
“IT SEEMS TO ME,” she continued, “if they were genuinely interested in finding out, they would have talked to us—the people who worked in the department—rather than someone who is never in the room.”
Another of the same group of nurses said,
"She's never back in the rooms anyway."
"About three weeks ago," he said, "a surgeon in this community told me that Dr. (Loren) Humphrey (chairman of surgery department and codefendant in Rela's $'s center) asked him to serve on a committee to find a new cardiac surgeon.
Bortz declined to comment last night. Kes said he thought the Med Center had better work with him.
Ralph Christoffersen, assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs, is expected to direct the summer session after this summer, Hutchison said.
THE COMMITTEE'S REPORT was samed by the RECITEE. Vice President Clyde K. Johnson, February 6, 1970.
"So, three or four weeks ago, Dr. Humphrey was soliciting a surgeon to serve on that committee—which is strange, because the committee even received the committee's report then."
The one of the cardiothoracic nurses said the Man of the "would do anything" to get rid of Dr. Res.
But Robinson and Dykes denied that they intended to get Reis to resign.
Robbinson said the report "was done with the very best people we could obtain."
KU to get computer
Calgaard decided to reshuffle duties within the office, rather than look for someone from the outside, so there would be no training process, Hutchison said.
An administrative computer advisory
hospital has given its recommendation to
Churchill Hospital.
The computer acquisition process began four years ago when a study group determined the extent of KU's need for a computer, Shankel said.
Dykes is expected to submit the recommendation to the Division of Purchasing in Topeka for approval, which could come this week, Shankel said.
direct the summer semester and intercession.
The University will announce the computer recommended by the advisory group after the Division of Purchasing makes its decision, he said.
Janet Riley, assistant to Calgaard, will help Hutchison do his budgetary work.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
--day basis since May 1975 when Calgaard, then associate vice chancellor for Outreach, became vice chancellor.
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Increases in part-time students will create larger enrollment in Outreach programs, Jerry Hutchinson, associate vice president for academic affairs, said yesterday.
Outreach head sees increase in enrollment
Part-time students who took six hours or fewer made up 10 per cent of KU's enrolment 10 years ago, Hutchison said. Now, 20 per cent of the enrolment is part-
Hutchison's duties were expanded Tuesday to include the Outreach program.
Increased leisure time is creating increased postgraduate enrollment, he said, because people want to "broaden their mental horizons" during their spare time.
"We're wanting more lifetime learning as a society," he said.
time and that percentage is expected to more than double again, he said.
Hutchison and Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, had shared the Outreach responsibilities on a day-to-
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kansan are offered to students of any national origin. PLEASE BURRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
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*Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 864-3534.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
FOR SALE
Tromendon selection of guitars, amps, drums,
bassists, keyboards, saxophones. Choose from
Hog's Shop - Hog Keyboard Studios, Choose from
Amy Ampere Kultom, Greec, and many others.
After atert topp T. p.m. Row Keyboards Studios,
after atert topp T. p.m. Row Keyboards Studios.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on your hikit equipment other than factory dumps or close-on repairs, but if you do not buy them at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS.
We can make your stereo sound better. GUAR-
ANCE! Our stereo systems have two details at
Audio Systems, 307 E. 9th.
Quitting business sale—bargain! Everything new in furniture, Large building full of merchandise furniture, Large building full of merchandise furniture, Large building full of merchandise. Country Shop, Herb Allerbur, Allerbur. (Hwy 40) Open 6-9, nee days 7-34. 812-349-213. (Hwy 40) Open 6-9, nee days 7-34. 812-349-213.
COST * 10% - Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single item or packages. Register for free Kissone. Call Dave. Phone: 862-6583. Earnings 6 to 10.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands on
sorbed. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160-page,
research paper. Research Assistance.
www.academic-research assistance.com.
Los Angeles, Calif. Calif. 4923
(213) 787-8744.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
BELL AUSTRALIA BELL AUSTRALIA ELECTRIC, 943-9609, 3000 W, 6th.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Machinery. Make the Furniture & Appliance Center, Tilt
Machine and Installation Center.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold work. Miniature sculpture, conventional diamond jewellery. Executed R.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting and design of unnatural stones. 841-3883 or 843-0970.
must sell HP-70 Financial Calculator. Best offer.
Leave message at 842-757. 2-12
Double Bed complete with mattress, box springs and frame. Good condition, $70. 842-2685. 2-12
1970 WV Fastback, auto, air, radio. 560,000 miles
2-13
814-6846
FENDER TWIN REVERB AMP Almost brand
Fender speakers. Mike Call at BM14-0280 - 12
Max Factor Lip Gloss—all flavors, plain an-
frosted at Round Cutter Drug Steril. 801 Max
Peace-600, two Alice speakers with stands,
mails. Call 842-2144 anytime.
2:13
Portable Santa-Corona "Cornair" two-man 1980, two years old, but rarely 2-13
K44 92-888
K44 92-888
Expedition Parks-National Leadership
Large, Large. Filler II 81, 842-4378, 42-15
at p. 129.
FUR SALK. Seal skin, muskrat, rabbit, 35% off.
Organic shampoo, baths, massage oils,
organic shampoo, bathtubs, massage oils and
shampoo. Shained and biodegraded biogran-
dable. See **BIODEGRADABLE** and **BIODEGRADATED**.
POTION PARLOR. 819 Vermont Hormone
Hours 12-5.
Motorola Megaphon, two seven inch scale
beam chrome lights, electronic police-ambulance
inscene, concealable 75 wt speaker, midfork pocket
speaker, Tecno 160A updell. Call 814-713-128
12:30.
1986 Portugal Catalina, excellent condition, air
conditioned, 3 star, or best offer 10/24,
keep trying 2-12
Thomas Monroe 371, organ with Mang Peng Protest
Reserve. Heavy Respiratory For information can be
provided at Reservoir 560 Receiver.
SPEAKERS—6 x 8 jersey coaxial never been paid $25,000 to John $41,833-2.17
Slide-rule Calculator in excellent condition. Call 814-5244 after 5:30 p.m. for more information.
Camera lens for Minolta S22mm Vivitar, 35mm
f1.8 lens for Olympus FX-70mm F2.8,
Call: 842-9560 after 9:50 a.m. to
9:17 a.m.
1 pair of Davos 595s, 189's made in Australia.
2 pairs of Davos 795s, 189's made in Australia.
Bought for $450, will sell for $65 or best offer for $950.
--large selection of sizes & prices
YARN-PATTERNS--NEEDLEPOINT
MUSIC IN MEMORY
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10.5 Monday, Saturday
IVAN'S 86 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & Mass.
$42,000
613-555-1234
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
Calculator, Bowman Brain, excellent condition.
For reasonable offer or higher bid:
862-8184
8-135
90 Triumph 675, 274 miles per gallon, radial
wheel. Good condition, good comfort. 842-80711,
for Touring.
Women's size 5 sweat jacket (ruck) trimmed in
their slicker. Bib size 481-735. Keep 3 inches
above the bottom.
Kustom 205 bass amp. Good condition. Call 842-9048 after 6 or see at http://www.
2-17
Classics records for sale. About 100 s2c to ¥3
925 s2c to ¥3000 s2c to ¥100 s10e to ¥3
841 s2c to ¥306 s2c to ¥186 s10e to ¥3
841 s2c to ¥306 s2c to ¥186 s10e to ¥3
Brown Wide-away bed in excellent condition.
Matted floor. Matt $41. Call 843-3291 for
5.00 p.m.
1974 Ford Mustang II, 29,000 miles, excellent condition.
Mustang I: 913-725-2825. Topeka near 5:30 AM
1974 Mustang II: 913-725-2825. Topeka near 5:30 AM
1974 VW Super Beetle 4 and in dash AM-FM
video with 4 trac. Chk 81-679; ask us for
image.
1975 Yamaha 350 hd, Mutt sell, will sell cheap
864-2233 2-18
NOTICE
1966 Dodge Coronet, Automatic, Snow plow,
brakes, brakes, excellent condition, 8-19
2-19
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, duluxes, clocks, televisions. Daily open. 12:35-12:47. 842-337-377
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at Quick Copy Center. We can make 5 copies of your hard copy in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, #38 Massachusetts. 814-6900.
SKLM-ont Bleu is open, 10% less under new
charge. 8 mAh on Kid-K10, 10 mAh on kid-K20,
charge 8 mAh on Kid-K30, 10 mAh on kid-K40.
Handyman Special. Possible Contract. Rebuild
handyman house. He needs house work. Some repa-
tions and remodeling. Call Li Haikang at 842-1839,
or Peter Pomerant avenue at 842-753-8188, or
Peter Pomerant avenue at 842-753-8188.
February Specials—Musk, Chantilly, Heaven
March Specials—Harry Potter, please
every Valentine, Round Corner Dart
Game
Remember your Valentine Feb. 14.-Pancunbers
Round Card. Rounds. Corner Dog Card.
809, Sax 304.
362, Macy's 794.
SECRITS only few have mastered, true friendship, love, forgiveness and understanding promised in the book. Includes pamphlets by mail. No cost or obligation. Mail Box 5067, Topeka, Kansas | Discovering 2 ©盒博 5067, Topeka, Kansas
Announcing the Catab Cafe's special Sunday
business! The Catab Cafe serves a variety of
vibrant only. Each week's meal will be a 4 or 5
guests course featuring fresh food and
guest chefs. By taking advantage of our
guests as reasonable as possible,
This Sunday, Feb. 10 we offer a course to remember by Chef Poly Cheff. A course to remember by Chef Poly cheff or information at Catab Cafe, 805 Main St., New York, NY 10026.
Give a gift of lastening this Valentines Day.
Visit our gallery, which includes poetry, art, and illustrated books as well as paperbacks and $1 price paperbooks in most fields. We allow students to complete out-of-park search service. Come in for a private interview or holiday Tuesday-Thursday 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Friday-Saturday 10 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-Friday 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Closed Monday 1405 Mass: 811-644-6422
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
travel allowance. Enroll now in transportation
transportation provided. Driver pay, pay later.
TSD Rail--This Sunday at Broken Arrow Park.
& 320. Louisville, Registration at 12:00, 2:15
- 3:45
Employment Opportunities
Students make money up to $95 per wk/part or a home address enveloping. Companies offer training in information regarding opportunities with these information regarding opportunities with these companies Advertising by 1107, Atlanta, GA 63035
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE. If you enjoy it, help a new young couple to help us at our office. You will need a young marriage to be married to us. We provide a private housekeeping cabin, completely furnished, with high ceilings; diving; moving general upkeep, welcoming guests; keeping dishes, etc. Time period: 14-hour housekeeping. For the day, depending on your convenience. For use the list below for Raymond Curt, 100 Sunset Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90020, 100 Sunset Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90020, 100 Sunset Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90020, 100 Sunset Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90020, 100 Sunset Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90020, 100 Sunset Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90020, 100 Sunset Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90020,
Oversee Jobs-temporary or permanent. Eus-
sional B.S. in S. America, etc., all典
tallies.获$2000 bonus. Seeing free info-wire International Job Center.
Dept. KA, Box 4400, Berkeley CA 94704, 212-835-6600.
A job opening for a student research assistant at the University of California, San Diego, requires graphing of data and analyzing in research. Specific computer skills preferred but not required. Candidates must have a Master's degree, Achievement Place 111 Haworth, 843-3460.
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
$12,000
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement in our program, with one of the top 30 companies in U.S. degree programs
Rewarding summer for sophomore and older college students Colorado mountains counselling and outdoor programs. Write now! include program Boys for Blooms, Flower Girls for Ramps for Boys. Floral Design, Colorado 8081
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a publication Bank, 38 & Retrock and Malls. Shop finding.
German Shepherd Huskie Cross pup Female
Broadway at 12:30 am around 12:30 &
Tennessee 834-7946
Found: One set of keys afternoon in front of Weeseck base. Claim in 111 Flint. Z=13
Lock black wallet in Allen Field House Feb. 5.
Need ID back in 844-1076.
2.17
House key near 15th and Nalmatum. Identify and claim at 111 Flint. 2-13
Nine Greek letters found in reasonable proximity to the word *καλκίδος* (f. x. 5; f. x. 36; f. ioh, each and of limited importance) or *καλεσθαι* (f. x. 5; f. ioh, each and of limited importance).
Found. Lady's Watch. Identify and call. Claim
between 5 p.m.-10 p.m. 864-1323. 2-13
I lest my little blue pillow at the KU-K state if you found it, call 843-656 and Sarah. 2-16
Found: a calculator last tuesday at the Mad Hater. Call 841-5794 and identify. 2-16
$100 reward for information leading to use of
www.brandname.com
Ibadin area web site: 1. Black and white fr
www.brandname.com
Pound: young female Samao/Husky type dog.
Light colored: 833-1035. 2-16
**Found:** Indiana' times watch, Feb. 9 on
Poundstone '13. Potter's Lake and Spencer Lake.
*644-515-199*
Lost: Two ring in Waeestre room on Feb. 9th.
Lost: Value Reward. Bank 841-684-20-14
Lost: Male Basket dog is name; Walker No. tags
injuries and medical record. Reward Debury 2:18
*384*
*384*
Found: Brennan plaque addressed to Rens, from Kendall, Nance, Kriak, and John. Call 864-2541.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in at the front desk (two rows, walk-up phone) at WEBSTERS (no phone). Attendance for 25 hours must be completed.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
rental housing in Lawrence, Lawrence
842-260-7531 842-260-7539
2 bdmh. all, until all, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Furn. parking, a/e, pool. 843-4993.
New 2 & 3 bbm; apartment near campus; parking:
.80; small,1.5m efficiency appliance,utilition;
.40; one-bedroom apartment.
Room available in a cooperative house, $40 and
dryer, good people, 842-9421
dryer, good people, 842-9421
Large room for man. Private bath-entrance
21 blocks west of床. 843-7827. 2-12
Boom curried with, shared kitchen and bath
toilet. Suitable for adults only. Affects
applicant for a mall town. No park.
No public amenities.
1 bdmr furnished apt. available immediately in
University Terrace, 8432-2299, 8433-1293, 2-16
14 bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
lyette and 2 rooms to campus $85 and up.
845 or $802-7458
C. 18
1905
armadillo bead cc
MACRAME BEADS
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
Sublet 2-bdrm. apt, at Frontier Ridge, AC. carpet, 1 lounge, laundry box. Furnished or un furnished. Clean and clean. Free dishes, linens. newspaper subscription. Avail. Feb. 24. 2-17
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
The New School of Music at McKinney
the famous great folde instrument,
folk and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin,
and classical guitar, rock band, guitar and.
Call 841-6817
0817
NIKL-Mont Blue is open, 10% has under new
release. 3 m/l for K-10, 3 m/l for K-15, 3 m/l for
3 m/l for K-19 and 3 m/l for K-28.
a Winter Wetton with a Sunlamp from Round
Complete Store. Complete kits, replacement
nails -81st Max
Use Your People Book Coupon at Round Corner Drugstore*—15% off. 601 Mass. 2-13
SKI Equipment Package: SKis, boots, bindings, and
ski gear. Call 641-8754 (with Pricing). (For first come,
prior to stock levels.) PAYMENTS:
2-Day
ART SHOW AND SALE. BAPTIST CENTER
1829 W. 19th, APFARDABLE ART-WOOD AND
ANIMAL WORK-
MANS. Hours 9-3 Mon, Thu Sat, 7-3
Thurs-2-5 Sunday. Begins Feb. 9, Fri. 9
Celebration of Love. Come and share in an event of love poems, dancing, and a celebration of love poems. The prison is filled with a collection of tall books and a movement exercise to mute itself as the prisoner exercises to mute himself. 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, May 24, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 25, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 26, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 27, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 28, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Wednesday, May 29, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, May 30, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 31, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 32, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 33, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 34, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 35, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 36, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 37, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 38, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 39, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 40, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 41, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 42, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 43, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 44, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 45, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 46, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 47, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 48, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 49, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 50, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 51, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 52, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 53, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 54, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 55, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 56, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 57, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 58, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 59, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 60, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 61, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 62, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 63, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 64, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 65, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 66, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 67, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 68, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 69, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 70, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 71, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 72, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 73, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 74, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 75, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 76, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 77, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 78, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 79, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 80, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 81, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 82, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 83, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 84, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 85, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 86, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 87, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 88, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 89, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 90, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 91, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 92, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 93, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 94, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 95, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 96, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 97, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 98, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 99, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 100, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 101, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 102, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 103, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 104, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 105, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 106, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 107, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 108, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 109, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 110, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 111, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 112, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 113, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 114, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 115, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 116, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 117, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 118, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 119, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 120, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 121, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 122, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 123, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 124, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 125, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 126, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 127, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 128, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 129, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 130, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 131, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 132, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 133, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 134, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 135, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 136, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 137, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 138, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 139, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 140, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 141, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 142, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 143, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 144, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 145, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 146, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 147, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 148, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 149, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 150, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 151, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 152, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 153, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 154, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 155, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 156, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 157, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 158, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 159, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 160, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 161, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 162, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 163, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 164, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 165, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 166, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 167, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 168, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 169, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 170, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 171, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 172, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 173, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 174, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 175, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 176, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 177, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 178, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 179, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 180, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 181, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 182, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 183, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 184, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 185, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 186, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 187, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 188, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 189, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 190, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 191, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 192, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 193, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 194, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 195, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 196, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 197, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 198, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 199, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 200, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 201, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 202, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 203, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 204, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 205, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 206, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 207, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 208, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 209, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 210, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 211, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 212, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 213, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 214, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 215, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 216, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 217, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 218, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 219, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 220, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 221, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 222, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 223, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 224, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 225, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 226, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 227, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 228, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 229, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 230, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 231, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 232, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 233, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 234, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 235, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 236, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 237, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 238, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 239, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 240, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 241, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 242, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 243, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 244, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 245, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 246, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 247, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 248, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 249, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 250, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 251, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 252, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 253, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 254, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 255, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 256, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 257, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 258, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 259, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 260, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 261, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 262, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 263, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 264, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 265, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 266, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 267, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 268, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 269, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 270, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 271, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 272, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 273, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 274, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 275, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 276, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 277, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 278, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 279, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 280, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 281, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 282, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 283, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 284, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 285, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 286, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 287, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 288, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 289, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 290, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 291, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 292, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 293, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 294, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 295, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 296, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 297, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 298, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 299, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 300, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 301, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 302, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 303, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 304, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 305, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 306, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 307, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 308, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 309, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 310, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 311, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 312, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 313, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 314, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 315, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 316, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 317, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 318, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 319, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 320, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 321, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 322, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 323, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 324, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 325, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 326, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 327, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 328, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 329, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 330, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 331, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 332, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 333, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 334, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 335, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 336, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 337, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 338, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 339, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 340, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 341, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 342, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 343, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 344, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 345, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 346, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 347, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 348, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 349, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 350, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 351, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 352, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 353, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 354, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 355, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 356, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 357, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 358, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 359, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 360, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 361, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 362, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 363, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 364, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 365, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 366, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 367, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 368, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 369, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 370, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 371, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 372, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 373, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 374, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 375, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 376, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 377, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 378, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 379, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 380, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 381, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 382, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 383, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 384, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 385, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 386, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 387, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 388, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 389, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 390, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 391, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 392, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 393, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 394, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 395, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 396, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 397, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 398, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 399, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 400, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 401, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 402, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 403, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 404, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 405, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 406, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 407, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 408, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 409, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 410, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 411, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 412, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 413, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 414, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 415, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 416, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 417, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 418, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 419, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 420, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 421, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 422, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 423, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 424, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 425, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 426, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 427, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 428, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 429, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 430, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 431, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 432, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 433, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 434, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 435, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 436, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 437, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 438, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 439, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 440, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 441, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 442, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 443, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 444, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 445, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 446, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 447, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 448, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 449, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 450, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 451, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 452, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 453, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 454, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 455, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 456, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 457, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 458, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 459, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 460, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 461, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 462, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 463, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 464, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 465, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 466, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 467, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 468, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, May 469, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 470, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 471, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 472, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 473, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 474, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 475, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 476, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 477, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 478, 8:48-10am at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, May 479, 8:48-10am
Colombian soccer team challenges other non-
assignable 7822
orange 7822 to a soccer mate. Calibur
2-18
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HELP WANTED
AVON--Start off the new year with excellent
work on the campus of Lawrence and mural
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Nude models needed during the following times:
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Tuesday and Thursday, $3.hr. Contact Maureen,
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*
Secretarial position, part-time. Afternoons, 2:30-4:00. Monday-Friday, $2.20 per hr. Must be able to type. Office experience helpful. Apply please directly daily. 7191. Mass.: Schumann Foods. 2-16 7337
Addresses wanted immediately! Work at home with children. Req. 3 yrs of experience in Ameri- service (e.g., 100 Watson Street, Suite 201). Send resumes to Winston Churchill Hospital, 60 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10017.
Research assistant in Dept. of Chemistry, Term is for 3 months, March and April 1978, full or half year period. Research assistant will computer programs to investigate surface topology, cell biology, and problems. Sipient commensurate with $600 month for full time appointment. Qualification—diploma in Applied Geometry or grammaring, a knowledge of analytical geometry and calculus, and experience in tested applicants should contact B.-K. Lee, 12 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10014, and undergraduate references, transcripts and e-communication by Feb. 30, 1978. This employer action is committed to ensuring that research are committed to women and men. Applications from women and men are required.
TYPING
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7599
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Tyning—experienced in dissertations, these, manuscripts, etc. B.A. University, IB. University, Call: 612-450-8231
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable,
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reunion. Jean. 841-7460
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Have you ever tried to love all the people? 2-16
MIDNIGHT MASS FRIDAY 13th at Jayhawk Fertility Station in front of Strong Services, service both Parade, Orthopedics, Roses, Candles, bakes, and laundry. w/ywahier, permitting, saffrine, new members welcome. 2-13
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Date wanted for party Feb. 13. Female preferred.
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2-13
Give your honey a Valentine Gift. The SUPEP
manual includes a detailed manual $39. Per 1, Imports, 747 Mass.
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Anxious or nervous when taking examiner Does it
really hurt? Anxious or nervous at the delivery
program call 842-1423 between 5 and 10.
WANTED
Happy 6 months, you sally, smell, strike, strife.
Happy 10 months, I love you. Thanks for be-
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PERSONAL
Mobile home 12 x 60 or larger. Would like to have before June 13. Call 631-7894 (KC), 3-13.
Adventurous female with TWA Pass (7-1) for travel in Europe over Spring, Nancy, 842-755-6900.
Jewish Male to share house. Must keep Kosher.
Split 1/16 mo., utilities. Call Roger 862-358-2-138
S1.5. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Solicite (plaice). Prompt efficient service. Throws, dissertations, term papers. 316-908-2347; 22-87. Streich.
Non-smoking rooms were intended to live in campus and campus and furnished $65 including utilities.
BOOMATE(M2)-one or two makes wanted for
administrative, immediate access.
Brian, 441-2790.
Looking for a one or two women graduate students (students in psychology, sociology, nursing, and religion) to provide them with algebra, geometry, and algebra practice. Resumes may be emailed to jonathan.dowd@gmail.com.
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Thursday, February 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
---
1. 2023-05-04
---
Spiraling costs hit Senate budget
By MARTISCHILLER
Rising costs for Student Senate supplies and services have increased the annual Senate budget 26.5 per cent during the past two fiscal years.
In fiscal 1975, the Senate spent $13,410 for supplies, capital equipment, rent, utilities and travel. A total of $15,450 was allocated to the Senate in fiscal 1978, an increase of $2,940.
The proposed budget for fiscal 1977 is $18,249, which would increase Senate office spending by 15.3 per cent, or $2,799 more than the budget of the 1976 fiscal year.
One of the largest proposed increases would be in traveling expenses. The Senate is spending $200 for travel this year, but has promised spending $600 next year.
JOHN HOUSE, Senate treasurer, said the increase was necessary because the student body president had become a member of an organization that is not part of the Advisory council is made up of the student body presidents of the six state institutions and its members. The department was asked to provide advice, he said.
The Senate spent $100 on travel expenses last year.
Rent and telephone bills are constantly increasing. Since the 1975 budget was cut, phone and Internet access padded into three more offices. They now occupy five offices in the Kansas Union.
The Kansas University Memorial Corporation Board sets the rent for the offices. The Senate paid $350 for rent in 1975, and in 1976 its rent was $850. In 1977, the rent will be raised to $800.
On Campus
On Campus
TODAY: The NOON-HOUR INTERNATIONAL will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Alcove F of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: The Student Senate MINORITY AFFAIRS SUBCOMMITTEE will meet at 8:30 in the Regionalist Room of the Union. THE OPTOCAP FLYING CLUB will meet at 7:30 in 2001 Learned. RONALD JOHNSON, poet, will read excerpts from his works at 8 in the Walnut Room of the Union.
From page one
The student groups had also charged that Horne had said all Title IX opinions she expressed came from the chancellor's office.
Davis said, "Clearly it's one of the responsibilities of the (dean of women's) office to advise the organizations. I would hope, however, that the office renders opinions that they would check with me.
"I think if it's possible to postpone the decision (whether to go coed) that it is certainly desirable. If any group feels that they have to know now, after counsel with Vice Chancellor Balfour, I can make a decision."
Horne said, "if that letter (Dykes) hadn't even been written, it wouldn't have had any influence. The issue is both legal and philosophical. In my opinion, it seems to some extent now that single-sex honoraries must go coed."
Dean ...
Steve Brown, member of Sachem, said of the dean of women's office, "The way they talked about it, it was like destiny—the way it's going to have to be. They said the governance system was going to make us go coed."
Sachsen recently issued a resolution to remain a men's society, which called for a definition of equal opportunity for both sexes in the consideration of honorary titles.
Bruce Woner, Sachem member, said,
"We have a responsibility to a lot of people.
It would be better to bury Sachem rather
than wash its tradition out in a merger."
Patton said Title IX guidelines have been in effect since July 1975 and that compliance has to be completed by July. KU's review committee is determining necessary compliance in both athletic and non-athletic areas she said. Its report is due in early March.
The monthly service charge on seven phones with four incoming lines and an昂贵通话费
TELEPHONES in the new offices, in addition to increased service and long distance rates, have caused Senate phone bills to increase substantially. In 1975, the rate for Senate phone services; and in 1976, it will pay $1,000. The costimated cost of the 177 phone bill is $1,500.
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The Senate spent $9,000 last year for office supplies, printing expenses, advertising and mailing. The increase will be $7,000 but will increase in 1977 to $10,099. House said two-thirds of next year's increase will be used for office supplies and marketing. It was also used for increased postage rates. The
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body president, said the money will be used for maintenance and repairs of existing
PHOTOCPY costs also will increase next year. This is the first year that the Senate office has had a photocopy machine, which costs $1,000 to rent, House said. Next year's rent will be raised to $1,400 by the company that owns the machine, he said.
Senate won't spend any more for advertising in 1977, he said.
Capital equipment, such as typewriters and office machines, are still being purchased by the Senate office. Last year, the Senate spent $120 to buy a postage meter. The Senate also spent $800 on electric typewriter. Next year's proposed allocation is $500, and Ed Rollos, student
This year, the Senate is spending $1,800 for supplies and printing and $1,400 for publicity. No increase in these figures were proposed for 1977.
THE COST of the spring Senate elections is also slowly increasing. In 1975, the Senate spent $1,000 for election supplies and $1,200 to publicize election information.
The final budget for 1977 will be approved after budget hearings conducted by the board.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.86
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, February 13, 1976
Bennett gives answers about liquor, abortion See story, page 8
KU salaries rate poorly
Bv SHERI RALDWIN
Staff Writer
All peer groups considered, the University of Kansas ranks generally third rank in average faculty rank. The low rank in salary flexibility which keeps KU from actively recruiting top faculty members and considering difficult, say University administrators.
Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chairperson for academic affairs, said yesterday, "We can get top people but it would mean next year someone must take a loss. Those taking that loss in pay are already at the bottom of our peer group comparisons."
Compounding KU's difficulties, full funding of the third and final year of a program to upgrade faculty salaries at Board of Regent institutions appears to have made of passing after a House Representation policy meeting in Topeka yesterday.
FIVE OPTIONS that would produce faculty pay increases averaging from 5.8 to 7 per cent were given to House committee chairmen and vice chairmen for consideration of Gov. Robert F. Bennett's recommended 10 per cent increase.
The first option proposed an 8 per cent raise for faculty receiving less than $15,000; 7 per cent for $15,000-$20,000; 6 per cent for $20,000-$30,000; and 6 per cent for those receiving $23,000 or more.
The second option was an increase of 3.5
per cent plus $800 per faculty member, an
addition of 12.5% for faculty members.
The third option would provide an 8 per cent pay increase for faculty paid less than the base salary.
This chart compares KU with the 23 public supported
masters this year. Students in Master's universities for
1954, 1956, 1957 and 1958 are displayed.
Places given are for those who can
cent for $20,000-$25,000; and 2 per cent more than
$25,000.
EMBERS
ROFFISOR
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
INSTRUCTOR
Pennsylvania 17,292 16,394 15,356 11,838
Rhode Island 20,121 19,284 16,394 11,838
North Carolina 16,273 16,097 15,356 11,838
Michigan 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Minnesota 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Illinois (U. bann) 23,182 16,097 14,975 11,298
Indiana (U. bann) 23,182 16,097 14,975 11,298
Maryland 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
New York 23,182 16,097 14,975 11,298
Missouri 23,182 16,097 14,975 11,298
Michigan State 23,171 16,097 14,975 11,298
Wisconsin 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Ohio State 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Texas 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Iowa 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Missoula 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Louisiana 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Iowa City 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Missoula 22,579 16,113 15,356 11,838
Oregon 20,658 16,789 15,356 10,743
Oregon 20,658 16,789 15,356 10,743
increase to those receiving more than $25,000. That is an average of 8.7.
THE FOURTH OPTION was a 5 per cent increase plus $300 per faculty member, an offer of up to $100 per faculty member.
KU will substantiate the 10 per cent salary hike and other budget items before the State House Ways and Means Committee Feb. 18.
KU is grouped with publicly supported members of the Association of American
The fifth option would give 7.5 per cent more to faculty members paid less than the minimum cost.
Staff Writer
Today sets double trouble
Bv PAUL SHERBO
Someone is going to have a surprise quiz today.
And everyone will face disaster upon unseen disaster. Today is Friday the Third.
At least one computer science student will drop his book of 400 cards in the wind.
It's all, of course, based on scientific fact. In Scandinavian myth, the god of evil, Loki, joined 12 other gods at a feast where he was uninvited and came to cause trouble.
At least one girl will spill grape juice all over her yellow dress.
But the number isn't the only bad thing going today.
The Egyptians knew that there were 12 steps on earth and that the 13th was the step into the nest.
In the Middle Ages, criminals were exorcised on Friday, earning the name 'hangman'.
THE NORSE GODDESS Feya, known as a witch, gave her name to this day for witchcraft.
Teamed up together, Friday and 13 bode ill for the unwary.
One of you will lose an important term paper.
One of you will scratch your favorite record.
The information center will get a question it can't answer.
The math department will make a mistake.
The buses will run late
The buses will run day.
Someone will drop a six-pack of Heinekein on the sidewalk.
Many of you will eat residence hall food. You will not WILKER will get another assignment like this.
There are, fortunately, some time-tested remedies for the situation. Rabbit's feet and lucky pennies have been used to combat Friday the Thirteenth.
Avoiding black cats, ladders and spilled salt is highly recommended.
Or there's the ultimate remedy. Stay home in bed, pull up the covers, don't answer the phone and wait for Valentine's Day.
Staff photo by DAVE HAUBER
Good luck.
COLORADO
Polished act
Lora Porter works on a new pair of shoes while Jim Dwyer relaxes on his noon hour. Forken knurches the leather pumps with polishes on his fingers to spread the wax more effusively.
Universities, a group of 23 schools considered KU's peer group. Within the 23 schools, there are two other peer groups considered, 14 schools in the Midwest and nine schools that are nonland-grant state universities.
Land-grant institutions include those schools with programs such as agriculture, veterinary medicine, agronomy, home economics and industrial engineering, Hutchison said. K-State is a land-grant school.
PROFESSOR SALARIES at KU average
$20,905, 32 per cent less than Pennsylvania's
$27,902. KU ranks third to the in the 23-
ninth tier and second to last in the
two, pep. per cent.
Hutchison said the professor's salary range at KU was from about $30,000-$25,000 to $16,000-$17,000. He said a dozen or fewer professors fell in each category, and that most were paid a sum near the average figure.
Associate professor salaries average
$15,789.22 per cent less than Pennsylvania's
$19,304. Third to last in the 23-school group
and again next to last in the other peer groups.
SS OF THE
The range at KU for an associate
criminal minimum of 1000 and
public minimum of 500. Hutchison
"AGAIN, MOST everyone gets close to the same." he said.
Assistant professor salaries average $13,907, 19 per cent less than $15,564 at Pennsylvania. KU here ranks last in each peer group category.
Hutchison said assistant professor
salaries ranges from $17,000 to $16,000 to
be paid.
Staff photo
Instructor salaries range from $12,000 to $9,000. Hutchison said.
The lower salary ranges in each group could be because the faculty member is new, hasn't been considered productive or understaffed, has not command in the competitive market, he said.
Instructor pay averages $10,202, 17 per cent less than $11,939 at Pennsylvania. Ranked 19 out of 21 (California reported no salary average), KU is 11th in the 14-school Midwestern peer group and last in the nonland-tran group.
See SALARIES page 3
Harmonic interlude
Warm temperatures, sweet radio sounds and a tasty harmonica occupy the attention of Geary Tallout, 1305 Connecticut, who
entertained passers-by yesterday from a wooded area west or Green Hull. Mid temperatures are expected to continue today.
Crime rate among women soars
Staff Writer.
Bv JOHN FULLER
Crisis rates for women have soared in the past 15 years. Magazine covers, television news and the front pages of newspapers regularly drive home the point.
Lynette Fromme and Sarah Jane Moore are now in prison for their assassination attempts on President Ford and the 'trial of the century' is now determining whether Patty Heart really wanted to rob a bank or was brainwashed into doing it.
Statistics compiled by the FBI in its Uniform Crime Report of 1973 show that the exploits of the women grabbing the headlines are the tin of an iceberg.
Although arrests of men still outnumber
those of women by six to one, the gap has narrowed; in 1965 the ratio was nine to one. If women's crime rates keep increasing as dramatically as they have in the years covered by the crime report (1960-1975), they will soon catch men.
In the report, the percentage of women arrested for murder rose 103 per cent compared to 141 per cent for men. The women were similar for aggravated 08551.
IN ALL SERIOUS crimes but murder, rape and aggravated assault, women led men in the percentage of increase of persons arrested.
In the other crimes the percentage
contrasted dramatically. The percentage of
women arrested for robbery rose 287 per cent compared to 160 per cent for men; for burglary it was 193 per cent to 76 per cent; for larceny it was 341 per cent to 84 per cent; and for fraud it was 231 per cent to 50 per cent.
Arrests of women for narcotics charges sky-rocketed 1,027 per cent, compared to 499 in 2013.
ALONG WITH the increases in arrests came corresponding increases in the number of women inmates in federal penitentiaries and state prisons. The number of men incarcerated by the federal prison rose 41 per cent from 1909 to 1974, bringing the total to about 15,000.
William Arnold, associate professor of
New owner plans spit and polish for town's only shoeshine stand
Bv DAVE HAUBER
Lora Porter curled a filterless cigarette in his polish-stained fingers. He turned aside and spit a loose piece of tobacco from his lips.
Waiting is part of the shoeshine business. "If I can't do this, Iain don't do this." Porter said, just come up to four feet apart, spit out his own macheed only made three—"that's going backwards."
Here in Lawrence, the only shoeshine stand in town is a small, blue, budded carpetball. On the window of the front door, painted sign in red letters that says simply, "Shoe Shine." On the front of the building is a professionally done sign that says the
Perhaps go backwards is the best way to describe the shoeshine business these days. It's a remainder from different times—times of newspaper extras and scrappy shoeshine boys hustling to polish businessmen's shoes for a dime.
The signs represent the changes the shoeshine stand has gone through recently. Wendell Collins, new owner of the stand, said yesterday that he bought the shoeshine stand inside the shop about two months ago from John Thomas. The shoeshine stand, with its raised platform, chairs and brass baskets, was purchased and borrowed from his former employer, James Alexander. He rents the building for $40 a month, he said.
Collins said he needed publicity and public identity to build his business.
Making the stand more attractive is one of Collins's goals, so he has begun to experiment with a more dynamic style.
blistered white walls with brown enamel.
He plans to carpet the woodwork and put KU and Haskell emblems on the door with molds. He also plans to put in new carriages.
"We ain't getting rich. As a matter of fact, we've lost some since we've opened. A lot of wea'rs have been there."
Collins looked around his 10-foot by 28-foot business. A small gas heater kept the air warm. He slouched forward sleepily in his blue overalls.
Collin's said that he relied on Porter to at the shop on weekdays. He said he could only work at the shop on weekends because of his sickness. Collin attended Community Museum during the week.
"We've got some regulars come in," he said. "This is the first time this shop has been open."
Porter said that all kinds of people came into the shop for a shoeshoe; farmers, lawyers, businessmen, women and KU and Haskell students.
Porter and Collins split the profits fifty-fifty. Porter, said Some days, he said, he only makes about three dollars shining shoes and other days he makes $10 to $12.
A sign on the wall lists prices for shining everything from slippers to buckskin boots. Shoes are 75 cents and slippers (on foot) are 60 cents; but slippers (off foot) are 75 cents. Although Collins said Porter was 76, Porter said he was 71.
Porter rememberes when he shined shoes inside a hat store on the 1000 block of Massachusetts. He said there used to be a man one shoeshine stand in Lawrence.
Porter pointed to a pair of hiking boots in the window and said, "He (Collins) wants
10 for those boots. He ain't got to get $10.
Take these black ones over there. They've
written on them.
A customer, Jim Dwyer, a city employee on his lunch hour, walked into the store for a
Forter took out the appropriately stained polish and swabbed the shoes with water.
Dwyer, who has been a semiregular customer of the shop for five years, said his other shoes had just "got busted the other way" and wanted to get a good polish on his new ones.
Mostly, Dwyer said, he wanted to talk with Porter, who shined his shoes as an instructor. "He's very good," he said.
After swabbing the shoes, Porter applied the polish with his fingers, because that's cheaper than using a rag. Next came a double brushing, another coat of wax, a second brush, and another double brushing and a baffling. A coat of edge and sole dressing finished the job.
Collins said business had been "kind of picking up."
Collins said he had made a deal with the shoe repair store across the street. "We don't fix any shoes and he don't shine any." He said he bought special polish at a hardware store.
Collins said his shop also winterized shoes. Many people, he said, don't take care of their shoes and spray polish buildup eventually cracks the leather.
Porter said, "There ain't no best day,
some days you're running around and
dancing."
Collin said, "If there wasn't no shoe shop in town, everybody would have to shine on the floor."
sociology and a criminologist said yesterday that the trend reflected the condition at the Kansas Correctional Facility for Women at Lansing. Four years ago, he said, there were only 36 inmates at this prison. This year there are 83.
He said the women committed no prevalent crime to get there. Like the men in their nearby prison, women can be in jail for anything from child beating to robbery. Anything, that is, except rape. Women can't charged with the offense under Kansas law.
DOUGLAS COUNTY ATTORNEY David Berkowitz said he had noticed a rise in women's crime in Douglas County but he said he had no fixtures to document it.
"the offenses we most often prosecute women for here are bad checks and (p. 235)
He said a woman from Lawrence had recently been sent to prison for repeated offenses of petty theft. Two cases are charged with aggravated crimes by women. One woman has been charged with aggravated battery for shooting another woman, and a woman who allegedly robbed two salesmen as they came out a nightclub has been charged with
The reasons more women have turned to crime, especially violent crime, are
In 1972, Susan Brownmiller, author of a recent study of rape called "Against Our Will," said: "Some women have gotten involved in the machismo (male virility) factor and are actually trying to imitate women." She added that women can rob banks and blow up buildings so can we. As far as I conceived that's not what women's liberation is all about."
ARNOLD SAID he thought the women's movement itself had almost no effect on the men.
Sociologist Fred Adler, author of a book researching women in crime, "Sisters in crisis," wrote that the majority of women offenders she studied regarded women liberationists with distrust, suspecting them of being lesbians. This attitude is especially prevalent in New York.
She says this attitude had convinced many prison administrators and law enforcement officials that the woman's arrest was way connected with the rising crime rate.
The warden at the federal women's prison at Morgantown, W.V., says in U.S. News and World Report, "At least 60 per cent of the prisoners here are in for narcotics or some drug related crime as bank robbery. It's the drugs, not the women's ibl thing."
VET ARNOLD SAID the indirect effects of the woman's movement must be taken
See CRIME page 5
2
Friday, February 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Ford warns Russia
WASHINGTON—President Ford said yesterday that if Russia or Cuba tried to make a colony of Angola, he would ask Congress to "meet the challenge without delay."
Ford made the statement in a tanned interview at the White House.
Ford said that the Soviet Union and Cuba "are now the dominant force in Anarola."
're said. 'We don't think the Soviet Union or Cuba under any circumstances should move in and make such a country a colony of either Russia or Cuba, and if they try, then I will certainly ask the Congress for help and assistance so that we can meet the challenge without the utilization of American military personnel.'
The President reaffirmed that if he is elected in November, he will ask Secretary of State Klaus Kiersten to remain in the Cabinet in his present post. Ford said he is confident of a resumption of negotiations.
Report leaks sought
WASHINGTON—President Ford yesterday offered House Speaker Carl Albert 'all services and resources of our government' to find out who leaked the campaign materials from a Compromise Committee's report.
When Press Secretary Ron Nelson was asked if the offer included use of FBI and Internal Revenue Service agents, he said, "You need to go ask Carl Albert."
Albert was not available for comment on Ford's suggestion, but it was learned that White House liaison艾摩 Mack Friedendorf consulted Albert's staff before responding.
The Village Voice, a weekly newspaper in New York City, published 24 pages of long excerpts from the report, and the New York Times and CRS correspondent wrote the article.
Chinese and Soviets clash
TOKYO-China yesterday reported "face-to-face struggles against Soviet armed intruders" in China's rugged northwest territory, but gave no details on these incidents.
There was no immediate comment from the Kremlin, which last week called reports of clashes in northwestern Ukraine and a report of important Chinese officials from beginning to end."
a report on unite militia in Sinking, China's official Hsinian news agency said: "The Khalikhs nationality militia in Abuchi County has frequently faced face struggles against Soviet-armed intruders' provocations and occurrences of attacks. The military has a strong force in frustrating the criminal plots of the Soviet revisionist new crazes."
Hainhua said nothing about the time, extent or severity of the struggles or about any casualties. It also wasn't know whether these were previously unreported.
Death penalty revision proposed
TOPEKA (AP)—The State Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee voted yesterday to recommend an amended death penalty bill for passage.
Given a favorable recommendation, the measure would impose capital punishment in Kansas for all first degree premeditated murders, except it wouldn't apply the death penalty for persons involved in a felony in which occurred, as the old state law imposed.
The Senate panel had approved a death penalty bill similar to the House bill last week, but delayed reporting it to the full Senate. The committee also amended version states that all
The committee's action followed a vote by the State House Federal and State Affairs Committee to report to the State House floor and vote on a more broadly worded death penalty bill.
murders committed "m刑ically, willfully,
deliberately and premeditately" will be
Schooners are coming to the Hawk Monday, Feb.16
However, it eliminates the old 'felony murder rule' under which accomplices in the killings of unarmed men were allowed to be found.
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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Patricia Heart's lawyers sought immediate police protection for her family yesterday as the heirens' parents were told in whispers at her trial of a bombing at the legendary Hearst Castle.
Randolph and Catherine Heearst, obviously shaken and angry, denounced the bombing at a guest house at San Simeon as a terrorist act.
Hearst family shaken by bombing
As the trial recessed for lunch, Hearn
to reporters he feared for the safety his
father.
Word of the explosion at the oceanside castle 150 miles south of San Francisco and the Browning case in Miss Atty. James L. Browning planned to rest the case in Miss Hearst's bank robbery trial.
"I will probably not move as freely in the city anymore," he said.
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We need teachers this semester for courses in massage, korticulture, ceramics, macrame, & auto mechanics. If you want to share knowledge in any other interest area, or would like to teach any of the courses listed above, contact us at 864-3477 or drop by the SUA office.
Find it in Kansan classified Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
What's in a Name?
Nothing
Take us for example. Just because our name hasn't changed doesn't mean everything else is still the same too. Quite the contrary. Nearly everything has changed.
Why?
Because we decided that Lawrence needs a private club—one that offers people an honest alternative to taverns and bars. In other words, you need a place to go when you're sick of standing in pools of beer. Maybe you're tired of going out and not being dressed up, or are you tired of getting dressed up and no place to go.
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3
Interest to restore housing builds
By JAY BEMIS Staff Writer
Staff Writer
Interest in housing rehabilitation in Douglas County is growing due to a joint effort by Penn House and Coleman Consulting Services.
Coleman Consulting administers federal funds for the county. It obtained $225,000 in community development funds from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. From that grant, $50,000 was set aside for a county housing rehabilitation program.
Penn House, which does volunteer social work, has been assigned the task of impersonating a child.
Twenty-seven applications have been received so far for county rehabilitation work.
OOCEE MILLER, Penn House secretary, said yesterday that people living outside of Lawrence had priority in the program since the funds are in form of a county grant. However, several Lawrence residents have applied, she said.
"We're not encouraging Lawrence applications," she said. "But we will accept them if someone walks in and fills one out. Lawrence applicants will be filled later, and we don't want anyone to be upset because they have to wait six months."
To qualify for the rehabilitation program, applicants must live in Douglas County, have an annual income below a certain threshold and be tracked on and plan to continue to live there.
Seventeen of the 27 Douglas County applications have come from residents in Lecompton, with the others being from Eudora and Baldwin.
MILLER SAID interest in Baldwin and Winslow may grow after news of the PGA Tour.
Repairs will not be based on the looks of a
Maximum income levels are: $4,800 for a one-person home, $6,910 for a four-person home, $7,910 for a six-person home and $9,760 for a 10-person home. Income levels for other family sizes fall in between those figures.
Salaries ...
RON CARLAGARD, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said "Iowa State is a really undistinguished university. Places like Iowa State and Wisconsin we expect to be on the list.
From page one
"Nebraska is below us for the first time." School's in Colorado, Iowa and Kentucky.
Hutchison said many new KU faculty members came from big cities, autocratic institutions or institutions with union ties, where were leaving because they were escaping.
"I isn't all just salary with people," he said. "And they don't come to me, and they don't leave because
Three library administrators get promotions
Promotions of three members of the administrative staff of the University of Kansas Libraries were announced in the magazine, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
John Glinka, associate director of libraries, has been designated associate dean of libraries. In addition to his present duties as associate deans, he will assume added responsibility for the planning of new and remodeled library facilities.
H. Robert Malinowsky, assistant director of libraries at KU, has been promoted to associate dean of libraries. In his new position he will supervise the libraries' technical departments and retain all his previous duties.
Mary Green, assistant director for personnel, will be the new assistant dean of libraries and will continue work with library personnel.
KU teams 5th in indoor sports
The University of Kansas placed fifth in the Association of College Union International Regional XI Tournament of chess, bridge, bowling, table tennis, billiards, table soccer (foosball) and air hockey.
Twenty-five first- and second-place winners from KU tournaments participated in the meet on Feb. 6, 7 and 8 in Springfield, MA; four on Feb. 12, 13, 14, and 15; SUA indoor recreation board member.
Twenty-four colleges from five states participated in the tournament, she said.
Randolph McClain, Liberia graduate student, and Paul Olivier, Newton sophomore, placed second in men's doubles in table tennis.
Vivien Wilcomb, Olathe junior, and Avi Solani, Irian sophomore, placed second in women's doubles in table tennis. Olivier placed sixth in men's singles in table tennis, and Wilcomb placed second in women's singles.
University Daily Kansan
Randy Brungardt, Galesburg senior, and Eric Leifer, Shawnee Mission junior, placed
Patrick McKenzie, Lawrence law
school graduate student, placed fiult in bridge
Ken Caldwell, Kansas City, Kan., sophomore, placed sixth in billiards.
Zeck and Warren Boozer, manager of recreation in the Kansas Union, accompanied the group as advisers. SUA paid for the trip.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
they're escaping. Most leave because they get better jobs."
He said average salaries were too low to provide much low pay in a condition of recession.
SUCH A CONDITION would begin with university departments losing enrollment, the closure of financial institutions Financial exigency is at its most critical stage when all possible resources have been cut or shifted to compensate for the smaller enrollment, requiring the termination of student enrolle
"We're hiring very, very few above the assistant professor level for next year," said Mr. Baldwin.
Calgaard said, "We're not terribly anxious to add this to the list of tenure members."
There was less senior faculty level recruitment around the country now by universities, which explained KU's not so small number of senior faculty members each year, he said.
"WHEN SALARIES lag behind, however,
you're not going to be getting or keeping
your team."
A bulk of tenured faculty would make matters during financial exigency even worse and the University is trying to maintain a balance. Hutchison said,
Whether a teacher's services in the competitive market are in great demand accounts for the biggest variance in salary levels, he said.
"They must compete with a professional marketplace outside the academic world." Equipment and facilities play a big part in keeping or attracting faculty, he said.
Those factors might include: putting in a bathroom; adding or replacing a septic tank; adding to a wiring system or making it safer; repairing porches or steps; repairing or replacing in roof; or modifying a bathroom, like water, cabinets and similar necessities.
"It no secret that law salaries tend to be rather high." Hutchison said.
house, Miller said, but on health and safety factors.
Miller said most applicants to date had been older persons on fixed incomes, who might have enough Social Security or other benefits, but not enough to fix up their homes.
SHE SAID SOME applicants, however, were people with younger families, who have four children with only one-bedroom houses.
Imported car service problems?
SEE ...
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATSUN
After Penn House receives applications, verification of ownership is checked at the county courthouse and the applicants are interviewed.
Miller said about eight houses were ready for repair bidding today and Monday. Small contractors, such as dry-wall specialists, plumbers and electricians, will be visiting the houses and submitting their bids to Penn House.
"Grandma might live in a house," Miller said, "but a couple of her children might be in joint ownership (of the house), and we have to figure in their incomes, also."
500 E. 23rd St.
ONCE THESE BIDS are in, Penn House will take the applicant's files and the low bids to the rehabilitation reviewing committee.
842-0444
Members of the committee which were selected by county commissioners are Elton Dark, Lecompont, Mary Mowery, Baldwin; Naomi Kidd, Eudora; Chairman Eugene Hardfarer, Lawrence; and Phyllis Anderson, representing the count-at-large.
Schooners are coming to the Hawk Monday, Feb. 16
"We don't have any power with the review committee," Miller said, "but the (Penn House) staff person who known the need to give feedback on these questions and describe the unique needs.
"A PROFESSIONAL inspector will go over the houses and find needed repairs." Miller said, "but the people will be able to tell what's most important for their personal comfort. It's an unusual situation and it gives us more flexibility."
"That way we're not in a position to tell the people what needs fixing," she said.
Miller said that the county was unique in
that it didn't have a minimum housing code.
She said it was good to have a minimum housing code however, because such a code is not required.
When asked if the program would continue to grow, Miller said. "A lot depends on politics in Washington. Every year more programs are brought in, but a bunch of are phased out. It looks like community investment funds will last quite a while."
Coleman Consulting has applied for 1976-77 community development funds, asking that $20,000, an increase of $70,000, be being used for the housing rehabilitation program.
VIRGINIA ASHLOCK, co-administrator of the funds for Coleman Consulting, said preliminary application for those funds had been approved by the board. Topека. The clearing house checks to make sure the intended programs aren't duplicated by other state and federal funds.
Coleman Consulting will now present a final preliminary application to HUD, and if approved, a final application will be submitted.
Ashlock said the funds had been used for or are planned for the following projects in the Lawrence-Douglas County area: building a pool, Baldwin's water supply; neighborhood facilities for Baldwin and Eudora, including a swimming pool in Eudora; a sewersystem in Lecompton; the Haskell Loop in Boston; and senior citizen centers countwide.
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Written on the screen and directed by
STANLEY KUBRICK
"RYAN O'NEAL *MARISA*BERENSON"
[WRITTEN] by Wes Brown
Weir Communication Company
Eve, at 10:30
Sat. 10:30 1 Theatre
"Best Film of the Year" NATIONAL HONOR OF REVIEW
Special
Bring Your Valentine to Ken's Pizza Parlor
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Feb. 14 and get any medium size Pizza for only $250 Open 11 a.m.-1 a.m. Good for Dine-in only
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27th & Iowa
KANU91.5 presents
Disco-Mania
proceed to benefit Blackness Is
Friday the 13th
8:00pm
cover $1.50
Off the Wall Hall
797 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas
THE HAWK'S NEST
presents
Friday, Feb.13 and Saturday, Feb.14
DISCO by KJHK fm-91 disco service
dJ's-Charles Mason Steve Dooly
Album and Steak Dinner Give-aways
Dinners furnished by
CWC
SIRLOIN STOCKADE FREE Cone with Every Meal
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
level 2-Kansas Union
FREE Cone with Every Meal
Located at 1015 Iowa, Hillcrest Shopping Area
Produced by SUA
4
Friday, February 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
A
Learning about life
Hashinger Theatre's production of "Dandelion Wine" is a reader's theater interpretation of Ray Bradbury's book about a young boy's summer of growing up in New York. The play will be shown at 10am on Thursday, June 9.
City, Mo. . sophomore; Kathy Horstman, Kansas M. Junior; Nell
Stevens, senior; Mary Lakey, Leewood M. junior; and Elsie Orr.
Chesterfield, M. junior.
Staff Writer
Jazz joint really jives
By BILL UYEKI
You might consider Paul Gray's Jazz Place, 928 N. Magnolia Avenue, for a nighttime entertainment. There you can still quench that raging thirst and, at the same time, listen to some thundering screams from his house.
Picture yourself on a Saturday night, ready for a party. You can share a few beers with able some friends, and you're thumbling through your memory for tonight's ideal
GRAY IS A SHORT, chuky, quiet-mastered • Lawrence businessman and KU alumnus who owns the music store below the building. He resembles a mustachioed Danny Thomas. But put a trumpet in his hands and surround him with a Gaslight Gang Band, and suddenly he is on the great Satchme himself.
The Gaslight Gang's music is foot-tapping, hand-clapping melodies, tinged with a taste of boogie. The sound is big-band sounds. With able
Nah, you don't want to be bombarded by a blaring jukebox again, and losing at it. You are awfully expensive, right?
The band consists of KU alumni ranging from the class of '40 to the class of '75. The Gang's members play with a sense of informality and often resort to amusing stage antics, as well as singing. This is a steady rapport between the band members and their listeners, whose ages range from 18 to 80.
brass and woodwind sections, a steady drummer and a lively pianist plunking away on a semit-battered old upright piano. For future projects tunes shoots vividly and contains gusto.
Rather than performing carefully rehearsed tunes, the band accepts requests enthusiastically. In addition to bringing the crowd into the act, this necessitates impromptu singing and dancing, creating a mood of spontaneity—the true spirit of jazz.
SATURDAY NIGHTS are reserved for the Gaslight Gang but other jazz bands are available. At Thursday and Friday nights,
Guest artists seem to float in and out at will. Gray joined the trifor a few numbers, as did one of his waitresses, Jayne Casselman, when she wasn't tending bar.
Other frequent guests include Mike White, a part-time
HUSKY TRUMPETER Jim Sellards, who has led horn sections with such well-known bands as斯曼 Kenton's and Doc Severison's, was the guest artist last Saturday night.
clinester and Jackson County, Mo., executive, and Skip DeVol, a fine bajo player from Las Vegas. DeVol, a former KU student, is scheduled to appear at Gray's Feb. 27 and 28.
The play, Hashinger Theatre's first spring production tells the story of Spoella, a old boy who, during the course of a summer, becomes aware of death and his own mortality.
The setting is a small Illinois town in 1928.
The entertainment isn't limited only to the stage. The Gang also performed some spirited offstage dancing to the band's tunes, dances, eliciting smiles and cheers from a surprised audience.
Walking through downtown Lawrence, one can sense the good time jazz in the midst of storefronts. The club's second floor windows shake with each resounding note. It can now be entered from Massachusetts, as well, but they may have to place in find the first time, but if you're like most, you'll soon know the way to the jazz lovers' showcase in downtown Lawrence.
"The show tries to encompass all the different ways of
Gray's club has been open since last January. Thanks to some recent additions, the club has expanded its seating capacity to accommodate the large Saturday night crowds.
Hashinger Hall Theatre will present a reader's theater adaptation of Ray Bradbury's *8 tonight and tomorrow.*
'Dandelion Wine' opens Hashinger's spring season
"The setting will be neutral enough that it will help the
growing old and the different ways of being young," Jeff Kuykendall, director, said this week.
The play will contain no action and very little pantomime, Kuyenkendall said. Instead, the actors would use images with their voices.
"It's a very high-energy play," he said. "Readers' theater runs a great deal on the skills needed to energy the actors can project."
audience to concentrate on the actors and experience the emotions of the characters. It will require the audience to actually be a part of what's happening on stage."
The cast members are Susan Darigo, University City, Mo., sophomore; Kathy Horstman, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Mary Lakey, Leawood junior; Debbi Neil Muhlberger, Tuska, Okla.; senior; and Elsie Orr, Chesterfield, Mo., junior.
Hearts and Minds' brings pain to both
Bv CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
When "Hearts and Minds" won the Academy Award for Best Documentary last year, the film itself was almost obscured by the furor over the acceptance speech and the Academy's hasty, predictable disclaimer to that speech.
"Hearts and Minds," an examination of the origins and
How comforting it was to muse about the "inappropriate political statement" or "Frank Sinatra's reading of the song "A Moment in Time" without bothering with the film that prompted it all.
effects of the Vietnam war, is the most painful film that I have ever seen.
It's painful in its images of American Vietnam veterans, from bitter paraplegics to bewildered pilots to brave men who lost their lives whom seek to salvage some meaning from their experience.
It's painful in its recollections of the worn ideas and too familiar faces that got this country into the Vietnam "conflict" and couldn't extract us.
The title comes from President Lyndon Johnson's
1964 statement that "the ultimate victory will depend on the hearts and minds of the people who live out there." But the film is probing the hearts and minds of the Americans who lived through that period, both at home and "out there."
Director Peter Davis, best known for CBS's controversial 1972 documentary, "The Selling of the Pentagon," gathers material from almost every conceivable source. There are several stories in this book: "This Is the Army" and "The Road to Hong Kong," segments from TV newsreels, shots of every President from Truman
to Nixon and even a scene of Bob Hope's gaffe at Nixon's White House dinner for the movie "Alive" and like! A captive audience."
But the film is much more revealing when Davis and his crew interview Vietnam vets who were new to the same nascivi families such as the old coffinmaker who lamentes the deaths of his seven daughters. And there is some searing new footage, such as the remarkable scenes of political and banking activity at the Sao Tome Country Club.
"Hearts and Minds" was not awarded an Oscar for its
politics, and the incident at the Awards was unfortunate because it gave the film a propagandistic aura that the film is carefully at play. The film's style is to question, not to preach.
A former pilot responds to the inquiry "Do you think we learned from this experience by saying 'think we’re trying hard not to.'"
In context, it's one of many truly moving scenes in "Hearts and Minds," and I cried. For the greatest pain is caused by the unresolved conflict that confronts the unresolved past in order to turn to the future.
Area moviegoers patronize avant-garde films
Entertainment Co-Editor
BY MARY ANN HUDDLESTON
Movieguers in Lawrence may be an untapped reservoir of support for experimental, high artistic quality.
Although most of the movies shown here by SUA and commercial theatres have already proved successful at the box office, some lesser known and less well-known films have done well financially.
"Hearts and Minds," a documentary about the Vietnam war, opened Wednesday at the Lucille Ball Center in week, "Lacombe, Lucien," a French film directed by Louis Malle, made a profit, according to Elden Harwood, local manager of the Commonwealth theatres.
The Commonwealth Amusement Corp. operates the five commercial theatres in Lawrence.
DURING THE FALL
SEMESTER, Commonwealth
Singer, and
Songwriter,
The Phantom of the
high quality films that weren't
box office winners. Both made
money, Harward said, although
the film was not a major hit.
"We issued the challenge while the iron was hot," Harwood said, "and a great many people to see it."
Harwood he had scheduled "The Passenger" in response to a story by Chuck Wagoner and film series chairman, that appeared in the Kansan last fall. The movie had been a commercial bomb across the country but was acclaimed by critics.
Approximately 1,400 saw "The Passenger" during the week it ran in Lawrence.
"The Phantom of Liberte" played the first week in December.
Harwood said. He said it had made enough of a profit for him to bring other movies of the same type.
THE ADVERTISEMENT for it was addressed to those who had seen "The Passenger." It said, "You've earned it you care enough. 100 of you care enough about this type of film to buy a ticket, we
Ed Ruhe, professor of English, said he thought an audience could be developed for a film about "entertainment" by frequent showing of good films. The University environment, with its concern for quality, would nurture development possible, he said.
The SUA film series is considered by many to be the best vehicle for bringing artistic movies to Lawrence because
If only 1,000 of you care enough about this type of film to buy a ticket, we will make sure that you have the films
will make sure that you have the films to see."
Only about 800 saw "Phantom,
Only" Hartwood, said, even though it was considered artistically better than "The Passenger. He said he had been little bit better than breaking on it.
FACULTY AND STUDENTS at the University who were interviewed said there was a need for high quality, artistic movies.
Harwood estimated that 800 attended "Lacombe, Lucien," which he said was enough to put him "barely in the black."
However, Harwood said he had scheduled several more films for this spring, including "Magic Flute," Ingmar Bergman's version of the Mozart opera of the same name.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
"I think it's a wide open market and it can be developed," he said of the demand for artistic films. We continue showing them as we don't run into the red ink."
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
and Sunday afternoons; Sunday and Friday late-
day periods posted on postage tape at Law-
rence Public Library; Monday through Thursday
seemer or $14 in Durham County and $10 a
week from Durham County. The minimum
inquiries are $25 and a semester paid through
the university's office.
In spite of the dedicated fans in high quality, artistic films, Harwood and all but one of the chairmen for the five SUA film series, they have selected selections of movies primarily on a film's past success.
Business Manager
Rosy Parris
HARWOOD SAID he booked all box office successes automatically and many movies that were borderline realist of his choices are a matter of judgment, he said.
Editor Carl Young
SUA is less concerned with making a profit than commercial theaters are.
"I think we have a responsibility to fill all the audience needs," he said, "the bounds of good business judgment," he said. "We try to cultivate new audiences but we publicly hold corporation."
Steve Benjamin, SUA board member in charge of films, said he had seen "an overwhelming more careful this year in their selection of films, staying mainly with movies that had a well known title, actors or actors."
THE FIRST CONSIDERATION is how many people will want to see a movie, and why good a movie is artistically.
Each chairman goes through catalogs of available films and relies on his own memory of those films, he said.
Film Society, said his series had concentrated on foreign films. He said he based his choices on well known titles and interspersed those with big-name directors.
"We keep the unknowns to a minimum," he said. "We don't want to take a chance on too many of them."
Steve Lewis, chairman of the
According to Benjamin, SUA films are doing very well. In the past the Popular series, which have been supported the other series, he said, but this year the crowds during the week have been "phenomenon. Only one or two of them have been the cost of the film, he said.
STEVE SCHMIDT, chairman of the Special Film series, said that most successful of the weekly series in terms of attendance and profit. During the fall he showed mainly science fiction
"1984," made the largest gross of any of its films, at $21.25 million. "Air," a 1996 film that ran seven minutes, was shown on TV.
The cost of film rental we
$27.50 for "1984" and $6 for the
short. Incidental costs, for
"Personna" was the most successful showing. Attendance was 488 and the film grossed $300. Film rental was $150, or 50 per cent of the box office income.
Reasons given for improved attendance varied
DeForest said she thought he had simply happened to bring movies people wanted to see. LEWIS SAID he had noticed many new faces attending the Film Society, whereas in past years he only attended all the showings. He attributed the increase, however, to the overall increase in University enrollment.
Schmidt attributed his success to a current interest in science fiction films and the fact that there hadn't been a science fiction series for a few years.
Stu McDonald, chairman of the Popular Film series, said, "I'd like to think that college crowds were more refined and distinguished in their tastes, but that's not true."
"I wouldn't want to say it was due to some overall enlightenment on the part of the film, audience." he said.
Whether film audiences in Lawrence are more conscious
shipping, projectionists, ticket sellers and publicers, haven't been taken out of the gross profits.
I'd like to think that college crowds were more refined and distinguished in their tastes, but that's not true.
Complete financial figures for fall haven't been computed yet, said Kathryn Gile, assistant programs for the Kansas Union.
Beverly DeForest, chairman of the Classical Film series, said she had made money on all her films and that "Street Nearad Desire" was the most successful, drawing a crowd of 500. The movie grossed $341.25 Film rental, however. A third of the classical films: $125 or 60 percent of the box office gross, whichever figure was greater.
THE FILM SOCIETY'S
of the quality of a film is debatable, but Harwood and the film chairmen said they had noticed changes in the types of movies audiences were coming to see.
WHEN THE HILCRESST theatres opened, Harwood said, they ran several art films. They were quite successful at first but soon declined off. He attributed much of the art films' initial success to interest generated by a former faculty, Dick McCann.
people used to come to the movies two or three times a week, no matter what was on," he said. "Now is they don't want to see a movie you can't give it away. A good quality picture of
any type can be a box office winner."
Benjamin said he had noticed changes in audience interest in SUA films.
"I think audiences today are more sophisticated in what they watch," he said. "They have an eye for the art in a film. They are attending foreign films and they used to stay away from."
McDonald said the changes he saw were in the types of movies coming to campus. For instance, the film "Anti-war film," was more
popular a few years ago than it is now, he said.
However, there seems to be quite a market for X-rated movies common among Iranian Vikers. The week after “Phantom of Liberate,” Harwool said that on the night it opened, the other four theaters combined grossed 10 million dollars of what “Super Vikers” made.
The University community is the main source of patronage for high quality films, he said. "Without it I wouldn't even attempt to run one of these films," he said.
McDonald said, "The students here are lucky. They get to see things they don't get in Kansas City. SUA can bring unique, arty and controversial but profitable movies. The fact that the movie makes much money says something for the audience here."
Harwood said, "I've made an attempt from time to time to create interest in this. This is where the future of the industry lies. You can leave the pop stuff out and use the dusty to make better pictures although it's a long way from being the art form it should be."
Highlights
Concerts
TED NUGENT AND HEAD EAST—Heavy metal rock 'n' roll, with high volume and high volume underground guitarists. With Nugent are the Amboy Dukes, Head East, a bassist from Boca Raton. Muad had their most recent hit, "Never Been Any Reason." (8:30 tomorrow in Hoch
This Week's
Exhibits
Theater
(Feb. 16 through March 5 in the Kansas Union Gallery)
(Through March at the Museum of Art)
DANDELION WINE—A reader's theater adaptation of Brad Ray Bardstaff's book about one
PAINTING AND SCULP-
FACULTY Members in the
department of painting and
sculpture will exhibit a variety
THE REDISCOVERY OF THE ARCHITECTURE AND drawings of 19th century American architecture. influence of the Middle Ages.
Recitals
summer in the life of a 12-year old boy. He learns to come to grips with mortality, especially his own.
(8 tonight and tomorrow night in Hashinger Hall Theatre)
(8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall)
Films
(8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall)
VISITING ARTIST—Ann Kocseli, pianist, will perform selections from Bach, Schumann, Beethoven and Barber.
VIVA LA MUERTE—A story
FACULTY RECITAL-
Howard Boyajian, professor of stringed instruments, will play selections by Bach, Hindemith and Schumann on the violin, and Schumann by piano and harpichord.
MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS—Sidney Lumet's flat direction, Gadfrey Uner's sharpness and the hammy performances of the cast badly mar this mystery. Agatha Christie's tale could still almost carry the film without it, and weren't so busy being art.
about a 10-year-old boy during
a mother denounces his father to
the Pascists. The boy's
mother violent dreams
dominate
NO DEPOSIT, NO RETURN
you kid become a
live-action. Disney feature
comes complete with a social message, indicating that the Disney studio is taking its first
BREAKHEART PASS-A-
WAR
MacCluskey's novel, Starring
Charles Bronson, Jill Ireland,
Ben Johnson, Richard Creena
ROYAL FLASH-George Fraser MacDonald's scoundrel in Richard Lester. The flair and slapstick of "The Three Musketeers" toward his prospective adversary "How I Won the War," and not even Malcolm McDowell, who very uncomfortable can help,
BARRY LYNDON-Stanley Koberch made the most convincing move all time, but whether it is an ironic and literate masterpiece or a boring and constipated play deba Starring Rary O'Neal.
Friday, February 13.1976
E
ing
se
ns
O
e
is
ne
st
A
ir
g
na
ge
el
y
do
do
ot
on
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po
Commuting safely is no accident
By BILL UYEKI Staff Writer
A multiple choice question confronts the student who drives between Kansas City and Austin.
The highway choices are: the Kansas Turnip, U.S. 24-40 and Kansas 10. Although there may not be a right or wrong choice, there certainly is a safe one.
TWO ACCIDENT FIGURES for the three roads were compiled for a two-year period, starting in 1974. The accident rate is the number of accidents for every million miles driven, and the fatality rate is the number of deaths for every 100 million miles driven:
According to data from the safety department of the Kansas Department of Transportation, the safest route by far is the turnpike.
Accident Fatality rate
Accident Failure rate (per 100
(per million million
miles) miles)
Kansas Turnpike .045 .99
U.S. 24-40 1.4 7.2
Kansas 10 3.2 2.2
The figures for the turnpike were for a portion of the turnpike from the East Lawrence booth to the end of the turnpike rear 18th St. Expressway in Kansas City,
For U.S. 24-40, the figures were from the
U.S. 24-40 junction with U.S. 59 north of
the west city limits of Kansas
City, Kan.
For Kansas 10, the figures were from the east city limits of Lawrence, to the junction between KS and MO.
LAST SEMESTER, nearly 10 per cent of KU's students committed to Lawrence, although there were no figures indicating how many were from Kansas City.
Many commuting students say they either take the road closest to their house or the road farther away.
The data is from a study by the Office of Institutional Research and Planning.
"I like (U.S). 24-40 the best," she said,
"and I think K-10 is about the worst."
Katrya Wells, Kansas City, M. graduate,
kuteny, saler on carpool used all three
buses to work with students.
KANNA FREES, Kansas City, Kan.
Donnna FREES, Kansas City, Kan.
pool used both Kanaa 10 and U.S. 24-40
"There's not near as much traffic on highway 40," she said. "If you get behind a slow truck on highway 10, you're stuck for a while."
The turnip may be the safest road, but David Wright, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student, said "poor students" usually couldn't afford the 75-cent toll.
From page one
Crime ...
into consideration. Women now feel they have more opportunities for achievement and more control over their lives, he said. The lack of women's influence among women was bringing women closer to the economic and social status of men. The awareness that women can compete effectively with men isn't limited to members of a formalized movement, she
“As women become more involved in the world, as they achieve social roles and status comparable to men, they will be, they will have a different types of criminality.” Adler says.
Some experts say that with more opportunities and rising expectations, crime can become a substitute for frustrated men who now want more than they can get.
ANOTHER REASON for the increase, according to some experts, is that as women become more self-reliant, they can
Arnold said he knew of no verification of that hypothesis and he said the widely held notion that women usually get off easy in court was mistaken.
crimes, the police have shown more will; press to arrest them.
Girls in Kansas juvenile correctional facilities usually serve longer sentences for comparable crimes than males do, he said. In the male facilities, there is a higher rate of making room for other juveniles. The girl's facility has no such pressures, he said.
The juvenile crime rate is also increasing, the FBI says. Among boys under 18, crime has doubled since 1960. Among girls of the same age, it has quadrupled.
Roger Barnes, assistant instructor of sociology, noted an ominous fact to remember when dealing with crime statistics.
"The biggest problem with statistics like the IBM's crime report is that it deals only with the罪行, not the people."
On Campus
TONIGHT: A ST. VALENTINE'S EVE CELEBRATION OF LOVE will take place at the United Ministries Center, 204 Broad at 7:30. The monthly meeting of the UMS will be at 8 in 42nd Linden, Mary Cathleen Peavy, Kansas City, Kan., senior and the Stauney Morris, St. Louis student, will present a RECITAL at 18 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
SATURDAY: The KANAS ASSOCIATION OF VETERANS will meet at noon in the Oread Room in the Kansas Union to discuss the G.I. bill for veterans.
SUNDAY: The FIRST UNITY OF MAN CONFERENCE will be at 9 a.m. at 800 Quincy in Topeka.
The deadline for filing FINANCIAL AID APPLICATIONS for the 1976-77 school year is Sunday.
Applications for MINORITY STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE of the State Colleges Coordination Council are due tomorrow. Applications may be picked up in the following locations:
Announcements...
Events ...
State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence has been appointed to the Select Committee on Appointments by Ross Doyen, State Senate president.
Roxann Paulsen, Overland Park senior,
said Kansas 10 might not be the best route,
but it was the shortest and most convenient
route for her.
THE JAYHAWK FENCING CLUB took seven of 12 trophies at its own tournament last weekend. Those who placed: Rachelle Raising, 1st, and Mary Elliott, 4th in the female unclassified division; Kitty Mulkey, 2nd, in the female novice division; John Hoefer, 2nd, Scott Jones, 3rd, and John Munson, 4th, in the male novice division; and Charles Anderson 1st, Sam Mitchell, 2nd, and Rick Hoefer, 3rd, in the male unclassified division.
In 1974, the fatality rate for Kansas was .03 per 100 million miles driven. The national rate is .05.
BILL ANDREWS, 1971 graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism, is the new promotion manager of KAE-TV and Radio, Inc., in Wichita.
Grants and Awards . . .
Part of the new highway to replace Kansas 10 may open this fall, says John McNeal, acting state transportation engineer.
the fatality rate for Kansas highways was less than the national average.
THE SECTION STARTS at an overpass south of DeSoto, and continues east to the junction of Kansas 7 and Kansas 10. McNeal said the rest of the new highway from Lawrence to DeKansas 7 junction near Ksaukee would not open until late 1877 or old-1978.
McNeal said the danger of passing on the current Kansas 10, which is mostly two-lane, might be solved by the new highway, which would be all four-lanes.
NEITHER FIGURES have been calculated for 1975, Merrill said. The fact that the bushes will be lower because there were them dead in 1975 and more miles driven, he said.
Jerry Merrill. state safety director, said
SKIING
Although road conditions and the quality of cars influence accident rates, both Merrill and McNeal emphasized the importance of the driver.
Mack McNeal, "There are many things which go into an accident record, named the crash."
"We believe people are being more cautious and aware in performing the driving task." Merrill said about the decreasing death rate.
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University Daily Kansan
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Fridav. February 13. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Jayhawks face riled up Cowboys
Sports Editor
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Missouri—and Big Eight officials Jim Bain and Ron Spitler—didn't do KU's basketball team any favors Wednesday night.
The Tigers, with the help of several disputed calls, defeated Oklahoma State, 72-71 at Stillwater. And when the Cowboys win, they will probably still be burning.
Things got so hot in Stillwater Wednesday night that Oklahoma State was whistled for four technical calls. But it still took a jump shot by Missouri guard Willie Smith with 12 seconds to go and a disputed "non-call" at the end to beat the Cowboys.
"ITS OBYIVO THEY have a very good team," KU assistant coach Sam Miranda said of the Cowboys. "They had to give up a possible two points and the ball out of bounds four times. That's 12 points they gave up on technicals."
While the Cowhays were losing a tough one at home, KU put a big road win at Iowa.
The big thing about the game was that
That's exactly the same position Oklahoma State will be in tomorrow night. The Cowboys, now 2-6 in the league race, desperately need to win on the road.
won, "Miranda said. 'We needed to win bady after losing at home last week."
On the other hand, KU can't afford to lose at home. Mathematically, the Jaywahks won by 15 games in a trailing league leader Missouri (7-1), three games with six to go. Kansas State
offense did exactly what we wanted it to. Our pucks shot well and that took some of the blame.
Good guard play was something KU had been getting little of recently before Wednesday night. Milt Gibson and Clint Johnson simply had not been playing well. But they came out firing against the team, allowing to hit 10 of 14 shots from the field.
and Nebraska are one game behind the Titers at 6-2.
sports
TOMORROW NIGHT, MIRANDA would like to see KU play a whole game as it did the first half against Iowa State last Wed-needay.
"We have always thought that Milt and Clint were good shooters," Miranda said. "I think they showed that last night. But for us to be successful, they must continue to play well."
"In the first half, I thought we played exceptionally well," Miranda said. "Our
OKLAHOMA STATE BOASTS a pretty good guard of its own in Ronnie丹妮, a 5-11 sparkplug who scored 24 points in the loss to New York man who makes the Cowboy offense run.
Miranda said, "He has good quickness and he drives well. But what makes him especially effective is that he passes off when we are our big men support on his drivers."
In KU's 63-59 loss to the Cowboys at Stillwater earlier this year, it was the Cowboy frontline that hurt the Jayhawks. Oklahoma State has good size, starting 6-7 Lafayette Threatt, 6-4 Dus Holder and 6-8 Dave Kravel.
"They are very active up front," Miranda said. "They have good size and they are good jumpers. And not only do they have good size, but they have strength as well."
What does KU have to do to beat the Cowboys? It's very simple, according toJim defense. It just have to do a real good job to defend and we have to do a good job on the boards."
Compton swaps Navy for KU swim team
"Ronnie Daniel is an exceptional guard."
By GARY VICE
Sports Writer
While many young men graduating from high schools were dodging Dugon Sam's military establishment, Tom Compton was trvying to get in.
When Compton, senior co-captain on the University of Kansas swim team, was graduated from Wichita Southeast High School in 1984, he appointed to one of the military academies.
"I applied through state senators"
"and Congressman (Garner)
Shriver appointed."
Compton attended the U.S. Naval academy in Annapolis, Md., for his freshman year. He was one of the first graduates.
"I THINK THE academy was going through a transition while I was there," he said. "I was disillusioned. There was a set of double standards between the old traditions and some of the new ideas coming in.
Compton said that although the experience had been good for him, he preferred to pursue an education in art and design, helping build a B.A. in environmental design.
"I just wasn't comfortable there. There wasn't an architectural school there and that's what I wanted. But I think I would have done it if I hadn't gone to the academy."
"ARCHITECTURE isn't a particularly easy major to go along with swimming."
Reamon's scholarship offer was a factor in his decision to come to KU in 1973.
"I realized it was a good opportunity to swim at about the best school in the Midwest," he said. "When I was swimming at Southwich (Wichita), I knew KU had a good swim team. They had five Big Eight titles in a row and this season will be their ninth."
Compton said he had to sit out of competition for one year because of his transfer from the Naval Academy. After being red-faced by the judge, he won the best season of his career last year, he said.
COMPTON BECOME PART OF KU's varsity record charts in his first season with a 58.661 in 100 yard breaststroke and for his part in the 400 yard medley relay team. The team of Mike Uffers, Compton, Don Menzle and Allan McDonald set the record at 3:30.5.
Last summer, he swam in the Region Eight Championships of the Pan American trials and won both the 100 and 200 meter races. In the latter event, he was 108.75 and in the 200 he finished in 221.5.
In the NCAA nationals last year in Ohio, Compton finished 14th in the backstroke, just two positions shy of gaining All-America status.
Before the NCAA nationals are held this spring in Providence, R.I., Compton and his teammates have another conference championship to aim for.
"After our last meet with Oklahoma," Compton said, "I was really encouraged." I just know we're going to win. If we keep our strong, we'll win it. But it won't be strong."
Swimmers juggle lineup
The KU swim team hosts Colorado and Nebraska at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Natatorium, be prepared for an unusual and jumbled Jayhawk line-up.
Coach Dick Reamon said he intended to use his swimmers in events outside their specialties to give them added competitive experience.
Recent stiff competition with Iowa State, Oklahoma and Missouri has kept him from
shuffling his line-up before now, Reamid said. He said he didn't expect a strong challenge from either the Cornhuskers or the Buffaloes.
"Nebraska doesn't have anything," he said, "but the fact that Colorado has a few good people that can help us polish up is totally positive for us. "Our swimmers can get a better opportunity to guage their efforts."
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--it appears to us that Mr. X faithfully "PREACHED THE GOSPEL TO THE POOR:" Get busy, work, make with something which to honor and worship God. "Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy: six days shalt thou labor and do all thy work."
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalm 2 and Acts 4:25
CONCERNING "PREACHING THE GOSPEL TO THE POOR"
Isaiah 6:11; The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me; because The Lord hath anointed Me to preach good tidings unto the meek; — — In Luke 4:16, etc. we read that Jesus came to Nazareth where He had been before he was baptized. That day, Jesus sapph day, stood up to read and found the place in Isaiah where it was written: "The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because he Hath anointed Me to preach the Gospel to the poor — — After John the Baptist was put in prison by Herod, John sent two of his disciples to ask Christ if He was the one to come, or should they look for another. — — "TO THE POOR THE GOSPEL IS PREACHED." Luke 7:19, etc.
Here is a story and incident the writer heard many years ago about some "Preaching the Gospel to the poor" that made a great impression. I never learned the identity or name of the man who did the praise, but I remembered him as a businessman who was very zealous in his Christian witnessing and testimony. He got together several of his likeminded friends to help with the music, etc., and went out each Sunday afternoon and held a dinner with them. I remember they were about 12 or 15 inmates. One afternoon as they rode out to the service Mr. X shocked and amused his friends by telling them he intended to start taking up a collection in every service, and urge those people to give their gifts. We present a present for God every Sunday. They had gotten into the habit of always expecting gifts with never the thought of giving being presented. It "REMEMBER THE WORDS OF JESUS LORD JEWEL HOW HE SAID, IT IS MORE BLESSED TO GIVE THAN RECEIVE." They were urged to try and earn the money they gave, to find a little job or work they could do, and tell they were trying to earn a little income. The kind of person suggested getting something to give by self-delivery with their allowance for sniff, smoking or chewing tobacco or something else. Mr. X kept passing the half and this kind of behavior throughout his life. He suggested get something to give by self-delivery after awhile some began giving regularly. One man got so interested in making something to give that he brought in sizeable goods, and Mr. X suggested he tithe the amount and save it from his earnings. He left the business as a living and supported himself. Some years later he truly said: "YOU CAN OUTGIVE GOD!"
--it appears to us that Mr. X faithfully "PREACHED THE GOSPEL TO THE POOR:" Get busy, work, make with something which to honor and worship God. "Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy: six days shalt thou labor and do all thy work."
The above incident happened tworecord or more years ago. It came to pass before our Statesmen, and Politicians, and Preachers, and the Powers of the Press, and Scholars "Fell in Love" with the Poor, the Laperts, and the Stampin' Up! Band. They had a hardness of their qualifications of character, intelligence, integrity, etc. Now that great numbers of them have been promoted to 'cast the ballist' many feel the freedom and liberty to 'cast sticks and stones to break our bones', yea, and 'cast bulls, pellets, buckets, hammers, and fire to burn up our cities, homes, industries, and what have you!"
it appears to us that these preachers, politicians, professors, or whatev, who think they are "Praeching The Gospel to the Poor" by advocating the state guarantee one every a living regardless of their situation. Acts 12:30 and Acts 14:58 gave the Sorcerer Simon: "The thy money perish with thee, because thou has thought the gift of God may be purchased with money. Thou hast not part nor lot in this matter; for thy heart is not in the sight of those who have been graved." It seems perhaps the thought of thine heart may be forgiven thee. For I perceive that thou are in the gall of bittersense, and in the bond of imiquity." Acts 8:20-22. Or may it be they need the probably more mature souls? Acts 9:31 Paul delivered to another sorcerer, Elymus, found in Acts 13:19-2.
P. O. Box 405, Docatur, Ga. 30031
Friday, February 13, 1976
7
KU seeks to repeat USTFF performance
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
A year ago, the University of Kansas track team left for Oklahoma City and returned with the first place trophy from the United States Track and Field Federation (USTFF) indoor championships.
The Jayhawks go to tomorrow's USTFF meet to defend their title.
But it'll be much tougher to win this time around. The Pacific Coast Club, considered the most powerful amateur track team in the nation, will be there in full force.
Tad Thalley, KU assistant track coach,
said yesterday, "They've got all their
superstars. They were pised last year
because we beat them."
A MORE APPROPIATE word might be named Because the case of what is named叫 the PCC
For the PCC, it was on par with Bobby Fischer losing in chess to Gerald Ford or the Harlem Globetrotter being beaten by Jack Spicer at High School's 7th grade all star scout.
Admittedly, the PCC wasn't at full strength in Oklahoma City last year. They did lose in crucial events. In one, the 300-yard dash, former KU spinner Mark
Latz out to Kansas freshman Cliff Willey
to return tomorrow for another
resignation.
KU will enter 30 athletes in 16 events. The PCC will enter half that number in fewer events. But when the PCC enters a competitor, it expects to score points.
FOR EXAMPLE, IT will enter Dan Ripley in the pole vault. He's the world record holder in that event after scaling 18-24 last week in Los Angeles.
The PCC will have Jim Bolding in either the 440 or 600. Bolding holds the world record in the 440-yard intermediate hurdles outdoors.
It also has Al Feuerbach, George Woods and Geoff Capes in the shot put. Feuerbach has the world amateur outdoor record of 71-7. Woods won a silver medal in the 1972 Olympics and Capes of Great Britain was rated first in the world in 1975.
The list could go on and on.
But don't count out the Jayhawks. Talley said KU had a chance to score in the 60, 300, 440, 600, mile relay and distance medley relay.
"We're in the medley (already) mainly to get points," Talley (aday). "But we're also trying to qualify in the distance medley (for the NCAA championships)."
KU students will have an opportunity to see the nation's top ranked gymnastics squad when the Jayhawks heat the powerful Raptors at 5 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson Gymnasium.
Gymnasts test top-rated NU
Kansas will be entering the contest after an impressive double-dual victory over Western Illinois and Fort Hays State. KU's offense has a high-nassion-high 188.35 points in the winning effort.
Nebraska, which upset previously top-ranked Iowa State last week, could be too much for KU coach Bock Lockwood's young star. The team was working in the 20-12 range. Lockwood said.
"It's been a good week of practice." Lockwood said. "We'll be ready for them. Our goal is to hit 80 per cent of our routines."
In posting their season's high score in the last outing, KU's gymnasts hit 71 per cent.
"I think the 188 is on the low end of what we will score this season," Lockwood said. "We'll be up to 195 when our specialists hit."
For the Jayhaws to upset the Cornhuskers, several of Nebraska's performers will have to do poorly, especially Larry Gerard and Gene Mackie.
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8
Friday, February 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
ESSEX
AID
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Forum quest
Following one-hour drill on controversial issues at yesterday, Fancon In Forum in Green Hall, Robert F. Bennett talked about
lighter matters with law students and Barkley Clark, professor of law.
New appeal method to be tried
items from grades, finals and parking tickets to financial exigency and a University Senate code amendment were presented at yesterday's University Council meeting.
Organization and Administration Committee reported that Parking and Traffic Court had requested a procedure change to eliminate the prosecution's side of court
Robert Casad, SenEx member and professor of law, said, the committee recommended that the procedure be used on an experimental basis.
Casad said the new procedure had been requested by Hank Sunday, chief justice of the court, because court cases are running a semester behind.
Less than five per cent of tickets are appaled, Casad said. However, there were about 22,000 issued in October and November alone, he said.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said he initiated a review of grade and finals
policies through the Office of Academic
Affairs.
Suggestions made by the Academic Procedures and Policies Committee (A&P) included changing grade reports to include the class average, the number of students
enrolled in the course and the number who started the course.
A code amendment to make the council chairman a non-voting, ex-officio member of SenEx was passed after discussion to determine the positions or keep the status uno.
The council chairman usually attends SenEx meetings, but has been excluded from closed sessions because of "observer" status.
Gerhard Zuther, chairman of SenEx,
argued for the status quo. He said the
council chairman might have difficulty with
the decision to appoint a member who
might possibly sway opinion.
Frances Ingemann, University Council chairman, withheld comment during the discussion, but added there were many times during SenEx meetings when she had pertinent information she couldn't add because she was an observer.
A motion to combine the SenEx and council responsibilities was turned down because of the excess work load involved for one individual.
Joel Gold, exSenE member and head of a financial exigency policy committee, said the committee met Feb. 9 with ad-hoc comments that discuss crucial issues being compromised.
Gold said reasonable compromises could be reached on five points, but the sixth was still an issue of whether the University could expand in selected departments while dismissing tenured faculty in other departments during a period of financial exigency.
Shankel told the administration would like to add staff members in one area if the addition would help to bring the University out of financial exigency.
Gold said faculty viewpoint would remain a factor of no expansion until the financial crisis.
--the proposed Tallgrass Prairie National Park.
Schooners are coming to the Hawk Monday, Feb. 16
Gov. Robert F. Bennett spent an hour yesterday afternoon giving brief, blunt answers to questions about a variety of issues.
The Governor, speaking to a group of lunch-munching University of Kansas law students during a Noon Forum session in Green Hall, gave his views on issues including liquor by the drink, abortion and nuclear power.
Staff Writer
Bennett he favored allowing liquor by the drink in Kansas.
By KAREN LEONARD
"I've always supported it. I think we have
no" he said, pointing to the hypocrisy and
the self-centeredness of his own work.
He said, however, he didn't support liquor by the drink as a means of increasing state tax.
"THE ONLY REASON I support it is that I think it's the honest way." Bennett said.
Abortion laws should be left up to the states to decide, he said. His personal feelings on the subject, he said, are that the decision to perform an abortion should be left to the pregnant woman and her physician.
Bennett munches state problems during law students' noon forum
Bennett also said he favored the building of a Wolf Creek nuclear power plant.
Energy production in the United States has reached a crisis situation, Bennett said. Production and exploration for oil has decreased while consumption has increased. As a result, he said, alternative sources of energy must be used.
"NUCLEAR POWER plants can operate safely in this country," Bennett said.
He said he no reason the state couldn't properly control, regulate and control crime.
This doesn't mean the government isn't exploring solar energy and other energy options, Bennett said, but for the time being the generating plant seems like it 14 best answer.
Bennett told the students he was against
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For love in bloom.
WORLD BLUE NO
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KING GEORGE'S
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1023 Mass.
842-1521
if you don't see it, ASK! »» KING GEORGE'S
Valentine's Day, February 14 Brighten your love with flowers and plants
Nothing says love like flowers. This Valentine's Day let a fresh bouquet or a plant speak for you. We've got some eloquent suggestions. Just call or stop by.
Nothing says love like flowers. This Valentine's
Owens 9th & Indiana 843-6111 FLOWER SHOP
MEXICO
ZONA TRIANGULAR DE MÉXICO
UNIVERSIDAD DE MÉXICO
DE LOS NIÑOS
NOVEMBRE 1952
Aztec Inn
Home of the Aztec Calendar
The Aztec calendar reminds you that memorable dining in centuries-old tradition awaits you at the Aztec Inn. We invite you to share our proud heritage.
Dine with us in the leisurely atmosphere of Old Mexico. Dine at the Atxec Inn.
1987
He would prefer a proposal that involved less land, Bennett said.
"I'm personally opposed to devoting 30,000 to 60,000 acres to an area for biologists and botanists to study wildflowers and tumbleballs on," he said.
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Tuesday thru Saturday
11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday—Closed Monday
American & Mexican Food—Also Luncheon
807 Vermont
842-9455
THE GOVERNOR said he was opposed to the right of public emblems to strike.
He said the government was limited by law in its negotiating flexibility.
"The government can't shut down," Bennett said.
Edward and Naomi Reste invite you to stop in soon.
"There's no way you can arm a negotiating token with the kind of power a tactical rifle has."
He said he didn't support total gun control but he thought the penalty for crimes committed with guns should be increased. He said that with a firearm for gun purchases should be established.
During the session, Bennett declared his support for President Ford in the 1980s.
Alfie's UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT 6th & Maine
"Try Our Fish Today Just for the Halibut"
YOU MUST ASK FOR KU SPECIAL
WEE BIT— -1 Pc. Fish 'n' Chips $1.19
1 20' Soft Drink
1 Order Mushrooms (reg. '1.64)
Mon.-Tues.-Wed. —BEER $1.00 Pitcher (5 'til Closing)
"WE FRY HARDER" Good 'til Feb. 18th
Try These: Fried Cauliflower
Pastramil - Roast Beef - Glam Fries
PARAMOUNT PICTURES CORPORATION
IN AWARD-WINNING MARKETING SERVICE
A JOHN BARRUMBREN, ARCHDIGOD MANUFACTURING
Fish&chips
AGATHA CHRISTIE'S
MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS
PG
AGATHA CHRISTIE'S
MURDER ON THE ORIENT EXPRESS
PG 14
Friday and Saturday
Feb. 13 and 14
7:00
9:30
Admission $1
Woodruff Auditorium
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 13, 1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE BE MY VALENTINE
54 months? Wow! B. and B. are still the ones for me, Gray.
Pam and Amy: You are beautiful, witty and true women. Love you both, Jim
Chi-Be He totties-worry (or I'll klick you in
that.) He totties-worry too 'n too long if we're haw-
kens. Lie. Die. Jebb.
Michael, "Architects may come and Architects might come. When I run dry, I step awake and think of the possibilities."
Cav. Merely by chance very unsuspecting you
I love her, but I am unprotecting me. Now, I'm in love with you, let me touch you.
Love o' my life...Thanks for making me shine.
Love you. But you know I always love you. Blueberry.
Hey Witt: Thanks for the Valentine's day ball and the dance wasn't bad either. Rob.
The happiest moments of my life have been in the park. I love the beautiful sunny weather and entire Day to my friends on 1 and 3 Gordon.
MARLON BRANDO Have a Happy Birthday and
Happy Valentine's day LOVE STELLA &
BEST WISHES
You want some flowers addressed to you. But
you don't suppose they will be cared for,
earned dough, or given to your man Joe.
Johnny Bob—Be my Valentine or I'll break all your Zappa records. Love, Debbie June.
To my Sigma Kappa Girls: Happy Valentine's
Day and Appreciation to your house-
mother.
SWETTS You the greatest STOP You're women-
gupen PUNK PS You the greatest G大猪
PUNK PS You've got your valentine.
Kalae giant pink bunny rabbit twitches her tail only for exotic reasons--like love.
L. Punk-My love to you on this spectal day
Love and kisses, dumbbunny.
To all: you Battentafel and ex-Battentafel sweet-hearts, Love and Kisses from: Socks
To Arnold, Vinnie Arthur, and especially Mark
贺 Valentine's Day. Love you all, bucket.
Bernard
Lance. Meet you on Bilb's bunk for a Valentine
gift. Please keep your address, P.S. T.I. Cherry,
name, Cher.
To J.A.B.-Are you my buddy? Happy birthday and Valentine's Day from Chuck.
Poodle- May this Valentine's day be full of un-
passionate affection and passion,
passionate kisses.
El Chetto, Sit on it! Just kidding sweetie, your loving nerd.
Dearest Vanka, I'm glad I came home to you.
I love England with me! I love
Twinkie: twinkle
CHOMP - BE MINE! Happy Valentine's Day, love
you always. CLOWN.
ment giverised in the University皱皱 MHRING
CLASSED BY THE UNIVERSITY皱皱 MHRING
CLASSED BY THE UNIVERSITY皱皱 MHRING
Color Crayon: What can I do/much of what you think? True to know you make me more valuable than yourself. You will always learn. (New York) Go get ahead. You say you love you to unite. Simm (Expressing the thought of K. Twain.)
Liz, you are the two points in the free throw line of my heart. Paul.
Maureen, as a girl you've great and you I think even a creep. Love, Tom. Even though you are a creep, Love, Tom.
happy Valentine's Day, Michael you are so
wautiful in every way. Je t'aime beaucoup
To da vlai Vale: Velf vet do you know *Ils*
gritch and quille hunk de homme *XIII* Mama
gritch and quille hunk de homme *XIII* Mama
Sorority group—Happy Valentine's Day. I love the both of you. The Hockey Stick.
to earth to space: happy valentine's and Charlie Brown Schenell, What a shot. Ooh yeah.
RST.-Sweetheart, Happy Valentine's Day. Thank
Keecher, the best year of my life. Love always,
KEECHER.
To my奎xy Tootle-I.LU. so much. How much? a lot, moo! I-ll.
K-I miss you. You come back and be my Valentine forever-Mx.
T amar兰莱--Thanks for the memories. Here's to future Love and Happy Valentine's Day.
Nuture.
JI-Be my Valentine. Your recipe, little daring,
that's what I like to call it. You're the one 18 months and Friday the 13th.
You've got to be very excited!
To my dear Alphas—Happy Valentine's Day from your loving love! "Slim"
Allen, Rose's are red. Violets are blue, Nothins' are fun Than smooching with you, Debby
BiPaPe A handace, forgetful midget with fagging and a grim smile. Every day we’re at Mt. MBweeB, Every Day We’re together I have to get on the bus.
Beth, I've known you only a short time, but I always remember how brave it will always remain that way. Love, David.
DJ- Your looks so fine, your body nshline! Oh wont you be my valentine?
WRC Jellybats; Chicago; camp music; photo-
wraps; movie; Parkway, Toronto; daffodils;
racing movies; Parkway, Toronto; daffodils;
To the little soldier; Tm-Rut; Cutes! Happy
Valentine's Day; At Ease! I love you. S.
Dear T.T. You may be a toad but you are the prince of my heart, J.J.
S. Bear—a very happy V-Day. (Be nice!) I love you Steve J. Kat.
Ed, you are the sunshine of my life. My love always. Jill.
M.B.I. it all started with Tabby 'Rabby' and
M.M. 'Kiddie' when I was a kid. How
howting me. I love you kids. Bacon, Lettuce
and Pineapple. I love you kids. Bacon, Lettuce
Big Bie-Bit-Happy Valentine's Day—you silly-silly!
Big Litle, Little Bit.
Houses are Red. Valentines are ginkgo. If you have a house, don't wear red. You can stick your head in the head. Love, love. Your house is red.
Poo, Valentine's day was made for you because
the heart is so big. I love you, Judy.
RAS (H) - m1 missed last week, I try again.
I'll have to look at the calendar. Valentine's Day,
shall we celebrate? Love—Katie
S. SHEVREH Happy Valentine's Day. Philadelphia on the 4th.
Dear Rabbit. A toast to your delicious delight.
Happy Valentine's Day. Love, J.M.
Hunk-May our love grow as wide as it is deep.
Always, Honey.
To my little pumpkin. You'll find my present under your blanket. G. B.
Happy Valentine's Day to Becky M. and all her绰
reborn from her mentor, Mike M.
Kathy and Terry, Your Godfather and Johnny
Beth both agree, that Polish beauties are the
prettiest.
Bar, what can I say about that which fills my heart? Love you beaucoup. Suz.
Deb, in six years we've come a long way. Let's go further together. Love Lick
Dear Squirrel! 'NO KITA in a
Happy Valentine's Day Love, the mouse-in-the-corner.
Valentine's Day Love, the mouse-in-the-corner.
CONGO. Have you heard that BLONDES have more fun? Well . . . ?
To our SEXY SUPERSTAR we must love you. Betty, Frieda, Eleanor, Pearl and the rest.
A princess dwells about a jerusalem where love is eternal.
With love, affection and deepest gratitude — I
would that you could know *Happy Valentine's*
Day.
ROPE. Happy Valentine's Day, Senator. VLA.
Hey wonderful little kids; are not experimented on in Haworth. The credit loves you more.
Keech: Roses Red, Violets Blue, But what are they if I don't have you. Chong.
Ted Nutent and I would like to wish the Comic
Twinee, "a. Happy Valentine's Day." Let's
let's celebrate it together!
Breakeer brunch, come in Red Fox. This it wasn't meant for the kids. It was tall and youthful up in the back. My tail on, yawning up in the back. The kids were just a bunch of kids.
1974 VW Super Beetle 4. ped. in dash AM-FM set.
1974 VW Super Beetle 6. call. Kruil 8621, ask for
kickstand.
Even though we ain't got money, I'm so in love with strawberry.
CLASSIFIED RATES
91 Triumpth GT6-24 miles per gallon, radial
90 Triumpth GT6-24 miles per gallon, 842-GT6-24,
for Tourai.
91 Triumpth GT6-24 miles per gallon, radial
one two three four five time times times times times
15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word .01 .02 .03 .04 .06
AD DEADLINES
1966 Dodge Cornet, Automatic, SPT snow tires,
new brakes, excellent condition. 6D48-2
4-19
**1970 Dodge Corner, Automatic, SPT snow tires,**
new brakes, excellent condition. 6D48-2
Found: ladies' Timex watch Monday, Feb. 9 on
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
To my Drive Me M. I love you still, crazy,
friendly, complete, your valentines. Tom
ERRORS
Thomas Murray 371 organ with Moog Presence
Simone Meyer 960 presence For information on
simone Meyer 960 presence For information on
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Calculator. Bowar Brain, excellent condition.
For reasonable offer or highest bid
845-814-896.
12
13
Kustom 202 bass amp. Good condition. Call 842-9484 after e or at Richardson's 2-17
SPECIALIZED
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These items can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 644-8538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
1975 Yamaha 350 hd. Must sell, will sell cheap.
864-6223
24.8
Motorola Magazette, two screen inch sided
display with 4-inch LCD. Includes Motorola
Telefonics Tecran 160A IP camera. Call 8117131d for
more information. Tee: 256-794-2233
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory built products, the product benefits from a larger and get more benefits at the GHAMPIHON SHOP at KIEFS.
We can make your stereo sound better.–GUAR-
RANCE! We'll play two earbuds, one at
Audio Systems, 307 E. Flint.
Tremendous selection of guitars, saws, amp's, basses and pedalboards. Shop "Hose Keyboard Studio, Choose from Gibbons, Amps, Amp Sets, Kromes, and many others. Amps, Kromes, and many others. Ning gigs. 9:30 a.m., Hose Keyboards Studio, 11:30 a.m., Hose Keyboards Studio.
Alternator, Starter, and General Specialists.
BELL AUFLEX,
ELECTRIC, 842-906-3800, 3800 W, 6th
(612) 527-8791.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERP T thousand of cases
18750946 427-8744 Los Angeles, Calif. Fax: 427-8744
312-4744
COST * 10% - Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single items or package. Register for Free korea.com/store. Call Dave. Phone: 858-6309. Earnings 6 to 10.
Cameron lens for Minolta. 80mm Vivitar. 52mm
Mamiya. 70mm F1.4. Call: 943-936-200, 5.00, ask for Niat. 8-17
Call: 943-936-200, 5.00, ask for Niat. 8-17
Quitting business sa—bargain! Everything goes. Get the same. Save money. Arguably building full of merchandise. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. We also have fresh tomatoes and lettuce. (Hwy 40, Open 6-9, seven days) 841-349, 213
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture & Appliances. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 708 S. Washington St., 12406.
CUSTOM JEWELERY: Professionally crafted gold
and silver nature sculpture, conventional
design jewelry. Organic handmade.
executed B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting.
and variety of unusual stones. 841-5838 or
843-0707
190 VW Fashion. auto, air, radio, 56,000 miles
Best offer 841-8646. 2:13
Max Factor Lip Gloss-all flavors, plain ans frosted at Round Corner Drug Store. 601 Mass.
Portable Smith-Corona "Corcair" 700 "manual"
Portable Smith two years old, but rarely used; $400
Battery 812-589-888
Peavy-600, two. Alice speakers with stamina,
mails. Call 841-2144 anytime.
2-13
Slide-rule Calculator in excellent condition. Call 841-5246 after 5:30 p.m. for more information.
FOR SALE Sea skin, muskrat, rabbit. 35% off
Freshly packaged in resealable plastic.
organic shampoo, jollons, massage oil,
cream balances and biodegradable
gels. Be based on labeled biodegradable
sales. BUY - POTTON PARLOR 819 Vermont
Hours 12-5.
STEREO Pioneer CD49 320 Bozak speakers. FISher pioneer. Pioneer SLSS lamp. 2-19
barked snake. Near new condition, one ower (female) and has snow lays. 2-19 843-5434.
New Sterio Echoe turntable, amp, and
speakers Call after 5 p.m. 843-6212 9.17
NOTICE
For Sale 1869 Plyl Furry II, 3 dr. bll 2 18b 2 bll
For Sale 1869 Plyl AK, AC, III, bll 2 18b 2 bll
*spadded* and *bullred* 3 dr. bll 2 18b 2 bll
Swap Shop, 820 Max. used furniture, dish
ware, cameras, televisions. Open daily
842-397-3717
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at the Copy Center. We can make 5 copies of your hard drive in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, 838 Manchauk, 841-7800.
SKI-Mont Blsu is open, 10% loan, under new
terms. $3 million on Kito 10; $3 million on
$1.5 million on Kito 10; p.m. Wednesday.
Check the schedule on www.ski-mont.com.
Remember your Valentine F. Round-14-Panbunts Cindy, Amanda Cardas. Round-3 Corner Dog Mia.
February Specials—Musk, Chantilly, Holly
please contact Valentine. Round Corner Drug
please contact Valentine. Round Corner Drug
SECRETES only few have mastered. true friend-abled through deeper spiritual insight. promised through deeper spiritual insight. pamphlets by mail. No cost or obligation. Mail box 5007, Topkai Kansu 66000. 2:20 Box 5007, Topkai Kansu 66000.
Announcing the Cabanbah Café's special Sunday brunch at Cabanbah Café, located in a private villa only. Each week's meal will be a 4 or 5 course brunch with fresh fish, seafood and guest meals by taking advance reservations. This Sunday, Feb. 15, we feature Beer Bourbon, Crab & Bacon, our favorite Chef Poly Campbell. Call 842-6000 for reservation. Information: Cabanbah Café, 803 N. 83rd Street rear entrance.
Give a gift of last signing this Valentine Day. Draw a heart on your artbook, poetry, art, and illustrated books as well as hardcovers and 12 price paperbacks in most fields. Visit our online store to complete out-of-print search service. Come in for a free library tour at Tuesday 10 a.m.-9 p.m., Friday 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
TBD Rail-Ally* Sunday at Broken Arrow Park,
& Louisiana Station at 12:30, 2:43
1-18
E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive transportation provided. Drive now, pay later. Transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
Special sale of Indian crafted jewelry. Blue
Saree with white beads at Ranada Inn J-15
Bat and Sun.
Two $250 scholarship. Any full-time undergraduate
or graduate student must be enrolled at Oxford
Faraday. Due March 1st. Please inform
us as soon as possible.
LOST AND FOUND
Found: Indies' Tindex watch, Feb. 9 on
Pittsburgh Park, Lake and Spencer Libraries,
16:44 bp. 864-519-169
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a pub-
lisher, through the National State Bank, 8th & Kentucky and Malls Shopping.
"State bank" advertisements are sponsored at a pub-
lisher's bookstore, 9th & Kentucky and Malls. Shopping
Bank, 9th & Kentucky and Malls. Shopping
Found: young female Samaoan/Huksy type dog.
Light colored. 843-1035. 2-18
German Shipping Huskie Cross Crop Female
Tennessee last week at least five times
Tennessee 835-746-794
2-13
Found: One set of key fris. afternoon in front of Wescoe. Case claw. Case in 111 Flint. 2-13
Black wallet in Allen Field House Feb. 5.
Need ID's back. 864-1076. 2-17
$100 reward for information leading to the re-
covery of a stolen vehicle. Bid in Bedwinan area since Feb. 1. Black and white bid.
Bid in Fayetteville area since Feb. 1. Black and white bid.
Found: Bounce brace address addressed to Renx, from Kendall, Nanea, Kris, and John. Call 864-3082.
Lot: Two rings in Wearce remarks on Feb. 9th.
Lot: Two rings in Wearce remarks on 6/24-1
24
Found: Lady's Wash. Identify and call. Claim:
between 5 p.m.-10 p.m. 864-1323. 2-13
I lost my little blue pillow at the KU-KST game. If you found it, call 843-6558 and ask for help.
House key near 13th and Nalamith. Identify and
claim at 111 Wheelers.
Lost billfold Small, burgundy-colored. Lost
billfold Strong and Strike Black Halles-
841-7631 after 3:00
Employment Opportunities
Found: a calculator last tuesday at the Mad Hatter. Call 841-5794 and identify. 2:16
Lost: gray and black tiger striped male cat
Grown: 18th & 4th Season, Seugie G寝.
Grode. No. 13
2-18
Colombian soccer team challenges any other nation or continent to a soccer match) Call 216-897-5040.
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
Overseas Jobs - temporary or permanent. Europe, Australia, S. America, Erica, etc. All inquire by telephone or by e-mail. Seeing free-info-wire; International Job Center. DEA, KA, Box 4509, Berkeley CA 94704. 920-368-8111.
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE: If you enjoy helping a new young couple to help us at our home, provide a loving marriage to you. Provide a private housekeeping cabin, completely furnished, mowing, general upkeep, weeping, carpentry duties, mov
Lollar: Lisa, Siberian Huxy using black face
collar: 842-2027, 842-3422.
2-17
ANNOUNCEMENTS
A job opening for a student research assistant, University of Maryland School of Data and statistics in research. Social science majors must have completed two years of required. Contact Mitchel Tahunan, Bureau of Research, Achieve Place 111 Hawaii 864-346-346.
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement in patient care. With one of the top 30 companies in a degreed program, we have no nap time. Excellent benefits, can be provided by our Expansion Grand, Grande Suite, K94 City, Mo. No charge.
Rewarding summer for sophomore and older col-
lege students, counselling children. Riding, backpacking in
outdoor education. Write now! include program
and personal plan. Spring March
for boys' girls. Sign up for Summer
THE NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
has a great fiddle teacher. Also blues, folk and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin and jazz jazz and rock guitar and band. Call 841-267-0925.
SKI-Mount Bleu is open, 10% less under new
conditions. 2 ml of Bleu on K-10, 15 cm² per p.
2 ml of Bleu on K-10, 15 cm² per p.
ART SHOW AND BLASTT CENTER
ART SHOW AND AFFORDABLE ART-WOOD
AND MIXED MEDIA. 9:00 a.m.-11:30 p.m.
MAN. 8:00-5:00 mth. first sr., 7:00-4:00
p.m. 8:00-5:00 Sunday. Begins Mom, Feb. 5. 2-13
Celebration of Love. Come and share in an event of fun, singing, sauf dancing, an anthology of works by some of the greatest historians of St. Valentine will be told by a master of dance on Friday, Feb. 26 at 10am at the Bridges. Sponsored by Planney, #84-#88.
SKI Equipment Sale: Ski boots, bindings
skip paths. Call 684-6177, after *6 First come*.
2-171
2-172
Get a Winter Tan with a Sunlamm from Round
Bulbs. Complete kits, replacement
bulbs-801
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Fitted Sheets
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Use your People Book Coupon at Round Corner Drugstore* 15% off -801. Mass 2-13
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Dr. in and out, prince of the phone calls (also) at WESTERN MEDICAL SCHOOL.
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
2 bdrm. all uu all贴, on campus. Furn. or umm.
free. Furn. parking, a/c, pool. 843-4903.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
rentals in Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exchange. 842-256-3900.
30 new 2 b/dm, apartment near campus; park-
ing area; efficiency apartment; unit
paid. 843-8579
Room furnished with, shared kitchen and bath
and a separate bedroom. A separate
allegible apt for mature newnet. No pool.
Ground floor.
Rooma available in a cooperative house, $40 and
$80 per person. Wear a防水 and dry clothes. Bags,
dry goods. 842-8421
1 bdm. furnished apt. available immediately in
University Terrace 6432, 8299-2433, 8493-1433, 2-16
Sublet 2-bdm, apt. at Frontier Ridge, AC, carpet, 50s. laundry, bus route. Furnished or unfurnished. Clean and quick. Free dishes, linens. Vacuum-appliance. Avail Feb. 2-17
7282
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
ent, 2- bedrooms to campus $5 and up, 6- f
room or $830-$4837
HELP WANTED
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Nude models meet during the following three days: Thursday and Tuesday, 12 & 3c. Contact Maryanne Gillard at jgillard@dior.com.
AVOR- Start off the new year with excellent earnings. On January 12, Lawrence and nearby states 844-612-6462.
Secretarial position, part-time. Afternoons, 2-4:30. Monday-Friday, $2.20 per hr. Must be able to type. Office experience helpful. Apply from Monday, July 19, 2015. Mass. School of Education, 7337 2-16
Research assistant in Dept. of Chemistry, Term 4, USC School of Engineering, part time. Duties include writing and running computer programs to investigate surface topology of solids, developing a Siipend commensurate with experience, up to six years of experience in the programming. Experience and expertise in computer programming, a knowledge of analytical geometry and spatial reasoning, and two years of esteemed applicants should contact B.K. Lee, Llc., 12345 Oakland Ave., Berkeley, CA, or undergraduate transcript, references a and b above. Researcher is committed to equal opportunity and affirmative action. Applications from women and men are welcome.
Addresses wanted immediately! Work at home or in an office with a computer. American Express card. 1401 Wilson Hill, Suite 511. (312) 769-3300. www.wilsonhill.com
TYPING
**THEISI BINDING:** The Quick Copy Center is located in the library of our service in fast and prices are reasonable. Our services are free to all students.
Experienced typet-arm paper,files,misc. tests. 800 pages of paper,spelling, spell纠正, corrected. 843-505, Mrs. Wright.
Experienced Uptist. I.B.M. Selective, Units, discs and term papers. Call Fam. Call 849-7529. tfr@uml.edu
Typist editor. IBM Pica cille. Quality work. Discussions, dissertations. Mail: 842-1027. Mile: 8-11
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable.
Electronic mail, fax, e-mail. BA Social Sciences
and Human Resources B.A. BA Social Sciences
and Human Resources B.A.
Exp. typist, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
expedient, journal, teaching, spelling coeficient,
Jean, 841-3699
S. L.S. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selicet PCiapt (pca). Prompt efficient service. Thinks. dissertations, term papers. Phone 315-864-2324. Evert Streich. 2:27
WANTED
Non-smoking roommate wanted to live with
you in campus and furnish- 465 including utili-
ties to camp
Jewish Male to share house Musil Koeber.
$150 plus m., utilities. Call Roger 812-358-233
Mobile home 12 60 or larger. Would like
Mobile home 16 20 or larger. Call 631-7948 (KC)
= 213
BOOMERMAN (one) or two males wanted.
INFORMATION, INFORMATIONS. Immediate
species, Brian; B14-817-2060.
Brian; B14-817-2060.
We need teachers this semester for courses in mechanical engineering and computer auto mechanics. If you want to share knowledge in any other interest area, or would like to teach a course, please call 4-3477 or drop by the SUA office. 2-13
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10
Friday. February 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Exhibits, speakers and dinners to highlight Black History Week
By ANITA SHELTON
Staff Writer
Exhibits, speakers and dinners are part of the activities planned to commemorate National Black History Week in the next few weeks at the University of Kansas.
Black Caucus, an organization of black students who live in Ellsworth Hall, the International Club and the department of African studies, will all sponsor programs.
Black History Week was first observed in 1926 and begins the second Sunday in February. The week begins with the births of both Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass.
AUTHORH BLACK HISTORY Week is
February 9-13 this year, the Black Caucus
will schedule its event on February 18 Karla Moore, Black
Caucus president, said yesterday.
More said the week was delayed because of the symmetrical break.
"We had been making tentative plans before the semester break," Moore said. "After we got back and everyone settled down we got started on the planning."
several activities are planned for the Carcassius game. The Caucus has had six scheduled games, including Player Services scheduled.
of Kansas City, Mo., for 7:30 Tuesday night in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. If the group can't come, a movie will be shown at Ellsworth, she said.
MEMBERS OF THE February First Movement will speak at 7 Wednesday night in the Forum Room of the Union. There will be a lecture on the history of the night in the Lewis Hall cafeteria, followed by a party for Caucus members. And on Friday there will be an Art Exhibit from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Ellsworth Hall lobby. A guest from the hall residents will follow, Moore said.
All activities will be free.
The International Club will have an African dinner at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 21, Alberta Wright, African Club member, and the part of the International Club, she said.
The dinner will be at the Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Admission to the dinner will be $3.50 for singles, $6.00 for couples and $1.50 for children.
WRIGHT SAID the dinner would include six African dishes prepared by African women. African artifacts will be displayed and there also will be a drawing and an African dance demonstration in which the audience will participate, Wright said.
Bad checks written during enrollment periods are a bigger problem now than in the past, according to Charles Burrows, University of Kansas associate controller.
Leniency on bad checks lasts just so long at KU
He said yesterday that the increased number of bad checks was probably due to general economic stress.
The department of African studies began business in 1932, and it lasted nine months before the Black History Month.
"We have some aces in the hole we can use against this problem," Burrows said. "If I check down, they'll be telling me that his fees still haven't been paid."
"March 5 is our special day," Burrows said, "After that a student's enrollment at KU is officially cancelled if he still hasn't made his fee payments."
THERE IS A $10 FINE on fees not paid before Feb. 20 and a $25 fine on fees not paid before March 5, he said, which usually gets late students to pay their fees.
"We give students every opportunity to
wear it, but after March 5 we really go after them."
A student isn't accused of passing a bad check to KU, but he is faulted for not completing his enrollment payments, according to Burrows.
A party will be given at the Union after the dinner, Wright said. The party will be free, she said, al'though there will be a charge for beer.
BURROWS SAID that between 200 and 250 checks written during spring enrollment were returned by banks because of insufficient funds.
Of the students who wrote the checks, the enrollment numbers cancelled in March, he said.
"Most finish their payments before March 5." Burrows said.
Some of the returned checks have to be run through again because of banks' clerical errors, Burrows said. The comptroller's office checks with a bank to make sure that an account has insufficient funds before contacting the student who wrote it.
Jacob Gordon, chairman of the department of African studies, said the new lecture series had the same two goals as the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History. Inc.: to help promote better understanding of history and to bring about harmony between the races by interpreting one to the other.
IF A STUDENT graduates and leaves Lawrence in debt to KU, there are still things that the University can do, he said.
Students invited to open forum
Cancellor Archie R. Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, will meet with interested students in an open room in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The meeting is one of a series of open meetings during which students can express questions or concerns to Dykes and Shankel.
"We can block him from getting his transcripts until he finishes his payments," Burrows said. "Say a senior graduates, leaves and has not paid $125 for his dorm."
"We'll turn it over to Students Accounts Receiving Book, who'll send three letters to the former student over a period of a couple of months, reminding him of his debt."
EDWARD BEASLEY, professor of black history at the University of Missouri at Kansas City and an official of the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, Inc., also spoke last night. Gordon said the department planned to have another lecture this spring and two a year beginning next fall.
If the debt still isn't paid, the KU Board of Regens will turn the account over to a collection agency in Wichita or Kansas City, Kan. Burrows said.
"I'm not sure how they collect, though I doubt that they break arms or something," he said. "But I'm sure that they can make payments for someone who refuses to pay his debt."
Marijuana bills to be discussed
Tom Duncan, Kansas director of the
Marijuana Organization to Reform
Marijuana Law
Legislative bills to reduce penalties for marijuana possession in Kansas will be publicly discussed at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Lumineum Library, 707 Vermont.
The Kansas Legislature is currently debating two bills that would decriminalize
Marie Stewart, a member of Black
students at the school, black students
benignified from the program.
"We try to involve all black students and African students in the activities." Stewart said. "The black faculty have also been a big help."
Stewart, a Salina sophomore, said the observance of a black history or black awareness week was a tradition at Ellsworth Hall.
"The FIRST ONE that I know of originated about two years ago when Ellsworth Hall had an International Night," she said. "The black students decided to take it further and scheduled a series of meetings a week that were related to black studies."
Moore said the work for the week was being done by Black Caucus members. All art works and talents also would be those of KU black students, she said.
Some local merchants are loaning clothes to the organization for the fashion and talent show. Moore said. African clothes are also loaned to the organization.
Stewart said the highlight of the week would be the soul food dinner.
"It it's fun and it's a challenge to cook for 50 to 60 people." Stewart said. "Besides the best part of the dinner is when you get to know the servers, you runners you even learned and just dig in."
STEWART SAID much of the food was being provided by the food service. The ribs and other food, and materials for the week, would be coming from an allocation from the Ellsworth Hall Government, Stewart said.
Moore said there had been a long, hard struggle before they were allocated the money. Approximately $700 was given to the Caucus for the week.
stewart said the week was good, but that it was only a sample of what was possible. "I think it's a shame that black people have to wait until Black Awareness Week before they can receive the money to do something," she said.
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Student assault reported
The student told police that she was assaulted once on campus as she left a building and once as she left her apartment. She said that the male member of the group held her arms behind her back while the females beat and scratched her.
A KU student was assaulted twice Tuesday by a group of men and women, the KU Police Department yesterday.
She said the assaults occurred because she refused a request to "discuss some problems with" some members of the group.
She suffered facial bruises, scratches and possible fractured fingers.
She said that some of the attackers were her relatives and that she had been assaulted before by members of the group.
Schooners are coming to the Hawk Monday, Feb. 16
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PETER PARKER
Tasheff says know-how her forte
By MARTISCHILLER
Staff Writer
Tedde Tasheff, candidate for student body president
Vox Populares: Latin for people's voice.
That's what Teddie Teshad wants to be.
Tasheb, Wichita junior, is running for student body president. Steve Owens, Salina sophomore, is her vice president running for state elections Wednesday and Thursday.
Tasheff and Owens said a major goal of their administration would be to make sure the 20 per cent representation that students have in the class makes board at the University is utilized.
Student representatives to committees in departments and schools often aren't familiar with the way the committees work in their background of issues involved, Tashef said.
There is also a lack of emphasis on the honor of being a student representative, she said, and many students don't take the job immediately until they've been on a board for a while.
"We want to start seminars and training sessions which will increase the effectiveness of student representatives in departments and schools." Tasheff said.
ideally, the chairman of a department could give new representatives the history
and background of a board at the seminar so the representative would have a good understanding of his job soon after he took office, she said.
Owens said he saw two new roles for the student body vice president in addition to his existing role.
The vice president should be an adviser to first-term senators and the chief lobbyist for KU students in the Kansas Legislature. He will also advise the university library hours and for women's athletics.
Tashef said her experience in University government made her the best qualified teacher in the department.
TASHEFF HAS BEEN in the Student Senate for two years and has been a member of StudEx both years. She was chairman of the Communications Committee and is currently the Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee.
Tashef is now a member of SenEx and University Council. She is vice chairman of the University Committee on the Committee of the University Council and chairman of the Athletic Seating Board. She is also the honors program representative in the English department's policymaking board.
Owens is finishing his first year in the Senate and is a member of the Culture Council.
He is a Summerfield scholar and a member of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. He is also on the Interfraternity Council's public relations committee and is a member of the faculty from the Office of Dean of Women in education. He is a coeducational, sophomore honor society.
ANOTHER PRIORITY of the Vox Populare platform would be working with the AT&T system.
Owens also served as assistant Student
Union Activities treasurer last year.
A summer employment placement center and an improved bus system are two goals she said she would pursue with city officials.
Tasheff said she would also like to start an experimental program for recycling University Daily Kansans in the residence halls and, later to expand the effort to other areas of the campus if the experiment was successful.
The Vox Populares Coalition also pledges to keep student fees down and to work for increased library hours and improvements in parking, traffic and security.
TASHEFF AND OWENS are encouraging
students to vote for the proposed satellite union in the referendum on this year's
Tasheff said there was a definite need for a student service facility in the west campus area. There isn't enough information or solid research available, but it will be useful to the destrict facilities for less than 60 students and 50 raise in student activity fees, she said.
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation ticket subsidy needs study, Tasheff said. She and Owens are in favor of a ticket subsidy if it benefits the students, but there is no way to make it available to indicate how much actual benefit it provides from the ticket subsidy.
There should be strong student representation on the Athletic Corporation board to tell the board what students can play in football and basketball tickets. Tashafeh said.
There is also a need for an executive athletic board, she said. The large Athletic Corporation board has alumni members who have met with hess said, and doesn't meet often enough.
Students would have more influence on a smaller board that met more often, she
A. S. Holliday
Steve Owens candidate for vice president
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Sprinau frolic
Karen Kuhle, Lawrence, grabs for Kay Hansen, Lawrence, during a spring weather
frolic Sunday afternoon above Potter Lake
Vol.86 No.87
KU Med Center studv defended
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE CENTER's research will focus on the development of new drugs for diseases of the central nervous system, such as Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis and departments of biochemistry, chemistry, medicinal chemistry, pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacology at the Medical Center and human biology, which will participate in the center's research.
"We interested in identifying what is wrong with a person with epilepsy, for example," Mertes said, "and what is the biochemical lesion that could cause it. We can locate the lesion, we can design drugs to alter it and hopefully cure epilepsy."
Nineteen professors and 30 new research assistants and graduate students will be involved in the center's research, which will begin April 1.
By BILL SNIFFEN
KANSAN
Grant starts drug center
MERTES ALSO said that the center
Staff Writer
Monday, February 16, 1976
Higuchi said, "The real value of the grant is that it allows the University to carry out programs it would like to see carried out, and demands on the University's resources."
CHARGES THAT the examination wasn't thorough were made last week by Robert L. Kruse, MD, and two surgeons at the Med Center, as well as the four-member cardiothoracic surgery nurse team. Rels and Hannah resigned after the investigation and called the investigation a "whitewash."
The two other members of the panel, David Sabiston, Duke University, and Henry Bahson, University of Pittsburgh couldn't School, couldn't be reached for comment.
Laufman said he wouldn't risk his reputation to do a law enforcement and called some of the officers involved.
By LYNDASMITH
The grant culminates a two and one-half year effort by Mathias Mertes, professor of microbiology at UCLA (guchi, chairman and reagents' president), medicinal chemistry and the late Edward Smissman, former chairman of medicinal chemistry to establish a center for drug research at KU.
One of three doctors who found the KU Medical Center's facilities safe for heart surgery yesterday denied charges that the examination wasn't thorough.
A $1.25 million grant given by the National Institutes of Health (NWI) will put the University of Kansas in the national forefront of drug-related research, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
"It (the Med Center) is not the greatest facility in the world." Harold Lauman, Institute for Surgical Studies in New York City, said yesterday. But he added, "I've seen many plants that are not as good as the one in Kansas."
LAUFMAN, WHO VISITED the Med
The five-year grant, which will be used to establish a KU center for drug design, was the first awarded for such research by the NIH. Shankel said.
"He (Laufman) can only evaluate what he has been shown." Reis said.
*He (Reis) has a personal investment in calling it a “whitewash.” Its certain not to
SHAKENL ATTRIBUTED this ability to the geographical proximity of the depart-
would do research on some drugs now in use to make them more readily usable by the public.
He said the interdisciplinary research would make the center unique.
"We've been told, and we certainly do feel, that we have a unique situation here in being able to bring together a number of different disciplines," Hijucci said.
"One of the projects will involve seven professors and 10 research assistants, all committed to improving Hughiči said that KU had already demonstrated capacity to effectively conduct research effort."
Recognition of this ability and a previous NIH Health Science Advancement award be indicated.
Shankel said he didn't anticipate that the grant would bring in additional state funds, but that it would strengthen the University's capability to draw federal funds.
"Professor Higuchi's presence, as a regents' professor, has also contributed immensely to this spirit of comaraderie and cooperation," Shankel said.
ments involved (most are located in Malawi and Hawetta halts) and to the depart-
The grant will improve teaching in the scientific disciplines, Higuchi said, because the material taught in the sciences has to be continually renewed by relevant research."
"Supplemental requests are being developed now." he said.
Higuchi said that the grant was intended to be a core around which other programs were built.
Center Dec. 19, was shown only what the Med Center's administrators wanted him to see. Reds said, and got an inaccurate picture of Med Center's operating room equipment.
Five doctors at the Med Center were interviewed. Laufman said he was at the center when David Robinson was about one-half hour. The interviewers were selected by David W. Robinson, acting executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, because, Robinson said, the five doctors were "one of the best."
The five doctors interviewed were Creighton A. Hardin, chief of general surgery; Frank W. Masters, chief of plastic surgery; Antoni M. Diehl, chief of cardiology; pediatrics; David Pugh, adult cardiovascular physician; and Reis.
room and in the intensive care unit. the panelists' report called the intensive care unit's air handing system "substandard." The team from open-heart surgery be placed in isolation to prevent infection. But the panelists found the equipment in operating rooms 512 and 542 and said heart surgery would be a priority. Reis said yesterday he expected more
REIS AND HANNAH had halted heart surgery operations Dec. 1 because of a recent cardiac arrest.
Reis said yesterday he expected more resignations at the Med Center.
"Within two or three weeks there won't be a cardiac nurse there," Reis said.
The nurses would either resign or be reassigned, he said, in an administrative move to eliminate any nurses that had been associated with him.
Ronald Hizzo, heart-lung machine technician, said he would resign this week. The reasons for his resignation are what he said were the need for medical negotiation and the availability of another job.
INSTEAD OF TALKING with himself and the technician who operated the heart-lung machine in rooms 512 and 514, Rizzo said, "He hadn't invented one in three years.
"They talked to people who don't know their assets from a hole in the ground," he said. "They talked to people who really knew nothing about it."
The nurses contacted by the panelists weren't those who were involved in the day-to-day operations of the operating rooms, Rizzo said.
Rizzo echoed Reis' charge that the investigation hadn't been thorough.
Laufman said, "We talked to about 12 mares-five or six alone in the intensive training."
But the nurses in the cardiothoracic surgery team weren't contacted, he said.
Beer drinkers aged 18 to 21 can cool their suds a little easier now that a state senate bill to raise the beer drinking age to 21 was killed in committee last Thursday.
State Sen. Wayne Zimmerman, R-Olathe,
introduced the beer bill at the request of
some people in Olathe "who apparently had
problems with some beer," he said.
See SURGERY page 2
State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, said Friday that the bill was defeated by 7-1 vote in the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee. Dissenting from the vote was State Sen. John Vermillion, R-Independence, he said.
18-year-olds can still drink beer
Booth said, "Some of us talked about increasing it from 21 to 85. I was just making darn sure it didn't have any support. I think we did the only responsible
Booth said he be had invited Ed Rofls, student body president, to testify on the bill because Rofls had an advocate of 18-year-old's rights in the past.
ROLFS SAID in testimony before the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee last Wednesday, "If you let me have the right to vote, the right to marry and get married, I would be told to sue, to die and to die on a battlefield, I think" would be asinine to not let me buy beer.
The principal proponents of the bill included the Rev. Richard E. Taylor Jr., executive director of the Kansas United Dry Forces. Booth said two law students from Washburn University and a student from Oklahoma State University in Gladstone testified on behalf of the bill.
KUAC free ticket policy mulled
Questions about the issuance of complimentary tickets to KU sporting events has sparked a report on the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's (KUAC). The report is planned to be released at the Athletic Board's meeting in April.
By JACK FISCHER
Messer said the working press, parents of the athletes, KUAC staff members and recruits for various teams now received complimentary tickets.
Doug Messer, assistant athletic director and business manager, and Clyde Walker, athletic director, are preparing the report. Messer said last week that some change in the current policy probably would be recommended.
HOWEVER, THE TOTAL number of
"I have the list down here and if you came down I still didn't show it to you," Messer said. "What do you want me to say, that I give away a lot of free tickets?"
complimentary tickets and its cost were unavailable to the Kansan.
Fans who拍 for their tickets receive the best seats to KU sports events. Messier set up a studio in Manhattan.
However, Dave Shapiro, chairman of the Student Senate Sports Committee, said the complimentary tickets received by students and student recruits were "prime seats."
"The complimentary ticket holders are scattered all over." he said.
At football games about 200 recruits
received seats between the 28 and 40-yard
seats.
AT THAT TIME, he said, Walker an announced that an "in-depth" study would be conducted.
Walker said that the total number of complimentary tickets would be released with the report, and that no other information would be out until then, according to the senator.
A Student Senator, who asked not to be identified, said Walker "put up a brick wall" when asked about complimentary tickets.
inflationary crunch and trying to economize, why are we giving away free food?
"I asked at the (Athletic) Board meeting last spring, if we were concerned with the
Walker was unavailable for comment. The annual audit of KUAC reports the amounts budgeted and spent for compliance audits and the Office of Sports Information.
See KUAC page 2
Chances of a similar bill reappearing in the future, Booth said, aren't likely.
However, he said, "We feel it's dead for this session of the legislature, but we're here."
HE SAID THAT he had told the legislature that passage of the bill would compound problems of enforcing beer laws, that the total state population of 18-year-olds who were responsible for any beer would be reduced and entrusted those under 21 with the power to
Mark Boranay, executive director of the Kansas Wholesaler of Malt Beverage Association, Inc., who lobbed to defeat the governor "very little sentiment to change the law."
vote the legislature should respect their maturity with respect to beer.
McDonald said future bills proposing age restrictions on the consumption of beer were always possible. He said the issue of alcohol misuse arisen several times in the past few years.
Clifford McDonald, the local Budweiser distributor and treasurer of the malt beverage association, said he had been sent by the company to Peru until its defeat in the committee.
Fertility ritual
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Between 200 and 300 people showed up for a midnight fertility mass at the Jawwahyk stand in front of Strong Hall Friday, Captain Kasima (Tlm Short, Pittsburgh second year law student) read **13 "Commandments"** (left), while Eric Ehdicron, Kansas City, Kan., senior, bid underneath a ray and Sand Rays, Belville junior, (right) listened.
10
Friday, February 13, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Exhibits, speakers and dinners to highlight Black History Week
Staff Writer
By ANITA SHELTON
Exhibits, speakers and dinners are part of the activities planned to commemorate National Black History Week in the next few weeks at the University of Kansas.
Black Caucus, an organization of black students who live in Ellsworth Hall, the International Club and the department of African studies, will all sponsor programs.
Black History Week was first observed in 1926 and begins the second Sunday in February such that there are birthdays of both Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass.
ALTHOUGH BLACK HISTORY Week is February 9-13 this year, the Black Caucus will schedule its program for the week beginning with Carla Carter, Black President, said yesterday.
More said the week was delayed because of the semester break.
"We had been making tentative plans before the semester break," Moore said. "After we got back and everyone settled down we got started on the planning."
Several activities are planned for the event. The Caucus has asked the All-Star Players scheduled the day of the event to play.
of Kansas City, Mo., for 7:30 Tuesday night in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. If the group can't come, a movie will be shown at Ellsworth, she said.
MEMBERS OF THE February First Movement will speak at 7 Wednesday night in the Forum Room of the Union. There will be a lecture and a party night in the Lewis Hall cafeteria, followed by a party for Caucus members. And on Friday there will be an Art Exhibit from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the Ellsworth Hall lobby. A guest for hall residents will follow. Moore said.
All activities will be free.
The International Club will have an African dinner at 6 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 21, Albert Wright, African Club member, part of the International Club, she said.
The dinner will be at the Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Admission to the dinner will be $3.50 for singles, $6.00 for, couples and $1.50 for children.
WRIGHT SAID the dinner would include six African dishes prepared by African women. African artifacts will be displayed and there also will be a drawing and an African dance demonstration in which the audience will participate, Wright said.
Leniency on bad checks lasts just so long at KU
He said yesterday that the increased number of bad checks was probably due to an increase in the volume of payments.
Bad checks written during enrollment periods are a bigger problem now than in the past, according to Charles Burrows, University of Kansas associate controller.
"March 5 is our special day," Burrows said. "After that a student's enrollment at KU is officially cancelled if he still hasn't made his fee payments."
"We have some aces in the hole we can use against this problem." Burrows said. "If a checkmate goes to the student warning him that his fees still haven't been paid."
A student isn't accused of passing a bad check to KU, but be is faulted for not completing his enrollment payments, according to Burrows.
"We give students every opportunity to their needs," he said, "but after March 5 we don't."
THERE IS A $10 FINE on fees not paid before Feb. 20 and a $25 fine on fees not paid before March 5, he said, which usually gets late students to pay their fees.
The department of African studies began in 1924, and the students last night were the Black History Lecture at the Black History Library.
Of the students who wrote the checks, one was a teacher and an enrollment application in March, he said.
A party will be given at the Union after the dinner, Wright said. The party will be free, she said, although there will be a charge for beer.
most finish their payments before March 5. Burrs said.
BURROWS SAID that between 200 and 250 checks written during spring enrollment were returned by banks because of insufficient funds.
IF A STUDENT graduates and leaves in detail to KU, there are still things that he hasn't done.
Some of the returned checks have to be run through again because of banks' clerical errors, Burrows said. The controller's office checks with a bank to make sure that an account has insufficient funds before contacting the student who wrote it.
Students invited to open forum
Jacob Gordon, chairman of the department of African studies, said the new lecture series had the same two goals as the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, Inc.: to help promote better understanding of the black history and to bring about harmony between races by interpreting one to the other.
Canceller Archie R. Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, will meet with interested students in an open forum at 1pm. Monday in the Forum Room
The meeting is one of a series of open meetings during which students can express questions or concerns to Dykes and Shankel.
"We can block him from getting his transcripts until he finishes his payments," Burrows said. "Say a senior graduates, and has not paid $125 for his dorm room."
"We'll turn it over to Students Accounts Receiving Book, who'll send three letters to the former student over a period of a couple of months, reminding him of his debt."
If the debt still isn't paid, the KU Board of Regents will turn the account over to a collection agency in Wichita or Kansas City, Kan., Burrows said.
"I'm not sure how they collect, though I doubt that they break arms or something," he said. "But I'm sure that they can make payments for someone who refuses to pay his debts."
EDWARD BEASLE, professor of black history at the University of Missouri at St. Louis, who was a member of the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History, Inc., also spoke last night. Gordon said the department planned to have another lecture this spring and two a
Legislative bills to reduce penalties for marijuana possession in Kansas will be publicly discussed at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Lawrence Public Library, 707 Vermont.
Marijuana bills to be discussed
Tom Durcan, Kansas director of the Nationals Organization to Reform Alumnae Association
Marie Stewart, a member of Black students at the university, black students benefited from the program.
The Kansas Legislature is currently reviewing that would decriminalize marijuana possession.
"We try to involve all black students and African students in the activities," Stewart said. "The black faculty have also been a big help."
Stewart, a Salina sophomore, said the observance of a black history or black awareness week was a tradition at Ellsworth Hall.
"THE FIRST ONE that I know of originated about two years ago when Ellsworth Hall had an International Night," she said. "The black students decided to take it further and scheduled a series of a week that were related to black studies."
Moore said the work for the week was being done by Black Caucasus members. All art works and talents also would be those of KU black students, she said.
Some local merchants are loaning clothes to the organization for the fashion and talent show, Moore said. African clothes are also loaned to the organization.
Stewart said the highlight of the week would be the soul food dinner.
"It's fun and it's a challenge to cook for 50 to 60 people." Stewart said. "Besides the best part of the dinner is when you get to see them as gamers who enjoy learning and just dig in."
STEWART SAID much of the food was being provided by the food service. The ribs and other food, and materials for the week, would be coming from an allocation from the Ellsworth Hall Government, Stewart said.
Moore said there had been a long, hard struggle before they were allocated the money. Approximately $700 was given to the Caucus for the week.
Stewart said the week was good, but that it was only a sample of what was possible.
"I think it is a shame that black people have to wait until Black Awareness Week before they can receive the money to do something," she said.
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Top Sirloin - choice of 10 ounce top sirloin, charcoal broiled in sauce
Six dollars and ninety-five cents.
7th and Massachusetts
Reservations requestes 911.166
Student assault reported
The student told police that she was assaulted once on campus as she left a building and once as she left her apartment. She said that the male member of the group held her arms behind her back while the 'emales beat and scratched her.
A KU student was assaulted twice Tuesday by a group of men and women, the KU Police Department yesterday.
She said the assaults occurred because she refused a request to "discuss some problems with" some members of the group.
She suffered facial bruises, scratches and possible fractured fingers.
She said that some of the attackers were her relatives and that she had been involved in the attacks.
Schooners are coming to the Hawk Monday, Feb. 16
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Tasheff says know-how her forte
By MARTI SCHILLER
Staff Writer
Tedde Tasheff,
candidate for
student body president
Vox Populares: Latin for people's voice. That's what Tedde Tasheff wants to be.
Tasheb, Wichita junior, is running for student body president. Steva Owens, Salina sophomore, is her vice presidential running candidate elections Wednesday and Thursday.
Tasheff and Owens said a major goal of their administration would be to make sure the 20 per cent representation that students receive is enough making boards at the University is utilized.
Student representatives to committees in departments and schools often aren't familiar with the way the committees work in the ground of issues involved, Tasheff said.
There is also a lack of emphasis on the honor of being a student representative, she said, and many students don't take the job until they've been on a board for a while.
"We want to start seminars and training sessions which will increase the effectiveness of student representatives in departments and schools." Taushef said.
Ideally, the chairman of a department could give new representatives the history
and background of a board at the seminar so the representative would have a good understanding of his job soon after he took office. she said.
Owens said he saw two new roles for the student body vice president in addition to the principal.
The vice president should be an adviser to first-term senators and the chief lobbyist for KU students in the Kansas Legislature. The vice president should be a leader of library hours and for women's athletics.
Tasheef said her experience in University government made her the best qualified doctor of nursing.
TASHEFF HAS BEEN in the Student Senate for two years and has been a member of StudEx both years. She was chairman of the Communications Committee, and is currently on the Student Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities Committee.
Taseff is now a member of SenEx and University Council. She is vice chairman of the Board, and a member of the Committee of the University Council and chairman of the Athletic Seating Board. She is also the honors program representative in the English department's policymaking board.
Owens is finishing his first year in the
state and is a member of the Culture
Council.
He is a Summerfield scholar and a member of Phi Dla Delta fraternity. He is also on the Interfraternity Council's public relations committee and is a member of the force from the Office of Dean of Warwick University of a coeducational institution here.
ANOTHER PRIORITY of the Vox Populations platform would be working with the Web browser.
Owens also served as assistant Student
Union Activities treasurer last year
A summer employment placement center and an improved bus system are two goals she said she would pursue with city officials.
Tasheff said she would also like to start an experimental program for recycling University Daily Kansans in the residence balls and, later to expand the effort to other areas of the campus if the experiment was successful.
The Vox Populares Coalition also pledges to keep student fees down and to work for increased library hours and improvements in parking, traffic and security.
TASHEFF AND OWENS are encouraging
students to vote for the proposed satellite union in the referendum on this year's
Tasheff said there was a definite need for a student service facility in the west campus area. There isn't enough information or solid research available, but it can be achieved with facilities for less than the suggested 600 raise in student activity fees, she said.
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation ticket subsidy needs study, Tasheff said. She and Owens are in favor of a ticket subsidy if it benefits the students, but there are not available to indicate how much actually being a student body gets from the ticket subsidy.
There should be strong student representation on the Athletic Corporation to tell the board what students can afford to play in football and basketball tickets. Tasheff said.
There is also a need for an executive athletic board, she said. The large Athletic Corporation board has alumni members who are not as well-affected said, and doesn't meet often enough.
Students would have more influence on a smaller board that met more often, she
4
Steve Owens,
candidate for
vice president
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Springau frolic
Karen Kuhil, Lawrence, grabs for Kay Hansen, Lawrence, during a spring weather frolic Sunday afternoon above Potter Lake
Vol.86 No.87
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
KU Med Center study defended
Monday, February 16, 197b
By BILL SNIFFEN
THE CENTER'S research will focus on the development of new drugs for diseases of the central nervous system, such as cancer, stroke, and depression; departments of biochemistry, chemistry, medicinal chemistry, pharmaceutical chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacology at the Medical Center and human health, who will participate in the center's research.
"It (the Med Center) is not the greatest facility in the world," Harold Laufman, Institute for Surgical Studies in New York City, said yesterday. But he added, "I've seen many plants that are not as good as the one in Kansas."
CHARGES THAT the examination wasn't thorough were made last week by Robert L. Reis and Hamner Hanham III, former heart surgeon at Johns Hopkins and four-member cardiothoracic surgery nurse team. Reis and Hannah resigned after the panelists' report was released and called him an 'observer.'
One of three doctors who found the KU Medical Center's facilities safe for heart surgery yesterday denied charges that the examination was 'wrong' thorough.
Laufman said he wouldn't risk his reputation to do so, and called his opponents "unproductive."
Grant starts drug center
"He (Reis) has a personal investment in calling it a "whitewash." It certainly not
"He (Lauffman) can only evaluate what he has been shown." Reis said.
Nineteen professors and 30 new research assistants and graduate students will be involved in the center's research, which will begin April 1.
LAUFMAN, WHO VISITED the Med
Reis said he wasn't questioning Laufman's reputation or ability. Lauffman had been misled by Med Center administrators, Reis said.
"We interested in identifying what is wrong with a person with epilepsy, for example," Mertes said, "and what is the biochemical lesion that could cause it. We can locate the lesion, we design drugs to alter it and hopefully cure epilepsy."
MERTES ALSO said that the center
Higuchi said, "The real value of the grant is that it allows the University to carry out programs it would like to see carried out, and it demands on the University's resources."
The grant culminates a two and one-half year effort by Mathias Martes, professor of pathology, Dr. Michele Goldman, chairman and reagent's technician, medicinal chemistry and the late Edward Smissman, former chairman of medicinal chemistry to establish a center for drug research.
A $1.25 million grant given by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) will put the University of Kansas in the national forefront of drug-related research, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
"We've been told, and we certainly do feel, that we have a unique situation here in being able to bring together a number of different disciplines," Filiuchi said.
Recognition of this ability and a previous NIH Health Science Advancement award based on experience.
By LYNDA SMITH
The five-year grant, which will be used to establish a KU center for drug design, was the first awarded for such research by the NIH. Shankel said.
SHANKEL ATTRIBUTED this ability to the geographical proximity of the depart-
Higashi said that the grant was intended to be a core around which other programs work.
Shankel said he didn't anticipate that the grant would bring in additional state funds, but that it would strengthen the University's capability to draw federal funds.
He said the interdisciplinary research would make the center unique.
missions involved (most are located in Maholt and Haworth halls) also for the departing states.
"One of the projects will involve seven professors and 10 research assistants, all of whom are from our area."
"Professor Higuchi's presence, as a regents' professor, has also contributed immensely to this spirit of comaraderie and cooperation." Skalek said.
Ronald Rizzo, heart-lung machine technician, said he would resign this week. The reasons for his resignation are what he describes as the lack of information and the availability of another job.
"Supplemental requests are being developed now." he said
would do research on some drugs now in use to make them more readily usable by the public.
The grant will improve teaching in the scientific disciplines, Hugucci said, because the material taught in the sciences has to be regularly renewed by relevant research."
"Within two or three weeks there won't be a cardiac nurse there." Reis said.
The nurses would either resign or be reassigned, he said, in an administrative move to eliminate any nurses that had been associated with him.
Higuchi said that KU had already demonstrated the effectiveness of research effort,
Center Dec. 19, was shown only what the Med Center's administrators wanted him to see. Rets said, and got an inaccurate picture of the Med Center's operating room equipment.
INSTEAD OF TALKING with himself and the technician who operated the heart-lung machine in rooms 512 and 514, Rizzo said, "he hadn't had one in three years, who hadn't operated one in three years."
Five doctors at the Med Center were interviewed. Laufman said he was at the Med Center one day and talked with Reis about one-half hour. The interviewees were selected by David W. Robinson, acting executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, because, Robinson said, the five were "the people most involved."
room and in the intensive care unit. The panelists' report called the intensive care unit's air handing system "substandard," and recommended that patients recover from open-heart surgery be placed in isolation to prevent infection. But the team at the equipment in operating rooms 512 and 800 heart surgery could be safely performed there. Reis said yesterday he expected more resignations at the Med Center.
The five doctors interviewed were Creighton A. Hardin, chief of general surgery; Frank W. Masters, chief of plastic surgery; Antoni M. Diehl, chief of cardiology; pediatrics; David Pugh, adult cardiovascular physician; and Reis.
REES AND HANNANA had halted heart
arteries operation. Doctors also
recommended the use of their operating
"They talked to people who don't know their assets from a hole in the ground," he said. "They talked to people who really knew nothing about it."
The nurses contacted by the panelists weren't those who were involved in the day-to-day operations of the operating rooms, Bizzo said.
Laufman ssaid, "We talked to about 12 maries—five or six alone in the intensive care."
Rizzo echoed Reis' charge that the investigation hadn't been thorough.
See SURGERY page 2
But the nurses in the cardiothoracic surgery team weren't contacted, he said.
Beer drinkers aged 18 to 21 can cool their suds a little easier now that a state senate bill to raise the beer drinking age to 21 was killed in committee last Thursday.
18-year-olds can still drink beer
State Senate. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, said Friday that the bill was defeated by a 7-1 vote in the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee. Dissenting from the vote was State Senate. John Vermillion, R-Independence, he said.
Booth said, "Some of us talked about increasing it from 21 to 85. I was just making damn sure it didn't have any support. I think we did the only responsible
State Sen. Wayne Zimmerman, R-Olathe, introduced the beer bill at the request of some people in Olaht "who apparently had problems with some beer," he said.
Booth said he had invited Ed Rolfs, student body president, to testify on the bill because Rolfs had been an advocate of 18-year-olds' rights in the past.
ROLFS SAID in testimony before the Senate Federal and State Affairs Committee last Wednesday, "If you let me have the right to vote, the right to marry and the right to be a judge, I would sue and to die on a battlefield, I think it be asinine to not let me buy beer."
The principal proponents of the bill included the Rev. Richard E. Taylor Jr., executive director of the Kansas United Dry Forces, Booth said two law students from Washburn University and a student from Oklahoma State University in Glathe testified on behalf of the bill.
KUAC free ticket policy mulled
By JACK FISCHER
Staff Writer
Messer said the working press, parents of the athletes, KUAC staff members and recruits for various teams now received complimentary tickets.
Questions about the issuance of complimentary tickets to KU sporting events has sparked a report on the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's (KUAC) The report is planned to be released at the Athletic Board's meeting in April.
Doug Messer, assistant athletic director and business manager, and Clyde Walker, athletic director, are preparing the report. Messer said last week that some change in the current policy probably would be recommended.
HOWEVER, THE TOTAL number of
"I have the list down here and if you came down I still wouldn't show it to you," Messer said. "What do you want me to say, that I give away a lot of free tickets?"
Fans who pay for their tickets receive the best seats to KU sports events, Messer sets.
complimentary tickets and its cost were unavailable to the Kansan.
"The complimentary ticket holders are scattered all over." be said.
However, Dave Shapiro, chairman of the Student Senate Sports Committee, said the complimentary tickets received by students and student recruits were "prime seats."
At football games about 209 recruits
received seats between the 29- and 40-yard
seats.
AT THAT TIME, he said. Walker announced that an "in-depth" study would be made.
"I asked at the (Athletic) Board meeting last spring, if we're concerned with the
inflationary crunch and trying to
economize. We are we giving away free
food for the poor.
Walker was unavailable for comment. The annual audit of KUAC reports the amounts budgeted and spent for completeness, audits and the Office of Sports Information.
A Student Senator, who asked not to be identified, said Walker "put up a brick wall" when asked about complimentary tickets.
Walker said that the total number of complimentary tickets would be released with the report, and that no other information would come out until then, according to the speaker.
See KUAC page 2
Chances of a similar bill reappearing in the future, Booth said, aren't likely.
Mark Boranyk, executive director of the Kansas Wholesalers of Malt Beverage Association, Inc., who lobbed to defeat the Lowe's "very little sentiment to change the law."
HE SAID THAT he had told the legislature that passage of the bill would compound problems of enforcing beer laws, that the total state population of 18-year-olds would be 325 million, and that problems wouldn't change and that by entrusting them under 21 with the power to
However, he said, "We feel it's dead for the session legislation, but we're going to watch."
vote the legislature should respect their maturity with respect to beer.
McDonald said future bills proposing age restrictions on the consumption of beer were always applied. He said the issue of alcohol is an arisen several times in the past few years.
Clifford McDonald, the local Budweiser distributor and treasurer of the malt beverage association, said he had been asked to test the vodka. Topekla until its defeat in the committee.
BASILI
Fertility ritual
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Between 200 and 309 people showed up for a midnight fertility mass at the Jayhawk statue in front of Strong Hill Friday. Captain Kansas (Tim Short, Pittsburgh second year law student) read 13 "Commandments" (left), while Eric Ehlredstrom, Kansas City, Kan., senior, bid underneath a sheet and Ray Sanders, Belville junior, (right) listened.
2
Monday, February 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Newsman mau be cited
WASHINGTON—Calling for action to protect the nation's secrets, Rep. Samuel S. Stratton, D-N.Y., said he would move to cite CBS Correspondent Daniel Schorr for content of Congress for releasing a secret House intelligence committee report.
Stratton, a former broadcast news commentator, said he would act tomorrow after Congress returns from a holiday recess.
"This is not a case of freedom of the press, Stratton said. It is one thing for Mr Schorr to comment on the committee report on his new program. That action is good."
He said he had acted when he learned he might be the only person outside the government with a copy of the report.
"It is quite another thing for him to pass along the complete text of that report to someone else for publication in clear defiance of the mandate of the House of Parliament."
Schore confirmed his role in the publication of the secret report in the Village Voice and said it was his duty as a newman to arrange the publication.
Tenneco admits payments
WASHINGTON - Tempee, Inc., a Houston-based international conglomerate, has disclosed that it made payments to individuals in 24 foreign countries and to
Tenneco officials said the statement was filed voluntarily because of growing concern about such payments made by other companies.
Payments in the United States were to political candidates, state utility board chairmen and local government officials from 1970 to 1975.
Tenneco also said it paid approximately $12 million over the five-year period to overseas attorneys, advisers, consultants and agents in connection with certain
Only $10,000 of the money spent overseas was known to have been paid directly to a foreign government employee, Tenneco said.
Tenneco said money indirectly reaching foreign government employees included $25,000 investment in a company and about $800,000 for military protection in an
Payments made in the United States listed in the statement included money submitted by a subsidiary, Tennec Oil Co., to a sheriff, three judges and a district attorney.
Lebanese reform rejected
BEIRUT, Lebanon — the radical Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine yesterday rejected Syrian-sponsored political reform plan for Lebanon and urged its government to stay in power.
Other leaders of Lebanon's left-wing organizations withheld immediate comment, but rightist leaders and Christian militia chiefs halted the plan, which they considered illegal.
A Lebanese Christian housewife, perhaps summed up the feelings of many civilians, said, "The declaration is good, but not good enough. Our leaders have gone to great lengths to prevent it."
The reform plan, announced Saturday night by Lebanese President Suleiman Franjieh, was pugged on the Cairo agreement of 1989 that deflimits forks of membership.
Among other things, the plan ends the Christians' 6-4 parliamentary majority and replaces it with a 50-50 balance. The plan also abolishes religious requirements
The jubilant firing of riffles greeted announcement of the reform plan but underscored the fact that Christians and Moslems were still armed.
Inmates riot, then give up
CONCORD, Mass. — About 70 inmates took over the two largest buildings and set a series of fires yesterday at Concord State Prison, then gave themselves up after being released.
The inmates filed quietly out of a prison dormitory they had seized after Prison Supt. Nicholas Genahua, speaking on a bullhorn, said they would not be hurt if he struck them.
Correction Commissioner Frank A. Hall said the outbreak began when guards came into the dormitory to remove two inmates* "who were under the influence" of alcohol. The first man was escorted out without incident, but when officers returned, the second man other inmates started shouting and harrassing the
The disturbance quickly spread to the gymnasium, where more than 100 inmates were watching the regular Sunday morning movie.
After the initial disturbance, break out about noon, the inmates barricaded themselves in the dormitory while about 100 state policemen and 50 guards, carrying guns and gas masks, marched into the aging brick prison and surrounded the building.
White House panel to eye CIA
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Gerald R. Ford's long-awaited plan to reorganize the intelligence community will include creation of a new White House panel to oversee the CIA and other spy agencies, according to administration officials.
The plan, parts of which officials said,
will be reviewed later this week, also is
expected to be updated.
—new presidential guidelines for covert operations.
—new powers for the head of the CIA.
new powers for the head of the CTA
in general in each of the intelligence agencies.
a proposed secrecy law making it a crime for past or present members of the executive branch to disclose intelligence secrets.
—an expanded President's Foreign Intolerance collection of foreign intelligence
One official said that although the President would likely make a general policy statement on the continuing need for covert operations, the specific guidelines, which would govern such operations in the future would not be revealed.
Parts of the reorganization plan are expected to be issued secretly to the agencies concerned, officials said in recent interviews.
One official hinted that the director of central intelligence would be given greater authority over the budgets of such other intelligence-gathering agencies as the Defense Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency and the National Reconnaissance Office.
Officials declined to be specific about what new powers the head of the CIA would give.
The Lawrence Workers of the United Farm Workers (FUFW) picked two Dillon's store workers four hours after noticing the sale in lettuce and orange not picked by the FUFW.
UFW supporters picket Dillon's
Staff Writer
The Dillon's stores were chosen by the FUFW because they were popular among students. Dutton, associate professor of social welfare and a member of FUFW, said the group was not protecting against Dillon's, but asking for the sale of the grapes and汁 Dillon's.
About 15 FUFW members, with signs and literature urging support for the UFW, started picking试剂 morning at the Dillen's store at 1740 Massachusetts. Some shoppers joined their forces and, after a couple hours, there were about 25 picketers.
"Some students and a lot of other people said that they were very sympathetic to the farm workers," Dutton said, "and that they wouldn't buy the lettuce or the grapes."
He called Saturday's demonstration information picking, and said that he
Lucas said that his store sold the lettuce and grapes sent by a central wholesaler, and that he wasn't sure what was being protested.
Keith Lucas, manager of the store on Massachusetts, said he had heard "both pros and cons from customers" about the nicketing.
"Upper to the about it, he 's said," Futtert in members also "he said." Dillon's store at 120 W. 6th on Dutton said, the manager gave the picketers coffee.
Dutton said the national grape boycott originally started in 1965, when the UFW protested the bad labor practices of California grape growers. Within the last six years, he said, a conflict has developed between him and Union and the UFW, led by Cesar Chavez.
Last year, an Agricultural Labor Relations Board was formed by the state of California, to supervise elections so the county could choose which union they wanted to be represented.
Although there have been some elections, Dutton said, the funds for the board have been cut off, making the board useless. A boycott using UFW's power will make the California state assembly initiate funds for the board again, he said.
He said the Teamsters drew up "sweetheart contracts" with lettuce pickers that didn't represent the lettuce pickers' interests.
"We have no objections as to how Dillon's handled themselves," he said.
"We want to get the word back to those legislators, who are sympathetic with the growers, who are thus power, means that we can affect and can affect consumption of lettuce and can affect," he said.
Radio-TV archives sought
Negotiations with Kansas broadcasters are now under way in an effort to establish a state radio and television archives section in the Kansas Collection of Spencer Library.
Broadcast tapes, log books and station correspondence from broadcasters throughout the state will be sought for the Kansas State University of the Kansas College, said last week.
Dutton, who said that a Lawrence
Griffin said the University was contacting Kansas station owners individually to see whether they were interested in donating their records.
The project was approved by the Kansas Association of Broadcasters (KAB) after Griffin decided the collection would be an immediate addition to the Kansas Association.
In fiscal 1974-75 the Office of Sports Information was budgeted $200 for complementary tickets and spent $62. For the same fiscal year, the KUAC was budgeted $8,200 for its recruits. The amount the KUAC actually spend is $13,044, exceeding the budget by $7,344.
He said each station would have to work
Individual archives would be maintained for each station that donated its records to the collection, Griffin said, and those archives would then make up the archives of the KAB.
The amount ticket for other complimentary tickets, such as those for the Chancellor, alumni and the KUAC staff, is impossible to determine from the audit because no specific accounts are listed for them. Shapira said.
KUAC...
State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence, said an amendment to a bill passed last year that created the Legislative Ethics Commission had made it illegal for legislators to receive complimentary tickets to KU athletic events.
"They (the picketers) have not talked very much to me about it," he said.
From page one
A CONTINENCY FUND is used to
expenditures outside the budget,
Sharpe.
The audit accounts for these tickets under miscellaneous categories, including public relations, the contingency fund and incident expenses. Shapiro said.
Glover said he didn't think it was "out of line" for legislators to receive complimentary tickets because they approved the budget.
The amendment was written to prevent special services from being given to them.
The amendment also makes it illegal for legislators to accept tickets from another state.
out either a gift agreement, in which the owner would donate the records, or a deposit agreement, in which the owner would retain ownership of the records.
Broadcasters' personal correspondence, diaries and photographs will also be available.
Griffin said he would go to KAB headquarters in Wichita this month to learn when the association's outdated records would be transferred to Spencer.
The project will be financed through the Kansas Collection's budget. he said.
The University already has some records from Kansas radio stations, he said.
Records for radio stations KANU and KJHK are property of the University and will probably become part of the University archives, Griffin said.
Surgery...
From page one
because "talked with anybody that wanted to talk with me."
RIZZO SAID the air vents behind the blood-pump were usually "caked with dust" which blew down during operations "like snow: like dandruff."
But a clean-up operation the night before removed the dust, Rizoza said, and the place was ready for a visit.
The investigators couldn't have known of that clean-up, Rizzo said.
Diehl said, "It would seem to me very logical to talk to the people actually in front of us."
Dheil said that although it was a "whirlwind tour," the technical information about the equipment in the operating rooms was not detailed in the short time the group was there.
Mike Fry, Wichita senior, said FUFW was protesting the sale of iceberg head lettuce, which is what most Lawrence grocery stores sell.
"Any kind of leaf lettuce is all right," he said.
Safeway store was picked three years ago by the FUFW, also said there was some change.
Beth Black, Lawrence junior, said, the FUFW had the address of a distributor from
Last week FUFW requested the support of MECHA, the campus Chicanoamerican honorary chairman of MECHA, and that his team ported the concepts and attitudes of FUFW.
whom any store could buy UFW-picked produce.
Members of MECHA may picket and support FUFW, he said, but MECHA won't use any of its Student Senate funds or facilities to help the FUFW.
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Monday, February 18. 1976
University Daily Kansan
2
---
Grad students get the business from writing skills
By FRED JOHNSON
Success in the business world doesn't depend entirely upon knowledge of business, mathematics and economics. Graduate students in the University of Kansas School of Business are learning that you need to communicate clearly through written documents, reports and memoranda is an important part of a business executive's job.
After learning last summer that some companies were concerned about a decline in writing and presentation skills of some graduates in recent years, the business department helped to help the students in its master's degree program improve their writing.
Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, said Friday that he had received a call last summer from an executive of a company on the business school's board of management, complaining of a nationwide decline in faculty quality of graduates during the last 10 years.
The company executive complained that the graduates didn't clearly state their conclusions or recommendations in their case studies or reports, he said.
PICHLER SAID after being told by the executive that some KU graduates had the same problem and after consulting four students at the school, the visers, the school's graduate assistance
committee met with James Gowen, director of freshman-sophomore English, and asked
The business school can't solve the problem nationwide, he said, "but we can certainly give our graduates an advantage over MBAs from other schools."
Gowen recommended hiring a teacher to supervise the writing students did in their classes.
Michael Valk, Lawrence graduate student and former assistant instructor in English, was hired last fall to supervise the students' writing.
DAVE SHULENBURGER, assistant professor and coordinator of the program, and he coordinated it informal. A student would write a term paper on memoranda and term papers during the course, he said, and if a professor thought a work to be difficult, he would have Valk screen the student's work.
Most of the problems are carelessness, Shulenburger said.
"The students weren't aware that writing ability was as essential as a knowledge of business, economics and mathematics to a business graduate," he said.
Valk said that of the estimated 140 students whose papers he had read during the semester, about 30 students had problems that required individual conferences with him before their work improved.
HE HAD TRIED to write at least one-half page of comments, both positive and negative, on each student's paper, Valk said, and most of the students were able to correct their mistakes by reading the comments and didn't require additional help.
"Although some students demonstrated a whole range of errors from structure to punctuation," he said, "none of them had more than four conferences to work out."
"All the students that I worked with individually showed improvement from one group to another."
"The students' problems weren't that they didn't know how to write or didn't have the basic tools that a good writer needs. It was that they had forgotten or were being careless about."
"When a student takes freshman or sophomore English he doesn't yet have a real interest in writing, he wants to write about. When the students find a topic that they are interested in, they have the basic tools to be a good writer. They just need to know what they learn and be more careful."
Valk said his experience in the business school had showed him that the English department was doing a good job of teaching freshman and sophomore English. The problem, he said, is that freshman and sophomores don't always understand that
Valk said he had been surprised by the professors' participation in the program.
what they learn in their English courses will benefit them in the future.
"WHEN THE PROGRAM started," he said, "I thought I would be working with about three professors, but during the course of the semester, I reviewed papers and professors. I'll probably be working with about the same number this semester."
Gordon Fitch, associate professor of business, said he gave a student's first paper to Valk to review and after that it was up to the student to decide if he wanted Valk to continue reviewing his papers. Most of them asked Valk to continue, be said.
Fitch said he had used the program as a self-improvement program. Most of his students were working on writing more concisely, he said.
CHARLES SAUNDERS, professor of business, said he had graded papers on their business content and then made copies of the papers for Valk to review. He said he knew the students' writing had improved when the teacher would be reviewed by an English teacher
Sulburer筷席 he said planned to poll the students who participated in the program to get the answer.
work. The professors were about evenly divided, he said.
Gerald Harris, Topeka graduate student,
has made the opportunity to have
hands-on experience with the
Sulenburger said he had polled the professors to find out if they thought the course was improved because the help Valk gave them is not known an English teacher would be reviewing their
"I knew I was weak in composition and sketches," he thought, "think his comment is highly helped."
TOM DEUBEL, Lawrence graduate student, said be initially had been hesitant about having an English teacher review his work.
"I didn't know how well I wrote, and I should it be quite an ordeal because he would an English major," he said. "I thought he would really chop up my papers."
Deubel said that Valk's favorable comments had proved that his fears were unmerged.
founded. He was really encouraged when Valk told him what he was doing right well. He did it very hard.
"Most of my mistakes were with punctuation. Now I am more conscious of punctuation when writing."
John Mayo, New York college student, said he was given a benzant at the beginning of the program.
"I WASWORKING hard to do a good job on the papers, and it bothered me when I knew an English teacher would be looking at them," he said. "But he was quite good about telling us what our problems were and how to improve our writing."
Pichler said whether the program was continued would depend on the business success.
"I would like to continue the program he said, "All the professors teaching a two-semester MBA program who used Valk last semester plan to use him this semester."
New particle taxes physical laws
By KAREN LEONARD
Staff Writer
The discovery of a new elementary particle called upsilon is causing some physicists to doubt the basic laws of atomic physics.
The particle behaves in a manner contrary to established laws and raises the possibility that there may not be any fundamental particles of matter, according to Douglas McKay, associate professor of physics and astronomy. The discovery of particles there is an infinite, rather than finite, set of particles within the nucleus of the atom.
McKay said Friday that upson was a surprisingly massive particle. It has three times the mass of the protom, and a very lifetime for a particle that heavy, he said.
"THE GENERAL RULE for nuclear elements is—the greater the mass (weight) of the particle, the shorter the lifetime. So if you want to control the counter to that expectation," McKay said.
Conceptually, McKay said, uplosion and other newly discovered elementary paradoxes indicate that the idea of fundamental particles to the nucleus of the atom is no longer valid.
If it is no longer valid, he said, the atomic theory itself becomes questionable.
McKay said that, according to the atomic
theory, there were a small number of fundamental objects and all matter could be considered constructed of those fundamental objects.
“If there is no limit to the number of fundamental objects, they lose their meaning. There's no way to use that notion anymore,” he said.
UPSILON WAS first observed five months ago at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) in Batavia, Ill.
Scientists from Columbia University, the Fermilab and the State University of New York at Stony Brook discovered upsilon in the debris of particles created when a beam of protons was accelerated and aimed at a target of beryllium.
Each collision producing an electron-positron pair was then examined to discover whether some of those electron-positron pairs had decay of some new article, McKay said.
The answer was yes, he said, and the new particle was named usilion.
This is speculation, McKay said, but the implication of the existence of upsilon is that there is evidence for a new type of quark.
All nuclear particles are made up of quarks, he explained, and to understand the particles we observe the quarks must be assigned very definite properties. Each
quark must have the properties of a certain mass, electric charge and strangeness. With the discovery of new electrical particles, a new property of the quark has been assigned. This new property is called 'charm', Mickay said.
HE EXPLAINED THAT at the beginning of a collision of two particles, the charm assigned at the beginning of the collision must be the same as the charm at the end of the collision. The property must be a constant.
McKay said that with the discovery of upsilon, still another property of these letters is the word *punc*-.
"Where does it all end?" he asked. "You can't invent a new property of nature every time a new particle is discovered. You're making it, you're only giving it a new label.
"This indicates to physicists that they don't really know that much about the inertia."
There have been a number of puzzling discoveries made in the last year-and-a half, he said. Another elementary particle called J(psi) was discovered about a year ago and another particle was discovered before that.
THE UPSETTING PART of these discoveries is, according to McKay, that understanding the first particle may not help in understanding the J(pi) particle.
"They might be entirely different types of phenomena," he said.
One particle was found to have a mass of 3 billion electron volts, another was found to have a mass of 3.8 billion electron volts and a mass of 6 billion electron volts, he said.
The equivalent mass of the proton, also a nuclear particle, is 94 billion electron volts
Electron volts are used to describe the location energy of atomic particles, McKay said. The electrons in a nucleus particle and convert it to pure energy, that's how much energy it would release.
THE INCREASINGLY HIGHER masses of these new elementary particles has led physicists to speculate that increase in the mass of increasingly higher weight, be said
This type of speculation is leading scientists to question the validity of the concept of a finite set of fundamental particles, he said.
Although the existence of upsilon has not yet been positively established, McKay said, experiments are being conducted to verify its existence.
"Maybe we'll never find out what's going on," he commented. "But it's possible that a different way of viewing time and space may be important to understand these very high energy collisions."
On Campus
TODAY: CHANCELLOR ARCHIE R. DYKES and Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor, will hold an open meeting from 1 to 2 in the Forum Room of the Kansas University Research Faculty on the Freer Gallery of Art, Berkeley, Calif., will speak on the Art of Reishoki (d. 1823) at 4 in the Lecture Room of SpoonArt Museum.
TONIGHT: The KU SCIENCE FICTION CLUB will meet at 7 in Parlor A of the Kansas Union. OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at 7 at the Baptist Student Center, 1629 W. 19th. HOWARD BOYAJIAN, chairman of the department of stringed instruments, will present a piano recital at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. There will be a play reading in German, "DER ZERBROCHENE KRUG" by Violet at B in the home of J. Wootton, 2422 National Lane.
The KU WOMEN'S TENNIS TEAM will hold open tryouts for the Spring squad, which will be held Wednesday from 9:30 to 11:30 p.m. at the Alvamra Acquaviva Club on M. W. 32rd.
Announcements . . .
THE DEPARTMENT OF PAINTING AND SCIULPTURE will open an art show at 2:30 to 10:30 in the Kansas University Gallery. Works by members of the department will be on display until March 5 from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, and 1 to 4 p.m. Sunday.
The Continuing Education departments of STUDENT SERVICES AND REFERENCE SERVICES will begin a series of lunch time mini-workshops on life and career planning at the Continuing Education Annex A. 13th and Oread. Discussions will be from noon to 1 p.m.
MARILYN STOKSTAD, professor of the history of art, was elected to a two-year term as vice president of the College Art Association of America. The 7000-member association is the national professional society for artists, art historians, museum curators and administrators.
Applications for the UNIVERSITY'S MINORITY AFFAIRS ADVISORY BOARD may be picked up at the Student Senate officer level three on the Kansas Union
Entries for the KU INTRAMURALS INDOOR TRACK TEAMS should be turned in no later than 4 p.m. Wednesday in 268 Robinson. Preliminary events begin at 10 a.m. Wednesday in 268 Robinson.
A new exhibit on the importance of the buffalo to the North American Indians is now on permanent display on the fifth floor of the MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY.
THE OFFICE OF REVENUE SHARING has asked that anyone having difficulty in completing place of residence to call (812) 948-2111 collect between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. Lawrence citizens can contact the Lawrence Douglas County Planning Office at 843-4600.
Entries for the University's co-op swim teams are due at 4 p.m. at Robinson in the Recreational Services Office. Practice 7 at 3:03 p.m. March 4 and the meet is on Friday, March 5.
Correction...
Tedde Tasheff, candidate for student body stressed Wednesday that she said had in Tuesday's debate with opponent Dave Shapiro that the Lawrence Gay Liberation Inc. would have to get its recognition from the Office of the Executive Vice Chancellor and not from the Student Senate. The Kansas reported her as saying that the Senate would consider giving recognition after the vice chanceller's office did.
Isadora and Her Avocado Plant.
Hmmm
SCREAM!
YIRE!
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Sorry.
I was just practicing my primal scream.
Whatever happened to small talk?
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4
Monday, February 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Kill the death penalty
Once again, members of the Kansas Legislature are using the eye-for-aneye reasoning in attempting to restore capital punishment. Several House bills are being considered. Senate that would allow the death penalty to be used in certain instances.
It's amazing to see how revenge can distort the thinking of these state legislators. Taking the life of another human being is the most heinous of all crimes. It's only natural that man respond with horror when faced with murder. Yet, it seems totally illogical that after experiencing this shock of unnatural death and after measuring firsthand the incomparable value of human life, man is so quick to call for death in return.
If the issue of capital punishment is examined in a rational manner it seems to be a barbary regression of society. But instead of dealing with the subject in this manner, many state legislators unfortunately have made the death penalty an option for a number of the death penalty does not act as a significant deterrent to crime. Therefore, to justify taking another's life, emotion must come into play.
One of the chief proponents of the restoration of the death penalty in Kansas is State Sen. Edward Reilly, R-Leavenhower. Reilly loses all control of his sensibilities when dealing with the subject of capital punishment. Last year he acted like a madman in attempting to bring the issue before the Senate. When he finally received a bill demanding that pictures of inmates who had been murdered while in prison. He said these pictures were too gruesome for the young Senate pages to see so he handed them out personally. What possible bearing could these gross pictures have on reasoned discussion of this subject?
Beyond the ideal that no man has the right to take the life of another, there are several reasons why the death penalty is unworkable. The greatest of these is that it is highly discriminatory. This was the major reason it was struck down by the Supreme Court in 1972 when money are rarely executed. It's generally the poor who sit on死 row and even then it's on a hit or miss basis.
Another inescapable fact about the death penalty is that it is irreversible. Once a man has been executed, unchanged new evidence does him very little good.
Morris Udall, a candidate for the Democratic nomination for president, is strongly opposed to the death penalty. Udall tells of how, as a second lieutenant in the Army, he pre-war training, he was assigned to defend a soldier on a murder charge.
Udall says that there was definitely a question of the man's guilt and that an experienced lawyer could have gotten away. But instead, the soldier was executed.
Curbing the ever increasing crime rate is a goal that we should constantly pursue, but revenge through the death penalty is not the answer. The penal system in the United States needs total revision. However, inmates don't have the power of the vote and legislators don't usually like to pour money into projects that won't reap them "rewards" on election day.
State Sen. Reilly is reported to be circulating his photographs in the state legislature once again this year. In the name of civilization, may those senators and representatives who place reason before overrule Reilly and his followers.
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
Tasheff examines issues
Education, polls discussed
The platform of the Vox Populare Coalition consists of issues that are feasible and productive. A positive approach to what can be done and what should be done has been realized through the selection of projects.
At the University of Kansas, students are allowed a 20 per cent representation on all policy-making bodies within the university. Participation in of participation by student represent-
tatives has been apparent. Having little knowledge of the structure of the department or school, and having little that could be of interest to the students these representatives haven't been as strong as they could be. Our coalition proposes the development of programs in which student representatives could help in acquiring the kind of knowledge needed to be good representatives.
1970
Working closely with the City Commission of Lawrence is another of our priorities. Included in the platform is the creation of a summer job
clearinghouse for students who live in Lawrence during the summer months. Increased cooperation with the Commission is also needed for the securing of funds for a professional study of the transportation needs of Lawrence.
Steve (Owen) and I have also committed ourselves to achieving low ticket prices for the majority of KU students who support the football and basketball programs. This entails picking up the pieces from the actions taken by this team, in order to instill a commitment to re-establish a ticket subsidy from the activity fee.
The Vox Populares coalition also encourages students to vote "yes" on the referendum for the proposed Satellite Union. If the referendum passes, we will encourage the students on the planning committee for the referendum to secure a minimum-bond fee that students recently enrolled at KU.
Our plan for a pilot-recycling program for newspapers in the residence halls, with the hope of expansion to other University areas, has encouraged by many people. Eventually this will produce revenues for the students.
With graduate students composing one-fourth of the student body, it is essential that the Student Body President and Vice President take on leadership role. Our administration would propose a graduate student representative to the Student Rights, Privileges, and Responsibilities Committee who would be a direct link with the student administration. This position would require some interest in lobbying organizations as the fee waiver for TAS and AIs.
Finally, we have promised no increase in the general Union fee and will keep the costs low. We also keep residence hall increases to a minimum. In a time of rising cost, Vox realizes the importance of finding ways to cut costs of all operations funded by the General Union.
Candidate for President
Tedde Tasheff
Shapiro offers platform
The 1976-77 school year promises to be full of challenging and significant decisions. The possible funding of a Satellite Union, faculty accountability, the intramural program and the quality of teaching staff are some demands that demand immediate attention.
As a Student Senator, I have served as chairman of the student senate sports committee, a member of the commission of the quality of classroom instruction and a member of the Student Senate Executive Committee. I am a strong advocate of the knowledge of the workings of the University governance system.
This knowledge and experience, coupled with a desire to open all channels of communication through personal contact with as many students as possible, is the basis of our campaign.
We believe that the only effective way to run the student government is to present viable answers to the problems of our students in our research, meeting with university administrators as well as state legislators. Our planks and issues revolve around concrete and well-defined problems confronting the student body.
The students at the University of Kansas must have a voice in their government. Mark (Anderson) and I will give you programs to help student involvement.
Our pledges are not empty promises that arise out of yearly political campaigns, but are realistic attempts with the problems facing us as students.
We feel that a student polling committee should be organized to help the Student Senate get back to the conference floor, similar to a Gallup poll, to determine the feelings of the students on important issues. This would not usurp the power of the referendum, where the students stand on issues and
could proceed to place it on the ballot for referendum, or decide the issue within the Senate. It is important to remember that this is a tool for the Senate's information only, and would not affect polling system would not cost the students a cent, and the process could be completed in five hours.
We also feel that monthly forums
should be set up to discuss the issues the students feel are important. This would be a traveling form to be held in the organized living groups.
Five hundred thousand dollars of our money is allocated yearly by the Student Senate. It is up to the student body to take an active role in its governance system. We ask you to vote, and we urge you to establish the voice in student government that we so desperately need. You ask to "help us help you."
Dave Shapiro Candidate for President
Ron, I can't afford to fake a stand on abortion . . . I'm going to have to straddle the fence.
BIDEN
Sir, if you don't take a position either way, both pro and anti-abortionists will attack you.
I know, Ron, I know . . .
somedays (groan) I wish
had never been born.
THE WHITE HOUSE
THE WHITE HOUSE
THE WHITE HOUSE
Careful, sir, careful . . .
you're taking a position!
you're taking a position
Ads start low tar warfare
NEW YORK-If you are a community leader, you should have already gotten a letter from William D. Hobbs' computer. Hobbs is the chairman of the board of the R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company of Winston-Salem and sending people his robot-written notes to tell them about his new cigarette called Now.
"We are proud of this technological achievement, and I thought you, as a leader in the field of writing, know about it," Hollz writes.
As with all wars, the tactics can be a mite difficult to follow, but it began several months ago when Philip Morris rocked its to foundations to learn that Philip Morris was going to bring out a cigarette called Merit. Merit is supposed to have a nicotine and 7-mg nicotine per coffin nail.
It might seem that Hobbs has rather low standards for hailing technological achievements and a peculiar idea of what community leaders are interested in knowing about. Actually, it can be said that Hobbs probably does not give a fig about commercials, and that his letter is part of an expensive, arcane and wasteful advertising and merchandising war.
Philip Morris had to make a move. The low and intermediate-low tar and nicotine field is already 10 per cent of the market and expanding at 14 per cent annually.
This was considered an invasion of the semi-low tar and low nicotine灯 dominated by Reynolds, the company that manufactures Winston Lights and 'Salem Lights. Formidable as that lineup may appear, cigarette marketing strategies felt that
Philip Morris had only one
Reynolds in the semi-low field, Reynolds is on the prowl for profits in the low-low tar field. In this millimetric battle, Carlton down in the subbase of the low tar league.
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) King Features
cagarette, Marlboro Lights, in competition against Reynolds* all-star low tar lineup, but narcotics mg, tar and 8 mg nicotine.
M. RICHARD JONES
Too much. For those who aren't yet hep to the metric system a milligram is .015 grain or .002288 once, but that .002288 lights and a cigarette like Merit can, with the right advertising, translate into millions of dollars worth of sales. Whether there is any difference in the smoker's stock of it, hasn't been established.
On the sidelines and not yet ready to engage in national advertising warfare, Brown & Cox went on to test-marketing a brand called Fact and another called Vanguard, which you ought not to confuse with Vantage. Liggett has worked with a brand named Vello.
Meanwhile, as its competitors are preparing to attack
No news doesn't stop presses
There was a day last month—I think it was Jan. 16—when nothing newsworthy happened. The media reported a lot of events that day. The wire services didn't shut down.
And if **wires** is defined as the words that fill the media, they are right. There shall be words
Radio and television newscalls had their usual air time. Newspapers didn't fail to appear, nor did they print fewer stories. They were hard to tell that nothing had happened. Walter Cronek
Why didn't responsible journalists tell us that nothing had happened? They didn't realize it. The media are at-
didn't mention it; the New York Times ignored it.
tuned to the generation of news.
That there might be a day with
no news has never occurred to
them.
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
Not so anymore, with the advent of radio and television came an increased demand for news, as Daniel Boorstin has written about it in "Images." News had to be updated hourly instead of daily. Real events were too unpredictable to be easily seen. They didn't occur in an even bait in floods and droughts.
So the media shifted the emphasis from the news itself to the newspaper or the newspaper used to fill a standard form.
Instead of waiting for the
and more words forever. The media see to that. News used to have significance. It was generated by real events. If nothing happened, there was no news.
As hundreds of millions of dollars and the time, energy and talent of thousands of people are committed to this commercial epic, we are also going to be subjected to several propaganda onslaughts celebrating the system that has created the community leaders may read Hobbs' letter and agree that he and his competitors have achieved new lows.
More yet. There is a rumor that Reynolds has another job that requires to go 9, mage ready to go, and that Philip Morris is preparing to burrow under the Carlton market with a brand called Pump.
Rather they are questioned routinely, and whatever they say or fail to say becomes news. A news conference is an event in itself. It isn't an event in the old sense of the word, but it is as if it were. It is what Boorstin has called a pseudosecence.
news to happen they began creating it. Politicans and government officials weren't to be trusted to inform the press when they had something important or newsworthy to say.
A non-existent ciggie with,
.00000000 tar and nicotine
ought to win the lowest. But
as matters stand now, the
Then there is that darling of editors everywhere, the feature story. It is timeless and often pointless as well. But it is easily captured in a flow of news going. There were a few features story Jan. 16.
Several presidential candidates were interviewed; and.
although they had nothing new to say, their comments were reported as news. Ron Nessman said a lot of things that the press saw fit to publicize, but none of them was new. Congress failed to act on several bills, and that failure was duly reported.
Hence Hobbs' introduction of Now, which tips the scales at 2 mg. tar and 2 mg. nicotine.
The only significant thing wasn't reported—that nothing newsworthy had happened all day. As long as the news is fitted to the data, there can be no priority given to real events. On days like Jan. 16, when nothing is new, there will still be news; on butons when several important things happen, you must compete with pseudoevents.
controversy is to be settled by the high tribunal of fluff and puff, the advertising industry's feeble instrument of self-regulation, the national advertising business of the Company of Businesses. Are you a Businesses. Isn't it an awe and a thrill just to read your august name?
That is the price of valuing the container more than its contents.
That could imperil Carlton's claim to be the lowest-tar tarantula in history, but imagine the panic in the corporate offices of the American Tobacco Company that the American Tarantula was counting Carlton? Some sort of counterattack had
With Madison Avenue now abuzz with predictions that $200 million will be spend this year by the various contestants in the low tar milligram battle, the Hobbs refuses to retract his lowest claim, which he made to so many of us community leaders, on the grounds that while Carlton 70% may indeed be a successful centrally distributed in so few stores they don't exist for competitive purposes.
to be devised. The answer was the invention of Carlton 70's. These Carltones are only 70 mm. They weigh about 2 kg, but they weigh in with a mere 1 mg. nicotine and 1 mg. tar. Napoleon may have introduced the metric system, but it took the rubberette industry to teach it to us.
CIA CIA
YAR! YAP! ROWF!
BARK! BARK! ROOT!
YAP! SARPY! YAP!
Letters Policy
The Kawaena mission requires that they be typewritten, dark-lettered and that it be accompanied by all letters are allowed to appear accorded to paper quality and the editor's belief that AK students must provide their names and faculty information. faculty must provide their name and provide their name and
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Published at the University of Kansas weekly
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Monday, February 16, 1976
5
Nugent, Head East need variety
Todd Nugent
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Noisy Nugent
"King of feedback music!" Ted Nugent struts as he bombards the KU audience with rapid, ear-pounding music. Nugent performed in concert Friday in Hoechst
By GREG HACK
Associate Campus Editor
The breeze was fresh Saturday night. It even kicked up a quick, cool shower. In inside Hoch Auditrium, things became hot and stale quickly. Ted Nugent and Head East gave a capacity crowd some good food. There were here were few surprises and little variety.
Nugent proved that he may well be "the king of feedback guitar," and those who enjoy having their ears pounded by fast, jamming music probably enjoyed Nugent's show. From the time he hit the stage until the show closed, Nugent was a stringy-
review
haired, strutting manish with a guitar. He played fast and he played one and another. He played well.
But his heavy style created problems. As good as his rapid riffs and screeching feedback were, some relief was needed, and Nugent couldn't give it. He ran, slid and wound the stage, and occasionally slowed the crowd to keep the crowd interested.
"Where Have You Been All My Life?" was a good example of the strengths and weaknesses of Nuget and his Ambony Dukes. Nugent manipulated his guitar well during the beginning. He and St. Holmes played, together and Rob Grange's bass drove hard.
ALSO, NUGENT'S music was devoid of emotion. Each song had a few lyricals that expressed the intensity whose voice is raw but unexpressive, or by his rhythm guitar player, Derek St. Holmes, whose voice was a bit better. The music was both melancholy and pushy, but neither artist nor moving.
But it just wasnt enough. Too much of Nugent's music just pounded away at the crowd's senses, and when he tried to slow down, it became apparent that he was a very imprecise guitarist—maybe sloppy is a better word.
However, the number was boring toward the middle and the end, the vocals may as well have been left out, and a low interlude may be present. I didn't know how to play slowly or clearly.
There was also the problem of a set beat
to keep the songs together, because there seldom was one. Grange and drummist Cliff Davies were more than competent, but they had a tough time keeping with the rhythm of a song, having a rhythm that was almost always fast and driving, but could change without notice.
THE BEST NUMBER was "Hey Baby," which bore little resemblance to the rest of the set. It was good old rock and roll, with a warm Davies kept going. The tune was also an amazing bass line by Grange, who for once wasn't drowned out by the guitars.
St. Holmes belted out a decent rock and roll vocal, and Nugent was at his best. His work was as fluid and as wild as on any other number, but for once it also had some merit. He decided to keep it from sounding like any other song he played in guitarist backed by a wall of amplifiers.
Nugent is great at what he does, but what he does isn't difficult enough, varied enough, or enjoyable enough to make him a great musician.
The opening band, Head East, was a good example of an above average top 40 band. They were competent and east to listen to, but not flashy or particularly exciting
LEAD VOCALIST John Schmitt was vex good and drummer Steve Huston did an especially good job of keeping the group's snappy numbers moving.
The group was on fairly short, up tempo songs, which was mostly what was played (its 12 song set took only 45 minutes). The group's best number was its big hit, "Never Been Any Reason," on which the vocals by Schultz and Huston were great.
The song showed that none of the musicians were exceptional, but that the way they helped each other and kept together was. Keyboard man Roger Boyd was complemented well by Mike Somerville on guitar and Dan Binyon on bass.
Surprisingly, the group's other hit, "Love me Tonight," was sluggish and the vocals did not.
Besides the quick numbers, the band played two long numbers that didn't make it and two that did. On the longer songs that failed, "Brother Jacob" and "Jefftwon" in the rhythms were repetitive and the instrument work was good enough to compensate.
Head East, scheduled to put out another album in April, is a good enough band to stay popular for a few years. But judging from Saturday night, the group isn't instrumentally sound enough or adventurous enough to take the lead among top 40 artists.
Trio netted after chase, shoot-out
After a shootout and a short car chase, a Lawrence policeman singlehandedly captured three Leavenworth men accused of killing an 8-year-old, Mart, 466 Illinois, early Saturday morning.
One of the accused, Marion N. Redmond,
43, was wounded in the wound by Cpl.
Wayne Othick, who captured the trio.
Redmond was listed in good condition
Sunday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital with
a gunshot wound in the left ankle.
Redmond and his companions, James L. Simmons, 36, and James E. Costello, 47, were charged with aggravated battery and beheld in Douglas County Jail. Simmons also was charged with five counts of assault. Bail for Simmons and Costello was at $30,000.
Two University of Kansas students were in the store when the robbery occurred about 1 a.m. Marshall Eakin, Lawrence graduate student, was working at the food
mart when two men walked in with pistols and ordered him to give them the money for his bounty.
University Daily Kansas
A LOCAL WOMAN and William Herring,
Lawrence graduate student, were ordered to
lie on the floor while Eakin handed the
money to the robbers. They said one of the
robbers had a gun and shot seven shots immediately before they fled. No one was harmed by the shots fired in the store.
Othick said he was driving east on Sixth when the getaway car drove in front of him with its lights off at Sixth and Florida. As he passed through, he stopped for him through the rear window of their car.
The trio then turned into a dead-end parking lot at an apartment complex at 255 N. Michigan and struck a parked car with occupants, none of whom were仁ured.
man shot at Othick again and then attempted to hide behind a trash container. Othick said that when the man attempted to fire, he fleed and hit him in the ankle. The man remained in the back seat of the car during the shooting.
OTHICK SAID that the driver of the ear rolled out and put his hand under the bridge to stop. Another
By the time other officers had arrived, Othick had already arrested the three men. An undetermined amount of bills from the police in 1983 in change were recovered, police said.
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Two $250 scholarships offered by KU sorority
Applications are available at Delta Delta Delta sorority, 1830 Oxford Rd.
returned to the sorority by March 1, along with three letters of recommendation, a personal letter and a copy of the applicant's college transcript.
THE SCHOONERS ARE HERE!
Local winners will automatically be matched to one of the $1,000 national scholarships.
The completed applications should be
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6
Monday, February 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Relaxed KU pounds O-State, 70-60
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
There's no longer any pressure on the KU basketball team. That was evident Satur-
Playing as relaxed as it has all season, the young Jayhawk team blazed Oklahoma State, 70-80, before 10,800 fans in Allen Field House.
sports
Trailing league-leader Missouri by three
playoffs to play in to plunge more than a
third straight.
eight Basketball basketball that. That realization obviously has affected the play of the team.
"ITHINK WE ARE playing more loosely now." Clint Johnson said. "The pressure isn't on us as much. We're still keeping our hopes up as far as winning the rest of our games and maybe getting a chance to go somewhere after the regular season."
But with a 12-9 record, even winning the rest of the games might not be enough. Ted Owens certainly isn't thinking about postseason tournament possibilities at this time.
So it's a loose KU team going into its last five league games. Maybe that will help. It certainly didn't hurt against Oklahoma State.
KU PLAYED AS WELL offensively as it had all season. Working well both inside and outside against the Cowboy defense, the Jayhawks hit a sizzling $8.6 per cent from
OKLAHOMA STATE (60) FG 7 FE 18 KB 29 PP 18
Threatt 6-7 7-7 3 1 4 5
Threatt 6-7 7-7 3 1 4 5
Daniel 4-11 3-4 4 1 11 6
Stevenson 3-2 2-3 4 0 1 4
Stevenson 3-2 2-3 4 0 1 4
Belgriy 3-2 2-3 4 0 1 4
Belgriy 3-2 2-3 4 0 1 4
KANSAS (70) 10-45 9-18 25 13 10
KANSAS (70) 10-45 9-18 25 13 10
Fiach 7-44 11 28 RF 5 12
Kontigny 10-4 11 11 11 11
Kontigny 10-4 11 11 11 11
Gibson 5-2 5-2 9 3 6
Gibbon 5-2 5-2 9 3 6
Nobles 5-2 5-2 9 3 6
Nobles 5-2 5-2 9 3 6
Harristadion 0-3 0-3 1 2 0
Washington 0-3 0-3 1 2 0
Tennessee 30-54 18-14 0 0 20
OKLAHOMA STATE
Tennessee 30-54 18-14 0 0 20
"I thought at times that we functioned pretty well on offense," Owens said. "You have to consider that Oklahoma State was the one who possessed the ball most of the time, they had taken their shots quicker, I think you would have scored a lot more points."
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
THE COWBOYS LED through much of the first half and played keep away in an effort to draw KU out of its zone. But the Jayhawks outscored the Cowboys 15-4 at the beginning of the second half to take a 48-34 lead. And the Cowboys were in trouble.
"We don't have people who can do well against a zone," Oklahoma State Coach Guy Strong said. "We are not in a position to win." We must take the so-called good percentage shot to be successful."
"We were kind of small without them," Strong said of the loss of Holder and Johnson. "We tried to play the big kid (7) at school." They really whipped us up, front.
KU'S TOUGH ZONE defense can be credited with slowing down the Cowboy offense. Oklahoma State relies on penetration for much of its offensive success, and it was unable to do that against the KU zone.
KU's other big men, Norm Cook and Paul Kokesi, were also effective, scoring 18 and 26.
"When they got that lead and were able to stay in the zone," Strong said, "it took away a lot of (ronnie) Daniel's effectiveness. We work to play against the zone in the second half."
Koenigs avoids fouls, helps team
WHILE THE COWBOYS were unable to get good shots against the KU defense, the Jayhawks were doing a good job. The Nets turned it on, Ken Koenig turned in one of his best efforts with 27 points, hitting 10 of 13 shots from the field. KU's other big men, Norm Cook and Paul
WITH THOSE TWO unavailable,
OWITH Alabama State was forced to play three
defense matches in the final.
Oklahoma State simply didn't have the manpower to stop KU's big line. Olus Holder didn't make the trip because of disclosure. And Oklahoma State refused to go 1/3 to go in the first half.
KU led by 22 points on two occasions in the second half. Oldahoma State made the final score respectable by outsourcing the five-minute stretch at the end of the game.
Ken Koenigs scored 27 points Saturday
Associate Sports Editor
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
RID KILLS CRAB LICE ON CONTACT
"It's been very frustrating, getting all
Crab lice infest even the nicest people
Koenigs did pick up two fouls in the second half. But the Big Goddard sophomore will tell you he'll take two fouls a game any day of the week.
Never before had Koenigs, KU's 6-10 forward, gave an entire half this season without committing a foul. He had been whistled for 82 floures, a average of more than 70 points per game. Jayhawks' 20 games before their 70-60 victory over Alabama State Saturday.
4
15
Angie Wagle scored a season high 29.75 to win the all-around competition. She also won a third in the tournament.
Koen Keniens must have thought he was in never-land Saturday night.
The KU women's gymnastics squad trounced Augusta College, 10.15-37,90; in a dual meet Friday in Robinson gymnasm.
KU women win
"IVE BEEN CONCENTRATED on keeping from fouling." Koenigs said. "Most of my problems have been from a lack of training. I've been able to cut out the sturdi foul."
Other KU winners were: Laurie Propt,
vaulting, 7; Sue Thorn, balance
beam, 7.2; and Karen Mundy, uneven
parallel bars, 7.96.
- Special comb included
- Without a prescription at Drug Stores
RID
Use Kansan Classifieds
those fols,” Koenigs said. “I’ve really hurt my teammates by doing it.”
KOENIGS DIDN'T HURT his teammates against the Cowbys. He sifted through the O-Site defense all night and repeatedly riffed in 15-to-12 foot jump shots. He wound up with 27 points, an excellent 10 of from the field and seven of 11 from the line.
Never had the 10,600 in Allen Field House seen him look sharper.
"HE'S JUST NOW reached the point that he realizes what he can do." Coach Ted Owens said. "He's just now starting to assert himself. That's all he needed to do."
Koons, being his usual soft-spoken and modest self, gave his Jayhawk teammates
"I was getting wide open shots because our people were making good passes," Koenigs said. "I was just in a position inside who hit me. They made some great mistakes."
KOENIGS GOT PARTICULARLY hot when the O-State player who was guarding him, Ell Johnson, got into serious foul out at the end of the game with 1:52 left in only the first half.
"We get somebob in 'foul trouble.'
Koonsa said, "go to him at hein."
He can't
guard you as tight so you get more open shots."
THE JAYHAWKS HAVE had very few "easy" victories this season. At home their largest margin of victory before Saturday was eight points. Sure, KU won only by 10. However, the score was deceiving as KU led, as by many as 22 points in the second half.
"It felt good for a change," said Clint
and his friends. "I love it. You count
take care of changes and learn."
Norm Cook, the Jayhawks' 6-8 forward, agreed.
"It was different," he said. "It was even sort of strange, but it was nice."
Almost as nice as never-never land.
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We need teachers this semester for courses in massage, horticulture, ceramics, macrame, & auto mechanics. If you want to share knowledge in any other interest area, or would like to teach any of the courses listed above, contact us at 864-3477 or drop by the SUA office.
THE T.M. PROGRAM Improved Academic Performance in University Students
D C
B A
™M as taught by Maharshi Maitesh Yogi is a simple natural technique which encourages the viewer to recognize and engage in more dynamic activity and high expression of creative potential, restoring the sense of life.
Tonight, 7:30 p.m.—Douglas County State Bank (9th & Kentucky, side door)
FREE PUBLIC LECTURES:
Tuesday, Feb. 17, 7:30 p.m.—University State Bank (9th & Iowa)
Wednesday, Feb. 18, 7:30 p.m.—Kansas Union,
Barlor A
901 Tenn. St. Gill Bldg. 842-1225 Sims-A Non-profit Educational Organization
S.U.A. Indoor Recreation
5
BOWLING: All-Hill Championship Tournament, May 16. Contact Jaybowl for more information.
HANDBALL/RACQUETBALL: Racquetball tournament planned for March 6 & 7 at Robinson. For more information, contact John Ranson, 843-4050. Deadline is March 3.
FOOSBALL TOURNAMENT: April 11; Jaybowl—Kansas Union. Sign up at Jaybowl by March 22.
POOL: Tournament planned for March 27 & 28. All events, including 6 Ball; Snooker; 9-Ball; and 14.1. Sign up in Jaybowl.
TABLE TENNIS: Open recreation, 1-3 p.m., Saturday at Allen Field House. Doubles tournaments—men's, women's, mixed—early March, singles—men's & women's—late April. Dates will be announced.
This is the second year Student Union Activities has devoted a complete focus on indoor activities. With more emphasis on these activities, they should be better than ever.
V
AIRLINES
PENNSYLVANIA
FOOSBALL TOURNAMENT: April 11; Jaybowl— Kansas Union. Sign up at Jaybowl by March 22.
CHESS CLUB: Meetings at Kansas Union,
Kansas City, 7:00 a.m.-11:00 p.m. Tournament
planned for Feb. 22 and will run for six weeks.
More info given at meetings. Beginners w
will need to sign up.
BACKGAMMON. Meetings Thursday nights, 7 p.m., Oread Room—Kansas Union. Beginners welcome. Tournament planned for early April.
A BOSS
This is the second year Student Union Activities has devoted a complete focus on Indoor activities. With more emphasis on these activities, they should be better than ever. Many fun and active events are being organized, and we hope KU students will participate.
For further information, contact SUA Office; 864-3477.
Rooms tend to change, check TV monitor in Union Lobby.
THE DINNER MAN
BRIDGE CLUB Meetings and play-room:
dayslays, 7-10 p.m., in the Brooming Room. Kansas
City, 502-436-3900.
if first Y has C then A te pov R po ar te po v n te we
Monday, February 16, 1976
KANSAS
Bill
Lundberg
Kansas second at national meet; Cromwell's 600 sets KU record
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
OKLAHOMA CITY —The Pacific Coast Club, winning five of the six events it scored in, edged out the University of Kansas here Saturday in winning the United States Track and Field Federation national indoor championships.
KU', the defending champion, earned points in nine events, but won none in compiling its second-place total of 25 points. The PCC had 32.
Hefting the 4-foot-high team trophy on his shoulder after the meet, Tom Jennings, the PC coach, said, "Ordinarily, we're not going to feel like we feels like this, but Kansas is fun to beat."
THE PCC TOOK FIRSTS in the 440, mile high jump, shot pat and mile relay. Former Kansas sprinter Mark Lutz was a member of the victorious mile relay team and Danny Seay, a 1975 KU graduate, placed fourth in the long jump with a 24-4 leap.
Despite losing, the Jayhawks managed some excellent performances, including a school record in the 600 by Nolan Cromwell and a time by the distance relay team which qualified it for the NCAA indoor championships in Detroit.
CROMWELL RUSHED TO the front of the 600 pack in the finals and led until the last turn on Myriad Center's 176-yard banked board track.
CHARLES DRAMIGA, an African
competing for New Mexico, burst past Cromwell with 70 yards to go and went on to win in 10:18.5, one of the fastest times in the world this season. Just before the finish tape, Colorado States' Bob Parry also passed Cromwell. Both were clocked in 10:21.3, the Cromwell came back to help KU take second in the mile relay. PCW was prior to a 3:14.0.
KU FRESHMAN RICK ENZS, a former all-state basketball player from Wichita South, led off Kansas third place distance to Tulsa in .018 for his three-quarters of a mile leag.
Randy Benson and Glenn Harter followed with stints of 48 i.e. on the 440 and 1:54.5 in the 360. The players were flown to Boston.
In front of 5,850 fans, Bill Lundberg ran his fastest mile ever, gaining almost 40 yards on the eventual winner of the relay. But it was not enough. The team's combined time of 9:25:21 lust
★ ★ ★
60-yard dash -4. Smith, 6.2
60-yard high hurdles -4. Coleman, 7.4.
300-vard run -3. Jackson, 20.8
Kansas results at Oklahoma Cl 60-yard dash--4. Smith, 6.2
0.16lb
300-yard run—3. Jackson
440-yard dash—3. Benson 40.2
*90 yard run* - Cromwell, 1:10.0 (school record;记旧 Washoe J. by Waddell Smith and J. Jay Warner in 1978).
Mil relay-2, - 3.182 (Akers, Jackson, Cromwell,
Wagner).
nacre mozzie relay—3, 9.5:32 (Enna 3:0:8, Benson
4:0:8), High 5:0:8, High 6:0:8,
High 7:0:8, High 8:0:8, High 10:0:8,
High 13:0:8, High 14:0:8, High 15:0:8
Team scores — PCC, 1, KC, 2K, 3, Akron State, 20,
4. Oklahoma, 15. Gail, 6C Guard, Truck, 11h, 1p
ducked under the NCAA's qualifying standard of 9:53.0.
"ITS BEEN A LONG time coming," said Landberg, who has recently been plagued by injury. "I'm from Detroit, and people have talked about my coming back for a long time."
Steven Rainbolt, tantalizingly close to seven feet in the high jump the past three meets, finally cleared that Saturday, taking third after PCC's Rory Kotine (73), and Dwight Stones (72), the world record holder, who was competing independently;
Gary Pepin, Raimblot's coach, said. "It's the best he's looked all year. He can still jump a lot higher. He's doing a lot of things wrong.
GREE IMPORTANT, THOUGH, he knows the things he needs to improve on." Haircut had three好 attempts at 7-12, which would equalled the KU indoor record. On his last try, Rainbow just brushed the bar with the bottom of his hips.
Rinholt said, "That's the first time I've ever made a PR (personal record) without touching it."
Two other KU athletes made impressive improvements on their bests. George Mason dipped under the nine-minute barrier in the two-mile run for the first time with a sterling 8:54.4 and Jim Podobarella with the shot 38-11% in taking sixth.
U.S. finishes Games winning ten medals
INNSBRUCK (AP) - Austrian Karl Schnabl came from behind to edge 17-year-old teammate Toni Innauer for the gold medal in 80-meter sk jumping yesterday, but he was not on the team's sour note with two American hockey players fired by a police for a brawl.
In the colorful closing ceremonies in the ice stadium yesterday night, athletes from the competing nations stood in casual dress and attended a ceremony where the opened and the Olympic fire extinguished.
A choir song "insmash, I have to leave you," and the public address announcer said in three languages: "We meet again in New York this summer." The next Winter Games will be held in 1800.
THUS, IN THE SHADOW of the beautiful Tyrolean Alps, did these Simple Games end, without the terrorist violence that was feared, without major controversy and following a successful 12-day festival of international sport which was free of the major problems faced by Montreal for this year's Summer Games.
The Soviet Union, led by its awesome hockey team, cross-country skips, speed and figure skaters, won 13 gold medals, six silver and eight bronze to dominate the Games. The East Germans were second in the men's world championship gold—and the United States was third with 10, three of them gold, considered a very strong performance.
THERE WERE FEW serious conflicts in
these games, but a brawl in a downtown tavern late Saturday night landed two American hockey players at the police station. They were released and later each was fined 300 Austrian schillings—about $18 for disturbing the peace.
Police identified them as Gary Ross, 22, of Roseau, Mim., and Robert Miller, 19, of Billerica, Mass. As a gesture of "good will," Austrian authorities said the two were free to leave the country—although more serious charges are pending.
Ross and Miller suffered bruises and abrasions but were not seriously hurt. Lawrence reports said one policeman was killed in the ambush and another was struck in the face.
A capacity crowd of 60,000 jammed the slopes of Bergisel Mountain Sunday to watch the ski-jumping finale against the background of two huge Olympic flames—one for these Games and one for the Olympiad Innsbruck hosted in 1964.
A POLICE SPOKESMAN said the Imbruck district attorney would be asked later this week to prepare charges of resisting arrest and causing property damage in Miller. But this will be largely symbolic since they will be out of Austrian jurisdiction.
Innauer, an Austrian ski ibl, led after the first round of jumps with a prodigious leap of 337 feet, the best of the day. Schnabli, who had jumped 320 feet for third place after his first jump, almost matched it with 318 on his second.
Swimmers capture double dual
The University of Kansas swimming team tuned up for the Big Eight championship meet with a double dual victory at the Omaha skatepark Friday night in Robinson Natatorium.
The Jayhawks jumbled their line-up to post the victories, defeating Colorado 65-48
Coach Dick Reason said he made the changes to give his swimmers an opportunity to gain competitive experience in events other than their normal ones.
"We were erratic," Reason said of the meet. "We improved in some places, but we let some things go. The most obvious thing was the improvement of the freshmen."
Reason said he was especially pleased the efforts of freshmen B Doster, David Eshaw and David Wester.
Dostert won the 50-yard freestyle in
:22.23, Estes captured the 200 backstroke in
:2:01.97 and Jensen finished third in the 500
freestyle.
Reamon also praised Gary Kempf, Roger Neugent and Paul Sweeney.
Kempf won the 1,000-yard freestyle in 9:54.54 and was second in the 500-yard freestyle. Neugent finished third in the medley behind KU's Ben Wagoner, who won the 200-meter Swenyen outpotted teammate Mark Hill to win three-meter diving, 724.05 to 622.0.
--competitions. Pormel horse specialist Bill Harms and ring specialist John Nunley both finished in their events, the best a Jayhawk could do.
TACO-TICO SPECIAL SANCHOS
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Gymnasts lose to top-ranked NU
The Cornhuskers defeated the Jayhawks decisively, 200-75-183, 80 in the dual meet September 6.
KU's gymnasts stumbed in their attempt to upset the nation's top-ranked gymnastics team.
Kansas managed to win only one event against the Cornhuskers. Sean Williams won the long horse vaulting competition, scoring 9.35 on a full-twisting handspring.
Coach Robert Lockwood said, "Williams" was the best thing we did today. Sean hit it well.
"We've got a young team, and when the No. 1 team in the country comes in and you fall behind after a couple events, its hard to regroup in time to come back."
Nebraska built an 11-point lead after the floor exercise, pommel horse and rings
All-around competitor Jody Summers provided KU's only bright spot in parallel races.
"I thought Harms came through on the horse. Lockwood said. "He had nice form and strength."
Mike Hynes brought an explosion of cheers with his 8.55 score on the high bar. But it it wasn't enough for Hynes to place ahead, as his high score was rarely achieved by KU.
"Jody had some leg-form breaks," Lockwood said. "He executed well as far as amplitude, mount and dismount are concerned."
Acme KU
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University Daily Kansan
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Offer good Tuesday, Feb. 17 Only
David Niven and Don Knotts in Walt Disney's
"NO DEPOSIT—NO RETURN"
Charles Bronson in
"BREAKHEART PASS" PG
Eve. 7:30, 9:30
Sat.-Sun. 2:30
Nor Cape, Harry Flushman
his new song 'ocean'
Royal Wings
Malcolm McDowell
Lvv. at 7:30, 1:30
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Hillcrest
Eve. 7:30, 9:30
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"Rarely has so much truth and power been captured in a film"—Rex Read
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Central Missouri State is expected to provide tough competition for the Jayhawks. It has already beaten Kansas State, one of the top teams in the Bie Iron.
The KU women's basketball team travels to Central Missouri State this afternoon after finishing fifth in the first women's Big Eight basketball Tournament last weekend.
"We prepared vory hard," assistant coach Shelia Moorman said. "We can beat them, but we'll have to play extremely well."
Women cagers travel to CMSU
The opening game loss to Missouri was disappointing because KU had beaten the No. 1 ranked team in the division.
"We didn't play together as a team." Moorman said of the loss to Missouri. "We couldn't hold onto the ball. We were down when we should have been up.
"Missouri has improved since the last time we play them. But there really no excitement."
KU is now 12-9 after splitting two tour-
nament games last weekend. The Jaya-yan
games ended with a 6-3 victory.
COMMITMENT
Adrian Mitchell and Karen Schneller paced the KU women in the tourney. Mitchell fired in 31 points in the two games, and Schneller added 26.
came back to defeat Oklahoma, 65-39, for fifth place.
STEVE CONKLIN Pres.
PATTI O'BRIEN V.-Pres.
SANDY SMITH Sec.
JEFF ERIKSEN Treas.
SOPH. CLASS OFFICERS
The African Student Association of the University of Kansas Presents The Second Annual
Feb. 21, 1976
6:00-9:00 p.m.
At Westminster Foundation, 1204 Oread
African
Night
$3.50 Single Adult
$6.00 Couples
$1.50 Children 12 & Under
Tickets on Sale
SUA Office—Kansas Union
African Studies—116 Strong Hall
K.U. African Club Members
African night disco will be in Big 8 Room, Kansas Union at 9:30 p.m., same date. Sponsored by International Club the International Club is funded from the Student Activity F
RCA Records and Tapes
The Winner. Eugene Fodor
The top prize winner of the International Tchaikovsky competition in Moscow.
RCA RED SEAL
International Tchaikovsky Violin Competition
Top Prize - Winner
Eugene Fodor
plays
Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto
and
Saint-Saëns Introduction & Rondo Capriccio
New Philharmonic Orchestra
For the concert of
ARL1-0781
Erich Leibhardt Conductor
RUSA
RED SEAL
FIRST WESTERN WORLD TOP PRIZE WINNER OF
THE TCHAIKOVSKY VIOLIN COMPETITION
EUGENE FODOR
Tchaikovsky · Ysaye · Paganini
Wieniawski · Prokofiaff
Jonathan Feldman, Pianist
VIOLIN
ARL1-0735
8
Monday, February 16, 1976
University Daily Kansam
Lawrence Villages, Inc., home finally opens
Staff Writer
By JAY BEMIS
After a year of planning and controversy, Villages, Inc., a home for dependent and neglected children, came to Lawrence yesterday.
The home's first nine residents, all girls aged 10 to 19, greeted guests with their houseparents, Mr. and Mrs. Phill McPhail, and the home's temporary site at 290, Missouri.
Lance Burr, Lawrence attorney and county project director for Villages, said yesterday that construction on the permanent quarters, to be in Pleasant Valley near the Wakarua Township, is scheduled to begin this spring.
THOSE PERMANENT quarters are to consist of two brick-and-stone frame cottages that will eventually house two families.
Burr said brick and stone was the smartest way to build the houses.
"If we build it right and sturdy," he said, maintenance costs will be lower and it will
Burr estimated total project costs, which included costs of a sewer lagoon and roadway, would be $150,000. Also, water commissions and the lagoon have been paid.
Funds for the construction costs come entirely from donations, according to Herb Callison, executive director of Villages for Topeka and Lawrence. $50,000 is still needed for the Lawrence construction, he said.
AFTER THE HOMES are built, Callison
said, the state takes on financial respon-
sibility for the children and maintenance of the hospital.
There are five Villages homes in Topeka, two for girls, two for boys and one that is coeducational. A boys home is proposed for a complete completion of the permanent quarters.
Burr said it was financially more efficient to have nine or 10 children in a home, in addition to providing care.
"Four can't make it (financially)," he said, "and 15 are too many."
He also said the trick to being a besusparent of such a home was having the children in the family.
McPail, who has two children of his own,
a needed, saving. "it's a fulltime job."
THE MCPHAILS have been with the Villages operation for five years. They ran a nursery for 10 years before coming to Villages and have 15 years experience in caring for families that are larger than normal.
At the Villages' temporary site, McPhail has changed a duplex into one home with seven bedrooms. The revision allows a family atmosphere for the Villages residence and the McPhails. The McPhails also have to have a part of the home for themselves.
McPhaill's remodeling has included repainting the house, adding two rooms, wallpapering and applying sheetrock to ceilings.
Speaking about his new neighborhood McPhail said, "I've never met more friendly and more helpful people—if I ever needed anything, they were there."
One major part of the children's lives is their band, "The Pride and Joys." With each child playing a different instrument, they play nine-piece band that plays popular music.
INSTRUMENTS PLAYED are saxophone, flute, oboe, guitar, drums, piano, bells, trumpet and organ. Practice sessions are every night after school.
The children have been attending Lawrence schools since September, but didn't live in Lawrence until last month. She drove the children to school from Toronto.
The reason for the delay in finding a Lawrence home was a delay in getting the loan.
Twenty per cent of the residents around the proposed permanent site protected the village by a Commissioner I.J. Stoneback, who represents the district where those residents vote, against granting a village for the Villages because of the protest.
The permit was denied, because it was thought that a unanimous vote was needed. It wasn't. The vote was one vote.
Villages disagreed that a unanimous vote was needed and filed a suit against the court.
FRANK GRAY, District Court Division One judge, ruled in November that a two-thirds majority was sufficient for approval. The commission voted again on Nov. 24, against voting 2. enough to grant a permit and a 1-4creat tract of land south of Lawrence.
One visitor at yesterday's grand opening
Dwindling Birchers remain here
He is polite, soft-spoken and very ready to listen. He likes the Fibonacci consistently and shows deep political sensitivity.
He is Robert Ammel chapter leader for
awareness chapters of the John Birch Society.
There are about 15 people in each chapter, Annelmed said Saturday. That membership is down from a 1971 peak of about 100, he said. Recently, membership has held steady.
"There's more people waking up every day," he said.
That educations uses pamphlets, speeches and films, Amnel said, to warn people against world domination by two organizations: the Council on Foreign
Relations in New York and "1313" in Chicago.
The John Birch Society has been recognized as one of the most stuntsually talented organizations in the United States. Unlike the organizations such as the Ku Klux Klan or the Minitemen, the John Birch Society has non-violence and stresses education.
"I learned that communism is a tool used by an elite group of people who run this country."
THE LEADER of that elite group is Vice President Nelson Rockefeller, Amnel said.
"Rockefeller apparently wants to be the top man in the whole world kingdom," he
The plans of this elite group are closely tied to Zionism, Ammel said. He emphasized that his opinions on religious weren't those of the John Birch Society.
Ammel said that U.S. foreign involvement proved the attachment of that elite group.
We condemned Korea and Vietnam, he said, but we have been read to fight for larger.
WHAT AMMEL CALLS "the Rockefeller group" even has contacts in Lawrence, he said. There are people on the city planning commission and the county commission
"They don't want to admit it, but they know," he said.
who follow orders from the group, he said,
although he didn't want to give names.
Ammel said that there were about six University of Kansas instructors and administrators who were members of the procommist group a few years ago. He said he didn't know if they were still at KU and didn't want to give names.
IN LAWRENCE, the John Birch Society is fighting attempts to form a regional government. Regional government is part of a plan to take local government away from the people and to centralize power close to the federal government, he said.
The local Birchirbers also fight efforts to establish gun control laws, Ammel said. "Any anti-gun law that they put in is unconstitutional," he said.
The political situation in Lawrence has calmed down in the last five years, he said.
was Evalyn VanValkenburg, Topeka senior, who was one of the first Villages' residents in Topeka with the McPhails in 1969.
"Suddenly there were 10 kids and a lot of discipline," she said of adapting to the villages in the beginning. At 17, it seemed kinder to give her family that I had never lived with before."
"I still don't like to see boys with long hair, especially when they don't take care of it.
Karl Menninger, whose husband is cofounder of the Menninger Foundation in Topeka. Menniger had a vital part in getting the Villages started in the late 60s.
Mrs. Menninger said she and her husband were pleased that Villages had expanded to Lawrence. She said that Lawrence was a wonderful city and that its consulting committee for the Villages project had worked hard in locating a home here.
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CLIMB THE LETTERS TO SUCCESS.
An Air Force way to give more value to your college life and college diploma.
• Scholarships
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Fidelidad Sultan more
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Vote this Wed. and Thurs., Feb.18 & 19
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2. Phi Kappa Theta fraternity
3. Phi Gamma Delta fraternity
3. Phi Gamma Delta fraternity
4. Corbin
5. Delta Chi fraternity
paid by Student Activity Fee
University Daily Kansan
Vail summer trip planned
Monday, February 16, 1976
9
Billed as the "jaywalk Family Summer Program," the event will be in Vail, Colo. On Friday, one of the program's sponsors and a teacher in continuing education, said Friday.
Another summer in the Rockies is planned for families of both KU faculty members and alumni.
"The first one we had last summer was a great success. We were 153 great champions from 14 starters."
The program is open to all alumni, staff, faculty and "friends" of KU. Friends of the ku are considered to be anyone who knows an alumnus and is interested in KU, be said.
THE VAIL TRIP is sponsored by the KU Alumni Association and the Division of Continuing Education. There will be informal classes taught by KU instructors on
Recreational activities will include backpacking, boating, horseback riding, golf and tennis, he said. A day care center will also be provided for young children.
human relations, medicine, law and political science, Clark said.
Participants in the program will get a group discount, Clark said. Lodge or condominium rates for a family of four will be $120; hotel rates for kitesurfing rates for campers or camper will be $33.
Some special meals for the group are planned, but most food will be supplied by the individual families, he said. Families were invited to enjoy a west of Denver, by following information $m$
"The Vail trip can really help alumni relations, as far as keeping people informed about what's going on at KU and giving the school a good image," Clark said.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor and group sponsor, said that he had gotten favorable response from alumni about the event.
ABOUT 200 TO 250 people are expected to
go to Vail this August with the program,
"If it continues to be a success we hope to
continue."
"It's a good chance for alumni to get
together, hear some educator and
student speak," she said.
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs and group sponsor, said that last year's Vail trip had almost broken even financially.
He said the trip could strengthen ties between alumni and the University.
"I doubt that we'll ever make money on it since that's not the trip's purpose," Caligard said. "We do try to keep costs down. We will lose it little money on the project."
If you happen to be cruising down the street 10 miles an hour over the speed limit on that newly purchased 10-speed Gitante or Campania bicycle, you may be in for quite a shock. That's breaking the law and you could be ticketed for speeding.
Bicyclists are subject to the same traffic regulations that motorists are. They must yield to pedestrians, obey the posted speed limits and heed all traffic signs.
Bob Ellison, captain of the KU Police department, says he knows that some cyclists use speed limits, regulations, especially speed limits. However, he says, not many cyclists are ticketed under these laws.
The Lawrence city ordinance requires that all bicycles be registered with the city. Licenses cost 25 cents and are valid for one year. They can be purchased at the city police station or the ticket window at Hoch Auditorium.
Bikers can be speeders, too
The purpose of the licenses is to aid police in identifying bicycles that are lost or stolen. Ellison said yesterday.
People who don't register their bikes can be charged with a midemission he said.
New Disco in Lawrence is hiring D.J. for coming season.
AUDITIONS ON THURSDAY
For Appt., Call 842-2458
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KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations. goods. services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan offered by the University of Michigan to students of national origin, PLEASE BRING LLL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
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STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dump or close-out products, the best option is the GRAHAMPHONE SHOP at KLEFS. **if**
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
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Slide-rules calculator in excellent condition. Call 814-5244 after 3:30 p.m. for new information.
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1974 Vega Hatcheck. Near new condition, one
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wheels, brakes, excellent condition. $800-2-
$199 2-19
SIPPAEKRAL $6-9 x 9ジャケット公司ナイアル2.17
BATTERY $12-15 x 8ジャケット公司ナイアル2.17
New Stereo equipment, turntable, amp, and speakers. Call after 5 p.m., 834-6212.
2-17
For Sale 1989 Ply. Fury II, 3 dr. 2R 318 bib 2
For Sale 1989 Ply. Fury II, 3 dr. 2R 318 bib 2
For Sale 1011 Indiana . 700-566-3949
For Sale 1011 Indiana . 700-566-3949
ARC registered Iribet Sather Punks for sale. Will
ARC register Call 843-8611 or 843-7526 for more information.
Two 12 inch 3-way UAtkspheres Excellent condition. Call 842-4579 after 5 p.m. 2-20
1026 GMC Truck $490, 1400 Oldsmobile $700,
1800 Pontiac $350, 2200 Ford $250,
Carridges $15, Call after 9. 814-220-2500
Extra-long double bed set, best Lapto foam, $75.
Call 841-4990. 2-20
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WEBSTER NOBLE HOME, 3409 w. 8th St., Lawrence, KS 61752.
2. bdmr, all allu, paid, on campus, Furn. or
freeum, Free parking, a/c, pool, B43-1893.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of renting locations available in Lawrence, Lawrence County and Springfield.
New 2 to 3 berm, apartment near campus; park-
new 2 to 3 berm, efficiency apartment, utl-
mities 845-8978
Room furnished with shared kitchen and bath and a sitting area. All appliances efficiency apt for male user no. Tops. Room has a large window.
1 bdm. furnished apt. available immediately in
Toronto Warcace. 843-290. 843-143. 2-16
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
elace or access to campus $55 and up, bldg
845 or 802-5887, bldg 845 or 802-5887
Rooms available in a cooperative house, $40 and
$80. Do not stay longer than 2 weeks; waiter,
dryer, good clothes, $82-$91
Bathroom, $82-$91
Submit 2-bed, bdm. at Frontier Ridge, AC carpet, 2 pools, laundry, bus route. Furniture or unfurnished. Clean and quail. Free dresses, linens. New wayup subdivision. Avail. Feb. 26-17
Subtit 2 bdm. Frontier Ridge Apt. Big enough
to suit a 10x10 unmatted. Deposit: 2-50
845-7609-600
Sublease available immed. on 1 bdm. apart-20
$165 month. Call 843-1455.
One bedroom apt, all electric kitchen, a-c base-
room, 241 PINCONE DCM 848-218
or 892-218 848-218 848-218
HELP WANTED
AVON- start off the new year with excellent
work. Provides late Lawrence and newri-
rals. Mr. Selik, 942-816-726
Secretarial position, part-time. Afternoons,
4:30. Monday-Friday, $2.20 per hr. Must be able
to experience helpful. Apply from
2:30-3:00, 191s. Max. Semester Foods:
2:16
7337.
Addresses worked immediately! Work at home with a team of dedicated professionals. American service, 140 Wallow Hill, Suite 302, Bloomington, IL 60701.
If you are married, mature and will be in Lawyer training, please contact your interested in visiting with you about a position offered. Contact department manager. Weekend work required. Please call Bernie Park, Cerik 25 Apt. Armstrong, 842-1453.
Substitute houseparents needed for small group care home for children ages 6-18 with intellectual and behavioral problems. Prefer couple care in social science. Must be 25-20. 843-616-66.
Research assistant in Dept. of Chemistry, Term 3. Assist in conducting experiments during time. Duties include writing and running computer programs to investigate surface topology of materials. Communicate with experience, up to 10 p.m., Stipend commensalize with experience, up to 10 p.m., present knowledge of qualifications. Experience and expertise in granulating, a knowledge of analytical geometry, and experience in presenting results to appointed applicants should contact B. K. Lee, 12345 Main Street, San Francisco, CA 94107 or undergraduate transcript, references a and b. Applicants who are interested or are committed to equal opportunity and affirmative employment from women and members of minorities must declare their
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are quizzed as a puns:
*State Bank, 9th & Retouch and Mall Shopping*
*State Bank, 9th & Retouch and Mall Shopping*
Lock black wallet in Allen Field House Feb. 5.
Need ID's back 864-1076.
2-17
I lost my little blue bibie call the KU-KState
if you found it, call 843-656 and
Sarah. 2-16
Lost; Twirl rings in Warehouse restrection on Feb 9.
Sentiment: Reward. Wound: 841-6844. 2-16
Found: a calculator last Thursday at the Mad Hatter. Call 814-5794 and identify, 2-16
Foundia liaises 'Tinnie with Market, Bob. 8 on
Council估利屋* Tinnie with Market, Bob. 8 on
$3.95 per Dozen
$100 reward for information leading to the re-
lease of the software. The Hibernate in-
navation area since Feb. 7, I black and white for
the software. Please see www.hibernate.org.
Found: young female Samson/Husky type dog.
Light colored. 840-1035. 2,16
TACOS
Lost: gray and black tiger striped male cat in
13th & 15th E&r Seac Egge, Decreion.
Groes. No. 13.
Lott bilboil
Moot burgundy colored.
Lotty beetle with Strong and Blake Hallia. Gall-
berg 4.30
Crowned beetle 4.30
Lott: Lia, Siberianusk wearing black #9a4
Lott: 822-1867, 822-3422
2-11
Casa de Taco
Lott: Set of keys at Jayhawk Bowl or Centennial
Park. Please call 861-214-7447 w. 9 p. 2-18
fri-Sun to (861) 214-7447
Lost: Dark Brown Suede Jacket lost in either
Lost: 1% Irish侍者 Pup-140 Tennessee/Bier-
beck needs medicine-Named Nose-Pup-12
-needs medicine-Named Nose-Pup-12
Lost billboard with Italian money and ID
Lost billboard with Italian driving license
Please call 841-756-18
**18**
Found: Monday, a red belfair in front of Strong Hall. 842-6010. 2-18
Found: Female black and brown tiger cat 64-197 of 15th and Tennessee Cat 81-447 of 2-18
Found: Women's short sleek sweater by Battleson.
Call Folem, #63-683. Leave message. 2-18
Found in, office of residence hall. 224 Strong,
glasses in case. Call 864-381 and 2.18.
www.math.harvard.edu
Lost: mate cat, white with orange spots. @ Union Wed. afternoon. Cairn 841-7585-2-20
8439880
Found: a set of keys behind Cernith O'Leary in
a mailbox.
Found: a call of keys behind Cerrith O'Leary in parking lot. Call id. 864-2872. 2-18
500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN
WANTED
Imported car service problems?
SEE
SEE...
ROOMMATE (81)—one or two makes wanted for
departments. Immediate opportunity.
Brain: Brian (81).
Looking for one or two women graduate students to share large campus. Country atmosphere 3 and from campus Large garden area. $100 per person. Tuesdays, thursdays, between 8 and 5 Monday through Friday. 2-18
I need Bragins Drug Class notes. Will pay. 841-7399.
Need roommate, Frontier Ridge, $60 monthly or weekends. Need for brad or knut 841-6072.
Temporary (bru) stirring seasoned home for
food. Will pay for food exp. in 2-19
Call Rom. 841-7587
Want to buy toy boat near Lawrence by June 1967
Write Box 388. Baldwin, Kansas 60065
2-17
Roommate wanted in 3 bedroom town house
appartment $90 - 841-5013 2-20
We need teachers this semester for courses in massage, horticulture and dietetics. We want you to share knowledge in any other interest area or would like to teach these subjects. We can contact 864-377 or drop by the SAU office. 2-16
Roommate wanted to share a room one block
from the kitchen. He paid $75 per month. Call 842-6800, 2-20
with payments valid $75 per month. Call 842-6800, 2-20
TYPING
Roommate roommate to share 2 dbm : house on-
campus. $0 & % utilities: 841-958-306
2-18
**Expertise** e. typifc B.M. Belti, Meclein; brisca, dies;
bringer and term papers; Chip Fam, Chip 548-879; U.
5799.
Experienced typit-l-term term papers, thesis, misc
materials on typit-graphical reading, quoicing,
correcting 843-854, Mrs. Wiley
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Typist editor. IBM Pica/ilec, Quality work.
Contact John. 842-912-8711, dissertations www.typist.edu.
Call John. 842-912-8711
Professional typing, work guaranteed, recompense,
having a Bachelor's degree in Electrical, N.A. Scaled
Society, or equivalent.
Exp. typi. IBM Selectric, term paper, these,
those, and others. Send letter of reference, spelling corrected,
Jane. 841-7600
S. L.S. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (pica). Prompt, efficient service. Theses, dissertations, term paper. Phone 914-989-2644, evenings; Streich.
**TEXPING- We have many return customers who want us to help them with their business. We appreciate your business. Call Harvey or Michelle at 516-738-4202.**
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SKI Equipment Sale: SKIs, boots, bindings and skis. SKI equipment - 6177, after 4th Payment - 217 (excludes only).
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1366
10-5 Sat. Tues.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
19-5 Monday-Saturday
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. If
Life planning workshop, Feb. 21, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Influencing your own future, by influencing your own future,
to be current for the future.
Within the context of a change in the environment,
the current situation for building on building for
the future by developing a place on building for
your unique identity coexistent with reaching
your unique identity. Minnesota Center, 1404 Wood, Coat
426 Precinct 810.
Colombian never team challenges any other nation, 7490 to 7492 to a soccer match. Call 2-187-635-4000.
NOTICE
THE NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
the world's instruments. 727 New Hampton
bass has a great sound. It folk and
clavier guitar, banjo, mandolin,
bassoon and rock guitar and bass. Call 841-
841-8417
Lawrence Gay Liberation meeting at 7:30 in the Student Union Feb. 17. Everyone welcome. 2-17
LAWRENCE GAY LIEBERATION--Come PBD
19. Student Union to be "Gay Thursday"
21. Student Union
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at least when you can make copies or your 128 page book in a flash in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, $8; Manuschka sets. 814-4600.
PERSONAL
SCHICKTS only few have mastered, true friendship, love, forgiveness and understanding promised to these men. Pamphlets by mail. No cost or obligation. Mail盒 500, Teppei Kauan, Kokusai 2-200, Box 5007, Teppei Kauan, Kokusai 2-200
Two $250 scholarships. Any full-time undergraduate
or graduate student who is enrolled in Oxford
School or One March lat. further inform us.
(319) 844-7151.
Swap Shops 620 Mag, used furniture, diaries,
books, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12h.
842-3577
If you are interested in working with students
who have questions regarding your job
coordinate your interest. Call Ben at 841-5723.
you over tried to love all the people 2-18
And you asked me if I could help with it.
Can I have a drinking session and need help?
Yes, I can.
Excel now in Lawrence® Driving & Rescue Rescue
transport provided. Drive now, pay later,
or cancel immediately. Drive now, pay later.
Heidi & Nancy & Joyne you=-Jalme & Fred 2-16
Diphyte = Happy birthday Sweetheart =
Happy Birthday
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
PRO AM Part Stop
PRO
841-2200
travel service
SUA / Maupintour
1209 East 23rd St.
Planning a trip?
Let Maupintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
Bicycle Ride
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass
Lawrence Gay Liberation thanks everyone who helped to make our last dance such a success.
MATH TUTORING-Copeent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 012, 142, 500, 558, 657. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Rateable考后. K42-7851.
Lead a bug life! Need help with your house. Lead a house cleaning done on weekly, in-hospital or monthly basis. Rates by hour, in-hospital or monthly or evening. Call 641-288 or 842-128 Daily.
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
MATH GOT YOU DOWN? If so, get help early.
107, 115, 119, 121, Call 841-1890.
3-17
10, 111, 111, Call 841-1890.
TRAVEL
SERVICES OFFERED
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
EUROPE ISRAEL *AFRICA ASIA* – Treated field
project in the region of Israel. First
First Avenue, Touger, GA 20048 (408) 635-7419
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
9th & Iowa
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
EUROPE
1/2 economy
laire
No daily travel charges required
TW1 7089
Free from 800-325-4867
Untravel Charters
"Tires-Batteries-Accessories" 19th&Mass.
Employment Opportunities
A
Bengals Ln
Tue Calhoun
Gifts and Jewelry
803 Mass.
A job opening for a student research assistant in the College of Education at St. Joseph's University of data and analytics in research, Social science or human sciences required Contact Mitchell Tubbman Bureau of Research 340-526-8364. equal opportunity employer Qualified to accept undergraduate degree.
Oversea Jobs-temporary or permanent. Europe, Australia, S. America, Africa, etc. All welcome. Call department for more information. Seeing info-wire to International Job Center. DEA. KX 480; Berkeley KA 9474. 2-105.
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
a quiet corner
THE LOUNGE
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS (50' Service Charge)
FREE
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
With pass available at your ski-sports shop
at MONT BLEU
Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices reduced -10% Weekdays, 25% less than weekends.
Mondays are Ladies Nite, $1. Equipment rental. $2 Towards
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
3 p.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
10 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
RECREATION'S FINEST
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrost Bowl
No one under 18 admitted
No one under 18 admitted.
NATIONAL FIREFIGHTER SERVICE
9th & Iowa
CORAL ISLAND SAILING
GREEN LINES
King
SNAIL FOREM
CRESTLINES
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SHRAZAAM
WE PRINT
ANYTHING!
SHAZARM
if You don't see it, ASK! << KING GEORGES
10
Monday, February 16, 1978
University Daily Kansan
1776-1976 BLOOD IS LIFE SOME THINGS NEVER CHANGE
+
REGISTRATION:
Feb.10, 11, 12, 13
10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Robinson (main hall)
Wescoe Terrace
Union (main hall)
DONATION:
DID YOU KNOW that your generosity guarantees free blood to every brother, sister, & family member of every KU student- EVEN YOUR FAMILY!
FEB.16-11 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
FEB.17 & 18-10 a.m.-3:00 p.m.
UNION BALLROOM
HELP KU - MAINTAIN a contribution quota to retain this privilege
- SAVE a student's life in the O.R.
- SAVE you or yours in time of need
LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK
UNIVERSITY STATE BANK
Sigma Phi Epsilon
KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA
TEAM
DAVE SHAPIRO & MARK ANDERSON
MONTGOMERY WARD
TEDDE TASHEFF &
STEVE OWENS
PHI KAPPA PSI
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SUPPORT THE BLOOD DRIVE
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1
Shapiro takes issues to students
David Shapiro, candidate for student body president
Bv CHUCK ALEXANDER
David Shaniro is a communicator
In his race for the office of student body president, the Lawrence sophomore and his running mate, Mark Anderson, Fairway campaign to the students—room to room.
Shapiro, who said his Insight Coalition campaign was based on personal communication, says he has met 75 per cent of his staff and many by going home to house, room to room.
A campaign button prominently displayed on his shirt pocket, Shapiro said this week that he didn't have as much experience in the Student Senate as his op-era Tusheff, but cited other factors that made him a qualified candidate for the office.
"I feel my experience in both the University governance system and involvement in the residence hall system has given me more than adequate experience to run for president of the student body," he said.
SHAPINO IS completing his first year as a senator, Senate Sports Committee member.
Anderson is in his second term as a mem-
ber of the City Council. He is a
student in a school district.
University of Kansas Athletic Corporation
in the 2015 year. Shapiro was president of
Oliver Hall
Sahira said he hoped to get more of the central University administration involved in student affairs because "it's the only way we can manage it," she added, deciding process of the university."
Shapiro said he would do this by changing the senate committee structure, welcoming more administration input to the committees.
Shapiro said he planned to streamline student service organizations funded by the Senate by eliminating office expenses that could be provided by the main senate office.
REGARDING THE KUAC ticket ticket
subady. Shannon 21, said he supported it.
"I think we should fund them (KUAC) because they reach more students than anything else other than the University Daily Kansan," he said. "We should look at our programs in the Graduate Series or the University Theatre. The only difference is that the KUAC could get along
without us (Senate subsidy); the Concert Series or the University Drama would not
Shapiro said he wouldn't support the $147,000 subsidy, but would support a smaller amount.
Sapiro has also added the plank or faculty accountability to his platform, because he considers blantt disregard for existing policies in academy and policies by faculty members. Sapiro said it wasn't uncommon to discover faculty from the library on their personal shelves.
Stricter enforcement of faculty parking violations would generate more money for Kirking and Security, he said, and deter faculty drivers from disregarding parking tickets.
"It's (ticket enforcement) within the power of Parking and Security," he said. "It just has to be included into their rules and regulations."
Shapiro said he favored a student lobby in the Kansas Legislature, but not through the Associated Students of Kansas, a statewide student lobby.
WE HAVE the most powerful lobbying force right here at KU—21,000 students," he
Shiprao said he hoped to make the Senate offices, filled with desks and office equipment, more accessible to students. He said he would place boxes in the office for each senator in an effort to make the senators feel they had a reason for being there. He said the boxes would also reduce the amount of money needed from the bills and notices sent to each senator could be placed in the boxes instead of mailed.
Shapiro said he saw a need for more minority student involvement in the Senate and would encourage such involvement by emphasizing minority involvement on the committee level and work at the committee level was the beginning of involvement with the Senate.
BECAUSE HE WANTS more student input on Senate decisions, Shapiro said, he will create a five or seven-member polling group to study the student opinions on certain issues.
Saintpaio said he'd done research on the effectiveness of surveys, such as those conducted by the George Gallup, and was convinced such a measure is needed. Senate's need for greater student input.
Mark Anderson, candidate for vice president
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
一
KANSAN
Tuesday, February 17. 1976
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Edible shorts hit the market on both coasts
Vol.86 No.88
I will never forget the chess games with my father. He was a great player, and I remember playing all of them. And he was very kind to me. He would play chess for me, and we would go to the chess tournaments together. He was always so patient and careful in his games. I still remember playing with him many times. He was a true friend of mine.
See page 8
Thermometer in mouth
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
William Bailum, vice chancellor for academic affairs, looks away during his check-up before giving blood at the Kamanas Union Hospital in Cologne.
terfurterrain Council and Panhellenic. Donors wishing to give blood may do so from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Tuesday and Wednesday.
KU can survive troubles ahead, Dykes tells forum
By LYNDA SMITH
Despite predictions of a nationwide drop in university enrollments within the next decade, the University of Kansas has a higher-than-average enrollment in the archi- Dykes said yesterday.
Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, fielded questions yesterday in an hour-long open forum. About 100 people including about 15 students, attended the forum in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
-KU lies between Topeka and Kansas City, where growth is expected in Kansas.
-KU's Outreach program is drawing more nontraditional students.
"1980 or '85, we meaning classified and unclassified employees and students, will make KU the kind of institution we want it to be." Dykes said, "we can invemn that if we continue to maintain superb teaching, we will continue to draw students because of our reputation."
--Many professional schools, such as architecture and pharmacy, are continually expanded.
SHANKEL, WHO responded to most questions asked at the forum, reiterated Dykes' optimism, citing four reasons the drastic drop in count to counter a drastic enrollment drop
—The expected demise of many smaller colleges and junior colleges will force students to look to other institutions such as KU for education.
To keep pace with additional faculty and with next year's enrollment increases, the University has requested 74 new university positions and 24.7 classified positions in its budget
Shankel said the majority of those
"IF WE MANAGE our resources carefully, make ourselves attractive to prospective students and are continually supported by federal funds, research grants
A member of the audience said that Outreach might diminish the effects of a decreased enrollment, but added, "You're buying trouble, aren't you, if the 60 uninsured people have not seen the year and the 74 new ones requested for this year get tenure in six or seven years?"
OUTREACH'S IMPORTANCE is reflected in KU's budget for fiscal 1976. Shankel said, where the University has been teaching mathematics and program to bring older students who dropped out of school back to college, and a minority advancement program in college.
and alumni the enrollment drop won't hurt us as much as other schools." Shankel said.
Shankel said that according to the expected number of high school graduates in the next 10 years, KU's enrollment would be about 20,000. KU's present enrollment is about 22,000.
One reason for the development of the Outreach program is that the University should provide educational opportunities for people who can't come to Lawrence to study. Shankel told Outreach also provides educational opportunities for many doctors and lawyers, who are required to continue their education, he said.
"We optimists think it will only be down to i 10,000 or i 10,000." Shankel said. "and the rate of inflation is going up."
He said that because of the mobility of TAs and AIs in and out of the University, the chances of the University going into enrollment were diminished.
FEW TAs, Als and visiting professors become tenured, Shankel said, and most positions have been and will be filled by such instructors.
See KU's page 6
positions to be filled would "be used in lines that will not叶落 to temoured positions."
Financial exigency is a situation in which the University is compelled to dismiss tenured faculty members because it can no longer afford to pay their salaries.
Librarians support plan
By KELLY SCOTT
There is some opposition to the proposed consolidation of the University's science libraries, but most branch librarians say they support the proposed science library if it gives them more space in close to their academic departments.
A recommendation from the library facilities advisory committee that would consolidate the science libraries in a new campus, would also the administration earlier this month.
The libraries involved are the Marin Library in Marvin Hall, the Science Library in Malott Hall, the Business and Economics Reading Room in Summerfield Hall, the Entomology Reading Room in Snow Hall and the Mathematics Library in Strong Hall.
Paul Mastert, professor of mathematics,
said he considered that consolidation a
favor.
"The mathematics library is much like an experimental scientist's laboratory," Moster said. "We may use it many times every day."
Mosert told the library contained mostly advanced texts and journals, that only graduate students and professors used. The text was printed in large black close to the collection an possible he said.
THE MATHEMATICS library is in 209 Strong. The department of mathematics office is in 217 Strong and most mathematics classes are conducted in that building.
Traffic control urged
The department of computer science is also in Strong and uses the library often, MSCS.
Charges that the mathematics library is inaccessible to handicapped people and students. Sir Clare closed led the facilities advisory committee and mend that the mathematics library be consolidated in the new library, T.R. Smith, professor of geography and member of the
Mostert said, "Well, that's funny, because we have a professor who is blind, and he uses the library a lot more where it is than he would if it were halfway across cam-
FACULTY MEMBERS and graduate students, who Mostert said were the main users of the library, have keys to the library so they can use it in the evening, he said.
Mostert said the decision about whether the mathematics library should consolidate with the other science libraries should be left to the department of mathematics.
Marina Young, science librarian coordi-
nator, said the consolidated library would
be able to keep up with all new book-
ings.
Lower speed limits and more stop signs may control University of Kansas traffic.
One advantage of a small branch library
"If an excellent combination of subject disciplines," she said, "Right now the job is to write."
The Lawrence City Commission will vote at its weekly meeting at 7 tonight on recommendations from the Traffic Safety Council to establish the traffic controls
The recommendations were originally made by J. M. Thomas, director of the KU police department. The Traffic Safety Commission, which studied the recommendations Feb. 2, voted unanimously to city commission to approve the controls.
The commission will meet on the fourth day of the First National Bank of Lawrence and
The recommendations call for 20-mile-an- hour speed limits on these streets; Baumgarther Drive from Jayhawk Blvd. to Mississippi; Jayhawk_dwr. from the Cil
Omega Fountain to 130; Lilac Lane from Jayhawk Blvd. to Memorial Drive from Mississippi to West Campus Road; North College Drive from 11th circling back to 11th, Poplar Lane from Jayhawk Blvd. to Place Area, including Bagley and Ellis Drives and north of 18th; and Sunflower Road from 16th to Memorial Drive.
The recommendations call for stop signs at these locations: Allen Field House service drive onto Naisimith Drive, Illinois at Sunnyside, Memorial Stadium exit at 11b, Parking Lot entrance at 11b, parking lot exiting at Naisimith Drive and north and south exits of X-Zone parking lot.
however, is that it gets greater use, young said.
"You'll run up two flights of stairs to
walk across the door. You will walk
across the door to do it."
THE CRAMPED facilities at Mauro hamper effective service Young said. Service consolidated in one building could accommodate that now are in storage could be put in use.
Young said faculty, members she had spoken to understood the reasons for the proposed move, but bated to see the library respond. "There was no active resistance to the idea," she said.
Young said she hoped that the new building could be open the same hours as Watson Library. Watson stays open over holidays and most of the weekends, but but because Malott is always locked for vacation periods, the science Library is closed.
The sciences are becoming more interdisciplinary, she said. The way the University's science collections are now organized is changing. Two or three libraries to get information
GARY GRUNEWALD, associate professor of pharmacy and a book chairman for the Maukotl library, said a balance had to be achieved in library and its location had to be achieved.
"The new library will ease some of the inadequacies of Mallett, but it must be acclimated."
One site that has been suggested for the $12 to 15 million science-technology library
building is the area behind Hoch
Auditorium near the Military Science
The proximity of the new library could affect pharmacy faculty members' feelings about access to information.
Grunewald said he thought the distance of the proposed library site was the reason the mathematics department didn't want to move the math library out of Strong.
"If the new central facility is nearby, I say yes, that would be satisfactory," Grunewalk said. But if they decide to put it in their basement, the abandoned Green Hall wed, scrap paper.
Leonard said the reading room's shelf and seating space brank when the collection moved last year from room 101A Summa Hall. He said he joined the Hawklet, a student lounge area.
Faculty members in the School of Business haven't had a negative reaction to combining the business and economics disciplines with other science collections, Leonard said.
"It isn't that unusual," she said. "In the Kansas City, Mo., public library, the business and science collections are shelved together."
CHRISTINE LEONARD, business and economics reading room librarian, said she favored consolidating the business and economics collection in the new building.
William Deacon, librarian for the Marvin library, said the consolidated library would offer more books and resources to patrons.
Staff Writer
By ANNE SIGMAN
Peace Corps worker flees Tonga Island
A University of Kansas Peace Corps volunteer says terrible living conditions on the island of Tonga in the South Pacific, including rat-infested, substandard housing, forced him to quit his assignment there after only two months of training.
The volunteer, David Scharnhorst,
Wichita graduate student, said last week he
trained the most miserable part of his life
he training on one of the outer islands.
"The electricity was off after 10 p.m.",
"She said. "There was nothing to do but go to bed"
"and get ready."
So much of the food there was inedible, he said, that trainees skipped language classes in the afternoon and went into the jungle to forage for green coconuts.
SCHARNORST SAID SIX or seven of the 33 trainees on Tonga had become so upset that they had planned to go to Washington, D.C. to be resigned and to complain about conditions on Tonga. Three of the trainees had been in the Peace Corps all three were dislublished by the situation and were thinking about nutting.
Michael Dix, the area manager for Peace Corps recruitment, said it was impossible for him to speculate on Schwarborh's difficulties dealing with foreign cultures.
It may not have been an ideal situation, he said, but there is no way to explain it very well.
DIX SAID THAT any volunteer had the right to complain and to come home.
"We are in 65 countries and we have 7,000 volunteers in difficult conditions and on the move," said Diana.
If may not have been an ideal situation, he said, but there is no way to explain it away. The Tonga government has approved the Tonga to be a science teacher in the country's best high school. He left, he said, because the Tongan government was unwilling to provide him with a house meeting space set by the Peace Corps and approved by the Tongan government ten years ago.
He said the Tongan government had then received money to build houses but still needed more.
THE STANDARDS include 200 square feet of floor space, a roof without "gross leakage" and a sanitary water supply, he said. Scharnhorst said the house offered to customers with a running across the concrete floor but had no rain supply and measure about 150 square feet.
He said he refused to take the house and returned to the family he had lived with during his training. Other volunteers didn't get along with their Tongan families, he said, and accepted the substandard housing.
A training director, who Scharnhorst said was incompetent, was in control because the country director was being reassigned. The district head attempted to get better housing, he said.
Scharhorst said the Tongan government wanted Peace Corps volunteers to work as teachers because it wouldn't have to pay the Peace Corps teachers the $1,000 a month if they taught teachers from New Zealand. Tongans are well paid if they make $48 a month, he said.
THE GOVERNMENT is bankrupt and can't afford any better houses, he said, and it has been providing volunteers substandard homes for several years.
Scharnhorst said he quit when he did to avoid a "predjudic'd" record. A volunteer who quits during his assignment has a hard time getting reassigned later, he said.
Scharnhorst said he liked some things about his experience
"My family practically adopted me," he said.
He liked the other people who trained there, said, and he wants to go back into the school.
"I don't regret going to the Peace Corp," he said. "I don't regret coming back again."
2
Tuesday, February 17, 1976
University Daily Kansas
associated press digest
Abortion aid challenged
TOPEKA—The Kansas Legislature should decide public policy on spending
the money for poor people, the Senate Ways and Means
Council made today
"Our intent is not to stop abortions, only to stop the state Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS) from paying for them," said James Francisco, D-Wichita, one of three senators sponsoring a bill to prohibit expenditure of state funds for abortions.
Francisco said 30 states now paid for legal abortions under the federal Medicaid program, but 20 states wouldn't pay for them.
Francisco attacked the appropriation of $270,000 to SFRS for the fiscal year that ended last June 30 and $300,000 in the current fiscal year to match federal funds to FPSRs.
Francisco said recent federal court decisions had indicated that the states didn't have to spend state funds for abortions.
Prison site questioned
TOPEKA-A high-level dispute appears to be developing between Missouri and Kansas over the site chosen for Missouri's new medium-security prison near ST. Louis.
Kansas Gov. Robert F. Bennett said at his news conference in Topeka yesterday that there was a question about ownership of the small parcel of land on left the Kansas side of the Missouri River by a change in the river channel nearly 25 years ago.
Missouri claims ownership, but Bennett said Monday he wanted a boundary survey made to determine whether the land was actually part of Kansas.
The land in question houses St. Joseph's airport, an Air National Guard facility and some industrial property. It is accessible by highway only through Kansas, a point that has prompted Kansas residents in the area to initiate a petition drive to keep the prison out.
Mail heist stamped out
BOSTON- Authorities said yesterday they had seized $27 million in stolen negotiable securities at the home of a U.S. Postal Service supervisor, some of them rolled up in newspapers in a fireplace. It was the biggest mail heist ever, an official said.
Pasquale Luzzo, 38, a supervisor at the Hanover Street postal branch in Boston, was arrested and charged with receiving stolen property. He was released on bail.
Luzzo, an 18-year veteran with the postal service, is married and has two children.
Malpractice bills okayed
TOPEKA--Four bills dealing with the problem of medical malpractice insurance won tentative approval yesterday in the Kansas House.
The measures are part of a 12-bit package recommended by a special committee that studied the subject between the 1975 and 1976 legislative sessions.
Only one of the bills sparked any debate during consideration by the House. A bill that would reduce the time in which a malpractice action could be brought was passed.
Rep. John Carlin, D-Smolan, the change applied not only to medical malpractice cases but to other types of civil damage suits as well.
Carlin said that people across the state had asked the legislature to do something about the malfunction practice problem but the bill as it stands "gives them the right to avoid liability" in such cases.
Nuclear contract out
TOPEKA-Atty. Atty. Gen. Curt Schneder yesterday declared a proposed contract to provide water for a proposed nuclear generating plant invalid and unenforceable. But he agreed to expedite a review of his decision before the Kansas Supreme Court.
Scheider said that two members of the state Water Resources Board, which made the contract with KG&E and Kansas City Power and Light Co. on behalf of the City, had been appointed to the board.
Meany blasts Ford
MIAMI BEACH (AP)—President Ford's lack of compassion for the "little people" was demonstrated by his vet of legislation that would have created new jobs, George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, said yesterday.
Meany said Ford has a capita of the nation's big corporations. If the United States is to recover from its economic downturn, it will not start getting people back to work."
At a news conference marking the opening of the AFL-CIO's winter meeting,
Meany denounced both Ford and his Republican challenger, former California Gov. Ronald Reagan, as products of Republican conservatism.
Waina also called Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace "a disaster", but declined to say whom he favored among the candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination.
The House is expected to vote Thursday in an effort to override Ford's veto of the multibillion dollar public works bill, and increase chances "look pretty good" for an override.
BUY A PEPSI
AND KEEP
THIS CARTOON
GLASS
This adorable glass can be
yours for keeps. Just buy
a 16oz. Pepsi at any
participating Henry's Drive-in.
And remember, it's one of a
whole set of "cartoon character"
glasses we're offering.
Collect 'em all!
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© WARNER BROS 1974
Henry's ™
DROOPY
PENNESOL
COLLECTION AWARD
This adorable glass can be yours for keeps. Just buy a 16-cup. Pepsi at any participating Henry's Drive-In. And remember. It's one of a whole set of "cartoon character" glasses we're offering. Collect 'em all!
Only
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Henry's ™
"We in the University share the concern of this committee and have undertaken a major reorganization which we believe will benefit our students and others," Dykes told the committee.
843-2139
HE OUTLINED plans for correcting the deficiencies, and added, "We believe these steps will give the chancellor's office much better input into the Medical Center problem solution of these problems are on the way to solution, and if they are not, they soon will be."
A plan of Chancellor Archie R. Dykes to correct deficiencies in the operations of certain facilities at the KU Medical Center was unanimously endorsed yesterday by the Legislative Post Audit Committee in Toeka.
The deficiencies were in food service, housekeeping and laundry operations, Dykes said, and had been uncovered in an audit report.
Audit committee okays Med Center changes
Dykes said the Med Center's physical
The resolution was adopted by the committee on a motion by Sen. Jack Steinger, D-Kansas City, after Dykes and others appeared before the Post Audit Committee.
Dykes said a study was also being made
using nurses to distribute food to patients
using nurses to distribute food to patients
Dykes said a decision would probably be made by the end of this year whether to build a new laundry plant at a projected cost of $1.8 million. The Med Center now contracts with outside firms to do 85 per cent of its laundry, he said, and the question is whether building a new facility would save more money than the present system.
6th & Missouri
plant had recently been reorganized under Russell Mills, assistant to the Chancellor for special projects, to provide more accountability to the chancellor's office.
DYKES SAID new purchasing methods were being studied for possible savings. He said he also supported Gov. Robert F. Bennett's proposal for a $200,000
The audit had showed that the cafeteria lost more than $388,000 in the fiscal year ending June 30. Dykes said several staff members were unable to reduct or eliminate the cafeteria's losses.
HE SAID these included reducing the hours of operation from 22 to 18 daily, using part-time help, increasing prices for meals and using more convenience foods.
management study at the Med Center to investigate other possible adjustments.
For example, Dykes said, the Med Center has no one with expertise in the areas of personnel and manpower to tell its staff that many people are needed for specific services.
"We need some hospital consulting firm with expertise which could help us determine our manpower needs and help us set work standards." Dykes said. "Then they
$1.00 Pitchers Are Back . . .
Every Afternoon
(Monday-Saturday)
Noon to 6 p.m.
at
could stay with us to help implement their recommendations."
SEN. WINT WINTER, R-Ottawa
Legislative Post Audit Committees chairman,
then the panel would recall Dykes and
the Center officials in the future for an update.
Richard Brown, the state's auditor, called Dykes' report "positive," and said his staff could work with it and the Med Center staff to correct the problems.
"THE ENTERTAINMENT MECCA OF LAWRENCE"
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17 thru Feb. 21
HOME OF
Country Boy
COUNTRY KITCHEN
Open 24 Hours A Day
1503 W. 23rd
843-2025
VOX
POPULARES
TEDDE
TASHEFF
For Student Body President
STEVE
OWENS
For Student Body Vice Pres.
VOTE
POPULAR VOICE
FEBRUARY 18 AND 19
VOTE
PULAR VOIC
HARY 18 ANI
Paid for by Vox Populares
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Tuesday, February 17, 1976
2
Both student body presidential candidates say they expect the satellite student union referendum to increase voter turnout in the student elections tomorrow and Thursday.
Increased voter turnout expected
Dave Shapiro, Insight Coalition candidate, predicted that 3,500 people would vote in the election that would be 700 more votes than the Democratic 2,800 voters cast in last spring's election.
Taddee Tashpee, Vox Populares candidate, said yesterday that the fact that there are only two candidates running for president is likely a slight increase in the number of votes cast.
Bruce Woner. elections committee
chairman, said he wasn't sure what voter turnout would be.
"It doesn't seem like there's been a beck of a lot of campaigning as far as signs on campus or signs in classrooms. But I hear about it continually, and I think there's been a big effort to make the contact on the part of both the major sets of presidential candidates," he said.
Students will be voting for class officers, student body president and vice president, student senators from academic schools and the satellite union referendum. Woner will not be required to present their KU IDs and spring registration cards when they vote.
Pollls will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
both days in the Kansas Union Lobby,
Summerfield Hall and on the fourth floor of
Wescoe Hall near the west entrance.
Tomorrow there will also be a poll in Blake
and tomorrow there will be a poll in
Learned Hall
The Elections Committee has opened more polls for the election in an attempt to increase voter turnout.
Werner said an addition this year to the Nunamaker district polls, open from 5 to 7 winters.
On Wednesday night there will be polls at Kappa Sigma fraternity, Ellsworth Hall, Oliver Hall, Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Hall Sears Sellars Pearson Hall.
On Thursday night there will be district polls at Lewis Hall, Phi Kappa Theta fraternity, Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, Corbin Hall and Delta Chi fraternity.
Wonen said the reason for the additional polls was the low voter turnout in the past.
Tasheef said she was satisfied with the way her campaign had progressed.
"Hopefully, we'll reach a few more voters, and that's the name of the game as far as the Elections Committee is concerned," he said.
Shapiro said that his campaign was hitting a peak at the proper time, but that he should have started organizing about three weeks earlier.
Special funds buy variety of dorm services
By LIZ LEECH
Staff Writer
Residence halls at the University of Kansas have an option giving them flexibility in purchasing equipment and improve their living and social attractions.
Several residence halls have taken advantage of this option by buying everything from library books to mountain climbing equipment, darkrooms to living room lights, lounge furniture to soundproofed rooms, and Fooseball tables to tennis nets.
All residence halls have vandalism and special improvement funds that can be used for whatever the halls want if there is damage. The program director of housing, said Sunday.
Because the fee was included in each contract, Hill said, the amount of money each hall has in its fund depends on the number of residents in the hall.
MCCOLLUM HALL, which has about 700 residents, recently purchased some mountain climbing equipment. Dave Mitchell of McColum Hall president, said. It cost about $100.
"Last year we didn't use all of our money, and we had between $7,000 and $10,000 left."
He said that the hall's senate decided what to purchase, and that the 26 senators were supposed to talk to the other residents to determine what they wanted.
"I fear that sometimes we aren't representative, but the best we (the five officers of the hall) can do is encourage the clerk to talk to people in their wing," Barclay said.
However, Barclay said the senate recognized the problem and had taken five surveys about what activities and facilities people wanted.
DAN KUNSETVSKY, a former senator in
Mollum, said he responded to responses
from the campaign.
"People sometimes get tired of looking at surveys and they just throw them away," he said. "And some decisions might not be representative of the whole hall because it would be impossible to get anything that would please everyone."
KUNSETVSKY SAID surveys indicated a large percentage of residents favored but did not support a new policy.
"I was going to vote against it because I didn't think it would represent the whole group, but because of the surveys I voted for it," he said.
Kusnetsky said the hall was also planning to build a $6,000 darkroom.
Hashing Hall has also been able to purchase some materials for van-ware.
Jim Stringer, Hashing Hall president, said the Hashing executive board and floor representatives had thought of things which, but residents also contributed ideas.
"The board tries to find out specifics, like what something would cost, and then we put a referendum for students to put comments on," he said.
STRINGER SAID if most responses were favorable, the board would find the exact costof the purchase to make sure it wouldn't cost more than had been anticipated.
Last year, Hashinger soundproofed its seven music practice rooms, and is now considering a dance barre, a game room and new lounge furniture.
Lyle Elliott, Oliver Hall president, said Oliver's executive board had also taken surveys to find out what the residents wanted.
He said the floor representatives and
executive board took two or three additional surveys to reduce the choices, and the representatives at Oliver did a good job of consulting with other residents about needs.
"When you live with 30 other people on your floor, it isn't that difficult to find out where you are."
Bob McBride, Templein Hall treasurer,
said communication between residents and
their employers is key.
He said that although there was about $8,000 left in Tempill's vandalism and
special purchases fund, nothing had been purchased this year.
He said, however, that the hall government was considering buying new lobby companies.
Joseph R. Pearson Hall has about 300 residents and uses the same survey and communication process as 'ne' other halls to determine what to purchase with its funds.
Mark Olson, JRP treasurer, said, "If there's someone else out there, then you can count on them."
THE HAWK'S
NEST PRESENTS
Wednesday, Feb. 18
8-12 p.m.
Millionaire at Midnight
& Oz
Doors Open 7:30
level 2-Kansas Union Produced by SU
SUA Forums Committee has drawn up the following list of possible speakers for the remainder of this spring. We considered availability, subject, price and appeal. Please tear out this ad, or write ONE choice on a piece of paper and drop it in the box in front of the SUA office in the Union. We think this will help us to better serve you. Thanks.
We'd Like Your Opinion
1. TOM WOLFE (author, the Electric Koolaid Acid Test)
2. GARY TRUDEAU
(Pulitzer prize-winning cartoonist of "Doonesbury")
3. LEONARD NIMOY
(Carlton, Mr. Snorkel and "St. Todd")
4. BILL RUSSELL (coach/general manager, NBA Seattle Supersonics)
5. JOHN GLENN (astronaut; U.S. Senator from Ohio)
6. DAN RATHER (CBS News correspondent; co-author, All the President's Men)
7. MARK GREEN
(attorney; former Nader's Raider; topic American legal system and judicial reform)
(Gonzo journalist; political observer; author)
9. BARRY WEISBERG
(People's Energy Commission-
Nuclear power opponent)
10. CECILY TYSON
(acclaimed theater and television actress)
11. MR. NICOLAS GONZALES REVILLA
(Panamanian ambassador to U.S.)
We can't guarantee that we'll be able to obtain one of these, but your opinion would be of help. Other comments that might help us to define the Forums area would also be welcomed. Please respond only once. s/Brad Bradley, SUA Forums Chairman
ALL STAR REVIEWS
February '76
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Reg. '1.35
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2/29/76
The Bull & Boar
The Bull & Goar
Roast Beef—BBQ Ham—BBQ Beef
or any 2 meat combination
$1.35 Sandwich Reg.$1.65
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NEW YORKER
LONDON MAPPINCHITT OF
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LUNCHEON PIZZA
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LUNCHEON PIZZA
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"The Best
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25¢ extra for meat
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Special served
11:00 a.m. till 4:00 p.m.
daily
Distributed by Schumm Foods Bull & Bour Mass. Stroot Doll New Yorker Schumm Catering
Blood drive into second day
After donating blood to the Interfraternity Council (IFC) and Panhellenic Blood Drive yesterday, William M. Ballour, vice president for student affairs, was still smiling.
"I'm still alive." Balfour said. "It didn't hurt."
Batou said that the IFC and Panhellenic had done a good job.
Maribeth Olson, a project coordinator
Olson said IFC and Panhellenic suffered a setback because the Bloodmoble had arrived an hour later from Wichita. All those rescheduled appointments were rescheduled, she said.
said that al out 229 donors were needed, in addition to the 380 who had already made donations.
She said she was still confident that IFC and Panhellenic would reach its goal.
David Niven and Don Knotts in Walt Disney's "NO DEPOSIT—NO RETURN"
Eve. 7:30, 9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:30 Grenada
in the Nelson
"BREAKHEART PASS"
Eve. 7:30, 9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:30 Naritty
San Capi, Harry Pashawan interment at his home in Royal Kings PG
Marcin McDowell Eve.at 7:30, 9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:05 Hillcrest R
"Rarely has so much truth and power been captured in a film—Rex Reed"
Eve. 7:30, 9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:05 HEARTS AND MINDS R
Hillcrest R
Granada
1047 W. 13th St. N.W.
1234567890
See Capt. Harry Flashman
surveiled
his son-in-law
Royal Masp
PG
Matecim McDowell
Eve, a1, 7:30, 1:30
Saturday, a1, 10:30
Hillerenz
Varsity
Nebraska 84 JACKSON ST.
FRESHMEN & COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRANSFER STUDENTS (Plus any interested unofficialmen)
(Plus any interested upperclassmen)
The 27th annual Principal-Counselor-Freshman CONFERENCE
Thursday, February 19 Kansas Union
Representatives from the high schools and Community colleges listed below will be attending the conference and have indicated an interest in visiting with you regarding your first year at K.U. We invite you to take part in this years conference, which will be held in connection with them about your first year's impressions of the University, to discuss how you have met the challenge of the academic programs, and to discuss any concerns you may have about your future years at K.U. You will be excused from attendance in your afternoon classes between 1:00 p.m. and 3:00 p.m. on the day of the conference. The sessions will be held in the Union Building, at the location indicated.
ABILIENE-B
ABROVE-B
ASHLAND-B
ATWODD-B
BELVEDY-B
SHOP MIEGE-B
BONNER SPRINGS-B
BUITE-B
CHAPARRAL-B
MARMARO-B
CLAFLIN, BUSTON-B
TY-B
COLDWATER-B
COORDINA-B
CONWAY SPRINGS-B
COMMUNITY-B
DERRY-ALCOVE-CA CAFETERIA
DDOGE CITY-B
DDOGE BUSTON-B
EMPORIARY-B
FAUL PTAU THAYER-B
EUDRA-D
ELD RINHLEY-B
GARNET-B
GORDON-B
GOODLAND-B
GLADWELL-B
GLADWELL-ALCOVE-CA CAFETERIA
GLENBRENS-B
HIWAWE-TRA-
CHIAND-PARK-B
BOUGUE-B
HOISITON-B
HLYOOD-RWILSON-BUSHTON-B
HUTCHISON-SUNFLOWER ROOM
JACKSON HEIGHTS-HOLTON-B
GUENTRY-North-B
JETMORE-B
KINGAM-B
LANKING-B
LANKING-B
LAWRENCH-JAYTHAW ROOM
LAWRENCH-NORTH-TRADIATIONS ROOM
LINKOON-B
LOUISBURG-B
LOUISBURG-B
LYONS-B
WESTVANITTAN-B
High Schools
MARYSWILLE-B
MARYSWILLE-B
MINEGWA-B
MINEGWA-B
MONTEZUMA INGALLAS-B
MONTEZUMA INGALLAS-B
ONAGA-C
ONAGA-C
OSAWAYCITY-B
OSAWAYCITY-B
OSAWATOMIE-C
OSAWATOMIE-C
PADLA-C
PADLA-C
PLAINVILLE-C
PLAINVILLE-C
BOUTIN CITY-C
RUSSELL-C
RUSSELL-C
ST JOHN, ST JOHN-C
ST JOHN, ST JOHN-C
ST JOHN, ST JOHN-C
SATANTA-C
SATANTA-C
SEAMON-C
SEAMON-C
SHANNEE-MISSION-INTERNATIONAL ROOM
SHANNEE-MISSION-INTERNATIONAL ROOM
SHANNEE MISSION EAST-WOODRUFF
SHANNEE MISSION NORTH-WOODRUFF
SHANNEE MISSION NORTHWEST-KANSAUS
SHANNEE MISSION WEST-WOODRUFF
AUDU
BOTTLE HIGHTS-B & B ROOM
SOUTH EAST GF OF BATINE-B
SOUTH EAST GF OF BATINE-B
SOUME-B
SOUME-B
TONGANOKE-B
TONGANOKE-B
TOPERA WEST-BIG & ROOM
ULYSER-C
ULYSER-C
WAMEO-B
WAMEO-B
WASHINGTON-C
WASHINGTON-C
WICHITA EAST-PARLOR A
WICHITA EAST-PARLOR A
WICHITA DREAD LIST ROOM
WICHITA DREAD LIST ROOM
WICHITA DREAD LIST ROOM
WICHITA WEST-CURRY ROOM
WICHITA WEST-CURRY ROOM
WYNDOTTE-MEDWELLOW ROOM
Community Colleges
BARTON COUNTY—B
BUTLER COUNTY—B
CLOUD COUNTY—B
COFFEEVILLE—B
COLLEY—B
DODOGE CITY—B
FORT SCOTT—B
GARDEN CITY—B
HASKELL—B
HUTCHINSON-CENTENNIAL
ROOM
INDEPENDENCE-B
JOHNSON COUNTY--FORUM ROOM
KANSAS CITY KANSAS--
COUNCIL ROOM
MAPLE WOODS--B
NEOSHOB--B
PENN VALLEY--B
PRATT--B
SEWARD COUNTY--B
Key: B-Ballroom
C-Cafeteria
This is your opportunity to feedback information about your experiences at KU to your former school.
2-3 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 19, Kansas Union
In case you have any questions concerning the conference, please contact Max Griffin, Conference Chairman, in the Office of Admissions and Records, 326 U.S. Parkway, New York, NY 10024.
Tuesday, February 17. 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Satellite union needed
For the first time in several years students will have a chance to express their opinions on a subject that will be important to them and many students for years to come.
Included among the Student Senate election ballots tomorrow and Thursday is a question: Do you favor building a stadium of allen Field House and Daisy Field?
When the same question was asked in a referendum in 1970, it was narrowly defeated. The satellite union was rejected then because students were upset about the possibility of paying for Wescoe Hall. Wescoe lost. Then she then did the satellite union, but Wescoe is here and the satellite union is not.
There is a need for the satellite union. More and more students will be spending their time in the western part of campus, away from the Kansas Union, when the new computation center, law school and visual arts buildings are built
A satellite union with food service, check-cashing facilities, lounge, study space and information center is also needed to serve Daisy Hill residents.
Such a building, however, will cost money—about $7.50 a student each semester. Unfortunately, there is no hope for a satellite union unless students are willing to pay part of the construction costs. A classroom is not a classroom building, but a building that will cater to the non-academic needs of students.
It seems a little unfair for students to ask the state to pay for something like an easier place, even when the state doesn't even keep faculty salaries even with inflation.
A Union committee last spring surveyed students and faculty members and found that about 90 per cent of the students and 50 per cent of the faculty members said more Union facilities were needed. Just under half of those members said they would pay part of the cost of additional Union facilities.
After studying the results of the survey, which included questions on what kind of improvements are needed, the committee report concluded: we must also confirm that the over-all No.1 choice for additional facilities is a satellite union."
if the satellite union of 1970 were built today, it would cost $2,950,000. The same building could have been built in 1988, but its plans were drawn, for $1,815,942.
Construction costs are going up about 1 per cent a month. If students approve a satellite union in this week's reference list, they will be able and the bids could be let this summer.
The longer it takes for student approval of the satellite union, the higher construction costs will go and greater will be the demand for such a structure.
The students in 1970 made a mistake when they didn't approve the satellite union. Every student who had has to walk from a place like Summerfield Hall to the Union for lunch (because Wescoe Terrace was full) knows that.
Vote for the satellite union tomorrow or Wednesday. Do it because the students of 1970 can help solve one of the problems of students at the University will have.
By Carl Young Editor
Liquor a potent issue
Kansans, it seems, have always been obsessed with alcohol.
Maybe it started with Carrie Nation, when she came out of the West with a shout and a whack almost a century but it probably started long before then.
Every year the Kansas Legislature considers several alcohol-related bills. Every year—and especially every election year—there is yet another showdown between prohibitionist and liquor-by-the-drink forces.
Lately, it has usually been the liquor-by-the-drink forces that took the offensive. The dry forces seemed concerned with holding onto their past victories.
The 1976 session has been somewhat different, however, as the drys have pushed for a bill to raise the drinking age for 3.2 beer to 21 and busily passed anti-alcohol petitions from legislator to legislator.
Because of the constant battle and the political strength of both sides, state legislators (and state voters) long ago decided on the compromise position that we know today. In this position—which has been the case for a number of years Kansas attempts to get good and drunk while making sure its breath stays clean and its image pure.
The idea is for the drys to be happy
because there are no "open saloons"
and the drinkers to be happy because
they can always join a "private club"
and socialize to their hearts content.
Unfortunately, the idea doesn't work. The dry forces are unhappy because there are still a lot of people out doing things that are bad for them both physically and religiously. And the fact is they aren't needed because they can't just go into a restaurant and have a bourbon and coke with their steak.
And the people in the middle are unhappy because of the hypocrisy of a system that not only pretends to be something it isn't, but also manages to discriminate against people because of income and locate all at the same time.
It isn't exactly a case of "something
that's certain" would be good,
for everyone.
It would be good for law enforcement agencies to at least have a chance at being unbiased. If would be good if it was decided once and for all whether the state was going to legislate morals and rules, or just going to let anyone drink who wants to.
Even prohibition would be less of a farce than the present shuffling.
Contributing Writer
By Jim Bates
Students are standing up cheering wildly and waving small American flags.
The Red, wipe and broom
"This is newsman Tom Hedrick reporting to you live from the Big Eight Room of the University. He was the Student Senate voted last fall to uncover graft and corruption at the University in 2014, a national celebration. Under the direction of Senator Joe
"Wait, our cameras have focused on in the hands of one of the KBG's laborers. Have you ever seen such hands? They look like the hands of a man who does dishes with Joy.
"Senator McCardle has once
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
"Mr. Zee, we have photographs—photographs that show two of our workers planting a tree while ten others lean on shovels or sit in a truck observing. If this isn't Communism, it is to the Americas laborer's Since when do we pay men to do nothing?" McCardie shouted.
Hedrick beamed. "This reporter hasn't been so moved since the fars danced in the crowd. He's victory over OU last fall."
McCardle, the Senate is moving into the final day of hearings on alleged Communist influences in Lakeside and Grounds, the KBG
"It's not it, Mr. Zee, that you hire both longhairs and rednecks, and that women are even being hired in our organization is trying to infiltrate all segments of society in preparation for the revolution. And isn't it true that the KEG has an unwritten rule that there be at least four obeyed by the worker needed on a job?"
"We now turn our microphones over to Senator McCardle, who is gavelling the hearing into session."
The pudgy junior from Eudora opens the hearing saying, "Today's first witness is A.L. Zee, director of the KBG. He we have seen evidence indicating your organization has Communist tendencies. The hiring practices of Building and Grounds have been based on socialist concepts of full employment. It seems that you are trying to create jobs that aren't really needed."
again restored order and he is pressing on in his inquiry."
"Mr. Zee, isn't it true that you have illegal contracts with a paint company owned by your brother. Isn't it true that he keeps the KGB supplied with paint to wear off streets and curbs less than a week, so that your painters can keep busy.
fencing around Oliver Hall. which fences nothing in and serves only as a hindrance to who want to use the area."
"And isn't it true that you paid thousands of dollars for
McCardle wiped the swea from his brow and continued. And isn't it true that the KBG has been able to local nursery to keep your gardeners supplied with shrubs, so that within the next three months they will be trapped by a giant hedge unable to leave the campus."
"McCarrie is pausing now waiting for some reply from Zee," Hedrick said, "but the KBG director seems to be in a position to uncover charts and huge pictures which he says will help nail the lid on this case. He explains how his graph proves that the KBG put hundreds of maps into the campus in search of leaves. It's obvious, he says, that since the task is so futile, these workers are actually training for the job, and because the Chi Omega Fountain Affair, which was another senseless deed of the Commies.
"The Senator has dismissed Zee and is now calling on Noah Forsyth, director of planning, as his final witness. Let's listen as McCarde concludes the bearings."
"Mr. Forsty, I'll get right to the point. Our Student Investigative Agency, the SIA, has been keeping close tabs on the KBG in recent months. They infiltrated the horseshoe games your workers play during lunchbreaks and have uncovered some of you've been developing. These plans prove beyond any shadow of a doubt that the KBG is in the RED."
McCardle paused and then continued, "Isn't it true, Mr. Forsyth, that you plan to hire a division of students next winter Porter Potter Lake 24 hours a day to keep the water free?
"And isn't it true that you are involved in recruiting high school students to come to KU, with promises that they can join the KBG and ride in the trucks all day long?"
"Hedrick here. Everyone in this room is on the edge of their
seats, folks. McCardle is closing in for the kill."
"And finally Mr. Foray,
it isn't true that the final act
was to remove the carlion from the
Campanile and use that
treasured memorial as a
tower for the campus police?"
"Folks," Hedrick shouted, "this place is in a state of bedlam. The leaders of the KGB are pale, slouched over with tears running down their faces. They've been called cellar Archie Dykes is ecstatic. He's standing on a chair giving a speech on how all the money that can now be saved will be used to increase faculty salaries. and the members of the Senate are doing a dance dance dance. Alma Mater. They've lifted McCardle above the crowd.
"So with the sounds of the Crimson and the Blue in the background we leave this highly emotional scene with the children, I will hold all the KU. The dirt has been uncovered and now it's up to Building and Grounds to clean it up."
OH, NO, NO--REALLY--IM JUST NOT INTERESTED----DON'T DO THAT----YOU MUSN'T! PLEASE! MERRY SAKES ABSOLUTELY NOT! PERISH FORBID! STOP THAT, SILLY GOOSE!
DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE'S
© 1976 WWT SPECIAL FEATURES
Concorde won't make skv fall
WASHINGTON — Columnists and congressmen have this much in common: When they owe the Senate their owe it to their constituents to say why. I have changed my mind on the matter of landing rights for the Concordoreasonic plane. Let me say why.
a couple of words first. Where matters of high political principle are involved, we need to be in the over-blew phrase, ciguity and reasonable consistency. The question put to William T.
Coleman, secretary of transportation, did not involve issues of principle. In the end.
public policy involves only the merits of a particular proposal, we ought to preserve an open
By James J. Kilpatrick
(C) Washington Star Syndicate
the question turned on a homely rule of human relationships. This, too. Where a matter of
Readers Respond
CWENS not forced to abide by Title IX
To the Editor:
We as CWENS feel that Sheri Baldwin's articles concerning TITLE IX have misrepresented our organization, making us look like sheep blindly following the Dean of Women's office.
Only one CWEN was interviewed in Baldwin's series of articles, and she was misquoted and taken out of context.
The next task force was initiated by CWENS and not by the Dean of Women's office to coordinate it for the coeducational group at Purkinton, president of CWENS talked with Ed Rolfs several times about the task force, yet he never mentioned that there would be any possible violations on the part of CWENS or the Dean of Women, as well as assuming Student Senate responsibilities.
It is true that there are only four men on the task force, but it is not because the women on the force have not been trying to recruit more. We haven't been able to find any more men who are willing and able to devote the time and effort required.
The KU CWENS saw that there were three ways to comply with the Title IX guidelines:
—go coed and remain affiliated with the University.
We felt there was a need to find an alternative to burying a worthwhile sophomore group. Title IX doesn't allow a public university to significantly support a single-sex organization. The KU CWENs chapter has a颁阅服, free publicity for our projects, access to student grades for selection purposes. University members on our selection committee. University buildings, which we deemed significant support.
—remain single-sex and lose any significant support from the University.
Even though we may lose affiliation from our national group, which voted to remain single-sex, we decided to go coed for reasons in addition to the need to be comfortable with men on a college level is important because most of us will be working with men throughout our lives anyway. There is no men's sophomore honorary group, and we think there is a need for one. Our men's sophomore honorary group will be expanded by going coed. Unlike some other honorary organizations, we feel the University will not be dealt a
We made our decision before the results of the Title IX self-evaluation committee came out for several reasons. We wanted to make the change, and as long as we did it, the committee decided to go ahead with the project. Our selection process would be in progress when the results of the committee were announced. If we were ordered to go coed, then it would be too difficult for everyone to include man and expect to have a viable group for next year. A change in the ritual we feel is necessary so that the new organization will be relevant to both men and women and not a organization that men can join.
devastating blow by our going coed.
After careful thought and discussion, and not because of pressure from Pam Horne or the Dean of Women's office, the nurse should go coed. Why should we be criticized for initiating change?
Naney Teacher
Caldwell sophomore
Walsh babba
Hutchinson sophomore
Mary Shaw
Shelley M. M., sophomore
Linda Haynes
Wameng sophomore
Bonnie Bosewell
Baltimore sophomore
Ann Warner
Hutchison sophomore
Vote 'em out
To the Editor:
Following the recent decision of the Student Senate to deny the student body a chance to vote on the question of athletic ticket prices, one of the senators decided the decision "ridiculous." So it was unfortunately it was also representative of the way many Student Senators have been acting lately—in a word, ridiculous. This latest decision, while easily the most outclassed but the last in a line to similar acts of irresponsibility.
For example, last fall the same group of senators held a bus颖 itself in a rhetorical disguise was reminiscent of the Senate in its formative years during the early '70s—times not noted for responsible actions. Many of them have refused to use student funds to benefit only a few students who bought season football or basketball. At last count, these few numbers are still making this the most beneficial
thing the Student Senate does for KU students—correction, did for KU students.
Other senators, lacking even a semblance of a reason, declared they were voting to end the price support out of a dislikes for Clyde Walker, which shows you don't have to be logical in order to win. Instead, the average student was forgotten, and it was predicted ticket prices could rise 100 per cent.
Thus, this latest vote should come as a surprise. What is surprising is the acquiescence of most season ticket buyers—who are more likely to who for the most part won't be buying tickets themselves. The logical thing to do would be to vote the rascals out, or at least elect enough others to restore a sense of responsibility to the Senate.
Will it happen? Probably not, but before you dismiss the whole thing as a joke, consider whether it's more than $400,000 of your fees to disperse, which is hardly a laughing matter. Do yourself a favor and vote this week—you'll win a reward—a wallet at the same time.
Jeff Southard
Student Senator
Wichita First Year Law Student
mind. This was the case with regard to Concorde. Until Coleman's reasoned and cogent opinion came down, I had opposed these landing rights. On the merits, he makes a convincing argument in their support.
To listen to the Chicken Little howls that have arisen in the past week, you might suppose that with Coleman's opinion, the skies indeed are falling down. We are having a storm are having hysterics. Spokesmen for Pan-Am and TWA are filled with gloomy forebodings. Platoons of lawyers are rushing to and fro. I am angry talk of legislation to overturn the Coleman decision.
This is what he decided: As secretary of transportation, Coleman authorized two Conway airports, the International Airport west of Washington. He said the government would not object to four flights a day into Kennedy and New York. For the moment, his action is final as to Dulles; service to Kennedy will depend on further approval by the Port City of New York and New Jersey.
That is the sum and substance of the Coleman order. These limited operations are subject to a penalty of one month, while the environmental impact is to be carefully monitored. The British and French carriers are on put notice that permission to land may be suspended at any time and appears to demand cancellation.
Five years ago, when a proposal for supersonic
passenger flights first flew into the public realm, the big question had to do with the sonic boom. Opposition was fought, and doughy little organization that styled itself the Citizens League Against the Sonic Bomb. That objection no longer obtains. Operations over land areas at less than supersonic speed.
Another major objection has to do with damage to the ozone layer. On careful examination, Coleman found the evidence unconvincing. Maybe a time will come when pieces of ozone damaged by a serious peril, but the time is not yet. The ozone layer appears to have remarkable properties of recovery.
A third objection goes to Concorde's noise. As Coleman freely concedes, the Concorde is indeed a noisy aircraft. Especially on takeoff, when it makes a terrible rocket. But it does not make it do so and the inconvenience will affect relatively few persons.
Some of the other objections are irrelevant or demagogic. If the Concorde loses money,
which seems likely, this is no concern of ours. If these flights "serve only a very few rich people," as Sen. Baily Bayh virtuously contends, this is how the world is. When it was earlier proposed that U.S. taxpayers manage the budget of a Boeing SST, these considerations were fairly arguable. Not now.
This is the main point: Friendship is a two-way street, the British and French have bought American-built airplanes that are noise and pollution induced our aircraft have caused over England and France. For the United States now to deny even experimental landing rights to a plane in which our allies have brought him, in my own view, would be a mean-spirited and selfish act.
Friendship cannot be all take and no give. Friendship often demands some sacrifice of self-control, but Coleman's decision should come to pass—two flights a day at Dulles, four a day at Kennedy—we would not have given the deal or sacrificed very much.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
and on weekends. Second-class postage paid at Law-
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Editor
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Associate Editor Campus Editor
Baldwin Bailin Gay Hack
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John Marineer
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University Dallv Kansan
Tuesday, February 17, 1976
2
Camp jobs made available
By KELLY SCOTT
If you're looking for a summer job, those summers you spent at camp could prove valuable.
The Office of Student Financial Aid has two loosleaf binders of mailings from camps all around the country seeking students as counselors, cooks and craft instructors.
Rita Schrag, assistant to the director of Student Financial Aid, says that there are jobs available at summer camps, but that students must pursue them on their own.
"They don't recruit on campus," Schragg said Friday. "In some cases an interviewer for a certain camp will come to Lawrence to invite a person who has already applied."
One problem KU students may find in looking for summer camp jobs is finding a camp that has a season that ends before KU's 1978 fall semester. Classes begin in September. Nearly every camp in the notebooks listed its season as running into September.
FOR MANY summer campers, Schragg said, colleges are a good source of inexpensive labor. Many college students want to work outdoors in the summer, she said, and they probably have to leave.
Almost every camp requests some kind of kit
camper as a prequirement to a counseling lot.
Many camps require that the applicant have achieved a Counselor in Training certificate, the standard designation many campers use to denote minimum counseling experience.
Campfire Girls, Inc., and Girl Scouts of America are the two organizations that have sent the most leaflets to financial aid looking for employees.
Campfire Girls' pay scale ranges from $400 for a summer's work as an assistant riding instructor to more than $1,000 for a summer as an assistant camp director.
"HARD WORK long hours ... 50-90
pay is what Campfire girls tells us
Both organizations stressed the rewards of working with children in scouting, but didn't require that applicants be a former Girl Scout or Campfire Girl.
It's possible to get a job in a camp without camping experience if you have a specialized skill, such as horsemanship or swimming. Nearly all camps require at least two years of training depending on the position, senior lifesaving and water safety instruction certification.
Girl Scout camps salaries are a little higher than Campfire Girl's salaries, but Girl Scouts staffers must pay a small room and board fee on a daily basis.
POSITIONS in Yellowstone National Park are also available. Hamilton Stores, Inc., a small chain of general stores and hardware stores, dishwashers and custodians. Employees pay $4.25 for room and board each day. Salaries start at $1.75 an hour and the company says that the lowest wage earner could make $6.25 a month a summer period from June to September.
The park administration is looking for station attendants who are paid $2.10 an hour. The park operates on a 48-hour work week.
Camp Stanley, a weight-reducing camp to teenage girls in Hurleyville, N.Y., has a difference of $10,000.
"We prefer that our staff also have a weight problem, so that they can participate enthusiastically in all camp activities," the Camp Stanley brochure said.
If the Lawrence area appeals to students.
IF TRAVEL is what you're looking for, Schramp recommended that students consult the Directory of Overseas Summer Jobs. It's available alone with the Summer Program and works at the United States at the financial aid office and the reference desk in Watson Library.
summer jobs are available at Lake Perry summer camp.
Only 20 of the 218 are expected to begin the medical school classes in July because they will be eligible for a full year.
Fifty-one Kansas counties will be represented by the 218 students accepted for this year's medical school class at the KU Medical Center.
A total of 947 persons, 728 males and 219 females, applied for positions in the class. The largest number of women in the history School of Medicine, 66 were accented.
KU hunts surgeon replacements
Of the 218, 202 are Kansas residents, according to a report issued this week by the Med Center. The 16 nonresidents are from California, Colorado, Missouri, Hawaii, Arizona, Nebraska, New York and British Columbia.
Thus, 25 per cent of the female applicants were accepted, compared with 22 per cent of the male applicants.
Med Class from state
Steps are being taken to resume heart surgery at the KU Medical Center as soon as possible, Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said yesterday.
Dykes said the Med Center's surgery department was already looking for heart surgeons who could work on an interim procedure. He later searched for permanent staff surgeons.
A TOTAL OF 153 undergraduate students who are attending or who have attended 18 Kansas colleges and universities were acclaimed.
the nation for a qualified heart surgeon and heart surgery team.
Dr. Martin Wollman, director of student health services at Watkins Memorial Hospital, said that although the number of student traps is influenza viruses hadn't hit epidemic levels.
The new surgeons are needed because of the resignations last week of Robert L. Reis and Hamner Hannah III. The two heart surgeons resigned after Dykes announced that the heart surgery section, closed since 1985, would be reopened. Dykes made his announcement on Friday at City Hospital clearing the section of alleged unsafe conditions was released.
"The University of Kansas Medical Center will continue to provide a high quality cardiothoracic surgery program as an integral part of health care education and service programs," he said.
If misery loves company, then University of Kansas students with a cold or influenza should be happy to know that they have plenty of company.
The highest number of accepted students were from the state's most populous counties, Johnson County, second highest in population, had 46 accepted students. The third highest in population, had 27; and Douglas County, sixth in population, had 19 accepted students.
Dykes said the Med Center would search
Dykes said he didn't know how soon the Med Center would resume open heart surgery.
Use Kansan Classifieds
Flu virus infects KU students
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MOST OF the students were science majors as undergraduates, with 62 biology majors, 44 chemistry majors, 22 majors in business, and 10 majors in biology majors and six biochemistry majors.
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Thirteen accepted students were premedical and two were health technicians and two were health technicians.
The mean overall grade point average was 3.61 on a four-point scale.
proportions, there had been a definite increase.
Quarterly figures showing the number of students treated aren't in yet, Wollman said, but the apparent increase in the staff's daily work load reflects the change.
On the four parts of the Medical College Admissions Test, the average scores of the group were above 68 per cent of those who took the test in verbal ability, 67 per cent in quantitative ability, 64 per cent in general information and 72 per cent in science.
THE MOROPOLIZERS. P.O. Box 317
ROSELLE, ILINOIS 60172
"We can't even say if the worst is over," Wollman said. "It's really a day-to-day thing. It has not abated yet, and the number of cases may still be on the upward."
Students who took the free vaccinations against influenza viruses last fall should have been helped here, he said, but the flu virus won't still affect many students.
Wollman said that complications included extremely high temperature, middle-ear injury and infection.
Wollman said many students didn't come to Watkins unless they felt really sick. Body temperatures above 103 degrees that wouldn't go down, muscle aches, a dry cough and sudden illness in general brought some students in, he said.
FROM THREE to seven students a day are hospitalized, he said, and the length of hospitalization varies, depending on the illness. Fluenza virus, from 24 hours to four, or five, days.
"Most people get over it rapidly," he said,
"and many prefer to stay at home. We are
sometimes likely to give hospitalization to students without a family setting."
NATIONAL STATISTICS from the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare and the Center for Disease Control show that flu cases have increased somewhat over last year, but haven't approached epidemic stage.
Wollman said that although there were several hundred of viruses responsible for the flu there was one thing recommended to help combat spread of the viruses.
"Because the viruses are spread so easily when a person sneezes or coughs, the mouth and nose should be covered," he said. "This does not totally prevent the spread of viruses, but it does reduce their spread significantly."
New Disco in Lawrence is hiring D.J. for coming season. AUDITIONS ON THURSDAY
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1. Kappa Sigma fraternity
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paid by Student Activity Fee
6
Tuesday, February 17, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Educators question paddle's value
By ANITA SHELTON
Corporal punishment by schools and parents is still a controversial and complex issue, some University of Kansas faculty members and Lawrence school principals
Debate on the pros and cons of physical discipline has been renewed since the October 1975 Supreme Court ruling that students were required to corporal punishment to discipline students.
Lelon Cappus, associate dean of education,
and yesterday that he thought the rulings
of the state were wrong.
"How the law is enforced is where the problems are." Capps said.
What should be achieved by the law is justice, Capps said. If children act like criminals they should be disciplined as criminals, he said.
"I THINK THE IDEA generally, though, that no one should have to use it," Capps said. "There may be a rare case or two where the IDEA is generally. I don't think it's very effective."
Ceps said much depended on the relationship between the teacher and child or parent and child. He said that physical punishment is not effective on the parent and the child would still believe that the parent loved him. If the relationship between a teacher and a child isn't strong, physical punishment may make the child less aware that the teacher doesn't like or love him, he said.
Margaret Schadler, associate professor of psychology, said it would be helpful if teachers knew the method of discipline used by the parents.
A teacher's use of spankings or isolation can hurt the relationship between a teacher and child if that method of punishment isn't used at home, Schadler said.
She said the issue of child punishment was very complex.
"WE KNOW THAT a lot of physical discipline tends to be bad," she said, "and is correlated with aggressiveness. Punish it." So why do you choose choice and know what the choice is?"
Schadler gave the example of a child who misbehaves to get attention. If the child has no other way of gaining attention the child is likely to misbehave even when punished, she said.
In all cases, the circumstances and alternatives should be considered, Schadier said. Spanking may be better than such punishment, she said, depending on the circumstances.
Bill Hopkins, professor of human development and family life, said that physical discipline could be helpful when used under very precise conditions.
"TOUBT that it it's used that precisely in schools, though." Hookins said.
Nancy Hughes, Golden, Colo., graduate student in the School of Social Welfare, said that child welfare was less concerned with discipline than with abuses.
KU's future . . .
Sankel said a proposal for tuition and fee waivers for graduate student teaching assistants would again be presented to the College. Regents for approval, as it was last year.
From page one
Shankel said he hoped people who interviewed for faculty positions at the University were being given a realistic assessment of their chances for tenure.
"PROMOTION and tenure are harder to get here now," he said, "so those tenured
He said that tenure for new faculty members, although extremely difficult to get, would always be given to "the very best" to keep them at KU.
Research assistants aren't included in the proposal because of what he called "political expediency." Salaries for research assistants are more variable, he said, and so would make approval of the proposal more difficult.
Shankel said if support could be mustered from the other five regents institutions for similar programs, the proposal would have a better chance of being passed.
Responding to a question by Ed Rolfs, student body president, about the status of an investigation into possible violations of TITLE 1X of the 1972 Education Amendments Act, Shankle said alleged violations were widespread in faculty and staff members and students.
A similar investigatory committee has been established at the KU Medical Center, be
These committees will eventually make recommendations, which will be forwarded to an executive steering committee composed of Mike Davis, University counsel; David W. Robinson, acting vice chancellor for the Med Center, and Shankel. The recommendations will eventually be sent to Dykes for approval.
He said compliance time for those organizations in violation of Title IX
"in athletics, there is a period of time allowed to make adjustments," Shankel said. "In most other areas, if there are any changes, you have to be made as rapidly as possible."
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consulted before any type of physical punishment is allowed.
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"I feel that it would be a very last resort would only use that when everything else worked."
GARY STAFFER, principal at New York Elementary School, said that the physical punishment was used occasionally, but only after consultation with parents.
The policy on corporal punishment is a complex one in the Lawrence school
5 FULL DAYS OF SKIING
She said those involved with social welfare were concerned mainly with abuse of children and the formation of policies concerning children.
Don Cooper, principal of Kennedy Elementary School, said he used course materials last week.
— Monday thru Friday, March 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 1976
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"The law is the law," Hughes said, "but there do exist procedures for people to intervene when there's an abuse of a situation."
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Physical punishment is thought of as the most effective way of teaching, offending and punishing children.
The most important things in any punishment, he said, are consistency and follow-
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The African Student Association of the University of Kansas Presents The Second Annual
African
Night
Feb. 21, 1976
6:00-9:00 p.m.
At Westminster Foundation, 1204 Oread
$3.50 Single Adult
$6.00 Couples
$1.50 Children 12 & Under
Tickets on Sale
SUA Office—Kansas Union
African Studies—116 Strong Hall
K.U. African Club Members
African night disco will be in Big 8 Room, Kansas Union at 9:30 p.m., same date. Sponsored by International Club The International Club is funded from the Student Activity Fe
Whomper Manager—Roland Daigle
For More Information Call Volunteer Clearinghouse—841-5059
aper may be donated, or we will pay 50° per 100 pounds, if you prefer.
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THE WHOMPER NEEDS MORE NEWSPAPERS!
A Community Recycling Organization
Bring them to the center at 7th and New Hampshire from 3 to 5 p.m. on Monday, Wednesday, Friday, or 9-3 Saturday.
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University Dally Kansan
Tuesday, February 17. 1976
7
Agencies fight increasing child abuse cases
By FLORESTINE PURNELL
Local health, education and social service agencies are working together in an attempt to handle the growing number of reported child abuse cases.
Mary Thomas, state specialist for the family preventive and protective services unit of the Kansas Social and Rehabilitative Service (SRS) said Friday that the number of fetal abuse cases had increased fairly steadily but her database registry was established in July 1972.
The registry has reports of child abuse received at the county level, Thomas said, as well as those reported directly to the unit by individuals.
In 1975, 3,636 cases of abuse were reported in Kansas, compared with 3,938 cases in 1974. The registry indicates an increase of 28 cases from 1972, when about 1700 cases were reported.
ONE REASON FOR the increase, she said, was the child abuse law passed in 1972. The law requires that nurses, doctors, law enforcement officials, school officials, attorneys and other professionals able to handle child abuse cases should be able to child abuse. Thomas said that under the law, private individuals weren't required to report cases, but that they often did.
Another reason for the increase is that some people's attitudes have changed, she said.
"People: we have suddenly begun to realize that the people who are reported are getting more ill."
WHEN CASES are reported, local social service agencies investigate them and report the information to the agency.
Despite the help given, Thomas said, many cases go unreported.
"There are no vicious reasons," she said.
Often it is a case of people not knowing
how to deal with someone.
There are various reasons most cases go unreported, Thomas said. Some people are afraid of being used or getting involved and so they refuse to handle a family themselves, she said.
To correct any misunderstandings, press releases are sent out and local training sessions and talks with organizations are held.
GLENNYS KUHLKE, service supervisor of the children and youth unit for Douglas County SHS, said that in the past, cases had been reported to the juvenile court.
However, since the child abuse law was
"We are usually able to screen out fights among neighbors. Then we try to determine what the family's needs are and offer services." Kuhke said.
passed, local agencies have been working together. Much of the investigation of reported cases is now done through her office, she said.
Services range from family group therapy to individual counseling and referral to other agencies, she said. The program is called Ash Mental Health Clinic, the juvenile court and the psychological clinic at the University are those services most often contacted, she said.
KUHLIKE AID most of the cases reported to her last year were those of neglect. According to law, neglect means neglecting a child to be in unsafe surroundings or situations.
"Sometimes there are cases where mothers neglect because they don't know how to care for their children," Kuhike said. "The mother will be immature herself. So she must be taught service to persons who could add to the mother's self-esteem or counsel."
against parents weren't common, and there were few cases in which children were congenital.
Kuhlke said cases involving action
"Most parents are not anxious to have their children taken away, but sometimes they know it's for their own sake," she said. The court will remove a child and its parent as a last resort. Removal adds more problems for the kids on top of everything else."
Kuhike said when cases were turned over to the juvenile court and hearings were held, it was best that her office have access to her records. In school and health officials could be used. In cases involving testimony from private individuals, attorneys represent parents could demand testimony even if the neighboring family been an anonymous until then, Kuhike said.
THE HEN CHILD is returned to the home, visits are often aimed at working the child.
Jane Krepps, probation officer for Douglas County Juvenile Court, said that when the court became involved with a case being handled by SRS, the SRS was kept informed on all action being taken as part of a working association between them.
"The purpose of the association," Krepps said, "is to keep lines of communication open."
When a report is made directly to juvenile services, it will often conduct its own investigation, Kreps said. When it has been determined that abuse has occurred, the court will take action on the home. Kreps said a hearing within the home determines what action the court might take.
FURTHER ACTION could be in the form of services through SRS and other agencies or by temporary court custody of the child. An informal hearing to determine whether the child is entitled to the home is then held. Kreps said it was for family use to be permanently secluded.
When an individual reports a case to the health department, he's encouraged to call the court if the case has been determined an actual child abuse, Scaly said. The health department will refer cases to the court if individuals won't, she said.
The Douglas County Health Department also checks into cases. Peggy Scalp, public health nurse, said the health department usually checked into borderline cases.
County health services will follow up with counselling, day care information and
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Events ...
TONIGHT: THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 at Danforth Chapel. Supporters of FRED HARRIS for the Democratic presidential nomination will present a free slide and tape show about the Harris campaign at 7:30 at the Jawahrah Room of the University. Asian Studies and Political Science, will give "A Report on Chinese-Slides and Comments," at 7:30 at Jayhawk Room of the Union. The LAWRENCE WOMEN'S POLITICAL CAUCUS will sponsor a Political Party Night at 7:30 at the Lawrence Public Library. The film, "WINNER SOLDIER INVESTIGATION," at 8:30 at Annum Veterans Against the War, will be shown at 8 at Pearson Scholarship Hall.
2907 W.6th 843-3300
Announcements ...
DANIEL L. AZARNOFF, professor of medicine and toxicology at the KU Medical School, has been appointed to the National Advisory General Medical Sciences Council.
JAMES MOESER, dean of the School of Fine Arts, has been designated as the organist who will represent Kansas in a Bicentennial recital in July at the Kennedy Center.
Donald R. McCoy, professor of history, has been named to a three-year term on the advisory council of the U.S. National Archives.
The work of three KU professors, Carlyle H. Smith, professor of design, Gary Nemchock, assistant professor of design, and Olivia Vallane, assistant professor of design, is now in the National Invitational Exhibition of the SOCIETY OF NORTH AMERICA at the New York. This exhibit will four Australia and New Zealand during the next year.
--one of the seven he had mentioned in congressional testimony two weeks ago as problem banks. He didn't identify any of them and others haven't been identified.
$450-million Tennessee bank fails
Controller James E. Smith in Washington identified Hamilton National as
It was acquired immediately by First Tennessee National Corp, a bank holding company.
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (AP)—The Hamilton National Bank of Chattanooga, with 120,000 depositors and assets of $450 million, was declared insolvent yesterday by the U.S. Comproller of the Currency
Ronald Terry, chairman of First Tennessee National Corp., told a news conference that Hamilton National Bank had been reorganized during the afternoon into First Tennessee National Bank, Chattanooga.
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76
Senior Class Party
76
76
8-12 p.m.
Thursday Night, February 19
10¢ Draws
Farewell To Johnny's
Town Tavern 401 N. 2nd St.
Located in North Lawrence across the Massachusetts Street Bridge
Special Guest—Archie Dykes
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8
Tuesday, February 17, 19876
University Daily Kansan
HARLEM
Besieged
Staff photo
Gary Scheiber, Toperka senior, decided to bring his dogs to the Campanile for some exercise on a warm and sunny day. For a
while he dozed as the dogs rumped up and down the hill. Then, as lured of each other, the dogs turned their attention back to Schenck.
Capital hotline has Topeka scoop
By dialing 1-800-432-3924, a Kanasan can learn almost anything he wants to about the activities of the state legislature, both past and present.
The toll-free number is the "Legislative Hollow" and it has been operated by the Library of Kansas in Topeka for the past three years to "give people a direct line to information," theLibrary, "and reference." Mulholm Wilson, director of the legislative reference division, said yesterday.
The hotline is in operation from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, whenever
the hotline is not busy.
Wilson said hotline personnel provided
any material the library had on record,
from representatives' voting records to
the times and places of any legislative
committee meeting.
Any material that is too long or too complex to convey over the phone, such as a copy of a proposed bill, is mailed to the person on request, Wilson said.
Wilson said the majority of the 100 questions received daily concerned the status of particular bills pending in the legislature.
large number of calls concerning legislative proposals on the death penalty, tax rebates
The hotline also will notify legislators if their constituents have called requesting information.
Kansas inaugurated the bottle, he said, after it had proved successful in Missouri. "It's going to be a huge success," he said.
Wilson said the hotline had received a
Wilson termed the response to the hotline "tremendous."
"People are so much more interested than they were five years ago," he said.
Swimming, track to go intramural
Swimming and indoor and outdoor track on a regular basis will be added to this spring's intramural program. Tom Willis, of Lakeside recreation services, said last Wednesday.
Softball, a standard program in the past,
also will be part of the program, he said.
Wilkerson said intramural basketball games had been reopened to the public. The games previously had been closed to spectators because fights among spectators, players and officials had disrupted games. Wilkerson said the decision to reopen was made in a meeting last month with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
Wilkerson said competition wasn't feasible because there was only one wrestling mat. He said however, that there would be wrestling competition next year because recreation services would have an additional wrestling mat.
Wilkerson said of the decision, "We decided to handle each situation that did occur individually and not penalize the whole student body for the actions of a few."
Something New at the HAWK
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The International International Calendar of Events
The International
11
Candypants, an edible underwear, started as the idea of two young men on the East coast. The product, which resembles a baby's plastic pants with red licorice drawstrings, is made entirely of candy. It can be worn, eaten or both.
TUESDAY: Eat out tonight!
Happy Hours: 4.7 p.m.
The new pastime of eating one's shorts probably won't come to Lawrence, according to employees of six stores in the city. This is despite the fact that the shorts come in three flavors—Hot Chocolate, Banana Split and Wild Cherry.
WEDNESDAY: Happy Hour 4-7 p.m.
Lee Brady, one of the manufacturers, was quoted in a New York Times News Story story as saying that only about five per cent of people who bought the shorts were white.
FRIDAY: T.G.I.F. 2 for 1 set-ups. 3-6 p.m.
Steak Night: Filet mignon, salad, baked potato, bread $4.75
THURSDAY: All the spaghetti you can eat for only
By PAUL SHERBO
Staff Writer
The other manufacturer, David Sanderson, said, "Lots of middle-aged people have purchased them. People don't relate to them." The same sort of screens even called to inquire about them."
Candy undies newest fad
SUNDAY: 30th set-up on beer
Happy Hour 4.7 p.m.
MONDAY: Break the week in easy.
Happy Hour 4.7 p.m.
TUESDAY: Eat out tonight!
CANDYPANTS are available in both men's and women's styles.
SATURDAY: Steak Night Again! Still a bargain for $4.75.
They can be bought in pharmacies and department stores in cities where they are sold. Lawrence apparently isn't one of those cities.
Date gets free set-ups!!
"I've never heard of it," said Bernard Lambert, owner of Key Rexall Drills, 711 Northwestern Ave.
EVERYDAY: 10% discount with KU Id. 12-2 p.m.
Dance to our own D.J. and enjoy drinking and dining—all at the same place.
12-2 p.m.—general public
"Of course, anything in New York might not get this far out," he said.
944 Massachusetts
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2 p.m.-3 a.m. — members only
7 days a week
"I think the East and West coasts go to extremes sometimes. I give them 30 days of time."
Kay Julian, manager of Kirten's at
allerton inc. 10th and low sale, "I have
nothing to lose" about the job.
All six persons interviewed, two of whom didn't want to be identified, expressed doubt that Candypants would make their way to Lawrence.
Lambert said, "You don't gamble on something this far out."
He said he wasn't sure about other stores, however.
"I THINK I'll be dropped before it ever gets here," said an assistant manager of one pharmacy. "They'll all be eaten up before then."
Only one person said he had heard of the edible shorts. Jack Miller, executive director of Lawrence Surplus, 740 Massachusetts, said they were a joke.
"It's stricty a fashion item," he said. "And it's not really good for give someone for Valentine's Day as a girl."
Ken Whitent, manager of the Town
Shop, 839 Massachusetts, said he agreed.
"My impression is that as a gag gift it’s fine, but it ought to be something like a candy bar."
JULIAN SAID, "think they'd be a funny thing to give somebody."
The ingredients listed on the Candypants box are modified food starch, glycerine, inverted sugar, manitol, lecithin and artificial flavoring and coloring. They are approved by the Food and Drug Administration.
Candy pants, however, can't be washed because they dissolve in water.
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February 20, 21, 26, 27 at 8:00 p.m.
February 22 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
The University of Kansas presents:
Reservations:
University Theatre Box Office
Murphy Hall 864-3982
KU STUDENTS
ADMITTED FREE
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ANCRÉ OBEY'S NOAH THE SEARCH FOR A GOLDEN AGE
Tuesday, February 17. 1976
9
gift it's a little
dypants acerine, and arley are agg Ad-
washed
Mason 6th on KU list
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
To really know how George Mason felt when he slashed his personal two-mile best Saturday at the United States Track Championships, you'd need one thing. championships, you'd need one thing.
But running is a different cookie altogether.
You'd need to be George Mason, University of Kansas distance runner. It's easy enough to experience the joy of a well pitched baseball or the satisfaction of a beautifully aimed basketball at a strike of an umph in bowling a strike is given when you can afford a line. And throwing a spiral in a pickup football game takes no more skill than making a batch of instant pudding.
Although running involves a little more effort than walking, it's something everyone has done: running to catch a bee or evading an oncoming rain storm.
BUT RACING TAXES the body to the limits of its endurance, and distance running, in particular, requires more or a large lung capacity and muscular legs.
"The first肘 or two, you're just trying to stay on your feet," said Mason in describing the start of his 8:54.2 two-mile run over the weekend. "It's pretty rough because everybody's really fighting and pushing, elbows are fiving."
To the average spectator, the two-miler simply rushes to a place somewhere in the pack of runners, finds a seat and runs near the end. It's much more involved.
"I REALLY WAN'T worried that much about the start," he said. "I never am. Just after the first quarter mile, I was just on my way. I started moving and passing people."
Of the 21 runners in his heat, Mason passed all but six, one of whom included KU teammate John Roscoe, who placed fifth in the 20-lap race with an 8.52-2.
The race become more dramatic for Mason when he realized, as he passed the mile mark, that he was on his way to an exceptional time.
"I came by him in pretty good shape: 4:24.0, which was the fastest I ever gone out. But it didn't bother me; I thought that I might die." Mason said.
As the tempo of the race picked up and the audience of nearly 6,000 people began to cheer more loudly, Mason put on a shirt that showed himself in a better finishing position.
HE.SAID, "I WAS still pretty far back, so I ran the next quarter really hard and passed about five guys."
Then the proverbial "beer" climbed on Mason's back. Lactic acid, a product of fatigue, was flooded his legs, urging his nervous system to slow down.
"At a mile and a half, the legs really started hurting, they really felt weak, sort of rubbery," said the 5-8, 130-pound junior from Clarksville. Ark.
The tremendous pounding, the ceaseless exertion on the wooden track, was taking its toll. But Mason did what the average Monday morning jogger
IT WAS THE SECOND highest finish of all a Big Eight runner at the Oklahoma State College ahead. Mason, who had walked on the KU track team with a mediocre high school rule best of 4:32, had just defeated most of the best distance runners in the conference.
down for everything I had, and I ended up leaning at the tone."
COFFEE COACH
What brought the blonde-haired Arkansas to KU, where he knew making mistakes was a key part of the job.
"I just had confidence in myself.",
Mason said. "I knew the coach was good."
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Only Jim Ryun and 4 usually fails to do: he kept on running, and running hard.
"I was just trying to concentrate and keep picking up people," Mason said. "I messed up in the place were yelling, too. I joked you wanting to run faster and faster."
**THAT HE DID.** With two dozen fellow track members in the stands screamed when his former record by eight seconds and became the sixth fastest two-miler in MKU history. The time was more than a quarter of a second his initial freshman year effort at 9:56.
Just before reaching the finish line, Mason said, he forced himself to quicken
"I looked back over my shoulder with three-quarters of a lap to go and saw this car."
His improvement would be considered remarkable by any standard. After his 9:56 as a freshman, Mason ended his first year of two-miling (Arkansas high) on two (in two) with 9:30. By the end of his senior year he had brought his time down to 9:24.
I just believed in myself and kept working at it."
And after several meets this year,
Mason had come to within two seconds of
running nine minutes; he ran a 9:02
at 8:43, and the 8:43 at 9:02 just
continued the progression.
University Daily Kansan
"I don't really consider myself that talented as compared to some other runners," he said. "I'll probably never consider my talent."
A few runners at last weekend's meet might disagree.
Timmons said, "Last Thursday he requested an opportunity to be put back on the team. After a discussion, it was decided he be allowed to return."
Waddell Smith, who quit the University of Kansas track team two weeks ago, last week decided to return to the team. Bob was in UU head track coach, reported yesterday.
A top-ranked spinner in the 440 and 600, Smith already has qualified for the NCAA indoor championships in the 440. Fellow sprinters Randy Benson, Nolan Cromwell and Jay Wagner also have qualified in the longer dashes.
Benson lead the nation with his 47.6 mark in the 440 yard dash, and Cromwell and Wagner lead the Big Eight in the 600 with times of 1:10.0 and 1:10.1.
Following the USTFF meet at Saturday at Oklahoma City, KU had qualified 10 individuals and two relay teams for the NCAA meet March 12 and 13 in Detroit.
Waddell Smith returns to team
Here are the kayakers, guardians and their events with the following skiers: 60-yard skiier Larry Smith and Kevin Newell, 60-yard skiier Warren Smith and Kate Smith, 60-yard run - Noa Cromwell and Adrian Smith, 800-yard run - Noa Cromwell and Adrian Smith, pod hit - Rob Gydera.
Hayes has said little in public since the 23-10 Rose Bowl upset by UCLA that cost the Buckeyes an undefeated season and probably the national championship. But he also had the opportunity at Demonstr to lash out at college who cheat to recruit high school athletes.
Pole valunt—Tad Scales.
Mille relay and distance medley relay.
"I most certainly will remain in football as the head coach at Ohio State," Hayes told a Denison University Hall of Fame audience.
Hayes, who turned 63 Saturday, has been the target of criticism for dismissing star defensive tackle Nick Buamonic from the team without telling him. He also was pressed by the press for skipping out on a postgame news conference at the Rose Bowl.
GRANVILLE, Ohio (AP)—Despite criticism from Ohio State University students, Woody Hayes insists he will coach the football season this fall with the Buckeyes.
Hayes to stay at Ohio State
"This is the first time I have spoken on this recruiting thing," said Hayes. "But I am getting sick and tired of some colleges cheating in recruitment. We don't chest at Ohio State. We report any cheating by any college if knew it to be true."
The Ohio State Lantern, the campus newspaper, has called for Hayes'
Hayes is a Denison graduate. He also coached football there.
Buy a large Coke and keep the glass.
Collect your set of 6 or 8.
While They Last!
Winter Olympics in vintage year wished auf Wiedersehen, goodbye
Coca-Cola
Taco Grande
By WILL GRIMSLEY
9th & Indiana—New
1720 W. 23rd
AP special correspondent
INNSBRUCK- AWD Wiedersehen, Inns-
nuck Good-bye. 12th Winter Olympic
Games.
You sent us away smiling. Everyone was intrigued by your medieval charm, your weather, the excellence of your organization and production.
We came in, doggy and suspicious. Your 5,000 cops, snarling dogs and electrically wired fences promised a "Gestapo Olympics."
It never happened. Your gendarmerie was super, blending with the scenery, never over-bearing, never discourteous, finely刻画 represent-a warning to any potential leperism.
And the sun shone beautifully almost throughout.
The ladies will always love you. You were a landmark for women's lib.
the women's figure skating gold medal and captivated the world.
The "Most Valuable Player Award" was a tie between two women: the indefatigable Tatiana Averina of the Soviet Union, with four speed-skating medals, two gold and one silver, the laughing skier, Ross Mittermaier of West Germany, with two gold and silver.
No male on the premises could match that.
Dorothy Hamill, a cute, dark-haird lashed of 19 with magic in her skates, showed
A poised, graceful and dynamic child, she will have us watching her for years. She is wearing the three gold-metal explosions of the greatest Hiene of Norway in the 1920s and 1930s.
And it took a woman to lead the way for the American team -Sheila Young, with medals of gold, silver and bronze for the red, white and blue. Never in history had a United States female-or male-athlete done so much in the Winter Games.
--from the people of LOUISE'S BAR
--from the people of LOUISE'S BAR
words silence
an opportunity to earn yourself
in the fields of living
words and
silence
every Wednesday, 12:00 - 9:00 pm daforn chase
www.dafornchase.org
Give Blood Play Rugby
Practice begins Feb. 17th Tues., Wed. & Thurs.-4:00 23rd & Iowa
Funded by
Be part of the Big 8 Champs Activity Fee
1307W.7th
W
shuffleboard
foosball
pinball
pool
LOUISE'S
COORS ON TAP:
draws
pitchers
schooners
VOTE
Maureen O'Sullivan
Dan Black Richard Rothfelder
Lori Kiine
Charlie Fairchild
John Olson
Phyllis Robertson
Molly Wood
Jim Pearson
Mike Taraboulos
Bart Duckworth
Kelley McHenry
Dave Wooding
Pat Maloney
Kathy Hannah
FOR
L.A.&S.
SENATORS
VOX
POPULARES
S.U.A. Indoor Recreation
KRU
BOWLING: All-Hill Championship Tournament, May 14. Contact Jayfay for more information.
1.
HANDBALL/RACQETBALL: Racquetball tournai-
ment planned for March 6 & 7 at Robinson. For more
information, contact John Ranson, 343-4050. Deadline is
March 3.
---
FOOSBALL TOURNAMENT: April 11, Jaybowl—
Kansas Union. Sign up at Jaybowl by March 22.
BIRD BANK
CINEMAS
POOL: Tournament planned for March 27
& 28. All events, including B-Ball; Snooker.
Basketball.
CHESS CLUB: Meetings at Kansas Union, 7:00 a.m., 7:00 p.m., 7:00 p.m. Tournament planned for Feb. 23 and will run for six weeks. You are info given at meetings. Beginner wears.
BACKGAMMON: Meetings Thursday nights,
7 p.m. Oread Room-Kansas Union. Beginners welcome. Tournament planned for early April.
TABLE TENNIS: Open recreation, 1-3 p.m., Saturday at Allen Field House. Doubles tournament—men's, women's, mixed—early March. Single—men's & women's—late April. Dates will be announced.
This is the second year Student Union Activities has devoted a complete focus on Indoor activities. With more emphasis on these activities, they should be better than ever. Many fun and active events are being organized, and we hope KU students will participate.
For further information, contact SUA Office, 864-347-74.
Rooms tend to change, check TV monitor in Union Lobby.
THE BANKER
BRIDGE CLUB Meetings and play-mon-
days, 7-11 p.m. in the Browsing Room. Kansas
University. 530 W. 24th St., Kansas City, KS.
10
Tuesday, February 17, 1976
University Daily Kansan
SEE EUROPE THIS SUMMER! This year we have the CHEAPEST airfare from KANSAS CITY!
SUA TRAVEL
SUMMER FLIGHTS 1976
All Fares round-trip only, taxes included, subject to change due to CAB, IATA and fuel increases
ELIGIBILITY: Affinity Groups and Affinity Charters are open to Students, Staff and Faculty of the University of Kansas (KU Medical Center included).
Immediate, dependent family members are also eligible
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS summer study abroad '76
ENGLAND AND SCOTLAND
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1285.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Henry Snyder Department of History or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
FRANCE
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1325.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Robert E. Anderson or Professor John R. Williams Dept. of French and Italian or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
Kansas City to Paris
London to Kansas City
June 16-August 12 *39175*
Pan-American Airlines-Affinity Charter
\* '384' 3⁴ pro rata share of charter,
'4⁴ Administrative, '3⁴ U.S. Departure Tax
Chicago to Luxembourg
May 25-July 20 *388 $^{00}$★
Icelandic Airlines—Group Affinity
Open return anytime within one year of departure available on this flight.
★ '381° Airfare, '4° Administrative, '3° U.S. Departure Tax
Sponsored by: Student Union Activities in Cooperation with the Office of Study Abroad
All Flights FAA & CAB Approved
For further information on these and other charter programsDrop by SUA 4th level, Kansas Union, or call 864-3477
Initial Deadline March 12
MUNICH-HOLZKIRCHEN
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1325.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Henry F. Fullenwider Department of German or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
GERMANY
EUTIN (Schleswig-Holstein)
DATES: May 25 to July 20
COST: $1325.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Ian Findlay Department of German or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
ARCHITECTURE ENGLAND & SCOTLAND
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1350.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Dean Charles Kahn School of Architecture and Urban Design or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
DATES: June 7 to July 31
COST: Average $390.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Mike Doudoroff Department of Spanish and Portuguese or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
SPAIN
DATES: June 16 to August 12
COST: $1250.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Irene W. Emmia Department of Spanish or Office of Study Abroad 108 Strong Hall
DATES: June 14 to August 17
COST: $2150.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
COST: $2150.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Joseph L. Conrad
Department of Slavic Languages
or Office of Study Abroad
108 Strong Hall
RUSSIA
YUGOSLAVIA
DATE5: Approx. June 14 to August
12
COST: Approx. $700.00*
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Contact Professor Joseph L. Conrad
Department of Slavic Languages
or Office of Study Abroad
108 Strong Hall
SPONSORED BY OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD Application Deadlines and Financial Aid Deadlines Vary: Contact the Program Directors Immediately
For other information on these programs or other opportunities to study abroad, please contact
OFFICE OF STUDY ABROAD
108 Strong Hall
864-3742
In Cooperation with SUA Summer Flights
*Cost subject to change due to fluctuations in airfare and/or currency valuations.
Tuesday, February 17. 1976
11
Binding hall contracts cause row
By LIZ LEECH
Staff Writer
A difference of opinion exists between administrators and several students about whether the University of Kansas should stick to its residence hall contract policies without exception, or consider students' individual interests.
The controversy arises in January when the Interfraternity Council (IFC) submitted a request to the Administrative Housing Board asking that consideration be given to students who wanted to break residence hall rules without having to pay vacating rate charges.
Bob Turvey, assistant dean of men and IFC adviser, said yesterday that he had attended the January meeting of the housing board to request that men who had pledged fraternity and lived in dorms be allowed to reside when the residence halls were at capacity.
HE SAID he thought the halls wouldn't
deliver money that way. His request was
denied.
J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said that residence hall guidelines would be followed and wouldn't be re-negotiated every time a resident wanted to move.
"They weren't denied moving out," Wilson said, "they were just told that they go to by the vacating schedule. We will be able to single out a person and penalize him."
The vacating schedule, explained on each residence hall contract, lists the amount of money a resident will be penalized or refunded if he wanted to move out. The greater the stays in a residence hall, the greater his vacating penalty is, the contract shows.
VACATING STUDENTS may make appeals through the Association of University Residence Halls appeal board if they have good reasons, said R.M. Candlin, administrative officer of the residence halls system.
Whether residence halls were filled to capacity has no bearing on students being admitted.
"You can't play games with it," he said, "and you can't be more generous with some people than others because that would be an impossible administrative position.
Turvey said, "There are a lot of administrative problems in breaking these contracts and I realize that the University should be careful not to incide halls because they are a business."
BUT TURTLEY said he thought the students' situations, as well as its own
President asks power to select election board
By The Associated Press
President Ford asked Congress yesterday to give him the power to appoint all six members of the Federal Election Commission and panel from being stripped of its powers.
Ford said his appointments would be subject to the approval of the Senate. He urged quick congressional action to prevent abuses in the coming campaign.
The House is scheduled to try to override the veto Thursday.
Both Ford and his challenger for the GOP presidential nomination, Ronald Reagan, came under fire from AFL-CIO President George Meany.
MEANY HELD a news conference in Miami Beach to mark the opening of the AFL-CIO winter meeting. He said Ford's vote of a multibillion-dollar public works bill showed that the President lacked compassion for the "little people."
The Supreme Court ruled last month that the commission, as structured under present law, was unconstitutional because it lacked oversight. The Congress. The court said it was the President's job to appoint the members of the commission, and it gave Congress until 2015 to adopt it.
Means said both Ford and Reagan were products of Republican conservatism. He does not want to blame Alabama for Democratic presidential nomination, but called Alabama Gov. George Wallace "a
In other political developments:
—In Oklahoma, Democratic party officials said an almost complete count of the state's prefect caucuses showed former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter leading his Democratic rallies although delegates are却争取 any candidate dominated the field.
—Former Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy, who is seeking the presidency as an independent, said in Oklahoma City he was running for a general election ballot in at least 48 states.
—Ford's campaign manager in Florida, U.S. Rep. Lou Frey, said the President's weekend trip through the state was unbelievably good. He said large crowds during the five-city swing showed that the momentum was turning for Ford.
-Idaho Secretary of State Pete T. Cenarraus said Sens. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., and Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., might be on the ballot for the state's May primary although Kennedy has said he wouldn't run and Humphrey hasn't announced his candidacy. Oregon Secretary of State Ted Cruz would be because the two men were among the leading candidates in public opinion polls they would be included on his state's ballot.
"But there is really much more consideration for the individuals in fraternal
He said fraternities also had strong contracts that bound fraternity members.
Pat Schafer, IFC president, said there were 21 fraternity members living in dorms who were financially bound by hall contracts.
"I know this is idealistic and it could cost the dorms a little money, but I think the university should deal more with the in-terms not in terms of money," Schaefer said.
Ed Rolfs, student body president, wrote letters last week to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and Del Sankel, executive vice chancellor, about the denial of IPC's request.
THE LETTER asked that students be dealt with on a more individual basis by the USM.
Rolfs said that although contracts were
signed by occupants of residence halls as well as by members of sororites and fraternities, exceptions sometimes should be made.
Jack Caulton, La Grange, Ill., junior, said that he had difficulty with his contract at Templin Hall when he tried to move into Delta Upson fraternity.
"I guess we'll have to think about it," he said.
Shankel said he had no reaction to the letter at this time.
Caution said that a member of the fraternity had wanted to move into a residence hall and that the two had wanted to switch places.
"NEVER REALLY got a good answer," he said, as to why the University wouldn't let him do it.
"The only change that would have to be made was going down to the resident director and getting the other guy's name on the meal list," Cauton said.
Sullivan said that in that case, because Calton had planned to move immediately, she shouldn't lose money. He did the dorms actually making money in similar cases.
"All they would tell us that it was
a room, and to us it was just a matter
of room, policy."
Caulton said that Delta Upson had fait him live there free and pay only for food.
TURVEY SAID that fraternities often boutt alarm contracts so men could move into dorms.
"Sometimes the house pays the dorm and then charges the member less over a period of time."
Cauton said he had talked to Wilson about the matter.
He said some fraternities paid the amount of money lost to the residence hall directly.
Pizza Hut
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Feb. 17-21
1606 West 23rd
804 Iowa St.
1606 West 23rd
Lawrence, Kansas
843-3516
932 Massachusetts Lawrence, Kansas 843-7044
KANSAN WANT ADS
804 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
842-1667
Redeemable with coupon only.
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daly Kannan are offered to all students with knowledge to read to them in French. PLEASE HALL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIEL RATES
Good only at regular phoce
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or,
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
$0.00
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
AKC registered Island Sitter Puns for sale. Will
offer 8-14 hour service. Call 843-8651 or 843-2090
for more information.
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.
For Sale: 1800 Ply. Fury III, 2 dr. CLR 318 bib 2.0
For Sale: 1800 Ply. Fury III, 2 dr. AC GLR 318 bib 2.0
Copper of Indiana.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
New Stereo equipment furniture, amp, and
speakers. Call after 5 p.m. 843-6121 2-19
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These calls can be placed in person or by telephone to the UDK business office at 664-4538.
SPAERKES - 6 x 8 TensorCNN cross vein been
Paid $2,625; skipped $4,000 John: 4,614 - 12/17
*
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Magnificent
The most important component in a stereo is the sound. With new WiFi technology and high-quality bracing, you can enjoy a great listening experience with your stereo.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amps, drums, basses, and keyboards. Shop *Horn Keyboard Studios* chosen from Guitar Pro, Amps, Ampere, Kuten, Green, and many others. Amps are available in a wide variety of styles. Rock Keyboards Studio. 1429 W 84rd- 83- 4007. Rock Keyboards Studio.
We can make your stereo sound better - GUAR-
dell's Stereo 802.11a/b detail. Details at Audio System, 307 E. 16th St.
COST **+** 1%—Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Call Region Phone. Register for free. Pro IV A high tech. Phone. Number: 842-6588. Evenings 6 to 10.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
touchs. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160 page,
e-book of Research Assistance, ACADEMIC
Ave. Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. 90253
(213) 477-8744
Quitting business *business—bargain!* Everything we need is all laid out in one furniture. Large building full of merchandise. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. We also have fresh meat and dairy. (Hwy 40, Open 9-6, nightly 842-348, 2-23)
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
BELL AUDIO TECHNOLOGY
ELECTRIC, B435-9069, 2000 W. dcm. 4 hp.
BELL AUDIO TECHNOLOGY
ELECTRIC, B435-9069, 2000 W. dcm. 4 hp.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Supplies for the Home. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704 W. Washington Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90031.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold and silver work. Miniature sculpture, conventionally sized. All glassware executed. B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting. Variety of unruled stones. 841-3884 or 843-9070.
STEREO Pioneer CDQ-149 2 Boast speaker, 2
Fisher speaker. Pioneer SL5S lens 2-19
1-19
Kustom 250 bass amp. Good condition. Call 842-9484 after 6 or see at Richmond 2-17
Motorola Megaphone, two seven inch sealed beam chrome lights, electronic police-ambulance siren, concealable 75 wt speaker, midland pocket speaker, T60A 100A call. Call 841-728-12:00
Thomas Mullins 371 STI organ with Mogg Poor
and John Duckworth 256 STI organ with Rochester
Woncker 566 Booster For information call
(800) 454-1944
1966 Dodge, Coronet, Automate, P.S. snow tires,
brakes, brakes, excellent condition, 8-20
8-20
1973 Ford, Coronet, Automate, P.S. snow tires
1974 Yuga Hatchback New need condition,
(female) and has snow tires. Evening,
843-513-643
63 Triumphe, GYX. 84 miles per gallon, radial
wheel drive, good condition. GYX-247-17F
for Toural.
Camera lens for Minolta X520mm 52mm Lusivar 52mm
Lusivar for Minolta X300mm 30mm Lusivar
Cali. 842-8600 after f5.6 for Kiran. 17-
29mm before f5.6 for Kiran.
1975 Yamaha 300 hd. Must sell, will sell cheap.
864-6223
2-18
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FIELDS
Two 12 inch 3-way UaH speakers. Excellent condition. Call 845-1579 after 5 p.m. 2-20
1926 GMC Truck $400, 1400 Oldsmobile $1700
1925 GMC Truck $180, 1500 Oldsmobile $1300
Cartridges $11 Call after 9 4:20-5:00 $200
Cartridges $11 Call after 9 4:20-5:00 $200
Extra-long double bed set, best Latex foam, $75
B11-481-6999 2-20
13 Camo Cannon, power and air Ham spotlights, banded lights, and new firearms. AM/FM radio with 22000 channels and new remote controls.
AM-FM Stereo Car Radio, call 842-6258 2-23
LOST AND FOUND
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale!
Make sense use these in Western Civilization!
Make sense use them.
1. As study guide
2. For exam preparation
3. For exam preparation
Chinatown 4X5 view camera with Dagor, extra.
Dagor, 42-760. Drift
receiver, 484-2760.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored by a pub.
The pub is located at 1830 West State Bank,
State Bank, 20 & Kentuckie and Malls Shopping
TURQUOISE dealer at Repent Performance Shop, 1422 West 3rd Street. one day only, Fri 21 from 10-6am.
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
"table now at Town Crier Stores.
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
Black wallet in Allen Field House Feb. 5.
Lost ID's back. 864-1076. 2.17
$100 reward for information leading to the re-
solution of a problem in Baldwin area Feb. 1. Black and white files
provide background information.
Lost billfold Small, burgundy colored Lost
billfold Strong and Blake Hall- 12-
841-7631 for a 4.90
Lett; Lisa, Siberian Husky wearing black flies
24:822-1267, 84:322-1492
2-17
Lot: S of keys at Jahwah Bowl or Centennial
Park; please call 864-2174 from 9 p. 2-18
Lost-half Fifth Sitter pup, gold color. Lost near 14 and Tennecme-Blieree-Blistera 348-343 = 217
1979, Browns jackets lost in either
2004 or 2014. 81-62-58 and ask for DAVE,
BREWARD
1983, Brown Jackets won in either
1979, 1983, Brown Jackets lost in either
Last bill lost with Italian money and ID
I will refund you. I drive Indian drivers.
Please call 841-7156.
2-18
Found: Monday, a red billboard in front of Strong Hall. 842-4010. 2-18
Found, in office of residence hall, 248 Strong,
plases in case. Call 864-3611. Deposit: 2-18
Found: a set of keys from OLearn in parkinson.趴. Call and identity.844-2972. 2:18
HELP WANTED
Found: Female black and brown bison cat in vit-
culture of 15th and Tennessee K84-6447-6448.
Found: Woman's short sleeve sweater by Battelen.
Call Colleen. 843-623-623. Leave message. 2-18
Lost: mate cat, white or orange spots.
Union, Wed. afternoon Cindy Calli 841-6853-200
Friday
Lost: Lassie in orange glass case, somewhere on campus. Tuves. Feb. 10-16. glas-652. 2-20
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
If you are married, mature and will be in Law.
You must be a licensed attorney treated in visiting with you about a position as an assistant apartment manager. Weekend work will require some time in the office and need supply Cairn Bertin. 25 April-10 October.
AVON~ Start off the new year with excellent earnings. Open territory in Lawrence and nearby cities.
Research assistant in Dept. of Chemistry, Term is for 2 months, March and April. Requires a bachelor's degree and computer programs to investigate surface topology of materials. Requires experience with Sipind commemorate with experience, up to ten years of experience in the training. Experience and expertise in computer engineering, a knowledge of analytical geometry and computer graphics are required. To be tested applicants should contact B. K. Lee, L.S. Smith, or undergraduate transcript, references and a letter of recommendation from an experienced officer is committed to equal opportunity and affirmative action. Applications from women and men are accepted.
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE. You if you enjoy beautiful beauty and the quiet space to work in at an amateur summer home on an Adrienne's and help us
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Substitute houseparents needed for small group care home for children ages 6-18 with intellectual and behavioral problems. Prefer couple care in social science. Must be native. 2-20 453-616-6
Addresses wrested immediately! Work at home on Friday. Reqs: 1 yr bachelor's degree, American literature, 1401 Wilson Bldw., Suite 1028, New York, NY 10036.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT REMITTERS Bring in and
distribute your college degree card, or
whichever phone number you use, "at" WESTERN
SCHOOL OF POLYVENEERING.
Free rental service Up to the minute listings of
Lewis & Lawrence Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exchange 942-250-3900
2. bdm. all uu11 paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Park free. a/c pool. 843-903-495.
Room furnished with stained kitchen and bath
decor. Kitchen has built-in appliances.
Also efficiency aid for male near town. No
paint on walls or floors.
New 3 @ bbmr apartment near campus; parking
space for efficiency apartment, utility
building. 843-957-9937
Room available in a cooperative house, $40 and
dryer, good people, #824-921
dryer, good people, #824-921
2-18
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen private
2- bedroom apartment to campus, up and up $495,
or $800-$435
Sublut 2-bdm, at, Frontier Ridge, AC, carpeted. 2 pools, laundry, in room. Furnished or unfurried. Clean and quiet. Avail. Dflex libraries. Mail subscription. avail. Feb. 20-13 643-7538
Subterm 2 bib.编目.Ridge Ap. Bid. enough
compiled. unmatured. unfunded.
cladet] 845-7608
Deportment
Sublise, available immured, on 1 bdrm. 2-apartment $165 month. Call 842-1455.
One bathroom all, all electric kitchen, ae- base-
ware. 380V, 60Hz, PINCONE CDR Call 841-292
or 842-1922
WANTED
ROOMMATE(S) one or two males wanted for Jawahher tower apartments. Immediate offer.
Looking for a two or two women graduate students to share large house. Country atmosphere 3 min from campus. Large garden costs $100 more. Attendance free. Tuesdays through tween 8 and 5 Monday through Friday. 2-18
I need Hingits Drug Class notes. Will pay. 841-
5269. 2-17
Temporary (huru spring semester) home for
children. Will pay for travel
Call 841-7681-299
2-19
Want to buy house near Lawrence by June 1976.
Write Box 580, Baldwin, Kannan 60006.
2-17
Roommate wanted to share nice home area block from campus. Own bedroom, CFI place, all furniture in unit. 50% off room rates.
Roommate wanted in 3 bedroom town house
apartment $841-5013 2-20
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedrooms
and have 2 classroom, Close campus and
route. Call -720-7280
2-247
Wanted: Novels and other writing by JACK
Wanted: Novels or books or complete edition: 811-
841-709-6250
Female roommate to share apartment on edge of campus of campus 462-675. Housekeeping and care will be provided.
Roommate wanted Parked 25.2 bedroom 2 on bus
route #1125.4 plan is valid 8423-294-126
Female roommate to share 2 bdrm; house close to campus. $70 & /½ income. 841-598-306-2-18
Reproduction is faster than over with Allee, at the Quick Copy Center. We can make a copy of the original from a copy in action for all of your copying and printing needs at the Quick Copy Center, 838 Massaubach Road, Chicago, IL 60617.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Manus. furniture, dishes,
dining ware, televisions, telecommunications
482-3577
482-3577
NOTICE
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & Mass
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
SECRETKS only few have mastered, true friendship, love, forgiveness and understanding promised by the company. Pamphlets by mail. No cost or obligation. Mail with name and address. Discover 2-20
E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation for the next 1 year of transportation provided. Driver pay new indy
contract.
Two $250 scholarship. All full-delivery undergraduate
tuition. Offer valid on Oxford State University
Oxford Bay One land 1st March. Further informe
KU KARATE CUB-Clut. still enrolling but hurry.
KU KARATE BIG TIME. still enrolling and Three & Thirteen Hollows, soft, sell at the KU KARATE Hall in Columbus.
The Fastest Student Education Coverage—KJHK is being featured first hand student education night at 8 p.m. and will continue with reports starts at 8 p.m. and will continue with reports each hour until all the results are in. Lisle will provide a Zoom session every action every Wednesday and Friday at 8 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Funded in part by student Action Fees.
TYPING
THEIS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is your headquarters for Thesis Binding and Copying. Our service is fast and prices are reasonable. The Quick Copy Center, 858 Main 84190-19ff
Experimented typet, I.B.M. Sebeltic, Biuse, dissolution and term papers Call Paan, 843-759-9799
843-759-9799
Experienced typist-limt-term papers, meets, mite,
sends and interprets data; compiles, scripses,
coded 843-5054, Mrs. Wright.
I do damned good typing. PEEKY, 842-4476 3-1
Typed editor, IBM Picaitec. Quality work.
Typed editor, IBM Picaitec. dissertations welcome.
Web site: 842-912-8778
Professional tyme, well warranted, transmittance 250W, peak power 180W, low line power electric, B.A. Social Sciences, U.S. Military Academy, West Point.
Ex typet, IBM Selectric, term paper, greene.
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S1.5 TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (pica). Prompt, efficient service. Theses, dissertations, term papers. Phone: 316-984-2694. Evening: 2-7
Streich.
TYPING—We have many return customers who tell us they would like to be apprehended by the apprehender your business. Call Harvey or send an email to us: info@nyctyping.com.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
SRI University College of Medicine
BSI Engineering - State Medical College
The NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
Instruments, 737 New Hanover Highway
and Lincoln Road, Nashville, TN,
folk and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin,
saxophone, jazz and rock guitar and bass. Call 841-8817.
Columbia soccer team challenges any other
member of continental to a soccer master. Call 2-18
7492
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tt
Lawrence Gay Liberal Conference at 7:30 in the Student Union Feb. 17. Everyone welcome. 2-17
LAWENCE GAY LIEARATION-CORE rap
LAWENCE to be去Give "Thursday"
16. Student Uni UA Thursday
20. Student Uni UA Friday
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CATERING
15 East 84th 841-2000
10.5 Monday-Saturday
Locally, bored, need a body, then vote Shapiro
Anderson. Student Body 2-17
Wanted: One angel with initials D.S. for full time love only. Contact M.T. 2-20
Life planning workshop, Feb. 21, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Living with an uncertain future: Influencing your own future. It is designed for professionals interested in developing a group context within the context of a small group experience and building the future by developing realistic planning strategies which are congruent with reach and purpose in the United Nations Center, 301 Oakdale, CO 80217.
PERSONAL
Al付 pst or present members of EZKANKAR
please call Paul, 864-1087
2-19
Alcohol abuse is America's No. 1 drug problem.
Alcohol causes a drinking problem and want to
Call 842-1101.
9th & Iowa
SERVICES OFFERED
Dear KV, love you much. want to get back to
you, and Shapiro-Anderson.
2-17
I will provide a short paragraph about the importance of maintaining an organized and clean workspace.
Maintaining an organized and clean workspace is crucial for productivity and efficiency. It helps reduce distractions and minimizes the risk of accidents, such as burns from spills or slipping on hard surfaces. A well-organized workspace also makes it easier to find items quickly and efficiently. Moreover, it can help you focus better by eliminating clutter and unnecessary noise.
MATH TUTORING -Competent, experienced tutor will help you through course material 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 121, 122, 123, 142, 142, 500, 558, 627. Regular sessions or one-time testason. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7851.
MATH GET YOU DOWN! If so, go help ease.
45, 78, 91, 103, 126, 149, 172, 195, 218, 241, 264, 287, 310, 333, 356, 379, 402, 425, 448, 471, 494, 517, 540, 563, 586, 609, 632, 655, 678, 701, 724, 747, 770, 793, 816, 839, 862, 885, 908, 931, 954, 977, 1000, 1023
TRAVEL
Employment Opportunities
Lead a busy life! Need help with your house!
Thorough, dependable house cleaning done on
weekly, bi-monthly or monthly bills. Rates by
week or month or evening. Call 842-1583 or
842-1583 Daily. Call 842-1583
A job opening for a research assistant, in the School of Business at McGraw-Hill University, requires data and assistance in research. Social science background is required. Contact Michel Tubanus, Bureau of Research, 435 W. 78th St., Suite 68-146. Idaho 8146-146. Qualified employer may accept.
RIDES ___ RIDERS
Oversea Jobe - temporary or permanent. EU-
passes for up to 18 months, $200-$300 monthly. Payment,
aid-scaling. Free info-write; International Job
Center. Dapt. KA. Box 449, Berkeley CA 94704 7.426-
Olivia Lawrence Mon., Wed. Fri., Sat.
Tues., 11:30-9:30, 3:30, 782-5245, J. Waltkins-2:30
EUROPE ISHAKEL *A*IBRCAVAMIA — Travel di
Bella Mare, Italy. First Avenue, Tucker, Gau. 30084 (684).
1104 Fondazione Alberto Scala.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 202
701 Mass.
843-1306
10-5 Tues.-Sat.
THE LOUNGE
A. P. B. C.
100-200 years old
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
MACRAME BEADS
large selection of sizes & prices
Mon.-Sat. 10:5-30
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
HILLCREST BILLIARDS RECREATION'S FINEST "If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
a quiet corner
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Foreign Auto Parts
No one under 18 admitted.
Foreign Auto Parts Discounts for Do-It-Yourselfers with Student I.D.'s
JAMES
9th & Iowa
Parts:
843-8080
Foreign Auto Service
GANG
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
Expert Repairs by Factory Trained Mechanics Services
Service:
843-5288
---
12
Tuesday, February 17, 1976
University Daily Kansan
@
FALLEY'S
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OPEN 7 a.m.--MIDNIGHT—7 DAYS
PRICES GOOD TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 17-FEBRUARY 22
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
B.
49c
79c
Ohse Economy
Minced Luncheon Meat lb. 79c
Swift Premium
Brown & Serve Sausage 8 oz. 89c
Ohse—6 Varieties
Luncheon Meats 6 oz. 49c
Ohse Wieners lb. 89c
Mortons
Chicken-in-a-Basket 32 oz. $2^{09}
Whole
Channel Catfish lb. 89c
Falley's Fluff Pack
Ground Beef 3 to 5 pound avg. 69c lb.
Hot—Medium—Mild
R. B. Rice's Sausage lb. $1^{49}
R. B. Rice's Chili lb. 89c
89c
49c
89c
$2^{09}
89c
69 $^{\mathrm{c}}$ lb.
$149
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
BISQUICK
60 oz. $1.29 regular
$1.63
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 22
COUPON
89c
Bisquick BUTTERPLACE JACKING MIX
FALLEY'S
Hunt's
TOMATO SAUCE
8 oz. 6 for $1 regular $1.35
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 22
COUPON
FALLEY'S
KIX CEREAL
9 oz.
49c
regular
65c
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good thru Feb. 22
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FALLEY'S
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9 oz. 49c regular
65c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 22
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Mrs. Butterworth's
SYRUP
24 oz $1.09 regular
$1.35
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 22
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Mrs. Butterworth's
SYRUP regular
24 oz $1.09 $1.35
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 22
COUPON
oz. 79c
Jeno's Frozen PIZZA 79c 12 oz. Beer 12 oz. cans 6 pack $129 Star Kist CHUNK LIGHT Tuna 6½ oz. 49c R.C.-DIET RITE or 7-Up 16 oz. 8 pack 99c plus deposit Gala Jumbo Towels 49c Hunt's Tomato Juice 46 oz. 49c
Star Kist CHUNK LIGHT Tuna
6 1/2 oz. 49c
R.C.-DIET RITE or
7-Up
16 oz. 99C plus
8 pack deposit
7-Up
Welch Grape Juice ... 40 oz. $99c
Brach Chocolate Covered Candies... 12 oz. $99c
Purina
Beef & Egg Dog Food... 25 pound $499
Folgers
Coffee... all grinds 1 pound $119
Towels
16 oz. 99c plus
8 pack deposit
49c
Hunt's
Tomato
Juice
46 oz. 49c
46 oz. 49c
Nabisco Premium
Crackers
59c
16 oz.
Betty Crocker
Snackin' Cake ... 14½ oz. **59¢**
Betty Crocker
Fudge Brownie Mix ... 22½ oz. **79¢**
Kraft
Macaroni & Cheese Dinners ... 7¼ oz. **4 for $1**
Kraft
Koogle ... 12 oz. **3 for $1**
Chef Boy-ar-dee
Beef-o-ghetti...15 oz. 2 for **89¢**
Chef Boy-ar-dee
Spaghetti & Meatballs 15 oz. 2 for **89¢**
Chef Boy-ar-dee
Beefaroni...15 oz. 2 for **89¢**
Franco-American
Spaghetzi...15 oz. 4 for **$1**
Nabisco Premium Crackers
Nabisco Premium
Crackers
16 oz. 59c
Campbell's
Chicken-Noodle
SOUP
5 10½ oz. $1
cans
Bright & Early Imitation
Orange
Juice
5 6 oz. $1
cans
Musselman's
Apple Sauce
4 16 oz. $1
cans
Aurora
Bathroom
TISSUE
2 pkgs 89c
dozen 99c
Musselman's Apple Sauce
Shurfine
**Cut Green Beans** ... 16 oz. **4 for $1**
Van Camp
**Pork & Beans** ... 16 oz. **3 for $1**
Brooks
**Chili-Hot Beans** ... 16 oz. **3 for $1**
Shurfine
**Golden Corn** ... 16 oz. **3 for $1**
Food King
**Plums** ... 29 oz. **49c**
Food King
**Pears** ... 29 oz. **49c**
16 oz. $1
cans
Aurora Bathroom TISSUE
2pkgs89c
Twin Pack
Pringle's Potato Chips...9 oz. $89^{c}$
171 oz.
Family Size Cheer...$3^{99}$
Food King
Golden or White Hominy...14 oz. 5 for $1
Food King
Rice...4 pound bag $99^{c}$
Food King
Sliced American Cheese...12 oz. $99^{c}$
Food King
Margarine...16 oz. 3 for $1
dozen 99°
Salad 49c
Cherry Tomatoes pint
Crisp-Solid $1
Head Lettuce 3 heads
Midd $1
Yellow Onions 4 lbs.
Tender-Snappy 2 for 39c
Carrots 1 lb. pkg.
Michigan 3 lb. bag 69c
Jonathan Apples
Fresh Tender 8 oz. bunch 59c
Asparagus
Catsup
Hunt's Catsup Shurfine ORANGE DRINK Our Own Brand ICE CREAM Wilderness CHERRY PIE FILLING U.S. No. 1 Red POTATOES Large Navel SUNKIST Oranges 32 oz. 69c 46 oz. 39c 1/2 gallon 88c 21 oz. 49c 10 pound bag 99c 10 for 99c
½ gallon 88 $ ^{c} $
CHERRY PIE FILLING
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BEAUTIFUL
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.89
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Wednesday, February 18.1976
Historians find new importance in minorities
See page 2
A man holds the American flag aloft.
Staff photo
Eudora patriot
Oscar Broers, Eudora, installs a flag along Main St. in downtown Eudora. Small towns like Eudora, once thought to be dying out, seem to be making a comeback, according to the mayors of Eudora, Baldwin City and Tonganoxie. See story, page seven.
Senate election polls open today
Student elections for student body president and vice president, class officers, student senators and the satelliteUND will be today and tomorrow.
Poll will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
both days in the Kansas Union lobby,
Summerfield Hall and on the fourth floor
of Wesco Hall near the west entrance.
Today there is a polling booth in Blake Hall, and tomorrow there will be a polling booth in Learned Hall.
Nunemaker district polls will be open from 5 to 7 tonight and tomorrow night. Tonight there will be polls at Kappa Sigma fraternity, Ellsworth Hall, Oliver Hall, Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority and Retrieve Sellers Pearson Hall.
Med Center seeks extra funds
Tomorrow night there will be district polls at Lewis Hall, Phi Kappa Theta fraternity, Pi Gamma Delta fraternity, Corbin Hall and Delta Chi fraternity.
By BILL SNIFFEN
Students will be required to present their KU IDs and spring registration cards when they vote.
Staff Writer
TOPEKA-KU Medical Center administers yesterday asked the state legislature for an additional $3.1 million in funding to the University of Kansas basketball hearings.
The $1.3 million supplemental aid request is needed because the Med Center's functions will be "disrupted" without it, Charcellier Archie R. Dykes said.
The top priority, Dykes said, is an increase in the expenditures ceiling for the Med Center. The University has requested an increase in the 1.1 million ceiling.
"We have requested and our Board of Regents has approved an increase in the expenditure ceiling on hospital revenue during the current fiscal year of $1.1
"The reason for that request," he continued, "is to enable the hospital to meet the rising costs of health care and services provided by the hospital."
million," Dykes told 22 members of the House Ways and Means committee.
Gov. Robert F. Bennett had cut the Med Center's request to $875,000.
"We don't believe the governor's recommendations are feasible to get us through the fiscal year without severe internal disruptions of the services we Dykes told the committee, "We appeal to the legislature for the full $1.1 million."
The Med Center's supplemental aid request was made along with its fiscal 1977 budget presentation—that budget totals $3.3 million.
Supplemental requests were made yesterday for: an increase in the Med Center's expenditure ceiling; $153,000 from the general revenue fund to pay for increasing utility costs; $1.38 million from the general revenue fund to replace hospital revenue pledged to bonds; $730,000 to replace losses lost from declining federal education; and authorizing medical student education; and authorizing medical student education; and authorizing medical student fee increase, to replace federal funds.
The expenditures ceiling is now
e 758,253.
Bennett has recommended that the legislature approve all requests but two; the raise of the expenditures ceiling and the appropriation of $153,000 to pay utility costs.
Campaign practices stir protests; Shapiro, Tasheff deny impropriety
By CHUCK ALEXANDER
Staff Writer
Charges of unethical campaign practices prompted an emergency meeting of the Student Senate Elections Committee last night.
David Shapiro and Mark Anderson, candidates for student body president and vice president, were charged with door-to-door campaigning in a residence hall and used Sachem Circle leaflets supporting the satellite union for their own campaigne
After the meeting, the other candidates,
Tedde Tasheff and Steve Owens, were
accused of conducting a similar door-to-door
door campaign.
A petition protesting door-to-door campaigning by Shapiro and Anderson was presented to the committee by three Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall residents who represented 11 other women who signed the petition.
The petition, which was written Monday morning, cited a regulation from KU residence hall policy that prohibits "room to room canvassing."
The petition also demanded that "definitive action in response to this complaint will be taken in response to this complaint immediately (within 24 hours) or we may be forced to pursue this matter elsewhere."
When notified of the allegation, Shapira said the GSF petition drew more starters by showing signs of dissatisfaction.
He said that past candidates had been allowed to campaign door to door without question.
"All we're trying to do is communicate with people and it's said when a little technicality that wasn't brought up in years that wasn't used under us in our campaign," Sanire said.
Lynn Bryans, Corbin Hall resident, said Tedde Tasheff, student body president candidate, and her running mate, Steve Owens, had conducted a campaign last week in Corbin similar to that of Shapiro's door-to-door cannon in GRP.
Bryans said Tasheff had knocked on the users of a few residents on her floor. "I was stunned," she said.
were drawn from their rooms by other things.
"It was just the noise that brought us out and some people who were in their pajamas peeked out to see what was going on," she said.
Sheila Everhart, Corbin Hall resident, said the women were surprised when they saw Tasheff and Eoffen because of the lateness of the hour—about 9:30 p.m.—and the fact men aren't usually allowed on the floors during weekdays.
Bryan's said the incident took place during the floor's study hours and, by caught sighting it, caught his attention.
Tasheff said the door-to-door campaigning she had done Monday was cleared through the proper channels and that she was escorted by a Corbin resident. Tasheff said, however, that the impromptu floor meetings were done at the request of the
Tasheff said she had gone door to door in a few instances Monday night but denied that she had engaged in door-to-door campaigning last week.
See CAMPAIGN page 5
Two legislators criticized the Med Center's aid request at the meeting.
State Rep. Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park and chairman of the committee, said more realistic estimates of budgets would make supplemental requests unnecessary.
"Even last year," he told Dykes, "we increased the estimate over what you said it the estimation to be. And now, we find the estimate exceeds this by $1.3 million."
"What it's telling us," Lady continued, as we really aren't doing a very good budgeting; we're budgeting, and then planning how to move the budget at the end of the year."
State Rep. John Carlin, D-Smoll, said the consistently low budget estimates and the need for supplemental increases were "frustrating."
"In general," he said, "the Med Center hasn't done as good a job as they could have. They could've been more realistic." Dykes said the Med Center's budget was difficult to determine 18 months in advance because of increasing medical costs.
This cooperation will cause better understanding of the budget estimating procedure and a greater likelihood of accurate estimates. Dykes was
After the meeting, Dykes said that the Mid Center's fiscal year 1978 budget, in now being prepared with the help of the legislature's budget analysts.
After the budget hearing, both Lady and Carlin said they doubted that the Med Center would receive all the funds it had requested.
Dykes said that if the expenditure ceiling weren't raised, the Med Center would have financial problems before the end of this fiscal year.
"We'll have to live within the budget," he cut and "to do that would mean cutting back" and "cutting down."
"The persons who would be hurt would be the patients themselves."
David W. Robinson, acting executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said the Med Center was treating more patients than it had been a year ago, and at less cost a patient. But the total costs of the Med Center's operations has increased he said.
"We have to spend more money to process more patients," he said. "But the
See MED CENTER page 11
Sign limit may keep out motel
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
Staff Writer
Specifications of the city sign ornament may prompt a model builder to locate in
the area.
Robert L. Woodbury, representative of Midwest Motel Inc., said he was "very serious" about moving a planned 41-unit Best Western motel to another city because the City Commission had refused to permit use of a sign larger than city specifications.
Woodbury appeared before the commission at its weekly meeting last night to ask permission to erect 154 square feet of signs in front of the planned model. It is to be placed in a Big Boy Family Restaurant, 740 Iowa City, Chester County, sign may not be larger than 90 square feet.
MAYOR BARKLEY CLARK said the commission regretted its decision, which was 4 to 1 for denial of Woodbury's request. However, Clark said because other firms required it to meet the specifications, it wouldn't be fair to make a special exception.
He said exceptions could be made when road visibility wasn't impaired. A 90-square-foot sign looks much larger along Massachusetts than it does along Iowa, he said.
"It's not the size of the sign but how it looks to people." Pierce said.
Commissioner Fred Pence cast the only dissenting vote.
off Iowa, Woodbury said, it would appear small to motorists. He said he couldn't build the model if he wasn't assured the sign would be clear enough that those entering Lawrence from the turpurea.
Wooldbury said the Ramada Inn and the Holiday Inn both had signs larger than city signage.
COMMISSIONER MARNIE Argersinger said visibility was clear in the area and people who usually stay in Best Western motels would find it.
The sign ordinance was passed in October 1974. Clerk said, with the understanding that those motels would alter their signs by October 1979.
Commissioner Carl Mibec, who said he would support or ordinance exceptions if signs didn't impair visibility, suggested that thebury purchase a special Best Western sign.
THE COMMISSION also studied and approved several existing and proposed traffic controls on the University of Kansas campus.
Because uniform signs are rented by managers of Best Western motels, Woodbury said, it would be difficult to change size or style of the sign.
Clark said city commission approval was needed so violators could try their cases in court.
on the request of Mike Thorns,
Knox director of police and parking, the
officers.
limits and stop signs on several campus streets.
Thomas said yesterday afternoon he had asked the city's Traffic Safety Commission to study KU traffic controls. City ordinances, which govern campus traffic, haven't been reviewed in several years, he said.
MOST OF THE CONTROLS endorsed by the commission are in effect, Thomas said, and those that aren't will be effective soon. The Traffic Safety Commission unanimously asked to ask the commission to approve these controls:
The establishment of 20 m.p.h. speeds on Baumgartner Drive from Jayhawk Blvd. to Mississippi; Jayhawk Blvd. from the Omina Omega Station to 13th; Lilac Lane from the Omina Omega Station to 14th; Drive from Mississippi to West Campus Road; North College Drive from 11th circling back to 11th; Popular Lane from Jayhawk Blvd. to Sunflower Road; the drive from South Lake and Ellis drives north of 19th and Sunflower Road from 16th to Memorial Drive.
STOP SIGN installation at Allen Field House service drive onto Naismith Drive, Illinois at Sunnyside, Memorial Stadium exit at 11th, North College Drive exit at 11th, parking lot exit at Naismith Drive and north of x-south exits of X-Zone parking lot.
Thomas said KU police officers would warn violators of the traffic signs for about 30 seconds.
In other business, Clark suggested that city officials and civic organizations undertake the development of Riverfront Park, a proposed recreation area in the vicinity of Tennessee and the Kansas River, as a bicentennial project.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is planning to help develop the park but won't have funds until fiscal 1977. Construction is expected to take from seven to 10 years.
"Parades and flag-waving are fine," Arngership said, "but I'd like to see something come out of this bicentennial that will last another hundred years."
Clark suggested that city officials and various public groups meet soon to discuss a plan.
★ ★ ★
City will study report charges
The second half of a report filed Jan. 27 by three members of a six-man committee that investigated city mismanagement charges against the mayor tonight by the Lawrence City Commission.
The report, signed by Dennis Smith, Alvin Samuels and Muriel Paul, includes charges and recommendations concerning the offices of City Manager Buford Watson, Personnel Director Brent McFall and Director of Public Works George Williams.
Air becoming battleground in growing smoking war
By BRUCESPENCE
Staff Writer
"A custom laothome to the eye, hateful to the nose, harmful to the brain, dangerous to the lungs, and in the black stinging fume there, nearest a serious Stygian smoke of the pit that is bottomless.
—King James I of Great Britain, 1604.
Tobacco is the ultimate paradox.
It's strange that smoking could bring so much pressure to so many and you be the source of so much harm.
But that is exactly the crux of the war between smokers who think it is their right to smoke whenever and wherever they please, and non-smokers who are demanding to breathe smoke-free air.
THE INCREASINGLY MILITANT tobacocophones are out so much to spuach the use of tobacco as to restrict its use to private places where people have not had to choose I have to choke in clouds of secondhand smokes.
"one vehement nonsmoker said, 'but we have not yet found a way to stop breathing. If it comes down to not smoking or no breathing, I think I should go home and be a habilite that I just haven’t been able to break."
"If they want to ruin their health, that's fine with
"Smoking more than one cigar at a time," Mark Twain once said, "is its excessive smoking."
TELL THAIL to the growing group of antimowers across the nation, and they will likely reply that any smoking in enclosed public areas is excessive. And we should be prepared to intervene in an effort to force their point with legislation.
A number of organizations, ranging from the American Lung Association, the American Cancer Society and the American Heart Association to antismoking groups such as GASP (Group Against Pollution), have successfully pushed for nonsmoking legislation in 31 states and scores of U.S. cities.
Most of the no-smoking laws, which prohibit smoking in places such as elevators, hospitals, physicians waiting rooms, museums, stores, restaurants, buses and subways are considered
weak by these groups. But the antitumack groups view them as at least a tooe hold. They are,
KANAS HAS had a no-smoking law since July 1. However, it apparently has been used only to a limited extent. It is considered by some antismoking spokesmen to be one of the weakest no-smoking laws of any passed in the 31 states that have such legislation.
The statute, primarily sponsored by State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, makes it unlawful to be a registered nurse in the state posted by the presiding officer, owner, leaseholder or person in charge and applies only to government meetings, elevators, indoor theaters, libraries, art galleries, nursing homes, waiting rooms, medical-care facilities and buses.
Conviction can mean a fine of up to $25
The law is effective only on a voluntary basis. If, for example, the presiding officer of a public meeting decides to post a nonsmoking sign, then and only then is he backed up by law. If the presiding officer doesn't want to ban smoking, a nonsmoker's protest can go unbeheaded.
The voluntary basis catch is the part of the stature that the antismiskers object to the most.
Booth said he thought the bill was a go
DONNA JENSEN, public information director of the Kaiman Law Association, says the law, though popular, has not changed.
She also said that she hadn't seen any no-smoking signs up in the Capitol building since the law passed.
"Don't get me wrong," she said. "I don't want to take away anything from Senator Booth. The law is a step forward. I mean, we really didn't expect to pass it. as was it. We did it in a smoke-filled room."
"IT'S SIMPLY that for the first time, nonsmokers
There have been no reports of convictions for violating the no-smoking statute, and Booth is quick to point out that the intention of the law isn't to "place a guard on every elevator."
have a little something to back them up," Booth said.
Jensen, however, said she thought that most Kansans weren't even aware of the law and, if they were, few knew exactly what it encompassed.
THE WEEK OF JAN. 11-17 was National Health Week, sponsored by the Kansas Lung Association and other organizations. Its aim was to inform Kansas of the new no-smoking law and to urge nonsmokers to apply public pressure on the legislature as well as on public establishments to broaden non-smoking areas.
Jensen said one of the biggest disappointments for the antismoking groups was the deletion of a clause from last year's no-smoking bill that would prohibit businesses as well as restaurants. The clause was deleted, Jensen said, because businessmen were accustomed to having the sales floors were marked off against smoking.
See SMOKING page 10
2
Wednesday, February 18, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Senate may OK death bill
TOPEKA-Kansas The Kansas governor gave tentative approval yesterday to a bill that would reinstate the death penalty in this state for all first-degree, permissed
Preliminary approval came after nearly two hours of emotional debate before packed galleries in the Senate chamber, where a year ago another bill designed to
impose the death penalty unless
if the Senate votes its final approval to the bill today, it goes to the House.
If the Senate gives its final approval to the bill today, it goes to the House. The measure, if passed by both houses, would unforestain at least the hands of Gov. Rick Santorum.
Lawyers can use ads
PHILADELPHIA—Delegates to the American Bar Association midyear meeting voted yesterday to grant limited advertising of fees and specialties by lawyers in the state.
The ABA's policy-making House of Delegates voted 184 to 180 to adopt a watered-down version of an earlier lawyer advertising proposal, limiting it so that attorney general Justin Wagner could not be voted on.
Before the vote, the delegates defeated by a margin of 135 to 118 a provision that would have allowed lawyers to advertise in directories put out by consumer agencies.
The delegates rejected another move to further weaken the advertising plan by eliminating authority for the inclusion of information about fees.
Hearst told to "fight or die"
SAN FRANCISCO—Patricia Hearst said yesterday that she timed her dark days of captivity by sound—the tinkling bell of an ice cream truck, the clicking of guns
At one point in her trial testimony Heart told of being given an ultimatum to fight with her Symbionese Liberation Army captors or be killed.
She stammered as she recalled the words of her chief captor, Donald "Clapuque" Defrieve, saying 'he said, fight or die, that I would either have to stay with them until they were dead.' She retold him.
With her attorney, F. Lee Bailey, leading her along the path of her narrative, Fearst told of her distorted perceptions while locked for weeks in a heat, stuffy room.
She remembered a radio blaring music, and "sometimes they'd have two radios and the television on at the same time."
She said there were also indoctrination sessions in the ideology of the SLA.
Committee to cut 10% salary hike
The Kansas House Ways and Means Committee is set to begin hearings this afternoon on fiscal 1977 budget requests for the University of Kansas Lawrence campus.
University administrators will present cases for what they have called top priority items—a 10 per cent faculty salary increase and a 12 per cent other operating expenditures increase—as well as other budget requests.
Rep. Duane McGill, R-Winfield, speaker of the House, and Rep. Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, have expressed opposition to the full 10 per cent increase.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said yesterday that the main arguments for
the salary increase would be that KU needs to be more competitive with the salaries of peer institutions and that inflation has eaten up the salary increases of the past two years.
The 10 per cent salary increase is the third phase of Gov. Robert Bennett's three-year plan to raise KU's faculty salaries to the median salaries of similar institutions.
Shankel said he hadn't heard of any legislative opposition to the 12 per cent increase in the other operating expenses. "It would be University expenditure, except salaries."
KU's $88.77 million total budgetary request includes an extra $537,668 to cover this year's utilities costs and $1.6 million for classified and unclassified personnel, needed as a result of expected enrollment increases.
House budget committee to hear faculty salary increase request
Rep. Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park,
said he thought most committee members
were too liberal.
TOPEKA (AP)—The chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee predicted yesterday his committee would approve something less than a 10 per cent salary increase for state university and college faculty members despite a strong plea by the chairman of the State Board of Regents.
"It will be somewhere between 5 per cent and 10 per cent, but I can't predict the exact amount."
The position of the regents was stated by Prudence Hutton chairman of the Board of Regents.
Hutton said that nothing else in the regents' requests were as important as the third installment of a three-year salary program.
"We sincerely feel that the funding of the request for the third year is imperative, and our most urgent pleas will be for that request." Hutton said.
The program, funded by the legislature the first two years, called for 10 per cent of donations.
the three state universities and 11 per cent for the three state colleges.
Gov. Robert F. Bennett has re-
commissioned funding of the regents' faculty salary, reqi-
Hutton said that a large part of the increase in the first two years of the program were eaten up by inflation and didn't actually represent a gain.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Gerald R. Ford announced yesterday the reorganization of the beleaguered U.S. intelligence community. The plan, Ford said in a nationally broadcast news conference, strikes a middle ground between the state and the class intelligence capability and the need to protect the rights of U.S. citizens.
CIA Director George Bush will be in charge of a new committee managing the intelligence community, and also appointed a new, three-member commission of private citizens to oversee intelligence and revamped the secret Fort Committee, which makes covert intelligence recom-
Alfuding to numerous leaks of information from Capital Hill, he said the Constitution protected a member of Congress from punishment for disclosure but didn't prevent a staff member from illegally making information public.
New intelligence plan announced by Ford
The President's plan didn't include many
Rep. Ots Pike, D-N.Y., chairman of the now defunct House intelligence committee, said he thought Ford's proposals kept in mind the fact that a small number of people in the工程部 "small
"Congress has to clean up its own house," he said.
of the recommendations made by the House Intelligence Committee.
"It's going to depend on those people when we go back to the abuses of the past."
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Wednesday, February 18. 1976
3
Historians beginning to discover minorities' historical importance
By KAREN LEONARD
Staff Writer
Written history has traditionally been a chronicle of wars and kings. But historians are becoming more aware that history is a social process, and the overlooked contributions of women and minorities to American history now are being studied.
"Within the last 15 years, there has been a tremendous basic shift in the definition of history," Rita Napar, acting assistant professor of history, said yesterday "There have been a number of history should be a history of all the people, minority groups tend to be left out of this."
Napier is one of five history professors at the University of Kansas who are researching women and minorities in American history.
SHE IS DOING an ethno-history of the Tingit Indians of southeastern Alaska. She said she became interested in the tribe and taught secondary school children in a Thought village.
Although she didn't go to the village with the idea of studying the Tingits, her research was more valid as a result of her personal contact with them, she said, and how can portray Indians as people and write stories that reflects their own views.
The current interest in minority groups like the Thingits stems from the commitment now being made by society to treat its minorities more fairly, she said, and when that group is taken more seriously, so is its history.
DAVID KATZMAN, associate professor of history, agreed that the study of social and ethnic history was on the rise and was a major contribution to the field of ethnic awareness in the United States.
"Some students are motivated by finding their own past. Other students are interested in taking a group and finding their place in social history." Katzman said. "It's a way of finding community within the larger mass of society."
He said his own interest in minority and ethnic history was probably a result of the fact that he was a member of
"It makes you conscious of being a majority, of being different," Katzman
His interest in minorities also comes from a strong sense of social justice, he said, and he has been active in the civil rights movement since 1959.
The value of research on minority behavior is its potential to affect questions of policy, culture and community to understand the quality of life in the past to understand life in the present; to evaluate current government programs, policies; and the effects of past programs, he said.
HISTORY IS NO longer being written as
Highway Patrol plans inspection for city vehicles
Kansas Highway Patrol personnel begin inspecting city vehicles at the request of Lawrence officials attempting to improve working conditions for city employees.
The inspections were recommended last month by a six-member committee that investigated management of city departments.
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said yesterday that police vehicles would be inspected first and inspections of other city vehicles would follow, at no expense to the city.
After each vehicle inspection, be said, the city will be told whether repairs of tires, brakes or lights are needed. Widgeman said that regular maintenance crews are performed regularly.
The inspections, which may last several weeks, begin at 2 p.m. at the Douglas County Fatality Center.
Use Kansan Classifieds
literature alone, he said. The new social historians use computers, he said, and their work is the only way to do it.
"That's the impact we expect to have by interpreting the past," he said. "The social sciences are too contemporary. They don't deal with social processes over time."
Katzman has published a book entitled "pre-ghetto Black Detroit: 1830-1900," and is now writing a book on domestic servants from the Civil War to World War I.
Regina Morantz, visiting assistant professor of history, said the study of women's history had suggested that some of her observations of events occurred in private in the home.
Through her research, she said, she realized that women weren't a peripheral species.
"WOMEN HAVE NOT been visible in public places. To find out what women have been doing, you have to redefine what you're interested in." Morantz said.
Historians are beginning to ask questions
about how they might like to grow up in a 1950s
century family.
questions are asked and the connection between the family and society is made, she
continues.
Morantz is teaching two courses on women's history this semester. She said there had been a wonderful response to the questions she closed out two hours after enrollment began.
OTHER PROFESSORS ALSO reported to student interest in their minority cohort.
W. Stitt Robinson, professor of history,
said more than 100 students at a time
enrolled in his course on American Indian
history, and members of the class were
native Americans.
Robinson said that in his research on Cherokees in the American Revolution, he was attempting to study them from an Indian's point-of-view.
"Too often in the past we've talked about non history from a white point-of-view," he said.
William Tuttle Jr., professor of history now on leave, is researching Afro-American studies.
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Wednesday, February 18, 1976
University Daily Kausan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
One primary enough
On Feb. 24, the New Hampshire primary will set off a whirlwind that will take candidates through 31 primaries in five months. By the time the contest begins of the candidates will be physically exhausted and financially depleted.
One method thru has been suggested to help calm down the process would allow for a national primary in early August. Nominees from each political party would be selected by direct popular vote of the people in all 50 states. If no candidate received as much as 40 per cent of the vote, there would be a run-off election 28 days later between the top two contenders. National conventions would select vice presidential candidates and adopt platforms.
THE NATIONAL PRIMARY would make the presidential selection process more representative of the people's will. This year 19 states, including Kansas, won't have any kind of primary. The delegates will be selected by a committee to be elected in nominating conventions and the common voter will have little, if any, say in the process.
In the states that have primaries, there is no guarantee that all the candidates will be on the ballot. When two primaries occur on the same day or in a different state, they may decide to devote all his efforts to one and not even enter the other.
FINANCES PLAY a large role in determining which primaries a candidate will enter. The campaign spending law has set limits on how much one candidate, who accepts federal matching funds, may spend in each state. The limit is based on the number of applications from $200,000 in smaller states to more than $2 million in California and New York.
If a candidate entered every state primary, the total cost could come to
$19.5 million. But the overall national spending limit is $10 million, so candidates must decide which primaries they wish to enter. When potential voters have been selected, the voter may be unable to express his choice unless write-ins are allowed.
A NATIONAL primary would help uncomplicate the system. The candidates who meet the requirements will be listed on the ballots in all 50 states. Also, the candidates won't have to run from one state to another during the campaign. We've moved more Instead we develop a national campaign that probably wouldn't last as long and maybe wouldn't place the voter in a state of apathy by mid-March.
The advocates of the convention selection system use the argument that a national primary would force candidates to rely more heavily on television coverage and there would be less personal candidate-voter contact. With the increase in assassination attempts, maybe a small decrease in personal contact wouldn't be that bad. Besides, in Kansas the ordinary voter has no say in the nomination process. Wouldn't the decrease in hand shakes and kissed babies be made up for by the increase in voter choice?
The idea of a national primary certainly isn't a new one. It developed originally during the Progressive Party movement of the early 1980s, which also proposed the recall of public officials and the direct election of United States senators. Although progress has been made in other areas, the nomination of candidates for the highest office in the land has for the most part been left in the hands of a few party regulars. Maybe during the next four years, steps will be taken toward developing a saner system of presidential election.
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
The Federal Election Commission (FEC) born 15 months ago during a post-Watergate period, will only care for a couple of weeks to live.
Earlier this month, as part of a far reaching and somewhat confusing decision on the U.S. Supreme Court gave Congress 30 days to restructure the young federal agency. Because Congress has lost quite a bit of its reformist zeal and the Senate's war against Senators and Congressmen have been offended by what they consider to be the agency's arrogant and high-handed manner, it seems very likely that senators will just let the diey die.
IF THE FEC, which is supposed to supervise and enforce the 1974 reforms, dies, odds are that the reforms will also die. If they do, the Campaign Reform Law of 1974 will be just another one of those well informed ideas that didn't work out.
The idea did have a healthy and optimistic start. The law, which was passed in October 1974, was intended to end the kind of undercover big-money campaign contributions that would allow them to usually lump together under the watergate.
IT WAS ALSO intended to equalize the spending of a marketing campaign, thus end the possibility that a candidate could buy his way into office through an overload advertising campaign.
Election watchdog needed
The bill isn't a week one. It requires frequent financial reports from all candidates. It requires a candidate can spend. Under it, presidential candidates can spend a maximum of $10 million
The law also provides for
Caucuses decisive in '76
selection that seem to favor liberal, insurgent candidate
Most of the attention in this year's presidential campaign is centered on states with primaries. But if the campaigns are as close together they seem now, the debates could be influential, caucuses could be influential,
Party regulars and state leaders are much more important in the Republican caucuses.
This year President Gerald R. Ford and former Georgia Gov. George W. Bush would campaign in all the caucus states. Fred Harris is trying to get off to a good start in the race against campaign from fizzling out.
In 1972 McGovern benefited from the new minorities, women and young delegates. This year the rules have been changed somewhat, but affirmative action guidelines are still affecting the composition of delegations. With several liberal candidates in the field, McGovern might be bely any one candidate much.
CAUCUSES HAVE been heavily criticized, especially by candidates who don't get many
SINCE 1968, caucuses have declined in popularity and changed in character, especially for the Democrats. More than one half the vote came from caucus states that the Democrats leaders had considerable influence over them. The Democrats have since adopted rules regarding delegate
The Democrats will choose 24 per cent of their delegates in nonpriinary states and the Republicans per cent of the caucuses. George McGovens's campaign received a great deal of momentum from the caucus states. The other candidates, including mention of Henry "Scoop" Jackson, did poorly in the caucuses.
By JOHN HICKEY Contributing Writer
These rules will decrease the likelihood of large uncommitted delegations or of favorite sons, to campainment in cancer states.
George Wallace and his staff think their chances are reduced if they don't have a system generally. Wallace plans to campaign in only a few caucus states because, he says, "the leaders are hostile toward him."
more for the delegates he got in New Hampshire than for a comparable number in caucus states. Early caucuses this year will be challenging, willing to spend more in caucuses, but their cost still
THE DEMOCRATS have adopted two significant rule changes since 1968. Delegates are required to themselves to a candidate or to explicitly state that they are uncommitted. Also, any candidate with at per cent of the vote may proportionate share of delegates.
Sen. James Buckley, former Sen. Eugene McCarthy and the American Civil Liberties Union said when they filed a suit against the law.
The Republicans have essentially the same system they had in 1964 when Barry Goldwater swiped the caucuses.
public financing of election campaigns. Public funding is intended to give poor candidates as good a chance at reaching the voters as rich ones. Each major political organization in the million from the government, education, each individual presidential hopeful can qualify for matching federal funds.
And that is what the Supreme Court said when it rulated that campaign spending calls were illegal and that, although it was constitutional to limit a contributor to $1,000 per can-
TO QUALIFY for federal
found wrong with the FEC was that two-thirds of its members were congressionally appointed. The court ruled that he should be held under other things, required that all the members be presidential appointees. That would be simple enough to fix, if it weren't so. That was Watergate was two years ago instead of one.
THE COURT did say, however, that it was legal to use public funds for election campaigns and that if a candidate receives public funds, he then was obliged to observe a spending ceiling.
It also said that it was legal for the government to give $2 million to each of the major parties. Buckley and the others bringing suit had argued that giving money to just the
Republicans and the Democrats stifled new parties and was unfair to smaller political groups.
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
Perhaps an FEC made up of only presidential appointees is better than a list of candidates (although it could probably write a law that would allow Congress to submit a list of names to the President for him to approve).
But campaign reform doesn't have much chance of long-term success, so sort of regulatory agency. When problems come up, the problem of a third party, for example, has to be some sort of ruling.
Still, a weak watchdog is better than no watchdog at all. As long as there is an agency, the time it should be changed and amended to fit unforeseen problems. Time will increase unfairness, but it will bring less unfairness.
And that is where we are today. All the presidential candidates have said they would continue to follow the old spending limits. This is understandable, because most of them have already received federal funds, which they would have paid back if they had passed the limit—not to mention the adverse publicity of being the only candidate to go over the limit.
AND WITHOUT a separate agency, reports of campaign spending must go through the same House and Senate channels they went through before the law. The reports from the House show the same procedure that worked so badly for so long.
THE 1976 CAMPAIGN will probably go on pretty much as like the Supreme Court hadn't ruled at all. The momentum of the present campaign laws will carry through even if the FEC does not.
UNFORTUNATELY FOR the law, it also infringes upon the freedom of speech by restricting the amount an individual is able to spend to make his views known. That, at least, is what
funds, a candidate must raise $5,000 through contributions of $250 or less in 20 states. After that, the federal government will each contribution of $250 or less, up to a total of $5 million.
The law also tries to end the problem of "fat cat" contributors by limiting contributions by individuals to $1,000 and by organizations to $15,000.
THERE ARE all sorts of problems with the present reform law. They are loopholes that allow inefficiency and there is unfairness towards splinter parties. The law enables candidates concerned only with publicizing one issue, instead ofation, to qualify for federal funds.
About the only thing the court
The country went for two centuries with hardly any law at all. That proved not only to be unfair but also dangerous.
UNDOUBTEDLY, caucuses are cheaper than primaries. In 1972 McGovern spent 15 times
New Hampshire's 3-ring circus now the greatest show on earth
delegates from them. They are said to be unrepresentative of the voters of the state and to hold the party's power in party workers. In Minnesota in 1972, about nine per cent of the Democratic voters participated in the caucuses. That was one of the highest figure for any state.
By JOHN JOHNSTON
Contributing Writer
HERE COMES THE PARADE! And heading the parade into the big top is the master of ceremonies, Mr. Showbiz himself, the ringmaster. Prodded dressed in
The circus is coming to New Hampshire. Ever since I was a child I've loved the circus. I love the people of the circus.
Most of those who perform under the big top start in the beginner's category and return to their places with the bearded lady and the two-beaded girl. But while they're in practice, they couldn't be handsome.
Defenders of the caucus system say that the candidates voters in caucuses than in primaries. The voters actually get a chance to make suggestions and ask questions,
Special Focus: Campaign '76
Most of the faces have changed since I last saw the circus, but there are a few regulars who seem to make it look like they are popular of all the regulars is Humpy Dumpy. The people always seem to enjoy Humpty. His act never changes. Every year he climbs up on that wall of his and falls to the floor. And every time he farts cheer as Humpty's put him back together again.
doesn't compare with the mass media expenses of primaries.
Whether the recent rend toward more primaries is in the interest of caucuses are still important will be apparent at the conventions.
a black tuxedo and a top hat, the ringmaster sits aboard a stagecoach, which is being drawn by a team of 20 horses. He crosses the crowd and has his hat on. The circus begins.
THEN THERE'S always George the Clown, too. Georgia has his faithful followers who'll always love him, but George the Clown he's carrying a six-shooter and wearing a sheriff's badge. As usual he's got his tired little black dog on the end of a leash. And he just keeps whipping and yelling "Down, Boy, Down."
Behind Georgie is Supersonic Scoop. Scoop files through the air like a B12. 'Never seen one of them flying trapze the way he can.' The billboard outside calls him 'the man with the jet fighter wings and the nuclear warhead on his back, scare Mr Scoop. not even war,'
FOLLOWING MR. SCOOP are the invisible men, Sansen and Benfont. These guys
HERE COMES The Peanut Man. He's another of the favors. The Peanut Man has been older, the old timer, Mr. Potato Head. He can pin on any face he to fit the situation and then he can change it again. The Peanut Man seems almost every person he meets.
Marching proudly behind the Peanut Man is one of the newest attractions in the circus, "Brother-in-law of the Kenndys." Brother-in-law hasn't been much changed since he circus. He's just something of an oddity everyone likes to look at and touch.
MAKING A SPECIAL appearance in this year's circus is Milton Hospelman, Shrapnel. Milt's appearance will be dark. This will be a one-time act. He's going to be fired from the circus cannon. He's going to be shot in never-ever land—
Most of the performers are inside the tent now and the crowd is getting really excited as the last few acts march in. Mo the Magician is coming in now. Mo jokes with the crowd as he out his glass and dribbles behind his back.
THE FIRE-EATING HOOSIER follows closely behind. He's trying to take over Mo's act, but rumor has it that he doesn't like children and that he lives in a very well with crowd circles.
Next in line is the king of the circus, Jeriono. Jero does a balancing act on the high wire that's hard to beat. He's always balancing it on his left or too far to the right, because if he did it could be disastrous. Jeriono performs hundreds of feet in the air without a crash helmet. He's also scared by him, but he insists that it hasn't hurt. It's this courage that makes him the star of the show.
Sweeping up the rear of the parade is Poor Freddie. Freddie never has made it to the big time and he probably never will, but he's a man of the moment. He pops his cup to help pay his way and he sings a mean broom, too—left-handed of course.
So now the crowd sits back for the show. It'll be a long show. Keeping an eye on three rings can really be tiring. But once you've been to the circus, you're hooked forever.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Contributing Writers John Jates
Editor Carl Voyne
haven't been with the circus long, and some people wonder whether they're here at all. No one really expects to. No one really expects to.
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Administrator Assistant Manager Debbie Service
Classified Manager Manager Debbie Service
Promotion Director Assistant Manager Scutt Booth
Assistant Administrator Assistant Manager Jim Marquardt
Assistant Administrator Johnne
Publisher
David Dary
News Advisor
Business Advisor
Susanne Shaw
Mel Adams
Letters Policy
The Kansan welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 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.
A CAST OF 1000's-CAMPAIGN 76
MONTER
THAN
TOURING
INFERNO
FROM THE PRODUCER
OF'68
CAM-
PAIGN
76
THE BIGGEST DISASTER
SEQUEL YET
G
Wednesday, February 18. 1978
5
Student's mother aids integration
By ANNE SIGMAN
Staff Writer
As busing and integration problems have spread around the country, disturbances in Boston have continued. But one Boston school is free from trouble even when the rest of the city is in an uproar, its principal says.
"Whatever happens in the rest of the city does not affect what goes on in my neighborhood. Will Ella Brown, principal of Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School, said yesterday."
Brown's son Kermit, Franklin, Mass., junior, told about his mother's success in integrating her school of sixth, seventh and eighth graders.
"She has a work of handling people and she is a hard worker," he said. "She has earned that."
KERMIT SAID HIS mother was chosen principally in 1970 at a time when the community of Dorchester, the predominately white town, was forcibly removed. School is walking for a black principal.
She wasn't chosen because she was black,
he said, but because she was qualified.
The Boston principal said in a telephone
interview that one reason for her success was keeping an open mind.
Brown said the school, which had been all black before busing began in fall 1974, had become one of 25 "magnet schools" this school year. Magnet schools are schools that parents request their children be sent to, she said.
Last year the school was 68 per cent white and 32 per cent black by court order, she said. She said about one-third of the students in sent in had returned by request, this year.
Brown said she stressed a humane approach in dealing with all the children and total involvement of parents with their children's education.
"TOO OFTEN SCHOOL leaders fear parental involvement." she said.
When parents aren't involved, she said,
they seek to control. When people are asked
for advice it makes them more comfortable,
she said.
"I seldm make a move without consulting everyone for input," she said.
Fear is the primary reason for the problems in Boston, Brown said. The people who resist and resent integration fear that their old way of life will be disrupted, she said, and they fear that integration is an "open sesame" to intermarriage.
Brown said she thought people should accept internship as a way of life and let them do so.
PEOPLE ARE CONCERNED with crossing boundaries as well, she said, because Boston is composed of small ethnic communities that have very possessive attitudes.
The most important thing, she said, is to let kids get an education.
Brown said she hoped black children being sent to predominately white areas were being treated the same way she treated the children at her school.
Brown said she puts her faith in the young. But she said she didn't think racial prejudice was a problem.
We see similarities among the problems in Boston and problems in Little Rock, Ark., in which she said, but more was expected of Boston because it's famous for education.
"I will always treat all children like I treat my own three sons," she said.
BROWN SAID she thought it was futile to spend time and energy fighting the war.
Brown said that she didn't have all the answers and that she was still learning. She said a problem for many was being able to admit their mistakes.
"I'm not afraid to reject an idea that didn't work," she said.
Attention was focused on her school, Brown said, because the problems had created a competitive spirit and a constant pressure.
Her school offers the best it can, she said, and parents can send their children there knowing they will receive courtesy, safety and a good education.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18 8-12 p.m.
'Millionaire at Midnight' & 'Oz'
THE HAWK'S NEST
In other action, the committee condemned the use of satellite union brochures
Stapiro and Anderson took about 700 students from the university to stampel "Stapiro-Anderson" -78" on the back of the brochures. The brochures were distributed in several University residence halls.
DOORS OPEN 7:30
Woner said that because Anderson-Shapiro had used the brochure without Sachem's approval, it constituted a demonstration on Shapiro and Anderson's part.
"I didn't know we were in violation and I guess it was a serious error in judgement," Jeff Bryd, Shapiro's campaign manager, said during the meeting.
THURSDAY, FEB.19 5:30-6:30 p.m.
presents
Thornbrugh said the group would take the matter to the AURH Judiciary Board for a hearing. Thornbrugh said the protest wasn't politically motivated.
Bruce Woner, committee chairman, said he'd delegated the responsibility of calling the women to the Senate office secretary and was under the impression the women were called or had messages concerning the meeting left for them.
The '12:30 Jazz Ensemble'
Director: Bob Foster Guest Solosist Jay Sollenberger
Dinner Special $1.25
Chili French Bread
Beverage Tossed Salad
Begins 6 p.m.
Level 2-Kansas Union Produced by SUF
Woner said he had scheduled the meeting at 9 p.m. to avoid possible conflicts with a biology exam a few of the women who signed the petition would be attending.
Campaign ...
From page one
Thornbruch said the committee didn't give the supporters of the petition enough time to tell their side of the issue. Thornbruch also noted that she wasn't notified of last night's meeting.
turnover for the meeting scheduled earlier. After hearing more information related to the petition, the committee said the matter was in progress and that University Residence Halls (AURH) Judiciary Board because it directly involved the university staff in making to the residence hall contract holders.
floor presidents because of poor resident
treatment for the uninsured and low-income
"I felt we weren't treated fairly," Mary Thornbrough, one of the petitions supporters, said after the committee's meeting. "I felt we were insulted and insured."
ANCRÉ
OBEY'S NOAH
THE SEARCH FOR A GOLDEN AGE
February 20, 21, 26, 27 at 8:00 p.m.
February 22 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
Reservations:
University Theatre Box Office
Murphy Hall 864-3982
The
University of Kansas
presents:
KU STUDENTS
ADMITTED FREE
UPON PRESENTATION
OF CURRENT
CERTIFICATE OF
REGISTRATION.
ANCRÉ
OBEY'S
NOAH
THE SEARCH FOR A GOLDEN AGE
Who would sign up for a date match program?
Why would someone sign up?
Who would sign up for a date match program?
Everybody! All kinds of people are signing up. Entire men's and women's teams, entire fraternities and sororities, entire dorm floors, and students in town.
Group rates?
If you mail your form in with 5 other friends, the cost is only
£10.
Why would someone sign up?
Why not? You can do it for a lark or to meet new friends.
How many matches will I get?
what will it get?
Between 3 and 15, if we can't find three, we'll give your money back.
It will compare your responses with all others to determine your closest matches on the basis of interests, attitudes, and appearances and background. You decide which is most important.
How much does it cost?
How will the computer match me?
No. You are the person with only one iPad in your matches. If you don't like their voice on the phone, you never have to.
Yes! BCOC has taken every step to insure that data will be seen only by keypuncher and that no data will be sold or released to another group. All forms will be destroyed after their use.
They will only have your first name (or nick name) and phone number. You will have their first name and number.
How much will they know about me?
Do I have to go out with any of my matches?
chairman
Yours may have made sure my medicines should be
your match. My matches will age, race, religion and drinking, smoking, and drug
height; age, race, religion and drinking, smoking, and drug
Will my answers be kept confidential?
$3.50 is charged to process applications and it's less in a group.
Can I specify how tall my matches should be?
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358
When is the deadline?
Friday, February 27. So don't delay in sending your forms in
BOAR
Tired of dating
a bore?
Let the computer fix you up
BOCO Computer
Date Match
Free Event?
Where can I go with a computer date?
There's a book on it.
What can't you give a computer date?
That's up to you but you are invited to the free BOOG Event.
As an extra you can attend the BOOCE Event: March
26, free. Others will pay at least $1.00
FRESHMEN & COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRANSFER STUDENTS (Plus any interested upperclassmen)
The 27th annual Principal-Counselor-Freshman CONFERENCE
Thursday, February 19
Kansas Union
Representatives from the high schools and Community colleges listed below will be attending the conference and have indicated an interest in visiting with you regarding your first year at K.U. We invite you to take part in this years event, which will offer opportunity for you to tell them about your first year's impressions of the University and have met the challenge of the academic programs, and to discuss any concerns you may have about your future years at K.U. You will be excused from at-ten or your afternoon classes between 2:00 and 3:00 p.m. on the day of the conference. The sessions will be held in the Union location, at the location indicated.
High Schools
ABILENE—B
AMOVNE—B
ASHLAND—B
ACUTON—B
ATWOOD—B
ALLON—B
BLETOY—B
HUMPH MIGHEE—B
BONNER SPRINGS—B
BUHLTE—B
CAMBRONE—B
CLAPLIN BUSHTON—B
CITY—B
COLDWATER—B
CONRAY SPRINGS—B
COMAN DOMINIUM—B
DERY-ALCOVE C ACAFERIEA
DODOGE CITY—B
DOWLWOOD—B
EMOMIA—B
EMOMIA—B
FAUL THAVER TAYER—B
EDUROA—B
ELF HINKLEY—B
GARBERT—B
GOODLAND—B
GOODLAND—B
ALCOVE C ACAFERIEA
GREENSburg—B
HIGHWAY—B
HIGHWAY PARK—B
HURLCITY, BOUGUE—B
HYLOLDWOOD-WILSON BUSHTON—B
HUTCHISON-SUNJAW FLOWER ROOM
JACKSON HEIGHTS-HOLTON—B
JUSTICE NORTH WORTH—B
JETMORE—B
KINGMAN—B
LINKING—B
LANING—B
LAWRENCE-JAYMANK WORK
LAWRENCE-JAYMANK WORK
LAWRENCE-TRADIATIONS ROOM
LINKON—B
LOUISBUNG—B
MOUNTAIN—B
LYONS—B
WHITMANTOWN-B
MARYSVILLE-B
MENKINE-B
MINNEAPOLIS-B
MINNESOALE-B
MONTEZUMA INGALLS-B
UPLINC-C
ONAGA-C
OSAKE CITY-C
OSAWAATONE-C
TOWN-C
PADLA-C
WARRINGTON-C
PLAINVILLE-C
SOUTH CITY-C
RUSSELL-C
KASTEN BEACH-SALINA-C
ST JOHN, ST JOHN-C
ST REELOT-C
ST MARYLYS-C
SATANTA-C
SEAOMON-C
SEAOMON-C
WHOOPER HEIGHTS-C
SHANNEE MISSION EAST-WOODDRUFF
SHANNEE MISSION NORTH-WOODDRUFF
SHANNEE MISSION NORTHWEST-KANSAS
SHANNEE MISSION SOUTH-KANSAS ROOM
SHANNEE MISSION WEST-WOODDRUFF AUDIT.
CENTER-SOUTH EAST OF SALINE-C
SUMMER-C
SKYLINE-KENDALL-C
TONGANOKE-ROOM
TOPERA WEST-BIG ROOM
ULYSSES-C
JULY HEIGHTS-C
WAMEGO-C
WASHINGTON RURAL-C
WASHINGTON-C
WICHITA EAST-PARLOR A
WICHITA MISSION ROOM
WICHITA OREAD-ROOM
WICHITA WEST-CURRY ROOM
WICHITA WEST-CURRY ROOM
WYANDOTTE-MEADOWLARK ROOM
Community Colleges
BARTON COUNTY—B
BARTON COUNTY—B
BUTLER COUNTY—B
CLOUD COUNTY—B
COFFEEVILLE—B
OLYMN—B
DODGE CITY—B
FORT SCOTT—B
GARDEN CITY—B
HASKELL—B
HUTCHINSON—CENTENNIAL
ROOM
INDEPENDENCE—B
JOHNSON COUNTY—FORUM
ROOM
KANSAS CITY KANSAS—
CINEMAL ROOM
MAPLE WOODS-B
NEOSHO-B
PENN VALLEY-B
PRATT-B
SEWARD COUNTY-B
Key: B—Ballroom
C-Cafeteria
This is your opportunity to feedback information about your experiences at KU to your former school.
2-3 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 19, Kansas Union
In case you have any questions concerning the conference, please contact Max Griffin, Conference Chairman, in the Office of Admissions and Records, 1248 East 59th Street, New York, NY 10017.
6
Wednesday, February 18, 1976
University Dailly Kansan
Ozone layer vanishing ... or is it?
Bv DAVID HAUBER
The ozone layer of the stratosphere went unnoticed for centuries, filtering out the sun's harmful ultraviolet rays. Recently, however, it has become a subject of great concern to environmentalists and business men alike.
Charges of destruction of this important oasis have been made by engraving.
They say the causes of the layer's depletion range from Concorge disease and bacterial infections to interoperal
William T. Coleman, secretary of transportation, rulened last month that the Concorde supersonic transport would be allowed to land at Dulles Airport outside Washington, D.C., and Kennedy International Airport in New York City.
Environmentalists are challenging Coleman's ruling in court, contending that the Concordia, besides being noise, is a violation of public health law, should be allowed to land in the United States.
COLLEMAN CALLED scientific evidence of the jet's effect on the atmosphere unconvincing, which relieved the jets from a threat to the national economy and the American market for the Concordore's.
The controversy over the Concordate may seem far removed from most people's daily lives. The fact that lives is whether the refrigerator works, their home or car is cool, or their underarms are dry. Each of these concerns, though, are closely related to the ozone
Rowland is now chairman of the department of chemistry at the University of California.
A former University of Kansas professor, F. Sherwood Rowland, presented a theory here last spring that the substances used in aerosol cosols and refrigeration units, Freen 11 and 12, were potentially harmful to stratospheric ozone levels.
The possibilities of banning such elements from commercial use would cause radical changes in the refrigeration and aerosol industries.
THE AEROSOL INDUSTRY, which uses Frecon as a propellant in spray cans, has already adapted to public concern by providing an emergency kit in commercial products. Rowland said.
William Lamb, technical supervisor for the Du Pont company's plant in Tucson,淋水队总经理。Freon, Du Pont had noticed a decline in its Freeport production since Rowland had made it available.
"There are a fair amount of scare tactics going on, but it hasn't stopped people from attacking the NHS."
The Tre DPont plant in Tecumshen doesn't produce Freon, he said, corporate policy has been set.
Increased advertising of roll-on deodorants, he said, was because of anticipated consumer reaction to the possible ill effects of Fren use.
"IF YOU'RE GOING to create a real scare on the subject," Lamb said, "your deodorant companies are going to get out of aerosols."
Rowland's theory of Freon's effect on the ozone layer is that inert Freon rises into the stratosphere and reacts with ultraviolet light to produce chlorine atoms that in turn react with the ozone to reduce it to simple oxogen.
Rowland said that a reduction in the ozone layer caused an increase in skin cancer. He
Professor says spring weather could continue
Although most Kansans know better than to expect 60-degree temperatures to last indefinitely, more spring weather may be in store.
Joe Eagleman, professor of geography and meteorology, said Monday that Kansas had been experiencing almost summer temperatures because the jet stream that usually crosses Kansas in winter had cool air almost to the Canadian border.
THE WEATHER typically will change from day to day and week to week, he said, but it will tend to be drier and warmer than usual.
Eagleman said a former graduate student of his who has left KU had done research to determine the relationship between university warm years and years of low humidity, acidity.
A sunspot is a storm on the sun that affe-
cues the nature of the sun's radiation heat.
The student predicted in 1972 that this year would be an unusually dry, warm one, be
ABOUT EVERY 22 years there is a period of a few years when sunspot activity is less than normal, he said, and the student had observed that those years corresponded to dry years.
Eagleman说 meteorologists didn't know exactly how the difference in radiation waves during years of low sunspot activity affected the temperature. It's just a small difference, but it can occur farther north and milder winters when sunspot activity is low, he said.
said that for every one per cent reduction of ozone, two per cent more ultraviolet light rays would leak through and cause a two per cent increase in skin cancer.
New Disco in Lawrence is hiring D.J. for coming season.
AUDITIONS ON THURSDAY
Lamb said. "There's been no evidence that there is a problem other than that of the drug."
ROWLAND'S THEORY is based on a mathematical model, Lamb said, that is simplicial compared with the complex meteorological factors of the stratosphere. The model suggests that it adequately consider naturally existing chlorine molecules in the stratosphere, which would indicate that it may not be a Freon problem, that it didn't include the effects of natural removal of Freon and that it could account for the increase in the computer theory weren't verified.
A group of manufacturing chemists recalled how lowland's estimate of ozone depletion was estimated.
"The they may be tagging the wrong animal," Lamb said of those citing Freon for ozone depletion. "The problem is real. If it's identified as Freon, we'll get out of the business. We don't want to harm the world."
Lamb said there were various studies of the ozone layer being done by universities, manufacturing research groups and government.
For Appt., Call 842-2458
Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry, said,"The (manufacturing chemicals) data doesn't seem to indicate that it is clean and clear-cut on either side. As far as I'm concerned, there is no conclusive evidence in this area right now."
HOWEVER, HE ADDED, "I Professor Rowland is correct, it could be quite so."
'The whole problem is that until very
Another source of concern, Lambsaid, was in the refrigeration industry. The impact of any law banning the use of Freen as a condom would have substantial consequences, he said.
recently nobody has had any good analysis of the atmosphere."
He said that billions of dollars would be involved in any refrigeration system change-over. Fron is used in supermarket, railroad and home refrigerators and in oil dispensers.
**BRICKY SAID**, 'Any substitutes for the new now used undoubtedly be more expensive than the old.'
"We're going to pay the price one way or another. They (Freens) are comparatively cheap and they're safe from the point of view of handling."
Local air conditioning servicemen also expressed concern about any moves to the city.
"Freron has become the modern safe refrigerator, said Emory Scott of Scott's Tennis Academy."
Without Freon, he said, the whole refrigeration industry would have to resort to more dangerous alternatives such as ammonia or sulfur dioxide.
Any change would also require a change in the industry's equipment, he said.
Scott said that efforts to get rid of Freen were being promoted by "a lot of do-goodens who have to have a project to up their eos."
Bricker said, "I don't believe that of Sherry Rowland. I think he is a good scientist and he is interested in science," without refrigeration, Scott said. "Would he like old countries, like in Greece where they have to shop without refrigeration.
An air conditioning service manager who asked not to be identified, said, "It's going to affect a heck of a lot of people in the air conditioning industry. That would mean the industry would be hard pressed to find another method."
"PEOPLE WANT convenience now and they're going to buy them (refrigerators) as long as they can afford them. This is part of the American system. Who would trade it?"
Legal activity on the issue of banning use of firearms before a committee in Congress, LAMBID
Legal action on the issue of banning
racial discrimination before a committee in
Congress. Lawmakers
"Virtually every state has one or more laws in the hopper on the subject," he said. It will take three years for any research on Freon to be conclusive, he added.
LEGISLATION IN KANSAS regarding Freon was introduced in HB 2015 by State Rep. Sandiford Duncan, R-Wichita, who is a board member for study until the next legislative session.
State Rep. Richard Walker, R-Newton, chairman of the public health and welfare committee, said, "We haven't spent very much time on it."
Sue Rieger . . . . . Secretary
Leslie Green . . . . . Treasurer
Sophomore Class Officers
Russ Engel ... President
He said that manufacturing groups had expressed concern over a ban on aerosol sprays and refrigerators using Freen and interim study of the bill was being made.
Ralph Munyan ... Vice President
Vox Populares
Thurs., Feb. 19
7:30 p.m.
LAST YEAR AT
MARIENBAD
75
$1
For entry into the 2-year program commencing in the fall of 1983, students must complete a Bachelor's degree in Room 108. Military Science Building, or phone 641-765-6800.
If you have two academic years remaining, there's a great 2 year AFRTOC program still available to you. Look into the details. We think you'll be pleasantly surprised. And pleasantly rewarded.
All Films in Woodruff Aud.
GRADUATION DAZE.
CLEAR UP YOUR FUTURE IN THE 2-YEAR AFROTC PROGRAM.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
What's up after college? That question is enough to get a lot of young people down.
Air Force ROTC college graduates have that worry, too. But their immediate future (and longer if they choose) is much more secure. As a commissioned officer, there are many reasons to be proud of Promotion, Proms. Financial security. And really, lots more.
Fri., Feb. 20
Sat., Feb. 21
7:00-9:30 p.m.
BLAZING
SADDLES
Award
Wed., Feb. 18
7:30 p.m.
FROM HERE
TO ETERNITY
Winner of 8
Academy Awards
Selling something? Call us.
75¢
Mfg. List $6^{98}
Located in North Lawrence across the Massachusetts Street Bridge
Thursday Night, February 19
10c Draws
SUA FILMS
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Special Guest—Archie Dykes
Town Tavern 401 N. 2nd St.
8-12 p.m.
Farewell To Johnny's
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on Columbia
SENIORS
76 76 Senior Class Party
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
K
76 76
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CHILDREN 7 to 12 $2.00
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7
Wednesday, February 18, 1976
Obituaries premature; little towns growing
By CONRAD BIBENS
Staff Writer
Small towns, once thought to be dying out, are making a comeback, according to three Lawrence area mayors and a new government study.
The mayors of Eudora, Baldwin City and Tonganoxie will say yesterday that their towns' leaders are working to improve the infrastructure.
The United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) released early this month a report that said small towns across the country were gaining in population.
THE REPORT, "Population Change in Nonmetropolitan Cities and Towns," said annexation was the main reason for small changes in population. The percent cent in the 1950s and 10 per cent in the 1960s.
Many demographers have said migration from big cities had been a major reason for small towns gaining in population in the early 1970s.
Eudora, with a population of 2,694, increased by about in the last five years, and now has 318,000.
Reasons for this increase include cheaper taxes, a good school system and less crime.
SOME UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS students live in Eudoria, which is nine miles east of Lawrence, because rental rates are lower for living space. he said.
About 180 students attend Eudora High School, Gerald Henderson, the school's principal, said. The enrollment represents a slight increase over past years.
"Less than half our graduates go on to college," he said. "Most go on to other towns because there isn't that much employment here."
ABOUT 25 PER CENT of the school's graduates continue to live in Eudora while working in other towns, Bill Rhodd, Eudora High School counselor, said.
"We're a bedroom community for Lawrence and Kansas City." Henderson said.
Both Henderson and Rhodd said though there was a turnover among Eudorea's high school graduates, the town's overall population remained stable.
Baldwin City, about 18 miles south of Lawrence, has a population of 2,834 which represents an increase of about 500 in the five years, C. V. Reeves, town mayor,
"We're a lot less congested here and we have an excellent school system," he said. "There's been an influx of people who live here but work in Lawrence or Oalate."
REEVES SAID Baldwin City's population figures didn't include the approximately 90 students who attended Baker University in Baldwin.
"We're the fastest growing city in Douglas County, percentage-wise," Reewes said. "Baldwin City is in a good location for commuters."
Mayor Mark Lee said the population of Tonganake had increased by 600 in the last five years. The population is now 2,564, including about 200 people who were added in 1972 when some nearby towns were annexed.
"TONGANOXIE OFFERS a better quality of life," Mark said. "A lot of people have moved here from large cities, such as New City, because of the high crime rate there."
"A lot of KU students and graduates live here," Mark said. "My son is one of them."
**TODAY: NOON HOUSE INTERNATIONAL will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. in Alcove F of the Kansas Union. Kansas City clerks and finance officers will begin a three-day meeting of the 20th annual professional school sponsored by the Department of Kansas Institute of Public Affairs and Division of Continuing Education.**
On Campus
Events...
TONIGHT: ANNE KOSCIELYN, associate professor of piano at Hartt College of Music at the University of Hartford and former Lawrence resident, will perform at 10:30 a.m. on Tuesday.
TOMORROW: The 27th annual PRINCIPAL-COUNSELER-FRESHMAN CONFERENCE will begin at 9 a.m. in the Union. Flutilla XXXI-3 of the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary will begin registration for a BOATING SAFETY CLASS at 7:30 p.m.
Six University of Kansas alumni have been nominated for three seats on the KU Alumni Association's board of directors. Those chosen were Gary Adams of Tulsa, Okla., Patrick Bolen of Salina, Nancy Lane of Russell, Margret Linton of Wichita, Richard Rodgers of Topeka and Tenton Fahort of St. Louis, Mo.
Correction...
David Shapiro, candidate for student body president, was incorrectly identified in the 2016 election. William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, was incorrectly identified
William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, was incorrectly identified as vice chancellor for academic affairs.
COMMITMENT
STEVE CONKLIN
PATTI O'BRIEN
SANDY SMITH
JEFF ERIKSEN
SOPH, CLA
Pres.
V.-Pos.
Sec.
Treas.
University Daily Kansar
SOPH. CLASS OFFICER
Nine ROTC courses get credit
Liberal arts students can take nine Army and Air Force ROTC courses for credit, the
Robert Friauf, a member of the Educational Policies and Procedures Committee (EPPC), said the EPPC had appointed appropriate faculty members to provide training, outside reading and structure of each of the courses that ROTC submitted for credit.
Of the 12 class-hours that Army ROTC submitted, were approved and two are still being studied by the EPPC, James Carothers, EPPC chairman said.
The ROTC courses rejected by the
Australian Council in content and
resubmitted, Carbeth A. Gorby
The assembly approved an EPPC recommendation that 12 of the 16 coursehs submitted by the Air Force ROTC be approved.
The approval of the nine classes, which took 21 class-hours, is retraced to the 1975 law that required all teachers.
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The other program is the Two-year NROTC Scholarship Program. The only difference in the qualifications is that you must have a C average (2.3 out of 4.0) or better. It is open to men and women.
For both programs, you'll need to pass Navy qualification tests. And, quite frankly, it will help if your major is math, physical science, or engineering.
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In other actions the assembly announced:—a permanent committee of faculty members has been established to screen applicants for military science teaching positions.
—the by-laws review committee will send out questionnaires to the faculty to help determine what revisions to be made in the assembly's structure.
The Air Force courses are: Air 304, for three credits; Air 308, for three credits; Air 344, for three credits; and Air 348, for three credits.
The course numbers for the Army ROTC classes approved are: Army 144, for one credit; Army 148, for one credit; Army 184, for three credits; and Army 344, for three credits.
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8
Wednesday, February 18. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Lockwood at home when in the country
By GARY VICE
At the end of each day when gymnastics coach Robert Lockwood completes his coaching and teaching duties, he exhales in his gym shorts, t-shirt and tennis shoes for cowboy boots and a western shirt, then takes a 20-minute drive to his home in McLoughlin.
Lockwood's life extends into a different environment when he is at home on his
"When my wife and I got married," he said, "we had this dream of having our own land with hunting grounds, a fishing pond, does and riding horses.
"Now, we've got 267 acres, some horses and typical farm dogs that control who comes in. I raise a few cattle, have a tanner and do some row crops, mostly rullo."
LOCKWOOD PAUSED TO prop his boots up on the corner of his desk. His boots were two tones of brown leather with designs stitched up the side in blue thread. He wore a black sweater, and he had orange embroidery on the front. When he continued, he spoke of plans for his farm.
"We hope to eventually come up with a summer camp, one that would have about 100 kids coming and going each week," he said.
He said a five-acre pond had already been built for the camp and he planned to build a mess hall and cabins on a tier above the pond.
Meanwhile, Lockwood wished the pond is popular when his birthday is celebrated with a celebration.
"WE ALWAYS have a trappe out over the pond to do stunts on," he said. "Usually we have a country band and barbecue a hog, they stay all night and through the next day."
Lockwood enjoys his rural life and writes and sings country music about his ex-
"Some days I can write an original country music song between classes," he said.
He reached inside his desk drawer and unfolded a sheet of paper with an untitled song scrawled on it. He first two songs were intended for him having his guitar with him, and continued to read.
"WE SHARED OUR LOVE through all these years.
We sang our songs and we shed our tears.
God loved us, like he said he would.
But we couldn't keep the bad behind the good."
Lockwood said much of today's country
music was written about pain, getting
used.
He folded up the song and returned it to his desk drawer. A sign over his desk read, "A clean desk is the sign of a sick mind." If there is validity to the sign, Lockwood is in super mental health. His desk is plied with unfold numbers of books and papers.
"I VOT GOT A lot of stuff here," he said,
"but I can usually find what I need."
Lockwood, now in his 12th season as the only gymnastics coach in KU history, is
satisfied with his responsibilities at the University.
"Where else could a guy go where he's around young people all the time who are excited about learning," he said, "I couldn't ask for anything better.
"The kids on this gymnastics team work as hard if not harder than any team in this country."
Hard work has characterized Lockwood's
sports
career. As a student at KU, he competed on the national high school all-earned American basketball his senior year.
"Volleyball has been kind of a second sport to me at Kansas," Lockwood said as he entered the gym. He wore a magazine, "Our team never finished below third in the nation. We trained in Robinson Annex. It was an old but used for archery clubs; a driving range and for innermuraals."
Lockwood also excelled as a gymnasist on KU's sports club, winning the all-around and trampoline events his senior year in the Central Associations Championships.
He is also a record holder in an event no longer part of gymnastics competition, the rope climbing. His time of four seconds flat at a height of Bartlesville, Okla., has never been greater.
In 1984, three years after he graduated from KU, Lockwood began his coaching duties here. He initiated variety wrestling and gymnastics programs with $1,000 each, and sport under authorization of Arthur "Dick" Lonborg, former athletic director.
"I coached both of them on a voluntary basis" he said.
LOCKWOOD ONLY COACHED the wrestling squad for its first year. His team lost its opening meet 28 to 10 Kansas State in a televised contest and lost to Missouri before defeating William Jewell to record a 1-2 season.
He said, "I don't know if KU ever won at wrestling after that, but I'm sure they must be stronger."
The coach was soon to inherit another program to guide. This time it was tennis. He served two years, 1968-69, as coach of the tennis squad.
Lockwood said, "I think I'm the only guy at KU who has been head coach of three
"I'd have to say that an intramural
hospital has a very time-consuming and
exhaustive procedure."
Lockwood also served as intramural director from 1964 until this year.
"Because my load has been somewhat relieved this year, my enthusiasm for travel is up."
If history is any indication of the future, one auspels Lockwood will be picking up the lead.
Scouts lose to Penguins early
PITTSBURGH (AP) -Bob Kelly scored two goals and Pierre Lacob picked up three assists yesterday as the Pittsburgh Penguins Scout, the Pittsburgh Squads, National Holiday I am a
The Penguins wrapped up the victory
early in the first period when Ron
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and broke a goal with two points.
These events occur only very rarely.
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The loss puts KU 12-10 over all this season
The top 10 players in this season.
The Jayhawks' JV team also lost to CMSU, 50-40. Melaney McWhirter was KU's leading scorer in that game with 14 points.
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16 points, followed close by Karen Schneller with 14. Center Adrian Mitchell was held to 11 points, but led the Jayhawks in rebounds with nine.
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KU stuck fairly close to CMSU through a trailing at internession by only sight, 38-30
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But CMSU's size began to take its toll in the second half.
field compared to KU's 37 per cent and had
40 rebounds to the Jaywhays' 29.
A small Kansas women's basketball team was trounced by Central Missouri State University, 82-61, Monday night in Warrenburg, Mo.
CMS height helps defeat KU women
"Our kids played hard and played well."
"They just wow us down in the second half."
The extent of CMSU's talent was seen in the stats. They shot 57 per cent from the
KU assistant coach Sheila Moorman said CMSU's main advantage was its height.
V. C. Sanders was high scorer for KU with
The women's next game is against Fort
Hastings College, 7 p.m. Friday at Alcatel
Field Hospital.
"It was our biggest difficulty—we just couldn't compete with their size," she said. "They have more size and more talent than any team we've played."
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Wednesday, February 18. 1976
9
KU doesn't seek revenge against Tigers
Associate Sports Editor
It was one month ago yesterday that the K basketball team traveled to Missouri to play.
The Jayhawks came back embarrassed and soundly beaten, losing by 30 point-98.
"Coach (Ted Owens) told us we weren't supposed to talk about it," one player said. KEN KOENIGS, 6-10 forward, said, "We've made the mistake of looking back before. We're trying not to think about it. It's in the past."
KU will give a chance to avenge that loss 'when it meets Mizzon at 7:35 tonight in Allen Field House. One might expect the Jayhawks to be shouting a "remember-the-Alamo" cry. They're not. In fact, they're not saying anything about it.
Mam Miranda, Kanea assistant coach,
the Jaybarra's earlier season debacle
can be held.
eor games are something KU hasn't 't had
KC sinks 76ers
KANAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Nate-Achierd scored a game high 33 points enabling the Kansas City Kings to snap a five-game losing streak by manhandling the Philadelphia 76ers, 125-107 in the National Basketball Association last night.
Archbald, returning to the starting lineup for the first time in six games after a bout with the fou. received scoring help from the Knicks' Jimmy Walker, who finished, with 23.
The Kings never trailed in the contest and led 35-24 until one quarter on the strength of nine Sam Lacey rebounds. The Kings' 6-10 win gave game high of 18 and also scored 18 points.
Kansas City extended its lead to 24 at the half by taking a 68-42 edge into the locker room. Archibald hit eight of 11 shots from the first half as the King shot 57 per cent.
Philadelphia suffered through a poor shooting first half, hitting only 35 per cent. The 78ers began to come alive in the waning minutes of the third quarter, closing the Kings' lead to 11, 93-42, with 14 points by George McGinnis.
Kansas City got the final break of the game only 47 seconds into the fourth quarter when McGinnis was whistled for his fifth foul, and six minutes later fouled out. McGinnis finished with 28 points and 10 rebounds.
The victory moved Kansas City to 3% games behind the Midwest Division leader, Lamar.
lately. The Jayhawks have won two prnram-
games, knocking off Iowa. State and
Illinois.
Indiana
WILSON
160
VOLLEYBALL
Norm Cook
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"I think our team realizes right now that they're playing pretty good," Miranda said. With Paul (Mokek) back in full shape and players playing well again, we come back.
"If we play good basketball we're capable of winning the last five games and then who knows? We could be playing somewhere after that."
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Jayhawks, 5-4 in league play and 12-9 overall, are already trailing Missouri by three games. A victory by the Tigers, 8-1 in the regular season, would put them in the driver's seat.
"THIS IS A tremendously important game for Missouri," Miranda said. "The team they're on them. They haven't won a Big Eight tie." The Rams, they'll be in trouble because they still have
to go to K-State and they've already lost to them at home."
To beat the Tigers, KU must first stop Willie Smith, the league's leading scorer, and then control their front line of forwards and Jim Kennedy and center Stan Ray.
"Their forwards (Kennedy and Anderson) have been playing real fine teams, both in the world."
(Norm Cook and Koehns) will have to outplay their forwards. And Paul (Mokeski) will have to outplay his forwards.
Mokesi and Ray will continue their battle as freshman centers. So far, the two have split, Mokesi scored 18 points to win the first matchup and Ray came back to win in a second game, swinging to each other, as they squared off last summer in a California summer league.
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THE YOUNG STORY
DISTRICT 1:
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- OUR COALITION - - - - -
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10
Wednesday, February 18, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Smoking battle ...
From page one
One of the aims of the organization, she said, is to try to convince businessmen that they may, in fact, be losing more money by allowing smoking because of merchandise damaged by burning or smoke damage and loss of business from nonsmokers.
"It's been a very slow process but I think they (businessmen) may be coming around," Jensen said. "I think people are getting used to complain, and that's a big help."
For an example of nearly ideal nonsmoking law, ant-smokers point to Mintzberg's advice.
The Clean Indoor Air Act, which went into effect Aug. 1, is a no-smoking statute that declares all indoor public places as off limits for smoking unless otherwise indicated. All the other states label their no-smoking areas.
RESTAURANTS, auditoriums, hospitals and similar buildings are all included. But restaurant owners there are reported to be required by law to provide that a place for nonsmokers be provided.
Despite the strict regulations, ways are being found to circumvent the law there. There have been reports of disruption and fraud within the section, beined led to a card table in the basement.
In Kansas, Bottle likes to point out that after his no-smoking bill was passed, his home town of Lawrence adopted a no-smoking policy in the city's meeting room.
AND INDEED the city does have such a policy but again, it's a fairly easy matter to change.
Attempted rape follows robbery of local woman
An unidentified man robbed and attempted to rape a Lawrence woman after breaking into her apartment early Saturday morning, Lawrence police reported.
The victim, a Watson library assistant, told police that the man entered her door and then walked into her bedroom and asked where she kept her money. She said the man took $4 out of her purse then demanded that she sexually assault him or he would rape her.
After 10 or 15 minutes, she said, the man appeared to be nerous verbs about how long he had stayed. He warned her not to call the police and then left, she said.
The man could be charged with aggravated assault, aggravated battery or other offence.
At any of the longer city commission meetings, it isn't uncommon to see a city commissioner puffing on a pipe, usually joined by a reporter with a cigarette. The officer often extends to the city offstreet hallway, which adjoins one end of the meeting room.
From there, a smoker can legally puff away to his heart's content and listen to the meeting—while his smoke wafts into the meeting room.
Many places that might come under the law already have no smoking policies. The ban is now being lifted.
CATHERINE DANIELS, assistant to the director of the Kansas City Area Transportation Authority, which also serves as the agency's chief consumer officer. always had a policy of no smoking on buses.
"We get a lot of complaints whenwere someone does smoke, believe me," she
The Lawrence Bus Co., posts no smoking signs in all its buses, a spokesman said, but there is no effort to enforce them even if the laws were seen some complaints from non-smokers.
"As far as our company policy goes, we're not trying to restrict smoking," the spokesman said. "It's kind of up to the driver. We don't need to enforce it (the nosmoking law); we're not enforcement people."
Both GASP and the Northeast Kansas Lung Association in Kansas City, Kan., said they were hearing of an increasing number of officers' offices that carried no-smoking slogans.
A TELEPHONE SURVEY of 25 doctors in the Lawrence area indicated that 15 of the offices had no-smoking signs up. Only two of the offices had signs and signs because of the new no-smoking law.
"It was a personal thing," one nurse said. The doctor doesn't smoke and he doesn't drink alcohol.
Another nurse said, "The no-smoking signs are up here mainly because all of us here in the office are allergic to cigarette smoke, but there were a number of patients complaining about smoke. It was that and a combination of the new law."
A Kansas City City, nurse who works in an office for four doctors said that although there had been complaints about cigarette smoke, no-smoking signs weren't up in her office because one of the doctors was a heavy smoker.
"IVEY BEEN reluctant to press it very far," she said. "I just wish some of the patients would really start complaining and demanding something soon. Then maybe we'd get some action."
Most hospitals seem to have no smok- pollen of one sort or another chiefly in the southern United States.
Lawrence Memorial Hospital, 325 Maine, has a no-smoking policy that forbids smoking in offices, elevators, corridors and rooms where patients receive oxygen. It also limits the number of dining areas. The KU Medical Center has a similar policy, but in addition, six tables in
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the dining area have been marked off for non-smokers.
WATKINS MEMORIAL Hospital doesn't allow smoking anywhere, a spokesman
Spokesmen for the Wyandotte and Johnson county public libraries, as well as the Lawrence public library, said that most residents cannot be normal but enforced no-smoking policies.
THE UNIVERSITY has had a no-smoking policy for years, he said, but the policy was re-emphasized last fall, though not as a result of the Kansas no-smoking law.
Dal Shenkel, executive vice chancellor,
said the University policy on no-smoking
covered all classrooms, with the exception
of seminar groups of 20 or less when no one
Shankel said he had received only a few complaints, which were then handled by the appropriate dean or chairman of the department concerned. A substantial number of violations, he said, would force the University to try to tighten the policy.
LITWIN'S
Except for meeting rooms, all other
area areas are off limits to smoking,
their use prohibited.
Although the University no-smoking
Both K-Mart, 31st and Iowa, and Woolworth, 911 Massachusetts, have no smoking policies, mainly as safety precautions, their managers said.
"Most lobbies are big enough to allow non-smokers to get away from the smokers," said one. "After all, it's bad enough that they can't smoke in the auditorium. I don't see how we could stop them from smoking in the lobby."
JOSE PEREZ, assistant manager of Montgomery Ward, 23rd and Odaiah, says he is hesitant to put up no-smoking signs in his office because of the business away because they smoke."
policy extends to the library, John Glinka, associate director of the library, said the wet reading room had been opened for those who liked to smoke when they studied.
Do smokers take advantage of the theaterobbies?
All theater auditoriums in Kansas City and Lawrence have no-smoking signs posted. But in the lobby it's "smoke em" if you've got em." Most representatives of the theater groups expressed a reluctance to mark the lobby as a no-smoking area.
"They smoke like fiends," one theater group representative said with a laug.
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April 5-9, Budweiser and ABC Radio will again sponsor National College Pitch In! Week.
THE REWARDS ARE GREAT: You get a cleaner community and, if you win, a $1000 or $500 cash award! Any number of groups per campus may enter.
FOR MORE INFORMATION: Contact your Dean of Student Activities or write Pitch In! Week, Dept. C, c/o ABC Radio, 1330 Avenue of the Americas, New York, N.Y. 10019.
THE RULES ARE SIMPLE: Organize a community improvement activity during the week of April 5-9, document what you accomplish, and send it to Pitch In!
Budweiser
KING OF BEERS!
PITCH INI FOR AMERICA'S 200TH BIRTHDAY.
ENTER NATIONAL COLLEGE PITCH INI WEEK TODAY.
The African Student Association of the University of Kansas Presents The Second Annual
African Night
Night
Feb. 21, 1976
6:00-9:00 p.m.
At Westminster Foundation, 1204 Oread
$3.50 Single Adult
$1.50 Children 12 & Under
Tickets on Sale
SUA Office--Kansas Union
African Studies----116 Strong Hall
K.U. African Club Members
African night disco will be in Big 8 Room Kansas Union at 9:30 p.m., same date Sponsored by International Club The International Club is funded from the Student Activity
SUPER-BURGER
MADE WITH
1/4 Lb. GROUND BEEF
(Pre Cooked Weight)
AND
FRENCH FRIES
$1.20 Value
99¢
February Sale
SUPER-BURGER
MADE WITH
1¼ Lb. GROUND BEEF
(Pre-Cooked Weight)
AND
FRENCH FRIES
$1.20 Value
99¢
February Sale
FEBRUARY 11th thru FEBRUARY 21st
Peter Pan
ICE CREAM
THIS MONTH
FEATURE FLAVOR
"CHERRY VANILLA"
ICE CREAM
FLAVORS GALORE
ALL FLAVORS
HALF
GALLONS
$1.05
FREEZER PAK
4 HALF GALLONS
$3.96
ESKIMO
PIE
ICE CREAM BARS
6 PAK
REG. 89¢
THICK
CREAMY
MILK SHAKE
49¢
TRIPLE DIP
BANANA SPLIT
*1.10 Value
89¢
WE ALSO
FEATURE
Hand
Packed
Ice Cream
Peter Pan
ICE CREAM
STORES
1015 W. 6 521 W. 23
Peter Pan
ICE CREAM
THIS MONTH
FEATURE FLAVOR
"CHERRY VANILLA"
ESKIMO PIE
ICE CREAM BARS
2AK 69
Place a Konsan wont od Cal 864-4358
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 18. 1976
11
Treasurer out, assistant to run
Douglas County Treasurer Edyne Norman announced yesterday that she will seek a ninth term, and the deputy treasurer will also self-ahead a Republican candidate for treasurer.
Norman, the Republican incumbent that has worked in the treasurer's office since 1950, said yesterday that she was ready to take some time to travel.
"This is my eighth term and I feel that that's sufficient," she said.
"I've enjoyed working with people, and it's been a challenge to do things for them, but after being in public office this long, I'm ready for a rest."
HER PRESENT TERM expires October 1977. She said that treasurer was the only county position that didn't terminate in January. She also completed the tax year before leaving office.
Leslie is supported for treasurer by Norman in November's general election. Leslie has been with the department since September, but she has been deputy treasurer since February 1976.
She is a graduate of Lecompont High School and attended Lawrence Business College. Her husband, William, is a Lecompont farmer.
LESLIE WAS FIRST employed as an auto clerk at the treasurer's office and later became vehicle supervisor. She said years of bookkeeping experience and knowledge of the operations and duties of the office and was probably administer the treasurer's office.
Leslie also said she had compassion for other people.
"I always try to place myself on the other side of the counter when customers need help or they're irritated, because I know how they must feel," she said.
Med Center . . .
From page one
more efficient we are, the more we go into the red."
Lady said a Ways and Means subcommittee would study the supplemental aid request and the budget proposed for fiscal year 1977 and report to the committee. The subcommittee will meet with Dykes in about two weeks. Lady said
Dykes said it was necessary to carry over the old strategy of planning for next year's budget, as part of its business.
- Approval of the third year of 10 per cent monetary increases; recommended by Bemphet
—Hiring new classified and unclassified personnel to meet the needs of this year's larger class, up from 163 students last year to 200 this year.
—A 12 per cent increase in the operating
cost of the Med Center, to $732,153. Bennett has
been charged the same rate for the entire
medical center.
- Capital improvements, including good planning for funds a new library in Bonnment Hill
VOTE
Maureen O'Sullivan
Dan Black Richard Rothfelder
John Olson
Lori Kline
Charlie Fairchild
Phyllis Robertson
Molly Wood
Mike Taraboulos
Jim Pearson
Bart Duckworth
Kelley McHenry
KANSAN WANT ADS
Dave Wooding
Pat Maloney
Kathy Hannah
FOR
L.A.&S.
SENATORS
VOX
POPULARES
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
time times time times times
15 words or
E fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
additional
WEB101 62 62 62 62 62
AD DEADLINES
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
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
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online, calling the UDR business office 864-1354.
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.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.- regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or cloaked products. Browse our range of pre-built components at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFs.
Tremendous selection of guitar, amp, drama,
composer and orchestral works. Shops: House
Keyboard Studio, Choose from Guitar,
Ampersand, Keyboard, Drum and many other
Amperes, Kronos, Greco, and many others.
Ring after it! Now in Rose Keyboards Studio,
Guitar, Composer and Orchestral Works.
We can make our stereo sound better. -GUAR-
dering at Audio Systems, 707 E. 9th.
COST
1950 - Steel equipment. All member
costs.
1960 - Steel equipment. Member for Free Roof
and Awning, all member for Free Roof,
Awning and Awning.
A, a frame, all members.
B, a frame, all members.
C, a frame, all members.
D, a frame, all members.
E, a frame, all members.
F, a frame, all members.
G, a frame, all members.
H, a frame, all members.
I, a frame, all members.
J, a frame, all members.
K, a frame, all members.
L, a frame, all members.
M, a frame, all members.
N, a frame, all members.
O, a frame, all members.
P, a frame, all members.
Q, a frame, all members.
R, a frame, all members.
S, a frame, all members.
T, a frame, all members.
U, a frame, all members.
V, a frame, all members.
W, a frame, all members.
X, a frame, all members.
Y, a frame, all members.
Z, a frame, all members.
Quitting business sales—bargain! Everything you need for a home, used furniture, an ample furniture store, and any other item we can offer. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. We also have ice cream, yogurt, and honey. (Hwy 40) Open 6-9, weekdays 82-349, 2-23
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
sales. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160-page,
mail order catalog Research Assistance.
Los Angeles, Los Angeles Calif. 4923-
6 (213) 747-8747
Alternator, Starter, and generator Specialists.
BEL AIR ELECTRIC, 843-6900, 2909. W. 6th.
Electricity, 843-6900, 2909. W. 6th.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Home Decor Items. The Furniture & Appliance Center,
Toll Free 1-800-745-3232.
**USTM JEWELRY:** Professionally crafted gold and silver work. Minimum sculpture, conventional finish. Exclusive B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting. Variety of unusual glamour. 812-8983 or D-0790
Motorola Megaphone, two seven inch seamed beam chrome lights, electronic police-mobility夹置, concealed 75 wt. speaker, midland pocket speaker, T60A 180A call. Call 841-3241 at 12:00.
1974 Vega Hatchback Near new condition, one
female (and has snow tires) 2-19
862-5314 2-19
1975 Yamaha 350 hd. Must sell, will sell cheap.
641-8239 2-18
STEREO Pioneer CD-90 492 Bozak speaker, 2
Fiber speaker. Pioneer SL515 tape. 2-19
1
1966 Dodge Cornet, Automatic, PS, snow tires,
new brakes, excellent condition, 842-703-7000
For Sale: 1989 Ply Pury III, 2 dh; 318 b2 2b8
Purchase: 1989 Ply Pury III, 2 dh; 318 b2 2b8
Behind seal 101 Indian Indiana. GTC $
$19.99
ACR registered Fitter Seller Punks for sale. WILL
register Fitter 843-843-841 or 841-846-
for more information.
Two 12 inch 3-way Utah Speakers. Excellent condition. Call 845-479-5 per 5 p.m.
1926 GMC Truck $400, 1940 Oldsmobile $750,
1950 Ford Pickup $380, 1955 Stone and
Cartridge $155. Call after $9.41.
1955 Chevrolet C10 after $4.91.
Extra-long double bed set, best Latte sofa,
Call 841-4859. 2-20
pair of Davos Skirt, 180's made in Austria,
pair of Davos Skirt, 180's made in Austria,
fitted for Dovos Skirt, will sell for $150 or best
ought for Dovos Skirt, will sell for $150 or best
The Camera, power and air. Hood speakers, hood
speakers, power and air. Hood speakers, hood
speakers, power and air. AM-PM radio with 22,000
encrasses and new live TV. AM-PM radio with 22,000
encrasses and new live TV.
A AM Part Stop
1209 East 23rd St. 841-2200
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
A PRO AM Part Stop
Bengals IN THE
Catsuit
Gifts and Jewelry 803 Mass.
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
the CRAMOPHONE shop
3 to 10 Times Loss Mistention
Them Most Stereo Components
AM-FM Stereo Car Radio, call 842-6258.
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AND STEREO
WALLS SHIPPING CENTER LAURENTA AVENUE 1820 647 044
Calumet 4XS view camera with Dugas, exor-
ginal drive. Drive SWA 54-48 short-
ened. MH32-764.
Western Civilization Notes—On sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use them—
1) As study guide
2) As information
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
TURQUOSE dealer at Repetit Performance Shop
1402 West 29rd, one day only. Bicycle, 21 from 18am.
Bike shop, 7th floor, 36th street, 5th avenue,
BOKONOON POTION PARLIR just arrived new shipment of men's corduroy sport jackets and western shirts. Also ladies' gathartine jacketes. Bokonoon POTION PARLIR 819 Hours, Trenches 1-2-4
Audio Components
AB-XB. Turitanite, Sherwened 7109A Receiver, 2
level, £199.00. 48 levels at a rate of
15 pts. old, mgd. 825+129 eur.
2400
Yamaha 200, CRS street bike. Like New. Only 2600 miles. Call 3:50 841-4391.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public fundraising tool. Bank of America, Bank of North Carolina, Bank of West Virginia, 9th & Kentucky and Mali Shopping Centers sponsor the fundraiser.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost Billboard. Small, burgundy colored. Lost
41-7831 for 2.30 $
2-19
Gear Dark, Brown Sandie Jacket lost in either
eastward or westward. 841-5628 and ask for DAVE BIG
FORT
Lost. Kit of keys at Jahawk Bowl or Centennial
Pier. Please call 684-2174 from 9 p.m. 2-18.
CHEVROLET HOTWILD 60, 237, V-8 auto, power,
powerful best price take one. Ownership #413, $249
41-10029
41-10029
Lost billbook with Italian money and ID
Lost billbook with Italian driver's license.
Please call 841-783-218
2-18
Found in office of residence hall. 284 Strong.
Found in case. Call 864-3631. 2-18
Found: a set of keys behind Carruth O'Leary in parking lot. Call and identify. 844-272- 218
Last male cut white with orange spots. By
Doris Wod, Needles Studio.
Found: Female black and brown liver cat in vicinity of 15th and Tennessee. Call 841-7641 for vicinity.
Found. Monday, a red hillfort in front of Strong
Hall. 842-4010.
2-18
Found: Woman's short sleeve dress by Battelier.
Call Colen: 842-6263. Leave message. 2-18
Lost! Glisten in orange glass case, somewhere on campus. Tuples. Feb. 10-845-6323. 2-20
Last week, German Shepherd puppy, fat last week in the 12th grade. In 1987 and 1989 he returned to 12th grade. Please return to 12th Grade.
Remontate to share beautiful four bedroom
room with two separate non-smoking
wardrobes with an open heart!
NOTICE
SECRETS only few have mastered, true friendship, love and understanding premised on genuine devotion and spiritual pamphils by mail or cost of obligation. Mail requests to Box 5647, Tooka, Kansas 69005. 2-20 Box 5647, Tooka, Kansas 69005.
Emit now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation and/or transportation provided. Drive new, pay later,
or otherwise.
FREE UNIVERSITY—We need teachers this semester, and we will be asking for wristbands, gliding dance, carvings, mandalas, other items. In any other interest area, or would like to work at us 861-3779 or drop by the SUA Office.
Two $250 scholarship any full-time undergraduate or graduate student. Oversee Oxford Bridge. Due March 1st. Further information.
KU KARATE CLUB—Silt enveloping but hurry
up. Great for training. 6 days of Wet and Thirst 132. Robinson, Sport self, set.
Karate Club, New York, NY.
The Fastest Student Event Coverage—JKHF
the first event featuring first student JKHF
event coverage featuring first student JKHF
starts at 8 p.m. and will continue with reports
hour until all the results are in. Listen
to action every Wednesday and Friday at 8 a.m.
and 2.30 p.m. Funded in part by Student Activity
WANTED
ROOMSMA(8)—one or two males wanted for
immediate Immediate. Immediate. 2-18
bryan. Brian. 411-272-6500
Looking for one or two women graduate students to share large house. Country atmosphere 3 and share utility, large room, and share utility with berry at 844-898-2188 tween 8 and 5 Monday through Friday. 2-18
Temporary (IBru agringer season) home for
wife and child. Will pay for food education.
Call 841-758-2190
RIP Card. 841-758-2190
Roommates wanted to share nine homes one block apart. They paid $75 per month. Call 842-856-2900. 2-30 utilities paid 475 per month. Call 842-856-2900. 2-30
Roommate wanted in 3 bedroom town house
apartment 841-541-503.
Female roommate to share 2 bdm. house close
to campus. $70 & 1/3 units. 841-5988. 2-18
Roommate wanted Parked 5 2 5 bedroom 2 bath on
business route $12.50 plus 40 miles @$99.99-$120.99
> 9.10
Female roommate to share apartment on edge of
sample. Phone 416-6713. Housekeeping and cooks.
Telephone 800-925-3018.
Formal rooms wanted to share 2 bedroom
room. Close to campus and on bus
route. Call 842-7200.
Wanted: Novels and/or writing by JACK
+ large single books or complete edition
481-6410 2-423
Wait, there's a space between "Wanted" and "Novels".
It looks like "Wanted: Novels and/or writing by JACK"
and "Novels". Let me look at the very first word in the image.
It's "Wanted".
The second word is "Novels".
The third word is "writing by JACK".
I will use them as separate words.
Final text:
Wanted: Novels and/or writing by JACK
+ large single books or complete edition
481-6410 2-423
Want to live in the country? I need 4床room.
Want to live in the country? I need 4床room.
from campus. Call 748-8959. Afterwards,
I will send you a reservation card.
Two lightweight 10-apcreds in good condition:
Call Deb @ 842-1178 or leave message. 2-20
HELP WANTED
Like kids? Grad student mom offering free room
@42-7390 or @42-8792
AVON- Start off the new year with excellent
announcements of Lawrence and new
leaders. 643-812-6980
If you are married, mature and will be in lawrence for a minimum of 6 months, you should position as an assistant apartment师. Weekend work may be done, but you need not need to call Bertie. Park 25 Apartment, Call Bertie. Park 25 Apartment.
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE. If you enjoy helping a young man or woman to help us at our job site, provide a young man or woman to provide a private housekeeping cafe, completely furnished with large kitchen and dining room; dutroing, moving general weeping, carpentry, mowing, gardening, upping lawns, keeping dilies etc. Time period 10 to be completed in August and September to depend on your work. NO WRITING ONLY to Raymond Curt, 1901 Sunset Written Cert., 1901 Sunset Written cert. when you write. Otherwise your time references when you write.
/Substitute: houseparents needed for small group / care home for children ages 6-18 with intellectual and behavioral problems. Prefer couple education in social sciences. Must be above 843-6106. 2-500
Addresses wanted immediately! Work at home with children, teenagers, and adults. American fitness. 140 Windsor Blvd. Suite 310. 212-875-6020. www.windsorfitness.com
FREE UNIVERSITY - We need teachers this summer to teach dance, dance ceramics, and auto mechanic you want to make knowledge in any other inter-occupation. You will be at 864-375-1295 or SUA Office at 864-375-1295 or SUA Office at 864-375-1295.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and pick up from the front desk (no phone, calls, phones) at WEBSTER'S (no phone, calls, phones) at WEBSTER'S.
CHINA
1967
armadillo bead co
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
10 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
large selection
MACRAME READS
Casa de Taco
of sizes & prices
Aug Sep 10 18:52
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
accommodations available in Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Enquiries 612-385-9700
2 bdhm, all it all until, on campus. Furn. or,
unfree. Free marking, a/c, pool. 843-993. fcq
3 new 2 bdm, apartment near campus; park-
ing area; refill efficiency apartment, jute
titles paid. 843-709-379
Room furnished with shared kitchen and baths. Kitchen has sink, refrigerator, and sufficient alfresco for male near town. No pet rooms.
TACOS
Rooms available in a cooperative house, $40 and $80 for rooms up to 21. Rooms dryer, good people, B42-5421
1-4 bedroom apartments, room with kitchen pristine
2-4 bedrooms to embody up to 8 beds and up to
842 or 840-5977
One bedroom apt, all electric kitchen, a-c-bas-
sement, 31 PINCEERE CONTEC, 482-1292,
or 842-1292.
Subtel 2 bdm. Frontier Ridge Apt B亿够 enough
441-850-7608 unfamiliar Deposit 2-30
841-850-7608
Sublease available immed. on 1 bdm. apart-
t. $165 month. Call 841-245-1200
TYPING
THESIS BINDING - The Quick Open Center is located in Riverside, CA. Our service is fast and private and affordable. Our services include free orientation.
Experimented types. I.B.M. Secticral, thesis, dissertations and term papers. Call Pam, 643-799-5198.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Experienced typet—term papers, theses, misc.
electric plot typesetter, spelling
spellings, typewriter
Typist/editor. IBM Pice坐, eita Quality work.
Sciences, theater. dissertations welcome.合唱 84-129-3178
$3.95 per Dozen
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable.
Dual-language software (A. S. Systems)
law liaison, gas electric, B.A. Social Science
research.
Exp. typi, IBM Selectric, term paper, papers,
proof reading, proof writing, spotted cor-
necting, Jean, 841-300-8697
**TYPNING:** We must have many return customers who want to support our business. We appreciate your business. Call Harvey, or email us at info@typning.com.
S.L.S. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (pica). Prompt efficient service. Thema: dissertation term paper. Phone: 312-989-2344. Evening: 2-7
Streich.
PERSONAL
Wanted: One angel with initial D.S. for full time, have a bachelor's Degree M.T.
time save only. Contact M.T.
2-20
all past or recent number of EYEKANER
Alcohol abuse is America's No. 1 drug problem,
drinking problem and want hot!
Call 842-0108
All past or present members of ECKANKAN
please call Pat. 864-1087.
2-19
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Wanted: 18,545 compatible students who need a Bachelor's degree in Physics or 19th and 19th Student Body Elections with Shagari University.
THE NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
The new instruments in New Hamshire
has a great bidi instrument.
Folk and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin
and jazz and rock guitar and bass. Call 841-
0817.
Colombian soccer team challenges any other nation or continent to a soccer match. Call 212-876-3455.
Pat Read
Oudian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1306
10.5 Tuesday. Sat.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & Mass.
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon..Sun.
SEE...
service problems?
SERVICES OFFERED
TRAVEL
500 E.23rd St. 842-0444
MATH1 GOT YOU DOWN! So if so, help early.
104. 563. 115. 111. Call 841-1080. 102. 317
107. 111. 115. Call 841-1080. 102. 317
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATSUN
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009, 142, 140, 500, 558, 828. Regular sessions or one-time text preparation. Rarely responds. Call 842-7681.
Lend a buddy life! Need help with your house? Through, dependable house cleaning done on weekdays or monthly bills. Rates by the job. Available day or evening. Courses 4:28-12:42 or 842-1258 Daily.
EUROPE*INSALE*AFBRE*AASA* Travel district
EUROPE*INSALE*AFBRE*AASA* Travel district
First Avenue, Picker, Ticket 6044 (*36*)
ADVERTISE U
EUROPE
1/2 economy
laire
50 day accommodation required
90 days free
free 800-325-4867
Untravel Charters
RIDES RIDERS
LAWFENCE GAY LIBERATION-Come *rue*
19. Student University to be "Gay Thias"
21. 8-19
Overseas Jobs-temporary or permanent Europe, Australia, S. America, Africa, etc. All聘务 820-3190 monthly. Expenses paid, light duty, travel costs, benefits, Dept. KA, Box 409; Berkeley Ca 74024; 2-55
D
A job opening for research assistant. Data collection skills and career skill requirements. Social skills and mental ability required. Quit after Feb.-25. Contact Liz Andreia UAP at (212) 367-8049. Employees qualified men and women of all races are needed.
Life planning workshop, Feb. 21, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Discussing how to use your own future, it is important for influencing your own future. It is also crucial for current life situation within the context of your goals and building for the future by developing skills and building your own unique life journey with reading, learning and exploring. 824 Dread Coat & Prey pre-registrar, 824-834
Olivera Lawrence *Mon., Wed.* Ffl. 9-20-2-30,
Ties, 11-30-2-30. Phone 782-5245. J. Walker, 2-26-
1-20. Phone 782-5245.
U
K
ADVERTISE
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
BORN TO RIDE
Planning a trip?
Let Maupintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations ser
DO ME LEWORK FOR 100%
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
SUA / Maupintour
travel service
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass
to play it no how!"
RECREATION'S FINEST
WESTERN SHORE TIGER CENTER
if You don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGES
"If we don't got it you didn't want
SHAZAAM
We Paint ANYTHING!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
West of Hillcrest Bowl
No one under 18 admitted.
9th & Iowa
FREE
(50' Service Charge)
Saint Christopher
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS (50: Service Charge)
With pass-available at your ski-sports shop
at MONT BLEU
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
07 days a week under new warranty. Prices vary by location and equipment type. More information are Ladder HI, $1. Equipment rental; $2. Mobile Rental.
3 p.m...10 p.m. Weekdays
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
12
Wednesday, February 18, 1976
University Daily Kansan
THE SATELLITE UNION ... Why it was proposed and why we need it...
What Are Some of the Reasons It Has Been Proposed?
The area of campus where the Satellite Union would be constructed is now a major population center on campus. Several new buildings have been or are being built in that area: the new law school, the new visual arts facility, the addition to Robinson gymnasium, the new computer science facility and the addition to Learned Hall. In addition to these academic buildings, the University has experienced unprecedented growth in living accommodations in that area of campus. The Daisy Field residence halls, Oliver and Naismith, several major apartment complexes and quite a few fraternities and sorceries have all combined to make this area a population center on campus.
This area has no student service facility. The residents and users of this area need a food service facility, a place to study or relax and a place to go and cash a check. Within the last year, we have seen our administration close the Hawklet in Summerfield Hall and move students from the Strong Hall basement. At the same time, Wesco Terrence has become overcrowded to the point that it is driving students away. There is obviously demand for a food service facility in this area of campus.
The concept of a satellite union is not a new one. Indeed, expansion plans for the Kansas Union as early as 1964 were greatly modified as a result of a growing feeling that students would be best served if a bookstore facility was located in the area of Daisy Hill. The concept of the satellite union was endorsed by the Union board in 1968. Students decided to spend planning money to draw up the blueprints. The satellite union was brought to a student vote in 1970. At the same time students were asked to finance a classroom facility because of a lack of state funds (Wescoe Hall). A new student housing complex was built and students were given access. Primarily because of the construction of these two other buildings many students decided not to support the satellite union at the time and the satellite union proposal was shelved for the time being.
Fuel prices for cars and buses have been and will continue to be increasing at a geometric rate. The cost involved in driving home for lunch could become prohibitive for most students.
How Long Has the Need Existed?
Since that time the Union has undertaken and completed a two-year comprehensive planning effort. An independent outside planning firm was retained by the Union board and they conducted scientific samplings and polled students needs and desires. In that poll, over $90\%$ of the students indicated that a new facility was needed on the west side of campus. For that reason, students on the Union board and the Senate have for two years, been discussing the proposal and have worked to bring it to a student vote.
Would Declining Enrollments Affect the Union?
(If Those Declines Occur)
No. There was sufficient business two years ago on the western portion of campus to provide the impetus for the satellite life union proposal. Declining enrolments, should they materialize as some suggest, would not be of the magnitude that would affect either demand or sales in that portion of campus. Studies have shown that even with constant enrolments, the demands per person placed upon food services alone have DOUBLED in the past two years.
It should also be noted that the same people that have predicted substantial enrollment declines are the same ones that predicted virtually no growth for the University in the last two years. As you know, the University's enrollment has grown at its fastest pace in history over the last two years.
When Would It Be Built?
There are many variables in making estimates, but ASSUMING among other things that (1) Students support the proposal in the student election, (2) that additional financing can be raised by the Memorial Corporation board of directors, (3) that architectural plans can be finalized by May, 1976, and (4) that the contracting process goes smoothly then, the new facility could be ready in the early spring of 1978.
Why Should I Vote for It Now?
Kent Longnecker, chairman of the Student Union Activities in 1970 put it this way:
"Think of students in the future who will have to stand in long, inconvenient lines because you won't vote or pay for an extension of Union services."
Think what might have been done in 1970 the next time you stand in line for a Coke in Wescoe Terrace or to cash a check at the Union. Think of what that line will be like in the 1980's when the student population continues to shift to the western portion of campus.
Where Would It Be Located?
The Satellite Union will be located in the general area northwest of Allen Field House and southeast of Jayhawker Towers.
What Would It Contain?
The number of services offered will be directly proportional to the amount of financing that can be raised and therefore the size of building that can be built. The 1968 proposal was for a 40,000 sq. ft. building. It was a modest proposal then. Since then inflation has taken a serious toll. Hopefully, even with the costs of inflation, at least a 30,000 sq. ft. building will not occur until the financial decisions can be made. The Union, however, in its long range study identified important primary needs, as defined by the Union poll.
- Eating and Dining facilities/kitchen space
*Check cashing services
*Sales area for sundries, cards, supplies, etc.
- Modest lounge and/or study space
What Would It Cost and When?
The 1968 proposal would have cost 1.8 million dollars. Today, the same building would cost over 3 million dollars due to inflation in construction costs. What is proposed is for students to finance the original 1.8 million dollars by a semester charge not to exceed $7.50 a semester, and for the Union to attempt to raise additional funds interim. The building cannot be built without the 1968 proposal; the 1.8 million dollars alone. Modest architectural and planning monies would be raised before completion of the structure. The maximum of $7.50 per semester would NOT BE CHARGED until the building is constructed. Those who will benefit from the building will pay for the cost.
According to Student Senate Rules and Regulations, a vote of 2,800 students is required to enact the referendum. Not voting TODAY or TOMORROW is a vote against the satellite union.
Because of the indicated support of this facility by members of the Student Body and the obvious need that will exist in that area of campus in the next three years, we, the undersigned, strongly endorse the referendum question that will appear on the ballot today and tomorrow. We strongly urge you to vote YES on the question. Many of us will not be on the campus to enjoy the benefits of such a facility, however, when considering this proposal, think of the students who will be following all of us in the 80s. This is a proposal for the future—a necessary and overdue project.
Steve Segebrecht Ed C. Rolfs Mary Lou Reece Bruce Woner Harry Wigner
Sharon Anderson Chris Milner Tedde Tasheff Cheryl Hausler Pat Schaefer
Steve Brown Tom Curzon Dave Shapiro Mike Taraboulous Mark Allen
Paul Rabinovitz Steve Leben Mark Anthony David Barclay Kati Rhoads
Lyle Elliot Kelly Scott Jenny Hoffman Mark Anderson Mark Pennington
Brian Dunn Steve Owens John House Scott Siebels Steve Chucovich
GREG BENGSTON ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE HALLS
VOTE TODAY OR TOMORROW
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the I proc the I proc fed a di Ml dis Na " n to lo tsi Rej
Commercialism key to college sports life, officials say
Bv KELLY SCOTT
Staff Writer
(Editor's note: This is the first of a two-part series examining the direction college sports are taking in the face of financial crises at small and large institutions across the nation, including the University of Kansas.)
College sports may soon move into the position of having to sell the shirts off their backs—literally
Athletic programs at 90 per cent of National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) schools lose money each year, a recent Sports Illustrated story said.
Although it may not go as far as here as having "Monsanto" replace "Kansas" on the basketball team's jerseys, college athlete administrators are usually given a chance either you play the huckster or you don't play at all.
Commercialism in college sports may be the only way money-losing athletic programs can climb out of a hole.
Or, colleges can begin to curb what some people call excessive emphasis on profit-making and the use of the money.
TOM WEISS, associate professor of economics and a member of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation board, said yesterday. "When athletic directors get together to talk over proposed
But college athletics as we know them now are in big trouble. A list of symptoms eating away at
changes, they always say 'I'll change the shape of college athletics as we know them now.'”
—A decline in revenue from both students and alumni that began after the period of student unrest on college campuses and that only now is beginning to reverse itself.
- More professional teams in every sport that rob colleges of fans.
Higher-priced equipment and more of it, since ancillary spending in NCAA schools went up 108 per cent.
-Title IX guidelines that prescribe sharing facilities between men and women.
- Higher recruiting costs, a result of more intense pressure to set the best high school prospectus.
Programs expanded to remain competitive with other schools that include more and better-paid coaches, more air travel and early arrival for bowls games to "accelerate" players.
MANY SCHOOLS are dropping freshman teams in various sports. The University of Vermont recently dropped its football program. Kansas State has lost men's tennis, swimming and track last summer.
One cynic has said the future top 10 teams in the
To some schools, commercialism may be the only game in town. More schools are using more advertising, and some schools, like Notre Dame, have programs that build new indoor sports complexes for them.
country won't be the best; they'll be the only 10 in existence.
At KU, athletic corporation administrators have begun to look at the professional sports business for
The most visible evidence of this is Allen Field House's new scoreboard, whose illuminated, rotating advertisements and bank of computer-controlled lights flash commercial messages during basketball games. By some predictions, that scoreboard is only the beginning.
"THE PROS haven't grown the way they have on the sales alone," said Jerry Waggon assistant athlete.
"It's the commercial aspects, the advertising, the radio and television," he said. "We're looking at the pros and asking 'What are they doing that we could do?' "
Unlike professional football, which supports only
use, college football must also support the other
offense.
"A consistent, winning football program like Nebraska and Oklahoma, or Ohio State and
College teams can't make enough money from direct football ticket sales, Waugh said. The only other source is alumni donations and, to a smaller degree, radio and television contracts.
Michigan in the big Ten, carries the load, "Waugh said. 'But building that program takes money."
"We may seem like all we think about is money." Waugh said, "but look away—whom's coming our reservation?"
J. Hammond McNish, faculty representative to the Big Eight Conference, said advertising on the scoreboard was no different from advertising in football and basketball programs.
"T'S IN KEEPING with our policy," he said, but he paid advertising of some form or another.
Waugh said, "There’s always a reaction to change. But if you’ve watched athletics, you’d see it."
"I think college athletics are moving away from the puritan look at the amateur athlete. This is show off, not for me," she said.
Waugh said he thought teams on the West Coast had begun to accept commercialism in athletics. However, some reaction to KU's scoreboard has been harsh.
Getting a professional tennis group to play an
exhibition match in Allen Field House is another
idea KU could pursue, Waugh said.
He also said he could foresee the possibility of billboards in Memorial Stadium.
Mnish said, "We're not money hungry. The idea of selling beer at basketball and football games was proposed at the athletic board meeting, and although it would bring in a great deal of revenue, in that decision we agreed with Mr. Walker that it would be inappropriate. It could alienate some fans."
"Is this selling the athletic program or KU?" he said. "The chancellors and colleges of all across the country realize they have to sell a school through its athletics."
Yet, if college athletics are the new heirs to the legacies of professional sport, will they be the heirs to professional sports infighting, skycrocketing salaries and player wheeling and dealing, too?
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Or is a different college athletics program, one that favors the amateurs who play on a墒 budget for the mere enjoyment of it, a better solution to the college financial ninch?
Vol. 86 No.90
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Dykes pleads faculty pay increase
Thursday, February 19. 1976
BY SHERI BALDWIN and LYNA DSMITH Staff Writers
TOPEKA-Fiscal 1977 budget requests were renewed yesterday as Chancellor Archie R. Dykes told members of the House Ways and Means Committee that a five-percent increase in merit faculty salaries would be "grossly inadequate."
Dykes said that if the requested 10-percent merit salary increase wasn't granted, the long range result would be an increase in his salary. The faculty members to leave the University.
Immediate results would include
disappointment on the part of faculty and unclassified staff and a deflation in faculty
Ben Foster, R-Wichita, was the only committee member to question Dykes in a manner favorable to the 10-per-cent hike. Dykes said before the hearings that he had no opportunity to discuss the 10-per-cent hike or of a lack of questions from the committee.
Referring to Foster's questioning, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said, "I will ask you to interview in a couple of questions on the merits of your help will, but it looks as if just about
everyone on the committee has made up their minds."
Hearings will end today with a review of proposed capital improvements for all Regents' institutions. The Ways and Means Committee will then break into sub-committees to determine which includes budget requests for the six Regents' institutions and the Regents.
KU's next appearance will be at Senate
ways and Meenna Committee hearings after
their nomination.
SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE Dame "Pete" McCill, K-Winfield, appeared before the jury on Monday.
Med Center program cut
Staff Writer
Bv BILL SNIFFEN
A loss of federal funding that had amounted to more than $11.8 million in 10 years will force the end of the KU Medical Regional Medical Program on June 30.
Opinions differed on whether the loss of the Med Center's program, and the loss of future federal aid, would hurt the Med Center.
Federal funds are being shifted away from the Med Center's program, and others like it, to establish 10 federally controlled Regional Health Centers, Russell Mills, assistant to the chancellor for special projects, said yesterday.
"Its loss will have very little impact on the Med Center." Mills said.
But Dan Duffin, Med Center comptroller, disagreed with Mills.
BECAUSE MOST of the Med Center program's funds are invested in health-care projects across the state, the loss of future federal funding for the program won't have a direct negative effect on the Med Center, Mills said.
"It was a big grant and a big program. Naturally it will hurt—the loss of revenues to the Med Center," he said. "It 'not unlike losing $3 million support on any campus."
history was $11,786,552. Since Jan. 1, 1974,
amounted to $3.8 million.
Duffin said.
LAST YEAR, the Med Center and the University of Missouri Medical Center jointly applied for one of the 10 regional centers in the nation to establish 7679 Health Planning and Development Act.
On Jan. 1, 1974, $3,300 million in federal aid was appropriated to the program, he said. On June 30, 1975, another $778,500 was granted, but this money was "wind-down money," Duffin said, because Department of Health Education and Welfare (HEW) officials had already planned establishment of Regional Health Centers.
The Regional Health Centers would coordinate the health-care systems of 17 Health Service Agencies in Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa. KU and MU had requested a $560,000 grant for the establishment of the program.
The request was denied in December by HEW officials because it was "technically unacceptable." Med Center officials never out what "technically unacceptable" meant.
Shapiro says charges could hurt chances
They then made plans to submit a second request. But last week the MU Med Center denounced it as "illegal."
Su Wusbury, professor of community health and medical practice at MU, said
The committee ordered Shapiro to stop distribution of the brochures, which had "Shapiro-Anderson 76" stamped on them, and pay SUA, the owner of the brochures, for the 700 copies taken. An apology to Sachem was also ordered.
A FORMAL complaint against Shapiro also was filed with the committee by 14 women from Gertrude Sellards Pearson Residence Hall (GSP). The residents said in a complaint to the court, including in the hall had violated rights guaranteed to them in the residence hall contract.
Shapiro was reprimanded by the committee for the unauthorized use of satellite union brochures designed by Sachem, senior men's honorary society.
The charges were made at Tuesday night's Student Senate Elections Committee meeting.
Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park and chairman of the committee, has given support to McGill and the five-per-cent plan.
The committee referred the matter to the Association of University Residence Halls (URH) Judiciary Board for further action because it showed more direct jurisdiction than the committee.
Tasheff last night she didn't think Tuesday's wave of charges and counter-charges would affect her chances for a job. But no formal complaints were filed against us."
MU was planning to submit its own proposal for a regional health center grant.
MU WITHDREW because HEF officials had indicated that only "solid and stable" health service groups would be considered, Wesbury said.
ED ROLFS, student body president and a candidate in two presidential elections, said he didn't think the barrage of allegations on both sides would sway voter sentiment.
Mills and Chancellor Archie R. Dykes met
week and decided to center District
Center.
five per cent hike. A 10-percent hike had been recommended by Gov. Robert F. Bennett as the third and final installment of Regents' plan to increase faculty salaries.
the KU-MU group was new, it would be given less favorable consideration it would be the one said. Consequently, MU thought it would have a better chance on its own, Wesbury said.
Robert Brown, director of the Med Center's Regional Medical Program, said he had fought the approval of the 1974 planning and development act for two years because it was "purely a regulatory law" and "allowed no room for innovation."
"We're going to 'win' this election on the issues and not the candidate's tactics," he added.
Tasheff added that she thought her chances of election were even better than they had been before.
"This is politics," he said. "What succeeds us will be a disaster."
The programs and equipment provided by the Regional Medical Program—including mobile vans, training sessions for nurses and technicians and the Jaysork, a medically equipped van to help save the lives of those in need of its service to the state. Brown said.
Shapiro said the allegations would probably hurt his chances for election but said he planned to continue running a positive campaign.
REGIONAL CENTERS with local management and orientation such as the Med Center's are much more effective, Brown said.
"Any time there are last-minute charges and allegations, I think most people look at as political hackery." Every kid thinks that the campaign had about got his mind made up by this point. Rofa said many previous presidential campaigns had been full of allegations and accusations to constitute. He said he was surprised the campaign has been as calm as they were.
"It'll be a great loss to the state," he said.
DYKES SAID there was no question about the influence Lady and McGill had on the influence
But the program's primary benefit to health systems across the state was its ability to better meet the needs of people.
"We've been able to fund things and try them out," he said. "Then, after demonstration, it's easier to talk to the legislators about money."
MILLS SAID there were no plans to continue the Regional Medical Program with him.
"Our interest is in serving the region," he said. But, about dropping out of the group, he added, "We only have one chance; you have to make a choice."
Wesbury said the MU Med Center "didn't intend to go it alone," even though he said he thought MU's proposal would be the only one that would be submitted
"Many committee members still support the 10 per cent, "Dykes said, "but whether a compromise can be reached with those favoring 5 per cent remains to be seen.
'rive bêc' céen is narty enough to keep one person with the increases in cost of living 'k' becon 'bêc' céen would be whether the top-quality faculty members leaving KU for higher salaries were any different from top-quality faculty members recruited to fill their places.
Dykes said replacements weren't as satisfactory because they hadn't already demonstrated superior teaching ability and a KU loyalty.
"If we hope to keep in our state the talented people in our universities, there is no question that economic factors will be a great part of this." Dykes said.
DYKES AGREED with John Carlin, D-Smolan and House minority floor leader, that KU has the capacity to grant sizeable merit salary increases when necessary. However, smaller merit salaries would then reduce the need to remaining faculty members, he said.
A $1.25 million grant from the National Institute of Health that should put KU in the national spotlight in drug-related research on obesity. The University is a prominent importance of having top-quality people to
See PAY INCREASES page 7
55 KANSAS 30 MISSOURI 24
Battle of the boards
Herb Nobles (39), KU forward, battles for a rebound with Missouri's Stan Ray (85) and Jeff Currier (64). Missouri won both the rebound battle and the game last night, holding
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Commission to discuss city management changes
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
Mayor Barkley Clark last night asked City Manager Buford Watson to prepare a list of recommendations for changes in city management policies to be placed on the Lawrence City Commission agenda Tuesday night.
The commission finished considering the first report, submitted by the three other
Clark's request came after the commission finished its study of a 20-page report filed Jan. 27 by three members of the six-man committee that investigated charges of city mismanagement. The report also second presented to the commission.
members of the investigating committee. two weeks ago.
Last night's study session included Lawrence City department heads. It lasted more than three hours as the commission requested that could be woven into city policy.
"We've had committee investigations," Clark said at the conclusion of the session. "They've been exhaustive and open to the public. Now it's time for the city commission to get out of the business of discussing that (employ grievances) here every week."
First day voting turnout high
The turnout was up and the voting smoothly on the first day of student elections, Bruce Woner, Student Senate Committee chairman, said last night.
Students cast 1,770 votes yesterday, compared to about 1,560 votes cast on the first day of elections last spring, he said. But Kanye West, Kansas Union had the heaviest votin'.
Voting will continue for student body president and vice president, class president, and chairperson.
The commission can't satisfy everyone, Clark said, but he said the investigations and a total of five study sessions were strides to improve city government.
schools and the satellite student union referendum.
Tonight from $1 to $3 there will be polls in Lewis Hall, Corin Hall, Kippa Kappa Theta fraternity, Phi Gamma Delta fraternity and Delta Chi fraternity.
Poll will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
in the Union Lobby, Summerfield Hall,
the four floor of Wescock Hall near the
front of Flint Hall and Learned Hall.
Students will be required to present their KU ID's and spring registration cards when they vote.
Watson agreed and said he would also update the commission on total policy data.
"I've been given an opportunity to speak, but I'm not sure I've been heard on all occasions."
Muriel Paul, one of the authors of the report discussed last night, challenged the commission and city administrators repeatedly throughout the study session.
Among the recommendations discussed last night was the hiring of a consultant to
Clark said eventual policy changes should be monitored by the commission. He suggested that Watson report each policy implementation to the commission.
"Consultants have been used wisely in the past, 'Walson said,' and 'I do think he could have done it better.'"
Watson said a consultant would be useful in developing plans to raise the productivity of employees and department heads, planning the city budget and drafting employee contracts. A consultant, he said, would be someone with experience in industrial management.
Paul said Watson should answer to the charges dealing with emplove relations
Since the study sessions began, Watson said he has had a part in changing the grievance procedure, eliminating the automatic suspension of an employee from a felony investigating employee health insurance options and writing an emplove newsletter.
Commissioner Carl M贝谋 said, "I approve of him as a city manager and as a man. If I didn't think so, I'd be screaming at the top of my voice."
The commission also spent much time discussing charges that Oak Hill Cemetery, which is operated by the city, had been segregated until one year ago.
Paul, who vigorously urged the commission to "make amends" to black families who had "known 30 years of shame and disgrace," said bills should have the option to exhume their ancestors and rebury them in any part of the cemetery.
Paul said she remembered when "the first black body was put in that ground," and charged that grounds weren't mainstay for the blacks who were buried by "city designs."
Free Dekliter, director of the Parks and
Rock Department, said the figures
and grounds
See CITY page 5
2
Thursday, February 19, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Contract ruling expected
TOPEKA (AP) — The Kansas Supreme Court probably will decide today whether to accept original jurisdiction in a case challenging an attorney general's opinion
Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider ruled Tuesday that a contract among the state Water Resources Board, Kansas Gas and Electric Co. and Kansas City Power and Light Co. was invalid and unenforceable because two members of the water board had conflicts of interest.
The contract is for the sale of the state's share of water in the John Redmond Federal Reservoir during the next 50 years. The utilities would use the water in a capacity of 100 million gallons.
Civil Justice Harold R. Fatzer said the Supreme Court would decide whether to accept jurisdiction today, but wouldn't rule on the validity of the contract until it was settled.
Senate tightens military aid
WASHINGTON — The Senate yesterday passed a $4.4 billion military aid bill which will tighten congressional control over U.S. arms sales to foreign powers.
A final vote of 60 to 30 sent the measure to the House, where a similar bill is seeking final committee action.
the bill requires the executive branch to notify Congress of proposals for commercial or government sales of major weapons and of any arms exports of $25 million or more. It allows Congress to disapprove the sales by majority vote in both chambers within 30 days.
Principal assistance from the bill will go to Middle East countries. Israel will receive grants and credits supporting $2 billion in U.S. arms imports.
Britain recognizes MPLA
LONDON - Britain and seven other European countries recognized the Soviet-backed Romanian movement (MPC) AYET, yesterday as the legal government of Angola.
...obtain and seven other European countries recognized the Soviet backed Popular Movement (MPLA) yesterday as the legal government of Angola. In addition, MPLA today that recognized the MPLA were Denmark, Ireland, Italy, The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and Switzerland. France had extended recognition on Tuesday.
West Germany will decide the recognition question "at an appropriate time," a government spokesman said.
A majority of the 46 members of the Organization of African Unity have recognized the MPLA, although Zambia has been a supporter of UNITA and the
Aftershocks jar Guatemala
GUATEMALA CITY (AP)—A strong afternoon rumbled through this earl-queen-conscious city yesterday, sending thousands of residents into streets and parks.
Hundreds of families returned in recent days to their homes for the first time since the disastrous Feb. 4 earthquake, which officials estimate killed 21,122 people.
Yesterday's afterhack was recorded at 3:58 a.m. and measured 3.6 on the 12 point Mercallc scale on which 12 indicates a quake causing total destruction of all buildings.
Inspectors checking buildings and houses condemned many buildings that appeared to be safe.
Movie theaters remained closed and large public gatherings were allowed. However, a soccer match will be permitted Sunday in the Aurora Stadium.
Makeshift tents set up in streets and parks are causing traffic jams and make street cleaning difficult, but delivery of water, food and medicines from abroad is not a problem.
Birth control bill OK'd
The Kansas House of Representatives yesterday passed 93-32 a bill to allow anyone except unmarried minors to obtain family planning materials. The bill now
The measure was supposedly designed to comply with federal mandates to provide contraceptives to all persons need them, regardless of age or marital status.
n house added a restriction requiring unmarried minors to be accompanied by a parent or guardian to be able to get birth control material and devices.
Opponents of the bill had lost two key tests during Tuesday's debate.
The bill, which passed b21-19 vote, was sent to the House for its approval.
Death penalty OK'd
TOPEKA (AP)—After a close vote, the Kansas Senate yesterday approved a bill restoring the death penalty for all first degree pre-meditated murders.
Sen. Elwana Pomeroy, R-Tokea, said the bill before the Senate this year was more acceptable than last year's bill, which he voted against.
"I could never vote for a bill that imposed the death penalty for all first degree murders, when that included the felony murder rule," said Pomeroy.
The felony murder rule, which isn't covered by the Senate bill, stipulates that a person committing a crime can be held responsible for the death of another person killed during the criminal act.
The death penalty would become mandatory for all persons convicted of premeditated first degree murder if the hill was held by the House and Gov. Robert F. Bennett.
Killing under the felony murder rule will still be punishable by life imprisonment.
Kansas has had some sort of statutory capital punishment since 1859. Five persons were hanged under its provisions before 1872, when it was amended to require that all death penalties be ordered by the governor. No governor ever issued such an order, and in 1907, the entire law was repealed.
In 1936, Gov. AIF M. L. Landon, under pressure from the legislature, agreed to the reinstatement of the death penalty. Fifteen years later, the governor that measure until it was ended in 1965.
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Central spy agency proposed by Ford
WASHINGTON (AP) - President Ford yesterday proposed a powerful, centralized intelligence community, limited only in its surveillance of American citizens.
Ford also proposed secrecy legislation that would make it a crime to reveal intelligence sources and methods and ordered intelligence agencies to secrete secrets to sign a secrecy agreement.
Ford's proposal would place no limits on contact operations except for a ban on contact with employees.
"There are no restraints on the conduct of covert operations . . . other than congressional oversight," a White House aide said.
Under Ford's proposal, the attorney general could bring a civil action against any company that violated his rights.
With certain limited exceptions, Ford's order, effective March 1, places the following limits on American intelligence activities:
maximum penalty of $5,000 and five years in jail.
—No collection of information on the activities undertaken by citizen citizens, corporate or grantors.
-No electronic aesopies by the CIA inside the United States.
— No interception of communications to or from the United States by the National Security Agency.
- No physical surveillance or break-ins directed against U.S. citizens
- No infiltration of domestic groups for the purpose of influencing or reporting on them.
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Saturday, Feb. 21 8:30-12:00 p.m.
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842-2458
University Dally Kansan
Thursday, February 19. 1978
2
Hawklet's closing causes Summerfield space pinch
By JAY BEMIS Staff Writer
The closing of the Hawkett cafeteria in Summerfield Hall last summer hasn't created any new problems, students say, but it hasn't solved any old ones either.
However, the new reading room is smaller in square footage and seating space than the old one.
The Hawklet was closed because the area it occupied was needed for a new computer.
Christine Leonard, Summerfield librarian, said yesterday the old reading room measured 1,000 square feet, but the new room occupied 600 square feet.
Leonard said she also was told that half of the old reading room would be used for adding more books.
"The way the figures were quoted to me (last summer)," she said, "this one (new room) was to be larger. After I'd been in bed, I found out that the figures had been revered."
"That way we would've gained space," she said, "but it has not happened. The old reading) room uplists isn't even full, but maybe they don't have tables and chairs for it. It looks like there would be room for only 25 or 30 seats anaway."
"But materials can only be checked out for two hours, so they students can't go out."
THE PRESENT reading room has 25 "reader stations," Leonard said, and 200 to 300 items are checked out daily. Some of the books are purchased that always use the reading room, she said.
When the Hawklet and the old reading room were in operation, Leonard said, students would check out materials and go to the library for their homework and ease congestion in the reading room.
As part of a compromise when the Hawklet was closed last summer, administrators and representatives of the computer center and military science to move some of the Hawklet's vending machines into a military science annex building.
The annex building, about 100 yards north of Summerfield, could be used as a student lounge, and a concessions and study area, they said.
Students interviewed in the annex
studied how they wished the Hawklet was
its operation.
"This (amex) doesn't have the same services available as the other place," Jim told us.
THE ANNEX doesn't have as many tables and chairs as the Hawklet did, he said, and since people are always coming in with things they need to use the area until others have left.
"Most people who used the Hawklet were in the School of Business and the Hawklet was a girl. I loved her."
When students came back to school last fall, he said, they didn't even know of the teacher.
"It was kind of a anneaky deal, moving the it-waited in the summer when most students were out."
MIKE RICHARDSON, Salina special
saint, said the annex was "the same as
the first."
"This (anxin) is out of the mainstream," he said. "Not too many students come up here."
"The Hawklet was a good place to meet with students who were having problems. It also was good for job interviews, because people who did have jobs liked to speak to others. But now there's no casual place to grab a cup of coffee."
Leonard said most comments she heard from students weren't formal complaints.
"People will come in, look around, find out there's nowhere to sit and get disgusted," she said. "Most of them will ask, are you going to met more space?"
LEONARD SAID she also had noticed that there was a problem because no coffee was available.
"Sometimes there are more requests for coffee than there are for space."
Leonard allows students to eat and drink in the new reading room, as long as they
"If it starts getting trashy, I'm not going to be a maid," she said.
The dean and the associate dean of the School of Business, Leonard said, are the only ones who would be able to get more space for the reading room.
"It tell them on occasion that I need more space and they know that," she said. "There really isn't any space in Sumter." It be the one to find out about more space."
The new computer center, to be about 100
riders east of Rocky Gymnasium, should
be located at the end of the track.
LEONARD SAID she didn't know whether the reading room would be moved back to its old quarters when the computer center was completed.
"I have asked," she said, "but it's too far away and I couldn't get any answers."
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--the play, "Noah," by Ande O'Boyle, to a Midwest Depression-type setting, Mimmo director of the play and assistant professor of speech and drama, said yesterday.
The play will begin at 8 p.m. Feb. 20, 21,
22, 26 and 27.
The student actors in the play took a semester course examining the improvisational techniques for the play, she said.
She said she put the play in its modern setting so that it would relate more to Karen.
Noah and ark get new setting in Obey's play
The story centers on Noah, as a man of faith, and his middle son, Mam. as a man of stealth.
a lot to do with us. The play has to do with waiting... with the idea of paradise."
"We aren't it doing it in a Biblical period," said Sherrill. "In terms of the destruction of a world, it is one of the most horrible."
Tickets for students are available at the Murphy Hall box office without charge for those attending classes.
The University of Kansas presents:
+
A different view of the story of Naoh and
weekend in a school. Presented by University, TeReo
KU STUDENTS
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UPON PRESENTATION
OF CURRENT
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ANCRÉ OBEY'S NOAH THE SEARCH FOR A GOLDEN AGE
Reservations:
University Theatre Box Office
Murphy Hall 864-3982
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4
Thursday, February 19, 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
You get an A一,Ed
(An open letter to Ed C. Rolfs, student body president.)
Dear Ed:
Well, kid, this is it—your last day as student body president, your last day in the spotlight.
It was a pretty good year, everything considered. You managed to get beer into the Kansas Union despite the timidity of the other state schools' student body presidents and their fears of offending the Board of Regents. You were able to visit campus absidy. You were able to get the Senate budget together in a relatively short time.
There were problems, of course. The whole mess about the drug rider this summer was a horribly sloppy affair that shouldn't have happened in the first place. The Commission on the Status of Classroom Teaching was a good idea that never quite made it. If you're going to analyze teaching, which undeniably needs some improvement, it would help to have some sort of power to implement your recommendations. It also helps to have enough time to really understand an issue about which so many sources have said so many different things for so long.
BUT, GENERALLY. things went fairly well.
BUT, GENERALLY Some people say things went too well. They say that during the administration, but a little close from the Senate office.
everything was run by a little cute girl from the
Maybe so. But the sheer disorganization I've seen at some Senate meetings
makes me doubt this story. If it is true, I suspect that this thing they see as a
weakness may be one facet of your greatest strength.
weakness may be one factor in power. Let's face it, Ed, you don't always come across as the political and academic whiz of the century. In fact, some people put you down because you seem so ordinary.
BUT IF YOU aren't a whiz, at least you realize it and don't try to do everything yourself. You surrounded yourself with a competent staff and let them take care of the day-to-day trifles of student government so you could concentrate on other issues
A lot of student politicians couldn't do that. They would try to handle everything they needed so that even if they were extraordinary, they still end up doing a job.
For a student body president, you've got an awfully ordinary ego. Like any human, you are somewhat conceited. But you don't let your conceit go so far as to blind you to the triviality of some issues and the possibility of your own error.
MAYBE IT'S just because you're the president and have nowhere left to climb in student politics, but you haven't been afraid of commenting on anything this
You've been commenting even more than usual lately, having discovered, perhaps, that lame ducks have more fun. But even in the early days of your administration, you still were willing to say at least something about everything.
Even if you were doing things everybody hated, at least people knew what you were doing.
That's all over now. The best you can hope for is getting elected as a senator and causing trouble for your successor. The most the rest of us can hope is that your successor will be as open as you were.
RIGHT NOW IT'S time for you to gather your posters and your piles of Senate records and your funny newspaper clippings and get out. By tomorrow, somebody else will be running the office. By 1979, no one at KU will even know that you were student body president.
Student presidents don't just fade away, they are quickly forgotten.
THE MAIN place they are remembered in yearbooks and old Kansan files. And even there, the political issues are faded and yellowed along with the pages so that it is impossible to tell whether a student body president did a good job. All you know is that so-and-so said that and so-and-so said this.
P. S. Don't look so smug, Ed, 20 per cent of the grade was on attendance.
So, for the benefit of future generations who might read this letter, I give Ed C. Rolfs an A-minus.
Sincerely Yours,
Jim Bates
Contributing Writer
Letters Policy
The Kansan welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 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.
WASHINGTON — The American business community has been getting a bad press lately, and lately the business community has deserved it. He is not alone in making and one of them began to take shape last week at Marymount College in Tarrytown, N.Y.
Prof knows his business
had hypothetical gross sales last year of $70 million, and the company sold a million net after taxes. The sole owner of the business recently灭落. Familli's students have become victims. What do the students to do about it?
Over the next 13 weeks, the
By James J. Kilpatrick
LAST WEEK Fanelli introduced his 35 students to the problem of a hypothetical political conflict. Corporation of Summit, N.J. R
(C) Washington Star Syndicate
There Prof. Robert G. Fanei met for the first time with his students.
It was a novel experience all around. Fanelli is not a professor by profession. He is a baker. He is indeed chairman of the company, Inc., Greenwich, Conn. The course he will be teaching at Marymount has never been taught before. Its title is "Corporate Decision-Making," and the novel aspect is that it features a narrative structure where corporate executives who make decisions.
THIS EXPEDITION into academic groves resulted from Fanell's long-simmering conviction that private enterprise fares poorly in most institutions of higher learning. The principles of the profit system, in his high school admirers, except at the most prestigious business schools, students rarely encounter a real, live businessman who is equipped, as they say, to tell it like it is. Fanelli began sounding off to this effect. The Marymount College people got in touch. One student sudden there was his name in the official college catalog: Professor Robert G. Fanell. He's in charge.
Farms; his topic is manufacturing. Next week the students will hear from Walter Barilari, president of United States Corporation; his topic is warehousing and distribution.
question will be explored by Fanelli and seven other business executives who also have volunteered their time and knowledge. The professor is Gordon McGovern, president of Pepperidge
IN SUCEEDING weeks, the students will be taught by corporate executives who spend their daily lives in marketing, advertising, personnel, purchasing, labor relations and corporate finance. The course is Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 10 a.m. credit. By the time it winds up in April, the affairs of the Summit Baking Corporation may be in responsible hands.
Fanellis no has patent on his idea. He would be delighted to sell it, but he would rather executives across the country. For too long, in his view, the business community and the government tended to occupy separate
worlds. The businessman's usual role is to mail in a check to the Building Fund. It is not a hostile relationship, exactly.
AS ONE consequence, Fanelli observes, the colleges continue to graduate students who are woefully ignorant of the private enterprise system. A poll by George Gallup last year found that the typical college student earned an average profit of 45 per cent and pay only 10 per cent in federal income taxes.
"Somebody ought to tell 'em what the score is," he says. And if nobody else will, he will. Fanelli's plan ought to lend itself to adaptation by small colleges or large universities might not be so amenable. But wherever a community college can be persuaded to offer a course in corporate decision-making.
aught by corporate decision-makers, the opportunity should be explored. The typical approach is to put his money where his mouth is. Faniell's plan offers him a chance to put his mouth where his money is and teach the course and practice of free enterprise.
TWO RESERVATIONS: This heartening idea will collapse if the corporate professors do not distinguish as any good professors from the academic world, and it will fade away unless the executives are willing to stick with it. This can't be a one-nightmare ideological quick fix. But given able and persevering professors from private business, who knows? This might be the best way for the Baking Corporation but of a new generation of students as well.
AS YOU KNOW, SOME OFFICIALS IN HIGH PLACES HAVE LEAKED INFORMATION TO THE MEDIA TO SERVE THEIR OWN NEFARIOUS ENDS----
--DON'T LOOK NOW BUT I THINK I'VE GOT ONE OF THEM CORNERED?
Leap year proposes challenge
You would think that a day that only comes around once every four years would have been upon it. Parties, ancient customs or traditions should be attached to it. But it doesn't seem to be that way for Feb. 29, just treated just like any other day.
Feb. 29 was first added to the calendar by Julius Caesar in 46 B.C. Since the earth revolves around the sun, days 5 hours 48 minutes and 46 seconds, a day is added to the calendar every four years. The years numbering the centuries since the year is divisible by 400.
how the title "deep year" came to be attached to those years. The theory is that the titles "deep year" are colored blue. Feb. 28. In ordinary years, a
THERE IS nothing to indicate
During that year, it is acceptable for a woman to pursue and to propose marriage to the man. In 1288, Scotland passed a law
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
One custom has arisen from the occurrence of leap year.
given date on Monday in one year will be on Tuesday in the next.
forbidding any man from turning down a woman who proposed to him during leap season, and proposing a proposal resulted in a fine equivalent to $500. France, Genaus and Florence passed.
BECAUSE FEB. 29 hasn't been set aside for relaxation and enjoyment, one would think
that the extra day would be used to accomplish matters of vital importance. The history books, though, don't back this up. Two of the high points for that date are: in 1872 Queen Victoria of Great Britain narrowly escaped assassination attempt and in 1965 Percy Elsie was announced that he would seek a second term.
The big news from Feb. 29, 1906, was the Ladies Home Journal telling its readers that "women of good birth and breeding long ago discarded the use of perfumes. No well-bred man will exhale any other scent than his own pure sweet aroma which is the result of the daily bath and clean linen."
IN 1960, there were 120,000 Americans celebrated their true birthdays for the first time. And in 1985, they saved from the fate of turning
five the same time most people turned 20 by an English law passed during the reign of Henry VIII that made Feb. 28 their birthday in non-leap years.
Of the people born on Bef. 29,
there are no presidents, kings or
popes, although one pope did die
on that day. Bef. 29's claim to
fame comes through such
people as Lee, foot of the
Society of Jesus and Gioacchino Antonio Rossini,
composer.
WESTPHAL
OIL INDUSTRY
THE CONSUMER
**THIS YEAR FEB. 29 will come on a Sunday and stores and offices will close only because it is Sunday and not because it is Monday, everything would be business as usual. There would be no parades, celebrations or unusual events. In fact, the day of Christmas and ordinary that even the postal employees would work.
Readers Respond KJHK for students
To the Editor:
Greg Bashaw's article in Feb. 12's Kanan provided interesting information on the diversity of radio station formats available in Lawrence. However, no survey of available formats is complete without mention of KJHK-FM 91.
KJHR is the student-operated radio station of the University of Kansas. The music, news and information format is specifically designed for the KU student. We provide a musical blend of good album rock salted with funk. We conduct research of the musical desires of the Jayhawk student body, KJHK provides an alternative to the "Top-40" and "Top-40 Album Rock" stations. We play many albums from artists and groups who provide ex-sensitive content sophisticated and progressive listener. Many of these albums, desired by the listeners, are ignored by other area stations.
Although our basic musical instrument is album rock and jazz, KJHK also provides special musical programs, including classical music, gospel rock, soul and "oldies." With a strong
station the University of Kansas students want.
news commitment, short informational programs on the rising subjects and cover areas of interest, short JKHJ is the kind of radio
Ernie Martin
Faculty Adviser and
General Manager, KJHK
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Editor
Carl Young
Published at the University of Kansas weekly
journal. Subscription is $12.00 per issue.
Periodical periods. Second-class postage paid at Law-
nace station. Free mailing to campus or semester or
$1 a week in Duxbury County and $1 a month in
Kansas City. Subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through
the university's subscription lists.
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Betty Haegelin Yael Abouhalkah
Associate College Editor
Associate High School Editors
Photo Editor
Staff Photographers
Sports Editor
George Miller, Jay Kouzer
Associate Sports Editors
Steve Stone,
Entertainment Editors
Greg Huegel
High School Editors
Stewart Bramu
David Crawford
George Miller, Jay Kouzer
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
General Branch Local Branch
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager Assistant Product Manager Debbie Service Manager Classified Manager Manager Debbie Services Promotions Director Manager Scott Bush Assistant Management Manager Jim Marquardt Assistant Business Manager Jim Marquardt
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Thursday, February 19.1976
5
Watkins wait tries patient patience
University Daily Kansan
By FRED JOHNSON
Staff Writer
Students who want to see a doctor at Watkins Memorial Hospital without spending time in the waiting lounge should get there early.
With 10 doctors available to treat an average of 125 patients a day, somebody can handle it.
Although the large number of patients sometimes extends the waiting period to more than an hour, doctors and students often wait until the patients are treated as quickly as possible.
Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Hospital, said vacacations and illness in the hospital staff had increased the time that patients spent in the waiting lounge.
"A FULL STAFF would be 12 full-time doctors and one part-time doctor." Wolkman said Tuesday. "Two doctors left the hospital to get special training and one is ill, so we are down to nine full-time doctors and one part-time."
Wollmann said it was impossible to predict when the vacancies would be filled. Several qualified people have shown in previous years that they couldn'tin the staff before July or August.
Wollmann said the staff had considered having patients make appointments to try to decrease the time spent in the waiting lounge. The problem with an appointment system is that a doctor can't know in advance how long it will take to treat a patient, be said.
If a doctor takes more time with a patient than he has scheduled for him, he said, patients must be treated.
WOLLMANN SAID the doctors had tried to encourage students to come to the hospital as early in the morning or afternoon as soon. If they come early, Wollman said, their waiting time will be shorter; most of students in the lounge will be cut down.
Patients may check in 8 a.m. to:
11:30 a.m. and from 2 p.m. to: 4:30 p.m.
A doctor is on duty to treat emergency cases
24 hours a day.
About 20 per cent of the patients are treated by nurses, Wollmann. Nurses can't do everything a doctor can, he said, but they can handle such things as periodic allergy injections and treatment of minor cuts and abrasions.
Wollmann said he hoped to change the part-time position on the staff to full-time and add one more staff position in July, in addition to filling the two vacancies.
THE NEW positions have to be approved by the state legislature, he said.
Bryan Walters, general practitioner,
said he thought a number system might cut
down the number of people in the waiting
lounge. If a student could pick a number
checked in he could leave and come back
back later without losing his place in line, be said.
"I tried the appointment system for about
City...
were continually moved. However, he said,
mowing the entire cemetery takes one week
and some parts become overgrown in that
time.
From page one
City Clerk Vera Mercer, who has collected grave lot fees for almost 10 years, said no city policy has ever dictated that a burial be buried in a special section of the cemetery.
Commissioner Marinie Arsenger, who was a member of the six-man committee, apologized for any injustices that may have caused him to miss a mission could not improve the reeburial plan.
In other discussion, the commission seemed in agreement to recommendations of written notices of probation periods; legal investigation of probation purchases; review of Affirmative Action guidelines; implementation of training; safety programs; and no requirement for employees to operate unsafe vehicles.
45 years in my private practice before I
didn't work," he said. "I will had patient
ships."
Walters said most of the students didn't get upset about waiting to see a doctor. Very rarely does a student complain about having to wait, he said.
Mary Hatfield, general practitioner, said an appointment system would cut down on the number of patients a doctor could see each day. She said time would be lost if the patient less than time lapse scheduled to treat a patient and didn't have another one waiting.
HATFIELD SAID the students were gracious about waiting.
Dennis Dahl, general practitioner, said most of his patients understood that the hospital was understaffed and that the ratio to doctors made waiting unavoidable.
"Many students have apologized for coming to see me when I was so busy," she
"They understand that doctors in private practice have patients waiting too," he said.
waiting lounge indicated that they were
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One student, who asked not to be identified, said he thought the doctors were doing their best to see patients as soon as they could.
aware of the hospital's problem and knew they might be a long wait before they please the doctor.
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Bill Kempin, Leavenworth sophomore, said he expected to have to wait because he slept last and didn't get to the hospital until after 11 a.m.
"This is a busy place," he said. "They could use more doctors."
Open 7 a.m.-12 p.m.
The student said he sometimes waited two hours to see a doctor.
"THERE are just too many students and not enough doctors," he said.
Steve Baru, Overland Park senior, said that the long wait at the hospital interfered with his classes but that he understood it. He said that the doctors had patients that came to the hospital each day.
Another student, who asked not to be identified, said he came to the hospital and waited during his lunch hour to beat the afternoon rush.
He said that he didn't know how many doctors were on the staff but that he assumed there was a large patient-to-doctor ratio.
"IF YOU WAIT until the afternoon to come in, you usually have to wait at least an hour," he said.
Kathy Nelson, Wellington senior, said she came to the hospital after her last morning class so she could see her doctor as soon as he got back from lunch.
Students who want medical advice but don't want to wait in the hospital can call 843-4456 and talk to a nurse or leave their number and ask a doctor to call back when he is free. There is someone at the hospital to answer the phone 24 hours a day.
We'd Like Your Opinion
SUA Forums Committee has drawn up the following list of possible speakers for the remainder of this spring. We considered availability, subject, price and appeal. Please tear out this ad, or write ONE choice on a piece of paper and drop it in the box in front of the SUA office in the Union. We think this will help us to better serve you. Thanks.
1. TOM WOLFE (author, the Electric Koolaid Acid Test)
2. GARY TRUDEAU
(Pulitzer prize-winning cartoonist of "Doonesbury")
3. LEONARD NIMOY
3. LEONARD NIMOY (author; Mr. Spock on "Star Trek")
4. BILL RUSSELL (coach/general manager, NBA Seattle Supersonics)
5. JOHN GLENN (astronaut; U.S. Senator from Ohio)
6. DAN RATHER (CBS News correspondent; co-author, All the President's Men)
7. MARK GREEN (attorney; former Nader's Raider; topic-American legal system and judicial reform)
8. HUNTER THOMPSON (Gonzo journalist; political observer; author)
9. BARRY WEISBERG (People's Energy Commission- Nuclear power opponent)
11. MR. NICOLAS GONZALES REVILLA (Panamanian ambassador to U.S.)
10. CECILY TYSON (acclaimed theater and television actress)
We can't guarantee that we'll be able to obtain one of these, but your opinion would be of help. Other comments that might help us to define the Forums area would also be welcomed. Please respond only once.
s/Brad Bradley, SUA Forums Chairman
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6
Tuesday, February 19, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Convertibles scarce but still tops
Staff Writer
By GREG BASHAW
With balmy spring weather, come afternoon car rides for some, night drives for others. But the springtime custom of convertible cruising may be fading.
The soft-tops are quickly becoming a bit of American history.
Cadillac, the only American company still making convertibles, will close production in its soft-top models and the dealers say used convertibles are as scarce as snow these days.
John Smith, sales manager of Dale Willey Pontiac-Cadillac, says demand has been so great for the last of the American-made convertibles that customers have offered to
pay much more than the $11,000 list price for one of the cars.
"We won't even accept orders for them because the waitlist is already so long," he said. "All the models Cadillac has planned to make are spoken for."
Cadila announced last fall that it would build 14,000 convertibles this year and then build 25,000 more.
Smith said Cadillac limited convertible production to 14,000 because that number was all of the rag tags the company could get. The firm that supplied car makers with the tops has stopped producing them, he said.
The end of convertible production won't affect Codd's overall production, and no changes to its stock mix would be needed.
“EVEN AT the height of convertible popularity in the mid '60s, convertibles accounted for only about seven per cent of the total American output,” he said. “The production kept diminishing until it was less than two per cent at Cadillac this year.”
Smith said the demand for convertibles had been eroded by auto air conditioning, a rising number of damages and thefts, air conditioning failure and the high-speed driving, with the top down.
money from stopping production, Smith said.
On Campus
TONIGHT: Florida XXII-31 of the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary will begin registration for a BOATING SAFETY CLASS at 7:30 in the Lawrence Room of the Community Building, FAUL DAVIDOFF, urban lawyer and city planner, will be present. The Hartford Experience"* at 8 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
TOMORROW: Approximately 390 high school journalists from 21 schools in northeast Kansas will compete in the Kansas Scholastic Press Association REGIONAL WRITING CONTEST in the Kansan newsroom in Flint Hall and in the Kansas Union.
PART-TIME STUDENT JOBS are posted outside 28 Strong: Food service, two;
bbs; typing-clarify, five; research lab, four; teaching graduate assistant, two;
school; tutoring.
Events...
THE FREE UNIVERSITY is gathering course ideas and looking for teachers in many areas. For further information, call 864-3477.
Federal accident impact requirements and roll-over tests also helped to hurry the convertible's demise. Smith said, because he was already in a vehicle that didn't pass minimum safety requirements.
TERRY EDWARDS, Lawrence, has been appointed to serve as Douglas County coordinator for the President Ford Committee.
Wally Workman, salesman at John Haddock Ford-Fiat, agreed. He said the convertible Flat Spider was a popular commodity in Lawrence.
State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, will sponsor a BICENTENIAL POETRY CONTEST. The work must be original and deal with the country and the Bicentenial. There are no length, form, or composition requirements. The three age groups are through 15, 18 through 64, and 63 and above. A $100 prize will be awarded.
Sims said new Volkwagen convertibles cost more than regular models because the convertible bodies are handmade. The smaller cars would always be a market for soft tons cars.
"The convertible's a recreational vehicle that gives you that great open-air feel," he said.
The regional deadline for submission of films for this year's THIRD ANNUAL STUDENT FILM AWARDS is April 15, 1976.
"THE SPIER'S a real hot item here, he said. "It's one of the moves we've run."
buy them usually buy them to keep and take good care of them."
Announcements . . .
In coming years, car makers will build models featuring open air roofs, Smith said.
"The future holds promise for sun roofs, moon roofs, astro roofs, whatever the different dealers want to call them," he said. "They're safer than convertibles and their rigid roofs can stand up to the federal standards."
FOREIGN CAR makers, including
followers and Flat, still produce comp-
panions and other vehicles.
Painting exhibition opens this weekend
Allen Sims, salesman at Jayhawk Volkswagen, said that buying a new convertible was about the only way to get one. The company had only used soft toy cars available.
The Lawrence Arts Center will have its second annual painting exhibition this weekend, and two $100 awards will be given for the best entries.
Workman said the convertible option added about $100 to the cost of the car but customers seemed to be willing to spend the extra money to get the feature.
Entries, which will be accepted through tomorrow, will be judged Saturday.
Ann Evans, Lawrence Arts Center director, said Charles Sanderson, a Wichita school professor.
The contest is open to Douglas County residents who are over 18 and to Lawrence Art Guild members, Evans said. Entries in water colors, acrylics, oils, encaustic will be accepted, she said, and all entries must be framed and ready to be hung.
The entry fee is $3 for gold members and
the entry fee is $10 for non-members will be
charged a $2 entry fee.
The awards were contributed by the
Award Arts Center and the Lawrence
Art Gallery.
Fiat may install roll bars in next year's models to ensure compliance with federal regulations.
"The're confusion now over whether the roll bars are required by law," he said. The "78 models don't have roll bars but they may be installed on all of next year's cars."
"We get very few trade-ins on convertibles," he said, "because people that
Frank Everett, salesman at Turner Chevrolet, said his dealership rarely got convertible trade-ins and, when they did, the models were usually sold within a week.
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Pipes Papers Etc
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Maverick 18.50 plus 11c per mile 64.00 plus 11c per mile 7.50 plus 11c per hour 1.50 per hour
Mustang Targa 11.00 plus 11c per mile 79.00 plus 11c per mile 7.00 plus 11c per hour 1.50 per hour
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For an interview, see Jim Gromelski at the Engineering Placement Office February 23rd, 24th or 25th. Make your appointment now. Or call collect 816-374-3433.
Buy a large Coke and keep the glass.
Collect your set of 6 or 8.
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Thursday, February 19.1976
Pay increases ...
From page one
draw federal funds and recognition to KU. Ten of the 40 faculty members who left last year went to universities offering better salaries, Dykes said. Six of the 40 were terminated and three are continuing their education, he said.
The University is requesting new classified positions (one for every three faculty members) and new positions. If this request isn't met, Dykes said, professionals would have to be used instead of classified personnel to do the job. But such a change which would create a large increase in cost.
A REQUEST for a 12-percent increase in other operating expenditures (OEE) was called by Dykes as the University's "most critical request, next to the faculty salaries increase." OEE represents all University expenditures except salaries.
The request is needed to counter the University's net loss in purchasing power in the four years, Dykes said. The wholesale rate was 8.4 percent in those four years, but the University has received only a 27.4-percent increase in appropriations during the same period.
DYKES SAID funding for increased credit hours taught during the summer hadn't been met. During the summer session of fiscal 1973, the University offered 30,728 credit hours. In fiscal 1977, 39,500 summer credit hours will be offered.
"The summer session is an important part of the University's total education." "Dykes said. "I see no reason why it isn't supported by the rest of the year."
Dykes urged consideration of an additional $85,533 in OEE for the University's summer session. The University has received funding to cover only the rise in teaching costs for increased summer enrollment. he said.
Dykes asked for $362,703 in supplemental funding for increased cost of utilities in fiscal 1978. The supplemental funding is Dykes' responsibility. University's current resources aren't drained.
Bennett earlier had recommended the deletion of a $70,498 request for seasonal and temporary custodial salaries, which Dykes urged be reinstated in the budget.
DYKES ALSO asked authorization to spend additional fees incurred from an unexpected enrollment increase last fall. More than 1,000 full-time equivalent students enrolled in the fall 1975 semester, than were anticipated in the budget.
"The campus is kept attractive by the use of seasonal help." Dykes said. "To maintain the University's facilities, the budget request should be restored."
An additional $23,455 for student help was requested by the Chancellor because "we like to encourage the utilization of students."
MINIMUM WAGE FOR the University is now $2.10, but is scheduled to go to $2.30 on Jan. 1, 1977. The University's request would not meet this minimum wage increase.
University Daily Kansan
Dykes pointed to the committee the University's request to keep shrinkage rates at two per cent for classified and unclassified employees. Bennett has recommended a five-per-cent shrinkage rate for classified employs.
Shrinkage is a figure representing the amount of money not used when positions remain vacant because of employee deaths, or because of an unpaid shrinkage rate is set, the number of
authorized positions that must be kept vacant increases or the period of time that a position is held.
A five-per-cent shrinkage rate would have to be artificially generated by keeping positions open, Dykes said. A two-per-cent increase can be met by normal turnover, he said.
SHANKEL SAID. "All studies indicate we are understaffed in buildings and grounds. Our request for additional personnel was not recommended by the Governor, and he also proposes to take our seasonal help and raise the shrinkage rate to five per cent.
"We are being hit from four or five different directions at the same time."
--car-field. FLAT 124 is a handsome traditional sports roadster. FLAT X19 has been acclaimed the most exciting car in its field.
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THE UNTERWANK GARD
Across the street from Penney's, above Jay Shoppe
842-624-8160 at 3:10 p.m. Monday - Thursday
9am - 5pm
FIAT IS THE BEST SELLING CAR IN EUROPE
John Haddock Imports wants to see FIAT become the best selling import in LAWRENCE! Come in and see the reasons why. . .
FIAT 128 The car that made VW develop the Rabbit.
FIAT 128 has all the features of the rabbit but is priced hundreds of dollars less.
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Ph.843-3500
VOTE VOX POPULARES
(POPULAR VOICE) February 18th and 19th
TEDDE TASHEFF CANDIDATE FOR STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT
ARCHITECTURE
Steve Chucovich
Kevin Flynn
JOURNALISM
Bill Fronch
Stevo McMurry
EDUCATION
Becky Powell
Elaine Samuel
Stacy Butler
Paggy Simmons
Sherry McKee
Margy Dowell
LIBERAL ARTS
and SCIENCE
Dan Black
Bart Duckworth
Charles Fairchild
Kathy Hannah
Lori Kline
Kellou McLeonry
John Olson
Maureen O'Sullivan
Jim Pearson
Richard Rothfolder
Phyllis Robertson
Mike Taraboulos
Molly Wood
David Wooding
Pat Maloney
1978
OUR COALITION
DISTRICT 1:
Reggie Robinson Phyllis Thompson
Ed Duckers Randy McKernan
Debbie Sedorcek
DISTRICT 3:
Jay Howard Dan Bayer
Brad Storrett Cathy Bailey
DISTRICT 2:
Mark Allon Tom Thorp
Sura Toers Chi-Chi Coe
DISTRICT 4:
Grant Larkin Rich Glover
Cindy Seaton Jeff Shadwick
Julie Riggs
DISTRICT 5:
Mari Wahl Sharon Pavel
STEVE OWENS CANDIDATE FOR STUDENT BODY VICE-PRESIDENT
SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS
PRES: Russ Engel
VP: Ralph Munyan
SECR: Susan Rlieger
TREA: Loslo Groen
JUNIOR CLASS
OFFICERS
PRES: Todd Hunter
VP: Dave Ranirox
SECR: Nancy Woldensaul
TREA: Cinda Osnoss
SENIOR CLASS
OFFICERS
PRES: Bill French
VP: Steffen Van Koppol
SECR: Marlano Maurin
TREA: Dorothy Schloorb
BUSINESS
Juli Anderson
Dave Dyer
Mike Tamburini
ENGINEERING
Jeff Nunes
Scott Lumpe
Woosei Purzer
Jim McCarton
FINE ARTS
Jan Harman
Chuck Fischer
Phil Kaufman
Sara Stevenson
Theresa Schuchart
PAID FOR BY VOX POPULARES
8
Thursday, February 19, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Smith's last-second tip-in stuns KU, 61-60
By STEVESCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
It doesn't take long for Missoula guard Willie Smith to make you feel like you're mad.
How about one second and one sound of the final buzzer?
As the last second was ticking off the Allen Field House clock and the 13,256 fans were roaring, Smith leaped and with two hands tipped the ball over the KU defen-
It fell down the chute and the Tigers had a dramatic 61-16 victory over the Jayhawks to maintain their tight hold on the Big Eight lead.
BUT THEN AGAIN, not everyone saw it that way.
"I thought the buzzer was off before Willie Smith tipped the ball," KU's Norm Cook said. "It's a cool game."
Ten seconds earlier it looked all but over for Missouri.
Cook, a forward, had been beFIed by the Tigers' James Claibon. The 6-8 junior calmly sank both ends of a one-and-one to put the Jawhavas ahead by one, 60-59.
Smith took the inbound pass, hit Clabaton at mid-court, fired the ball to center Stan
raey, who was all by himself two feet away from the KU bucket.
RAY SHOT, BUT missed. Kim Anderson,
Missouri 60-47, lowered, tipped the missed
ball down and broke through the bottom.
Smith then out-jumped Cook and KU's four guards—Milt Gibson, Clint Johnson
sports
Cris Barnhoun and Brad Sanders—to tj the ball in as the gun sounded.
"All we had to do was have someone jump on the boards," said Ted Owens, the KU coach, whose team trapped to 5-1 in league play and 12-10 over. "But Norman (Cook) was the only size we had. The other guys were just too small."
OWENS WAS FORCED to play four guards because forwards Ken Koenigs and Herb Nobles and center Paul Mokeski had all fouled out.
Owens said. "We wanted to get the ball out of Smith's hands and we did so. With six seconds left I looked up and didn't even see him. Then they make that hard pass to Ra."
NORM STEWART, THE Missouri coach,
wanted Smith, who was the game's leading
offense.
Even with the small team, Owens got his jaywhacks to play the final 10 seconds to win.
"We really did what we wanted to do,
"We planned to run all the time off and then have Wille tip it in at the buzer," Stewart quipped. "No, really, we wanted Wille to have the ball, and in case they double-teamed him we wanted another guy near the basket."
★ ★ ★
BANKSAS (60)
| | FG | FT | RB | TP | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Cook | 6-18 | 7-9 | 1 | 1 | 18 |
| Cook | 6-18 | 7-9 | 1 | 1 | 18 |
| Mokhani | 5-9 | 1-1 | 7 | 5 | 12 |
| Johnson | 5-9 | 1-1 | 7 | 5 | 12 |
| Johnson | 5-9 | 1-1 | 7 | 5 | 12 |
| Clark | 1-0 | 0-0 | 3 | 0 | 10 |
| Nobles | 3-4 | 7-0 | 0 | 3 | 7 |
| Nobles | 3-4 | 7-0 | 0 | 3 | 7 |
| Sanders | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Sanders | 0-0 | 0-0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| WINNERS (41) | FO | FT | BR | PF | T |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kennedy | 6 | 12 | 14 | 5 | 12 |
| Kensely | 10 | 12 | 14 | 5 | 12 |
| Riley | 4-10 | 1-2 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
| Ray | 6-10 | 1-2 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
| Smith | 10-25 | 1-2 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
| Smith | 10-25 | 1-2 | 4 | 1 | 10 |
| Cashion | 0-3 | 2-2 | 2 | 3 | 8 |
| Cashion, M | 0-3 | 2-2 | 2 | 3 | 8 |
| Total | 34-45 | 13-21 | 16-21 | 6 | 11 |
Kansas
Attendance: Jerry Meen and Buford Goddard
Attendance: 13,260
"THEY DIDN'T HIT very well against our zone on their first shots," Owens said, "but we kept giving them second and third tries. Those really hurt us."
Kansas track hosts OSU, WSU
THE JAYHAWKS, who already have qualified 10 individuals and two relay teams, have several athletes close to KU's leadership strength KU's NCAA title chances.
Mouri, 9; in conference action and 21-3 overall, outbounded the Jayhawks, 42-37. Smith, only 6-2, was the biggest culprit with eight.
By GARY VICE
Admission is free to the meet beginning at 9:30, which will include both men's and women's programs.
In tonight's triangular meet against Oklahoma State and Wichita State in Allen Field House, the University of Kansas track team will be out to qualify athletes in more events for the upcoming NCAA championships.
Sophomore spinner Cliff Wiley is omen-
taining the qualifying
gift of $1 in the skydrive d
bank.
Thad Talley, KU assistant track coach,
said yesterday, "He qualified last year in
the 60, and there is no reason he shouldn't
make it this year,"
The KU women take on Kansas State in dual competition.
SENIOR LARRY Jackson will be shooting for the NCAA qualifying standard in the 90-yard dash. Jackson recorded a 6.2 touchdown last month and has a lifetime best of 6.0.
Jim Podrebarac, hopeful of joining his role Rudy Guglielmi to improve his late wife's health.
Staff Writer
Poderbarca said, "I want to qualify this meet or at the (Big) Eight indoor. I should
KU was paused by Cook, who popped in 19 points. Mokseki added 11 and Gibson 10. After Smith's 26, Missouri was led by Anderson with 12 and Ray with 10.
Study in Guadalajara. Mexico
Rainbow cleared 7- in the U.S. Track and Field Federation championships last Saturday in Oklahoma City and is short of the NCAA standard by just an inch.
THE GUADALAJARA SUMMER
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Brack, KU's top returning hurdler, needs
HIGH JUMPER STEVE Rainbolt and hurdler Dennis Bracke also are close to qualifying for the trip to Detroit and the NCAA meet.
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) -Kansas State, led by sophomore guard Mike Evans' 30 points, downed Nebraska 65-31 last night in Big Ten basketball action here before a crowd of 8,000.
K-State is 8-2 in the Big Eight, good for second place, and Nebraska is 7-3.
KSU's Evans fells Nebraska
The game got in the slow a start. With 8-17 to play in the first half, Nebraska junior forward Bob Siegel tied the score on a layup at 13-13.
K-State was on the 23,19 with 3:30 left in the half. But in the period's final minutes Nebraska held K-State scoreless and made eight points to lead at the half 27-23.
In the next seven minutes, K-State rallied to smatch the lead. Junior forward Larry Dassie scored from five to push Kansas State ahead, 38-37.
The Wildcats outscored the Huskers 14-4 in the remainder of the game. Overall, the Wildcats scored 25 points, over the Huskies' 18.
Nebraska tied the score three times during the next four minutes, but couldn't grab the lead. With 3:21 remaining, junior forward Rickey Hankey scored from underneath, pulling the Huskers to 51-49, the last time Nebraska came close to victory.
Nebraska raced to its biggest lead of the contest with 18:42 to play when senior guard John Stark had 17:03.
Another potential doubled is Kevin Newell, a KU qualifier in the 60, who is only two-tenths of a second off the 48.7 time needed in the 440. However, Newell has a slight muscle strain and won't run tonight, Talley said.
KU shot ahead, 37-30, at the start of the half second, but then started getting beat on the boards. Nearly every basket the Tigers打破 was on second and third follow shots.
McCall's best 600 is 1.3 seconds off the NCAA standard of 1.10.7.
to lower his best time in the 60-year high hurdles by one-tenth of a second to 7.2 to join freshman teammate Anthony Coleman, who hit 7.2 last month.
TALLEY SAID HE was hopeful that some team members would be able to qualify in more than one event, Tommy McCall, who has qualified in the half-mile, will run the 600-yard run tonight for a chance at doubling in the NCAA.
"THAT HAMSTRING has hampered Kevin all inward season," he said, "and we
don't want to take any chances on any athlete in this meet."
Talley said that neither Oklahoma State nor Wichita State had a very strong team.
KU will be hard-pressed to win in the long jump and triple jump events, Talley said Vervil Crawford, Wichita State's outfielder, who regretted as one of the best in the region.
THE BIG EIGHT leader in the 440-yard dash, KU's Randy Benson, won't be in the quarter mile field because of his recurring knee injury. The team is not indicating to the mile relay, the last event.
Benson said yesterday, "I'm going to swim tonight, and then I'll probably run in the relay. I need to rest my up breast (the Big Eight) indors."
Missing from tonight's lineup will be shot patter Rudy Guevara, who has a sore ankle.
The African Student Association of the University of Kansas
Presents
Night
The Second Annual
African
Feb. 21, 1976
$3.50 Single Adult
At Westminster Foundation, 1204 Oread
6:00-9:00 p.m.
$1.50 Children 12 & Under
$6.00 Couples
Tickets on Sale
SUA Office-Kansas Union
African Studies-116 Strong Hall
K.U. African Club Members
Sponsored by International Club
THE GAME WAS a dog fight from the outset. Smith hit the Tigers' first 10 points to give MU an early 10-lead. KU came right back, however, behind the inside game of Kobe, plus the newly found outside shooting touch of Gibson, to lead at halftime, 33-28.
The International Club is funded from the Student Activity Fee
African night disco will be in Big 8 Room,
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
Place an ad
Call 864-4358
Kansas Union at 9:30 p.m., same date.
TONITE: GOD'S OWN JUKE BOX
Rhythm & Blues — Folk — Country Don't miss it!!! only at
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
926 Mass.
843-8575
842-9458
BIG BOY
JB'S
February Special
79c
Brawny Beef Burger
Reg. 95c
JB'S
The Honest-To-Goodness Restaurant
SLA TRAVEL
There Is Still Time To Sign Up
PADRE ISLAND
$ 121^{00} $ March 12-21
INCLUDES:
—Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
INCLUDES:
Round Trip Charter Bus Transportation
- Seven Nights Accommodations at the Sand Castle
Private Pool and Fishing Dock
-Kitchenettes (fully equipped)
-Side Trip to Old Mexico
- Side Trip to Old Mexico
- Limited Shuttle Bus Service
- Beer and Eats Party at Padre
- Beer and Eats Party at Patreo
- Free Beer and Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
GROUP FLIGHTS
Only a Few Places Left
DENVER . . . . March 12 *101°
So Hurry Inll
CHICAGO . . . March 12 *'69⁰ᵃ*
Deadline March 2
HELPING STUDENTS GO PLACES IN A WAY THEY CAN AFFORD.
Stop by the SUA Office or Call 864-3477
SHAKESPEARES PIZZA "as you like it"
MUSHROOMS
PIZZA
1
FREE DELIVERY
841-1777
open mon.-sat. 5:00-1:00 delivery until 12:30
sun. 4:00-12:00 delivery until 11:30
west of the Chi Omega fountain
---
Bicentennial Buy
Snadies
2 Cheeseburgers and Order of Fries All for ONLY
Sandy's
Sandy's HAMBURGERS come as you are...hungry
TWICE
76¢
Good thru Sunday, Feb. 22
2120
W. 9th
Thursday, February 19. 1976
University Daily Kansan
9
CB radios carried off
A rash of citizen's band radio thefts was reported yesterday by the Lawrence Police Department.
K-State-Kansas game sold out in Manhattan
Police said more than 20 CB radio were stolen sometime between Monday evening and 7 a.m. Tuesday. Most of the thefts occurred in the Indian Hills area.
It is believed that the thefts could have been carried out by a single group. The answer is unknown.
One of the radios belonged to a KU student, Jamie Maloney, Wichita senior.
By JOHN THARPE
Persons planning to go to the KU-K State basketball game Saturday who don't have a ticket will find that their best bet for a court-side seat will be in front of a TV set.
All game tickets have been sold, and all tickets were sold in Manhattan.
"This is the first year ever we did not exchange tickets with K-State," Dou Messner, assistant athletic director and head coach of the association business manager, said vested day.
NO SWAP occurred this season because K-State sold mostly reserved seat tickets, Messer said. He talked to the K-State Athletic Department several times to try to make arrangements to exchange tickets, he said, but had no luck.
"We pleaded with them on several occasions to add seat or something, but we couldn't get them to work it out." Messer said. "They kind of had their backs to the wall by commitments to season ticket holders.
CAROL ADOLF, K-State ticket manager,
said season tickets went on sale in October,
and were gone within two weeks. She said
that because of this, KU didn't send any
tickets to Manhattan for the game on
January 31 in Lawrence.
"We'd just as soon not had any (this year) because of the way they treated us last year. Why, they put us up in the last three years, referring to the 1975 seating arrangements."
Adolf said that K-State discouraged students from selling their tickets for the
*Anyone with a student ticket must have a card with a photo that matches the ticket holder.*
game Saturday and that there was very little ticket scalping.
Ahearn Field House, which has a seating capacity of 10,800, will be packed, she said. Karry Carney, news editor for the Kansas State Collegian, reported that students began camping outside the gym Wednesday afternoon for Saturday's 1:30 game.
Several press tickets for the 58 seat press box have been distributed, according to the Chicago Tribune.
THERE WILL be 40 more passes for photographers and 40 complimentary letters from the museum.
The planned SUA bus trip to the game had cancelled earlier this year when it was
"When we take a trip, we try to provide a
trip and we can't get tickets this year."
said SUT.
Last year, 80 students took the bus trip,
she said.
determined that no tickets would be available to KU for the game.
"THESE ARE NOT from over-the-counter sales." Novotny said.
However, 25 tickets did make it to Lawrence for the game. John Novotny, executive director of the Williams Educational Fund, said these were complimentary tickets, part of a Big Eight Conference policy.
"They go directly to Coach Owens, to play in the immediate use of the basketball staff."
He said all Big Eight schools exchanged
this 25-ticket block every game. The seats are directly behind the team's bench, serving as a buffer between players and opposing fans.
The game will be televised at 1:10 p.m. Saturday on channels 4, 13 and 27. Because Ahearn Field House will be crowded, many KU students are planning to watch the game in person or via parties. But the diehard fans will probably show up in Manhattan to try to get tickets.
Use Kansan Classifieds
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A
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920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-9 p.m.
one two three four five times times times times
15 words or fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
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
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. Here all cases can be placed in person or the UDK business office at 641-858.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
FOR SALE
We can make your stereo sound better- GUAR-
DER systems. We also carry two data centers
at Audio Systems, 30 Ft. 90 In.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESSE - Magnesium
amidates the water-soluble components of
the DNA polymerase. The benefit is
increased DNA synthesis and longevity.
Tenebrend selection of guitars, drums, basses.
Shop - How Keyboard Studio. Choose from Gibbon,
Honey Shop, Keyboard Studio, Greta, and many others.
Wing Amp. Alto, Greci, and many others.
1420 W. 25rd. How Keyboard Studio.
1420 W. 25rd. #8436. How Keyboard Studio.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Spare-
sure BELIC AUTO ELECTRIC, 849-3690, 900 W, 40 h.
520 VAC.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of cards. Send $1 to your up-to-date, 166 page, mail order catalog. Research Assistance Institute, Los Angeles, California. fax (213) 477-8474.
COST *10-170er* Stereo equipment. All major brands Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single item or package Register for free Koss King. Pricing details. Dale. Phone # 658-6395. Earnings 6 to 10.
Quitting business sale—bargain! Everything from laundry and furniture to aurora large building full of merchandise so have free fruits and vegetables. Country Shops are so nice! How? 48, Open 9-6, seven days. 843-744-239.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Appliances. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704
W. 23rd St., New York, NY 10028.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold
and silver earrings, sculpture, conventional
design, organic form. Execu-
sured by B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting
and variety of unisex stones 141-3833 or
843-0970
1974 Vega Hatchback. Near condition, one
female) and has snow free. Episode 218
03/01/1974
STEREO Pioneer CDQ 949 2 Boxak speakers, 2 speaker.
Pioneer. Pioneer L510m turntable, 12T8485
Pioneer.
1966 Dolge Coronet, Automatic, PS snow tires,
new brakes, excellent condition, $29.
5-19
10-19
For Sale 1808 Ply. Fury II, 3 dr. 218 bll 2 bbl
For Sale 1808 Ply. Fury II, 3 dr. 218 bll 2 bbl
1808 Ply. Fury II, AK, INC, AKC, $700, Ccom
ARC registered Irish Sister Pupa for sale. Will make good bird douds Call 834-6531 or 841-4666
Two 12 inch 3-way Utah Speakers. Excellent condition. Call 845-4797 after 3 p.m.
1952 GMC Truck $400, 1960 Oldsmobile $1700
1963 Ford F-250 $1800
Carridge Cards 115 Call a 后 911-320-250
210 Carriage Cards 115 Call a 后 911-320-250
72 Cameroon, power and air his. Ham spellers, bood
and furnaces, gas-fired boilers, new buildings and
new trees and new AM/FM radio with 22000 watts.
95 Cameroon, power and air his.
AB-KT Burbank, Sherwood 7109A Receiver, 2
AX-AR Rockville, Sherwood at set 30
price. 15 mdl. old. 842-189 eepw
extra-long double bed set, best Latex toam, $75.
电话 841-8599-3020
2-20
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & 8th A
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CRAFTED
15 East 8th 041-2646
10.5 Monday-Saturday
1 pair of Davies Shoes 189e made in Austria,
$260 each. 2 pairs sold for $345 or $485,
or one pair will sell for $149 or $179.
Cat Calig $414,788.
MACRAME BEADS
large selection of sizes & prices
Mon. Sat. 10:5-30
19th & Mass.
AM-FM Stereo Car Radio, call 842-6258. 2-23
Couluton 4X5 view camera, with Dagor, extraz,
mini camera. Drive 5A4-LA4 short
motion. 843-2760.
armadillo bead co
*41.9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun*
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sat!
*Must be submitted by January 21*
Makes sense to use them...
*2) For class preparation*
*3) For class presentation*
*"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
*"New on Saturday"*
BOKONOON POTION PARLOR just arrived new shipment of men's corduroy sport jackets and western shirts. Also ladies' garbardine jacket and parka. BKONOON POTION PARLOR 819 Vermont. Urges 12-5. 2-24
TURQUOISE dealer at Repeat Performance Shop,
1422 West 8th, on day only, 21 from 10, 16
Yamaha 200 CSS train. Like more. Only 2,600 miles. Call after S 30 841-4391.
CHEVROLET Impala 152. 683, V-8 auto, power.
CHEVROLET Impala 152. 683, Hot price takes one. Other models: 841-302, 841-302, 841-302
Glion SE-2 electric bass with harddell case, dimmable LEDs, power supplies, Stucco shield, Silicon Midi 4A PAC, bass control, will diagrams. Buy now at www.glion.com.
1967 Pontiac Lemans. Air, Power brakes and
steering wheel wash—women's moped bicycles.
4960 Pontiac LeMans. Air, Power brakes.
Shortword 8000 receive. Dual 1226 turntable. 2
sparklers. Sell clean-up. Call 223-754-6990.
WANTED
1967 Anthem-Healy 3000, Excellent condition,
throughout. Must sell $290 or best offer. 2-20
1970 Karmann Gamma, excellent condition. 29.2
mpg, dependable. vinyl) top $1050.842-394-23
Roommate wanted to share nice home one block from campus. Owns Bathroom 1, Living Room 2, Bedrooms 3-4, Balcony 5-6, 849-2-60 - 2-60
Roommate wanted in 3 bedroom town house
apartment 981-841-5013
2-20
Temporary (Bru spring semestar) home for
farmworkers. Will pay for food for foodie
Call 841-7891-219
2-19
Female bedroom wanted to share 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Close to campus and on bus line to UCF.
Roommate wanted: Male or female, Junior,
Male. Resume to: Lydia C. Lewis at 814. A31-5977.
25B, 25D and Louisiana at 814. A31-5977.
Want to live in the country I need 2 nannies
to work with. Please email me at 748-7892. After 6
min. from campus, Call
Female roommate to share apartment on edge of
room. 72 Housekeeping in place of rent.
2-238
Roommate wanted Parked 25 2 bedroom 2 bath on
bus route. $112.50 plus $15 utilities. 843-265-2419 - 2-19
Wanted. Novels and other writing by JACK
- single, any book or complete edition.
841-4101 - 2-23
Two lightweight 10-speed in good condition.
Call Deb: 854-178-198, qr. leave message. 2:30
Like kid? Grad-student mom offering free room in dorm for evening commitment to school.
Wanted- five hours housework and simple sewing every Friday. Call 834-1247.
2-23
Male Roommate, to share a really nice apt. Just
roommate to come by 446 Grand R
Torrence, 3. any time.
Child care provider to 3 years in dp.
Minimum wage = Apply in person AAB1B1B
Minimum age = Apply in person AAB1B1B
Roommate to share Towers Apt. 841-6137
or 842-1921.
HELP WANTED
Substitute humaprobe needs for small group
work. Practice probing on a surface with
intensity between probes. Pretend to
examine a surface with intensity.
AVON--Start off the new year with excellent
openings. Open in Lawrence and near
nearby.
If you are married, mature and will be in Lawship for at least 15 years, may be interested in visiting with you about a position as an apartment manager, apartment manager, expendable required. Please contact Cali Bernie, Park 25 Appointments, 842-1650.
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE: If you enlist a needy young couple to help us at our job site, we need a young female couple to help us at our job site. We provide a private housekeeping cabin, completely furnished with a sauna, kippah, sweeping mowers, diving mathes, suave window, sweeping carpets, etc.,等, we have a permanent June 1 to December workplace. For your convenience, for us, the latter, the better! Cocr. 1906 Sunset Drive, Lawnware. Please give us when you write. Otherwise your time is wasted.
Addresses wanted Immediately! Work at home in San Francisco or New York. American Service, 1401 Winton Blvd., Suite 128. Attn: Jane Kemp, 150 West 76th Street, Suite 318.
Management Position for *Business Student-*
*Administration*. Part time during school year. Contact Jae
Jong Hyun at 212-834-0750.
Mt. Trainer with Crazy Top Shop, Novelty T-shirt, custom screening, aesthetic weed. GC accessories. Part-time to start. Sales exp. help-design resume to Crazy Top Shop. T1-252
NOTICE
Swap Shop 620 Mass. clocks, televisions. Used furniture, diaries. Swap Shop 832-3177. Daily open 12: 15PM-6: 30PM.
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at a cost of less than $250. We can make copies of your 128-page thesis in $5 or action for all of your copying and printing needs at the Quick Copy Center, $84 Massachusetts.
SECRETs only few have mastered, true friendship, love, forgiveness and understanding promised in the book. We are excited to present pamphlets by mail. No cost to address with name and address. Discovering
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
Two 200scholarships. Any full-line undergrad-
ed or graduate degree student from Oxford
Ford. Die Match must. Further inform
us.
The Fastest Student Election Coverage—LJKH FM at will be first feature student hand student election starts at 8 p.m. and will continue with reports on student action also for an analysis of All Student Senate action every Wednesday and Friday at 8:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. Funded in part by Student Activity
KU KARATE CLUB-Still enrolling but hurry!
KU KARATE CLUB-Still enrolling but hurry!
W and Thurs - 12:30, Hobson. Sport, self-
assessment tests.
KU KARATE CLUB-Still enrolling but hurry!
The Cashback. Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Full
Weekend meal for $125 per person. See the
cook's check. Call 843-6950 for reservations.
Available at: www.cashback.com
FOR RENT
Free rental service. Up to the minute lattices of rental housing available in Lawrence, Lawrence
New 2 x 3 bdm. apartment near campus; park-
ing lot with efficient efficiency apartment, uni-
teled mail code 841-6750.
2 dbm, all uuil, paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Free parking. a/c, pool. 843-899-183.
Room furnished with shared kitchen and bath. Room equipped with refrigerator, dishwasher, efficiency appliance, for male user. No teen room.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen private
2- bedroom apartments to campus $5 and up-
3$6 or 845-720 $6
4- bedroom apartments
Sublease available immited. on 1 bdm. apartment. $165 month. Call 842-1455. 2-30
Sublet 1 bdrm. FrontRidge Apt. Bg large enough to accommodate uninfused beds. 2-204 hadcage #847-7688
Quit room; without food facilities in professor's home, separate entrance and bath. No smoking.
Transportation and outside eating arrangement required. Includes 15 hours homework. housework: B63-1247J
2-23
Large 2 bbt, one single room with kitchen
Large 3 bbt, one double room with kitchen
853-1601 or 841-3232
2-25
LOST AND FOUND
Lost billfold Small, burgundy colored. Lost
billfold Small, blue and Strike BLUE.
841-7631 at 9:30 2-19
"Found" advertisements are quoired as a public service by the State Bank, 9th & Kentucky and Malt Shop Shipping.
Lost: mate eat, cat with orange spots. By Union, Wed. afternoon. Cindy Cali 441-805-2800.
Lost: female Germans Sternberg puppy, last autumn.
Missed: female German born in Kentucky. Please return to 124 Tenn. Hospital.
Lost: Glosses in orange glase case, somewhere on campus. Tues. Feb. 10-645-6522
2:20
A few days before Christmas found a faint
mark on the shoulder of a short hairstyle man. cat. 8-20
after 8 a.m.
bracelet found in front of Strong Hall Identify and claim at 209 Strong. 2-23
Roommate to share beautiful four bedroom
apartment with an open heart,
non-making vegetarian with an open heart.
Found. two gold keys on tinker in 2141 Wiesoen.
English Office: Call 644-8549 and Identify 2-33
Found: Pendant ladies' watch on chain. Found near J pendant Towers. Call 684-3297. 2-329
TYPING
Experienced typist, I.B.M. ELECTIC, thesis dissertations and term papers. Call Pam; K685-799, ffl
THEIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located in our office and provides our Service is fast and prices are reasonable. Our Sending Services include:
Experienced typid-term paper, papers, mile. corrections. 843-854. Mrs. Wiley. corrected. 843-854. Mrs. Wiley.
I do demand good tying, Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Dana White, 510-954-3572, danalee.wilson@nationalgeographic.com
Danielle Wilson, district director, National Geographic
Professional typing, work maintained, reasonable.
Proficiency in Microsoft Office and other large electric B.A. Social Science courses.
Expt. typi, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
application, journal, writing, spelling correction.
Jean. 841-309-2600
S. L.S. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric plea). Prompt, efficient service. Theses, dissertations, term papers. Phone 316-924-2944. Weekly Streich. 2:27
**TYPNING**- We have many return customers who want us to help them with their business. Call Harve Ward for your business.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
The NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
and its instrument ensemble in jamshire
has a great band, folk and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin
and electric jazz or rock guitar and bass. Call 841-735-4026.
Life planning workshop, Feb 21, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Life coaching workshops to help you influence your own future. It is designed for persons willing to assess their current life situation and develop plans for the future. Embasis will be placed on building for growth and development in your own home and congruent with reach your own goals. 104 Orcad, Cedar Rapids, OR pre-registration: 843-694-2200 cedarrapid.com
If you have a drinking problem and want help,
Call 824-1011.
Offer is onanged with initials D.S. for your
love one contact M.T.
2-20 All part or present members of ECKANKAR
please call Pau, 864-1087.
2-19 Dear KU, you love much, want to get back to
together, you and Shapo-Anderson.
2-19 "popularize?"
Brock concert featuring "Hiver of Life" Tuesday,
at 3:30 p.m. Big 9 Room, Kansas University
No charge!
PERSONAL
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. If you don't, there's a weekly newsletter to be sent by Girl Thursday. Please visit United Union.
Backpacker Club will meet in the K.U. Union.
Tonight: 7:00-9:00 p.m.
2:19
Alcohol abuse is America's No. 1 drug problem.
You have been drinking problem and want help.
Employment Opportunities
A job opening for research assistant. Data-col-
ing and statistical skills required. Social学
skills and mental capabilities required. Social
science quit Feb 28 to contact Amélia GAF
and Bob McGill at 402-735-1120. Women
qualified men and women of all race
groups.
Jim, Happy 211! Put on your fancy pants and
be ready to by 6:15. Love, Brownie.
2-19
A job opening for a student research assistant, in the Department of Biology at UNC Tarhelen, requires data and analysis in research. Social science experience is required. Contact Mitchell Taubman Bureau of Research 864-346-2010. Equal opportunity employed. Qualified resume to be submitted by May 31.
SERVICES OFFERED
Overseas Jobs - temporary or permanent. Europe, Australia, S. America, Erica, etc. Allocate an additional monthly Expenses paid, see Finding free information. Dept. KA, box 490, Berkeley CA 9407-252. DEPT. KA, box 490, Berkeley CA 9407-252.
TRAVEL
MATH GOT YOU DOWN! If so, help early.
103. Mail MATH GOT YOU DOWN!
115. Call 841-1896.
3-17
MATH TUTORING>-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 142, 500, 558, 857. Regular lessons or one-room test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681.
EUROPE ISRAEL-AFRICA ASIA — Travel disp. agency
FIRST Avenue, Taiga, Georgia. Georgetown 714-298-5000.
RIDES — RIDERS
Olivia Lawrence Mon., Tue. Fri., Wed. — 20-3-20,
Tuesday, 11:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Phone: 782.755.345. J. Watterson 20-3-20
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
PRO
AM Part Stop
1209 East 23rd St. 841-2200
THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
Pat Read
Indian Trader
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1306
10-5 Sats./Tai.
Bud
9th & Iowa
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
Foreign Auto Parts
Discounts for Do-It Yourselfers
with Student LD's
JAMES
Parts:
843-8080
Planning a trip?
Let Maipintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Foreign Auto Service
Service:
843-5288
GANG
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
Expert Repairs by Factory Trained Mechanics
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass.
D
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
RECREATION'S FINEST
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl
No one under 18 admitted.
9th & Iowa
10
Thursday, February 19. 1976
---
University Daily Kansan
---
Vehicle inspections find defects
By JOHN FULLER
Staff Writer
A substantial percentage of motor vehicles in Kansas were found to be defective during the first nine months of 1975, according to a report presented to the Kansas House Transportation Committee.
The report said 332,029 vehicles were inspected during the nine-month period. Of these, 70,747, or 21.3 per cent, were found to have faulty steering wheels and 2,122 defects, according to the report.
Lt. Bill Shanley of the Kansas Highway Patrol said yesterday that the patrol, in its own spot checks of vehicles during the same period, found an even higher percentage of defective vehicles. Of 3,489 vehicles they checked, 64.4 per cent were defective, he
The largest number of cars, 32,383, in both
inspections had defects in lighting equipment, the report said.
It also listed 20,927 defects in exhaust systems, 19,833 in brakes, 19,244 in tires and wheels, 19,119 in steering and suspension; all new device; and 6,250 in glass and glazing.
As of January, Kansans who register a vehicle must first have it inspected at a station authorized by the highway patrol. Personnel at authorized filling stations, garages and car dealerships can perform the inspections also.
THE INSPECTION costs $5, plus 50 cents for a sticker to certify the inspection. If the vehicle fails the inspection, the owner has 30 days to correct the defects.
Many vehicles are found to have dangerous defects, according to inspectors.
Jim Snell, a mechanic at Montgomery Ward, pointed to some worn wheel bearings on a Volkswagen he was inspecting.
"That guy could be going down the road and have a front wheel fall off any time if he were to ride up."
Snail said most defects were things drivers should, but often don't, check the window.
"You can always drive down the street at night and see someone driving around with one headlight, which is highly dangerous," he said.
Several mechanics said they thought the inspection system could be improved.
"YOU CAN take a car one place and it'llail the inspection and then take it to another place and pass," Dean Holladay, a mechanic, said.
Holliday said some people who inspected cars weren't really qualified to find defects in the vehicles, and others recommended unneeded repairs.
Shanley said complaints about inspections should be made to the highway patrol. He said 11 state inspectors investigated complaints.
"IF A CITIZEN thinks his car has been rejected unnecessarily, he can call the highway patrol," he said. "We will inspect it and if defects aren't found, we will investigate the inspector who recommended the repairs."
He said an inspector could be arrested or have his license revoked if irregularities were found.
Shanley said the ideal situation would be for the state to have its own inspection stations and inspectors. However, the state can't afford such a program now, he said.
L
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843
Ken's
Luncheon Specials
Any Sandwich & Salad Combo
(Ham & Cheese, Sub, or Supersub)
$1.89
Luncheon-sized Pizza
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additional toppings 10c)
99¢
27th & Iowa
843-7405
With each 10", 13", or
15" Pizza, You Receive
a Free Salad
Ken's PIZZA PARLOR
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 86 No. 91
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, February 20, 1976
Pipe smoking growing popular among students
See page 6
Pay raise rests with subcommittee
By SHERI BALDWIN
Budget hearings for the Board of Regents' schools ended yesterday.
TOPEKA—The fate of the proposed 10 per cent merit salary increase for faculty members will now be determined by House Ways and Means subcommittee deliberations, some legislators said this week.
John Carlin, D-Smolan and House minority floor leader, said yesterday, "I wouldn't envision it at 10 per cent. but I will win." Good chance it will be more than 5 per cent.
Carlin said committee members weren't necessarily going to agree with House Speaker Dane "Pete" McGill and Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park and House Wayls Committee chairman, on their alternative proposal of a 5 per cent increase.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said legislators were independent minded people and wouldn't be dictated to by any chairman.
Senate President Ross Doyen, R-
Coronidae and Senate opinion was split
by a vote to hold the impeachment.
Doyen said most Senators at the 10 per cent hike were arguing that an 8 per cent hike would give the Board of Regents more room to capitalize increase over the past three years.
This year's request for a 10 per cent pay hike is the third in a three-year Regent's plan to help KU catch up with faculty institutions considered to be in KU's peer group.
Doyen used a figure of $1,000 to demonstrate that two 10 per cent increases would yield $1,100 the first year, then $1,210 the next year. A third 10 per cent increase yields $1,313, over what a cumulative 30 per cent increase would have been.
For 1974-75, KU ranked 21 out of 23 in professor salaries for publicly supported members of the Association of American Universities.
An 8 per cent increase would be more in
line with it, because it would yield
11.20 %, 9.50 %, 7.60 %.
Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, said the crucial cuts for KU's 10 per cent request would be made in the House Ways and Means Committee.
"It'll be hard to restore it when it comes to the Senate." Booth said.
Booth said Doyen was underestimating positive feeling toward the 10 per cent hike. “He’s supposed to be more pessimistic than I am, He’s the president.”
Sen. Donn J. Everett, R-Manhattan, said there would be an effort to compromise with the House somewhere between 5 and 10 per cent.
Dykes also said a House-Senate compromise would probably be the most sensible.
Everett charged that McGill's 5 per cent cut was a definite conflict with his support of a 17-18 per cent increase for the tuition grant program for private schools.
The Speaker is from Winfield where, South of Boston, he vehemently opposed the 10 per cent hike. Then he turns around and in effect, by benign neglect, approves the tuition grant.
Everett said he was opposed to tuition grant programs because they were a way for the state to aid private schools by granting tuition to students.
Victoru announcement
McGill said Southwestern didn't benefit from the tuition grant program, the students did. He said he had recommended a freeze on the present level of tuition grant funding so that no increase would be made before year 2 without a revaluation of the situation.
The five options were prepared by the House research department and released in a House leadership policy meeting Feb. 12. The options were given to House committee chairmen and vice chairmen for consideration.
Regent Glee Smith, Larned, said five options to the 10 per cent hire that would produce hikes averaging from 5.6 to 7 per cent were undesirable.
"A decrease in professor-level salaries is surely what we're not asking for," Smith said.
Vox Populares presidential candidate Tedde Tashkeff and her running mate Steve Owens keep their reactions to incoming vote tabulations low key, while campaign manager
Another option considered was an all-
faculty pay increase and not a merit
incentive. The plan would be for a
percentage of the total salary.
Smith said the options were undesirable because percentage hikes decreased for professor-level faculty members, similar to a progressive tax system. Under the proposal, the more a faculty member made, the less his salary would increase.
Mike Pettit announces Tashaeff and Owens the winners. The candidates and campaign workers were at a party last night in the Delta Uplaison fraternity when the an-
Tasheff, Owens snare win
By the Kansan News Staff
Teddy Tasheff scored a decisive victory teddy over Dave Sainiro in the race for the championship.
Tasheff and the new vice president, Steve
Students endorse satellite union
By the Kansan News Staff
Students endorsed a $3 million satellite
union, 2,450 to 907, in the past two days'
work.
The referendum called for a 40,000-
square-meter satellite union to be constructed
from the ground up.
The referendum asks the Memorial Corporation Board of Directors to issue revenue bonds to finance the construction. The bonds would be backed by a maximum student fee of $7.50 a semester and $2.50 a semester, for no more than 30 years.
The referendum said the satellite union should include food services, a bookstore, check casing facilities, lounge, a study area and general meeting rooms.
FRANK BURGE, director of the Kansas
FRANK, said the Memorial Corporate
Burgeon's office is seeking a
"Our task will be to match the financial
resources available in an effort to respond to a significant "vote" note he said
Both candidates for student body president supported the satellite union in
Teddie Taussleh, student body president,
said she was pleased with the outcome.
Burge was especially pleased by the outcome because a similar proposal had been given.
THE COST OF A satellite union has increased a million since the proposal was first defended.
"The Memorial Corporation Board of Directors will do everything possible to provide a facility that will perform the services the students have repeatedly said are needed in that part of the campus," he said.
The Student Senate Services Committee, which studied the proposal, recommended it.
The committee found that Wesco Terrace was the only major food service close to Murphy Hall, Summerfield Hall, Robinson Gymnasium, Allen Field House, Learned Hall and the new law school building.
Student fee increases for the union usually must be approved by the Senate, the Memorial Corporation Board and the Kansas Board of Recents.
There are also many residence halls, fraternities and sororities in the west campus area not conveniently served by the campus Kansas Union, the committee found.
Sacchar Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, the senior men's honor society, published 3,000 leaflets supporting the satellite union, and founded University Residence Halls printed 4,000.
Burge said, "I presume the board of directors of the memorial corporation will accept this nomination."
Owens, received 1,853 votes to 1,344 votes for Shapiro and his running mate, Mark
Votes were cast Wednesday and yesterday.
The proposal to build a satellite union near Allen Field House passed by an even majority.
Tasheff and Owens arrived at the Kansas Union shortly after midnight and were besieged by well-wishers. Tasheff is KU's first woman president.
About the win, she said, "It's an honor to be president."
Owens said, "I'm very honored and eagerly anticipate getting to work."
TASHEFF ATTRIBUTED her successful campaign to "platform and experience."
"The platform displayed a competent device of research and knowledge," she said.
Shapiro, who stayed at the Sigma Chi fraternity, said of his loss, "I really don't know what to attribute it to. By no means think we were going to lose by 500 votes.
Tashef took her first week in office was filled with a lot of meetings with industry leaders and politicians.
"Wemade a lot of friends and met a lot of new neon."
Shapiro said be thought the satellite union issue caused a large voter turnout and said,
"I think Tedde worked hard to get the off-campus vote."
He said he wasn't sure whether he woulu run for a Senate holdover seat. He said he probably wouldn't run for student body president next year.
VOTES WERE BEING counted into the early morning hours for several schools and libraries.
However, it was determined by Bruce Woner, election committee chairman, that votes for junior class officers, plus graduate candidates should be tabulated officially until sometime Friday.
Woner said there weren't enough people to tabulate those ballots. He said some persons had been in the Kansas Room of the North Carolina State Department's nights straight, and "they need some sleep."
Woner apologized for the delay and said, "All I can say to those who haven't gotten returns yet, and who have stayed up late, that I'm damn sorry. I realize they worked hard in their campaign and have a right to know."
The total number of votes cast in the election Wednesday and yesterday was 7,206.
WONER ATTRIBUTED the large turnout to more polling places and longer hours at the polls.
Tasheff XV Populares coalition swept to victory in many school elections. The
coalition won the majority of seats in the School of Fine Arts, School of Journalism and the School of Architecture and Urban Design.
The coalition also won the four sophomore class offices.
Tasheff was at the Union for about 45 minutes early this morning, finally leaving to return to a party at the Delta Upsion fraternity. She was wearing a pants suit with a large campaign button pinched to the front of her knit pullover sweater. Owens also was dressed casually, with overalls and hiking boots.
OWENS SAID THAT he had to take a
today's best tinted was going back
to the party.
The margin of victory, Tasheff said,
surprise her.
"We expected it to be closer than it was," she said. "But we're glial it was as decisive as it would."
She said that she would organize a Senate retreat for this weekend to help them.
"We're hoping for a good turnout," she said. "We're hoping to meet them (new senators) and fill them in on the Student Senate."
A total of 1,629 were cast yesterday,
to add to Wednesday's total of 1,770.
See page 7 for election results.
Amateur, professional sports forecast for colleges
(Editor's Note: This is the second of a two-part series examining the direction college sports are taking in the face of financial crises at small and large universities across the nation, including the University of Kanaa.
By KELLY SCOTT
In 1974, some Fordham students began to play organized football again. There were no scholarship players, and other students coached the team. At first they played intramurals, but they began to get
The Fordham University football team was disbanded five years ago because Fordham's athletic department couldn't afford coaching salaries, traveling expenses or new equipment.
Fordham's phenomenon is occurring several places in the country. Old athletic programs that crumpled under the weight of big time expenses are often not well known, and their mittled, but they are as popular as they ever were.
So they wanted to offer other schools. It seemed logical that they contact schools in their former hometowns.
A DIFFERENT football program was born.
This approach may be the only way for smaller schools to find their way out of economic disaster. The solution is through a new
It reflects the belief that putting money into college sports through commercialism is treating the symptoms of a Fick system, but ignoring a terminal disease.
"The thing about athletic directors being in financial difficulty." Weise said, "is that they can deal with it. It's a challenge."
These colleges have found they had to go through the death and relurban of a sports program to achieve their goals.
THE COST OF operating a college program is a case of each expenditure leading to another, Tom Weiss, associate professor of economics and a co-ordinator for Athletic Association board, said Wednesday.
Weiss said he once introduced a motion at an Athletic board meeting that all of the KU coaches stay within their budgets that year. After a long discussion, the motion failed.
As college sports are now, Weiss said, a move to semiprofessionalism would be the next logical step.
the director of their Norman Yetman, associate professor of American studies, said he thought colleges should become organized, semipro leagues for the professional sports leagues.
"I THINK WE ought to face up to the fact that sports aren't played by the student." Weiss said.
"Let's out out the hypocrisy," he said. "We have to realize that we're playing with professionalism."
Vetman is writing a book about sports in America.
A college player under scholarship to a school gets the cost of his room. board, tuition and a small
spending allowance (for laundry) for as long as he's eligible to play, according to Yetman.
THE ONLY difference between college and professional player, Vetan said, is that the pros get more money and don't have to take time from practice to study to remain academically elibil.
When the player decided he wanted to join a professional team, he said, that club would reimburse the school for the training the player received in college.
Vetman said he thought colleges should become minor league systems for each professional sport.
A player would sign a contract to play for a certain school, Yetman said. He wouldn't be forced to go to classes, and there would be no grade requirement to play.
THIS IS SEMILAR to professional baseball clubs investing money in their farm systems to train their players.
Both Yetman and Weiss said if college sports continue at the expense they were presently operating under, a semi-pro status would be more realistic.
However, they said they would prefer athletic programs that provided just facilities for the athletes.
Weins said he thought an athletic program that everyone could share was his interpretation of it.
WHEATHER COLLEGE sports should be considered pro or amateur had been a long-debated stance.
Making college sports more accessible to the non-scholarship player who just wants to play is a theory often associated with Jack Scott, author of the book "The Athletic Revolution" and former basketball coach.
Scoffs says that amateur athletes, which college sports technically are, are valuable because they can make a difference.
The image of the college player as an entertainer he draws crowds to games is inconsistent. Scott says, "I don't."
THIS SEPARATION is seen at Louisiana State University. The LSU athletic corporation loaned the
Opposition from alumni rather than the failure of its innovation led to his dismissal from the job one year later.
For financial reasons, a college athletic program that directly involves students must be connected to
SCOTT TRIED to put theory into practice as athletic director at Ohio. He opened teams to everyone, cut coaches' salaries and reduced his teams' travel.
Today, with more schools separating their athletic corporations from general university administration, there appears to be little chance for such programs, because athletic corporations don't have to answer to students, faculty or to chancellors.
university about $400,000 between 1958 and 1972 for a new building.
Weiss said he suggested at one KU Athletic Corporation board meeting that the Athletic corporation turn its $7,000 in 1975 profit to the Chan-
gers and sell it to spend it on. The motion wasn't even seconded.
Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director, said he thought there was a need for more recreational facilities for students. But, he thought a proportion of student activity fees should be spent for new
PROTESTORS AGAINST commercialism in college athletics say change them: make college athletics a sport more students can play. Spend less money doing it, and enjoy the game whether you win.
But if college athletics persist as huge, money-grubbing monsters, they say, drop the double standard and make it a legitimate professional enterprise.
At KU, the sentiment in favor of student recreation rather than "big business" college athletics was one force behind the Student Senate's refusal to continue to pay $147,000 in student activity fees to the Athletic Corporation each year. Yet UKU teams as we know them has never been greater.
The future of intercollegiate athletics—as far as the University of Kansas is concerned—remains
2
Friday, February 20,1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Public works veto stands
WASHINGTON - President Ford's veto of a $8.1 billion work jobs bill was upheld yesterday, when the Senate failed to muster the two-thirds margin needed
The vote in the Senate was 63 to 35, three short of the necessary margin. The Senate voted less than three hours after the House supported overriding the veto on the measure.
wmouse rouse tobystaffs never held much hope of blocking an override in the house, but Hugh Scott, Senate minority leader, said he expected Ford's web to be
The Democratic congressional leadership contended the measure would create up to 800,000 public works jobs.
r-resident Ford said when he vetted the bill a week ago, "This bill has so many deficiencies and undesirable provisions that it would do more harm than good."
During the House debate, John J. Rhodes, House minority leader, said the bill would speed "max dollars for leaf-raining jobs."
"This is the most ill-timed veto in the last five years," Carl Albert, speaker of the house, said.
Records laws compatible
TOPEAK-Altay. Gen. Curt Scherder said yesterday there was no conflict between the Kansas public records law and federal laws requiring confidentiality.
The opinion was requested by Max Bickford, executive officer of the Kansas Board of Regents, to determine if the state law conflicted with the 1974 Buckley Amendment. The Buckley Amendment requires written consent before educational institutions can reveal contents of student records.
Schneider said the state law didn't conflict because it said that only public records required to be kept by law must be open to public inspection.
The attorney general said student records aren't legally required and must be kept secret without proper consent.
Committee to study leak
WASHINGTON—The House Ethics Committee was ordered yesterday to investigate the leak of the intelligence committee's secret report by CBS News.
The House resolution ordering the investigation said, "the alleged actions of the said Daniel Schorr may be in content of or a breach of the privileges of this
Schorr has acknowledged he is responsible for the two-part publication of the intelligence committee's report over the last two weeks in the Village Voice. The
The resolution focuses on Schorr, but it is possible the investigation would also involve the person who supplied Schorr with the report, Rep. Samuel S. Stratton, Jr.
Death penalty bill delayed
**JORKEA** - The Kansas House probably won't consider a bill reinstating the death penalty until the first week of March, John Hayes, house majority leader,
The Senate passed a kill Wednesday that would require the death sentence for all first-degree murder convictions.
Gov. Robert F. Bennett said yesterday the Senate bill was unacceptable to him because it was too broad.
"An acceptable bill is going to have to itemize what classes of murder require the death penalty." Bennett, said.
sennett said he favored a bill that would impose capital punishment for three specific categories of murder: murder of a fireman or policeman when on duty, killing a public official and a teacher, and murdering a state legislator.
The death penalty bill stands a better chance of winning the appeal than this did a year ago, Hayas said. The House defeated a death penalty bill by 30 votes last week.
"I feel there are some people who have had a change of mind on it," he said.
Ford favored by college GOP
President Gerald Ford is the favorite Republican presidential candidate of University of Kansas students according to a poll conducted by the KU College Republicans Monday and Tuesday at Wesco Hall.
At a table set up on Wescott Terrace, students were given a ballot and asked to check their favorite Republican presidential candidate.
The poll was one of a series of polls scheduled for Kansas colleges by the Federation of Kansas College Republicans Chubs.
President Gerald Ford received 187 votes; Ronald Reagan, former governor of California, received 100 votes; Vice President Nelson Rockefeller; Elliot McCormick; John Connally; former secretary of the treasury, received a total of 26 votes.
A total of 312 persons voted in the poll. Ford received 60 per cent of the vote.
Tai Chi Chuan
The Tai Chi class will resume on Feb. 21, 1976, for those who enrolled in last semester's class and had finished up to the posture "Fair Lady works at shuttle." Time: 12:00-1:00 p.m.
Although a new type of gasoline nozzle that saves gas vapor is being tried in other states, it won't be coming to Kansas in the fall. The company said (EPA) official said Wednesday.
Cymour Shuster, of the Kansas City EPA office, said the nozzle stopped at least 90 per cent of the vapors recently released in an atmosphere when stations pump gasoline.
Shuster said eastern states that already had a pollution problem would be the first to enact legislation requiring the nozzles. California has begun using them, he said.
Several Lawrence gas station attendants were asked about the nozzles, but none knew whether they might be installed in the near future.
Gasoline nozzle tried on coasts, not in Kansas
Time: 12:40, 1:00 p.m.
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Oil companies in California aren't very pleased with the EPA campaign to install oil pipelines to the University newspaper story. The nozzles have caused additional costs, the story said, both for changing to the new nozzles and for the spillage some San Jose station owners have felt.
Problems occur most frequently when the automatic shut-off on the nozzles clicks and the gas steps flowing, the story said. When the tank is full and the nozzle isn't immediately removed, customer pays for some gas that flows back into the storage tank.
--projects will be assigned according to the participants' abilities, Shaklee said.
K-State votes for president approves gym
Chris Badger had 8,380 votes to win the presidential election over John Lewis who had 1,209 votes and Bernard Shaw, who had 172 votes.
Kansas State University had a record 5,605 students turnout Wednesday to elect a new student body president and to approve a $3.7 million recreation complex.
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He said remote sensing can be used in flood control and water management, and is also useful for agriculture.
Although 20 participants are sought for the course, only about 10 have applied for it, and most of these have been KU students, he said.
A total of 27 new student senators and a new three board of Student Publicationmen.
"Students have shown the most interest, possibly because the course is accredited through the Harvard school of continuing education. They also look fine on a transcript." Shaklee said.
Remote sensing to be taught at break
Douglass Way, associate professor of design at Harvard and a recognized expert in remote sensing, will teach at KU March 15-19, according to Ron Shaklee, Lawrence student. Shaklee is one of eight graduate students on the KU remote sensing service.
Several University of Kansas students will spend their spring vacations in Nichols Hall, participating in a course on remote sensing taught by a Harvard professor.
The course, entitled "Remote Sensing, Aerial Photography and Interpretation and Terrain Analysis," will offer background knowledge in the geo-sciences to geologists, urban planners and members of other professional disciplines, he said.
photography to interpret the land' geographic features, according to Shaklee
Remote sensing is the use of data gathered from satellite and airplane
The course will feature instruction in the interpretation and mapping of soil textures, geographical formations and land-use characteristics, Shaklee said, and it will be used for conservation, the agricultural engineer and mapping and planning specialists.
The course costs $225, far less than the fee
charged when it is offered at Harvard, the
bachelor's degree.
"I'll give specialists from many different disciplines a broad knowledge of what remote sensing is all about," he said. "Courses regularly offered here on remote sensing deal more with the electronic and physical sciences, not interpretation and application."
The backgrounds and interests of the participants will be considered, and special
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 20, 1976
3
1973
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Worn-out
Although footpaths may decrease the time spent walking between classes, their wear creates an extra burden for buildings and grounds personnel. This near potter Lake
Shortcut path fixers defied by student feet
Staff Writer
BY FLORESTINE PURNELL
A straight line is the shortest distance between two points. That isn't a lesson in geometry, but the major reason why students skip paths across University of Kansas lawns.
However, these short cuts are often unsightly and create more work for the department of buildings and grounds personnel who have to deal with them, says Harold Blitch, supervisor of grounds and landscaping.
"Footpaths are a part of every college, university or any other place with great expanses of open space." Biltch said Wednesday. "When one develops, we attempt to do something about it, but we have trouble stopping them from forming."
There are several ways to deal with a footpath. Blah said he tried to "plant-out" a path before it did too much damage. Small pieces of concrete were thrown away from the path back on sidewalks.
Bilich said this was the method used most often because it was the least expensive. However, there are times when financing is required, and you must be dealt with, until funds are available.
Even if enough money was available to lay concrete in all the paths students created, Biltch said, the grounds could become so criss crossed with sidewalks that they would become as unsightly as the paths.
It is impossible to estimate the cost of the damage done by footpaths, Blitch said.
"How do you place value on something that replaces oxygen?" he asked.
Sometimes signs are used to route a walker back to the sidewalk. However, this is not always safe.
that most signs, especially the "cute" ones,
up in residence hall rooms.
"The situation with the signs is really comical," he said. "We've tried them over the last 20 years without much success. The prohibitive signs that tell a student to stay off the grass only tend to create more paths."
Another method sometimes used is putting gravel on a path.
"The trouble with gravel is that it is unsightly and unstable." Blitch said. "It is also difficult to control and difficult to walk on."
Gravel also tends to be hazardous when the area has to be mowed. In winter, there is no way to remove snow from a gravel walk by making more damage to the area, Bitch said.
The removal of one footpath only creates another. Blitch used the example of the women's hockey field east of Robinson Gymnasium and the extensive planning done to stop footpaths there, which ran from southeast to northwest. After Naismith and Balls and Watkiss Hospital are built, a path runs northeast to southwest formed.
Biltish said the ideal thing was to mitigate where walks should be during the planning stage of a building. He said he and Alton Thomas, University landscape architect, met with planers of new buildings to determine where walks should be.
Bilch said that grounds personnel were careful when they had to cross lawns in trucks, because they knew how damaging vehicles on lawns could be. Most areas are checked to determine whether they are sturdy enough to support trucks. When possible, trucks use the sidewalks, which are reinforced so they won't crack, he said.
Eugenics possibilities discussed
By JACK FISCHER
Staff Writer
The manipulation of cells to alter species life and create new life 'in' the realm of extinction.
Scientists working in the field ofugenics, often called genetic engineering, wonder whether humans will be created to specifications, but when, George Bogulsawski, assistant professor of interobiology, said this week.
Although the made-to-order human is probably still in the distant future, today's research in the manipulation of simple organisms may soon offer increased food supplies and the eradication of some hereditary diseases. Bocasulawski said.
Some of the most advanced research in genetic engineering is now going on at the NIH.
The chemical DNA, which contains the coded information for the development of cells of all organisms, has been taken from a frog and implanted in a common bacteria, Boguslawski said. After being placed in a nutrient medium, the bacteria shows that the frog DNA, information that the bacteria normally wouldn't create or contain.
This was a first step towards altering organisms, he said.
Another technique of genetic engineering is cloning. In the December 1971 issue of Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, the process of cloning a frog was explained.
The nucleus of a cell was taken from an adult鸡 and placed inside a frog egg. When the egg was incubated, the offspring weren't a mixture of the traits of two chick embryos but exact duplicates of the adult from which the nucleus was taken, the article said.
Bogalwaski said that because of the complexity of human beings, the prospect of creating a new world is enormous.
But we are faced, in a sense, with the possibility of a thousand Hitlers," he said. "Then, too, we could create a thousand Einsteins."
Because of differing environmental influences and the unknown nature of some of these factors, it is important to consider
Bigger building works out well for Endowment
The new location of the KU Endowment Association is working out well, Todd Seymour, the association's president, said Wednesday.
"We're delighted with our new quarters," he said. "There's more security for our residence."
In January, the Endowment Association moved to a former engineering research building west of Nichols Hall. The association had been located in the former University Faculty Club, near the Kansas Union.
One of the main reasons for the move, Seymour said, was that there was about 80 per cent more space in the new building, which accommodates 25 employees.
"We no longer have people running into each other tearing to do their job," he said.
Another reason for the move, he said, was that the campus has much less traffic than the other one.
A seminar featuring three black lawyers will be presented this weekend by the KU Black American Law Students Association (BALSA).
Black lawyers join in seminar
Leonard Clark, a lawyer for the National Labor Relations Board; Melvin Jenkins, a lawyer for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights; Charles Scott, a lawyer for the Kansas Association of Attorneys, will speak at a seminar starting at 1 p.m. Saturday in the Green Hall Annex.
Tyrone Means, president of BALSA, said yesterday that the seminar was "geared toward the black student," but that anyone interested could attend.
even cloned humans wouldn't be complete identical.
Bogawalasi said genetic engineering work involving humans presented many challenges.
Means also, said anyone interested in the formation of a black, pre-privileged student club in Manhattan.
There are so many factors to create a
wild or personality that we haven't even
been able to describe.
William Conoby, professor of speech and drama, said scientists and social scientists were divided in their opinions of genetic traits. He teaches a course about the study of the fulbright.
"Some futurologists want a moratorium on eugenics," he said. "Others say there should never be censorship on research or investigation.
"The biggest issue is the value question. Our technical capacity exceeds our grasp of social implications. This gap is the biggest problem."
Boguslakova said scientists should always be able to conduct research unimposed.
"Who is better qualified to decide what should be pursued than scientists?" he asked. "Scientists can be socially responsible, too. We try to alert the public to possible dangers of our work. We can not be blamed for the use that the work is put to."
Boguslakski said that the major breakthrough needed for more sophisticated genetic engineering was to find a gene differentiate to perform specialized functions.
"Only if we learn that can we make a cell go on and do what we want it to do," he said. There are several ways in which genetic information can provide potential source of food, Bologna said.
He said that choking some plants, such as carrot and rice, is relatively easy to do in laboratories. Another possibility is to alter certain forms of bacteria to produce a high
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"We're pretty close to understanding them on a molecular level." he said.
Before the end of this century, Boguslawski said, some common hereditary diseases, such as sickle-cell anemia and diabetes, would probably be
Boguslawis said it was very difficult to demonstrate how biochemical science of genetics would advance.
level of protein that could be used for human consumption, he said.
The African Student Association of the University of Kansas Presents The Second Annual
African
Night
Feb. 21, 1976
6:00-9:00 p.m.
At Westminster Foundation, 1204 Oread
$3.50 Single Adult
$6.00 Couples
$1.50 Children 10 $8.00
$1.50 Children 12 & Under
Tickets on Sale
SUA Office-Kansas Union
African Studies-116 Strong Hall
K.U. African Club Members
Tickets also on sale at the gate
African night disco will be in Big 8 Room Kansas Union at 9:30 p.m., same date.
Sponsored by International Club
The International Club is funded from the Student Activity Fee
--come along with us,
Bicentennial Buy
Swedios
2 Cheeseburgers and Order of Fries All for ONLY
Sandy's
Sandy's HAMBURGERS come as you are...hungry
HAPPY NEW YEAR
76¢
Good thru Sunday, Feb. 22
2120 W. 9th
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
TONITE:
THE TOM MONTGOMERY TRIO Great Modern Jazz
SATURDAY:
THE GASLIGHT GANG DIXIELAND BAND
Featuring: MARVIN HART
widely acclaimed K.C. jazz trombonist
only at . . .
PAUL GRAY'S JAZZ PLACE
842-9458
926 Mass.
843-8575
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 can be part of it. For details see Jim Gromelski on Campus in the Union February 23rd, 24th or 25th. Or call collect (816)-374-3433.
we're going places
N
NAVY
4
Fridav. February 20,1976
University Daffly Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
- - - -
City primes for disco invasion
By DAVID HAUBER
Big business and big entertainment have descended on Lawrence so that right-liers can also move to local entertainment places.
The drawing card being bet upon by many entertainment spots in Lawrence is that of the discotheque to demonstrate and a disc jockey playing records. Some, however, are skeptical of the ability of the disco format to support the luxurious mix of disco additions to clubs.
Entertainment businesses in Lawrence have long lamented the lures of other entertainment centers like Kansas City and Seattle made by local clubs since last summer to attract more crowds.
"Lawrence has just been kind of slack in entertainment, especially their consciousness of disco music," said Spike Santee, a local disc jockey who will be working for the Eldridge House's new disco, The Big Eight Disco.
FOR MANY 21-clubs in town, like the International, the Ramada I'ms' Rubayat, the Flamingo and the new clubs in the Eldridge House and the old Free State Opera House, the disc represents the impact of its current entertainment trend.
Bugsy, formerly the Free State Opera House, is planning an elaborate and costly operation designed to outstrip any similar entertainment experience in Lawrence.
Dan Grimm, the president of Bugsy's, which is a Cedar chain, said Babbage's Disney theater would be opening March 35.
"We're trying to be trend setters," he said. "This place is going to be dynamic. One thing we're conscious of is the history of this building. We want to put more quality in it than it's ever had before. There won't be a speck of the old Free State here.
"We have the money behind us. We have the experience behind us and I think we will be around for a long time."
ACROSS THE STREET from
Bugsy's is the Eldridge House. The Eldridge House, which has a hotel, restaurant and night club, is putting a disco night club in its old Big Six room downstairs.
JESS SANTAULIARIA manager of the Big Eight Disco, said. "It's to be a permanent club. It's going to be a lot of class. I want to go some place that's soft and quiet and nice. We kind of think it's going to be the booie game to go in town."
Santularia said his main concern for the club was that it held the roundiness and elbowing of an under-21 beer job. He said his clientele would be graduate workers, bankers and businessmen.
"I get so disgusted about people saying let's go to Kansas City for dinner or to see a show," he said. "The problem is that discop never gained that in the Midwest until they learned about Dirty Sally's went into Kansas City. With that popularity and this big college town, why should Kansas City
'Cuckoo's Nest' cast director spark movie
Popularity in the entertainment business means money.
SANTAULARIA declined to say how much money he was spending on the computerized dance floor he is planning for. "We were the only one of its kind and that it was expensive."
By CHUCK SACK
The computerized dance floor is an innovation in dancing. It consists of a translucent plastic surface lightened underneath by a pulsating pre-programmed device that be disc jockey. Installing a computerized dance floor is expensive, however.
Reviewer
Grimm said he was putting in about 680 square feet of computerized dance floors at Bugsy's, at a cost of $45,000. A 21-club with its own dance floor will be in the backdrop of the opera house, he said, and below that is a dance floor. Two movie screens flashing alternating slides will be going constantly, he said.
Those with an eye for film credits will be amazed at the names connected with the production of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." The magic of Ken Kesey's celebrated novel and one of his many film lingers that any producer who would gather such a group of renegade artists on one set must be crazy.
have that kind of popularity and not Lawrence?"
On the other side of the camera, there is Haskell Wexter, director of photography, who shot "Who's Afraid?" and "The Night." In 1969, he directed "Medium Cool" and his political ideas led him to make a documentary in Brazil. When he returned, he was unable to find a copy, but he ascribed as visual consultant on "American Graffit!"
Fletcher is a fine actress who retired for 10 years until she should take the part of Mattie in "Thieves Like Us". Sampson, a Creek Indian and western painter, has never played in a film before.
Jack Nicholson, as R. P. McMurphy, is the only superstar in the film, and he has always been a maverick, a rare star who eschews commercial roles for artistic risks. He is joined by Louise Fletcher, as Nurse Ratched, and Will Sampson, as Chief Bromden.
FINALLY, the director is Miles Forman, a Czechoslovakian exile who has made only one film since coming to this country in 1988. All that his group of misfits has done is to take one of the most influential books of the 60s, bend it to their own up come with one of the best films of the last year.
Those who go to "Cuckoo's Nest" anticipating a faithful adaptation of the novel will be disappointed at the sight of a man in his early twenties, Big Nurse, and the Chief is never called Chief Broon. But it would be impossible to
visualize many of the book's powerful passages, so Forman and screenwriters Lawrence Hauben and Stephen Levine have created a
The sparkplug for the story is Nicholson. His McMurphy is an exhilarating maniac who delights in waging war with the authorities of the mental institution in which most of the action takes place. His pleasure in matching wits with the guards and nurses is obvious, and his acting in the important roles of the outside world transmits the same love of freedom that guides his actions within the asylum.
LOUSE FLECTHERS Nurse Ratched is the perfect foil for Nicholas's free spirit. She brings a firm, tightly controlled intensity to her portrayal, and the continuation of the men in the ward is totally convincing.
The rest of the ensemble are equally delightful and their background antics keep the tone soft. Especially noteworthy is Christopher Lloyd's Taber. Lloyd mires his way through every scene, and his mobile features are the source of much of the film's humor.
THE PERSON who is most responsible for the triumphs of "Cuckoo's Nest," though, is Forman. Until now, he has been typed as a director of realistic comics. Two of his Czech films, "Loves a blonde" and "Fireman's Ball," received Academy award nominations.
"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" doesn't hold back on real detail; it was shot in the Oregon State Hospital in Salem—and it is often very funny. But its tone is more serious than Forman's earlier works, and should encourage a review of past films.
However, many of the fruits of the success of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" are yet to come. Wexler, Fletcher and Nicholson are all working on new pictures and Forman, is in Europe making a comedy titled "Someone Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe."
This Week's
Highlights
Concerts
GARY BURTON: Widely known as a 'jazz vibes player,' Burton is a faculty member at Berklee College of Music in Boston. He brings a quintet, in bass, percussion and guitar.
(7 and 10 p.m. Wednesday at Off-the-Wall Hall)
SHEERY KLOSS,
VIOLINIST: Winner of the
Competition and European
awards, Kloss will perform a
program that includes selections
from Brahms, Beethoven
CONCERTS FOR YOUNG
POPERS
An adaptation of the comic
opera by Donizetti, especially
for children. KU faculty mem-
ber. (2 p.m. Sunday in the
Lawrence High School
university.)
( @ p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall)
MAZOWSEZE FOLK COM
member Polish company will present Polish folklore through language courses. The program will include harvest dances from the wine country and a "Kujawlik"
(8 p.m. Thursday in Hoch Auditorium)
FACULTY FOLLIES: Once again, faculty members of the School of Fine Arts let their hair
down in a spontaneous, lightly rehearsed program that includes a confronto duet, a duet with the soprano showhouse concerto. James Moeser, dean, will conduct the City Filled harmonica Band.
NOAH; The University Theatre's second major production this year is an improvisational approach to the story of the Depeper children during the Depression. The play was written by Andre Obey.
FACULTY PAINTING AND SCULPTURE SHOW: A variety of works by members of the painting and sculpture department of painting and sculpture.
(8 tonight and tomorrow night and 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre)
(3:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall)
(Through March 5 in the Kansas Union Gallerv)
BLAZING SADDLES—Mel brooks' outrageous western. The ending isn't entirely satisfactory, but the antics of oration and humor make Madeline Kahn should divert attention from the thin script.
Exhibits
Films
Theater
8 x 8—A feature by the German surrealist Hans Richter.
SISTERS—Brian De Palma's homage to Brian Hitchcock includes the most vicious words in the humorous opening is disarmingly casual, but his De Palma goes on to demonstrate his firm comedy.
TRANSPORT FROM
TREASURES
films to come out of the East European New Wave, this Czechoslovakian film was
released in 1983.
L E S E N F A N T S
TERRIBLES—This collaboration between writer Jean Cohen and artist Pierre Melville was made as a companion piece to Cocteau's "Les Parents Terribles," written in 1900; it has become available in 1906; the country only very recently.
BREAKHEART PASS — A
Richmond Bronson, Ben Johnson, A-
bronson Crenna, Ed Lauer and Jill St.
John, assisted by Tory Gries
Bursy's stage will have a backdrop with a computerized pattern coordinated to the dance floor's thousands of light patterns. Carpeting will be laid throughout the building, be said.
NO DEPOSIT, NO RETURN—A Disney feature for families. No kids, no go.
IN ADDITION to accepting any local talent ranging from 'belly dancers to sword swallowers', Grimm said he wanted drama and fine arts students at KU to contribute to stage productions for payment under theatrical fund, bubble and fog machines and would have five explosion chambers.
MYSTERIOUS MONSTERS
-An uninspired rehash of every tired legend from the adominable snowman to the gorilla who makes it mysterious is that its difficult to see how two hours can be filled with so little material.
Check advertisements for theaters and times.
"My experience in this town is that it's dead. I ask people where they live, and they say Karasae City," Grimm said. "It's going to be an escape, I'll tell you that. It's an escape. We are going to can their minds."
"We're going to have to change students' habits. Hopefully, we'll give them what they need so that they'll come back."
GIMMICKS SEEM to be a necessity for the success of
discos. Giveaways, special nights and different kinds of entertainment revolve around the existence of discos.
A question as to how successful discs are going to be in Lawrence with the great increase of new discs in the area led by Pete Hunt, a bartender and manager at the Rubayat.
"I think everything's getting tired of it," he said. "It's just the same old thing. I think it." He didn't. It it. It peaked for us last semester.
"If they get more things going I think that's the direction to go right now."
JOHN WORKS, assistant project director for the Kansas Union, said the Hawk's Nest featured disco nights on irregularly scheduled weekends.
"The general marketing outlook is that discos are in," he said. "If we don't come out with it, first someone else will."
He added, however,
"Anybody and everybody is having a disco and you're going to see a weeding out."
Works said the entertainment business in Lawrence was fiercely competitive but it didn't sit each other's throats. "I don't sit each other's throats."
SANTEE SAID he had heard rumors that more discos would be coming to Lawrence. He said the old bowling alley at Ninth and Mississippi might become an 18-year-old disco tavern.
He said, "Discos will just go wild and the people will slack off and the discos will say, 'What am I going to do to be better than the disco across the street?'
"By the end of next year there are going to be too many discos. I think that's when the companies get together. A disco jockey who works with Santee, Ted Oshirak, said he thought discos and the dancing music that went with them are the matter of educating the public.
"It's a big business now," he said. "I'm not going to see we're jumping on the band because I think it's going to last."
THE JAMMIE'S HORSE
An Ark!
0 BY JAY KOELZER
Cliff Rakerd, Lawrence junior, gestures in delight as be found out that the structure his father has been building is an ark. The University Theatre's production of Noah starts Friday at 8 p.m.
'Barry Lyndon' abandons all the rules
By GLENN MEYER
The public be damned
That may have been Stanley Kubrick's attitude when he created Barry Lyndon.
"Barry Lyndon" seems to violate just all the rules for making a successful movie. "Barry Lyndon" amusing or chilling, not stimulating. There are battle scenes, but their violence isn't bloody and horrible, or worst of all, "Barry Lyndon" begins slowly, and moves slowly through its first half. It is more than three hours long. Surely no one would want to sit through such sedum.
In the first half of "Barry
TO WATCH "Barry Lyndon," we must abandon the rules. Kubrick's design has elements that are similar to elements in the writing of English novelist William Thackeray, whose first novel is the source of Barry Lyndon, Esq. it is the source for the film's plot.
Lyndon", Kubrick focuses on the panorama of 18th century society, not on personalities or experiences to use in experience the setting, the plot moves slowly and there is little dialogue. The characters, including Redmond Barry, are small, distant and slightly comical.
When we first see Redmond Barry, he is a simple-minded, stubborn Irish youth who is in love with his cousin. Redmond shoots his cousin's English boyfriend and is forced to leave home.
Redmond becomes, successively, an English soldier, a Prussian soldier, a Prussian officer, a card shark and, finally, Barry Lyndon, the husband of Lady Lyndon, played by Marisa Berenson. In the process, he is killed by a barbarian to a rogue and an opportunist.
THE FILM IS all Kubrick's. The scarcity of dialogue continues through to the second half. The fine outdoor settings
so typical of the first half become subordinate to the second half's elaborate indoor settings and costumes.
For a satire such as "Barry Lyndon" to be effective, it must be very specific. It generalize. For that reason, the characters may seem two-dimensional. The satirist asks what he thinks he can examine what he has to say.
Thackeray said of his character Lyndon:
Berenison is a good choice for Lady Lydon. Her etherae beauty and her excessive costumes and hairdos make he seem little more than one of the girls in Lydon. She is, however, one of the few characters in the film who seem capable of love.
“If the tale of his life has any moral (which I seriously doubt), it is that honesty is not the best policy.”
This theme is presented in the film, as in the book The Lydons' high society is beautiful and cold. It indifferently
destroys those who love, such as Lady Lyndon, and those who seek glory the glitter, such as Lydon. The winners, like the weak and disgusting stepson, Lord Bullington, are no more deserving of wealth and title than is Lydon.
The solemn music that begins and ends "Barry Lydon," George Handel's Sarabande, sets the mood for the characters of the film selidm express their thoughts and feelings. When they do, it is usually through an almost invisible motion or expression.
the panoramic view taken by Kubrick gives us a complete view of the time in which Lyndon lived. It also dwarfs people and makes them seem petty.
The kind, wise voice of narrator Michael Horden often tells us of events before we see him, including Barry's downfall.
EVERY DETAIL of "Barry Lyndon" makes the hero's
downfall not just predictable, but inevitable.
Lyndon doesn't have enough restraint,够 deformiousness or a noble enough birth to fit into the social world of high society, Vair Fair.
We can, of course, dismiss *Barry Lyned* as a boring spectacle that is too depressing and overly clinical, but a vanguishing director gone completely mad. We can, as Pauline Kael, New Yorker movie critic, does call her "boring" film critic "pets" and his film "a three-hour slide show for art history majors." But if we do, we may have a mockery of Thackeray's closing words to "Vanity Fair":
"Ah, 'Vanitas Vanatum!' Which of us is happy in this world? Which of us has his desire? or having it, is satisfied?—Come children, let us shut up the box and the puppets, for our play is played out."
New books offer little that's new
ONE JUST MAN, by James Minkes (Pocket, $1.99)—A novel about criminal justice in America. The hero is a man who has been wronged, tortured and has become wary of all what happens when this man, who is angry about plea bargaining, urges other criminals to demand rights to be the main theme of the book.
THE SHADOW KNOWS, by Diane Johnson (Pocket, $1.95)—A psychological thriller about a woman who goes through a series of terrorizing acts that she cannot understand. vanessa's first book is based on her step, an attack on her maid and vicious phone calls.
BITS OF PARAIDIE, BY F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, and CRAZY SUNDAYS, by Aaron Latham (both Pocket books, $1.95 each)—Works to capitalize on the eternal interest in the
Fitzgeralds. A scholar named Matthew J. BrUCColi has collected 21 previously unpublished gradares, and these constitute the first volume. "Crazy Sundays" is about the 1837-1940 period when Fitzgerald was on tour in Spain to play music for the Hollywood studios.
MASH GOES TO LAS VEGAS and MASH GOES TO MOROCCO, by Richard Hooker and William E. Butterworth (Pocket, $1.50 one)-Uncle! The first two or three of these were pretty funny, and each guarantees a laugh or a tear. We love them and the MASH books will soon be in a class with "Mutt and Jeff."
THE DREDAFUL LEMON SKY, by John D. MacDonald (Gold Medal, $1.50) - Travis McGee is back, and for some readers that's all that has to be said. Travis lives on a
houseboat, the Busted Flush, drives around in a truck that was once a Rolls Royce called Miss Agnes and helps delamps in distress—and others—who have been bilked of their fortunes by the heinous types who live in southern Florida.
NIGHT RIDERS, by Thorne Douglas (Gold Medal, 95 cents) - Douglas turns out westernists that are fairly respectable. And this one is even relevant. The hero, an ex-slave who is part Comancho, is part owner of a big ranch. He's forced to fight his way to the bottom of a wall as he wander inside the pages of a paperback.
OPERATION COUNTERPUNCH, by Dan J. Marlowe (Gold Medal, $1.25) — Another series, the Earl Drake books. Drake is one of those rough- tough们 who can help people in trouble, especially female people. Damn
chauvinist pig. Drake has to fight an army of killers in this one.
DICK Tracy 3. NO: MRS.
PRUNEFACE AND CRIME,
INC., by Chester Gould (Gold
Medal, $1.25) As you read
Dick Tracy today it may be
hard to believe that he well
drawn and even interesting. And it
has some marvellous villains. In this collection Tracy is fighting a villainess named Mrs.
Pruneface. Good fun. It may even show up as an LA&S course one of these days.
FOXFIRE, by Anya Seton (Crest, $1.50) — A novel about two lovers in Arizona, a woman born to wealth and culture and a mining engineer who is half Indian. A story of hidden wealth and the importance to their attention after they involved with some vicious folks in their small mining town. Soap adventure.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekly during the academic year except holidays and examinations. Kan. K6453. Subscriptions by mail are $3 a month. Subscriptions to the student semester or $2 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through the student discount or $2 a year outside the county. Editor Business M-
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 20, 1976
Dances provide money for gays
By PAUL SHERBO
Staff Writer
Because of income from dances, Lawrence Gay Liberation, (LGL) doesn't need student Senate funding or recognition, two LGL officers said Tuesday.
Rick Stewart, treasurer, and Marc Sramke, secretary of the LGL at the university of Kansas, didn't want to talk about the dance for the舞但 that it was substantiated.
"This year for the first time we have come up with some very successful dance encounters."
The success is because of greater acceptance of gay dances, he said. Attendance at the dances has ranged from 1,000 to 1,600 people.
"Originally it was all gay," Sramked said.
Now about half the people at gay dances are "straight," he said.
Stewart said that the Senate had always refused to fund the LGL.
"We don't like it. We've been denied access to our jobs." The Board of Regents who refuses. It's at the office.
The LGL doesn't worry about that kind of recognition any more, he said.
The LGL must pay about $500 for every dance, Stewart said. This includes the Kansas Union's Ballroom rental fee, salary for a disc jockey to pay recorded music on a rented stereo system, advertising and a coat-checking service.
Recognized student organizations at KU don't have to pay rent for the ballroom, Sramkei sat. The LGL has to pay for the museum, which is a month for its office space in the Union.
However, Leta Ehrman, in charge of reservations for Union building operations, said that the government was ready.
"We have fordied for all dances. I have been here for 10 years and we have always done it."
The funds brought in by the dances will be used in three ways. Stewart said.
The LGL will use some money for publicity of his cause and possibly for course materials.
The LGL is also considering research grant to be given to anyone in a project described below.
Finally, the LGL hopes to bring in an outside speaker.
The LGL might ask Rep. Bella Abzug D-N,
that to KU as a speaker, a speaker
None of the funds are used to pay LGL officers. he said.
Other ideas have been considered to raise money for the Lawt, Stewart said. A skating party will be scheduled sometime this semester.
The dances probably won't be held more often than twice a semester, he said.
"We don't want them to become overworked. This way people look forward to the holidays."
KU police are notified about the dances and sometimes a policeman stops to look in, Sramek said. No formal security is hired for the dances.
Regents to discuss press service, fees
By SHERI BALDWIN
The Regents will assume operation so Kansas State College at Pittsburgh, Emporia Kansas State College and Fort Hays State College can have access to the services. With the reorganization, financial support can be improved by the Regents and duplication of services can be avoided, according to Hutton.
Admission to the dances varies from $1.50 to $7.50,札skam dance is tenes for April 4th.
TOPEKA-A reorganize the University Press of Kansas, fee hikes for the 1976 session and the proposed steam-powered trash plant are among the items the Board of Regents will consider at its monthly meeting here today.
Warren Corman, Regents' facilities planning director, said an engineering
Prudence Hutton, chairman of the Regents, said yesterday, "I don't have any reason to believe that it wouldn't be approved."
The University Press is expected to be reorganized as the Regents Press of Kansas as of July 1. The University of Kansas, the University of Illinois and University now subsidize the operation.
The Regents Press will remain in Watson Library where the University Press was located. Each school will pay an agreed proportionate share of the operating budget. KU's office will be included in it's annual budget.
consultant would be recommended to study the feasibility of KU's proposed steam-powered trash plant. The request for a consultant was made in January 1975, man's committee since November 1975
Corman said the consultant would check studies made by William Smith, dean of the college. Smith studied possible energy sources and designed plans for the garbage burning plant.
In other matters on the Regents' agenda:
—KU will ask to increase comprehensive feedback for the 167% summer session to meet increased costs of providing special programs.
Costs for the Summer Institutes Abroad program in France will increase to $1,235 from $1,079; Germany cost will increase to $1,279 from $1,279; and Spain costs will increase to $1,250 from $1,084. The other countries cost will increase to $1,285 from $1,180 and an architecture institute will be added in the United Kingdom at $1,350.
—Permission will be requested to transfer the title "Green Hall" to the new law school building when it is completed. KU also will ask to name the new basic science building at the KU Medical Center Orgran. KU will have a building H. Major, in recognition of their contributions to the Med Center while they were faculty members.
On Campus
Events...
TODAY: A History of Art MUSEUM OF ART COLLOQUIUM will be at 4:00 p.m. in the lecture room of the Spooner Art Museum.
*TONIGHFT: THE KU FUK DANCE CLUB
will meet at (7:30, and at 3:00 p.m. Sunday in
the gymnasium*)
TOMORROW: The AFRICAT CLUB will have its second annual African Night at 7:00 p.m. at the United Ministries Building, 1204 Oread. THE CREEDE REPERTORY THEATRE of Creede, Colo., will conduct its annual midwest auditions at 10:00 p.m. tomorrow and Sunday at Rockhurst College in Kansas City, Mo.
Announcements . . .
The Frank E. GANNETT NEWSAPER FOUNDATION has donated an electronic editing system to the School of Journalism. The project, funded by $100,000, will be used mostly in editing classes.
Grants and Awards ..
Editorialists that helped protect a Michigan state forest from oil drilling have won for the DETROIT FREE PRESS the top citation in the 1976 Editorial Excellence Awards, sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism.
PADRE ISLAND
SUR TRAVEL
FIAT
IS THE BEST SELLING CAR IN EUROPE
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DENVER . . . March 12 *101°°
GROUP FLIGHTS
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Deadline March 2
Stop by the SUA Office or Call 864-3477
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HELPING STUDENTS GO PLACES IN A WAY THEY CAN AFFORD.
C
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on Saturday only
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Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358
6
Friday, February 20.1976
University Daily Kansan
Number of pipe smokers growing
By BILL UYEKI
ALEXANDER WILSON
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
"When love grows cool, thy fire still warms me;
After 26 years of selling pipes, George Wilson, owner of George?
When friends are fled, thy presence charms
Pipe Shop, 727 Massachusetts, says the number of pipe smokers has grown in recent years. And he says business is good
If thou art full, though purse be bare,
I make and set gown all care!"
"My Pipe"—German smoking song
Pipe smokers have been around for years. Germans, as this song suggests, are among the many Europeans who savor the tasty aroma of tobacco smoked in a pipe.
There are many theories about who smoked the first pipe, and who first enjoyed tobacco. The oldest pipes are supposedly those found in the mounds of North America, more than nearly 1000 years ago. Hemp, archaeologists say, is what these people smoked.
SOME SAY EUROPE first heard of the use of tobacco in the early 1500s from Christopher Columbus, told of a herb natives smoked in the New World. Others say Europeans started smoking tobacco pipes when Jean Nielot introduced tobacco A French botanist named the new substance 'niotropine', in honor of its introducer.
And now, 300 years later, pipe smokers are increasing, according to some estimates.
J. D. Hattfield, manager of the Town Clrier Pipe and Tobacco Shop, 919 Massachusetts, says most new pipe smokers are former cigarette smokers.
THE ADVANTAGE in smoking a pipe he, says, is that one doesn't have to hnail while breathing.
George Wilson, owner of George's Pipe Shop, 727 Massachusetts, says the surgeon general's warning in 1964 about possible cancer from pipe smoking increased in the number of pipe smokers.
"they started pickin' those pipes on the board like annie off a tree." Wilson gave
John Willhite, co-parent of G & W Pipe Co. 623% Massachusetts, agrees that many pipe smokers are former cigarette smokers who don't want to give up smoking.
"IT'S A GOOD compromise," Willhite says. "Sure, pipe smoking can be dangerous to your health, but it's not as dangerous as smoking cigarettes."
Lance Carlsen. Lecompton freshman, says, "My wife was the one who got me started smoking pipes. She likes the aroma of the tobacco, and I like the taste of it."
Hatfield says about 65 to 70 per cent of his customers are University of Kansas students who buy both pipes and tobacco at his shop.
Stan Cox, Lawrence junior, says, "I like to smoke while I'm reading. It's relaxing."
"A lot of people like the aroma of a pipe better than cigarettes," he said.
MIKE O'DELL, City Can, Kin, fresh-screw, pipe smoke has helped him quit meth.
He also says that pipe smoking is more tolerable for other people, especially the older ones.
"But," he says, "if I think my smoking's going to offend someone, like in an elevator."
HATFIELD ALSO said pipe smoking was cheaper than smoking cigarettes.
Willate says that because pipe smoking smells better than cigarettes, less people are exposed to it.
"One of the biggest reasons people smoke is that they spend one-fourth as much time smoking."
Hattief says he smokes seven to eight baskets of tobacco a day and spends about $800 on his diet.
His store offers pipes made from 10 different materials, ranging in price from a $1 per square foot price.
Meerschaum, Hatfield says, is a hard, clay-like material made of sea fossils.
OTHER PIPES are made from clay, cherrywood and ceramic materials, be said, but the most popular pipes are made from briarwood.
Briarwood comes from the root of the heath tree, which in French is spelled bruyere, which is the source of the word, briar.
pipes, using only hand tools, and not turning the pipe on a lathe.
Hatfield's briarwood trees price in range from $1.95 to $150 in 22 different styles. A good pipe for the student to start with costs $11.50, he said.
ALTHOUGH SOME smokers may not agree with him, Hattfield says the average pipe smoker should never have fewer than eight to twelve pipes.
"As you smoke," he says, "moisture coats in the pipe, and sometimes it takes three days."
Many pipes are needed, he says, so the smoker always has a pipe to smoke while driving.
"When tobacco is wet, it causes a steam which burns your mouth." Haffield says. "Also, having a wet pipe makes the tobacco hotter than how expensive the pipe or tobacco is."
Wilson adds, "The way the pipe is packed, and the moisture content of the tobacco can affect its flavor."
WILSON, WHO says he has smoked a pipe for more than 50 years and has been in the pipe business for more than 28 years in his profession, also says he makes and repairs pipes.
The cost of good pipes is going up, he said.
The cost of good pipes is going up, he said. Without inflation, pipes have doubled in price since 1970, Wilson said. He predicted that a $1 pipe he smoked would cost about $30 in 10 years.
Willhite, who has custom made pipes for KU students, says that $8 is the minimum price for a piece of briar to make a "fair-size" pipe.
HE SAYS THERE is a trend for men 18 to 35 years old to smoke "freehand" pipes, which are or irregular shape instead of the traditional smokers' stores carry. Willmite makes only freehand
Use Kansan Classifieds
Hatfield also discussed the other item of concern to pipe smokers—the tobacco.
There are three kinds of tobacco, he said. The natural kinds has a natural tobacco flavor and is sweetener; the artificial sweetener; and English tobacco goes through a long, special process to give it a flavor.
HIS STORE'S most popular flavor, he said, is "Doug's Mixture," an aromatic blend made by Doug Dean, former manager of the store. Hatfield said that Doug's Mixture was one of 44 special blends offered by his store.
With so many tobaccos to choose from, he
"I tell every pipe smoker to at least try every kind of tobacco," Hatfield said.
said, half the fun of smoking a pipe is trying the many different blends.
Hattfield doesn't just deal with males. He's had two ladies, about 35 to 40 years old, come into his store and buy pipes for themselves.
"SURE, SURE," says Wilson, when asked about lady customers. "About 10 years ago, some girls would come down to the farm and verminities and buy pipes for themselves."
He said they bought one special kind of tobacco—the "Flying Dutchman."
"I bet I had 100 to 150 pipes in one of those girls' dormitories up on the hill."
FreeUniversity
Today is the deadline for turning in course descriptions for inclusion in our catalog to be published next week. We still need teachers for courses in ceramics, macrame, weaving & hang gliding. Call us at 864-3477 or drop by the SUA Office.
MEL BROOKS'
BLAZING
S'ADDLES
SUA Films
Friday, Saturday and Wednesday Films in Woodruff
FRI-SAT.
Feb. 20-21
7:00-9:30
$1.00
From the people who gave you "Who Jesus Sings"
WED.
Feb. 25
7:30 75'
TUES.
Feb. 24
7:30 75°
SISTERS (Shown in the Ballroom)
LES ENFANTS TERRIBLES
A
Plant Sale
Buy one, get one FREE!
Anything in the greenhouse!
Buy one plant at regular price and get a second plant of equal value free.
841-4666
Sale ends Sat., Feb. 21 Garden Center Cash & carry and Greenhouse please.
4 blocks East of Mass. on 15th
SUNDAY BUFFET: breakfast and lunch in one!
15th & New York
EL DRIDGE HOUSE CLUB AND DINING ROOM
SUNDAY NIGHT is student's night. Special menus at very special prices.
7th and Massachusetts
The Eldridge House When You Need A Night Out.
THE BIG 8 DISCO-for your drinking and dancing pleasure. Watch for next week's opening!!
THE HAWK'S NEST PRESENTS
'URDAY, FEB. 21 8:30-12:00 p.m.
'TREE FROG'
With Special Guests:
'GOD'S OWN JUKEBOX'
8:30-9:15
Doors Open 8:00
-Kansas Union Produced by SL
Level 2-Kansas Union Produced by SUA
SUA Officer and Board Interviews
President Secretary
SUA OFFICER INTERVIEWS MARCH 1, 1976
Vice President Treasurer
SUA BOARD INTERVIEWS MARCH 8,1976
Indoor Recreation
Festival of the Arts Fine Arts
Films
Outdoor Recreation
Free University Forums
Special Events
Travel
Public Relations
Applications Available at the SUA Office
BUY A PEPSI AND KEEP THIS CARTOON GLASS
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This adorable glass can be yours for keeps. Just buy a 16-oz Pepsi. Just buy a 16-oz Pepsi Drive-In. And remember it. A whole set of 'cartoon character' offers. Collect a collection.
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Henry's
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843-2139
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 20, 1976
7
Election results
STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT
BODY PRESIDENT ... 1,853
Taddie Tashtef (Vice President)
STUDY BODY VICE PRESIDENT ... 1,853
Steve Owens (Vice President)
Stonewater (Independent)
Mark Anderson (Intendent)
THE BOOLEAN OF ENGINEERING
Caleb Caitlin (Independent)
Hannah Hines (Vice President)
Sean Hines (Vice President)
Sean Hines (Vice President)
Wesley Wesenberry (Vice President)
Jim Weiner (Vx Popularities)
Wesley Purser (Vx Popularities)
Bill Boiling (Assets)
Jim Parker (Assets)
Jim Parker (Assets)
Joe Swearney (Assets)
Dave Jey (Vx Popularitie
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COLLEGE PRESS
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Victory hopes
Dave Shapiro waires for a final vote tally at the Sigma Chi fraternity. Shapiro was attending a party for campaign workers last night.
Army Human Resource (expansion)
Greg Sugg (Independent)
Jimmy Banks (Independent)
SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS
Russ Ingle (Voy Populares)
Committee (Commitment)
Tom Byers (SORB)
John Wymer (F.E.19)
Vice President
Bruce Van Riegger (Voy Populares)
Patil O'Fallon (Commitment)
Tom Eden (SORB)
John Wymer (F.E.19)
Treasurer
Leslie Green (Voy Populares)
Jeff Fliken (Commitment)
Nancy Albera (SORB)
Page Heaven (F.E.19)
Secretary
Saman Hieger (Voy Populares)
Committee (Commitment)
Nancy Albera (SORB)
Jahlia Allen (SORB)
SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS
Billy French (Voy Populares)
Vice President
Steffen van Kopp (Voy Popularity)
Dorothy Schlumberger (Voy Populares)
*"Janne Martin" (Voy Popularity)
LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES
7 HATCHET DAYS
Celebrating Washington's Birthday!
DENIMS:
2 pc. denim jacket and pant sets . . were $ 42^{00} . . NOW $ 19^{00}
Denim dresses . . . . . values $ 27^{00}-$ 31^{50} . . NOW $ 12^{90}
Denim dresses . . . . . values $ 40^{00} . . NOW $ 19^{90}
Rack of denim skirts and jeans . values $ 14^{00}-$ 18^{00} . NOW $ 6^{90}
HATCHET RACK of denim jackets . . . . . NOW $ 5^{00}
HATCHET RACK OF
Print T-shirts long sleeved $3^{25}$
short sleeved $3^{00}$
Plaid gauze shirts were $13^{00}$
NOW $ 6^{90} $
"Sweet Baby Jane" tops
were $ 1950
NOW $ 990
SPECIALS
Wool hats and scarves $2^{00}$
Saturday at
Bras . . . . . . . $ 1 99
Leather purses
1/3 off
THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts Street
How a19-year-old college sophomore can become a 21-year-old Army officer.
The Army offers college sophomores the opportunity to earn
1967
an officer's commission in two years. It's tough, but the people who can manage it are the people we want to manage the men, money and materials of the United States Army.
You apply for the special Two-Year Army ROTC Program during your sophomore year. Then attend a six-week Basic Camp, with pay. Approximately $500.
You'll learn what it takes to be a soldier—to have your body toughened,your confidence developed.
Do well and you can qualify for the Army ROTC Advanced
Course in the fall. Do exceptionally well, and you may be heading back to college with a two-year full tuition scholarship.
For the next two years you'll learn what it takes to be an Army officer. You'll be challenged both mentally and physically. You'll get the kind of management and leadership experience that will be an asset to you in any career, military or civilian. You'll receive an extra $100 a month, up to 20 months. And when you graduate, you'll have earned your college degree along with the gold bars of an Army officer
The Two-Year Army ROTC Program. If that's the kind of challenge you're looking
kind of challenge you're looking for, you're the kind of student we're looking for.
Contact:
CAPTAIN BRAD BRADDOCK
Room 203
Military Science Building
Phone:864-3311/3312
ARMYROTC.
LEARN WHAT IT TAKESTO LEAD.
HATCHET DAYS!
ASHINGTON'S SALE BIRTHDAY
Celebration Savings
One group Pre-washed Denim Skirts and Jeans
Values $15^{00}$-$20^{00}$ . . . . . Now $6^{90}$
Pre-washed Denim and Corduroy Dresses
Values to $30^{00}$ . Now $12^{90}$
Plaid Gauze Shirts . were $13^{00} Now $6^{90}
One group Sweaters . . . . . Now $5^{00}$
ALLEY SHOP
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
8
Friday, February 20,1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAS 4
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Clint Johnson will try to stop "purple popguns"
Wagner paces KU past OSU and WSU
By GARY VICE Sports Writer
Jay Wagner was victorious in the 440 and 840 yards run to lead the University of Kansas track team to victory over Oklahoma State in a triangular meet in Allen Field House.
Wagner qualified for the upcoming NCAA indoor championships with his 48.6 seconds victory in the 440 yard dash. He had previously qualified in the 600 run field with a 1:10.1 clock. KU has also qualified two relay squads.
KU dominated the meet with 92 points.
The team edged Oklahoma State for second 82½%.
In the women's competition, Kansas State prevailed with four points followed by Oklahoma State.
Wagner, a junior Walker from Ben-
nington, also won the 890 yard run in 1:56.7 as he out-leaved Oklahoma States' James Coleman at the tape.
Middle-distance runner Rick Enzel tied Jim Riyun's Allen Field House record in the 1,000 yard run with a 2.10-7 clocking. Enzs shattered his previous best mark of 12.19, which he set earlier this year against Missouri. His winning time is the second fastest run indians in the SIH. He so far has run in three NCAAs on a sheet of劝建 for the NCAA most
or qualifying for the NECH meet.
Head coach Bob Timmons said, "I
thought our guys performed real well and we didn't have any injuries. Overall I was pleased with the meet and I think we'll be in the Big Eight Indoor Championships.
Sputter patter Jip Padrobara won with a
86-10% loss, but fell just short of the NCAA
and was not in contention.
"I had five throws past my old PR (personal record), "Podrievebac said, "but couldn't hit 59 feet. It should come easy but he still has a long city. City This has been my best night ever."
Anthony Coleman continued to blister the hurdle events, winning both the 60 yard lows and highs. The Dallas freshman won the 60 yard low hurdles in 6.8, equifying his lifetime best, and he won the 60 yard high hurdles in 7.3.
"I've been running pretty good this year," Coleman said. "I've got a cold tonight and I'm not running my best, but I did manage to run a 6.8."
high jumpers Steve Rainbow and John Butterfield finished 1-2 in their event as both cleared 6-10. Rainbow won the competition because of fewer misses, Butterfield, a Sherman Mission junior, improved his record by one inch with the 6-10 jump.
Celessa Russell managed the only win for the KU's run track squad. Russell won
For the past two years, it seems that everybody has wanted to knock off KU's basketball team. Now, the shoes on the other foot.
$1.00 Pitchers
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Every Afternoon
(Monday-Saturday)
Noon to 6 p.m.
at
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When the Jayhawks travel to Manhattan to meet Kansas State at 1:10 p.m., tomorrow they will be in the spooner's role. They'll play in channels 4, 13 and 27, beginning at 1 p.m.
Sports Editor
Although KU is out of the league race with a 5-6 mark, the Wildcats are in the trick of it, trailing leader Missouri by only one game and is 8-2 in league play and 17-6 on the year.
THE JAYHAWKS CAME within a point of doing the Wildcats big a favor Wednesday night, but to Missouri, 61-60. "It was a tough loss," KU coach Ted Owens said, "but I think we have a lot of pride. I'll be unanimated if we don't come back and play well."
Jayhawks faced with spoiler role
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
"it's going to be harder to get back up," he said. "But since it's K-State and the crowd and atmosphere that goes along with it, that will help us."
"That's always a big game. You always want to beat them."
Ken Koenigs admitted the loss to the Tigers was very disappointing. But he doesn't think it will affect the play of the team.
0
BEATING K-STATE, though, isn't going
Then there are the "purple poppuns" who are enough to give any opposing coach Williams and Evans have been devastated and combined to average 37.8 points a game.
KU won the first meeting with the Wildcats this year, 62-57 at Lawrence. Much of the credit for that win must go to Milt Gibson and Clint Johnson for their excellent defensive work against Williams and Evans.
“YOU KNOW THAT Chuckie (Williams) and Mike (Evans) are going to get their points,” he said. “You have to hope you can contain their front line in both scoring and blocking, but not as optimistic that we can do that that Dassie is playing as well as he is.”
With the emergence of 6-4 Larry Dassie, a transfer from Dodge City Junior College, the Wildcats have played much better. Owens thinks Dassie, 6-4 Carl Gerlach and 6-4丹德雷 may be the keys to shutting off K-Stale's offense.
KU's offense has improved in the last few seasons. Milt Gibson, Ken Koenigs and Paul
KU football team signs 24
KU football coach Bud Moore has announced that 24 players have signed national football letters of intent with the Javahaws.
"Right now, I think they are playing as well as any team in the league," Owens said. "And the play of their front line is probably the biggest reason."
The group comprises 11 linenem and 13 backs. Eight of the signs are from Kane.
to be easy. The Wildcats have played well late and beat Nebraska Wednesday night
Murphy, 63. 2-4, 108. Waterbury, Fred
Oksenbarger, Vet Elk High School; Al
Johnson, 63. 2-20, 108.
Backs-Jeff Ameinie, 5,10, 16; Mige High School; Bobby Berry, 5,9, 19; Louisville, Ky.; Dave Dan丝曼, 6,2, 105; Burington, Iowa; Mark Gellig, 6,1, 11; Crawford, Ohio; Fowler High School; Mike Higgins, 6,1, 105; Greta, La; Mike Hubak, 5,9, 183; Parma, Ohio; Leroy Irwin, 6,1, 80; Augusta, Ga; Greg Jones, 6,1, 100; Osborn High School; Tracy Levy, 6,1, 185; Wichita Southeast Kansas City, Mo.; Guy McCline, 6,1, 180; Maplewood, Mo.; Delvin Miller, 6,1, 180; Mpenahe, Pa.
KU SIGNEES
Linemen-Monty Carbonell, 6-2, 21; Chattam, I.; Charles Casey, 6-4, 22; Laurinburg, B.C.; Mark Cunio, 6-2, 23; Greensburg, N.C.; Claude Elswick, 6-4, 23; Clovis, N.M.; Mike Gay, 6-8, 20; Salina, N.M.; Robert E. McKinnon; Chesterfield, M.; Rod Ligon, 6-4, 24; Winston-Salem, N.C.; John McCray, 6-4, 26; Wichita Heights High School; John
ATTENTION ALL JUNIORS
The Torch Chapter of Mortar Board, Inc. (a national honor society for senior men and women) will be making selections for 1976-77.
Applications are available in the Dean of Women's Office (220 Strong) and must be returned by Feb. 20, 1976.
THE DEPARTMENT OF
STATE REFERENCE AND
TREASURES
University of San Fernando Valley
COLLEGE OF LAW
Announcing:
FALL SEMESTER 1976
• Full-time 3-year day program
Part-time day and evening programs
The school is
FULLY ACCREDITED
by the Committee of Bar Examiners
Tel:(213)894-5711
8353 Sepulveda Blvd., Sepulveda, Ca. 91343
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Mokeski have all begun doing the things expected of them.
After having problems through most of the season, Gibson is beginning to regain confidence in his shooting.
"I have to try to make them (the other team) guard me," Gibson said. "Because I haven't been shooting very well, everybody has been laying off me.
"I have to keep hitting the shot. When I do it opens up the inside game."
The One and Only
New Grass Revival
"The best progressive
bluegrass band in the world"
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bluegrass band in the world"
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2 bedroom apts . on KU campus . utilities paid furnished or unfurnished . laundry facilities swimming pool . in conditioned . covered parking on bus line . in locked system roomservice
Now Taking Applications for Fall
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Friday, February 20,1976
other because I body
5
I
K-State wrong on ticket policy
There's a certain flavor, an excitement that can't be transmitted over the airwaves. To truly appreciate a KU-K-State game, one has to be there.
There's something about a KU-K-State basketball game that can't be captured on television.
That's why it's so disturbing that Kansas State didn't allow KU any student tickets for the game. For the first time in years, KU had a response to "Eat tme up, eat 'em up."
ones who come out on the short end. They are the ones who have to stay home and watch the game on TV, not the administrators.
The KU-K Game game isn't just a basketball game. It goes beyond that. The game's the main attraction, but the 90-mile course makes the 90-mile route to Manhattan.
FOR ONE, IT gives them a chance to renew old high school acquaintances. There's nothing like going down to
By Allen Quakenbusb Sports Editor
KSU" won't ring through Ahearn Field House.
OH YES, K-STATE did give KU 25 tickets. But students can forget about obtaining any of them. They are complimentary tickets for the athletic department and required by the Big Eight to be sent to the visiting school.
So, for the first time, KU students wanting to go to the game are left out in the cold. And it's sad.
The KU athletic department can't be blamed for the lack of tickets. Doug Messner, assistant athletic director and business manager, tried several times to get the Wildcats to allot some tickets to the University. But he had no luck.
CAROL ADOLPH, K-STATE'S ticket manager, responded that the tickets KU allotted K-State last year were so bad she was glad they didn't get any this season.
So KU decided if kKState wasn't going to give any tickets to them, it would return the favor. So there was no kKState but the Wildcats and the Wildcats played here in January.
As it stands now, the students are the
Aggieville with the old high school crew—even if they are wearing purple
Then there's the pleasure of going to Aggieville after a KU victory. What can be better than striding through the streets wearing a giant POPP button, beaming at the Wildcat fans sneering at you.
Going to the KU-KState game is a part of the whole college experience to many. To some, it's as much of a tradition as Christmas. There are students at University who haven't missed a KU-KState game since they have been here.
BUT, UNLESS THEY are the lucky ones, they are going to miss this one. And it's not going to be easy sitting home on a roof with a balloon; they should be in Ahearn Field House.
There are a lot of disappointed students at KU right now. Many were planning to take the SUA bus trip to the game. Last year, 80 people made that trip. But because there were no trips available, SUA had to cancel the trip this year.
There's no question intercollegiate athletics is becoming a business. But the students shouldn't have to suffer because of it. Only through cooperation on the part of both athletic departments will they be spared.
Ali fights on TV tonight
SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP)—Muhammad AII
annoyed by a cold, weighed 285 pounds
yesterday for the fight which will launch
what he says will be his final year of boxing.
Coopman came in slightly heavier than was expected.
All his weight was only a pound and a half less than his weight when he stopped Joe. All his weight was only a pound and a half less than his weight when he stopped Joe.
All will meet Jean-Pierre Coopman of Belgium, who weighed 206, tonight in a scheduled 15-rounder at the 12,000-seat Roberto Clemente Coliseum.
he doesn't cold and the fact that he hasn't trained, especially hard. All is an answer to that.
Both men posed for pictures in the ring after weighing in but this weigh-in lacked the theatres that accompanied some of them in the 1960s, probably because Coopman, who speaks
only Flemish, doesn't understand a word he says.
Ali's fifth defense of the battle he regained by knocking out George Foreman in Africa Oct. 30, 1974, will be telecast live to the United States by Channel 5 from p.9 to p.11 p.m., EST. The fight is scheduled to start at 9:45 p.m.
Before going to weigh-in at the Coliseum before yesterday afternoon, all awaived off a few pounds.
University Daily Kansan
"The key is his ego," said trainer Angelo DiDonato. "He's afraid about his body. He's vain about his body."
As asked for a prediction on the fight, All asked for the fight could end after the first TV course.
Most observers believe that the 34-year-old champion, who has advantages over Coopman in weight, reach, height and experience, will win inside the limit.
These events occur only very rarely.
Last year's floor samples:
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No more having to train at inconvenient early evening hours. No more late plates or missed summer. No more tred-eyed wrestling up. And no more missed social life.
The season, which began with training last September, all comes down to a two-day meet at Oklahoma State starting today in stillwater.
BJ RENSTONE
Associate Sports Editor
The Big Eight championships is all that's left for the University of Kansas women's basketball team.
KUS' 7-1 DUAL meet record counts for something, but the team that defeated Kansas a week and a half ago - Nebraska will show up at Stillwater in full force.
CLAIRE MCELROY, KU coach since 1972, responded uneasily to the question, "Can Kansas defend the Big Eight swim title it won last year?"
ence, kansas
SUNFLOWER SURPLUS
As a result of more intense recruiting, the granting of scholarships and tuition waivers and the growth of the AAU and age-group swimming programs in the Midwest, almost every Big Eight school will enter a stronger team than last year. McFloy will
"I think the team is stronger and deeper than last year," she said, "but so are most of our staff."
McEliroy said Nebraska probably would have the top swimmers in each event. Although it takes speed to win the race, it's depth that wins the meet.
660
Women try to defend league swimming title
A birthday sale and
"Ours, we're hoping, will be a deeper team," she said.
KU WON ITS Big Eight title last year at Ames, Iowa, by defeating State by 81 points. But of the 20 events contested, Kansas won only four: the 400 yard freestyle and medley relays, and Cassie Strom won the 50 and 100 yard breaststroke.
massachusettsstre®
KU had as many as four swimmers score in one event.
pre-spring
Inventory
Theoretically, KU could have had even more than that score in an event. In conference swimming meets, points are given for every place from first to 12th. Moreover,
clearance
a team scoring swimmers in fifth and seven scores more points than a team that
Who, among the 17 women KU is taking to the meet, has the best chance to pick up a girl?
"OUR BASIC STRENGTH is depth," McBray reiterated. "We win by thirds and fourths."
MelEloy hedged, "I can name something about each of these (swimmers). Almost all of them are swimmers."
KU has only three seniors on its squirt this year. Gail Wagner, Gail Lehltcher and Kyle Cook, a multi-talented athlete who also competes in track, cross country and basketball.
It's Kansas Senate Resolution No. 18, which reads, in part: "A resolution commending and congratulating the University of Kansas women's swimming team on its winning the Association of Intercollegiate Swimming for Women Big Eight swimming title."
IN MCELROY'S OFFICE is an unnatural reminder of Kansas. Big Eight championship.
It's signed by Richard Rogers, Kansas Senate President.
Breaststrokers, April Bruce, Karen Mundy, Rebecca Lawson and Strom should be well. Strom is just a sophomore, had a hand in five live in 21 Big Eight last years in five live in 23.
DIVER LAURIE PROSPET, who was the runnerup in both one and three meter diving last year, returns with Miti Rattenne, who also scored in those events.
In addition, KU returns all its scorers from the 1975 team except one, Terri Pollard, who still is eligible, but is concentrating on making it into med school.
Although McElroy is justifiably proud of that distinguished document, framed in wood and hanging prominently on a wall facing her desk, she'd be satisfied with something a little less majestic this year: another first place team trophy.
Swim team hits the road twice
one of the top NCA4 Division II swim teams- Drury College.
Dick Reannon, KU swim coach, said, "The Oklahoma State dual should give us a good idea of what to expect from them in the Big Eight meet. O-State is a team with great depth and experience, but a great deal of feedback. They could use this to their advantage in a dual meet situation."
A busy weekend is in store for the University of Kansas men's swimming team with a meet scheduled against Oklahoma State at Stillwater and an invitational at Drury College in Springfield, Mo.
Larry's car is always
Smiley car
The Jayhawks compete against the Cowboy's today. Tomorrow they go against
Why? Because a healthy car is a happy car.
Keep your car healthy, buy your parts at Larry's.
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
New wagon & Truck & Retail
American & Foreign
1502 W. 3rdd - 842-4152
Student Discount
TIRE SALE
MICHELIN
10 DAYS ONLY EXTRA DISCOUNTS EXTRA BIG TRADE-INS!
Sale Ends Saturday, Feb. 21----5:30 p.m.
RAY STONEBACK'S
929 Massachusetts 843-4170
We're the appliance store on Massachusetts Street with discount tire department in rear of store. Come thru city parking lot behind Woolworth's for tire service!
We BUY used cars.
John Haddock Used Cars
23rd and Alabama 843-3500
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Aztec Inn
The Aztec calendar reminds you that memorable dining in centuries-old tradition awaits you at the Aztec Inn. We invite you to share our proud heritage.
Home of the Aztec Calendar
Dine with us in the leisurely atmosphere of Old Mexico..Dine at the Atxte Inn.
[Picture of interior of a building with wooden walls and a covered ceiling, decorated with floral arrangements. The room is furnished with chairs, tables, and shelves. In the background, there are additional decorative elements, possibly related to art or crafts.]
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Tuesday thru Saturday
11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday—Closed Monday
American & Mexican Food—Also Luncheon
807 Vermont
842-9455
Edward and Maomi Roste invite you to stop in soon.
T.G.I.F. 3-6 this afternoon. 2 set-ups for price of 1!
Steak Night-$475
A thick fillet mignon, broiled to your tastes; served with a crisp green salad and your choice of dressing, baked potato with mounds of sour cream, and warm bread. A spectacular feast that's a bargain for any pocketbook!lI
But don't forget Saturday. Another great steak night and FREE set-ups for you date ALL NIGHT!
The International
12-2 p.m.—general public 944 Massachusetts
2 p.m.-3 a.m.—members only 842-2458
7 days a week
10
Friday, February 20, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Growth of CB popularity brings more radio abuse
By JOHN THARP
Staff Writer
CB radios have replaced stereo as the number one electronics bestseller, according to industry reports. Since October, the number of CB radios has almost doubled. The Federal Communications Commission has estimated that the number of CB radios in the United States in October, 1975. Today, it estimates that more than 10 million Americans own and operate CBs.
In January 1975, 40,000 applications for FCC licenses were issued; 130,000 were requested last month. The FCC says, however, that 50 to 60 pc^2 of all operators are talking illegally because they don't have a radio service license.
The license cost $20 a year ago but has been reduced to $4. No examination is required.
On the highways, truck drivers are complaining about the irresponsible use of
"I was trying to get a smokey report, and couldn't get the channel because some lady was yuking about her sewing machine," she said. "I had to truckdriver who asked not to be identified."
"The reason for that is that some operators have not had the time to learn to respect the value of their radio," said Stuart Kowlaski. Wichita junior.
Kowlaski, an operator for six months,
complained recently about the crowded
stadium.
Cosmic Cowboy said he had noticed an increase in the conversational use of the truckers' road channel since the first of the year.
"Half of them (radies) are Christmas presents, like toys," he said. "People are always talking, never listening. That's how I know when people come in with mike (microphone) shy for a long time."
Cosmic Cowboy said CBs were valuable and described an accident in Missouri where a gasoline-laden tank truck crashed into the sidewalk, was learning previously over a creek.
"Three of us driver stopped, and I called a smoker and a tow truck, and they were gone."
Law enforcement agencies have also benefited from the use of CBs. The Missouri Highway Patrol equipped more than 700 patrol cars with CBs in July 1975. Statistics
show that the highway patrol logs 7,000 CBs a month.
About 50 Kansas Highway Patrol troopers have installed their own CBs in patrol cars. This figure has remained about the same since October 1975, according to Supt. Allen Rush. A plan to equip all patrol cars with CBs has been shelved in Kansas.
"Based on the information available to us, some states are becoming disenchanted with CBS," Rush said last week. Washington took them out of their patrol cars.
Rush thought "irresponsible transmissions" contributed to crowded airwaves. The patrol is having one dispatcher's office monitoring channel 9, the emergency call channel. In service since 1975, the airport station received 125 calls in January.
Persons who don't own CBS often complain that the radio interfere with stereo reception.
Sherry Elliott, FCC office manager in Kansas City, Mo., said that TV interference tops the list of complaints her office receives. The second most reported problem is the use of profanity on the air, she said...
The FCC is a government agency charged with regulating interstate and foreign communication. Besides CBs, the agency covers ham radio, business and municipal services and provides internet stations. The FCC employs slightly more than 1,700 persons, and more than one-
fourth of them are engaged in field engineering.
The Kansas City office covers Kansas, Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska, and has three local engineers assigned to it. They are aided by 10 more engineers in Grand Island, Missouri, and have access to area and so few engineers, the FCC is pressed to effectively handle all complaints, Elliott said. There is a plan under way to add another division responsible only for Cars and hams, she said, and this would help reduce duties for more efficient regulation.
Although radio violations are punishable by fine, imprisonment and loss of license, Elliott said fines are usually the only action taken, with an average fine of $30 per vehicle.
"There is a drastic increase in the number of CB radio sheds this school year over last," said Mike Thomas, director of police and parking.
The Topics Police Dept. reported 178 CB shelters for January 1996, compared to 457 in September 2004.
On the lighter side, a number of operators are socializing off the air. CB clubs are forming, and they often sponsor dances, dinners, coffees and charity drives. Some groups have a special defense and police departments and assist these groups in emergency situations.
The River City CBZ Club, a Lawrence organization, has grown from 200 to 390 students.
AURH okays code
A code outlining the rights and responsibilities of residence hall dwellers was approved for submittal to the Administrative Housing Board last night.
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) approved the code without discussion because these sections could not be used in conjunction with Harry Wimer, president of AURH, said.
A selection process for resident directors of the residence halls, which will be submitted to the offices of the Dean of Men and of Women, was also approved by the AURH.
Wigner said that if the selection process was approved, it would be the first time residents would be involved in the selection of the resident directors.
The proposed selection process would establish an interview committee whose members would be students on the residence hall staffs and a representative from the Dean of Men or the Dean of Women.
In other action, Wigner announced that J. J. Wilson, director of the residence halls system, had proposed a fund for the improvement of public areas in the residence
Wigner said the fund would be financed by Wilson's office. The fund proposal is being submitted to the housing services committee for how the money can be used, be said.
An AUHI task force on security in the residence halls requested additional time to complete a task.
rehearsed program will be a contra bassoon duet "Sweet and Low" featuring Bryant Freeman, professor of French and Italian, and John M. Pauk, assistant professor of wind and percussion.
In honor of the bicentennial, the works of John Phillip Boozer, American composer, including "National Anathema," will be on display at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout teccal Hall.
No, it's not April 1. It's the fifth annual Faculty Follies, a musical lamppoon which is produced each year by Pi Kappa Lambda, national music honor society, as a benefit for scholarships for outstanding music students.
Musical inanity faculty foolery generate funds
The River Semi-Pro Musica Chorale will be directed by James Ralston, associate professor of choral music, and the River City Filledharmonia Band will be directed by James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts.
Highlighting the spontaneous, lightly
+
February 2
February 22
The
University of Kansas
presents:
February 20, 21, 26, 27 at 8:00 p.m.
February 22 at 2:30 p.m.
University Theatre
Murphy Hall
Reservations:
University Theatre Box Office
Murphy Hall 864-3982
The
University of Kansas
presents:
KU STUDENTS
ADMITTED FREE
UPON PRESENTATION
OF CURRENT
CERTIFICATE OF
REGISTRATION.
ANDRE OBEY'S NOAH THE SEARCH FOR A GOLDEN AGE
LET BORT BOOT YOU
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
HATCHET DAYS WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY SELL-A-BRATION
Saturday, Feb. 21 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m.
Our Buying Mistakes Are Classified Information
COASTAL PARKS
The Town Shop FOR MEN 839 Massachusetts
The Country
The Country House FOR WOMEN At the Back of the Town Shop
House FOR WOMEN
ooon
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the
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 20, 1976
u
By CONRAD BIBENS Staff Writer
Institute favors minority rights in zone conflict
Paul Davidoff, executive director of the Suburban Action Institute of New York, said last night that his organization was committed to opening up the suburbs to minority groups so they can share in the prosperity there.
A conflict is going on today in America because of the increasing intercerts and the wealth of the suburbs.
Davidoff spoke to a crowd of about 150 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. He is an adjunct professor in Urban Planning at Columbia University.
The lecture, "Opening Up the Suburbs:
The Hartford Experience," was co-curated by Dr. Mark C.
"We have in our country a policy of omission and indifference toward solving problems of human settlement," he said. "It was the policy toward New York's financial problems."
His organization works against urban problems by recommending federal bills to reduce unemployment and low income, and he writes in a tax breaks for the wealthy, Daviddoff said.
But the main purpose of the Suburban Action Institute, he said, are to get the more affluent suburbs to pay their fair share of metropolitan taxes, and to allow minorities to live in some proximity to the increased employment there.
Urban Design and the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies.
Discriminatory zoning laws have put suburbs beyond the reach of most minority people, be said. Those laws include the residents' earnest rent at least $20,000 a year or that new homes be built with at least 1,300 square feet on one to five acres of land.
"The right to travel in search of superior placement is next to freedom of speech in importance in America, especially in this Bicentennial year," Davidoff said.
"In Kansas it's not unusual to build a house on 100 acres of land," he said. "But in a large city or suburb it's not just fair."
The majority of good paying jobs, both white and blue collar, are now in the suburbs, he said, leaving depressed economies in the inner-cities.
said, and the cities must now pay for the expenses of crime and poverty.
The suburbs must allow easier access by passing laws that legalize low-income housing such as moderately priced apartments and mobile homes.
"Busing is bastardized but it is the only available way to create open education," he said. "It will be the only way until we have open housing."
The Suburban Action Institute was important in helping the city of Hartford, Conn., win its recent suit against the government's development (HUD), Davidsoff said. The case prevented HUD from granting federal funds to Hartford's suburbs until they received federal legislation that required them to federal economic opportunities for the poor.
Davidoff, who served as Hartford's counsel, said the case was a landmark decision because it was a city that was the plaintiff, rather than a civil rights groun
The case, decided by a federal district court, was a cry for help by a declining city.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and enquiries.
ACM (Academy of Music Technology).
ACM ACM Accredited Clinical Course. BNGK
ACM ACM Accredited Clinical Course. BNGK
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hift equipment other than factory dumps or dims a good benefit is that they are more durable than products at the GRAMPOHION SHOP at KIEFS
Tremendous selection of guitars, drums, saws,
Snares, Basses, Keyboards and more.
Shop Keskey Keyboard Studio. Choose from Gibson,
Gretsch, Fender, Green, and many others.
Walt Disney Studio. Buy Keskey Keyboards Studio.
B W 237-483-6100. Walt Disney Studio.
We can make your stereo sound better. -GUAR-
DER! We can also have two car details at
Audio Systems, 307 E. 9th.
COST 10+ : %-Stereo equipment. All major brands Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single item or packages. Register for free Kiss One. Call Dave. Phone # 688-6295. Earnings 6 to 10.
Quitting business sale—bargain! Everything we have to sell now is our unique furniture. Large building full of rooms. We also have fresh fruits and vegetables. Our kitchen is fully equipped. (Hwy 49, Open 9-6, daylights 82-348, 2-23)
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
tickets. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160 page,
mail order catalog. Research Assistant,
Los Angeles, California. 902-43
(213) 877-4874.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Spectran-
ELECTRIC, BELL AU 8905,
ELECTRIC, BELL AU 8905, 2009 W, 40 h,
36 V, 120/240 Volt
Excellent experience of New & Used Furniture &
Appliances in the Dubai trade. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 7081 Dubai Road, Dubai, UAE 36024.
Two 12 inch 3-way UHawk Speakers. Excellent condition. Call 842-4579 at 5 p.m. 2-20
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold and silver work. Miniature sculpture, convection dishes, decorative vases, executed. B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting and variety of unisex valuers. 841-3853 or 843-0970
ARC registered Iritse Saiten Pupus for sale. Will
buy 434 6583-01 for more information.
4-20
Extra-long double bed set, best Laux foam. $2.20
Call 841-4959
ARB-XTURNable, Sherwond 7100A Receiver, 2
ARB-XTURNable, Sherwond 7100A Receiver, 3 at set mod-
价. 15 mm old. 842-1986.
Dell, Call 443-4579 after 5 p.m.
X-200
Landmark $800. Landmark Store
Landmarkmaster $100. Landmark Store
and more.
73 Camayo, power and air. Hail spansors, blood
transfer systems, and air ducts. Alarmes and
newers add AM-FM相片 with 22,000
batteries.
AM-FM Stereo Car Radio, call 842-6258. 2-23
Western Civilization Notes -New on Sale
Makes sense to use them-
20 For class preparation
21 For class preparation
*New Analogy of Western Civilization*
22
Calumet 4XS view camera with Daxor, extracts
image from a digital drive. Drake SW4-4XS short-
receivers. receiver 841-2760
pair of, Davies Brush, 180% made in Austria, for sale at the Dutch auction. We sell will sell for $250 or $300 call, Cail Wrigley or William will sell for $100 or $120 call.
**TURQUESA deal on Repeat Performance Shop.**
1492 West 3rd, day only, two. 21 from 10.68.
BOKONO POTION PARLIER just arrived new shipment of men's ordnard sport jackets and socks for Bokono. See People Book advertisement or POTION PARLIER 819 Vermont. Hours 12-3. 2-24
Yamaha 200 CSS stile bike. Like new. Only 5,260 miles. Call after 5:30 841-4391.
CHEVROLET INTEGRAL 65, 283. V-8 auto, power
battery. Best price takes. One owner; 814-
841-3092.
Gibson EB-2 electric bass with hardshell case, $150. Kustom 50 amp with '12' speaker, $80. M-SCA M-6 P.A. tone monitor, will dicker. JBL R-140 with cabinet, hardly used, $130. 642-142 with cabinet, hardly used, $130.
Shrewdware 1900 receiver, Dual 1226 turntable, HRL speakers, Sale clean-up offer. Call 232-852-1452.
1967 Pontiac Lemans Air. Air Power brakes and
sterling brake seats -means the speed's bicycle
bracket. 825-7240.
1967 Autumn-Healy 2500. Excellent condition
through Must sell $290 or rent at £235-$400.
Furnished.
1970 Kannah Kamma, excellence condition 2.8.2
depends. dependata vinyl. tip $160.84 - 823-3943
Pioneer CT 4114 Dual Cassette deck $140;
Turntable $85; dual 219 turntable $66.
Air Conditioner $37.
Bicycle-Green men's 10 speed bike in good condition
841-0753
2-26
Must liquidate? Small kit 'table and chairs, two
holding chairs, clock radio park, para-
lure, table and chairs, etc.
Henry for Sale. Just reduced. Hardware specialist
Henry for Sale. Just reduced. Hardware specialist
Luis Balizur for sale at 8:140 pm later. Hawaii, Havana,
Santiago, Tulum, Panama. Call 526-379-0660.
For Sale...1794 C125 Honda with 990 miles Els.
Fiat 500 with accessories. Call after:
843-964-0631
843-964-0631
HELP WANTED
Substitute homeparents needed for small group care home for children ages 6-18 with intellectual and behavioral problems. Prefer couple care in social settings. Must be over 21, 84-108, 84-108
AVON - Start off the new year with excellent school uniforms and Lawrences and Mrs. Hills, 842-812-6830.
If you are married, mature and will be in Law-
yers, please do not attend. The woman
treated in visitation with you about a position as an apartment manager manager. Weekend work is required. You must also apply Carly Beric. Call 25 Apts 8001, 327-491-6881.
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE. If you enjoy beautiful beauty and the opportunity to help people at our office, provide a comfortable couple to help us at our location. Provide a comfortable couples' cabin, completely private, mowing general upkeep, weeding, carpentry duties, moving general upkeep, wedding ceremony, keepings dike, etc. Time period June 1 to be completed by July 31. ONLY for your convenience. For its sake, the latter will receive the Camera ONLY. Raymond Carr, 1906 Sunset Drive, Palm Beach, FL 33480. Reference when you write. Otherwise your time reference when you write.
Addresses, wanted immediately! Work at home,
church, nursing center, and elementary school.
American services. 1601 Willow Blvd., Suite 312,
Buffalo, NY 14220.
Management Position for Business Student-
Department of Education
Part time during school year Contact de-
partment at 1-800-243-5276
Mt. Trainie with Crazy Top Shop, Novelty T-Shirts, custom screening, athletic wear, gecko accessories. Part-time to start. Sales exp. help. Send resume to Crazy Top Shop, 17 W. Brooklyn St., 928-645-1000.
HELP WANTED for Tiffany's Attic and
Waldo Astoria
Auditions being held for Hootchies & Kazozs, singing waiters and waitresses for Tiffany's Attic and Waldo Astoria. Dinner Playhouses. Feb. 21-2 p.m. at the Waldo Astoria. 7428 Washington, Kansas City, Missouri 64112. If unable to attend please send picture & resume for future audition time. Applicants must be 21.
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alcea, at Copy Center. You can make copies of your 1280x720 photo in action for free on copying and printing pages. Quick copy Center, $88 Mandash setts. 841-9400
SECRETRS only few have mastered, true friendship, love, forgiveness and understanding premised on mutual respect. Phosphate pamphlets by mail. No cost or obligation. Mail box 5647. Phone 6600. Discover 2-28. Box 5647. Phone 6600. Discover 2-28.
Kauz Shop. 620 Mast. Used furniture, diaries, baskets, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12:35. 842-355.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
Transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
Two $20 subscriptions. Any full-time undergraduate
or graduate student may pay by Oxford Road. Due March 1st. Inform earlier.
To be paid by 31/04/16.
Bengals IN
Gifts and Jewelry
803 Mass. Mall
Columbus
KU KARATE CLUB- Still sertifying but humpy,
their style. Not as bad as their training.
Wod, said Traits RHohnham. Sport, self-
education. The club is in Brooklyn.
WORKSHOP GROWTH TOWARD SHALOM—Openspace for personal growth within a small community. 26-28 at a nearby retreat center. For information, call the Office of the Information Center, 1204 Oread, 843-8533. 2-24
The Catfish Care special Sunday dinner is a Full
套餐 with cocktails, sandwiches and she
sheep each meal. Call 625-5084 for reservations.
(312) 237-1391 www.catfishcare.com
Today is the day for turning in course desks in the fireroom in our catalogue to be delivered next week. Call us at 864-7371 or drop by courses in maritime, ceramics, weaving and wadding
Volunteer Closing House is taking applications
for Volunteer Position 644-3890 at 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
daily.
WANTED
Roommate wanted in 3 bedroom town house
apartment 891-841-5013
2-20
Roommate wanted to share house one block away with another. The roommates paid $75 per month. Call 842-6860. 2-20
Wanted: Novels and other writing by JACK
Wanted: Ninety-five single or complete edition
841-6210 2-23
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
room. Contact Clear campus and office.
Call 891-7520
2-297
Female roommate to share apartment on edge of
10th floor of 135 Housekeeping and
2-23 in place of rent.
Want to live in the country? I need 2 dormitories
15 mile from campus. Call 749-8825. 6 p.m.
15 mile from campus. Call 749-8825. 6 p.m.
Two lightweight 10-spreads in good condition.
Call DuB = 842-1178 or leave message. 2-20
Like kids? Grad student mom offering free room in exchange for eventing commitment to sign up.
Roommate wanted Mile or female Junior.
Roommate wanted 25th or older
utilities 25th and Louisiana 418-827-9272
Wanted- five hours homework and simple
learning every Friday, Call 843-1247.
2-23
Room Mate: to share a really nice apt. Just north of 57th Street. Comes by Compass 4-144 and Grass 4-3. Any interest?
Roommate to share Towers Apt. Call 841-6137
or 842-1921 2.25
Child caregiver for 3 to 15 years in day care facility in person. AA13BIRT Minimum insurance: *Aiob* in person. AA13BIRT
To rent one mic : am1234567890
LOST AND FOUND
absentee officers are sponsored as a public
State Bank, 909 & Kentucky Malls and Shoppe
State Bank, 909 & Kentucky Malls.
LIGHT: Dark Brown Suede Jacket lost in either
DEEP: Black Vest 841-508 and sik for DAVG, BLEE
BLOOD: Black Vest 841-508
Loc. female German Shepherd puppy, tenn. can
be born at Stuttgart and Kinstock. Please return to 1342 Tern
Road, Stuttgart.
Bracelet found in front of Strong Hall, Ident
and claim at 209 Strong. 2-23
A few days before Christmas found a faint
pink mark, short hair marred cat mast.
after 8 p.m. 6-20
Lost! Gloats in orange glass case, somewhere on campus. Tuples. Feb. 10-6442-520 2-20
Lost: mate cat, cal. white with orange spots. By Union, Wed. afternoon Cal. 841-685-2000. 2-20
Found two gold keys on ring in 3114 Wheaton.
English Office: Cam 64542 and identify, 2-23.
Found. Pendant ladies' watch on chain Found. near Jayhawk Tower. Call 864-2579 - 223
Roommates to share beautiful four bedrooms
from home, featuring non-smoking vegetarian with an open heart
and a large window.
Found. Small male dog. No collar. White with
dark spots. Approx. 13cm long. 59
new wolfmans bridge. Call 843-2232 before
arriving.
Pound. CERMAN SIFFEIRD puppy. Tan with white markings. Recommended 8 weeks. Fears 2-447 or 843-459.
Found: Large brown, black, white female cat
near Union. Ident at: 137 Teen. # 4. 2-24
Found 1 large St. Christopher medal. Silver inscribed: Call 864-7095 and identify. 2-24
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTBEST MOBILE HOME, 309 W. 6th St., Lawrence, KS 61875.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
bearing accommodations in Lawrence, Lawrence
Riverfront 842-720-5661, 842-720-5936
2. bdm, all itu paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfree. Park free, a/c, pool, B63-4993.
**Credit:**
New 3 x 2 bdm; apartment near campus; park-
ing space; efficiency apartment, unit;
483-970-7657. 843-970-7657.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
ly furnished to campus $35 and up, by贷
483 or 845-2000
Room (murmured with shared kitchen and bath)
Also off-grid. With a large kitchen.
Also efficiency apt for male near no. Pet. No
kitchen, but a great place to live.
Sublease available immed. on 1 bbm. apart-
ment. $165 month. Call 842-1255- 200
2.1 hdrm. Frontier Rape Apt. Big enough
to enlist in uniformed. Enforced.
closed! 845-7008 2-20
Quiet room without food facilities in professor's home; separate entrance and bath. No smoking.
Transportation and outside eating arrangement at home and 15 hours of housework. Call 843-1247. .2,23
Large 2 bfr, spt. one single table with kitchen
kettle and microwave for young ladies
or 81-34325 or 81-34326
2-25
SULEASE single bedroom or entire apartment
term airtight, immediate occupancy. Dale
Borrell 918-754-2500
www.sulease.com
Must sublease one bdmr Frontier Ridgart Ari-
pital 843-9198 on lease for lease. Deposit.
deposit. 843-9198
TYPING
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12
Friday, February 20, 1976
1.
University Daily Kansan
Aim of no-need awards debated
ByLYNDASMITH
Staff Writer
In recent years, the issue of no-need scholarships has been a volatile one in financial aid. Funds in national financial aid programs are waning, but more universities and colleges across the country are making no-need awards.
The term "no-need" has been used to describe a grant or scholarship for which financial need isn't a consideration when the grant or scholarship is given.
This burden on aid resources was partly lifted in 1972 when Higher Education Amendments of 1972 created a publicly funded program (the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant) to help low-income students.
SINCE 1985, the first year of full federal student aid programs, national student aid resources have fallen short of student need because of increased living and tuition
The results of a recent survey in the College Board Review shows that, of 265 public universities pollled, 148 are making Nine are considering offering the awards.
IS FINANCIAL AID intended to remove restraints from a student's choice of college, or is it a recruiting tool? In a no-need scholarship, is money squandered on students who fail to complete it, or is it against the counter declining academic standards and enrollments?
The existence of these types of scholarships has raised fundamental questions about the purpose of financial aid in the education of school administrators and financial aid directors.
income students, who are squeezed out of most financial aid programs.
x/120x
Because the awards are directed at a small number of students, the CSS questioned their effectiveness in increasing and maintaining enrollments and high graduation rates.
Rogers said he favored offering no-need grants to high academic achievers, but KU
ONE REASON no-need scholarships aren't given at the University is that they would divert funds from the financial aid now used for needy students, Rogers said.
The College Scholarship Service (CSS), a department of the College Entrance Examination Board which determines the eligibility for admission to a recent policy statement that the purpose of a financial aid program is to provide monetary assistance to students who can't attend college without it. The concept of financial aid, as mentioned said, is "of utmost importance."
Rogers said he favored a "small honorarium to freshmen with outstanding grades."
THE CSS QUESTIONED the effectiveness of no-need scholarships in changing students' choices of institutions. Also, it said no-need grants might take funds from those students who did need them, and from faculty and staff salaries.
At the University of Kansas, a no-need scholarship program is being considered by University administrators and Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, but it is not
"A STUDENT MIGHT knock himself out to get good grades in high school," he said, "but because his dad's a banker, he's knocked out of a scholarship."
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for
Committee questions Regents' procedures
Staff Writer
The committee failed to get to specific University of Kansas requests.
By SHERI BALDWIN
TOPEKA- The House Ways and Means Committee yesterday questioned Board of Regents' methods of supporting capital improvements for Regents' schools.
"We are still trying to catch up with what we didn't build in the 56th and 60th," he said.
Kansas hasn't overbuilt its colleges, Corman said.
John Carlin, D-Smolan, attacked the
legits' responsabilities to their institutions
Warren Corman, Regents' facilities planning director, made the capital improvement presentation. The committee was invited to ask specific questions, but never got more specific than leaky roofs and building remodeling.
Corman said the amount of space needed at the six Regents' schools was justified by measurements such as the number of weekly student contact hours, which measures the number of students in each seat each day.
"We're predicting space for students who will actually be there, not some pipe dream for students that will never materialize," he said.
"It seems to me we have more contact with the presidents and chancellors of the schools than the schools have with the nine-member Board of Resents." Carlin said.
Prudence Hutton, chairman of the Regents, explained the Regents' practice of having a "executive session after the Regents meetings. Hutton said the Regents also met on the campuses throughout the year and on campus functions when time permitted.
Corman said that the schools had emphasized energy conservation and that KU's proposed trash-burning steam plant was a promising possibility.
Walter W. Graber, D-Pretty Prairie, said that during campus visits the committee had to confirm the identity of
The schools are caught between building too expensively and building too cheaply.
Corman said that major projects' priority had been ranked for the committee, and that a list would be furnished within a few days.
buildings. Graber said the faulty construction made him leery of future construction.
KU has ranked a request of $287,000 in final planning funds for a Robinson Gymnastics addition near the top of its priority list. Also on the list are fundraising funds.
Construction funds of $1,603,200 for the Visual Arts building, $1,785,960 for the Law Center building and $2,700,000 for the Administration Hall are also among KU requests.
Calgaard said the word "scholarship" meant an award for excellence in academics. Scholarships aren't historically linked to financial need, he said.
academic affairs, said he favored "without equi-
gence a no-need scholarship at KU"
He said it was no secret that universities wanted to attract the best academic
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Calgaard said a no-need scholarship program shouldn't diminish the University.
"We would want to have an attractive, ample financial aid program for minority students."
Rogers said he doubted no-need scholarships would draw the better students
NO-NEED scholarships aren't needed to bolster KU's academic standing, Rogers said, in view of how well KU students are doing academically.
"A small stipend of $100 or $200 wouldn't swain to that many students," he
Last year the average GPA universitywide was 2.91.
Scholarships now given to students at KU that resemble no-need scholarships are National Merit, Watkins-Berger and Summerfield scholarships, he said.
In 1965, 72 finalists chose KU first, and this year, 46 chose KU first. This decrease is an indication that a yearly stipend of $100 is better than not attracting them to KU. Rogers said.
The cons outweigh the pros in a university no-need scholarship program, Roger says.
THE NATIONAL Merit scholarships are given to those students who are national merit finalists and who select KU as their first choice in schools.
The National Merit Scholarship given at KU is the James C. Davis Scholarship, which awards from $100 to $1,500 a year to merit scholars.
Rogers said funds for Watkins-Berger and Summerfield scholarships were designated specifically for those scholarships and don't come from KU's $1.7 million in financial aid
WATKINS-BERGER and Summerfield scholars are chosen almost exclusively because of academic achievement. Financial need isn't a consideration when these scholarships are awarded. After the scholars are named, however, those deemed in financial need are financially supported.
Students studying Russian at the University of Kansas are waiting with open Russian-English dictionaries for a group of students who had been included to arrive in Lawrence tomorrow.
The group, made up of 30 to 35 tourists, will make Lawrence its first stop on a three-week tour of the United States, Joseph T. Brown and the Languages and Literature, said vested day.
Soviet tourists to visit KU
Conrad said KU had been sending students to the Soviet Union to study since 1966, when students went to the U.S.S.R. on a Summer Language Institute program. In 2014, the KU administration allowed KU students to spend a semester studying at the University of Leningrad.
The tour is sponsored by the Council on International Educational Exchange (CIEE) and KU's department of Slavic Languages and Literature.
But until two years ago, Conrad said, CIEE had been unsuccessful in its attempt to let Soviets attend State University. State officials braveluck was made when the Soviets decided to send at least
One group of 25 Soviets visited KU in October 1974. The group was supposed to be made up of farmers, but there were only 10 students. They were the rest. The rest were students or professionals.
three groups of up to 30 persons each to tour the United States.
Although the group, due to arrive tomorrow, has been called students, it will also include a seamstress, some workers, and 10 students from technicians. They range in age from 20 to 50.
Their stay in Lawrence should give the villan an idea of what life at a Midwestern community would be like.
"Although it will be a tourist trip for them," he said, "for us it is a nice stimulus for our Russian studies. It will give students a chance to converse with native speakers."
The group will attend a women's basketball game at 5 p.m. tomorrow and a get-together with KU Russian students to tomorrow night. Monday morning, they will attend classes related to their various interests, Lawrence that afternoon, Conrad said.
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"Jesus answered him IF I WASH THEE NOT, THOU HAST NO PART WITH ME!" John 13:8. One terrible affliction and spiritual disease making the Church unclean is "Apostacy! In 1st Corinthians 11:31 The Spirit of God tells us; "FOR IF WE WOULD JOURGE UDSELVES WE SHOOT NOT BE JUDGED!" Examine yourselves, whether ye be in the faith; prove your own selves." 2nd Corinthians 13:5. If we are indifferent to sin, evil or any one or more of God's broken Commandments, is our love for Christ genuine?
“Apostacy” is forsaking or abandonment of what hitherto has been professed and adhered to, as faith, principle, party. In order to be helpful to any wishing to ‘judge self’, consider whether or not when you joined the Church, or hitherto, you professioned or adhered to The Faith. The Bible is the infallible Word of God Almighty, and the only rule to direct us how to do such things. “Remember that the Sabbath Day to keep it Holy!” believing that man should do no work on that Day unless work of necessity and mercy, and the Day should be spent with the aim of increasing our knowledge of God and seeking His Honor and Pleasure rather than our own—see Isaiah 58:13, 14. If we have forsaken and abandoned these doctrines, then as far as they are concerned we are apostate. (That great man of God, John Bunyan talks in his vision of seeing a man being carried down into hell) We should remember the duty, one may say, “judge self” regarding the terrible sin of ‘apostacry’!
If there be any asking the "honorable apocrypt" maybe we can obtain that honor by asking The Church to erase our name from its rool BET. TER, HOWEVER, REPENT, AND PRAY TO CHRIST AS PETER DID; SEE WHAT MY FEET EYELIT, BUT ALL SO HANDS AND HEAD! J1 13:9.
"Then said Jesus unto them, the image is not yet come; but your time is already ready. The world cannot hate you: 'BUT ME IT HATETH, BECAUSE I TESTIFY OF IT, THAT THE WORKS THEREOF ARE EVIL—FOR MY_TIME IS NOT IF YET FULL COME!" I John 7:1-10.
Psalm 2 and Acts 4:25
Get yourself a Bible. Keep it with you. Read in all the days of your life that you may learn to "Fear The Lord your God!" To keep pride out of your heart lifting you up to think you are better than your brethren, and to keep from turning to the right or left hand from obedience to God's Commandments and Statutes, to the end you and your children might live a long and blessed life in the land God gives you. Deuteronomy 17:18-20.
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SLEEPING IN THE BED.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.92
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, February 23, 1978
Noah satisfied but critic isn't by Obey play
See Review, page 5
Coin flip settles 3 Senate seats
1010
1012
1017
1027
1044
1055
354
343
344
321
312
311
277
276
268
266
252
227
197
18
75
The last results of the student elections were tabulated Friday and tied for three Student Senate seats were decided by the toss of a coin.
GRADUATE SCHOOL
Joe Sweeney won over Steve Fennel for a seat from the School of Business.
Crang Bleigh and Jeff Shadwick won the toss over Rick Glover for senate seats from Nunemaker District 4. The three had tie two seats from the district in last week's vote.
10
A majority of the new senators from the graduate school were elected by write-in vote. Only six people filed for the 21 graduate school seats.
Ellen Reynolds (Independent)
Bill Remmers (Independent)
Tim Carson (Independent)
Pete Kamatzar (Independent)
Peter Kamarzai (Independent)
Bernard Willard (Independent)
Roger Loder (write-in)
Jackie Donovan (write-in)
Max Craig (write-in)
James Flynn (Write-in)
David Wayat (Write-in)
Josh Lamb (write-in)
Mike Economides (write-in)
Harry Butcher (write-in)
Jo Abht (write-in)
Lauda Friend (write-in)
Dave Kirk (write-in)
Frank Flutter (write-in)
Edith Heberlington (write-in)
Washington Dugan (write-in)
Kathy Dugan (write-in)
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS
Todd Hunter (Vox Populares) 396
Vice President
John Benge (Action) 373
Dave Rimace (Vox Populares) 341
Treasurer
Beckey Young (Action)
Cinda Osmess (Vox Populares
Sectretary
Secretary
Nancy Weldensau (Vox Populares)
Paula Bush (Action)
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Wildcat hospitality
Jayhawks Ken Koenings and Norm Cook attempt to avoid a live, blue-painted chicken tossed at them before Saturday's KU-K-
State basketball game in Manhattan. Koenig's reaction may have foreshadowed the game's outcome, as the K-State Wildcats won 78-52.
Regents approve Union renovation
By SHERI BALDWIN
Staff Writer
TOPEKA - A renovated Kansas Union and a trash-powered utility plant for the Kansas are in the contract negotiations state lawmakers have negotiated from the Board of Regents here Friday.
The Regents approved an architectural work program to remodel the Kansas Union building by hiring of an associate architect to finish drawings and specifications for the project.
Frank Burge, Union director, said yesterday he expected the contract for the associate architect to be negotiated within 30 days. Funding for the project is to be provided from student Union fees and operating revenue.
Burge said a 50-year-old stairway to the night of the southeast Union entrance would be removed because the terreroz stairs were taped, therefore hazardous and unstable.
"GAREFEL STUDY over a year's of traffic patterns, and checks with the fire marshal told us we could indeed abandon our job in order to large sale." It is seldom used and is no longer used.
Burge said 400 square feet would be gained on each of the five Union levels when he was removed. The space is to be converted to student lounges for each level, he said.
A second sequence would cost $170,000-$220,000 and would include the stairway removal and lounge construction, 40 more seats in the main Union lobby and an enlarged canopy at the Union entrance. The canopy now over the north-east entrance would be lengthened, Burge said, and would extend as far south as the southeast entrance, covering the front portion of the patio area.
The remodeling will be done in three sequences and will be finished by August 19.
The first sequence would cost $12,100 to $15,100 and would include removing portions of walls in the Union lobby to improve access to little-used areas.
A gradually-sloped entrance that woul comply with the architectural barrier code for handicapped would replace a temporary unacceptable ramp. he said.
The third sequence, which would cos-
ease the 6000, would finish the patio canopy
and the soffit.
Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor,
said that the Regents were unofficially committed to the utility plant project and that they had committed planning fund money to finance a professional engineering consultant for the project.
KU requested the consultant to study the feasibility of a burnable trash recovery system that could both heat and air-condition the University. The cost of the proposed system is an estimated $10 to $12 million.
A MOTION TO shift architectural coordination and inspection in the clinical facilities building to the state architect's office from the firm of Langston, Kitch and Associates, Inc., was approved. Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor, was appointed to lead the committee for project management of the clinical facilities' construction.
The Regents also approved a reorganization of the University Press of Kansas as the Regents Press of Kansas, effective July 1. The operation will now be subsidized by all six regent schools so that all schools have access to publish scholarly work and support can be improved by the Regents and duplication of services can be avoided.
The name change for the reorganization will require approval by the Kansas legislature because the University Press of Kansas was created by legislative action. KU also was allowed to increase comprehensive fee schedules for the 1976 summer semester and summer Institutes Abroad program fees and two Colorado geology field classes.
Tasheff's transition meets Rolf's retreat
By MARTISCHILLER
As Ed Folsl relax leaves office. Tedde Tasheff, the newly-elected student body president, is quickly assuming her administrative duties
She said she hadn't gone through all the files yet, but it appeared Rofls had left her an abundance of useful material and information.
Tasheff said yesterday that the transition of power had gone smoothly and that she was going to spend this week getting her administration organized.
Rolfs said a few personal belongings were the only things he took from the Student Office.
"You go in with very little and leave with very little." he said.
Tasheff already was moved into her new office. Her desk was stacked deep in files and folders and a glass of fresh-cut daffodils was perched on the window sill.
Tasheff said her first priority for this week was to charge the standing committee with their duties for the tenure of the board. That would involve charges would be new ones, she said.
THE MAJOR PLANKS of her campaign platform would be parcelled out to the committees, she said. For instance, she will charge the Academics Affairs department and cent student representation on policy making boards become more effective
One difficulty is deciding which committee should be charged with the different projects, she said.
Tasheff said she had been reviewing what the student body presidents had done immediately following the last two weeks and knew her what to do as she takes over.
The Committee on Committees will be elected at this meeting and will have the responsibility of accepting applications and conducting interviews to re-establish committees, she said. Any student at the university may apply for a committee position.
Rolfs said $ \mathrm {h i}^{4} $ administration had been weakest in relations with KU adversely and in theancement in its relations with the Kansasas Legislature, and student relations had been good, he said, but his work closely with KU administrators.
Tasheff and Rolfs were pleased that the voter turnout had increased this year. Oral is 2,758 students voted in last spring's elections to almost 4,300 votes cast this year.
TASHIEF SAID she hoped the upward trend continued next year. She said she wanted to get the new Senate and its younger senators involved and motivated so the enthusiasm would spread to the student community.
N.H. primary should narrow field
By DON SMITH
Washington Correspondent
Campaign workers used to enjoy speculating about the primaries. But not anymore. Most observers here are uncertain about who will win the primaries. And no one is making any predictions.
The Republicans have two announced candidates in Pennsylvania Gerald R. Ford and former California Gov. Ronald Reagan.
The Democratic field of candidates is more crowded—last count 13 were entered in tomorrow's New Hampshire.
Yet only a handful of the Democrats appear to be real threats to receive the nomination. Candidates in this group are Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana, former George Gumy Jim Carter, Sen. Henry Jackson of Washington, presidential candidate Sargent Shriver. Rep. Morris Udall of Arizona and Alabama Governor George Wallace.
THE ONLY PROBLEM with the above list is that it doesn't include the names of some candidates who haven't announced candidacy for president but might. This group includes Sen. Barbara Brown, Sen. Frank Church of Idaho and Sen. Subray, Bob McDonald.
The Ford and Reagan offices here have different views of the upcoming primaries. The Ford campaign seems unsure of itself; the Reagan campaign seems to be confident, both claim to be ready for the New Hampshire primary.
According to a poll taken recently by the New York Times and CBS News, more Republicans rated Reagan higher on leadership than Ford. However, Ford was regarded as the stronger of the two candidates.
The first primaries won't necessarily be the most important for Ford, but they could decide Reagan's political
fate, Grace Marie Prather, deputy press director for the President Ford Committee, said.
"The early primaries are only a few days away," she said. "These will be the first battalions and will dictate how they play."
PRATHER SAID the Ford committee expected tough campaigns in both New Hampshire and Florida.
"These first states are the states that Ronald Reagan would logically do well in," she said. "Reagan has the support of the governor of New Hampshire (Meldrum conservation). These states have very conservative, New Hampshire populations."
The President is a general appeal candidate, Prather said.
"He'll do better as a nationwide candidate," she said. "If Reagan doesn't do well in New Hampshire he won't."
analysis
make it to the California primary. But if he does well, it could be a long battle."
The Reagan campaign appears to be optimistic.
"We're guarded optimistic," a spokesman for the Reagan campaign said, "I think he a winner."
THE SPOKESMAN SAID Reagan's campaign was on schedule.
"To my knowledge, it has gone according to plan," the spokesman said. "He's been to New Hampshire just the number of times he had planned and he'll be there and in Florida before the first primary."
Reagan's recent proposal to return some federal programs to the states in the process cut the federal budget by $90 billion is beginning to be accepted, the spokesman said.
"All he did was suggest that program," the spokesman said. "He said we should take a good look at all the programs and see which could be transferred to the states. What he is trying to do is to save the transitional money, the money that the federal government shifts back to the states."
Regardless of Reagan does in the early primaries, he will stay in the campaign until the convention, the seat he will win.
"You'd like to be 100 per cent sure he'd win but nobody's ever certain." The spokesman said.
ON THE DEMOCRAT side, no one is willing to say who's the front runner. In fact, of mot, of the campaigns shun that label, apparently remembering Maine Sen. Edmund Muskie's fall from that status in 1972.
There's little doubt in the Bayh campaign that Bayh must outdistance his liberal opponents in the early primaries if he is to establish himself as a credible candidate.
"What were hoping to do in New Hampshire and Massachusetts is do well in the liberal field," Gayle Alexander, a deputy press secretary said. "We feel we have a lot of room in New Hampshire and we feel we'll come in a good solid second."
The Baych camp isn't talking of defeating Udall in New Hampshire as they point out that Udall's been campaigning there for the last 18 months. But they do believe that Udall can be defeated in Massachusetts, thus paving the way for Baych to carry the banner for liberal Democrats.
"I THINK BY THE END of Massachusetts, the liberal field will narrow," Alexander said. "And when you see the narrowed to one liberal versus Jackson or Carter, I think you'll see a very different vote breakdown."
If Bayh survives in New Hampshire and Massachusetts, he hopes to do well in New York and Pennsylvania, two of the biggest primaries. He has already been endorsed by about 60 per cent of members of the New Democratic
See CANDIDATES page 3
Residence hall life varies from convenient to coping
(Editor's note: This is the first in a five-part series examining where students live and why at the school.)
By LIZ LEECH
Staff Writer
Living in residence hall appeals to many students at the University of Kansas and for a
But students often live in the hall for similar reasons, too.
Residents say they enjoy living with a large number of other people, having access to special facilities.
Some of them say they like it so much that they'll cope with nocturnal roommates, food not quite to their liking, blaring stereos and a general lack of privacy.
The official housing study, which is annually submitted to the Board of Regents, showed that 17 per cent of KU's students live in residence halls this year.
Laura Shockley, Parke Village sophomore
in Cornish Hall, said she had chosen a residence
hall for her first and second years in college parti-
cularly because her parents wanted her to.
"I THINK THERE are advantages and disadvantages to all living situations, but living here, you are living close to lots of people and get to know them pretty well," she said.
She said she chose to live in an all-female hall because there was more privacy there. In Corbin, the rooms are private and spacious.
There are more freshman women in GSP and carbin than sophomores, Stockley said, and the freshmen are getting better.
Shockey said she thought people living in apartments couldn't meet as many people as those in apartments without them.
The atmosphere here for freshmen is pre-
secure, but the sophomores liked living here last
year.
At Hashing Hall, Gina Kennedy,Lenza senior, said she liked the community spirit of her hall.
She said students at Hashinger were mostly superclassmen and lived in Hashinger because they were hard to find.
"IREALLY FEEL like I belong here and it seems people return here, year after, year." the said.
Dan Kunetsky, Leawood senior, said he had thought it would be cheaper to live in a residence hall than in an apartment. He lives in McCollum Hall.
"I didn't want to cook, and I expected to eat food and a place to sleep and study," he said.
However, Kusnetzy said he had to spend about $30 a month for food in addition to his regular payments because he didn't like the food that was served.
He said next year he would move into an apartment with three friends and live less expensively.
McColm Hall was his choice, Kunzetalky said,
because he thought he had fewer rules than other
battles.
"I don't like people telling me when I have to be in my room or when I can't have guests." he said.
Russetty said residence hall offered him things he couldn't get in an apartment such as computer use.
KUSNETZKY SAID, however, that although
there were parking spaces for cars, there weren't enough of them.
J. J. Wilson, director of housing, said he though
guest living was particularly beneficial for younger
students.
He said he had enjoyed the opportunity he had in McCollum to meet people.
"Within five minutes walking time there are about 630 people," he said.
Of the 3,637 students who live in residence halls,
about 1,900 are freshmen.
Kunetakty said that McCollum had a number of foreign students, and that he enjoyed meeting fellow students.
It's an excellent way for them to bridge the gap from high school days to a more permanent lifeline.
KU has several payment options for students in residence halls. There are five single-sixth halls and
WILSON SAID that having fixed costs in a residence hall made things easier for students' parents because they knew exactly how much they would be paying.
four coeducational halls. Students may choose their halls and their roommates. Single rooms are
Corbin, G.S.P., Lewis, Templin, J.R.P.
Berkshire, $1.5 million for double rooms
and $1.5 million for single beds.
Rates for the 1976-1977 school year will be $85 higher for double rooms and $110 higher for single rooms.
McCOLLUM HALL costs $10 more because it has more educational and recreational services. There is a language room, weight room, computer and study skills room, computer and Study Skills program and athletic equipment.
Hashinger Hall in the most expensive residence hall, costing $1,200 for a double room and $1,500 for a four-room
Hashinger is the center for creative arts, and has extra facilities such as soundproof music practice rooms, a darkroom, painting and drawing rooms and weaving looms.
See HOUSING page 3
2
Monday, February 23,1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Nixon returns to China
PEKING—Chairman Mao Tse-tung met with Richard Nixon at noon today (the time) as the former American president continued to relive the peak his president
Tn meeting between the 82-year old chairman of the Chinese Communist party and Nixon was announced by a Chinese government spokesman shortly after it
The place of the meeting was not announced immediately, but presumably it took place at Mao's home in Peking.
na invited Nixon to return to China on the fourth anniversary of the visit that accompanied relations between the two countries after a break of 23 years.
Nixon and his wife were entertained last night at a banquet at which China's acting premier, Kuo Kuo-feng, publicly acknowledged that the Peking hierarchy is in control.
Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger said Saturday in Brasília that Nixon would report to the government when he returned.
Hua, the former public security minister, was the surprise choice two weeks ago to succeed the late Premier Chow En-ai. Vice President Teng Hasa-ping, who had been expected to get the job, has been subject to public criticism in recent weeks as a "nationalist roader."
Reagan funds diverted
NASHUA, H.-N. ROHAN Reagan said yesterday that he knew about money being diverted from his gubernatorial campaign in 1979 to obbain Republican efforts.
Reagan told an audience at Rivier college that he had just found out about the incident. He said he wouldn't have condoned it.
The Washington Post reported Sunday that at least $100,000 contributed to Reagan's campaign for re-election as governor of California had been secretly leaked.
Reagan had no significant opposition in the primary and professed neutrality about Republican races.
Reagan said, "I don't think any candidate has anything to do or pays any attention to the spending of campaign money and how it comes in."
The Post story quoted Thomas C. Reed, Reagan's campaign manager in 1970 and new secretary of the Air Force, as saying the diversion of money was discussed "in our words."
Congress nears deadline
WASHINGTON-Congress has only this week to restructure the Federal Elections Commission. If the end-of-the-week deadline established by the Supreme Court isn't met, the commission will lose much of its power, including the authority to disburse campaign funds to presidential candidates.
The Court said the commission structure must be changed to make all eight members presidential appointees. The present law gives Congress authority to appoint a majority of the commission. The Court said this violated the separation of powers principle in the Constitution.
Burglary suspect held
Lawrence police arrested a local man Thursday in connection with a number of recent burglaries, some of which involved attempted rapes.
The man, Albert Thomas, 255 N. Michigan, is being held in Dougless County Jail under $20,000 bond. He faces charges on three counts of burglary, two counts of theft, three counts of attempted rape and two counts of lewd and lascivious behavior.
Torres, 25, is thought to be responsible for nine bargejuries that have been reported by the police.
More than $3,000 worth of stolen property
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was recovered from Thomas' apartment, some of which has still been unclaimed. Police withheld addresses of the burglary victims who also reported sexual assaults to protect their identities. Burglaries solved that didn't involve sexual assaults occurred at 1345 Vermont, 1716 Tennessee and 1012 Emery.
ACCORDING TO NEWTON, KLNW has been a pioneer in the use of radio communications. The mobile news units before Topeka and Kansas City stations, had utilized "beeper" telephone reports before most stations and had purchased one of the first automated stations.
Arden Boon said that one of the greatest problems the station had faced was how to communicate with the audience. The addition of FM, he said, solved that problem by allowing the FM station to emphasize a mostly-music format, while AM presented community-news.
twenty-five years ago, Arden Booth signed radio station KLUN-AM on the air from a studio in a pasture southwest of Lawrence.
By JAMES COBB
BOB NEWTON, operations manager of KLWN, said Friday that the growth of the station was reflected in the increased number of employees, two remodeling projects and studio, the doubling of the size of the station and the use of new technology.
KLWN keeps signing on
When the station began operations, its AM broadcasting was limited to a period from 6 a.m. to sunset. After the FM station was added in 1964, broadcast times were extended. The separation of FM broadcasts from AM was completed two years ago.
The latest remodeling of the facilities at 31st and Iowa was completed in 1973.
The families of five of the station's original stockholders were at the
Staff Writer
Newton said the two stations' operations were now nearly autonomous.
The original staff was six persons, Newton said. The present staff of more than 20 includes five University of Kansas students.
For many of the people who had worked for or listened to the station since then, yesterday was a time for reminiscing as the organizers celebrated a周年 anniversary with a rededication ceremony.
KLWN-AM is the oldest commercial broadcasting station in Lawrence. Booth began the station under the ownership of local stockholders of Lawrence Broadcasters, Inc., and later bought out the principal stock of the company. Booth's son, Hank Booth, has served as general manager of the station since 1973.
"You walked through the pasture and into the front door." he said.
The original broadcasting stud was in a 20-foot or 30-foot brick building, Arden Baths.
Dee Skie, 1201 W. Campus Road, one of
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the original stockholders, said she thought the highlight of 25 years of operation was the coverage of the 1961 Lawrence food, flood and water citizens about areas that would be flooded.
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Mayor Barkley Clark said the coverage of an instrument in saving lives and property.
the (the KLW staff) were very active then," she said. "They did a great iot."
Rock Chalk Revue is sponsored by the K-U Y- and partially funded by the Student Senate.
Newton said the station had been a training ground for many outstanding broadcasters. The station has experienced frequent staff turnover, he said, typical of small-market stations, particularly those in college towns.
MONTY MOORE, the "Voice of the Oakland Athletics," was also a KLWN employee, Newton said, and Tom Hendrick, the "Voice of the Kansas Jayhawks," worked at the station while a student at the college. Larry Wagner, who is communication director for the Shawnee Mission school district, once worked at the station.
Among the former staff members at the reception was Bill Morris, who worked at KLWN while attending KU in 1968-67 radio with WWHC of Hartford City, Ind.
"There have been some amazing changes here," Morris said.
HANK BOOTH, the present manager of KLWN, was five years old when the station began broadcasting. He said that when the station began operations, he had crawled into a large cart that had contained the lights for the top of the broadcasting tower.
The box was in the middle of the studio door, he said, and he knocked himself unconscious.
Although people were walking around in the hall, he said, no one knew him as the inside kit.
The mayor read a proclamation from the Lawrence City Commission declaring Fob.
mended the station for an extremely human approach, which set it apart from other hotels.
ARDEN BOOTH, who is now a state senator, said he foresaw a lessening of governmental interference in broadcasting and individuality. Booth worked before the KLWN at WREN radio, WREN was in Lawrence until the mid-1940s.
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Mon.
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Tue. Sisters Shown in Ballroom 7:30—75'
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Feb. 23 to Feb. 25 SUA Films
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Instructors in Basic Science* and Nuclear Technology are needed. Applicants must have BS degree, although postgraduate degrees are preferred.
New Instructors receive direct appointment as a Navy Ensign and five weeks of training and briefing—no Boot Camp. Starting salary is approximately $10,000 (or more) plus all military benefits including free medical and dental care, 30 days paid vacation and unlimited paid sick leave.
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All qualified applicants are personally interviewed by Admiral Rickover, Director, Naval Reactors.
*Math, Physics, Chemistry, Engineering.
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University Dally Kansas
Monday, February 23. 1976
3
Candidates
From page one
Coalition in New York state, a group that also entitles George McGovern of Albany to office in 1972.
The Democrat with one of the highest name recognitions is Shriver. He would appear to be the favorite of the party's leadership, and he can capture much support from that group.
Shriver's campaign began late and hasn't picked up much momentum. However, his staff thinks that he will be a strong candidate in the New England primaries.
"I think we'll do pretty well in the primaries," Linda Cook, a press assistant for Shriver, said. She refused to define what pretty well was.
A recent Boston Globe poll showed Shriver No. 1 among those in Massachusetts who were polled, with about 20 per cent of the vote.
Shriver worked as the manager of the Merchandise Mart in Chicago before his brother-in-law, Joe Kennedy. He joined Merchardise Mart early 1960s. It's been reported that Chicago Mayor Richard Daley finds Shriver a very acceptable candidate and this might help him.
SHRIVER DIDN'T do well in the Iowa Democratic caucuses last month, but the Shriver organization isn't blaming the candidate.
"He was a late entry in Iowa." Cook said. "Carter has been there for you and a half year, but he is now back."
The Shriver organization expects him to receive between 10 and 20 per cent of the delegate vote in the Mississippi caucuses. An official tabulation is not available yet.
In addition, other Democrats have been running hard, Jackson is well organized in New York state where he hoes to do well. Recently, Jackson was in the news when he was booed off his speaking platform in Boston by antibuiling protestors.
The Democratic candidate who appears
TAKING APPLICATIONS NOW
3
--to be the most polar at this time is Carter. The New York Times and CBS News poll showed that Carter appealed to all ideologies. This has helped Carter's campaign but has hurt his credibility and made him the object of severe press scrutiny.
VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE is taking applications for 1976-77 school year. #9. We are looking for dedicated, concerned students to fill positions such as Big Brother/Big/Sister coor-dening his/her relations, agency contact, etc.
To schedule an interview or obtain further information call the VCH office at 864-3844 between 9 a.m. and 10 a.m. or by drop off from our office at 11BUton.
This organization is funded from the student activity fee.
UDALL SEEMS the candidate with the most to lose or gain in New Hampshire. If he wins in New Hampshire, he will have momentum. But, should he lose, his campaign could be finished. He finished poorly in the Iowa caucuses. Yet he was the winner by Archibald Cox, former Watergate special prosecutor, who is a hero in the Northeast.
Finally, Wallace's northern popularity is a question mark this year. No one is sure how well the southern governor will do in the North. He seems to have some popularity in the Massachusetts antiburing neighborhoods, but observers here don't believe Wallace much of a chance to win the nomination, even if he does well in the Norton.
On the Republican side, Ford appears to be in some trouble, considering that he is the incumbent. Ford has never faced a challenger. Ford has much weaker than most observers think.
the guessing will be over soon,
however. The New Hampshire primary is tomorrow and the only thing that seems likely there will be two winners and many losers.
In all residence halls, $50 is credited to students who return to a residence hall for a tour.
Housing
All residence halls provide students with beds, mattress pads, pillows, study lamps, desks, bookshelves, desk chairs, lounges and bathrooms. Venetian blinds, closets and drawer space.
From page one
STUDENTS CAN RENEW refrigerators or their rooms and may decorate the rooms to their tastes. But they must use University paint on the walls, and can't nail things to the walls. If they don't like the colors of paint provided, students can paint with whatever they want, as long as they repaint with regulation colors before they move out.
The halls also provide for, which students must buy a permit, laundry equipment, 20 meals a week, maintenance, vending machines and bus service.
Students can pursue their political interests by participating in hall government. In addition to each hall's system, the Association of University Residence Halls makes policy decisions concerning all the halls.
In 1971, a new student code was written which gave students more freedom and participation in student government. Wilson would later use the code for some extra attractions in the halls.
STUDENTS BEGAN having open hours, improving public areas in the halls and
SUA Officer and Board Interviews
SUA OFFICER INTERVIEWS MARCH 1, 1976
Vice President Treasurer
President Secretary
SUA BOARD INTERVIEWS MARCH 8,1976
Festival of the Arts
Films
Fine Arts
Indoor Recreation
Outdoor Recreation Public Relations
Free University
Travel
Forums
Special Events
Applications Available at the SUA Office
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Make ups for missed lessons
NAT'L MED BDS
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Kansas Fall compacts
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Monday, February 23, 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Faculty needs raise
Once again Chancellor Archie R. Dykes is pleasing his case before the legislature for increased funding of the University. Unlike the last two years, when Dykes successfully returned with 10 per cent faculty pay increases, he is meeting stiff opposition this year.
GOV. ROBERT F. BENNETT has recommended another 10 per cent pay hike as the final installment of a three-year plan to increase faculty salaries. However, Speaker of the House Pete McGill, R-Winfield, and State Rep. Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park and chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, have urged the legislature to substitute a 5 per cent plan. This proposal seems to have the support of the legislature.
Even with the gains of the last two years, the University still ranks near the bottom when measured against pay scales at comparable schools. Dykes and other administrators argue that the University is losing some of its better faculty members because of this.
Kansas is one of the few states that
can actually afford to significantly increase aid to its colleges and universities. Through commendable budgeting practices, Kansas has avoided the financial deficits that plague many states. But even though thrift is a praiseworthy virtue, the legislature surely must realize that if you want results you must be willing to pay for them.
EDUCATION IS the foundation for a better state and a better society. The University of Kansas is an excellent school, of which the state should be proud. Yet, a school can't live forever on a reputation. It's obvious that classes are getting more and more crowded at KU. Most members of the faculty are hardworking and dedicated to the students, but they can only do so much.
The University needs the support of the legislature. The improvements that have been picking up momentum in the last two years shouldn't be stopped now. We need the continued financial support of the state.
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McGill bills too far right
Although the Kansas Legislature gets a substantial amount of news coverage, most of us still don't pay much attention to it. Kansas politics is usually tedious, obscure, repetitive and boring. It is also one of the state's citizens and especially to the students of the state universities.
Every time I've checked this
enough. But McGill is also the Speaker of the House. He has been the speaker for the last two decades and will speak an unprecedented third term.
McGill has always been conservative, but this year he seems to have jumped on the Ronald Reagan bandwagon. He will spend state revenues, but McGill wants a one-per-cent increase in
"RELAY, IN TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND YEARS IT DISSIPATES."
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
the sales tax. He would remove the sales tax on food and prescription drugs.
FOR ONE MEMBER of the legislature to be for the death tax, the state taxes tax and a decrease in KU faculty pay is bad
session, the legislature has had along with its reasonable bills, some ill-considered potential blunder bound to be bad for everyone concerned. All the sorry pieces of legislation have been supported by Diane S. "Pete" McGill, R-Winfield.
THE EFFECT would be the generation of about 100 million for the state, which would be used for important and desperately needed social and educational programs, right? The governor will increase state spending; he wants to limit the Kansas Board of Regents' proposed faculty pay raise 5 to 5 percent off
10 per cent, which Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and some enlightened legislators know the state schools need.
MGill opposes the faculty pay raise, at least in part, because of polls he and some of his fellow legislators have MGill's own poll was a decisive uniscientific enterprise.
He had a questionnaire printed in the Winfield newspaper. Interested constituents asked him questions. The poll consisted of one-sentence questions about spending by the state government. There was no explanation of why it happened or do why it might be needed.
MCGILL PAYED no attention to the facts that Winfield represents only one small, conservative part of Kansas and that people strongly against state spending for anything are much more likely to answer such a poll. He was soon using statistics in his talk about what the people of Kansas want. fronically, any question about increasing the sales tax was excluded from the poll.
McGill's bid for an unprecedented third term as
FRENCH COMMUNISTS
FRENCH SOCIALISTS
Speaker of the House appears to be in no trouble, provided most of the conservative Republicans in the House are reelected. A Democratic majority in the House would of course, end his chances, but that possibility seems remote.
WHAT McGLLL hopes to gain from his appeal to conservatism isn't yet clear. Perhaps he has what he sees as the best course for him, but he has been speculation that he is eyeing the seat of Rep. Joe Skubitz in the fifth congressional district. Skubitz is running for reelection this year, and he is expected to retire after that.
Undoubtedly there is an important segment of Kansas voters who support the positions taken by McGill. But that segment doesn't represent all Kansans and, one would hope, it doesn't represent the majority of them.
VOULEZ-VOUS COUCHER AVEC MOI CE SOIR, ARF, ARF?
Readers Respond
Waugh critic wants evidence
To the Editor:
"The chancellors and presidents of colleges across the country realize they have to sell a school through its athletics." (21) "We're not ready, 19). Nonsense. How long are we expected to accept this old chestnut as gospel? I defy Mr. Waugh, or any member of any college or university athletic program, to provide evidence points in that case. Most evidence points is in the other direction."
Several years ago, a university of Oklahoma president asked the legislature to approve a large budget: "Give us a University the football team can be proud of."
His admittedly faceted remark was intended to test the power of the football team's appeal, and the budget was heavily cut. He was told the legislators didn't appreciate his
remark, and he later asserted that he knew of no case in which athletic success directly benefited the university. The University of Chicago withdrew from intercollegiate athletics after a 2016 year-long effort at the enormous cost of such sports and the undue emphasis they placed on a minor aspect of the University's activities. If anything, Chicago is a greater university now than it was then, and contributions to its latest programs have been worth $100 million, and the campaign is less than half-completed.
College athletics generates money* for college athletics. Period, No great university was ever built on the football field and it's time Mr. Waugh et al. nutty to try tell us otherwise.
James S. Scally
Lawrence graduate student
James J. Scally
Recognize gays To the Editor:
Although I am rarely interested in the Student Senate, I was extremely interested in the comments of the two candidates for president on recognition of Lawrence Gay Liberation.
Dave Shapiro said it shouldn't be recognized or funded and Tedda Tasheff said it should be recognized if our beneficent students are taught to gay students the same rights to form political organizations that non-gay students take, quite naturally, for granted. Whether the group should be funded is a rather moot point because of the few campus service organizations that pays its own way.
They do exist, I assure you, and not only in the School of Fine Arts, but in engineering, architecture, psychology and business. And they all pay student fees, by the way.
bands, buttons or signs—i. e., since they are invisible—they don't exist.
Tasheff and Shapiro seem to suffer from a myopia that badly affects the student population. Teachers in these schools don't here wear labels, arm-
All over the nation, laws are being changed to dispose of such victimless crimes as homosexuals and homosexuals equal opportunity.
Five years ago the Senate appropriated $600 to Gay Liberation to show support for their suit against the University for recognition, though of course the chancellor then saw that the funds allocated and the funds were never dishurried. Times change in Kansas. Not always for the better.
Steven Weaver Lawrence special student
Schlesinger Calvinist spectacle
To the eyes of the magazine's editors and subscribers there is interest in heroic, courageous and visionary, and which may strike other retails as quite shocking. In her own words, and fleshy face, a merciless
WASHINGTON—The cultural historians who say a society reveals its values in its portraiture should look at what's on the cover of Fortune magazine this month: a painting of James Monroe by Andrew Johnson, a defense, done in the brush strokes of capitalist, realism.
executed the Schlesinger portrait, appears to have wanted to suggest power in his slabby, wide strokes. It is an amazing show that says, "You don't agree." We have ways to take care of that." El Greco painted powerful men, but the convention and behavior of the time matters how spurious, be made to show the subject's power rested on something higher than ability to chop off the head of a Nandolien won't the idealized
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) King Features
(C) King Features
mouth, an overhanging brow on a face that looks as if it had never expressed either joy or laughter.
PETER MORRIS
IT IS A picture that might suggest insanity in its subject, to non-twentieth century eyes. It is a picture of the glory of Napoleon, handle the anomaly of a heroic functionaire? How would he depict, not the hot blood and military prowess of a leader leading his troops, but the celebration of an official, of a warrior whose courage isn't individual but a collective strength drawn from a beaten populace.
Think of the status idealizing Alexander the Great and Caesar, and then look at this pre-historic no-neck. The head is turned in the activities that register in portraits of the early Americans, Washington, Jefferson and Adams, are obliterated. In two centuries we have mightily forgotten what heroes should look like.
DANIEL SCHWARTZ, who
man David painted, and we trust Schlesinger isn't the one who owns the magazine's cover. He is on the cover because he's written the lead article, a pitch for more munitions and war ex-
FOR ONE WHO is known as a hard-facts and tough-logic man, his argument is sparse and so he expert has little difficulty throughed on it. What we have here, rather, is a sermon, a religious statement. But you expect to see behind you expect to see behind the glass-faced box with the peaked roof in front of the church: 11 o'clock at The School of the Words. She scolds me all preface "A Testing Time for America."
The theme is dark and predestinarian. God, working in history, has given America a painful role of sacrifice uening. The theme is not a destiny about which one can express much jubilation . . . it is an odd and unvile fate. Yet it must be
faced soberly; there is no escape." Yipes!
THE ESSENCE of predestinarian Galvin virtue was to understand the institutes prepared and to cooperate with it. As he says, "The weight of responsibility placed on the United States will not disappear There will be no deux executions for our leaders We have committed 'failing purpose.' We are a 'nation apparently withdrawing from the burdens of leadership and from the rest of society' deluded ourselves into thinking, 'America's involvement in the external world ... has appeared to be a matter of simple choice reflecting nothing more important than tastes or moral preferences."
HENCE THE practice of morality becomes the sin of sloth and glutton, but there is a sacrament which revivifies, forgives, and puts us again as one with a gloomy destiny God has predaired for us. That man has overcome "the loss of vision, of moral stamina, of national purpose ..."
In his theology of national purpose, the Devil is Russian. As always the Devil is seen as more clever and realistic than the namby-pamby angels left on God's aid. The Devil knows, so our ordained minister of death writes: "By contrast, Soviet leaders have consistently put in power in areas from specific uses." They appreciate the power of power, the sacriament for its own sake.
"LORD ACTION'N' dictum that power tends to corrupt". Dr. Death writes to reconcile his notions with older, more traditional values, "... is readily misapplied, for it neglects an equally important truth. Weakness also corrupts
Heretorefo, it had been thought that corruption causes
and the air force play the role of the deserving poor upon whom America should practice the corporal works of mercy by doing appropriations as nuns tell beads.
A Hogarth or a Hieronymus Bosch should paint his picture.
weakness. But no matter, this fierce man would expiate the sin of loss of national purpose by giving alms to the military, for in this sincerely believed parody of the values of the civilization Dr. Death thinks he is defending, the army, the navy
Letters Policy
The Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. The faculty must provide their name, year in school 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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e., they ou, of g., and say of as re. they ority of w ar gege be but
Monday. Februarv 23.1976
5
Impressive performances wasted by undistinguished 'Noah' script
By EVIE RAPPORT Co-Entertainment Editor
It's always seemed to me that if someone's going to take the time to re-entertain a familiar tale, then that person ought to ask them about their insights, some fresh analysis of that tale.
In 1931, Andre Obey, French playwright, rewrite the Biblical tale of Noah and the Ark, giving it what seems to be in the ancient Bible. "Noah," a profoundly pessimistic slant.
This time around, Noah's family rejects his leadership and abandons him, his wife goes mad and the affectionate animals he had sheltered through the flood turn on him.
The last line of the play—reached finally after three hours—is, “Are you ready?” The summary, as it appears in the movie, is
And after all that's happened to Noah in the long months on the cramped ark, it's just too much to believe that those words were written there. It denies the affirmation of the Biblical tale.
OBEY GIVES HIS Noah a determined optimistic outlook, a gentle and affectionate personality, a simple and charming trust in God, and William Kuhike fully projects that traits in a performance of masterful completeness. But Kuhike's most moving description is to wash away the despair description of washing the last sand earth slowly being covered with Boodwater, as he watches—unable to save them—from the safety of the ark.
Even granting Kuhle's strength as an actor, I don't think this scene could be so powerful unless Obey intended it as a denunciation of Noah's simple, blind faith.
The only other firmly drawn character in the play is Noah's second son, Ham, played with misspelled verve by Cliff Rakered. But the audience expects Ham to play's. From scene to scene, we a young man alternately wounded by the seeming cruelty of humanity's destruction, or driven to claustrophobic jitters by the cramped house he lives in, or his stupid father's lack of firm command.
IT'S NO WONDER that Rakerd—an able and imaginative actor—acouldn't seem to
decide whether his character is jealous of
himself, or contemptuous of his simp-
times impractical fiefs.
Of the principal characters remaining, only that of Mama Naoh makes any impression—and that, again, is a negative one. Barbara Mounsey does her best as the kindly and steadfast wife and mother, but she's burdened by the almost impossible task of suddenly toppling into madness with hardly any warning.
One moment, she's happily daring pants in the hold—surrounded by the trio of sisters who will eventually be her daughter-sin-law. A little later, she's bemoaning the loss of her kitchen garden and her pots and pans. Then, suddenly, she's a tragic, stricken figure—a pathetic reproach to her father. She is defenseless victim of this man who, according to Genesis, "found grace in the eyes of the Lord."
Much of the confusion of emphasis and tone in this production may have been caused by the play and its translations—apparently two versions were used in rehearsals. But much is caused by the lack of firm director's guidance. Marcia Grund.
better than giggling, clumsy adolescents dominated by the strong-willed Ham. Another of those abrupt, unjustified character transitions that dominate this play shows them—in the final scene—to be pragmatic adults who reject the faith of Noah and desert him to begin rebuilding the desolated world.
THE ACTION takes place on Jefferson Filser's impressively geometric set, built of pipes and platforms and rising to a striking height. The use of the revolving stage and ceiling allows the lines and design emphasize the set's strong lines and fine use of controlled space.
But there simply isn't in the play as written by Andrew Obey to warrant the investments of time and creativity by able designers and an ambitious director.
KU theater productions are frequently so well conceived and competently performed that a play's weakness is somewhat concealed.
In the case of "Noah," however, the strength of the performances serves only to emphasize a plodding and undistinguished script. It's almost a shame to waste such obvious ability on such disjointed and unsatisfactory attempt to retreat an old tale.
University Daily Kansan
On Campus
TONIGHT: The Lawrence FRIENDS OF FARMWORKERS will meet at 7 in the International Room of the Kansas Union. The SUA BRIDGE CLUB will meet from 7 in THE WOMEN IN COMMUNICATIONS will meet 7 in FLINT. The STUDENT RECTAL SERIES will present a double bass recital at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
**TODAY:** A short play — "THE MEME-
GERMAN and English at 3:30 in 1967 Wes-
tern."
who rehearsed her cast using improvisational techniques, has, I think failed to clarify or resolve the inconsistencies of character and theme that muddle the show.
THE VALUE OF those improvisational techniques shows most clearly in the performances of nine actors as the animals on the ark—truly impressive displays of imagination and imagination that provide the only really satisfactory characterizations in the play.
Part II of a story on college athletics in Friday's Kansas incorrectly identified Jack Scott as former athletic director at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. Scott was athletic director at Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio.
Correction . . .
Events ...
Improvisation certainly couldn't do much for the remaining actors—Paul Hough, as Sherm; Gifted Blooth, as Japheth; Victoria and Robert Gwynne; and the sisters who marry the brothers.
They are, for most of the show, little
review
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DONALD J. MCCORRIS
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Roger Johnson, KLWN advertising salesman, broadcast since Thursday from the front window of the Ed Marling store downtown, Newton said.
The radiothon was tied into a state-wide radionuthon to raise money, Bob Newton, KLWN operations manager, said yesterday.
Radiothon aids leukemia study
The radiothon ended at 6 last night.
Pledges of almost $5,000 were received in a four-day trial for leukemia research, patient support and medical training.
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Monday, February 23, 1976
University Daliv Kansan
Inspired Wildcats thrash Jayhawks, 69-54
Kansas State turns tables
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
MANHATTAN—Ken Koenigs seemed to the perfect analogy for Saturday's performance.
they looked a little like the Kansas team you saw play them last year (a 91-53 KU win)," he said. "They had their backs to the wall just like we did."
Kansas State was faced with a "must" win situation. A loss at home might have doomed any chance it had of grabbing the Big Eight tie. Their intensity was obvious.
Koenigs seemed to hit the nail squarely on the head with that statement. An inspired Wildcat team came out quickly and buried KU-654. And it could have been worse.
"THEY PLAYED A great and inspired game," KU coach Owens said. "Credit them with great pressure defense that drove us out of our offense."
That defense kept the Jayhawks from doing much of anything in the first half. KU did little more than stand around against the tough pressure defense and was forced to shoot virtually every shot from the outside.
"I thought we stood some," Owens admitted, "but I think we need to credit
At times, the Wildcats seemed to know what the Jayhawks were going to do on offense better than KU did. The tenacious KState defense was everywhere.
"YOU COULD TELL they had us well-scuoted," Mil Gibson said. "They knew just how to play us. In the first half, they were waiting on what we were going to do."
the Jayhawks managed to score only 21 points in the first half, hitting nine of 27 shots from the field. The Jayhawks never recovered from an early 19-7 deficit.
"We made some adjustments in the
Tallev resigns
Tad Talley, assistant KU track coach,
announced his resignation Friday and
accepted the head coaching position at The
Clubd in Charleston, S.C.
taneey, in his fourth year as KU's big Eight assistant, will leave following the Big Eight Indoor Championships this weekend in Kansas City. He will begin his coaching duties at The Cathedral in time for the opening of the Southern Conference outdoor season.
Talley cited job insecurity as a factor in his decision to accept a head coaching job. A vote last month at the NCAA convention to limit all sports other than football and basketball to one head coach failed, but Talley is concerned that issue might arise
"I'm getting in my middle thirteens (36),"
"so I need to make one more
money on a permanent job."
second half and did a better job," Owens said. "At times, we seemed to be getting back in the game. But we just never could do it."
At KU, Talley coached the hurdle and sprint courts, which has developed into the strength of KU's track program. Many of his athletes have qualified for the 1976 Indoor Championships in Detroit, March 12-13.
Carl Gerlach in particular hurt KU. The 6-10 Wildcat center used his quickness to score a game-high 19 points, 15 coming in the first half.
"WE WANTED CARL to handle the ball a little more, just a little more than uman." K. Schiller added.
UK employed a new defense for the game. It called for guards Milt Gibson and Clint Johnson to play man-to-man against the K-4 team, while the big men played a zone inside.
"It was designed to shut off Mike (Evan) and Chuckie (Williams)." Gibson said. "Wherever they went we wanted to have two people on them."
"We did okay against them, but their big people ended up doing a lot of scoring."
The loss dropped KU to 5-6 in league play, which ties them with Oklahoma for fourth place. The Jayhawks are now 12-11 for the season.
"The only thing I know," Owens said, "is that we're going to try to put it together for the last three games and finish as strong as we can."
BANSA (54)
Cook 7-14 1-2 12 0 14
Mokena 1-4 1-2 12 0 13
Motekana 5-15 3-2 5 8 12
Glennon 4-9 0-1 4 2 2
Nobles 0-0 0-1 2 1 1
Rabannehouse 0-0 0-1 2 1
T28-11 6-12 35 15 54
BANSA STATE (40)
Finley 2-12 9-17 25 18 54
Danielle 2-12 9-17 25 18 54
Danelle 2-12 9-17 25 18 54
Williams 7-17 2-2 3 2 16
Williams 7-17 2-2 3 2 16
Winton 0-0 1 1 1 0
Lington 0-0 1 1 1 0
Lington 0-1 1 2 0 4
Drope 1-1 1-2 3 4
Foster 0-1 1-2 3 4
Total 28-56 13-17 21 33 --
31 33 - 54
35 34 - 69
KANSAS
KANSAN STATE
sports shorts
MEN'S SWIMMING-KU's swim team defeated Oklahoma State in a dual meet at Stillwater Friday and came back to win the Drury Invitational at Springfield, Mo.,
KU won 10 of 17 events at the Drumite and gained revenge on Missouri, which had beaten the Jayhawks earlier this season. Gary Kane named the outstanding quarterback.
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL-KU's women's basketball team doubled the pleasure of winning at home this week, defeating Fort Hays State, 72-32 Friday night and Phillips University, 66-63 Saturday.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The deadline for filing
FISCAL YEAR 1977 BUDGET REQUEST FORMS
(Student Activity Fee) with the Student Senate
Treasurer's Office is
5:00 P.M., FEBRUARY 27TH, 1976.
Request Forms are available at the Student Senate Office, B 105, Kansas Union, or call 864-3746 for further information. Late submittals can not be accepted.
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
KANSAS 14
Koenigs and Johnson stop K-State's Evans
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lectures:
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February 24,
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Gerlach wrecks Kansas
Community Room EVERY
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STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL
MEDITATION SOCIETY
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
MANHATTAN—School was in session
Saturday for Paul Mokeke, KU's 7-foot-
room.
Carl Gerlach was headmaster and the 6-10
amass State center manager "Big Mo"
the youngest captain.
Gerlach showed Mokeski some ballet moves, where you fake right, go left—or vice versa—and whoosh right on in for two points.
"He're really so quick," Mokesi said. "He got by me a couple times so easily. I guess I should have sagged off more. I didn't realize he was that quick."
IT REALLY WASN'T a matter of Mokesi failing to do his lessons. He was prepared; it was just that Gerlah was as unconcerned with the 80-54 cakewalk over the Jawkways.
"Carl just had a good ball game, it wasn't Mokesi's lack of mobility," said Jack Hartman. K-State head coach. "Carl's quick for a big man, and he utilized that as much as he can. You've got to capitalize on what's available."
Gerlach fired in 15 points in the first half and ended up with 19 for the game. He played sparingly in the second half when KState entered up a lead as big as 24 points.
HE ALSO TOOK away much of Mokeski's offensive game.
"He made it tough for me to get in good offensive position," said Mokeski, who was held to two points in the first half, but scored 12 for the game. "He was a sagging off of me and I had to come farther to get in position for a good shot."
When the Jayhawks beat the Wildcats, 62.
When, 31 in Allen Field House, Gelach
Hermann.
"We'd rather have him (Gerlach) play at forward," Ken Koenigs, KU forward, said. "He's sort of out of position when he plays there."
K-STATE FLUSTERED the Jayhawk offense the entire game and kept them from getting the good shot. Kansas shot only 33 on the first half and 57 per cent for the game.
Milt Gibson, KU sophomore guard, also was impressed by the KSU defense.
"They played excellent pressure
and held their ground," And they
drilled us out of our offense."
THE JAYHAWKS, WHO trailed by 14 at halftime, had a chance to get back into the game early in the second half. But a rally over them was enough that they knew they it were done for good.
"They played the best defense I've seen anybody play this year," Gibson said. I've never been Chuckie (Williams) and Mike ever. I had a better defense than they did against us."
"We dug ourselves into a hole, getting behind by that many early in the game," Keenigs said. "That allowed them to control the tempo of the game."
"I thought it would be a close game" he
tried to explain. "But I did. I guess
I didn't know what to expect."
R
He knows now. Thanks to Gerlach and Company.
Mokeki said that before the game he didn't think there was any way the Wildcats could win.
JACK NICHOLSON
ONE FLEW OVER
THE CUCKROOS NEST
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Monday, February 23, 1976
University Dally Kansan
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Edifio
Call's wins lead women tankers to second title
The University of Kansas women's swimming team took advantage of a rule allowing its racers to compete in as many as five events a day and easily won the Big Eight title Friday and Saturday at Stillwater, Okla.
The Jayhawks, who successfully defended their league championship of last season, have now won a berth.
Call set conference records in two events, won four and placed in eight to lead her teamsmates to a 498 to 419.5 victory over runnerup Nebraska. Call's time is 2:07 of 2:07 in the 200 freestyle and 2:18.5 in the 200 individual medley set Bie Eight records.
"If the girls hadn't have been up and swimming well, the girls could have been better easily," McElroy said. "This year, it was harder. Everyone was trying to knock us off."
KU made sure that didn't happen by taking a healthy lead after Friday's events. The Jayhawks led Nebraaska 328 to 150.5 of Call's victories in the 500 freeest. 100
Claire McE利ey, KU women's swim coach, said winning the meet this year was the most important factor in her training.
KU entered the meet for the first time as a relative unknown.
freestyle and 200 individual medley, plus a second in the 400 freestyle relay and a second in the 800 freestyle relay.
"We were pretty far ahead after Friday's tour," McEllroy said. "It would have been tough."
Without some hot scoring by Call, Tampa wouldn't have been that tough. But McKeeley, as wewn't surprised by Call's performance, has been 'samed a consistent performer all year.'
Other consistent performers for KU were J. K. Walters, sprint specialist April Bruce and divers Karen Mundy and Laurie Prost.
Call in eight events and got the results they wanted—with interest.
Bruce, a sophomore, placed in six events, including a second in the 400 freestyle relay, a second in the 50 freestyle and a third in the 50 breaststroke.
Mundy took first in one-meter diving and second in the three-meter board while Prince William was third.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations. goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan The International College to color, or national origin, PLEASE bring ALL 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 by calling the 'UK business off' at 844-369-2700.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
864-4358
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Redress of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dummies or out-printed products. Get a price quote from the GAKMHOOK SHOP at KIERS.
Tremendous selection of guitars, saws, drums, mandolins, and keyboards. Shop Hose Keyboard Studios. Choose from Greyhound, Ampere, Kauton, Greco, and many others. Admit after 7:30 p.m. No Keyboard Studios. Admit after 7:30 p.m. No Keyboard Studios.
We can make your stereo sound better -GUAR-
DER. We'll provide you with two earbuds, Details
at Audio Systems, 207 456.
COST **10** : 60% - Storm equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single unit or package. Register for free Kiss Home. Call Dave. Phone 854-6289. Eminence 6 to 10.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of topics. Send B4 for your up-to-date, 160-page mail order catalog. Research Assistant, Los Angeles, California. 902-435 (213) 477-8474.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialties
BASIC ELECTRIC BASES. BALANCE AUF
ELECTRIC, MODEL 904-965, 300 W, 6th.
HVAC & AIR CONDITIONING
ELECTRIC. MODEL 904-965, 300 W, 6th.
Quitting business sale—bargain! Everything from furniture, antique furniture, large building diaries, also have fresh fruits and vegetables. They also have laundry machines. (Hwy 49, Open 6-9, seven days) 841-328, 213-750.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture & Kit-
tops. The Furniture & Appliance Center, Toll-
way 401-852-3777.
1 pair of Davis Skis 190s 'n' made in Austria.
2 pair of McKenzie skis 190s 'n' made in Austria.
1 bought for $650 will sell for $85 or less
2 bought for $650 will sell for $85 or less
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold and silver work. Miniature sculpture, convention-ready jewelry, antique or modern executed. B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting and design of unusual stones. 814-3853 or 843-0970
AM-FM Stereo Car Radio, call 842-6258. 2-23
make sense of them (Girl Education)
Makes use of them to use them:
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For classroom preparation
"New American"
"Western Civilization"
Available now at www.careers4you.com
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
BOKONOW POTION PARLOR just arrived new men's potion in the brand's original packaging for *POTION BOKONOW* that will be available from *POTION BOKONOW*.
Yamaha 200 CCS street bike. Like New. Only
3600 miles. Call after 5 30 841-4391.
CHEWROT Insulpa %54 683, V-8 auto, power
CHEWROT Heat press takes one. Price: $414.
841-3029 841-3029
Shrewd 8000 receiver, Dual 1226 turbattle, 2
Shrewd 8000 receiver, Save-make offer, Call 2
849-6688
849-6688
Gibson EB-2 electric bass with hardshell case
Gibson EB-2 electric bass with hardshell case
Midfield M3 PA control, w/disco drums,
Midfield M4 PA control, w/disco drums.
1967 Ponton Leman Leman Alr. Power brakes and
brake calipers on most "m" speed bicycles
5,000. 841-785. 5-258
5,000. 841-785. 5-258
1970 Karmann Ghaffar. excavated 29.2
billion tonnes of limestone.
Presentation CIT 4113 Dilby Cassett drive $410
aurore. Presentation CIT 4113 Dilby Cassett drive $410
aurore.
Must Mustiquet! Small kit, table and chair,
must be white, clock radio, parkia, india
print. 849-0918
Bicycle--Green men's 10 speed bike in good condition
841-0753
2-24
Houses for Male. Just reduced. Handgunman specializes in providing self-defense training for Lail Musatzer at 941-849-1600, havers. Haven is located on the corner of N. 10th and S. 7th Streets.
For Sale - 1741 C125 Honda with 960 miles. Ex-
condition with accessories. Call after
4:30 a.m. to (800) 744-1020.
1974 Vega Hathatch new condition, one
female (Male) and has mow three. Evening
843-843-843
Potted, mature Irish plants while they last 841-2
6811 after 6 p.m.
Need to buy a gift? Use the selection of unique
performance performances at Performance
23rd, 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.
2-27
Original Antique Show & Sale February 27, 28
Antique Auction: Monday through Saturday 11 a.m.
Lawrence show: Friday hours: 5:30 p.m. to 6:15 p.m.
one admission (4) gown and tail for club member.
H. Krutumck service by hotel Club of Lager-
wasser.
Gibon Nature Natural Finish ES3327 Phased Elem-
tic semaconda with humidness, Phasae. Same as ES33
$800. Amgse V-4, variability. 100 Wrms. New
Amgse V-4, clean condition. Clean condition.
Diameter. charles 542-757. charles 542-757.
Bareus Berry pick-up with snake cord, Ladwid set up. Excellent condition. Local $845-2879
1941 Honda CB200, Excellent condition, $750 or
best offer. Call 842-8387.
2-27
Comfortable studio bed bedroc $40. White banquet, like new, $25, 842-8759. 2-27
Super 8 movie runners. Minolta Autofocus D-6, 2-inch 8-megapixel cameras with featureless and accessories. 842, 368-924.
Honda CL-360, 1974, excellent condition, $75. Includes helmets, padded backpack and tools. 801-220-6700.
New army inflatable 4-man raft. Call Ragat at 864-6021 or have message at 864-6021 2-21
Magnavox turntable, 2 speakers, $100. Bar and
stocks, $40. After S, 9.821-3714.
2:27
WANTED
Wanted: Novels and other writing by JACK
- single book or complete books - edition 2-23
841-6310
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
and 2 college campus and on kus
route Call 842-7280
Female roommate to share apartment on edge of
building. 102nd Floor. 18 Housekeeping in place of rent. 2-23
Want to live in the country and I need 2 matrimonials?
Need a room for 3 people, 15 min. from campus. Call 749-9893. @ 6 p.m.
or call 749-9890. @ 6 p.m.
Roommate wanted: Male or female, Junior,
Bachelor's or equivalent. 85th and Louisiana A: 841. 5267-8291
85th and Louisiana B: 841. 5267-8291
Wanted- five houseworker and simple sweep-
every Friday. Call 834-1247. 2-24
Roommate to share Towers Apt. Call 841-6137
or 842-1921 2-23
Room Makers: to share a really nice apt. Just
Room 246 by boree for $446 on the Terrace. Apt. 3 anytime.
2-84
Child care provider to 1, 3 years in AIBB
Child caregiver for 1, 3 years in AIBB
Minimum wage: Apply in person. AIBB is required to apply in person.
To rent nicer one bedroom unfurnished apart-
ment, call (Apartment complex, or
Jacobs 124-202-8760). Jacobs 124-202-8760.
WANTED Classroom volunteers for children's
time between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m. You'll feel good if you
want to work with Niceon. You'll need
Female nominate to share house or apartment
next year. Must be cool. Call Larry. 841-658-
2010.
Roommate to share beautiful 4 bedroom house,
provides kitchen, laundry and wetterman with an open heart Call 518-267-3060
NOTICE
Swap Shop, 820 Mass. Max. used furniture, dishes, lamps, clocks, televisions. Daily ad 12-5.
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
the GRAMOPHONE Shop
DEC 1837 BAR IN STATION # 85
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion
Then Meet Stereo Components
STATE OF
THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
Two $200 scholarships. All full-zip undergrad-
ment programs. 20% tuition fee. Oxford Road
Due March 1st. Further inform us at
college.edu.
WORKSHOP GROWTH TOWARD SHALOM-
Opportunity for personal growth within a sop-
porting setting. Participate in Feb. 26-28 at a nearby retreat center. For informa-
tion, visit registration, contact United Minus™
412-539-1270.
Reproduction is faster than over with Alice, at least when printing. You can reprint your of your 128 page thesis in 5 minutes. See also in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, 858 Massachusetts suite. 841-4900.
TROUBLED WITH LIFE! Lost hope, feeling FEARFUL
in your new home. Enlarge inner pages,
through a spiritual light, unlocking
with name and address. Free introductory pack-
away. Discovery Box 5067. Tokanawa
66055.
Transportation available to New Orleans Mardi Gras $45 per person round trip by bus. Leave information, call Boosee at Roosee Brucker Park 811-6521. 4-242 Bruce Parker 811-6521.
FOR RENT
Voltunteer, Clearing House is taking applications
for 164-8899 at 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. date:
644-8899 to the Volunteer Office.
The Cabin Cafe special Sunday dinner is in Full
Time. The cabins are fully furnished. Call 615-283-4070 for reservation.
The Cabin Cafe special Sunday dinner is in Full
Time. The cabins are fully furnished. Call 615-283-4070 for reservation.
Email now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation provider's driver license
(transportation provided). Drive new, pay later.
New 2 *3* bldm, apartment near campus; park-
side new efficiency apartment, unitized;
new 483-857.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
rentals in Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exclusions 842-250-3690
www.rentals.com
Brown furnished with shared kitchen and baths, large living area, separate dining room. Also cobbled aid for male nurse town. No物业。
2 bdm. all, util. on, campus. Furn. or
unfurn. Free parking, a/c, pool. 843-1953.
ATTENTION STUDENT BENEFITS: Drop in and
attend sessions (no phone daily calls) at WEBSITES
(no phone daily calls) at WEBSITE.
Quiet room without food and facilities in professor's home; separate entrance and bath. No smoking.
Transportation and outside eating arrangement 6 pm-10 pm, or 15 hour lunch house. Call 833-1247. 2-23
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
vory or 60-room to campus $50 and up
or 842-room or 842-room
Larger 2 bdr. 1 single room with kitchen
Larger 3 bdr. 1 single room for young
children 843-1601 or 841-3323 ... 2-29
843-1601 or 841-3323 ... 2-29
5 Nights a Week No Cover
NEW MODERN DECOR
SLEUCEAKE single bedroom or entire apartment
SLEUCEAKE secondary occupancy (semi-
Room) Brian, Stan. 841-278-3961
2-26
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
WILLS SHOPPING CENTER LANNING ARMS 1807 824-0644
Most sublease one bitm. Frontier Rape-Alert
phone number left on lease. Free security
deposit 849-0198
Want to sell your Naiman Hall contract for retail orSendel Call 841-3944 before yr.2727
**AUTHORITY OF THE MUSEUM OF ART AND CRAFTSMANSHIP**
Female roommate $575.50 room, owner, util
pdt. Avail March 6—end of May. 163 Louisiana
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public State Bank, state and Kentucky and Mailing Shops. State Bank, state and Kentucky and Mailing Shops.
New Member/Available
Class | Private Club
Open 12 p.m. to 9 a.m.
Wavey PO-owner
Bengals IN
THE CATALOG
Gifts and Jewelry 803 Mass.
Bracket found in front of Strong Hall. Identify and claim at 209 Strong Hall. 2-23
LOST: Dark, Brown Snood Jacket locket in either
armpit. Possible faint wear.
LOCATE: 81-526 and 83-526 for DAVE.
Found: two gold keys on ring in 3114 Wilse-
English Office. Call 664-1854 and identify. . . . 2-32
Found: pendant ladies' watch on chain 2-23
nay-jachawan Towers, Cars 864.237-39
2-23
Found. small male snail No. collar. White with black markings. Length 52 mm. Wakkerwaal bridge. Call 843-3232 between Amsterdam and Wakkerwaal bridge.
Found CERMAN SHIFFERD puppy. Ten with
an average of 8 weeks. Female-2
4674 or 8194 males-2
Found: Large brown, black, white female cat near Union. Identify at 1137 Teem. # 4. 2-24
Found 1. large st. Christopher medal. Silver inscribed. Call 864-698 and identify 2-24
35 for return of glasses. Name on frame.
Joe Luckle. 864, 1426 or 841, 0011.
2-27
Found: copy of BABBIT in NW corner of O-Zone.
Call Terry at 842-4681. 2-25
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
Found - Lafontes with band, found in Finst
2/17/87, 7/18/76, Call and identify after 6. g-
431-949-2064
HELP WANTED
SUMMER JOB FOR COUPLE: If you enjoy traveling, be sure to complete a personal client help to us at our summer job for a private travel provider on an Adrienne Marie cabin, completely furnished and a salary of $800 per week. Travel duties include providing a private vacation
Addresses wanted immediately! Work at home in NYC. Expand job offered to Ameri-
can services; 140 Wilson Blvd., Suite 210, New York, NY 10017. Req: Bachelor's deg or equiv in rel. field; 2 yrs exp.
Sandwiches—Pizza Pool—American Shuffleboard
Management Position for Business Student-
student at New York University. Part time during school year, contact J. Michael Smith, 212-569-3081.
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement in health care. We provide individuals with one of the top 20 companies and benefit car plus expenses, profit sharing, benefits and incentives. We offer 940 Karen City, MN, 64106 (811-521-6535).
Mt. Trainer with Crazy Top Shop, Novelty T-Shirt, custom screening, athletic wear, Greek袜子, Partime to Sales. Sales help, Send resume to Crazy Top Shop. I, 2-25.
TYPING
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Experienced typist. I.B.M.Ect. Mechanic, thesis, distractions and term papers. Call Pam. 542-799-f.
THEISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is available. Our service is fast and prices are reasonable. Our service is free.
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Experienced tynit—term papers, these, mime.
Experienced tynit—term papers, spelling,
spelling 843-604, Mrs. Wiley.
Experienced tynit—term papers,
FIELDS
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable.
Insurance law, electric law, B.A. Social Sciences,
law, public affairs.
I do damned good tysing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
RAM DASS movies: "Evolution of a Aqaf" and "The Miracle of Allah"; "Darahan with Maharaji"; "Tram Dass movies will have two showings-Friday to February 27 at O'Grades, p.15.0 at the United Minimum." @4 O'Grad, $15.0
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
Typist editor, IBM Pcitel editor. Quality work. Participate in dissertations welcome. Mail 842-918-3271. No phone calls.
Employment Opportunities
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK, tf
Bridge: club tentz, 7:00-11 p.m. in the Kansas
Union.
2-23
Oversee sales - leniency or punishment. Must have foreign experience in the field of sales; plus foreign exp. Prior office time, international clientele sought. Travel required.
A job opening for research assistant. Data collection and skill assessment skills required. Social Science and技能训练 skills required. Social Science and技能训练 skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能 training skills required. Social Science and技能培训
Exp. typ.: IBM Selectic, term paper, thesis,
textbook. Exp. typ.: writing/spelling, spelling
reaction, Jean. 841-3600
ANNOUNCEMENTS
TYPHING-We have many return customers who come to our office. We appreciate your call. Call Harvey or appreciate your call.
A job opening for a student research assistant, to conduct research in the fields of data and analysis in research. Social science faculty required. Contact Mitchell Teisham, Bureau of Statistics, 612-437-5800 or mail resume to: Mitchell.Teisham.Bureau.of.Science@gmail.com. Equal opportunity employer. Qualified to accept any degree.
Volunteer, Cleargroup House is taking applications for positions. If you are interested, visit 642-380-5797 or www.cleargroup.com
S. L.S. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (plea). Prompt, efficient service. Threes, distractions, term service. Phone: 910-342-2844. Stretch. 2-27
Consultations wanted from college students Call
305-624-8188, Consultations, Shop 149, West 23rd, Rd.
3658, 10 a.m - 6 p.m.
THE NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKenzie
amphibian park has a great tide pool. Also blue,
folk and clastic guitar, banjo, mandolin and
jazz and jazz rock and guitar and bass. Call 811-
*4717*.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
Pat Read
Indian Trader
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon..Sun.
HIDEOUT
843-9404
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10-5 Sats.-Tai.
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSU
500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CHAPEL
10:50 a.m.
10-5 Monday v. Saturday
SEE...
Volunteer. Clearing House is taking applications
from 64-5898 between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. daily.
Call 64-5898 at 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. daily.
Restaurant, West 60th St. Open daily to
a.m.2-8 m. fri.Sat.2-14
**2-24**
SERVICES OFFERED
TRAVEL
Charlene, taw on your 20th. From your
scholarz girlfriend
2-23
Happy birthday little less the first, its good to have you out of ten漏-your old buddy. 2-23
EUROPE/ISAELLA*PHECASIAA --- Travel in
Europe for EuroSafety - First Aid,
First Aid Trainer, Trucker, Goat,
21st Avenue, Toronto, Canada. (604) 235-8900.
MATH TUTORING-Competent. experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 012, 142, 500, 598, 858. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 824-7651.
MAT10 GOTY YOU DOWN! If so, get help early.
HARP 110.110.110.110 HARP 841.181.990.3
3-477
Brock concert featuring "River of Life" Tuesday.
5:30 p.m. - Big B, Kansas University
No charge!
ENTERTAINMENT
EUROPE
1/2
weekly
laire
80 day advance payment required
NTM
no free
800-325-4867
Untravel Charters
PERSONAL
A
What if you kick the basket? Then what?
WEDNESDAY WEDNESDAY 3:00, 4:00, 7:00
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 2:00, 4:00, 7:00
1209 East 23rd St. 841-2200
AM Part Stop
TACOS
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
travel service
PRO
Casa de Taco
Planning a trip?
Let Maupintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
$3.95 per Dozen
SUA / Maupintour
1105 Massachusetts 843 9880
Phone 843-1211
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosbail
Bicycle
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Mails—Hillcrest—900 Mass
a quiet corner
THE LOUNGE
RECREATION'S FINEST
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
West of Hillcrost Bowl
No one under 18 admitted.
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
9th & Iowa
GOVERNOR OF
TENNESSEE
SHAZAAM
We PRINT ANYTHING!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SHAZAAM
if You don't see it, ASK! »» KING GEORGE'S
Skiing
FREE
With pass—available at your ski-sports shop
BEGINMERS SKI LESSONS (50' Service Charge)
Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices reduced 10% weekly, be first than weekend. Call 516-935-1000.
per.
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
3 p.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
8
Monday, February 23, 1976
University Daily Kansan
What type of people sign up for a BOCO Computer Date?
OUI
Photo by SUE MEAD
PARKS
Pi Phis Want You
Photo by SUE MEAD
Phi Delta Thetas: The kind of gentlemen Mom would like you to go out with.
A man in a suit is falling down.
BOCO Computer Date Match
Most computer date match services are for losers. You've heard the pitch — "lonely, divorced, widowed." Who would sign up for a rate match like that?
This computer date match is for everybody - jocks, jerks, jeans freaks, space nakeds, fit changes modern artists, comics, musicians, hippies, hipsters, rockers, sci-fi fans, sports fans, pop stars, celebrities, babies, baby pins, penny crips, pinch roses, match balls, mantas, anarchists, reactions, honeys, names, KUFler, Greece.
Our computer can quickly search through thousands and find those special types with whom you are most likely to communicate and enjoy dates. There is no easy way we can predict you'll have a dreammate. But even if your matches don't have a lot of matching, the best thing you can do is to keep in mind that you are likely to be married.
THIS IS HOW IT WOHKS
First, answer the questions below as honesty is possible. Mail the form to with your check or money order for $3.50 or $9.75 for those mailled in groups of two or more. The deadline for application is Friday, February 27, 1976.
Our computer will compare your responses with those of all others and report the closest matches. Along with each match first name and phone number, you receive from the computer three separate scores of similar interests, attitudes and values; and appearances and background. You make the final decision on what more important. You will receive between three and fifteen matches. If the computer can find at least three we will refund your money. All participants in the program are invited to the next round.
All information on your application will be held in strict confidence. Only your first name and telephone number will be released to others. The data you supply will be used only for matching with a compatible date. No data will be told or in any way released to another group. Anyone getting your name will also be on your list so you may be certain that those who call and identify themselves really are computer date matches.
To participate in the BOCO Computer Date Match '76:
- You must be at least eighteen years old and single
- You must be a registered student, faculty or staff member at University of Kansas, Lawrence
* You must not pose any risk to your mother should they decline to get accustomed
Signed completed form and a money order or check made into
BDCO Computer Data Match P.O. BOX 1629, (852) 78-48 or in forms queued
are enclosed in the same envelope to)
BDCO Box 1629
60644
Use ball point pen. No pencils or felt pens please.
It is important for you to place an answer in each appropriate box. Items with a * MUST be answered. Think carefully. The following items will eliminate from your prospective matches those persons whom you would not consider dating.
* **am** 1 male, 2 female.
* My height is ft. and inches.
My match must be no more than inches shorter or inches taller than 1 am.
* Age is years.
My match must be no more than years younger or years older than 1 am.
* I drink
My match must drink no more than 1 never.
My match must drink at least 2 sometimes in a group or rarely.
* smoke
My match must smoke no more than 3 occasionally.
* might smoke pot
My match must smoke pot no more than 4 often.
* My attitude on drugs is
My match's attitude on drugs must be no more liberal than 3 open mind on hard drugs.
* am 1 undergraduate, 2 graduate/professional
* my match must NOT be (if it matters) 3 faculty/staff
* my match must NOT be (if it matters) 1 American, 2 foreigner.
* my race is 1 Black, 2 Caucasian, 3 Oriental, 4 Am, Indian.
* my match's race must NOT be (if it matters) 5 Latino, 6 Arab, 7 India, Indian.
* my match's race must NOT be (if it matters) 2 Orthodox, 3 Protestant, 1 Jewish.
* my religion is 5 Christian, 6 Great Orthodox, 7 Moslem.
* my match's religion must NOT be (if it matters) 8 Untertanian, 9 Qaaker.
* am 1 a transgender/orphan member.
* my match must NOT be (if it matters) 2 independent.
The following items will be used to select matches on the basis of background and appearances.
* **My hair color is mostly (enter two if mixed)** 1 Black, 2 Brown, 3 Blonde, 4 Red.
* I prefer my match (ranked favorite to least favorite)
* My hair length 1 longer than average, 2 much longer than average.
* I prefer my match's hair length to be 3 longer than average, 4 much longer than average.
* **men** I have 1 clean-shaven face, 2 moustache.
* women I prefer 1 clean-burns, 4 beard.
* *(woman I wear makeup when men)* I prefer matches who wear makeup on 3 regularly.
* **spend approximately** 1 dollars per year for clothes
* **my weight is** 4 pounds.
* The highest level of formal education completed by my father or mother was 4 four-year college, 5 graduate/professional.
* My family's annual income range is 1 less than $8,000, 2 $8,000, 3 $15,000.
* I grew up mainly in a 31,000-level town, 2 medium city.
* I grow up to be from 3 larger cities.
1
$ \textcircled{C} $ 1976 Interpersonal Research, Inc.
Deadline-Friday,February 27th
Use ball point pen. No pencils or felt pens please.
Now let's find where your special interests are.
Use ball point pen. No pencils or felt pens please.
0 | learn me cold not interested
1 | no experience but interested
2 | familiar with it and interested
3 | much into it
☑ Scuba Diving
☑ Bicycling
☐ Swimming
☐ Brewing
☐ Pool/Billards
☑ Tennis
☐ Spectator Sports
☐ Snow Skating
☐ Water Skating
☐ Sailing
☐ Basketball
☐ Camping
☐ Softball
☐ Horseback Riding
☐ Ice Skating
☐ Golf
☐ Pinball
☐ Travel
☐ Country Western Music
☐ Folk Music
☐ Jazz
☐ Rock Music
☐ Classical Music
☐ Opera
Group Singing
☐ Play a Musical Instrument
Dancing at Dances
Attending Plays
Reading, Non-Fiction
Reading, Fiction
Play a Science Fiction
Photography
Painting and Drawing
Arts and Crafts
Play Picture Painting and Acting
Folk Dance
Bridge
Backgammon
Chess
Political Campaigning
Student Activism
Religious Activities
Tranquil Meditation
Yoga
Astrology
Health Funds
Vegetarianism
If we missed any, you may write in special interests which you are much into (please print):
___
___
___
The following statements are intended for matching attitudes and values. Please enter the number closest to your reaction.
1 Strongly Disagree
2 Disagree
3 Neutral
4 Agree
5 Strongly Agree
Most of my friends remeal me as a sensitive person.
I feel I am ready to settle down and get married.
I usually put things away when I finish using them.
A person can be morally without being religious.
Would you prefer to have intimated old house rather than a new house.
Marijuana should be legalized.
Movies deal too explicit with sex today.
I might marry after I know my partner for only a short time if I knew I was in love.
I would marry after all or really quite匆促.
Two single people who are only strongly attracted to each other should have intercourse as often as they like.
When you fall head over heart you sure it’s sure to be the real thing.
You need rarely to wear a monochrome shirt unless has several relations with people.
I find myself reluctant to make close friends with someone of another race.
I could not condone the killing of another human being, even in war.
I read the newspaper’s editorial page frequently.
I believe in Supernatural your destiny.
I belong to many clubs and organizations.
I am punctual and rarely miss an appointment.
A couple should live together for a while before getting married.
If I remember my wife wanted to marry anyone of another race, I would try to talk him or her out of it.
I might quit a high pay job to work at something personally rewarding.
Education should not be taught in the public schools.
I should be reluctant to attend school.
I find myself frequently afraid to acclimatize new challenges.
There are probably only a few people that I could really live in love with.
I should avoid my loved one regularly and I prefer a date who does also.
I would vote for a woman as President of the U.S. if she were qualified.
I am affectionate and don’t hesitate to express my feelings.
If my country wants a danger of being overcome by a foreign enemy, I would not talk my life to help save it.
I am willing to sacrifice much of my life in order to achieve my academic goals.
Love is best described as an exciting thing rather than a calm, peaceful thing.
I will need to take care of others.
I feel ill at ease when someone tells a dirty joke in mossy company.
When I hear a good joke, I usually remember and relate it to my friends.
everly easy.
Each ear should pay their own wav on a day.
I definitely plan to go to graduate school.
I believe that if I were wealthy, most of my problems would take care of themselves.
I would probably cheat on an exam if my degrees were in progress and if there were little chances of it.
I am going to college because my parents urged me.
I often like to spend time by myself.
Working seven days a week for a career.
I usually try to make detailed plans for tomorrow’s activities.
I believe in God who answers my prayers.
I would rather do things with others than by myself.
Parents have a responsibility to provide religion in training for their children.
Would have permission to eat certain foods I loved very much.
I more a listener and follower than a leader.
If my child, brother, or sister were charged with a serious crime, I would lie under oath to answer questions.
I feel ill at once when a friend tells me he his problems.
I get a special delight from playing handicap palking games on friends.
The more in love one becomes, the more jealous one becomes.
I am
* **Name:** test,
* **first for**
* **mailing label**
* **local mailing**
* **address for**
* **mailing label**
* Identify domain name.
- Your first name or *kmware unique to your phone number only this name is listed here and your contact number is listed there.
- Local phone (if you have none)
list a number where you can
be reached) (913
*ENTER ADDRESS CODE*
23. Oliver
24. Peleon
25. Beltrams
26. Sephermann
27. Watkins
28. Fosterley
29. Gaspard Peleon
30. Gordon CPB
31. Nick Hagerty
32. Joseph R. Pearson
33. Levi
34. 31 Off campus Lawrence, 60944
35. Other off campus, give rap
36. McColum
37. Miller
38. Wilson
---
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In consideration of Class D Officer(s) (BDC0) and Interational Research's complying my responses on their form to those responses of all officers and the reported board at desk in the above contract, I hereby release BDC0 and Interational Research, their agents, officers, servants, and employees of and from any and all sources who may be held liable for any violations of this contract by myself or my property and that subsequently accrue to me by reason growing out of or in avenue connection with, directly or indirectly, services provided by BDC0 and Interational Research under this contract. This release must be binding upon your distributions, here, now.
of kin, exercise and administration and represent (a) that I have heard the foregoing understand, i.e. and sign it voluntarily; (b) That I am at least 18 years of age and of mind; (c) That I am a student, faculty or staff member at university of Kuala Lumpur and that BMCG is my intention to work with me.
*DATE X*
© 1975 Interpersonal Research, Inc.
---
Z
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
COMFORTABLE
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.93
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, February 24, 1976
Western Kansans view wheat straw as energy source
See page 5
Decision on faculty rights near for nonfaculty staff
BvLYNDASMITH
Staff Writer
The issue of faculty rights for research at universities is far more lucrative at the University of Kansas than at a committee to committee for six years. But a University policy has never been enforced.
One may be soon forthcoming,however.
One day of such foreboding: 'nowhere! The Council of Directors of University Daughters (CDUD), under chairman Rena Capone, director of the Bureau of Child Research, wrote a policy six years ago that would institute certain rights for those personnel, such as notification of nonreappointment, sabbaticals and titles denoting rank.
The proposal has been before almost every faculty committee. Copeland and his faculty.
"Everyone put the issue," he said,
"The object to bring to the ball high."
DEL SHANKEL, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday he first met with members of CDUd last year about their proposal and made a few changes in its content. He then referred it to SenEx for consideration in the fall. SenEx referred the proposal to its committee on Faculty Rights, Privileges and Responsibilities.
Copeland and met with SenEx two weeks ago to answer questions concerning the proposal, and SenEx is expected to give its recommendation to Shankel next Wednesday.
Joel Gold, SenEx member, said, "We
looked it over again this week, and we don't see anything wrong with it."
Neither Gold nor Shankel knew why it hadn't been approved or rejected in six ways.
PHILIP HUMPHEY director of the Museum of Natural History, said the policy probably hadn't been adopted because of a natural resistance to change and a desire to either the Kansas Board of Regents or the National Board of Regents had authority in the matter.
Shankel said the administration would first have to approve the proposal, and then it would be sent to the Board of Regents for final approval.
THE POSITIONS involved are curator,
librarian, continuing education professor,
and academic advisor.
University divisions that employ those personnel are the Geological Survey, Museum of Natural History, Sponer Art Museum, Burse of Child Research, Computation Center, Institute for Social and Environmental Studies, Training Education and University libraries.
Copeland said the proposal was needed because research associates, curators and professors of continuing education all mission to the University's teaching mission.
"Many research associates, librarians and curators are on graduate students' advisory committees," Gold said, "and the Geological Survey and the Bureau of Child
Research provide research facilities for many students and faculty members.
"People who make such contributions to the University should have many of the same benefits as those in CDU's aim, Copeland said, is to institute policies that would give these positions job
CDUD SUGGESTS that personnel be notified of nonemployment in the same time periods as assistant professors, associate professors and professors. Suggested time periods are three months for new personnel, six to eight years for employees, five years and one year for personnel employed longer than five years.
"The way it is now," Copeland said, "a research associate could be notified at eight in the morning that his appointment will be terminated at five that afternoon."
Copeland said many people had interpreted CDUD's proposal as a request for tenure for the faculty-equivalent staff members.
"It's conical because notification of nonrepresentation is just the opposite of teletubbies."
CDUO also is seeking a system of titles for research associates to denote rank. A senior research scientist would get early research tenure, Copeland said, rather than tenure.
"Under current procedures, if a research associat is distinguished after five years
See NONFACULTY page 3
Russian studies American psyche
Staff Writer
By KAREN LEONARD
Vadimir Yorgievitch is trying to find out what Americans think about blacks.
He wants to know how bad crime really is in the United States. And he wants to know what an American journalist would do if he was forced to write a story praising homosexuality.
Vygoricke, one of 30 Soviet tourists in Lawrence over the weekend, is using his two-week U.S. tour as a primary source to learn about what he and other questions about what life is like here.
"The best way to come to understand
Requests on agenda
The commission is expected to consider the request as a resolution that may become city law.
Having discussed two reports filed by members of a committee that investigated charges of city mismanagement, the commission acted on the committee requests at 7 noon.
The commission will also discuss changes police administration, including the crime statistics.
In other business, the commission will review bids for construction of a city maintenance garage, to be built at 10th and 12th floors. The bids were taken Friday afternoon.
different people is to get down to meet the average person." Yergoviek said. "I have seen the externals of America in pictures and books, but what I'm really interested in is the psychology of Americans. That's something you can't read about."
Ygorierich is one of 150 Soviets who tour the United States each year.
HE SAID that there were many more Sovietists that would like to come to the United States, but that because of economic difficulties only a few made the trip.
Also, he said, "you charge too much."
As a group leader Vialer Sidorov pointed out, Yegirchen isn't an average Soviet. He received an M.A. in philology from the University of Leningrad and now works as the Secretary, or leader, of the Komosomal group in a tractor factory in Leningrad.
According to Sidorov, secretary of Leningrad's 800,000 Komsomol members, the Komsomol is an organization of young Communists from 14 to 28.
Staff photo
Yegoricev said that the organization was the final step in the weeding-out process before becoming a member of the Communist Party.
Although it may seem strange for a philology major to be working in a tractor factory, Yogirichel explained that when you study philosophy, you study everything. This is particularly interested in the psychology of workers, the worker and how he viewed the world.
Yogievorich is a 27-year-old, married clean-cut and clean-shaven member of the Communist Party. He said the Party had directed him to work in the factory.
IN HIS JOB as a factory Komsomol
leader, he said, he works outside of the normal nine-to-five working day and must be on hand whenever he is needed. His duties include volunteer social work and organizing political activities, much the same as a U.S. labor union official, he said.
In his factory, Yegorichev said, there is now a challenge to encourage workers to take night courses. He said there were night courses offered in journalism, engineering, medicine or anything the workers expressed an interest in.
In a country with only one political party, political activity is defined as anything from organizing the political education of youth to starting physical education programs, international work, recreation, dancing, and presenting plays. he said.
He was quick to add that in the Soviet Union, unlike the United States, a factory worker didn't have to remain a factory worker and had to work nights night courses, so on to a different job.
VEGORICHEV said he was paid by the Kosomosl group at the factory, not the company.
The Komsomel makes a third of its money from dues and the rest from the proceeds of Komsomel magazines and newspaper Komsomel foundation raising projects, he said.
He said that the Komsomol was a very rich organization and it is the largest organization in the United States.
Sidovor said that the Komosomal was paying half the expenses for the tour group members in Lawrence. The Soviet government paid the other half of the $2,000-a-
See RUSSIAN page 6
STUDIO 38
residents are assigned to each kitchen with responsibility for meal preparation shared among them.
Kitchen help
Rita Gattin, Colby senator, prepares dinner in one of seven small kitchens in the basement of Miller Hall. Seven hall
Noncoed living svmbiotic
(Editor's note): This is the second in a five-part series examining where students are most likely to be affected by learning problems.
By LIZ LEECH
Friendship and cooperation are the most common denominators of fraternities, sororites and scholarship halls at the University of Kansas.
These living groups all have selection processes that determine who their members are.
Unlike more than half of KU's residence halls, these living groups aren't coeducational. But they're significantly smaller, leading, some residents say, to closer friendships and a spirit of working together.
Sororites and fraternities are more expensive and larger than scholarship organizations.
Fraternities
The 21 fraternities at KU house a total of 408 men this year, representing 6.5 per cent of the student body.
BABE SAID be thought fraternities had to be selected in choosing their members
Charley Babb, Denver sophomore, lived in a KU residence hall last year but now lives in Kappa Sigma fraternity. He said he didn't dislike the residence hall, but thought a fraternity would be more beneficial to him.
"I like the stress that is placed on scholars, athletics and the social life in this city," she said.
He said that being a fraternity member, kept him busy, but not so involved that he didn't have time for friends who lived in his old residence hall.
The fraternity costs him about $120 a year more than the hall did, but he said he thought it was because there were more social activities in fraternities.
because they wanted people who would get along well.
"Sometimes rush is impersonal and you don't always get a chance to know a guy really well, but I don't know how else we could do it," he said.
There is a formal men's rush each fall and spring before classes begin during which rushes visit each fraternity house. Men usually visit at least once in invitation to pledge a fraternity any time.
Fraternities have three kinds of rush. After May 27, fraternity rush chairmen can visit high school graduates and persuade them to sign pledge cards.
Mark Hughes, Emporia sophomore, said he pledged Phi Delta Theta because he
already knew some of the members and thought a praterity would offer more than a
"I think that I'll have lifelong friends from living here because people are so close now," he said. "If you have school problems or you are going to help you, and with personal ones, too."
Bob Turvey, assistant dean of men and adviser to the Interfraternity Council (IFC), also said that men in fraternities developed lifetime friendships.
He said football game weekends were evidence of those friendships when alumni returned to the houses for buffets in large numbers.
See HOUSING page 3
Two performers scheduled for KU's Festival of the Arts in April have cancelled their appearances, reducing the Festival to a three-day program.
Two festival artists cancel appearances
Lionel Hampton and Herbie Hancock, who were scheduled to appear April 9 and 10 respectively, cancelled their contracts too late for SUA to find acceptable replacements, Carol Poulson, program director, said yesterday.
Foulson said that some other acts were tentatively scheduled after the two performers cancelled two weeks ago, but that replacement negotiations had fallen through.
"All that was available was too expensive or not good enough quality for the Fees."
SUA will refund all the money for the $8
coupon tickets, which would have been good for the five performances, Poulson said. Those who purchased coupon tickets can go to the SUA office for a complete refund.
Tickets for individual performances will be available March 8, she said. Tickets for the American Chambers Ballet and the American Dance Center will cost $10, those for George Plimpton will cost $1.50.
Poulson said that Lionel Hampton had decided to go to Europe during the time the Festival was scheduled and that Herbie Hancock had chanced his tour route.
There isn't much a college can do about a broken contract, she said, because it doesn't have the time or money to take contract cancellations to court.
JD Nuttick Coffe
Sept 13 1830
Died
March 13 1912
WILLIAM L. CRIVEN
CORN
washington Mass.
Sept 80 1920
Roll in the
Commencement
Dec 21 1863
GROVENOK
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
The costs of cemetery plots and tombstones are increasing in Lawrence
Morticians defend business
By DAVE HAUBER
Staff Writer
They are usually quiet places. The furniture is neatly arranged and the rooms are impeccably clean. Off to the side of the room, the floor lends a solemn air to the surroundings.
A soft bell signals the arrival of a visitor and from the back comes a well dressed man with the polish of a lawyer or banker. The hand gesture denotes distance between his profession and others.
The funeral industry has been accused in the past of taking unfair advantage of people when they are most vulnerable, at a time of death.
His deals with death.
Complaints against funeral directors are centered on attempts to oversell services and items to families of dead relatives, who can't afford them. They buy anyway because it is the last thing that they can do for the deceased.
A LOCAL FUNERAL director, Larry Morton. He the Warren-Meilwain Mortuary.
"Most people want to do it themselves," he said.
McElwain said that he usually let people decide for themselves what kind of funeral they wanted. He said that it was good grief theraw.
"I don't think people are that vulnerable," he said. "People, as far as funeral services are concerned, usually ask for the reason to which they are accustomed to living."
OVERSELLING funeral services, Rumsey said, results in people not being able to pay later and causes more accounts receivable. He also said that most people spent at levels on which they were accustomed to living.
RUMSEY SAID that some of the alleged bad practices that the federal government should have taken were not.
McElwain agreed with Rumsey and said
"The guys that aren't art just don't last long," he said. "in bigger cities, it's run more as just a business but out here it's run more like a community project."
Oscar Rumsey of Rumsey Funeral Home, said, "Our problem is that we try to sell people down rather than up. You can ask them to come out. You don't do it you any good or them any good."
Complaints about funeral homes and a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) survey of mouricans in Washington, D.C., New York and elsewhere have prompted an investigation into the industry for the past few years. In May, the FTC will hold hearings in different regions of the United States to gather information about local restrictions on funerals and proposed restrictions on the industry.
there had never been a complaint or legal
flict against Kansas funeral directors
The Kansas Funeral Directors and Embalmer Association responded to possible federal restrictions in a statement this month in Wichita opposing federal regulations. The statement said that local self-regulation was sufficient for state ethical practice.
Local funeral directors defend their business, which in the past has had to contend with the kind of boo boo nature of its deceased. But for many funerals, a right to make a profit for what they do, but add that at the same time they are providing a necessary social service in a community.
There are three funeral homes in Lawrence; Bower-See Lestuary, Rumsy Funeral Home and Warren-Meelwain Funeral Home and used to discuss its business with the Kanas.
LAST YEAR in Lawrence, 375 deaths occurred. McElwain said that his business performed about 100 funerals in the area, and he said that about 300 funerals. McElwain said the death rate in Lawrence was lower than the national average because of the young people.
However, funeral directors say that costs of their services are rising with inflation. The cost of embalming fluids, operation of automobiles and equipment and the cost of wood and metal used in caskets have made funerals more expensive today. Local businesses have to contend with an approximate 5 per cent yearly increase in the cost of funerals.
The cost of an average funeral, not including grave markings or cementetry is $1,100.
BOTH RUMSEY and McElwain said
BOTH RUMSEY and McElwain said
see FUNERAL page 7
2
Tuesday, February 24, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
First primary today
CONORD, N.H. — Campaigning Democrats reached out for final handshakes, and rival Republican campers mapped their get-out-the-vote days yesterday on the eve of New Hampshire's primary election, the first of the presidential primaries. In the tight race between President Gerald R. Ford and former California Gov. Ronald Reagan, today's outcome could hinge on the nuts-and-bolts tasks of getting supporters to the polls.
While Ford and Reagan vie for Republican delegates, five Democratic contenders will be carving up the primary vote. That race is said to be close, too, with former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter and Arizona Rep. Morris K. Udall expected to be the ton finishers.
be the top nominee. Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana, former Sen. Fred R. Harris of Oklahoma and 1972 vice presidential nominee R. Sargent Shriver are the other nationally rated candidates.
Ford proposes arante
WASHINGTON—President Gerald R. Ford proposed yesterday that Congress grant the states $2.5 billion for social services such as day care programs. He warned lawmakers that they would endanger economic recovery if they didn't renew federal revenue sharing.
Ford made his proposal for an annual block grant for social services shortly after urging the nation's governors to support renewal of federal revenue sharing. He told the National Governor's Conference that economic recovery would be imperilled if Congress failed to act.
improved in Congress. Ford said the $2.5 billion would be allotted to the states on a population basis
Hearst refuses to testifu
SAN FRANCISCO.-Patricia Heerst calmly invoked the Fifth Amendment 42 times before her jury yesterday and said she was pressured into writing of a desire for sexual relations with her terrorist captors, including a man who she swore had raped her.
The testimony came shortly before Hearst ended six days on the witness stand and risked a contempt of court citation for refusing to answer questions which she also had.
Death penalty bill killed
TOPEKA- The Senate Judiciary Committee killed yesterday the bill it had under consideration to reinstate the death penalty in Kansas.
The Senate last week passed another bill reimposing the death penalty in Kansas for all first-degree, premeditated murders and sent it to the House. That measure was passed on Thursday.
Sen. Norman Gair, R-Westwood; a death penalty opponent, moved to kill the bill. He said that because the Senate had passed one bill, another wasn't needed.
the bill. Norman Gaur, R-Westwood, a death penalty opponent, moved to kill the bill. He said that because the Senate had passed one bill, another wasn't needed. Strategy was said to have played an important part in Gaur's move. With this victory, the bill was available for enactment if the House kills the bill already passed by the Senate.
Nixon meets with Mao
At the close of the midday conversation with the 82-year-old chairman of the Chinese Communist party, Nikon was asked to convey Mao's regards to President Gerald R. Ford. Mao met with Ford during Peking visit last December. Other information was released about the meeting at Mao's Peking home.
CBS suspends Schorr
NEW YORK (AP) - CBBS newsman Daniel Schorr, who has admitted released a secret House intelligence report to a weekly investigator, was uncovered from reporting duties by CBS yesterday.
CBS, in a statement released by President Richard Salant, noted that government investigations had been called upon and prosecuted for releasing the secret report.
Schorr admitted releasing the report, prepared by the House committee on governmental intelligence operations, to the New York State Department, published in New York's Greenwich Village.
"In view of the adversary situations in which Dan Schorr is placed in pending government investigations, he has agreed with CBS that he will be relieved of all
reporting duties for an indefinite period." Salant's statement said.
Schorr wasn't immediately available for comment.
The statement said the network would provide legal counsel to Schorr "insofar as investigations relating to his CBS news activities are concerned" and said the network "will fully support Mr. Scharr's efforts in obtaining information from a source through which he obtained the report. These aspects of the matter involve fundamental issues of press freedom."
The House has ordered its Ethics Committee to investigate the leak of its report and determine if any action should be taken against Schorr. The Justice Department indicated it also was considering an investigation.
Does this happen to you?
*You go out for a nice evening of relaxation and drinking and end up wading around in puddles of beer.
-You feel like you have to drive clear into Kansas City to go to a nice club.
- You have to go 3 different places to be able to have dinner, a couple drinks and go dancing all in one night.
You don't have to accept these standards any more! You have a choice!
The International:
When you're tired of
the local beer joint
general public
12. 2 pm
2 pm-3 am The International
BUZZI SAID the bill would probably be amended in the Senate so that it couldn't go into effect until the state was sure that the federal resolution had passed and that there was no chance of losing any badly needed federal highway funds.
Buzzi said a new bill that would require helmets only for cyclists 16 and under had been favorably voted out of the State Transportation Commission to pass the resolution within three weeks and by that time the new bill should have cleared the Kansas House.
Motorcycle riders older than 16 may soon be able to ride without helmets if a bill attached to the 1975 Federal Highway Act passes Congress.
2 pm-3 am The International 944
members only Massachusetts
7 days a week 842-2458
Richard Wright, Eudora, who is a member of a group called BATEA (a medical advocacy group of mental ements), which has protested the present helmet law, said that the threat of losing federal funds had always been the big hammer held over the Legislature to enact
The resolution will change federal mandates that allow the Department of Transportation to withhold federal highway revenue and provide cyclists to wear protective head gear.
THE NEW LAW would still require riders to wear some kind of protective eye device approved by the Department of Transportation, Buzzi said.
State Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence, said yesterday that the law requiring cyclists to wear helmets stood a good chance of being repealed in the Kansas Legislature this year if House Resolution 3869 is passed by Congress.
"It's really a form of blackmail." Wright said.
Staff Writer
THE HELMET LAW has been highly controversial since its inception in 1968, when only riders under 21 had to wear helmets. In 1970 the law was repealed, but in 1974 a law was passed that required riders to wear helmets was enacted, largely as a federal mandate. State officials have
State may annul cycle helmet law
By JOHN FULLER
Wright's statistics show the following results. In 1967, before the first helmet law was enacted, there were 31,538 registered ANSAs and 14 fatalities involving cyclists.
In 1968, the year the first law was enacted, there was an 8.2 per cent rise in registered motorcycles to 34,356. But three were 30 percent that year or a 114 per cent increase.
IN 1972, two years after the law had been repealed, the number of cycles had more than doubled to 88,000, but there were only 22 fatalities. In July of that year the current number of cycles rose only 11 per cent to 99,499. fatalities rose 90.9 per cent to 42.
He said that as "a tax-payer, a physician and avid motorcyclist," legislators shouldn't be swayed by sensationalism or illogical pleas to repeal the law.
defended the bill with numerous national statistics and medical investigations that
"They prove that the helmet isn't doing what it's supposed to do." he said.
In recent hearings in the State Transportation Committee, Horman E. McSwain Jr. of the KU Medical Center defended the new bill.
"HELMET LAWS save lives and save tax-payers' money," he said. "If you choose to repeal the helmlet law, at the same time you must use appropriations for every hospital in the state to provide medical care for those so injured."
"The government says if you protect you
if it kills you, and that's just what has
been done."
Wright said that helmets killed more riders than they saved. He said he had statistics to prove his point that were gathered from state records in Topeka by an independent research firm, Dane Mootz Memorial Foundation in Kansas City, Mo.
Several riders interviewed debated the pros and cons of helmets. One of the most
Wright said the statistics disputed officials' assertions that the only reason there are more fatalities is that the number of cyclists had increased.
"Obey Your Sense of Smell . . .
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common complaints was that helmets
are rider's ability to hear
surrounding traffic.
"I got arrested for resisting arrest because I couldn't hear a policeman's siren behind me and I kept on going," Keith Harold, 316 N. 8th, said.
"If you stuck a meat thermometer up in between your head and the helmet on a 90 degree day in the summer, it would register about 120 to 130 degrees." Wright said.
ANOTHER COMPAINT was that the helmets are hot and distracting in the rain.
Riders said that they constantly had to wait in line for three days, which distracted them from driving.
Studies have shown, as the helmet makers admit, that even the best helmet is up to only 13 to 15 miles an hour. At a distance of 20 kilometers are prone to crack or break in a collision.
Most riders admit that helmets can help prevent injury in some situations, and many said they would wear their helmets even if they weren't required. However, most said they didn't like the idea of being forced to wear one.
Put yourself in intensive care.
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the VILLAGE SET
922 MASSACHUSETTS
MIDNIGHT
MADNESS
SALE All Fall and Winter Fashions Included Tuesday, Feb. 24, 7 p.m.-10 p.m.
Sale merchandise will be remarked to low,low prices one hour before doors open. Also all sale merchandise will be transferred from our Kansas City stores.
ALL SALES FINAL
NO REFUNDS
NO RETURNS
1.
Tuesday, February 24.1976
3
Housing examined . . .
From page one
It costs between $1,355 and $1,500 a year to live in a fraternity. Turyanny, Payment is
IN ADDITION; there are pledging fees that cost between $20 and $50, and initiation fees of about $5 to $100. Those are paid only once, usually upon joining the fraternity.
Facilities and services provided in fraternities vary from house to house. Turvey said that most houses had phones in every room, study and test files, television rooms, living rooms, cooks who prepare 19 meals, a barbershop, parking lots. Sleeping arrangements vary.
Many of the fraternities require their members to do cleaning and maintenance, but some have mails. Turvey said that only a few had laundry facilities.
Fraternites have either sleeping dorms or beds in the rooms.
Sleeping dorms are large rooms with no furniture except beds.
FRATERNITY HOUSE rooms range in size from a capacity of two to four. Desks, chairs and other furnishings may be included.
Turvey said that all fraternities elected officers and that the men had almost 90% of the votes.
"There's pressure in fraternities to be the center of activities, but you expect that when you join."
"One pitfall is that you get so involved in the (Greek) system that you often don't have time to get to know other people," Turvey said. "But you really learn how to deal with people because you're so involved."
Sororities
The 12 scoratives at KU are similar to fraternities, they select members through rush, or a membership program, offer a course in a specific activity, or members in activities to encourage unity.
Privacy is something you have to sacrifice in a sincerity, Jelinek said, but the truth is that the government is very careful.
JANE JELINEK, Bluff City junior, said she joined Delta Delta because the use of an e-mail system was new.
PAM HORNE, assistant to the dean of women and Panhellenic adviser, said that about 815 women lived in sororities, talking about 3.7 per cent of all students.
"It's not just another living group because, ideally, everyone has that group membership in common and when they are together they have certain goals and responsibilities." Harper said.
"They have something very special in common with each other," she said.
The average annual househall is between $1,170 and $1,346. That doesn't include pledge fees, $15 to $33, or initiation fees that range from $40 to $240, each of which are paid only once. Each sorority has a "correspondence building," it built for the househall only the first year or paid separately. Corporation fees are between $112 and $250 per woman.
Between 55 and 80 women live in each sororite. Her said. She said the houses were more like homes than residence halls because they were smaller.
Meals in sororites are prepared by cooks, and the cleaning is usually done by maids and janitors. Most sororities have televisions, living rooms, coin-operated or free laundry machines and vending machines. Nearly all are located within a few blocks of campus and have parking space for members' cars.
Sororites have rush to select members twice a year, in August and January.
Horne said that men weren't allowed past public areas in aoritories during pest control seasons.
SCHOLARSHIP HALLS at KU house smaller living groups than Greek houses, and are considerably less expensive, they offer a variety of housing options residents do all the cooking and cleaning.
Scholarship halls
KU has eight scholarship halls, four for men and four for women, all located just outside the city.
east or campus? *parking space is private;*
cast there 988 students living in the halls
this year, 1.8 percent of KU's total
enrollment. About 50 people live in each hall
James Barker, Columbus, Kan,Junian,
he said he thought the cooperative system was
"I hadn't cooked much before this, and I learned the Barke said, "but there have been lots of others."
He said he was saving a substantial amount of money, but he also chose a scholarship hall because he came from a town and didn't know many people at KU.
LIVING WITH a group sometimes limits privacy, Barker said. Women are allowed in a room.
Barker said he dined out sometimes because he didn't like certain meals, and this cost him an extra $15 to $30 each month. Two of the women's scholarship halls, Miller and Watkins, cost $250 a year to live in.
Maur Faint, Miller Hall president, said that food wasn't included in their bills.
Instead, Miller and Watkins each have seven kitchen, and seven women are assigned to each kitchen. The women must cook as well as a widget, shop and cook the food.
FAUST SAID that plan stemmed from the will of Elizabeth M. Watkins, who left money for the hall to the university. Watkins stated that she thought college
women should learn how to cook for at least seven people.
Faust said that she like scholarship hannu
that there probably won't as much
private college.
It's a big co-operative spirit, but you learn to be assertive and open about how you learn.
He said that 400 students usually applied for the 160 to 180 openings in the halls each year. Students living in the halls must maintain a minimum of 12 credits with at least 14 credit hours each semester.
Kirk McAlexander, assistant to the dean of men and adviser to the All Scholarship Hall Council, said the average cost to live in a man's hall was $500 a year. He said the women's halls, except Miller and Watkins, cost about $815.
RESIDENTS are selected on the basis of their financial need, scholastic ability or potential and their attitudes and goals. McAlexander said.
He said that students didn't have to be on scholarship to live in a scholarship hall.
Scholarship for the halls work in shifts to residents of the halls work in shifts to prepare the meals, but they can plan their own shifts around classes and activities.
"It's really different to get to know someone through working with him, rather than just seeing him at meals," McAlexander said.
Like the Greek system, the scholarsap-
hall have like dorming doors, or beds in
the rooms for several residents. Desks,
dressers and dressers and bookcases
are also provided.
Most of the halls have free lounge facilities, televisions, living rooms, pianos, kitchens and recreation rooms. They also offer a variety of music albums, records and books that can be checked out.
(Tomorrow: Advantages and drawbacks of apartment living.)
Nonfaculty
From page one
. . .
COPELAND SAID rank should be denoted by the titles of assistant research scientist, associate research scientist and senior research scientist, with each title corresponding to assistant professor, associate professor and professor.
and internationally famous after 15 years," he said, "he is still just a research associate and can never be called anything but a research associate."
Misconceptions about research associates have interfered with the passage of CDU'd services.
"Many people look at research associates and say, 'They'll only be here a short time.' They don't have experience in academic departments," he said. Many research associates of CDUD organizations have been here 15 or 20 years continue to attract outside sponsorship.
"If the research community is to survive, there has to be some acknowledgment that these people have a faculty-equivalent status."
There are two different sources of funding for research, Copeland said, which further muddles the issue of faculty-equivalent rights.
SOME ORGANIZATIONS, such as the
Kansas Geological Survey, are almost completely state-funded. However, almost all personnel for the Bureau of Child Research are financed by federal projects. Only personnel supported by state funds are funded by CDTs' proposal. Copeland said because the availability of funds for "outside-sponsored projects" can't be controlled.
Faculty-equivalent personnel aren't granted sabbatical. CDUU also is the sole representative. Copeland, Calif.
"We would like to see state-funded research associates go through a regular sabbatical committee that would decide who is in charge of the same one that is for faculty members."
Copeland said a University policy for vacations had never been spelled out, although each division had an established vacation policy for its personnel.
William Hambleton, director of the Geological Survey, said a policy for research associates was needed simply because no policy now exists.
You'll have 2 chances to see the
"These people have the same level of academic preparation and are selected with the same kind of care as faculty members with whom they work," he relates to such people. "Hambleton said."
G
Gary Burton Quintet
one at 7 p.m. and one at 10 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25
at
Off the Wall Hall
737 New Hampshire Lawrence, Kansas 841-0817
Now, how often can you see one of the country's top Jazz Vibraphonists, with 19 albums to his credit, in an intimate setting, for only $4, in Lawrence,Ks?!
MIDNIGHT MADNESS Tuesday . . . (Tonight!!) 7:00 - ??
Sleeveless Sweaters
Values to $20^{00} & $30^{00}
Now $14^{90}
Outerwear
Leathers-Suedes-Trenchcoats
Now 30%-50% Off
Sport Coats
Values to $85^{00}
Now $39^{50} to 1/2 Off
3-pc. Suits
Reg. $140.00
Now
$99^{50} - 1/2 Off
Dress Shirts
Reg. $16^{10}$ $20^{10}$
Now ½ Off
Ski Sweaters
Reg. $25⁹⁰..$27⁹⁰
Now $18⁹⁹
Rugby Shirts long & short sleeves Reg. $1895 Now 1/2 Off
open thursdays till 8:30
Casual Pants
Reg. $20^{90}
Now $11^{90}
Large Group of Sweaters Shawl-Cardigans-V-Necks Now 30%-50% Off
Dress Slacks
Values to $30^{00}$
Now $6^{00}$ $19^{50}$
Plus Much, Much More!!
this is the largest midnight madness ever - -
all of our KC stores have transferred their
fall styles to the Lawrence store for one last sale.
MISTER
GUV
920 Mass.
Student Senate powers to be transferred tonight
The final transfer of Student Senate powers will be at 6:30 tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The old Senate will meet with the newly elected Senate to turn over the reins of student government.
The new officers will then take office and describe their goals for next year, Tasheff and
Teddie Tasheff, student body president, told yesterday that the old officers would take an oath to give their reports and elect three holders, give holdover election gives a final chance to senators in the old Senate to serve next year, if they lost in last week's elections, she said.
interested in serving on one of the seven standing Senate committees, she said.
the new Senate will first elect the Committee of the Senate to interview a student
Tasheff said there would be no new legislation introduced tonight.
Study in Guadalajara, Mexico
THE GUADALAJARA SUMMER
GROUP OF THE VERSITY OF ARIZONA PROGRAM will offer July 5-August 13, anthropology, political science, language and literature. Tuition and fees, $195; board room and desk for students of the Guadalajará SUMMER SCHOOL. Office of international Program, University of Arizona.
---
KANSAS PREMIERE!
SIDE-SPLITTING SEX SPOOFS AND NOSTALGIC TELEVISION CLASSICS: The Sinematic and Cinematic Sides of 1950'S Sociology
I'm not afraid to say
GO SEE A MOVIE TONIGHT!
WHAT MAKES
MEN BLUSH
PART!
The 1950's Sex Education Festival
This is a series of shorts that may be the most hysterically funny movies ever to play on the Kansas University campus. The titles include: How Much Affection (1956); Doing Do's and Dont's (1954); Is This Lovely (1957); Are You Popular (1952); Are You Ready for Marriage (1955); and Dangling Participie (1959). To describe but two of them: How Much Affection, which might better be titled The Perverse Passion of Petting, is the idyllic story of teen-aged love run amuck. With their entire life ahead they learn that their family's hopes for a future of virtue deserve family-raising are haunted by the specter of unbridled physical love and sex-fueled madness! But with the help of family and friends they arrive at a truly inspirational and heartening solution to The Menace of Premarial Intercourse. Then in Standish Lawder's outrageous Dangling Particle, we see a sixty-five year old matronly high school teacher trying to tell a group of potential pervers that each and every fantasy, no matter how bizarre, is 'perfectly normal.' This film is without doubt one of the most remarkable social documents of its time: a sort of ultimate statement on adolescent frustrations and sexual brainwashing techniques at high school. They are not only the most real and are of equivalent quality, each one specially selected for its ability to evoke whisles of disbelieving laughter! One last film in Part I is the 1950's equivalent of sexual politics — Ronald Reagan's only filmed encounter with Jayne Mansfield!
☆☆☆☆☆☆
PART II
1950'S Television Masterpieces
Ozzie and Harriett (1957)
Called Father's Night at the Fraternity, this one features the absurd Wally and an incredible musical climax with Ricky pounding out some Gorgeous
★★★★★
BURNS AND ALLEN (1954)
Possibly the greatest episode ever made as Grace helps a young sorority girl to be beautiful so she can get a date to the prom!
★★★★★
Elvis Presley on Ed Sullivan (1955)
This one is truly unreal. Elvis's first appearance on the Sullivan Show and he was censored from the waist down as he pounded out Love Me
★★★★★
FATHER KNOWS BEST (1956)
Stars Robert Young! Kathy runs away from home when she has "adolescent problems" but comes back home in the end when she realizes that when all is said and done, Father Knows Best!
FOUR NIGHTS ONLY! THURSDAY, FRIDAY,
SATURDAY & SUNDAY, FEB. 26, 27, 28 & 29; WESCOE AUDITORIUM; COMPLETE SHOWS NIGHTLY
AT 7:00 & 9:45 P.M. $1.75 SPON. BY VOLUNTEER
CLEARING HOUSE.
---
4
Tuesday, February 24, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Air apartheid issue
Smoking is a dangerous thing.
Smoking is a dangerous thing:
Not only it is a dangerous thing to do,
it is a dangerous thing to talk or write about.
A careless word or phrase and friends become enemies almost overnight.
People have the right to smoke cigarettes. If they want to smoke 29 packs a day, that's fine. It is their body and it is their money. Outlawing cigarettes would be inconsistent with what most people believe to be this nation's ideas. It probably wouldn't stop them, anwav.
ON THE OTHER hand, nonsmokers have the right to breathe clean air, or at least to breathe without having cigarette smoke in their face. Some studies have shown that breathing the exhaust of somebody else's cigarette is worse for your health than smoking one yourself.
The right to smoke and the right to breathe are enemies. The only thing they have in common is that they are both "rights." If both sides wanted to be uncompromising and hard, the situation could deteriorate into a virtual war.
PENDING THE invention of smokefree, vitamin packed cigarettes, there seems one main way to reconcile this conflict. That is to use the "equal" that used to be used in racial matters. The only way to satisfy everyone is to segregate.
Many states have already begun to do this, requiring separate smoking and nonsmoking sections in planes, trains and restaurants.
Unfortunately, this solution isn't a complete one. Although it does create a truce while eating or traveling, it doesn't help at all as far as smoking. What can you do when smokers and nonsmokers have to be in the same room?
IN THAT situation, it seems there is nothing to do but make enemies. Somebody's rights must yield.
But the nonsmokers have won more of these showdows recently. They have been becoming more vocal and more militant all the time.
Their new outspokenness has resulted in an increased awareness of the nonsmokers' situation. Law protecting the rights of non-smokers was passed by 31 states, including Kansas.
THESE LAWS mean that when smokers and nonsmokers clash over the air of an auditorium, it's no longer a matter of whether they're sisters or another's. It's a matter of the law.
Sometimes nonsmokers get carried away with their own rhetoric. But they do have a point and they probably have breathed a lot of other people's excess smoke over the years. And, after all, a man isn't born with a cigarette in his mouth.
In the long run, the right of a person to smoke doesn't mean they can smoke anywhere, especially if everywhere includes places in which everyone else has to breathe smoke along with them.
By Jim Bates
Contributing Writer
Are you a small country?
Need cash, arms??
THEN SIMPLY FILLED OUT THIS COURDON AND MARITO:
SECRETARY OF STATE
WASHINGTON, D.C.
U.S.A.
DEAR DR. KISSINGER:
THE SOVEREIGN NATION OF___
RESPECTFULLY REQUESTS $___
AND___TONS
OF ARMAMENT OR WE WILL GO COMMIE.
© 1976 NOT SPECIFIC TEXTURES
This first primary is a make-or-break situation for many candidates. After eliciting either especially strong or especially weak support in the early caucus states, such as Wisconsin, Indiana and Ohio, candidates come into the election needing a good showing to keep them in the race or to support early gains.
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Published at the University of Kansas weekly departmental journal, *The Kansas State Journal*, during periodicals second-class postage paid at Low-denomination banks or at a tennesseer or $1 a year in Douglas County and $2 a year in Bakersfield. Periodicals are $2.00 in a tenner, paid through the university's student account.
... the New Hampshire voter,
or at least that is what we are
told that we should seek. Sure as
Hommad, the New Hampshire
says he has shown con-
struction in predictive
a winner. Since the state began
its obstacle course in 1952, no
candidate has been elected
president who didn't win in
New Hampshire.
But trying to figure out what a "good showing" is provides the fishier basis of a shire's exaggerated importance. Because, fellow voters, a good showing is pretty important; whatever a candidate says it is.
Editor
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Betty Haelgin Yael Abouhalkah
Rosy Parris
Advertising Manager
Business Assistant
Gary Burch
Linda Beckham
Business Manager
Publisher
In 1972, George McGovern said he would consider 25 per cent of the vote in New Hamshire a "good showing"; the poll said Edmund Muskie had won the fact that his showing" of 60 per cent of the vote. When the big day was over, the fact that Muskie had lodged a respectable victory with 46 per cent of the vote was ignored. Instead, the headlines indicated that McGovern made the correct claim per cent of the Democratic vote. The scores of victory were so mown.
News Advisor Business Advisor
Susanne Shaw Mel Adams
When it comes to politics,
New Hampshire is in a surrealistic world all its own.
Every four years the rest of America turns its eyes, and cameras, to this tiny state of
What does N.H. know?
fiery campaign issues that will set them apart for the voters.
On the Primary Trail
800,000 and seeks the knowledge of the preeminent political guru
Sown, however, in a state with less than 4 per cent of the nation's population; sown with a turnout of about 88,000 Democrats—17 per cent of New York voters; sown then, by the votes of less than one half of one per cent of the nation's voters.
But the race seems to have narrowed down to changeling Carter and Udall, the one-eyed basketball player from Arizona.
There is no indication that the situation will be any different this year. The Democratic Senate has passed Mo Udall, Birch Bayh, Sargent Shriver and Fred Harris—are fighting for a share of the 116,000 registered Democrats and some of the 149,000 declared Democrats—are candidate group of veritable look-alikes, there are very few
By Betty Haegelin Associate Editor
and is hounded by pro-lifers. He is also strong on other issues such as gun control and full government through government jobs.
As for Shriver and Harris—Shriver will be happy if he finishes at all. Both need some support to keep their canine friends both are not expecting much.
Carter derives his strength from his early caucus victories and the importation of 90 Georgians to sing his praises
But the real fireworks could be set off in the other camp's battle between Ronald Reagan and Gerald R. Ford. This week Mark the first time Gerald Ford was elected elective politics outside his Grand Rapids congressional district and polls show his
he were not the incumbent, he might not even be their tenth choice."
But incumbent he is, and this alone is likely to pull enough votes to give him a respectable showing. His recent swings through the state have inducted his chances considerably.
But the Reagan camp has said that it would consider a 40 per cent showing a victory and Republican Gov. Meldrim predict that Reagan would win with more than 50 per cent. Reagan is a showman on the stump, but that isn't much of a feat considering he has been among the most versions of the same speech for
somewhat self-endowed. The state law says that its primary must be one week before any other state's. But it's still under consideration in a small and unrepresentative state can grab such importance.
New Hampshire is unlike any other part of the country. It has no state income tax or sales tax. It lacks a budget, balances its budget and it does. It is 86 per cent woodland. There is one state representative for every 2,000 persons, and there are paid $20 a two-year term.
Four of the five elective officers are Democrat in a state with a Republican majority. The president is Thompson—an amateur law
WESTPHAL
Hotel New Ham
OUT ORDER
SORRY FELLA, BUT BEING THE HEIGHT OF OUR FOUR-YEAR RUSH, WE'RE ALL BOOKED UD!
door-to-door. Carter is the one,
then, with something to gain.
Udall has everything to lose.
Udall has played New Hampshire big-he's been working the entire state for more than a year and has reached the 35,000 Democratic households with door-to-door access. He will preserve after all of this work, the pollsters say, he 'been finished.'
Bahy has resolved himself to coming in third today, mainly because he is catching most of the positions he posessed by all of these Democrats. Bahy happened to preside over a Senate committee that proposed anti-abortion amendments to the Constitution
wooing might get the cold-
shoulder. Ford, privately and
publicly has been thrown off
the job. Blinders and blunders
and malappropriate
At a New Hampshire breakfast, he promised to continue in the ways of Daniel Patrick McKenna and follow the same challenges challenging some of the third and fourth world powers, calling a spade a spade." He worked; said work in the other 48 uh, 49- states could profit from New Hampshire's spirit; noted that it's January already, when it really is it's really February; and so on.
When he deviates from "the speech" he, too, has trouble keeping his tongue unwrestled. In one speech, the flubbed. Third eight times in a single talk. He also tends to shoot from the lip, such as his remark to the distribution of free food after Patty Hearts' kidnapping; have an epidemic of bollism?
his 15 years in the political limelight.
If Reagan can build in 40 to 50 per cent, it will provide a solid base on which to build his effort to unseat Ford.
And the news media are by no means infected by the "liberal Eastern establishment." Instead, publisher William Loeb of the Manchester Union Leader is a vibrant partisan whose iron grip brought Muske to tears ... and ultimate defeat in 1972.
and-order man who arrests speeders from his own official car and has advocated arming the National Guard with nuclear weapons.
WASHINGTON - Miss Sophie Satin died a year ago this February in her 96th year. A botanist, a teacher, a social historian, a museologist Miss Satin was, although she never seemed to have used the term, a feminist in Czarist Russia.
Women's gains often forgotten
In fact, the only way that New Hampshire is typical is that as of last week, fully 60 per cent of the registered voters said they would vote to keep the voters in the succeeding primaries, go to the polls despite ignorance and ambivalence seems to be the real question in today's race. And, perhaps, the rest of us should know what We can about the whims of the New Hampshire voter?"
In the light of our modern conterminations and controversies, it is ironic that one of Miss Saita's accomplishments was to be among the very first girls in Russia. She writes that in 1896: "I could not continue my education because all women's colleges were closed. (Government edict). All I could do now was to read and to wander about in the Moscow) or to do or how to occupy myself. And then in this dull and boring 'doing nothing' period I learned by chance that somebody offered to teach the graduates of our school stenography. What did the word stenography mean? I knew it at home, neither did my friends. Only the doctor . . . said that this word in Greek should mean 'Narrow writing', but what is this stenography for, and how and when it is used? He did not know either. This unknown thing is going to taught . . . it was worthwhile to accept the offer. I followed her advice at once.
so rare and so much in demand that her services were used at lectures and political occasions she might otherwise not have been able to attend. In 1905 she was ordained as a prefect in the transcript of an international conference, but when she arrived and the admiral for
MISS SATIN wrote that the skill was invaluable to her. Not only was she able to earn money with it, but stenographers were
get an idea of what Russian women had to go through to get an education in a country that had no Department of Health, Education and Welfare to help them.
A 40 to 50 per cent showing for Reagan would mean Ford would receive a similar percentage, although Reagan has been declared the winner in advance. This win could set a pace that could ultimately drive Ford out of the Republican Party and bring it closer to do well in the upcoming states. New Hampshire's power is
MISS SATIN and her friends had to set up their own college, but under the bootleg name of
图
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) King Features
This small kermish is described in her "Recollections," a book of great charm written at the behest of American friends but which is unhappily unpublished. In it you
whom she was to work got a look at her, she remembered. "He exclaimed, 'They sent a woman! What a shame. Poor But still worse was the attitude of the official stenographers. They refused to move when I approached the desk given us. One of them muttered; the kitchen, it the kitchen, and it the waterstain grapher who got up, moved his papers and politely offered me the necessary space for my work." To his credit, he allowed the admiral changed his mind and (twice offered Miss Tatin a job.)
"Collective Lessons," lest the government close it down. Ultimately, because of their leadership and staying away from political meetings, the government began to reentert and Miss Satin was among the first class of women who attended at the University of Moscow.
Not only did Miss Satin become a botanist, but she and her friends raised the money, collected and mounted the specimens for a free natural history museum. Next they began to design and manufacture visual aids for teaching children chinchillas as the science classes had continued their work of collecting and cataloging the flora and fauna of their native land. This could entail risks as when the coachman
almost totaled them and the microscope she had purchased with her Paris stenographic earnings. When they both survived, the coachman told her. "Miss, you were saved my life," he said until you will achieve something great." This is apparently the reason why I am still alive so long."
WHEN MISS SATIN got out of Russia and away from the hunger and the stupidity, she didn't take money with her but made sure her money was. I had been unable to complete my research on this particular
WHAT WOULD Russia be like today if it hadn't driven out people like Sophie Satin and her family, which included her Rachmannmann*? Her description what it was like for women to live in the Soviet Union in that period are less horrifying than tales of the concentration camps perhaps more disinterpreting because they are probably more representative of ordinary experience:
"The poor dressmaker was afraid of everybody and she shall never forget her face, because when she was ordered by the Soviet Government to go to one of the railroad stations in beijing to be one of the guards of a police force holding a gun in her hands. She was afraid even to look at the gun and for a whole day kept it on her chest as possible thinking all the time the gun might go off by itself."
subject due to the revolution. I had preserved the mould spores for several years, having wrapped them in sterilized soil somewhere and somehow to finish up my research."
Sophie Satin came to love America, for many years she pursued her life's work at the Carnegie Institute and at Smith College. Americans, however, did not always understand how she could come to love Russia, too. Many of them thought it was a land where the people live in "caves," tents and mud huts." She confesses she lost her temper when the wife of a Department of Agriculture bureaucrat, where Miss Satin worked one year, told her how happy you are to be here, coming from this savage, horrible and abominable country."
**MISS SATIN** assumed she'd be fired for telling the lady off but, instead, "I found on my table only a glass of water with a beautiful rose and a note to her," he wrote. Later, lunch, I found on my table a splendid peach, on the third day I found a pear. So it went all the week . . . The unpleasant incident . . . helped me to better understand and value American life and come closer to them."
Ford's candidacy got off to a painfully slow start and it has been obvious that he isn't likely to attract the same type of strong support as his opponent Reagan.
"Ford," says California pollster Mervin Field, "is not the Republican's first choice.
The feminist movement these last years has inspired notable work on the contribution of women in our history, their culture, immigrant women like Miss Sophie Satine are overlooked.
Rv PHIL. McKNIGHT
Guest comment
Faculty evaluation
Director of Instructional Resources
It may be safe to say that everyone has strong feelings about at least one aspect of the Curriculum and Instruction survey. It is not the purpose of this discussion to review the in the survey, but rather to discuss future alternatives.
The matter of providing information to students for assistance in selecting courses
Although it began as a student project to help students select their courses more wisely, it has also led to other functions. One of these (evaluation), is incongruent with the nature of the original survey, while the other is a proper use of the survey.
At any rate, after discussing the problems of the survey with various students and faculty committees in the past year, I have decided that we need to separate, distinct operations; information for student course selection, diagnostic information to teachers and evaluative information for purposes of merit salary deliberations and for decisions accordingly. Accordingly, the survey will be so revised this semester.
is being discussed with the Student Senate. We need to decide what kind of information is of most use to students and how it should be obtained. I welcome any suggestions.
With regard to providing diagnostic feedback, the present survey will be available for use before spring vacation in order to ensure that students are returned after vacation as soon as possible, at a time when I believe teachers can better use the information to help them revise their courses in order to meet current preferences and expectations.
With regard to evaluation, there is a consensus among many faculty and students that a short list of questions should be used. Given the purpose of evaluation, it would appear that between five and twelve questions would be sufficient. This semester we will adhere to our course's basis. I invite your insights with regard to what kinds of questions should be used.
Diagnostic and evaluative forms discussed above will, I hope, be complemented by individual departmental instruments and procedures used in the clinic. I believe that the more information the better, particularly when it pertains to
evaluation. I also think that it is advisable to have one common form for evaluation because the university department's teaching records are being compared at the university level during budgetary allocation processes. The department are aware of comparison, a department dissatisfied with its merit pay allocation would have no opportunity to say "our teaching department" than X department's scores.
In shortening the evaluation process we are not trying to make it easier, but rather to make it more value of information obtained.
Finally, I believe that the Curriculum and Instruction Survey should be only one of a kind in our country. We evaluate alternatives available. Thus, another project currently underway involves constructing an Item Bank of Descriptive and Evaluative items.
The goal of all of these activities is to make diagnosis and evaluation more accurate and more useful through revisions of items, questionnaires, and procedures. It is a crucial task, and faculty members do not have the training to withdraw from the course before receiving a grade from their students.
Tuesday, February 24.1978
University Daily Kansan
5
Information 'du jour' available by phone
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
John Harkanson sits on front of a short wave radio in Wescoe Hall at night, slowly turning the radio's tuner in search of foreign language newscasts.
Harkanson, Philadelphia graduate student, finds a newcasting originating from an overseas radio station and flips on a tape recorder next to the radio.
The newcastle service is designed to aid students of foreign languages by making recordings of newcastles in six languages by phone, Harkenson said last week.
The next night, a University of Kansas student can hear the recorded broadcast by telephone, thanks to the foreign newscast generated by the KU Language Laboratory.
He records several broadcasts in each language and a faculty member in each language picks the newswest to be used. He also uses descriptive, appropriate vocabulary and timeliness.
Harkenson said he spent about 15 hours a week scanning the short wave's frequencies in the region.
Harkanson said the tapes were changed twice a week, although some tapes were longer if they were exceptionally clear or another clear newest couldn't be found.
"Clarity and strength of signal determine how often it is changed," he said. "Clarity is the biggest concern, since it is used as a teaching device."
The tapes are edited and placed on a bank of tape players in Wescow Hall. By dialing one of six telephone numbers, students can call them for lessons, which average five minutes in length.
The numbers, in operation 24 hours a day,
are 86-3055 for French broadcasts, 86-3218
for Spanish, 86-3033 for Chinese, 86-3034
for Portuguese, 86-3019 for Portugal and
86-3241 for Russian.
Although he understands only English and Chinese, Harkanson said he recognized all six languages when he heard and recorded them from the radio.
Signal strength of stations varies seasonally. Harkanson said, so planning his schedule to record foreign stations at the best time is important.
Spanish stations are easy to find, he said, and Russian and French broadcasts can usually be heard in the afternoon. But he often has to depend on luck, he said.
"I can get most of what I need through 11 p.m.," he said. "If I really want to pick up another job, I should just work."
I've stayed over night here a couple of times."
Some powerful overseas stations, such as Radio Spain and the West German Deutsche Welle, are dependable sources, Harkanson said.
For other languages, he said, he sometimes has to depend on Voice of America, an American radio service that is connected to foreign lands in their native languages.
HARKANSON SAID he preferred not to use Voice of America because it was an American news service. But for languages other than English, said he, sometimes has few alternatives.
The foreign newscast business began on a trial basis in December 1974, and on a full-time basis in May 1986.
Harkanson began work on the service last September. Before that, the recording was done by another Language Laboratory for foreign language departments.
The Language Laboratory and Harkanson's work are funded by appropriations from the individual language departments.
The newcastset business began with the same languages it now has, he said, but the number of calls it receives has increased since the operation began.
During the 1975 fall semester, the service received 8,908 calls, an average of between 6,400 a week, Harkinson said. He said more calls were being received this semester.
SPANISH HAS BEEN the most popular language number called he, followed by French.
The Language Laboratory has facilities to expand the newcast service to 12 lines, but Jackson said he doubted whether there would be changes in the operation in the near future.
"It's all a matter of money," he said. "One of the language departments was able to put enough money, we could add to the bank. The other departments we added, the more staff we need."
Joseph C. Kuo, assistant professor of Oriental languages and literature, who assists Harkanson in editing the Chinese tapes, said the service was being used by Oriental students to hear news from their homelands.
He said he thought the service could be helpful to students in other disciplines.
"For instance, yesterday we made a tape of a Chinese broadcast about the change of prime minister. Kuo said. "The political activity is taking place from Peking."
Wheat, which has provided income for Kamans and food for millions of others, now supplies the bulk of beef.
By JAY BEMIS
Staff Writer
Wheat straw as energy studied
Fratt is being used as a mode for turning wheat straw in energy to fill electrical need.
The southwestern Kansas town has depended on natural gas for its power in past years. But officials have been told that the town won't get its traditional supply in future years, so they have begun a three-part plan for future energy sources.
The first part of the plan is to use small deposits of natural gas that now surround Pratt. It has been estimated that those deposits be sufficient for only a five-year period.
So, as the second part of its plan, Pratt is the chief expert on converting wheel shaft energy.
The third part of the plan would be setting up such an operation.
DEAN ECKHOFF, associate professor of nuclear engineering at Kansas State University, said in a telephone interview Sunday that such a plan would be practical, especially in western Kansas towns governments own electricity.
"It might be to their liking," he said. "It will attractiveness and potential for the work."
Wheat straw energy would be about 20 per cent more expensive than natural gas, he
said. But the straw, selling for up to $15 an acre, would mean added income for the farmer.
The wheat straw would be converted to energy by being burned in a boiler, he said. That boiler would be "universal," he said, and burn almost anything that's organic.
Gathering the wheat straw would be a manmoth operation, Eckhoff said. Straw from 20 per cent, about 200,000 acres, of a six-county area around Pratt would be enough to supply Pratt's electrical needs for one year.
ECKHOFF SAID the idea of wheat straw energy came to him while he was on a trip to Mississippi.
"I got to thinking when looking at the timberland down there of how it takes three acres of timber, which grows in a lifetime, for a year's heat," he said. "Then I thought of Kansas crops, which could provide an acre of energy for one year."
the concept of a bio-converter, or double-purpose, crop was well known and accepted in the scientific community.
Eckhoff he said he thought the wheat straw concept was probably the first of its kind in the Midwest or the nation, but said he had read of a similar procedure in Austria.
A PLANT there used wheat straw in its energy system to solve an unemployment problem, he said, because people could be hired to gather the straw.
Some people have criticized Eckhoff's system because they think it will take
nutrients from the land. Eckhoff, however,
referred.
"There's a mixture of nutrients that will and not up the plant material." Eckhoff said. "It will be formed and combusted, the system will return water and carbon dioxide into the air."
"Ashes will also be left, and we'll collect them and return them to the ground with some type of fertilizer or a manure spreader concept."
Eckhoff said his idea wasn't receiving any direct monetary support from the state, but he was providing $10,000 in matching funds to help pay feasibility study salaries.
THE PRATT CONTRACT is being handled through the Ozark Regional Committee, an agency which, according to Eckhoff, grew out of an executive development program for Appalachia. The agency has since spread its developmental programs into Missouri and Kansas, he said.
The feasibility study is the first of four being done by the Ramasa Center for Energy Sys. (Ramsa Center) in Calgary, Canada.
Gasification of wheat straw and of
manure from a feedlot north of Pratt is the second area of study.
The third area of study will be the energy properties of manure when it is burned at 40 to 60°C.
Finally, combustion properties of wheat,
are modified in other materials to be
reviewed for future use.
The first preliminary report on the Pratt project is supposed to be finished early this time. The report is expected late in the summer. The report should be completed early in 1977.
---
FIND OUT call 841-7100
PUBLIC NOTICE
The deadline for filing
FISCAL YEAR 1977 BUDGET REQUEST FORMS
(Student Activity Fee) with the Student Senate
Treasurer's Office is
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee
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5:00 P.M., FEBRUARY 27TH, 1976.
Request Forms are available at the Student Senate Office, B 105, Kansas Union, or call 864-3746 for further information. Late submittals can not be accepted.
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Tuesday, February 24, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Russians try to end stereotypes
By KAREN LEONARD
Soviet tourists spent the weekend in
desserts trying to understand American
students' lives with a Live Ship.
"We don't want to convert them. We just want them to look at us with open eyes and not through someone else's words." George Marnedo, a tour member and specialist in international relations at the Moscow Institute for U.S. Studies, said Sunday.
Mamedov and the group's leader, Valery Sidorov, talked about their trip to the United States and commented on U.S.-Soviet relations.
Mamedov, who speaks fluent English, began as an interpreter for Sidorov, but became impatient. He finally answered the questions himself with Sidorov's approval.
MAMEDOV, Sidorov and 28 other Soviet tourists were in Lawrence over the weekend on the first leg of their two week tour of the United States.
Mamedov said he thought the Americans he had talked with were generally surprised to find that the Soviets were as open and willing to answer questions as they were.
"Unfortunately, we haven't been asked
many, primitive, anti-Soviet
medieval ones."
But he said that he found that Americans stereotyped the Soviet Union as a "cowardly country," and courses started out with that preconceived notion. He said studies of the Soviet government were sometimes under the Course title of "A survey of totalitarian countries."
Another thing Americans have the wrong idea about is wheat, Mamedov said. Americans have been led to believe that refusing to sell grain to the Soviet Union would cause great hardships in that country, he said. But the Soviets do have a
reserve when the crops are poor, he said, and the corn and other grains purchased from the United States are used for cattle feed. The grain isn't a necessity but is simply useful to improve the people's food supply, and then more meat in their meals, he said.
MAMEDEV said that as nuclear powers the United States and the Soviet Union "have a special responsibility to keep our planet alive and well."
The Soviet government has never believed in the export of revolution, he said. "How you build socialism in your country is very, very own interest, affair." he said.
The final goal of communism is happiness for all mankind or, as it is written in the Bible, for all mankind. He can even each through the happiness of all and the happiness of all through the happiness of each," Mamedov said. He said that such a future could well be accomplished through the happiness of all.
If there is a conservative faction in the United States that opposes defense, there is no such faction in the Soviet Union. Numedov said.
"The Soviet people still remember the 20 million Soviet士兵 that died during WW II, so we think you can never fight hard enough for peace," he said.
MAMEDOV DID, however, express concern over U.S.-Red China defense
He said that although he favored improved U.S.-R.D. Chinese relations, they shouldn't be used against the Soviet Union, Cuba or any other country.
Some people have been critical of President Gerald R. Ford because he has not exploited the differences between the Soviet Union and Red China, Mamedov said, but actually this has been a positive step towards universal detente.
Along with detente, Mamedov said, the SALT talks have demonstrated a new
On Campus
TONIGHT: STATE SEN. ARDN BOOTH, R-Lawrence, will speak to the College Republicans at 7 in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION will meet at 6:30 in Danforth Chapel. SHERRY KLOSS, violinist and winner of the sixteenth Sterling Staff Incampus CRUSADE at 8 in Swainshott Recital Hall. DUWRood Auditorium at 2:30, 4, 7 and 8:30.
Events...
Announcements . . .
TOMORROW: The UNITED MINISTRIES is sponsoring a worship and breakfast at 7:15 a.m. at 1204 Oread and a Faculty Forum with Chancellor Archie R. Dykes speaking on "Higher Education in the Current Legislative Session" at noon.
Grants and Awards...
---
The University chapter of PHI KAPPA APH will nominate a Phi Kappa Phi who will receive a bachelor's degree in May for one of the national graduate fellowships awarded to 20 seniors from those nominated by about 175 universities. Interested students contact David Darwin, assistant professor of civil engineering, in 2008 Learned Hall.
degree of confidence between the Soviet Union and the United States. He said that it was the core of security between the two nations.
Although the fact that the talks are being conducted is significant, Mamedov said, limiting the spread of new technology is a needed part of the final agreement.
He said his government began helping the Angolan liberation movement when it first began in 1961, but it was suppressed by the Portuguese forces.
Now the situation in Portugal has made a successful national liberation movement in North Africa.
IF RESEARCH into new weapons isn't limited, Martesov said, then the SALT talks are underway.
HE SAID that persons were chosen for the tour on the basis of their work record, education background, skills of workers, and their political activity. Whether they were responsible citizens and whether they participated in summer activities in project projects was also considered, he said.
Russian studies
person tab and the tourists provided their own pocket money.
The oldest member of the group is 30. One
All of the members of the tour group either belong to or work in the Komsomol. Some also belong to the Communist Party. Half of them are students and the others are members of various professions, Sidorov said.
From page one
Sidorov said the Soviet government was short of foreign currency and would like to start a tourist exchange program on a noncurrency basis.
group member said he looked young, but actually wearing a toupee just to fool people.
He aid that the Soviet government had tried to work out an even trade of tourists that wouldn't involve currency, but added that because the cost of living in the United States generally higher, the U.S. Tourist Agency would lose money in such an exchange.
186
Senate offices hit by burglar
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The Student Senate offices in the Kansas Union were broken into sometime Saturday night or Sunday morning, the KU Police Department reported yesterday.
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Tuesday, February 24, 1976
University Daily Kansan
7
Funeral business described . . .
From page one
cremations, not done in this area, weren't any cheaper than burials.
McElwain said that after paying off all his overhead expenses, he made about $100 profit on a $1,100 funeral. Rumsey said he didn't know what his profit would be.
Caskets can cost anywhere from $75 to $100 for a doctwover wooden box to move easily. The most expensive is $1,600.
Most of his profit, he said, is based on the mark-up on the items that can be bought and 200 items.
McElwain said that most people bought coffins costing about $450, and that his overhead expenses for the funeral would run about $650 to $950.
However, McElwain said, "We don't provide any less for standardized services for those who have less than others. We also eliminate against people who can't afford it."
BOTH RUMSEY and McElwain said that they would provide funeral services for nothing if a person didn't have any money. "There's nothing else to be done," McElwain said. "They'll take care of the people who are grieving." This business to make a profit, but we are also in this business to provide a public service."
He added, however. "There are very few people who can't afford to pay anything." Often social security will pay $255 for each year of work. Administration will支付 $400, he said.
The cost of a funeral, he said, could be broken down into five areas: casket fee (amounting to 90 man hours), the services (amounting to 90 man hours), the equipment and facilities, the cost of automotive equipment and miscellaneous expenses, as musicians, cemetery workers, flowers.
MCELWAIN SAID that the Kansas price disclosure law said he must give a family an itemized statement cost of services based on these areas.
Poet reads own work
A silent audience listened attentively last night as a poet read his poems in a soft, soothing tone.
Robert Duncan, noted San Francisco group of about 17 people in the Big Eight.
The reading was sponsored by the department of English at the University of Kansas as part of its Writer-In-Residence program.
"My work is directed toward the origin of man, his beginnings and failures." Duncan said after the reading. "It's one of my enduring interests."
Duncan, born in Oakland, Calif. graduated from the University of California nearly 30 years ago. That was when he cultivated his interest in poetry, he said
Duncan has five collections of his work now in print, in addition to a book of essays. He said he was planning a new collection to be called "groundwork," a group of poems dealing with aging, which is one of his developing interests.
"These books constitute my Brownie points; what I put in 'Groundwalk' is my own interpretation."
Poets often seem to put out a new collection of poems every three years, Duncan said, which is comparable to production in the Detroit car industry.
"The books I have in print are keeping their little daddo in the cookies," he said.
Duncan read several poems about the creation of the present form of man, based on the theory that there were other forms of humanity and what had human intelligence and feelings.
He said he was glad he could get away from his reputation as a contemporary poet so he could experiment with more traditional styles.
Duncan's most recent collection of poems is titled "Bening the Bow," from which he recites:
Many of his poems are written on the inside covers of books in his library and on the walls of the building.
"I'm intrigued by what somebody will think in the future at some second-hand bottle when he finds my poems," he said. "He'll wonder what old codger drew them in."
There is a certain amount of risk involved in running a funeral home. Both funeral directors said that working on corpse was something that could be dangerous because it is difficult to keep the body clean.
Hepatitis, streptococcus, meningitis, tuberculosis and other contagious diseases have to be protected against by the use of rubber gloves and aprons, they said.
McElwain said morticians were trained in sciences such as pathology, anatomy, chemistry, plastic surgery and in various business courses. His training, he said, made it possible for him to get a job just about anywhere.
The cost of dying involves other businesses besides the mortician's such as an insurance company or a private bank.
IVIANA MIER, office manager of the Oak Hill and Maple Grove cemeteries said that the cost of burials hadn't changed since she that she has been with the city cemetery.
In 1966, a burial plot cost from $60 to $112.50 and labor costs for opening and filling the grave cost $60. Now, she said, labor has gone up to $95. On Saturdays or holidays, she said, a $50 charge is added for overtime labor.
Oak Hill Cemetery comprises about 40 acres of land and is located on East 15th, Maple Grove Cemetery is on Highway 24 north of Lawrence.
"A a Carmethy is very interesting work. You have to get to like it, you have to get to like people," she said. "I've been in this business for 30 years. I learned that you can make the best of things. Of course, you have to faith in the good Lord, I think."
SHE SAID that her work was very rewarding because she helped people in times of need and spent a lot of time adven-
turing to the business financial and emotional aspects of death.
Mier said that her husband, who died four years ago, used to run the cemetery with her. Her husband would park cars or talk to customers about arrangements, she said.
The trauma of a loved one's death, she said, can be eased by having sensitive people around.
"In a time like this they don't really
"EVERYBODY'S NOT qualified for it," she said of the cemetery business. "If you don't really like it, you're not worth a darn."
Mier said many customers appreciate her sympathetic advice and has come back to me.
realize what a funeral home does," she said of the relatives of a deceased person.
Oak Hill Cemetery isn't a profit-making business, she said. However, she added, some people are very demanding about their time and that should have to navy extra for more services.
Cemetery service involves setting up the grave site and assuring the smooth progress of any ceremonies. About 137 people were buried there last year, she said.
The cost of running a cemetery has gone up like everything else, Mier said, but costs of running the cemetery haven't increased as drastically.
"We're kind of on the tail end on everything we do." Don't ask me why be聊了, do I know?
"Appearances mean a lot," Mier said. "I grew up with a lot of respect for a owner."
"IT IS TOUCHY," she said of determining prices. "Of course there are some you have to lay it on the line. But usually I have the one they want and I ask them how they'd like to pay for it."
Harold E. Garrett, manager of the Memorial Cemetery across the street from Oak Hill, said that "people today get just what they pay for."
She said that many people bought their lots ahead of time as insurance against forcing the family to worry about business concerns.
He said that cemeteryers were more and more coming to be considered public utilities because they served the public. He said there were buried at Memorial each year, he said.
**PRICES FOR grave plots at Memorial Cemetery are $175 but cost $150 on the "premed" plan of buying graves in advance.** Plan and purchase costs are $125. On Saturdays and holidays it is $165.
"The principle of this park here," he said.
Garrett said that a memorial park didn't have all the clutter of tornbones but just a few. "It's a bit like the beach," he says.
"is that it is a place of the living and not of the dead."
Markers are now made of granite because of its durability, he said. He said that cemetery rules required graves to have either a vault or a two-piece box into which the coffin is placed. This cuts down on the amount of settling of the earth and required maintenance. The average cost of a steel vault, Rumsey说, is $275.
MAUSOLEUMS and above-ground crypts, Garrett said, are an alternative to a hammered sand, said however, that few could afford a hammered sand ranged from about $750,000 to $1 million.
The service his cemetery provides, he said, includes dirt removal from a freshly graveutzer because it bothers people. Garrett said that when people paid the cemetery on a "pre-need" plan, state law requires 15 per cent of their money be placed in a maintenance fund which could draw interest making "pre-need" less expensive.
Cemetery expenses have been increasing
about 5 per cent every year, Garrett said.
They are supposed to be a profit
cometer," he said, "but sometimes I
wonder."
PROFIT IS SOMETHING that is a part of
in being in business, Garrett said.
"Somebody has got to do this business," he said. "War isn't nice either, is it? But somebody has to sell that ammunition. But nevertheless you have them and it's somebody in business that supplies the need."
Garrett said that being around death don't make it look at it any differently than it did before he was ejected in a glass.
"The only thing is that you get used to being around death," he said.
The funeral business is based greatly on recognizing the existence of a person after death. Grave markers are, therefore, part of the business.
"I do think he grave should be marked and I do people like so," said Martín Martin, owner of Lawrence Museum Company, 810 E. 13th. "I suppose there's a certain amount of
satisfaction in making sure things are in a sequence of order."
A GRAVE marker can range in price from $4 for a baby-sized marker to $1,290.
Most people buy one costing about $123,123. said many people alsobuy on a "pre-need" basis. he said that he sold a grave marker recently to some people who wanted to remark the grave of a baby already dead 100 years.
Like all those in the funeral business interviewed, Martin said that a profit had to be made. But McElwain said that there was no benefit in the funeral industry than just business.
MeElwain said that social customs and religion greatly influenced the kind of beliefs he taught.
"We don't consider ourselves to be psychiatrists," he said. "We're funeral directors. One of the best services we provide is listening. The families might have a lot of anger and a lot of times we're a sounding board."
The business of funeral homes is also an open market, McElwain said. Although funeral homes are traditionally family-oriented, the number of directors in the next 10 years are good.
TAKING APPLICATIONS NOW
VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE is taking applications for 1976-77. We are looking for: dedicated, concerned students to fill positions such as Big Brother/Big sister coor-mentation bldg relations, agency contact, etc.
To schedule an interview or obtain further information call the VCH office between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. daily, or drop by our office at 114B Union.
This organization is funded from the student activity fee.
"I've had people say, 'Don't you get depressed and isn't it morbid?' he said. "I think you have to have a real idea of what you're going to do to the point where death is meaningless."
"Death occurs in my family too."
Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Programs
2nd Annual Speaker and Film Series
Presents:
"A DIFFERENT DRUM"—Story of a young Comanche boy torn between his families desire for him to attend college and his own natural aptitude for auto mechanics.
Pizza Hut.
"SIOUX LEGENDS"—The history and legends of Sioux ancestors. Shows scenes of daily life and magical stories.
Luncheon Specials 11:00 - 1:30
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
Pizza Hut' Salad
- thin N Crispy — any 10 - single topping $1.79
- Thick N Chewy — any 10 - single topping $2.24
- Additional Topping 10 each
Deep Dish Spaghetti . . . $ . 99
Above pasta served piping hot with Garlic Bread.
Cavatini deep dish pasta $1.29$
Cavatini Supreme deep dish pasta $1.39$
**Sandwiches**
Sandwich Supreme $11.19
Cheese Sandwich $11.19
Ham & Cheese Sandwich $11.19
Sandwiches served either hot or cold with pickle
dressing
Tues. Feb. 24, 1976
804 Iowa
Pizza Hut
1606 W. 23rd St.
7:00 p.m. Rm. 3 Bailey
KU-Y ADVOCATE SERIES PRESENTS
SENATE BILL 1
For more information call 864-4353
Are we to enter our third century under Richard Nixon's criminal code?
THE ADVOCATES:
Denis Hauptley (Attorney)
US Justice Department
Washington D.C.
Karen Blank (KU Student)
Executive Director Kansas
Civil Liberties Union
Thursday, Feb. 26
7:30 P.M.
Jayhawk Room
in the Union
Audience Will Be Invited To Participate In Discussion
Partially funded by Student Senate
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GET YOUR TICKETS SOON!
To be sure of a seat on Friday March 5 in Hoch Auditorium theatre to see this great comedy variety show.
Tickets Available at the S.U.A. Ticket Office
and at Every Bank in Lawrence
Prices: Friday, March 5-$2.00 and $3.00
Saturday, March 6—Sold Out
The 26th Annual
A BICENTENNIAL PARODY
Rock Chak Reuse is sponsored by the KU- Y and partially funded by the Student Senate.
will be
ROCK CHALK REVUE
Bicentennial Buy
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Tuesday, February 24,1976
University Daily Kansan
Trackmen bemoan Talley 'bomb'
By GARY VICE
Scarth Writer
Last Friday's meeting of the University of Kansas kick team began on a rather ominous note with head coach Jake Snyder. "We've got a lot of work to do," he said.
Timmons said, "Originally, we were going to hold a meeting Monday (yesterday) to talk about the Big Eight Championships, but something has come up that we'll have to talk about now."
As Talley informed the athletes of his decision, his voice grew shaky. Hearts were sinking at the thought of his leaving and several athletes fought to restrain their tears. Others found it easier to shed them.
It was something no KU trackman wanted to hear. In a valley, KU assistant coach, and resign his position at Chicago, he said the Citylathe The Citadel in Charleston, S.C. The resignation is effective immediately following the Big Eight Indoor Track season.
Talleday his decision was influenced by the possibility of the NCAA eliminating coaching assistants from sports other than football and basketball. He said that he wanted more job security for his family and that he considered his new position a permanent one.
"You can take a boy out of the South, but you can, too, the South out of a boy," Talled say, "it's like sola."
Talley, a graduate of Furman University in
New York, has been an enthusiastic about
returning the part of the country to which he
gave his life.
In his fourth year as KU's top assistant, Talley had an excellent rapport with his athletes. After the team shuffled out of the meeting room, a few walls were filled with memorabilia, and there were many team members, were shaking their heads sadly.
Quarter-miller Randy Benson said, "It's just like a bong being drowned on me. It bit hard."
Freshman hurdler Anthony Coleman said, "I was really shocked. Coach Talley was everything on this team," he added.
Jay Wagner, one of KU's top sprinters, said, "It's
kind of a shock. He worked with all of us so personally."
Talley said that he enjoyed working with people, and
P. SALVATORE
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Talley yelling encouragement
that he preferred "to coach a person and not just an event."
"At The Citadel," Talley said, "it's going to be a program where you develop an athlete.
"The group we have here at KU, with their talent and ability, will always be successful."
Talley, regarded as one of the nation's top sprints
and hurdles coaches, said he hoped his decision wouldn't affect any of the athletes' status at KU.
"I don't really look for any of them to withdraw," he said. "The guys deserve a program of this quality."
gives you a program of this course. High junior Bill Bailey said, "People don't realize how much losing Coach Talley will hurt this program. You look at the sprinters and they are the strength of our team."
Wagner, a junior, indicated that this might be his last year competing for KU.
"I probably won't (compete next year)." Wagner said. "Talley was just the nucleus of our group."
Coleman said, "I'm going to keep on working, but if we don't get an excellent hurdling coach, I'm going to have to leave. I need someone to work with me like coach Talley does."
Tailey said the athletic department was hopeful that a replacement could be found in time for the outdoor season.
Clyde Walker, KU athletic director, said yesterday that finding a replacement would have to follow affair rules.
If the Jayhawks can't find a replacement, sprint captain Benson said he was prepared to assume a
"We'll certainly attempt to replace him as soon as possible." Walker said, "but I fully expect it to be several weeks."
"I'm going to have to really do job outfors and to everyone it can be done." Benson said. "I got to know them well, and they helped me."
"We will be to be pushing for one another a lot more, coaching each other. We may just I save to follow later旦
One brief exchange between Talley and Coleman seemed to capture the mood of the emotion-packed
After announcing his resignation, Talley told Coleman, "I don't want to hear about the Big Eight's best hurdler any more. I will hear about the best hurder in the world."
Coleman replied, "I don't know if I can make it without you. coach."
Freshman Coleman a humble hurdle star
By GARY VICE
Sports Writer
Alternately sprinting and jogging around the track in Allen Field House is a freshman hardier who is surprised to find himself among the Big Eight conference in two events.
Anthony Coleman, a prep star last year at Lincoln High School in Dallas, Texas, said yesterday, "I never expected to be one of the best." Eight as a freshman. It's a great feeling."
Coleman is humble about his conference leading marks in the 60-yard high and low hurdles, but his teammates chide him about the abbreviation "A.C.T.S." on his practice T-shirt, saying it stands for "Anthony Coleman Track Star."
Those who have witnessed Coleman's blazing performances during indoor competition this season would find it easier to believe his teammates.
Coleman refutes that translation and says it means Active Committee of Teachers and Students, an organization he was involved with in high school.
His 7.2 mark in the high hurdles set a record for KU freshmen and meets the qualifying standard for competition in the NCAA Indoor Championships.
He has run a 6.8 in the 60-yard low hurdles and a 7.2 in the 60-yard high hurdle event. Both times are lifetime bests for Coleman, who is also coming to the University of Kansas.
"I's a real honor for me to go to NC's." he said. "I plan to run them at a 7.1 or a 7 fat in the Big Eight. That's my goal. I'm really going to get down to work."
Coleman's hurdle tutor, Tad Thalley, assistant track coach, said he believed that Coleman's inexperience was the only thing slowing him down.
Tallay said, "Anthony is a young hurder. He has not hurdled for a very long period of time. He's having some trouble with his steps to the first hurdle.
"he has a lot of potential with his height more hurdle work." He just needs a little more hurdle work.
Coleman said, "When I come out of the blocks, every time I go over the first hurdle, I hit it right here (pointing to the scab on his left knee).
"Most of the time, the first one out of the blocks. If he's an exceptional runner, wins
sports
every time. I always have to come from behind to win, or I need to lean hard."
In KU's last meet against Oklahoma State and Wichita State, Coleman didn't need to lean too hard. He came a 6.8 in the 60-yard low hurdles against an easy field of competitors and looked over his shoulder for his nearest challenger in the final yards of the race.
Coleman said the public address system at the meet bothered him. At Allen Field House, PA announcer Harvey Greer, Talley's predecessor as assistant KU track coach, introduces the hurdle events and puts the spotlight on Coleman.
In the meet, Greer said, "Keep your eye on lane four, the Big Eight's leading hurdle."
"Whenever I run," Coleman said, "I run to win, but I don't like it (the PA system); to win, I don't like it."
Coleman, it would seem, prefers to the pressure on himself. He said his ambition this season was to try out for the U.S. Olympic team, which will be competing against the world's top athletes this summer in Montreal.
"I plan to go to the Olympic Trials," he said. "I want to do my best to make the trials, whatever it takes. I'll try to do my best."
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NOTICE
The Association of University Residence Halls is holding its annual election of officers on Thursday, February 26 beginning at 6:30 p.m. at McColum Hall (cafeteria level). Officers to be elected are: President, Vice President, Assembly Chairperson, Secretary, Treasurer, and Communications Coordinator. Residence hall students interested in information regarding the election may call Harry Wigner at 864-4041 or contact their hall president.
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February 26,27 and March 1,9:30-3:30
Enroll at our table in the Union lobby or at the SUAoffice, also in the Kansas Union.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, February 24.1976
9
Films to tell migrant tale
One portion of the Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Program for the spring semester will begin with the showing of two films at 7 oncthon in Bailey Hall.
The films are "Children of the Harvest," which is about the life of migrant laborers; and "Mexican-American: Heritage and Destiny," a film about Mexican-American history and culture. Nearly 95 per cent of Kansas' migrant laborers are MexicanAmerican, and they play a large role in the state's agriculture.
Two films dealing with the plight of the American Indian will be shown March 9.
The film series will end with the showing of two films about blocks on April 20 and 27. The Man" stars James Earl Jones and the girls from "Raisin in the Sun," stars Sidney Potter.
ALL THE BAILY投影室, which start at 7.p.m. in the BAILY projection room, are free to the public.
The other part of the enrichment program will be a speaker series including four nationally known members of minority groups.
Like the film series, all speeches in the enrichment program will be open to the public.
The first speaker is Vine Deloria Jr., author of "Duster Fied for Your Sins," and one of the chief negotiators at Wounded Knee. March 30 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Enrique "Hank" Lopez, director of the National Mexican-American Media Association, will speak at 7:30 p.m. April 1 in 314 Wesco Hall. He is also editor and writer of the children's publishing literary magazine, and is a spokesman for Puerto Ricans and Mexican-Americas.
THE FINAL SPEAKER'S form will feature actress Ruby Dee and her husband, actor-playwright Ossie Davis. Dee has appeared in films and on Broadway, and has been in nearly 20 television shows. She is the author-and director of the movie "Cotton Candy," he says, he believes that humor in his writings can help bring about social change.
The couple will present "An Evening with
Anne Oakie" at 7:30 p.m. April 23 in
Hoch Audio Hall.
The Radisson-Muehlebach Hotel will be the host for the first Star Trek convention ever in Kansas City, M. on Feb. 27, 28 and 29. William Hatner, De Forest Kelley and Nichelle Nichols, stars of the television series, will attend.
Wide said he was expecting about 5,600
fans, "mostly students, college and post-
college."
Star Trekon comes to KC this weekend
"We're trying to give a relaxed, small convention, unlike the mob in New York's convention, for people who can't afford to do it." He added to the honor of the Star Trek, this week.
Star Trekon '76 is coming.
The fans will have the opportunity to view Star Trek films, science fiction movies, a panel discussion and a question and answer session with the series' stars. There will also be a costume ball and a stage production. A dealers room, in which Star Trek souvenirs and memorabilia will be sold, will be a main attraction.
The three-day event will run from noon to 1 a.m. Friday, 9 a.m. to 2 a.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $15 at the door. They are $12 in advance, available from Star Trek 76, P.O. Box 17088, Kansas City, Mo., 64132.
Prizes will be awarded throughout the event, with special awards going to winning teams.
Qualifications for volunteers are that the individual be 18 or older, mature, patient, positive and flexible in attitude. Volunteers must obtain a TB skin test and schedule about two hours for orientation training time.
Science fiction authors Sondra Marshak and Myrna Culbreath will introduce their new fan-fiction anthology, "Star Trek: The New Voyages."
McCollum Hall receives grant for new festival
The festival will include a series of activities coordinating international meals, lessons on how to prepare foreign foods, cultural displays, films and entertainment, David H. Barclay, McCollum Hall president, said yesterday.
McCollum Hall received a grant from the Pearson Trust Committee last week allocating it $3,080 for an International Festival.
He said the festival was intended to expose American students to foreign customs, as well as to give foreign students an opportunity to participate.
"We hope that there will be a lot of people participating and we will actively campaign to get the foreign students involved," Barclay said.
About 30 per cent of McColum's 650 residents are foreign, he said.
Barclay said that the films, displays and entertainment would be open to the public, but that the cooking lessons and meals were for McColum residents only.
Reiber said yesterday that about 15 persons had volunteered in the last few weeks, but that at least eight more were needed.
Barclay said that a specific day for the festival would be set aside every two weeks for about two months. He said he thought the first festival would be early in March.
Hilda Child Care Center can still use volunteers, according to Joan Reiber, director.
Hilltop center still has need for volunteers
The basic role of most staff volunteers is to assist classroom teachers. Heber said. *He also offers help with the library*.
Reibel said that volunteers usually fell into two broad groups. One group consists of the who volunteer on a regular weekly basis, for example, and the newveles for course credit in HDPE or HDFL.
able to meet federal guidelines for teacher- child rates, she said.
Volunteers are still needed to work with
toddlers and 1-year-olds or 3-year-olds from
9:30 to 11 or 11:30 on Monday or Friday
mornings. Hillspil is at 1314 Oread
as meal times, naptime or outdoor play times, she said.
Volunteers are also needed several afternoons a week to work with 3-year-olds, adults and older.
The other group conducts special acco-
nunces with the children several times
during the week.
Time commitment for volunteers is a minimum of two or three hours a week.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Acommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan and Donsai newspapers. Bring your card to color, creep or national obtain. HELP WALL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
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--one two three four five
times times times times times
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fewer
$.00 $2.5 $2.5 $7.5 $3.00
Each additional
AD DEADLINES
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Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Friday Tuesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
*Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDX business office at 984-6358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
864-4358
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Gibson EB-2. electric bass with hardcase skin,
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Murray M-63 PA. tone control, will dicker. JHIL-
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Potted, mature Irish plants while they last. 841.
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Original Antique Show & Sale February 27, 28
Antique Auction: Saturday at 10am; Saturday at 11am
Lawrence show hours: Friday and Saturday at 11am
admission (1) good all 3 days; Victoria show
admission (1) good all 3 days; Fleet Club of South
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Need to buy a gift? See the selection of unique
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1974 Honda CB200. Excellent condition, $750 up or
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Comfortable bed bod jacket $40. White base-
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2:27
Super 8 Movie camera, Minolta Autokit D-6.2,
Hasselblad X-Pro 1000 and other many accessors and features. Cheap, $349.99 for 1000mm lens.
HCL CL-300, 1947 excellent condition, 875. In-
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NOTICE NOTICE NOTICE
Free University Enrollment 9:30-3:30 Thursday, Friday,and Monday February 26.27 and March1.
Enroll at our table in the Inion Lobby or at the SUA Office. Also in the Kansas Union.
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Kansas City, Kansas 66101
Lisec Advertising
Still now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
travel assistance. Will accept paid transportation.
Provide driver, new行李, paid
transportation.
FOR RENT
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Two 2005 scholarships. All full-time undergraduate
or post-graduate students must pass the
Oxford Road. Due March 1st, further info
available.
Volunteer. Closing House to taking applications
from 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesday, March 16,
646-388 3:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. day of the
week.
(YOU MIGHT NEED A CHANGE) Memorandum
Volunteary Service has openings now for full time Christian social activists. See us in the 2-24
union today.
TROUBLED WITH LIFE! Love hope, feeling re-
al, and lonely? Real love, security and inner
peace. Free introductory pack with
name and address. Free introductory pack
Box 5067. Tokara, Minnesota
66053
66053
Transportation available to New Orleans Mardi Gras $35 per person round trip by bus Lease for return early March 1. For more information, call: Rousei 86257; Bruce Parker 412-244-292
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS. Drop in at
the front desk (no phone calls, calls) or at
WEBSTER'S LINE (no phone calls, calls)
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
free courts in Lawrence, Lawrence
Bellary, and Rutgers. Bid #242-8950.
Bid #242-8950.
2 bdm. all allu paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Park free. a/c pool. 843-493-..
Runs furnished with soiled kitchen and bedding. Also efficiency apt, for male near low. No pets.
3.0 ft 2 bdm apartment near campus; par-
ent living in efficiency apartment; unit
ties paid. 843-9579
1-4 bedroom apartments, room with kitchen private
bedrooms and access to campus. $5s and up. $6s
or $830-$1,400.
Large 2 bgt. labs, one single room with kitchen
and laundry area for young kids
pastels: 843-160) or 841-3232
2-25
SUBLEASE a single bedroom or entire apartment
Brian, Stan, 841-2799
Brian, Stan, 841-2799
Must sublease one birm, Frontier Ridge Apart-
ment on left, on lease. Free 2-48
discount. 852-918.
Female romantica $375.00 room, utile
Female romantica March 6- end of May 163 Louisville
upstairs
Want to sell man's Naults Hall contract for
$4,950. Call 813-744-3944 or 2-27-
or come by Room 1001.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Modern, 3 bedroom house, 12 baths, full basement. Located in Westfield Village. No Pets Ideal for 3-5 students (480-917-6400).
MARRIED STUDENTS ENTERING MEDICAL OR DENTAL SCHOOL this summer in KC Location near KU Med Center Located near KU KU Med Center UMKC Dental project is in federally funded low-cost housing it is less than half for similar housing. Well-presented 2-story rooms, 12th, Baths, LR, DR. Kitchen & waste disposal windows, well-made! Many students professions live here so care pool is easy. Call us at (804) 357-8966.
WANTED
FIELDS
Male Roommate, to share a really nice apt. Juniper, Courtyard. Come by 448 Grand Plains. App. 5 anytime.
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom furnished apartment. Close to campus and 247-305-6196
To rent a room one bedroom unfurnished apart-
ment (Apartment complex or
house) Jim 842-707-9615
Like kids? Grad student mom offering free room
exchanges for evening commitment to
college.
10-19
2014
WANTED Classroom volunteers for children's
time between 8-10am. You'll feel good, if you
know 8-10am. You will be needed!
Booneau wanted: Male or female, Junior.
Pierce wanted: Male or female, Junior.
usilites, 2015 and Louisiana. Ala. 841-579-8777.
Foreign Auto Parts Discounts for Do-It-Yourselfs with Student I.D.'s
Wanted—five hour houseworker and simple sweep every Friday, Call 843-1247.
2-24
Parts:
843-8080
armadillo bead co.
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10:5:30
MACRAME READS
Foreign Auto Parts
BEADS
JAMES
JAMES
Factory Trained Mechanics
of sizes & prices
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
Foreign Auto Service
Service:
842 5288
Expert Repairs by
GANG
THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Female roommate to share house or apartment next year. Must be cool. Call Larry. 814-8637
Roommate to share beautiful 4 bedroom house,
provide water, internet, laundry,
western衣具 with an open heart Call
us at (800) 253-1212
Full size backpack (Kelty, Traillie, other name brand) and sleeping bag (Kelty 643-9699). 2-27
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a publication by the State Bank, 9th & Kontocks and Mall Shopping Center.
Lotti Dark Brown Braun jacket lost in either
storm or rain. Made for 841-566 and ask for DAVE. BAG
411-566.
Found: Small male rabbit. No collar. White with brown markings. 93cm long. Body weight 85kg. Mink woven bristle skirt. Camera 645-2823 between ears.
Found: Large, brown, black, white female cm near Union, Ident at 137 Teen. # 4. 2-24
$5 for ref of glasses. Name on frame. Joe
Lucke. 84126 (8411 or 841-091)
2-27
Found: GEMMAN SHEPHERD puppy Tan with
her back. Occasionally a 5 week female.
4674 or 8438 by age 2
Found: 1 large St. Christopher medal Silver inscribed. Call 8659-6599 and identify. 2-24
Found: copy of BABHT in NW corner of O-
Zone Call terry at 842-4891. . . . .
Found-Ladies with band with band Found in Flint
8-14/78-6/78-76 cell and identify after 8, p. 541
29/78-6/78-76 cell
TYPING
Experienced typist. I.B.M., Sectalic, thesis, dissertations and term papers. Call Pam. 648-799. fshp
THRESH BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located in one of our office locations. Our service is fast and are reasonably priced. We have a large stock of copy machines.
Experienced typist-term paper, themes, mice.
Experienced proofreading, spelling, corrections.
843-6543, Mrs. Wright.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Professional typing, work maintained, reasonable.
Resume to the following addresses:
some law, pike electric, B.A. Social Science,
science, public relations.
Typist editor, IBM Picaite/cite. Quality work
with the team. Send disertations welcome.
Mail N821-9127-832
Exp. typi. IBM Selectric, term paper, thesis,
descriptive. IBM 814-3030, spelling, writing
journal. Jen. 841-3040
8. 1.S. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (sic). Prompt, efficient service. Themes, dissertations, events. Phone: 315-906-2244, evening: 2-47 Stretch.
**TYPNING** - We have many return customers who are working for us. We appreciate your business. Call Harvey to discuss.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
Volunteer Clarifying Clearing takes applications to Volunteer Clarification at 1600 West 39th Street, 844-288-3689 between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. daylight hours.
Confections wanted from college students. Call Supervisor Performance Shop, 1422 West 23rd St., Dallas, TX 75019.
RAMP DASS movies: "Evolution of a Yeah" and "Darwin," which are among the movies: "Harsham with Maharashtra"; from Dass movie will have two shows: "Friday Song of God" and "The Warrior," p.m. at The United Ministry, 1240 Broadway, 11 a.m.
Employment Opportunities
Overseas Jobs - temporary or permanent. Europe, Australia, S. America, E. Africa, etc. All must be foreign-born. Please see visiting. Fee into-wire-ware International Job Center, DEA, KA, Box 4490, Berkeley CA 94725, 2-25
KANU has an opening for part-time student announcer. Must have third class FCC license with good endurance. Experience preferred. Qualified. Coached to apply. Call 864-4530. 2-28 coached to apply. Call 864-4530.
A job opening for research assistant. Data collection skills and skills necessary for social science skills and career skills required. Social Studies until Feb. 25. Contact Iris Andriela UAP and her team, provided by a graduate student, qualified men and women of all races to take part.
HELP WANTED
A job opening for a student research assistant at the U.S. Air Force Academy, Fort Bragg, for data and analysis in research. Social science degree is required. Contact Michel Taubman, Bureau of Research, 342-816-5472. Equity opportunity. Qualified. Email: maubman@ufa.edu
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
$12,000
Addresses wanted Immediately! Work at home or in the office. Apply online at American Express, 1360 Wilton Blvd., Suite 210. (800) 754-3044.
Management Position for Business Student-Student
Manager, Part time during school year. Contact我
phone 412-567-0300.
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement in the industry, including individuals with one of the top 30 companies involved in the sector. Expand our last benefit, car plus expense, credit grant benefits and Grand Suite 940. Kansas City, MN 64112.
Mt. Trainee with Crazy Top Shop, Novelty T-Shirt, custom screening, athletic wear, Greek accessories. Part-time to start. Sales exp. help- needed. Send resume to Crazy Top Shop 1, 28-35
Sandy's Drive-In is now taking applications for its $1.99 wine-drive, which includes a $25 buy-2-eat mall-price on food. Apple's $3.99 drive-in is open Monday through Saturday.
Boyce's Club of Lawyers needs recreation super-
visor; welcomes young people through prizes, free
membership, community programs and employ-
ment opportunities.
PERSONAL
Rock concert featuring "River of Life" Tuesday
at p.m. big-ball, Pig岛, Kansas University
No charge!
Vista Restaurant, West 6th St. Open daily to
1:24 a.m. Fri.-Sat.
SERVICES OFFERED
Volunteer, Closing House is taking applications
Volunteer, Closing House is taking applications
644-389-2000 between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
p.m.
8 a.m. to 11 p.m.
Kick the smacking hit! Completely safe, expert. Serve at Marquette and compare Mark Clare, Days; 861-4121; Evenings; 841-3901; Heavyhead thanks everyone who gave us support in District N. Nunenauer. We appreciated it and I thank you so much.
MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 012, 142, 500, 508, 677. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Rates allow. B47-8643.
MATH GET YOU DOWN If so, go help early 102, 108, 102, 106, 111, 111, 113, 114, Call 841-1969.
TRAVEL
EUROBPISHAEL-AFRECAVASIA — Travel diwala
Maharashtra, India.
First Avenue, Tucker, Ga. 20048. (681) 356-7948.
ENTERTAINMENT
What if you kick the basket? Then what?
WEDNESDAY, WEDNESDAY, 2:30 p.m., 4:00 p.m.
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, 2:30 p.m., 4:00 p.m.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1366 10.5 Sat.-Saf.
RECREATION'S FINEST
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
"If we don't got it you didn't want
to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl
No one under 18 admitted.
9th & Iowa
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
5 Nights a Week No Cover
NEW MODERN DECOR
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at a restaurant, at home or on the go. An astounded designer for warm thoughts and gentle feelings.
THE
843-9404 CLUB
HIDEOUT
Sandwiches — Pizza
Pool — American Shuffleboard
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
New Members Available
Class I Private Club
Class II Private Club
— 2 DAYS —
Wave Point-owner
10
Tuesday, February 24, 1976
University Dally Kansan
FALLEY'S
Riverside Tom Turkeys
20-22 pound average
2525 IOWA
NEXT DOOR TO GIBSON'S
OPEN 7 a.m.-MIDNIGHT—7 DAYS
PRICES GOOD TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY
FEBRUARY 24-FEBRUARY 28
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
Swifts Premium
THE BANDY WITH THE SWEET SACRE TALK
BOUNDS
CRFT'S
BRAND
49c
Bacon
89c
Rodeo Brand
All Meat Bologna...lb. 89c
Ohso Brand—5 Varieties
Luncheon Meats...12 oz. 79c
Armour Star Speedy Cut
Boneless Hams...lb. $1 89
Carl Budding—6 Varieties
Sliced Smoked Meats 3 oz. 39c
Van De Kamp
Fish Fillets...12 oz. 99c
Falley's Fresh
Whole Fryers...lb. 49c
Falley's Fluff Pack
Ground Beef...3 to 5 lb. avg. lb. 69c
79c
$189
99c
39c
FALLEY'S
Dial
BATH SOAP
bath size 4 Bars $1 regular 37c
Limit 4 with coupon good thru Feb. 28 5 oz.
COUPON
49c
FALLEY'S
69c
FALLEY'S
Blue Bonnet
WHIPPED MARGARINE
16 oz. 59¢ regular
79c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 28
COUPON
FALLEY'S
A-1 SAUCE
79c regular
10 oz.
$1.03
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 28
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Heinz Genuine
DILL PICKLES
48 o. $89c regular $1.29
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru Feb. 28
COUPON
Pepsi-Cola
9 oz. 59c
16 oz. 99c plus
8 pack deposit
6½ oz. 49c
99c
Always Good
Canned
Pop
7 12 oz. $100
cans
49c
7 12 oz. $100 cans
Texsun Pink
Grapefruit Juice ...46 oz. 49°
Old El Paso
Refried Beans ...15 oz. 3 $1
Seven Seas—Regular 63c
Green Goddess Dressing ...8 oz. 49°
Seven Seas—Regular $1.19
Creamy Italian Dressings ...16 oz. 99°
Donuts
Frozen Patio
Mexican Dinners
DOZEN 99c
49c
Instant—Regular $3.25
Folgers Coffee...10 oz. $2^49
Van Camp's
Pork and Beans...16 oz. 3 for $1
Whole or Cream
Stokely Golden Corn...16 oz. 3 for $1
Wagner's
Orange Drink...32 oz. 3 for $1
Hunts
Apricots...29 oz. 59¢
Yellow Cling
Hunts Peaches...29 oz. 49¢
Food King
Mixed Fruit...29 oz. 59¢
Shurfine—Whole or Strained
Cranberry Sauce...16 oz. 3 for $1
Miracle Whip
Bath Room Tissue
Shortening
Glad
Food Storage Bags ... 25 count $39^{c}$
Hefty
Trash Bags... 15 count $1^{49}$
Hefty
Tall Kitchen Garbage Bags 15 ct. $99^{c}$
Brooks
Chili—Hot Beans... 15 oz. 3 for $1
Food King
Cut Green Beans... 15 oz. 5 for $1
Swanson
Chicken Spread... 5 oz. 4 for $1
42 oz. $ 9 9^{\mathrm{c}} $
4 for $1
49c
99c
Pillsbury Layer
39c
Cake Mix
$ 749
5 for $1
3 for $1
Chef Boy-Ar-Dee
Spaghetti & Meat Balls 15 oz. 2 for 89¢
Chef Boy-Ar-Dee
Beefaroni... 15 oz. 2 for 89¢
Chef Boy-ar-dee
Beef-o-Ghetti... 15 oz. 2 for 89¢
Franco-American
Spaghetti... 15 oz. 4 for $1
Swift's Premium
Chili with Beans... 15 oz. 2 for 89¢
Contadina
Tomato Sauce... 8 oz. 7 for $1
Coffee
5 6 oz. cans $100
Orange Juice
TNT Brand
Popcorn...32 oz. pkg. 39¢
Failey's Own Sliced
White Bread...16 oz. 4 for $1
Southern Grown
Sweet Potatoes...4 pounds $1⁰⁰
Michigan
Jonathan Apples...3 pound bag 69¢
Fresh—Tender
Asparagus...1b. 98¢
Crisp—Red
Radishes
Large Slicing
Cucumbers
Bell Green
Peppers 4 for $1
3 18 oz. $1
cans
Whole Sun Frozen
Heartland
Natural
Cereal
16 oz. 79c
Musselman's
Applesauce
4 16 oz. cans $1
Thank You
Ready-to-Eat
Puddings
3 18 oz. cans $1
Gala Jumbo
Towels
49c
Crisp Solid Head
Lettuce
4 for $100
California-Navol
Sunkist
Oranges
20 for $100
49c
4 for $100
20 $100 for
Students enjoy elbow room, privacy of apartments
By LIZ LEECH
Staff Writer
Staff Write
(Editor's note: This is the third in a five-part series examining where students live and why at the school.)
The main reason University of Kansas students live in apartments is space: there's more of it, 10
"Unlike residence halls, you don't feel like you're
working in a closet in downtown. We've apen
sofa in closets on walls at Halls."
About 9.145 KU students live in apartments. That figure represents 42 per cent of all students.
Some other reasons students live in apartments are privacy, location, less noise and the freedom to move.
But some students said there were disadvantages. Not all apartment complexes are conveniently located or quiet. Some students say they feel isolated living in an apartment.
Ash, who lived in a KU residence last year, said that the only thing he missed was meeting a lot
"But I still have my old friends from the dorm," she said.
ASH LIVES WITH THREE other women at West Hills, where they share a kitchen, living room, two bedrooms and three baths.
"We're just two blocks from campus and it's a quick five-minute walk," she said.
The women split the $185 rent four ways and each paid a $2 security deposit when they moved in.
Ash said that the rent didn't include utilities and that she wasn't sure how much monthly utilities cost.
The food bill is usually $20 a month for each woman, Ash said, and they share cooking responsiblity.
"We try to save money by picking on the sales, to be might we might be spending a little more than the dormitory."
BRADLEY CLARK, Overland Park junior, said he and his roommate split the $250 a month rent in their apartment at Jayhawk Towers. He said he used to live in a fraternity.
"It's a little less noisey here, and there's a whole lot more room." Clark said.
He said that Jayhawk Towers' two-bedroom
heater cost $40, but he and his roommate paid
$16 for extra bedding.
Clark said that he did most of the cooking, but the two usually ate only dinner at the apartment
Ellen Maxwell, Overland Park freshman, lives in Naismith Hall, a privately-owned residence hall. She said her parents didn't want her to live in an apartment.
She looked at the university dorms, and the rooms weren't bier enough. she said.
She said that she paid $755 a semester to live in Naisimh, where four persons shared one suit. The cost was about $1200 per month.
"IT SEEMS THAT IN university dorms people have their doors open all the time and everyone is watching."
She said she liked the privacy at Naismith, but sometimes, particularly on weekends, it became
Kathy O'Brien, Eldorada junior, said that she enjoyed the privacy of an apartment. She shares a two-bedroom, furnished apartment with two other women at Frontier Ridge Apartments.
"And even with just two roommates, you can still have enough space to add another room and shut the door," O'Brien said.
water usually cost $7 and electricity cost $17 to $35.
All costs are divided among the women, she said.
She said that the apartment wasn't close to campus and that she drove to classes.
SHE SAID THE APARTMENT cost $165 a month.
"We're on the top floor here and we can sometimes hear the stereo in the apartment downstairs, but there are mostly students out here that need to bed prely early during the week." O'Brien said.
O'Brien's sister, Amy, a sophomore, lives with her. Amy said the main reason she had wanted to marry her was that she could be
She said that she and her roommates took toum
preparing meals and that their total food bill was
$12,395.
Amy said she lived in a residence hall last year and couldn't study in her room there because it was
"In the dorm you'd come home from class and you had a bed and a desk," she said. "At least here you can sleep."
SHE SAID SHE HAD made a lot of friends at the residence hall the year before.
"But if you start out in an apartment you're in
trouble because we're out here in the middle of nowhere," she said.
Mark Willoughby, Overland Park sophomore,
lives in a duplex on Brush Creek Drive.
Willyloughy said he had lived in two apartment complexes before the duplex and then the duplex after that.
WILLOUGHY SPLITS HIS rent with three other roommates. Rent is $25 a month for the unfurnished duplex, which has two bedrooms, two kitchen and living room, a dining room, a kitchen and a garage.
Willeighy said each of the four men paid $20 for a month's utilities and #4$ for each food.
"We share the cooking and its edible," he said,
"and it's probably better than dorm food."
She said that she had lived in a KU residence hall for one year and a sorority for three years before her death.
CITY OF NEW YORK
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
City Manager Buford Watson in his downtown office
See HOUSING page 9
Watson says charges against city not new
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
Staff Writer
City Hall is still standing
from its offices, Buford Watson, city
man, supervises directives to city work
crews. Lawrence streets are repaired,
walkways, sidewalks and trash is
collected from city roadways.
On Jan. 27, three members of a committee that investigated charges of mismanagement demanded a thorough house cleaning.
But times haven't been easy for City Hall. In recent months, the activities of Watson and other city administrators have been probed, debated, criticized and rebuked, in response to requests of city employees. Charges of "businessmanagement" have become common.
The members—Murree Pamir, Amy Samuels, president of the city firefighters association, and Dennis Smith, president of the city sanitation workers association—have recommended changes for nearly every city office.
AMONG THEM IS Watson's office.
The three have said Watson is guilty of, among other things, harassing and misleading city employees.
The mismanagement report isn't the first
Yet, Watson doesn't think the report has permanently harmed city administration, because it also has significant improvements, such as safety programs, insurance plans and better roads.
"A lot of the charges and allegations are old," he said last week. "Some of the people who talked to the committee are disgruntled former employees. I hope the public makes note of the fact that most of the charges were never proven."
Whether in his quiet office on the fourth floor of the First National Bank building or amidst volatile debate in public discussions, he studied sessions, Watson says he isn't guilty.
A card on his desk, a mammoth piece of furniture that is usually covered with papers and packets, says: "It's difficult to win a battle when your opponent is not handcapped by knowledge of the facts." It's a suiting motto.
The well-publicized charges, which reached virtually every tentacle of city law, bother him rather than run him. He apparently thinks in the victim of angry city employees, who retaliated because the commission refused Nov. 4 to acknowledge employee associations for assaulting a cop.
"WHEN PEPSI-COLA has a strike, their employees say 'Don't buy Pepsi,'" he said. "They don't say Pepsi is poison or made of dead rats."
see WATSON page z
818.
Lawrence, the fifth largest city in Kansas has 42,983 residents. It has 177 miles of streets, 11,900 acres of land and $92 million in assessed valuation.
WHEATHER WATSON IS GULLETY of mismanagement is something that wasn't
Class II is known since coming to Lawrence in Spring 1970. Watson, who had been city manager in Henryetta, Okla.; Muskogee; Oakland; and Sioux City, Iowa, before coming to Lawrence, met several problems during his days at the helm of a university town.
“It’s the only town where I've seen the student union burn, two people killed in the streets and a computer center bombed,” he said.
THE TURBULENCE of the University of Karasas student body was only half the problem, Watson said. Equally important was the prejudice and inability to communicate with students that existed in the police department.
It has 394 city employees.
In 1971, Watson secured a $25,000 federal grant to send all police officers to the Meinnerg Foundation in Topeka for training and counseling. Only two officers didn't attend.
Watson said he had been "very involved" with the Chamber of Commerce efforts to bring new industries to Lawrence, something a city manager wouldn't have done 18 years ago when he first entered public administration.
In Fall 1975, the United Public Employee Associations of Lawrence accused the city of misallocation a one-half per cent sales tax, which a city referendum endorsed in 1971. Watson, as the mainstay of the city government, said. The money has since been accounted for.
Not egistically, Watson says he has been instrumental in constructing Babcock Place and Edgewood Homes, projects for elderly and low-income people, and in balancing city budget and lowering the tax burden. It was 38.92 mills in 1970 and is 34.89 in 1976.
DURING THE DISCUSSIONS of the mismanagement report, Mayor Barkley and his staff acquainted federal funds and his opportune acquaintances with federal officials. Clark also praised him for his successful presidency of the Kansas Association of City Managers.
City streets have also been improved during the past six years, Watson said.
Two years later, Watson began emphasizing the need to keep young men and women in the police department to assure them of their safety with the times." The trend has continued.
Wednesday, February 25, 1976
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.94
Commission okays 28-point plan n response to employ complaints
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
Staff Writer
The Lawrence City Commission last night unanimously approved a 28-point resolution in response to grievances and suggestions made in recent months by city employees.
Essentially, the resolution restates commission intentions to continue recently implemented programs and plans for public safety inspections, revamped grievance procedures and provisions to allow employees charged with violations of Buford Watson's discretion of Buford Watson, city manager.
Programs to be added by the resolution include free mental health services, explanations of insurance billing, distribution of copies of 1975 sales tax allocations and revision of employee evaluations and work manuals.
The resolution, which was prepared by city personnel last week, originally had 27 deputies.
The commission unanimously approved an amendment that Watson constantly monitor progress made by city employees; Donald Purdy, sanitation superintendent, and Arnold Wiley, street superintendent, that they build better working relations.
THE AMENDMENT was made jointly by commissioners Donald Binsn and Fred
The resolution marked the disbanding of a six-man committee, which investigated charges of city mismansion, and the end of commission review of employee complaints, which must be reviewed in the city's grievance procedure.
Five study sessions, during which the commission informally discussed the findings and recommendations in two reports. The committee then preceded the final commission decisions.
Passage of the resolution went swiftly, and no one in the audience, which filled the entire meeting room, disagreed with the plan.
MAYOR BARKLE CLARE said he was pleased with the work of the committee and response by management to the many months of investigations and study sessions.
"It was painful to some extent," he said,
"but I think Lawrence is a better city boy."
Bimbs echoed Clark, saying the "time has come for all of us to lick our wounds, forget our personality conflicts and get together as a team."
Tentative plans for a $7 million water treatment facility were also brought before the commission. Watson said the commission would be wise to authorize the facility in the event that federal funds would be made available for such a project.
SPEAKING IN THE closing minutes of the meeting, Watson suggested that the commission think about the plan and that it will be put forward to the committee planning at its meeting next Tuesday.
The engineering project, Watson said, will cost $36,000. He said an engineering company had done a preliminary study of Lawrence water needs in 1969, which cost $25 million to implement the city for the $13,000 study, he said, if it's selected to draw the final plans.
In other action, the commission awarded a $646,374 contract to Twin Cities Construction Co. for the building of the city maintenance garage at 11th and Haskell. The garage, which has been debated for years, is expected to be completed in the fall.
The facility will be built on Dragstrip Road north of 23rd, Watson said, and will treat water from Clinton Reservoir, expected to be completed by 1980.
Watson made construction cost estimates, which were made several years ago, have been altered because of building material price increases and alterations to the original site plan. He asked the commission to approve the reallocation of $80,215 in
revenue sharing funds and $23,115 in interest payments for the project.
THE REVENUE SHARING funds, Watson said, could be diverted from remodeling of city offices to the garage project and replaced by part of $225,000 that the city expects to receive in revenue sharing funds after July 1.
The commission approved the suggestion, although Pence, who has opposed the proposal, said it was too early.
"That garage has cost more than it should have, and it should never be built," he said.
The commission also set March 8 as the bid date for sidewalk construction on the west side of Iowa from 15th to 23rd on University of Kansas property.
George Williams, director of public works, said he the project would be paid for by KYDOT and he would have to although the city was acting as a contracting agent for the project. He said he
See MEETING page 2
N.H. primary close for Ford and Reagan
CONCORD, N. H. (AP)—President Gerald R. Ford and Ronald Reagan ran neck-in-neck early today in the New Hampshire presidential primary election.
Former Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter led the democratic field with 31 per cent of voters.
Carter's closest challenger was Arizona Rep. Morris K. Udall, who claimed in his second-place showing to have emerged as the top liberal contender for the nomination. He trailed Carter by about seven percentage points.
Ford had a narrow edge in the slow count of the Republican race.
The President said he had expected to win.
Reagan claimed he already had won by holding the President's virtual standoff against Clinton.
It was a 50-50 race with 80 per cent of the expected vote counted.
The figures: Ford 47,910, Reagan 47,512. The presidential preference vote in the New Hampshire spotlight was advisory only. National convention delegates were
Ford's strategists were counting on ballots from Keene, a southwestern city where he campaigned personally and where GOP moderate are plentiful, to boost his tally. But that would be the last major New Hampshire city to get its ballots tallied.
being elected separately, and in that category candidates pledged to Ford were leading 18 to 3. Delegates pledged to Carter were leading 64 to 3. Democratic convention seats, to Udall for 4.
Ford's New Hampshire campaign manager, Rep. James Cleveland, had a word for the Reagan victory claim: "I say it's howwash."
Cleveland said a victory is a victory.
Earlier, with 33 per cent of the estimated turnout tallied, the Democratic lineup was:
0-228 2-295 3-414
Carter 9,975 or 31 per cent.
-Udall 7,410 or 23 per cent.
—Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana 5,564 or 17 per cent.
- Former Sen. Fred R. Harris of Oklahoma 3.496 or 11 per cent.
—Sargent Shriver, 3.031 or 10 per cent.
Computer dating comes to KU Fun of it stressed Legitimacy doubted
By PAUL SHERBO
Staff Writer
The ads picture such diverse subjects as wild boars and a men's rugby team in the buff. The applications feature questions on radical preference and not smoking.
It isn't publicity for a serious attempt to reconcile the lonely hearts of the University of Kansas. It is for laughs, says Steve Danzig, head of the computer date match service employed by the Board of Class Officers (BOCO).
The service has been used with Dangi's off-bat approach at 13 universities across the country.
"THE ONLY REASON I do on college campus is that I couldn't deal with this in real life."
Applications distributed around the campus have a series of questions from which punch cards will be made. Danzig said. The cards are run through the computer and the results are sent to Indiana in Birmingham. The results be sent to the applicants in about three weeks.
The applications have questions about the religious, racial, and physical preferences of the applicant. The applicant must also be a full page of self-descriptive statements.
KU students, staff and faculty will be matched only with each other. Daniag, said it
"If you only want to be with people who
it smoke ablaze you will only be matched
with those who don't."
The idea of the service isn't to seriously match people with marriage prospects, Danzig said. People wouldn't want to participate in an event where Danzig had used the service himself.
"THE FIRST YEAR, I signed up under
three different names, purely for research
(1973-1982)."
See BOCO page 5
A free dance for all applicants will be held at 28, Rich Coulson, BBOO chairman and Frye.
BOCO decided to use the computer dating idea to get out of a $2,000 debt, incurred when BOCO-sponsored concerts lost money Coulson said.
BOCO won't lose money but Danzig may,
be said. However, Danzig expects a succe-
sure.
Coulson said the contract required that Danzig take one dollar from each applicant's fee for the first 700 applications and $1.35 for the next 1,000. The percentage paid to Danzig increases with volume, he said.
DANZIG SAID his idea had been received much better than he had expected when he started at the University of Indiana. About a year ago, he applied there two years ago, he said.
"I would be highly suspect if something like this started up again," he said.
"I did talk to a source of the University of
The Shawne County district attorney's office express cautious doubt Monday about the computer dating service employed by the University of Kansas board of class officers (BOCO). Other sources said the operation was leitimate.
THE INDIANA BETTER Business Bureau said that the computer dating service hired by BOCO and operated out of Bloomington, Indiana, has been incorrectly confused with an illegal operation that worked out of Indianapolis.
Computer Date Match, the Missouri company that O'Sullivan sued, had charged $600 for their services. The BOCO operation charges $2.75 to $3.50.
Steve Clark, alumn adviser to BOCO,
he said he thought the Bloomington operation
Joseph O'Sullivan, attorney for the consumer affairs division, said he had a different computer dating service last year for deceptive and fraudulent sales practice. The present BOCO operation apparently detected, he said, but he still had reservations.
Before losing the suit and ending business, the Missouri firm had given matches who lived as far as 50 miles away to invalids. O'Sullivan said.
Indiana that I felt was a reputable source," he said. "Talking with the people in Indiana, there was no problem with the program not being legit."
Steve Danzig, who runs the BOCO-hoired operation, said he had been confused with a police officer.
THE BOCO PROJECT isn't to be taken as
"Those high-priced operations really prey on the problems of lonely people," he said.
"People want to do this for a laugh," he said.
Rich Coulson, BOCO chairman, said any applicant who didn't receive at least three offers was out of luck.
O'Sullivan said he thought protective measures were available to BOCO.
"This isn't fraudulent in any way," he said.
"If I were working with that guy, I think he had him press a performance bond," he said. "It sounds like a lark to me. I sure as hell wouldn't want anything to happen." "Did he didn't
"You've got to wonder how much $3.50 would hurt anyone," he said.
O'Sullivan recommended that students more conventional means to get dates.
O'Sullivan recommended that students use more conventional means to get dates.
"You don't need a damn computer to do it," he said.
1
2
Wednesday, February 25, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
Pot penalty cut approved
TOPEKA - The Senate Judiciary Committee approved and sent to the Senate a bill reducing the penalties for possession of less than two ounces of marijuana.
The bill would provide that possession of two ounces or less of the drug was punishable by a sentence of 30 days and a fine. Present law allows for a one-year ban.
Food stamp cut proposed
The penalty for possession of more than two ounces of marijuana would remain the same under the bill, which originally was intended to stiffen the second-offence charge.
WASHINGTON - A food stamp plan designed to save $300 million a year was unveiled on Monday by the U.S. Committee. Critics said it would tap food stamps away from three million to four million.
The committee plan, approved 10 to 4, would limit the earnings of food stamp recipients. It would end itemized deductions from income to determine eligibility, and would limit the number of people eligible for the program.
Under the present program, administered by the Agriculture Department, food stamps go to 18.7 million persons. The program costs taxpayers $5.8 billion a year.
Grass fires threaten town
EMPIORA - Prairie fires flared up yesterday in the grasslands of the Kanas
finnish hills of Emporia, and in later afternoon the town of Gridley, population
thriving.
One farmhouse north of Gridley, about 35 miles southeast of Emporia, was reported destroyed by the fire.
Perry Johnson, a volunteer fireman at Gridley, said the prairie fire near there was still burning out of control.
was still burning out of control.
National Guardmen moved into the area to help firemen and residents fight the blaze.
"I've been fighting it all day and my eyes are so full of smoke I cann't even see," Johnson said.
"We've tried at every crossroads to hold it back," he said, "but it just jumps the road like there's nothing there. We've tried backfires and everything but we just run." He continued, "It's a long road, it's a long journey."
Schorr investigation begins
WASHINGTON—The House ethics committee met in closed session for two hours yesterday as it began investigating CBS newsman Daniel Schorr's admitted scheme.
After the meeting, Chairman John J Flynt, Jr., D-GA., of the house committee on standards of official conduct, said his panel reached no resolution in the case.
On Monday, Schorf said he believed the central question in any legal battle he may face is the public's right to know.
A CBS correspondent for 23 years, he has maintained that he "could not be responsible for suppressing the report."
Hearst psychiatrist testifies
SAN FRANCISCO- A defense psychiatrist told jurors yesterday that Patricia Heast, fearing for survival in captivity, adopted "alternate personalities," in an effort to help her cope.
Dr. L. J. West said that when he first met the newspaper herress after her arrest last September she was "a person without an identity."
West, director of the UCLA Neuropsychiatric Institute and an expert in the study of prisoner-of-war torture, frequently compared Miss Heart to the survivor of a terrorist attack.
Even now, he said, she suffers from "survivors' syndrome," fearing she will be killed.
"Patricia Hearst, improved as she is, still trembles at mention of the SA," said the doctor, who first examined her 10 days after her arrest and again nine days ago. "... Her last words to me when I last examined her were: 'My biggest worry right now is staying alive.'"
PEKING (AP)—Former President Richard M. Nixon gave a smiling Chinese throng a taste of American-style campaigning yesterday as he shook hands, tweaked babies and invited all to visit him in the United States.
Nixon's trip to China, however, wasn't all pleasure, Rabbi Baruch, a Nixon friend or an adviser in the war.
Baruch said that the purpose of the trip was for Nixon to met Hua and gain an insight into the current political ferment in China. He said Nixon had gone to China reluctantly "at the encouragement of the State Department."
The crowd, which gathered at the Gate of Heavenly Peace, appeared unhearsed as it pushed close to Nixon offering hands in welcome.
"bring you wishies from America. I hope some day you'll come see us," a vigorous-looking Nixon told his welcomers. Many of the Chinese wished him good health.
The encounter on the broad Tien An Men Square outside the Forbidden City was unusual. Foreigners visiting Peking sediment meet ordinary citizens in spontaneous group
This morning Nixon is scheduled for
Rabbi says China trip business
another excursion on the public- to visit Tsinghua University and have a look at wall posters reflecting the current ideological struggle between radicals and conservatives in the Chinese Communist party.
We also carry the top lines in tennis wear, warmups, and accessories for men & women. We are happy to serve for all your tennis needs.
Nixon met with Acting Premier Hua Kufeng yesterday afternoon for their third round of talks since he arrived in Peking last Saturday. There was no immediate response. The Nixonides or the Chinese Hainuina news agency on what topics were discussed.
Phone 842-8845
Open 11-6 p.m.
VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE in taking applications for 1976-77 position with Big Brother, we are looking for dedicated, concerned students to fill positions such as Big Brother/Big sister co-operative relations, agency contact, etc.
But, for the time being, Watson, who Clark says has been scrutinized more closely than any city manager in the history of the state, is ready to get on with the task. "I am going to do good things happen here that shouldn't be ignored by alleged mismanagement, he says."
3
TENNIS BUFFS
See The Professionals at First Serve fr
From page one
TACO TICO
Special
BURRITOS
Watson . . .
clear in the public debates. Perhaps it never will be.
At Watson's suggestion, the commission also created an assistant chief of police position and changed the rank of a police officer in charge of technical services, to captain.
ALSO, THE COMMISSION approved preliminary plans for the remodeling of The Pladium, a bowling alley at Sixth and Mississippi, into a discotheque.
However, it rejected a request made by a representative of the Downtown Merchants Commission to erect $1,500 worth bicentennial markers on Massachusetts. The commission did not unanimously agree to erect them, withdrawn before a formal vote was taken.
Sale Price
TAKING APPLICATIONS NOW
From page one
wouldn't release cost estimates until after
it's built. The sidewalks will be
built this summer.
The controls, Clark has said, will permit teachers to issue statements in municipal rather than district courts.
first serve
TENNIS-SKI SHOPPE
To schedule an interview or obtain further information call the VCH office at 864-3848 between a m.a. and b.m. or by drop on our office at 141B Union.
Coors on Tap Glass $25^{c}$ Pitchers '1.25
Expires 3-7-76
first
49c
Reg. 59c
Restringing
Repairing
Regriping
Restoring
This organization is funded from the student activity fee.
T A C O
T I C O
On first reading, the commission approved the installation of stop signs and the establishment of 20-mile-an-hour speed limits on all highways, mission, which tentatively approved the traffic controls last week, is expected to end its discussion with the final reading next
2340 Iowa T A C O
841-4218 T I C O
serve
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1st Anniversary SALE
10% off on all beads
20% off on ready-made jewelry
Enroll at our table in the Union lobby or at the SUAoffice, also in the Kansas Union.
MEXICAN CHEF
and clasp for $2.50
In the Hillcrest Shopping Center
---
15 in. of liquid silver
FREE UNIVERSITY ENROLLMENT
one at 7 p.m. and one at 10 p.m.
WEDNESDAY, FEBUARY 25
February 26, 27 and March1,9:30-3:30
FreeUniversity
You'll have 2 chances to see the
Gary Burton Quintet
at
737 New Hampshire
Lawrence, Kansas
841-0817
Off the Wall Hall
Now, how often can you see one of the country's top Jazz Vibraphonists, with 19 albums to his credit, in an intimate setting, for only $4, in Lawrence,Ks?!
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11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
841-3454
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Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358.
The 26th Annual
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A BICENTENNIAL PARODY
To be sure of a seat on Friday March 5 in Hoch Auditorium
theatre to see this great comedy variety show.
GET YOUR TICKETS SOON!
Tickets Available at the S.U.A. Ticket Office and at Every Bank in Lawrence
Prices: Friday, March 5—$2.00 and $3.00
Saturday, March 6—Sold Out
Rock Chai Revue is sponsored by the KU- Y and partially funded by the Student Senate.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, February 25. 1976
3
Senate power transfer completed
By MARTI SCHILLER
Staff Writer
Student government power at the University of Kansas was transferred last night when last term's senators met with the senators elected last week.
The last act of the old Student Senate was to elect three past postmen to holdover seats, and the first act of the new Senate was to elect senators for the Committee on Committees.
The Senators also were addressed by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, Ed Rolfs, outgoing student body president, and Tedde Tassheff, the new student body president.
David Shapiro, Lawrence junior, was elected to one of the holdover seats. Shapiro lost to Tasheff in a bid for student body president.
ADRIENNE HYLE, Manhattan graduate student, and Bruce Woner, Hutchinson senior, also were elected to holdover seats. Hyle is the co-chairman of ExSex and was a
member of StudEu. Woner was chairman of StudEu and chairman of the Elections Committee.
Five senators were elected to the Committee on Committees, which also includes the Chair of the Senate president. The committee is responsible for interviewing students interested in serving on one of the seven standing Senate committees. The committee may apply for a committee position.
Juli Anderson, Kirkwood, Mo., junior; Steve McMurray, Norton senior; Marryluce Reece, Scandia junior; Jim Williams, Salina and Woner were elected to the committee.
The committee is now accepting applications.
DYKES SAID STUDENT government during the past year had shown real progress and thanked the old Senate for the work they had done.
Dykes said there had been some
discussion in the Kansas Legislature about giving faculty less than a $ per cent salary increase, but that he was continuing to push for the full 10 per cent KU has requested. Legislators taking a bloomly look at Kansas' future, because of the continued dry weather and the depressed economy, are part of the problem. he said.
ROLFS TALKED ABOUT the successes and failures of the old Senate. The Senate's Commission on the Quality of Classroom Education has set priorities at the University, he said.
He also said the satellite student union would be a good place to put the jump circle, which was taken from the center court of Allen Field House.
"A year and a half ago, non-trained assistant professors would tell you that to excel and get promoted, you needed to publish a book or write an article—not be an excellent teacher. Now those same instructors just aren't sure what to expect,
ROLFS SAID THE athletic department was a source of frustration to last year's results.
and that's a step in the right direction," he said.
Tasheff said she would be assigning the standing committees their goals next week and announced an orientation meeting for new senators Sunday at the Kansas Union.
"The total lack of sensitivity to students by the athletic director and his staff over the past three years resulted in understandings, commitments and working relationships being lost or ignored," he said.
Rolfs also said too many state funds were being channeled into improving athletic facilities rather than into improving classroom facilities.
Certain qualities need to be developed by new sensors to have an efficient, smooth, reliable operation.
Enthusiasm, willingness to do their best,
the ability to compromise and to respect
other's opinions, and a sense of humor are
necessary, she said.
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KU projects to help handicapped
Granada
TREATMENT - Ngong Kwai 2 DLUF
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
Construction projects to benefit the handicapped and are supported by the University of Kansas in construction.
Bids will be accepted later this year for construction of elevators designed to make Bailey, Flint and Snow halls more accessible to the physically handicapped, member of the Committee for the Architectural Handicapped, said yesterday.
Williams said funds for the elevators and other campus improvements to help the handcapped would come from a Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) grant the University of Kansas received this summer.
The grant and matching state funds total $300,000. Williams said.
KEITH LAWTON, director of facilities planning, said the elevators and associated projects would be funded on a priority basis after receipt of the bids.
He said the elevators in Bailey and Flint, which would be entirely new, would receive first priority, followed by the various other campus changes.
These will include the renovation of restrooms in Bailey and Snow and the addition of more curb cuts on campus to allow students to cross streets more easily, he said.
The Snow elevator project, in which an existing elevator in the hall will be thoroughly renovated, has third priority, Lawton said. If bids for the other projects must be submitted and deplete the grant funds, he said, that project may be put off to a later date.
Williams said the new elevators would cost approximately $100,000 each at rates, and he in the Show, where an elevator shaft could be used, would cost slightly less.
TOPEKA ARCHITECT Bill Hale is designing the elevators, Williams said, and the plans should be complete sometime near the middle of the year.
Bids will then be accepted for the project, and construction should start this summer.
Williams said the elevator additions were part of a four-year plan to make the campus accessible to handicapped persons. The architect, Donna Brown, for the Architectural Handicapped in 1974.
Many of the projects the committee recommended were completed in 1975, he
said, including remodeling restrooms in seven University halls, installing ground level entrances in Hoch and Murphy Hills, adding curb cuts and publishing a campus map showing the location of building entrances for the handicapped.
THE COLOR-CODED campus map, which is now the official one, was one of the most important projects of the committee, Williams said.
The 1975 work was done for $8,000, he said. The elevators, which couldn't be added because of limited funds, are important to continuing the committee's efforts, Williams said, because other projects are useless without them.
There is no point in renovating the interior of more buildings to benefit the handicapped, he said, if those buildings are inaccessible.
"I VEH LETTERS within the last year from two people who wanted to study education," he said. "Good grief, you had to learn that you can't be because, because you can't get in the building."
Williams said the new elevators would eliminate "significant obstacles" now keeping handicapped people from unimaginating a complete educational program at KU.
Emproria Kansas State College has more applications for admission from handicapped people than it can handle, simply because the university allows the campus accessible. Williams said.
"The lack of access, which has been a tradition in the past, has kept people from engaging with the environment."
KU also provides employment opportunities, Williams said, and the improvements benefit prospective employees as well as students.
The University of Alabama recently called him at part of that school's efforts to
place handicapped graduates in places where they could get around. Williams said.
---
For example, be said, Hoch Auditorium once had a step at its exit, which was dangerous to everyone as well as an obstacle for the handicapped. The step has been replaced with a sidewalk, which Williams made the building easier to reach for everyone.
FOLLOWING THE addition of the elevators, Williams said, the committee hoped to improve access to the printing service in West Campus, renovate the buildings still inaccessible and make curb cuts near mid-campus parking lots.
WILLIAMS SAID the efforts to make the KU campus accessible had proven to be unobtrusive and even beneficial for the general campus population.
Persons confined to wheelchairs can't use the bus system at present, he said, because of the lack of public transport.
IT'S ABOUT
TIME
call
841-7100
He said the University of Illinois had been using buses equipped with chair lifts since 1952. The University of Illinois now has 17 such buses in use.
"They're no different from our buses," Watts said. "They're no newer, they're not."
IN SPITE OF THE CHANGE the committee is supporting, Williams said he was pleased with the progress which had been made since the committee's organization in
"In general, we've had extremely good cooperation," he said. "It's been a pretty good year."
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OPEN EVERYDAY 7a.m. to 12p.m.
ATTENTION All Student Health insurance Policy Holders
at the
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee
There will be an open hearing concerning the prescription drug benefits of your Student Health Insurance, and an opportunity to ask questions about other specifications of the health insurance contract.
Council Room in the Student Union
Thursday, February 26 7:30 p.m.
What type of people sign up for a BOCO Computer Date?
THE TROOPERS
Photo by Sue Mead
Naismith 8 Doesn't Gamble With Choosing Dates they use
Jumping
BOCO Computer
Date Match
Deadline, Friday, Feb. 27
1
Wednesday, February 25, 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Oninions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
APARTMENT ISSUE
© 1954 WYT OPTION, TRAVELWAYS
Real issues the issue
The Supreme Court made a reasonable decision in its interpretation of the Constitution allowing women to make individual decisions of conscience concerning abortion. Those who are unequivocal in their views can work as a constitutional amendment either to prohibit abortion or to allow individual states to prohibit it.
Abortion and busing, two of the biggest issues in the 1976 presidential campaign, shouldn't be issues. Both are issues in constitutional law, but the President is charged neither with the responsibility of interpreting the Constitution nor with the power to amend it.
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS are the domain of Congress and the states. The President has little, if anything, to do with them. Whether he would support such an amendment says nothing about his capacity to administer the functions of the executive branch of the government.
Much the same is the argument against busing as a campaign issue. The courts have used their power to enforce the Fourteenth Amendment to order busing to achieve racial integration in public schools. Their decisions have been neither arbitrary nor capricious. The courts have the authority to enforce
the supreme law of the land regardless
of the President's personal opinion
may be.
INTEGRATION of the schools is a state and local problem that can often be worked out without the use of court-ordered busing. Neither a constitutional amendment nor a tirade against busing by a candidate will guarantee will improve the public schools.
There are too many real issues that need rational discussion by all the candidates to allow these wellsprings of emotion to obscure the debate.
UNEMPLOYMENT, FOREIGN policy, defense spending, national health insurance and the intelligence gathering agencies are important issues that shouldn't be glossed over just because of thinking instead of the blind fearing which so often accompanies the mention of abortion and busing.
It is the voters who determine the issues because the candidates are eventually forced to talk about what the voters want to hear. For busing and abortion to become the dominant issues of the campaign would be a vast abjuration of responsibility by the electorate.
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
A aficious plot is developing concerning the stairs of the Kansas Union.
when informed of the plan as he was moving his per sonal effects out of the Student Senate offices.
The Board of Regents approved renovation of the Union Friday, including removal of the stairway to the right of the southeast entrance. Immediately, a fund raising opportunity was seen.
Union stairs stairway to money
By Betty Haegelin Associate Editor
But Ed Rolfs, former student body president, was aghast
Some stairs will be cut into sections and will be sold for $25 for each section. Some people said these sections would be ideal for pedestals or bird bath
The Memorial Corporation Board, after an emergency meeting in the Hawk's Nest Friday night, decided to auction off the stairs to the highest bidder.
"Who wouldn't want to own a piece of Kansas Union history?" Melvin Freedman, chair of the organization. "One of these stairs would grace the den or living room of an KU booster. In fact, some people have said that they should be bar, the true symbol of KU."
"We were perplexed by such an unthinkable action, as were many other students," Ed postulated. "That old center stairway represents a Union heritage of which distinguished firebombers and students, firebombers and thousands of alumni are a part."
Ed noted that some fat cat might actually end up owning the very step on which the arsenal stood when the place was empty. And what concertgeer, he asked, hadn't gone up those stairs at one time or another to buy tickets to such memorable performances as those of Somy the Righteous Brothers?
"That stairway belongs to those people who put something into it," Ed fumed. "This makes the KMUC look like money changers in our University's temple of anarchism!"
Especially in this bicentennial year, the least the KMUC could have done was to
paint the stairs red, white and blue before selling them so more money could be raised forworly bicentennial causes.
"And they at least could have told me about all of this," he said.
Tedde Tasheff, recently elected president, said she hadn't formed an opinion yet.
“But Ed's left me a lot of good files on the screen and I'll get someone in my address books to mess with this real soon,” she added.
Rolfs said that from suggestions received in the Student Senate office, the most popular option suggested by students was to use the stars in to represent approved satellite union.
"If those stairs could talk," he said, "I'm sure they'd say I want someone walking on them that has a part in creating the rich heritage of KU, or at least someone who isn't so fat."
It was reported that Chancellor Archie R. Dykes was to rule on the matter shortly, but he could make no decision until
he had gone over to the Union and gotten a "feel" of the stairs by taking off his shoes and down them several times.
But Freedman said he just didn't understand the fuss over the innocent capitalistic venture.
"All we wanted to do was make a couple of quick buckets," he said. "You'd think these were the staircases to heaven or something. I don't understand all the sentiment over a few cupped, terreroa stairs. I guess I'm not just patricid enough."
CARTER
76
INTERNATIONAL TEA GROUP
Commercialism colors birthday
Happy Birthday, USA! The slogan repeats itself in television advertisements, radio commercials and on KU's national network. The commercialized nation won't miss any opportunity to make a few buckets and this is the best opportunity yet. The nation is having a birthday and everyone is bidding, especially businessmen.
When all of the absurd uses of the bicentennial theme are taken into consideration, it makes one wonder whether the last 200 years haven't been spent contemplating the
celebration. The birthday has become so commercialized that it appears to be run by a large
offices in a high-rise somewhere in New Jersey. DURING THIS YEAR, son
DURING THIS year, con-
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
advertising agency, probably named Bicentennial E:ings, Inc., or Patriots Unlimited, with
States' rights still abused
WASHINGTON—Now and then a classic example comes along to illustrate the rise of nationalism and the fall of democracy. The croppied up in the Senate three weeks ago in the matter of day
background is in order. In 1974, congress approved certain amendments to the Social Security these "those known as Title I appropriating funds in the form of matching grants for the
care centers for children. The matter isn't easily explained, but it merits a few minutes of your time.
Our nation was founded in part upon the sound principle of federalism. The idea was that the national government would exercise only those powers of a truly national concern; all other powerws should be reserved to the states to be exercised in respect to the respective uses and prudent theory has suffered rough abuse in recent years. On January 29, the Senate kicked it around once more.
By James J.
Kilpatrick
(C) Washington Star Syndicate
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
and weekends. Subscription prices vary.
Second-class postage paid at Law-
niversity post office or by mail to a
semesterer or $1 a year in Deuxch State and $10
a year in Illinois. Non-semester sub-
scriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through
the university.
A BRIEF WORD of
operation of day care centers. The 1974 Act laid down specific requirements for the staffing of these centers as a condition for aid. The federal bureaucracy enlarged upon the standards.
In order to qualify, it was thus decreed that a day care center must have one adult for each child up to age six weeks, one adult for every four children between six weeks and three years, an adult for every four children between three and four, and so on, up to one adult for every 20 children between 10 and 14.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--864-4510
Business Office--864-4258
Editor
Carl Young
Associate Editor
Campus Editor
Betty Haeenell
Yael Aboualkhah
An All-American college newspaper
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Business Manager
Education Card
Assistant Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Publisher David Dary
News Advisor Business Advisor Susanne Shaw Mel Adams
THESE REQUIREMENTS were to have become effective Oct. 1, 1975. When it became apparent that few day care centers could comply by that deadline, the deadline was extended to Feb. 1, 1976. The effect of the Senate's action on January 28 is to extend further deadlines and provide a supplementary $250 million in grants to meet the mounting costs.
The critical debate was not on the extension or even the money. The critical debate was on an amendment by Sen. Robert Puckett Kane. He struck the specific federal requirements from the act, and to let the states establish their own staffing rules. It was an excellent amendment and it have passed. It lost 37 to 44.
IN ARGUING for his amendment, Packwood voiced the same arguments that states righters have urged since 1788. The state came to the Senate seven years ago, he had the feeling "that somehow there is a magic in Washington, that we have a superior knowledge, that God has spoken to us and only us, and what God says to the states and the local governments."
we impose it on the whole nation."
leave the dead alone. A University of Pennsylvania anthropologist was hired last year to dig up Betsy Ross and move her to the courtyard next spring, digging led to some excitement when her bones weren't immediately recovered, but they were finally found and moved. The project was deemed a success and it was considered of such value to the country that her body was identified as Pocahontas, are now being considered for exhumation.
Sen. Paul J. Fannin, R-Ariz.
Dewey F. Bortkle, R-L坦略.
Dewey L. Bartkle, R-L坦略,
spoke to the same effect. Said
Fannin: "I totally reject
the notion that only in Washington
can we influence the needs of
our children."
"I no longer share that view," Parkwood said. "I have come to the conclusion that we cannot run this country well from COF, because we must program that will work in Massachusetts may or may not work in Maryland or Minnesota ... My amendment would say to me We trust you. We think you understand your priorities."
SUPPOSE THE specific standards are wrong? Pack- wood cited the conflicting views of authorities in the field of child care. He observed that a departmental study of staffing ratios won't even be finished until the Senate not to mud all children, all states and all localities into a single mold.
THE CONSERVATIVES got nowhere. They were snowed under by liberal forces led by the governor of Minnesota. Mondale expounded pathetically upon the terrible damage that might be done to tender-aged children if they were not well cared for were relaxed. It should affect
"The one disadvantage of a federal program," he said, "is that when we make a mistake.
sumers had better strike up a fancy for stripes and red, white and blue, for producers are offering little else. If you don't like these colors, the manufacturers seem to be saying, then you must not love them. You can't toilet seat clothes,衣服 and baby blankets is designed with the patriot in mind.
Well, there are some of us who gravely doubt that children will be damaged or "destroyed" if they are subjected to only one adult for every six children between three and four, instead of to one adult for every five children between three and four. If we were born in the name of the Constitution day care centers got to be the business of the national government anyhow. But this is how the wind blows; and the wind chills.
Braniff International Airlines has shown recently that with the right design, the American flag can be the tackiest thing in the air. The abstract painting of the American flag in motion on a Braniff jet looks as if the artist tried to paint it while the jet was moving. "We're putting our colors on the line with the flying colors of the United States," does little to help the image.
BIG BUSINESSES are baping that by associating themselves with the history of the United States, they will be placed in a position to be an important people. The National Football League gave $10,000 to a high
our conscience, he said, "if we pay for day care centers that damage children, destroy them, kill them," 1 y. n a d psychologically.
school junior for her essay about the league's role in American history. When historian Henry Steele Commander heard of the essay by Marianne McCormick, the most concise entry. "It has importance whatsoever," he wrote.
Businessmen aren't the only ones who are trying to come up with bigger and better ideas to celebrate the birthday. Service projects, in turn, units keep coming up with ideas. This year should provide a great opportunity for service projects. It is a time when projects could be very effective. Projects of this type are being started, but many others with little value are also being done. Enormous sums of money are being generated with no redeeming features.
The bicentennial year has only just begun. We still have more than 10 months left of the fall and spring, and red, white and blue packages. We'll make it through, though; we always do. And when it's all over, when the United States becomes the odd one out, we'll still look forward to bilateral clearance sales.
THESE GREAT thinkers of bicentennial follies won't even
Letters Policy
The Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgement. The editor must provide their name, year in seb and hometown; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH THE KING?
HOW WON YOU LIKE TO THE ONLY COUNTRY NO OFFERED A BRIBE BY LOCKHEED?
Wednesday, February 25,1976
5
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the ent
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Haskell students out of room, luck
By BILL UYEKI
Staff Writer
Lately, there hasn't been much room to live at Haskell Indian Junior College.
Two of six residence halls are overcrowded at Haskell, one of three post-secondary schools for American Indian students, by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (HAI)
To compound problems, school officials say, only one of the two residence halls planned for construction will be built, because of a lack of funds.
Some of the school's residence halls, such as those for Haskell's athletes, have two students in a room, an "ideal situation," Smith said.
About 700 of Haskell's 1,091 students live in the residence halls, Benny Smith, acting director of residential programs, said Friday. The remaining students live off campus, and some have encountered landlords with landlords and rent payments.
Other halls, like the men's Oseoelca-Keoku Hall and the women's Winona Hall, sometimes have three or four students in rooms designed for two students.
Smith said that Oseola-Keokuk, the largest residence hall, had 282 students in 100 rooms this semester. Included is an alumnae room and a faculty room of 22 rooms for honor students only, which had not more than two per room. But, minus the honor wing, the rest of the hall averages 134 students.
"I don't like cramming four people into one room," said a student in the men's hall. "I don't see how a person can get an education like this.
"Some people don't care how they live, but I do."
Another student said that some at Haskell didn't care about studying, which made it difficult for roommates in a crowded room who wanted to study.
another student said, "if a guy has a lot of clothes, we have to bring in an extra closest." of times you leave your clothes in your luggage.
Some freshman students at the men's hall complained that they didn't have a choice of what room to live in, or who their roommates would be. Others said that hall mates would sometimes enter room checks, sometimes entering rooms at 4 a.m., every day for a week.
Joe Hathcote, residence hall supervisor at Oscela-Keokuk, said students had a choice of rooms to live in, but new students who didn't know anybody at Haskell were assigned to rooms. He said he hoped housing applications would be offered to students next fall, so students could list preferred roommates.
BOCO...
KU$'s first attempt at computer dating will probably succeed because KU and IJ are closely related.
"We both have big bell towers and big dorms," he said.
The deadline for applications is Friday.
The cost is $3.50 individually or $2.75 for a
manual training package.
BOCO offered to put a picture in the Kansan of large groups that filled out applications. Six living groups have accepted her offer and have appeared in a variety of poses.
The name of each person who applies will appear on the list of every person he is matched with. All answers to questions on applications are confidential, Damigis said.
Kansan makeup gets fifth place
The Kansas recently placed fifth in the college and university division of the Inland Daily Press Association's typography and makeup contest.
The presentation of the award was made yesterday at the association's annual spring meeting in New York.
The Indiana Daily Student, University of Indiana, won first place, followed by the Columbia Missouri, University of Missouri; the Daily Illini, University of Illinois, and the Daily Iowa, University of Illinois.
Inspections have been conducted in the past for "disciplinary problems" he said, but there haven't been any this semester. Mr. Nastasaki has been on disbursement was on on Haitong can.
Wallace Galluzi, president of Haskell, said the residence halls were insufficient because they were built when Haskell was a high school.
"Besides that," he said, "there is a lack of housing in the community."
Accepting fewer students would ease the housing situation, Gallucci said, but it is more important to make Haskell available to many Indian students.
"We don't think we ought to cut a kid's education to make more room in the bedroom."
Gullianzi said that Sen. James Pearson, R-Kan., has been instrumental in helping with the effort to build a new hospital.
Lee Gerkin, research assistant to Pearson, said yesterday that construction on the new residence hall at Haskell would begin within 30 to 60 days, and would be finished within a year after the building starts.
Gerkin said the reason for the lack of money to build two halls was that a possible error in the architectural engineer's estimate of the halls' total cost.
The original estimate, he said, was $2.85 million for both halls. This amount was allotted to Haskell from the BIA for the fiscal 1975, he said.
Beginning last December, Gerklin said, bids were taken for the construction of the halls, and the lowest bid was $7.78 million—about 10% less than the highest bidding period last only 60 days, he said, and because of wage increases and higher construction costs, any rebids would have to be made within two weeks.
"This came up at a particularly bad time." Gerkin said.
"We're caught in the inflation spiral," Gallucci said.
With the available funds, Gerkin said, one residence hall will be built, along with the parking lot and recreational facilities for two halls. Construction of the second hall would cost an additional $1.4 million, he said;
Because it is the fiscal year 1978, Gerkin said, Pearson plans to request funds for fiscal year 1977.
Within the next two months, he said, Pearson will give statements and testimony on why Haskell needs more money to a subcommittee of the Interior Department, the State Department, the State Department and Pearson were optimistic about receiving additional funds for fiscal year 1977.
About 300 Haskell staff live off-campus, Smith said. The students live in apartments scattered across the city, Smith said. He was also houseing on the east side of Lawrence.
Apartment dwellers receive funds from the BIA, tribal and federal government
Crab lice infest even the nicest people
RID KILLS CRAB LICE ON CONTACT
RID
For entry into the 2-year program commencing in the fall 76 term, apply by the end of March 1976. Entry is limited and competitive. Inquire/Apply in Room 108, Military Science Building, or phone 844-647-663.
- Without a prescription at Drug Stores
But it all starts right here...in college...in the Air Force ROTC. Things will look up...so look us up.
No obligation, of course.
- Special comb included
Next year you could be on scholarship.
And after college, you'll receive a commission in the Air Force... go on to further, specialized training... and get started as an Air Force officer. There'll be travel, responsibility, and other of benefits.
An Air Force ROTC 2-year scholarship, Which not only pays your tuition, but also gives you $100 a month allowance. And picks up the tab for your books and lab fees, as well.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
"If a student can finance himself off
that, he must be the prerogative to do
that," Smith said.
grants, through Haskell's financial aid program. Smith said.
One of the problems for Haskell students living off campus is that many new students aren't familiar with Lawrence, he said. Also, late or unpaid apartment bills of
There have been some problems for Baskell students living off campus, Smith said.
His office helps the students to locate off campus housing, he said.
Haskell students makes it difficult for other
haskell students to move into the same
school.
There have been some complaints from students, Smith said, of managers who tell students on the phone an apartment is available to them. But when they find out the students are in trouble
Frank Quiring, dean of students, says in addition to classrooms, good living conditions are essential.
"It should have a high priority at Bielefeld 10 years ago, instead of now, be said."
THE HAWK'S NEST
Friday, Feb. 27 9:00-12:00 P.M.
'THE ROSEWOOD TRIO'
Doors Open 8:30
Saturday, Feb. 28 8:30-12:00 P.M.
presents
Opening Act: BETH SCALET
9:15 to 'COLE TUCKEY ON RYE' 12:00 Doors Open 8:00
KU-Y ADVOCATE SERIES PRESENTS
Level 2-Kansas Union Produced by SUR
SENATE BILL 1
Are we to enter our third century under Richard Nixon's criminal code?
Thursday, Feb. 26
7:30 P.M.
Jayhawk Room
in the Union
THE ADVOCATES:
Karen Blank (KU Student)
Executive Director Kansas
Civil Liberties Union
Denis Hauptley (Attorney)
US Justice Department
Washington D.C.
Moderator: Paul Wilson, Professor of Law
Audience Will Be Invited To Participate In Discussion
Partially funded by Student Senate
ANNOUNCING CAMPBELL'S Annual Transfer SALE
We have transferred all remaining winter stock from our Leavenworth store, to combine with our own, for three days of final reductions and clearance.
THURSDAY-FRIDAY-SATURDAY ONLY!
SUITS -
Values to $195.00
Group A Group B Group C
$59.95 $69.95 $79.95
SPORT COATS -
Group A Group B Group C
$29.95 $39.95 $49.95
Values to $95.00
All Remaining
SWEATERS Values to $25.00 ... $13.95
One Rack
SPORT SHIRTS Values to $20.00...1/2 Price
One Table
DRESS SHIRTS Values to $14.00 ... $6.95
One Group
SLACKS Values to $37.50 ... 1/2 Price
- 3 DAYS ONLY -
C
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843-2828
Pizza-Hut Luncheon Specials 11:00 - 1:30 MONDAY THURSDAY
**Pizza Hot** Said $ .45
**Pizza Hat** Said $ .45
**Pizza Thin** Snow - any 10' single topping $1.79
**Thick N Cheese** snow - any 10' single topping $2.24
Additional Topppings 10%
Pasta
Cavatimi deep dish pasta $1.29
Cavatim Supreme deep dish pasta $1.39
Deep Dish Spaghetti $ 9.99
Above pasta served piping hot with Garlic Bread Sandwichs $ 11.99
Buffet Supreme $ 11.99
Salam & Cheese Sandwich $ 11.99
Ham & Cheese Sandwich $ 11.99
Hot or cold fried or cold with pickle and potato chips $ 11.99
804 Iowa
Pizza Hut
1606 W. 23rd St.
WOW! IT'S WOLFÉ'S FABULOUS 18th ANNUAL
DOG SALE!
SHORE
CAMERA SALE DON'T MISS OUT
See the Thursday UDK
This is Wolfe's Annual Clearance Sale. We will unload the odds and ends and overstocks of merchandise accumulated over the past year. There are incredible values on cameras, lenses, projectors, enlargers, light meters, flashguns, etc.
See the Thursday HDK
WOLF
for Full Page Ad
WOLF
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116 West Eighth · Phone 235-1386
Topeka, Kansas 66803
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kanson. 864-4358
ALL STAR REVIEWS
February '76
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6
Wednesday, February 25, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Call's afraid she's over the hill
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
At 19, Catty Call is in her twelfth years of aquatic swimming threat—or so she claims.
In swimming, national caliber performers begin as early as age 13. American record holders often haven't reached ninth place, and that's why their country's national anthems at 17.
BY THE AGE OF 15, many swimmers
consider themselves burn-out, has been.
Call, a member of the University of Kansas women's swimming team, wouldn't like to have herself placed in that forlorn category yet.
But to listen to Call, who helped KU score 149 of its winning total of 489 points in the Big Eight championship laurels last season, harks somewhere around the corner.
"I like to do it, but there are those younger girls coming up all the time," Call said. "I feel like I'm getting kind of old for swimming."
THAT'S A STATEMENT with which Call's competition would undoubtedly agree.
In the third annual championship meet last Friday and Saturday, Call
--deafened the best swimmers in the conference in the 500 freestyle, 200 freestyle, 200 individual medley and 100 freestyle.
- helped her teammates take second and a fourth in the midfield relay, and a fourth in the midfield relay, and
--took fourth in an event she rarely swims, the 100 butterfly.
In all, Call swarm nine times—the she'd place in the 50 butterfly—and set two league records, one in the 200 freestyle (6:10.7) and two in the 200 individual medley (2:18.5).
"I WAS SURPRISED," Call said of her Big Eight success. "I didn't even realize that I had won that many until Friday night I was going to bed, so I felt like me. So much was going on all the time."
As in football, where many times split ends have one personality and linemen another, swimming has its own set of personality types.
Breaststrokers, Call said, are a bit clammy. They stick to themselves, and don't flirt with them.
"ALL THE BREASTSTROKERS that were on the team that I used to swim with (the Santa Fe Trailblazers in Prairie Village) were all kind of crazy," she said. "Most butterflyers seem kind of intelligent."
If Call is a typical freestyle, then assistance in measuring and pestling to seek publicity.
They also prefer to concentrate on one race and season—at a time.
"It's hard to look far abear." Call aid.
That's the most I like to look at in one time.
NEXT FOR CALL is a chance to qualify for the AIAW national swimming championships in mid-March at Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Along with some of her teammates, Call will attempt to lower her best times in the 290 individual medley and 250 freestyle, as well as the 180 individual long jump. The distance is less than a second away from qualifying.
"I think I'm close," said Call, whose best time of 1:50 and 1:00 in the 200 freezing is fractions away from the AIAW standard. "I wasn't, I couldn't try again. But I think I have a chance."
CALL'S LAST ATTEMPT to qualify for nationalists will come in an intrasquid exhibition during the men's dual swim meet at the State State Saturday in Robinson Natoratium.
If Call does make the trip to Florida, she won't be swimming in uncharted waters.
Swimming for a private club team in 1972, 1973 and 1974, Calip competed in the AAU national championships. In her first two years she was a member of a relay team, and in 1974 she swam in the 200 freestyle and the relay.
FOR CALL, "QUALIFYING individually
(street) was the biggest thing
I’ve ever done."
That is, until last weekend.
A swimmer and racer since she was born, who can say her peak years as a swimmer were
"Iused to think they were younger," she said, "but you can always still improve, I."
What is the prime age for a swimmer?
"Twenty years old." Call offered.
Ask her the same question five years from now and she'd probably say 25.
Changes made at KU Relays
High school track athletes from Missouri, Iowa, Oklahoma and Nebraska, and women basketball players prominently in plans for the 1921 championship (1921 1924) by meet director Bob Timmons, yesterday.
Timmons said the Relays will drop 16 events, and add eight others to last year's
Among the events canceled are the Jim Bausch decathalon, two college division and two junior college division relay, three women's events, five high school events and three open division events, including the shot put and mile walk.
By dropping the decathlon, the Kansas
team lost its April 15-17, will last
three days instead.
But instead of limiting high school competition to Kansas, the Relays have received permission from neighboring state football teams and are awarded tickets to athletes in states bordering Kansas.
SUA Presents
a discussion
on
Psychic Awareness
by
Marcella Kelly
well known Kansas City Psychic
Wednesday,
March 3, 1976
7:30 p.m.
Forum Room in the Union
Admission Free
Open 6 nights a week for your pleasure and enjoyment 8:00-1:00 a.m. Mon.-Thurs. 8:00-3:00 a.m. Fri. & Sat
Enjoy special house beverages as well as your favorites at reasonable prices while dancing to your favorite hits played by Spike Santee and Ted Oshirak, both professional D.J.'s. And—for something special—see our computerized lighted dance floor with its many patterns and rhythms.
Opening this week! Accepting membership applications now
Entrance under awning on South side of Eldridge House 7th & Mass. 841-4666
THE DISC
ZODIAC SANDALS don't grow on trees . . .
But you can find them at Arensberg's
Arensberg's
= Shoes
819 Mass. 843-3470 Where Styles Happen
ELDRIDGE HOUSE
CLUB
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Selling something? Place a want ad.Call 864-4358.
Photo by Sue Mead
Three South Corbin Doesn't Monkey Around
What type of people sign up for a BOCO Computer Date?
THE WOMEN IN THE WILD
they use
WOW
BOCO Computer
Date Match
Deadline Friday, Feb. 27
KU tennis team gets fresh start
Bv STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
Don't make the mistake of asking members of the KU tennis team to explain why the Jayhawks finished fifth in the Big Eight last year. They don't like to talk about
But ask KU tennis coach Kirkland Gates about this season and the second-year coach becomes all smiles.
"We've already beaten both Arkansas and Southern Illinois, 5-4." Gates said, "and last year they both beat us, 8-1. That's a very optimistic sign."
Gates has reason to be optimistic. All of his players are returning, and they've come back with a different attitude.
sports
"The ATTITUDE seems to be more enthusiastic this year," Gates said. "The players got themselves in a losing rut last year and it affected their play.
"We've also got more discipline this year and I think that's one of the reasons we've been doing better. Last year was my first year and I expected the players to do a little much on their own. Now we're more organized and putting things together."
Still, Gates isn't promising any miracles this season. He said the Jayhawks could finish as high as second and shouldn't finish than fourth in the conference this year.
"OKLAHOMA STATE is definitely the favorite," Gates said. "They have all seniors this year. If they don't win it this season, it's just a real loss." They second by one point the last two years.
"Missouri and Oklahoma are the favorites for second and third. Missouri might be a little bit stronger because they're real good at the top (first three teams), but it's not good opportunity to take fourth and even place higher if you play well."
Gates said that Colorado, Nebraska and Iowa State have improved since last year, but don't quite have the strength to compete in conference. K-State no longer has a team.
SF Giants sold
CHICAGO (AP)—National League owners approved the sale of the San Francisco Giants to financier Robert Lurie and Bob Short yesterday, pending certain conditions involving both the purchasers and the City of San Francisco.
Chub Feeney, president of the National League, would not reveal the conditions but said they would have to be fulfilled by March 1.
Feeney said he had no doubt that the conditions would be met, but if they weren't the league would hold another meeting on the Giants' matter.
Earlier, Lurie, a San Francisco financier who leads a group trying to keep the Giants from moving to Toronto, told newsmen the proposal by National Exhibition Inc., the current owner of the team, was acceptable to him.
Lurie and Bob Short, former owner of the American League's Texas Rangers, are trying to buy the Giants for $8 million. Lurie and Bob Short will have to pay the other $7.5 million in cash is ready.
BENNY CURTIS
Bill Clarke slams a serve
Bill Clarke, a 6-foot-4, 200-pound junior from Leawood, is the hawkies' No.1 singles player. Gates described Clarke, a tall athlete, as an all-powerful champion, as an overpowering player.
"He's a muscle player," Gates said. "He's got that strong serve and hits the ball really hard, but he'a his little anorthodox. He's capable of being an All-American. He wants to be a great player and he's willing to sacrifice to do so."
FOR TWO STRAIGHT seasons Clarke has mowed down almost everyone he's faced in conference dual play, but has struggled at the Big Eight Tournament.
"I want to win the Big Eight, that's my goal," Charke said. "I haven't played good."
Tim Headke, one of two seniors on the team, is the No. 2 singles player.
KC Kings win
FHOENIX (AP)—Nate Archibald picked up a loose ball, drove the length of the court and scored with 16 seconds left to give the Kansas City Kings a 120-117 overtime victory over the Phoenix Suns last night in a National Basketball Association game.
Alice Is Easy
Alice is easy and most anxious to please She can do marvage things for you, and is practically always available.
You will find Alice Monday
5:00 a.m. and Saturday from 9:00
a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the House of
Lords, in downtown Lawrence.
OPEN HOUSE
See
Let Alice or any of the friendly
Let at the House of Usher/Quick
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JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS.
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"He has probably as many shots as anyone," Gates said. "Potentially, he can do it all."
LRE
Gg Buller, a 6-foot-1, 180-pound Topeka senior, holds down KU's 3 no. singles pos t
Lawrence, Kansas 1603 W. 15th
"HE'S NOT A winner yet," Gates said of Buller. "He has the most pressure on his shoulders. He just needs to come over that hill and get over the psychological hang-up of losing."
"Jeff's starting to win," Gates said. "He had a losing attitude last year. He's got confidence in his game this year and that makes all the difference in the world."
913-843-4993
Kansas' No. 4 player is Jeff Thomas, a junior from Baton Raton, Fla. Thomas relies on a big serve and plays conservatively from there.
Mark Hosking, the only freshman on scholarship, is the Jayhawks' 0.5 player. Gates thinks Hosking has been a reason for the team's improvement this season.
"ONE PLAYER CAN make a big difference," Gates said. "Mark's added a dimension down at the bottom of our team. He's a big, strong boy with a big serve and volley.
"He's a lot like Clarke, except that he's more of a natural athlete. He's really started to come around. You have to remember he's had very little coaching."
The Jayhawks' No. 6 position isn't filled yet. Sophomores Hank Colman and Lonnie Taylor and freshman Joe Ruysser are battling for that spot.
The doubles teams are Clarke-Headline, No. 1; Beller and whoever Gates finds as his partner, No. 2, and Hooke-Hoeking, No. 3. The doubles team is in doubles when the No. 2 spot is filled.
"Buller badly needs a partner," Gates said. "I was working with Buller and Hollan Colman there, but that wasn't working out. They were losing, so now I'm trying Ruyser there."
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Cords,
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20% Off on All Regularly Priced Merchandise with KU I.D.
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Offer Good Thru Feb. 29
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29
WRANGLER — LEE LEVI LADY WRANGLER LEVI FOR ME
NEW YORK CITY CHANGE
University Daily Kansas Wednesday, February 25, 1976 7
LITWIN'S
Your
SANANDRICARD
welcome box
iced
with
831 Mass.
9:30-5:30 Daily
'til 8:30 Thurs.
Alfie's
Alfie's FISH'N BAR-B-QUE 6th & Maine
"Obey Your Sense of Smell . . .
That's an Odor."
CHICKEN
BEEF
RIBS
HAM
SMOKED BEANS
Call Ahead-We'll Have It Hot & Tasty
842-5500
Bring this ad for Half-a-Bar-B-Que
(No Limit) CHICKEN 99'
KANSAS PREMIERE!
SIDE-SPLITTING SEX SPOOFS AND NOSTALGIC TELEVISION CLASSICS: The Sinematic and Cinematic Sides of 1950'S Sociology
I'm not afraid to say "Yes"!
GO SEE A MOVIE TONIGHT!
WHAT MAKES MEN BLUSH
PART I
The 1950's Sex Education Festival
This is a series of shorts that may be the most hysterically funny movies ever to play on the Kansas University campus. The titles include: How Much Affection (1956); Doing Do's and Dont's (1954); Is This Love (1957); are You Popular (1952); Are You Ready for Marriage (1955); and Dangling Participie (1959). To describe but two of them: How Much Affection, which might better be titled The Perverse Passion of Petting, is the idyllic story of teen-aged love run amuck. With their entire life ahead of them, a young couple's hopes for future of virtuous decency and sex-fueled madness! But with the help of family and friends they arrive at a truly inspirational and heartrending solution to The Menace of Premarital Intercourse. Then in Standish Lawder's outrageous Dangling Participie, we see a sixty-five year old muniarly high school teacher trying to tell a group of potential pervers that each and every fantasy, no matter how bizarre, is "perfectly normal." This film is without doubt one of the most remarkable social documents of its time: a sort of ultimate statement on adolescent frustrations and sexual brainwashing techniques at high school. The film also describes the characters as of equivalent quality, each one specially selected for its ability to evoke泪手 of disbelief laughter! One last film in Part I is the 1950's equivalent of sexual politics — Ronald Reagan's only filmed encounter with Jayne Mansfield!
☆☆☆☆☆☆
PART II
1950'S Television Masterpieces
Ozzie and Harriett (1957)
Called Father's Night at the Fraternity, this one features the absurd that he is an incredible musical climax with Ricky pounding out some Golden Olden.
☆☆☆☆☆☆
BURNS AND ALLEN (1954)
Possibly the greatest episode ever made as Gracie helps a young sorority girl to be beautiful so she can get a date to the prom!
Elvis Presley on Ed Sullivan (1955)
This one is truly unreal. Elvis' first appearance on the Sullivan Show and he was censored from the waist down as he poured out Love Me
★★★★★
FATHER KNOWS BEST (1956)
Stars Robert Young! Katch runs away from home when she has 'adolescent problems' but comes back home in the end when she realizes
FOUR NIGHTS ONLY! THURSDAY, FRIDAY,
SATURDAY & SUNDAY, FEB. 26, 27, 28 & 29; WESCOE AUDITORIUM; COMPLETE SHOWS NIGHTLY
AT 7:00 & 9:45 P.M. $1.75 SPON. BY VOLUNTEER
CLEARING HOUSE.
8
Wednesday, February 25, 1978
University Dally Kansan
Commission to recommend ways to improve U.S. Senate efficiency
By LYNDA SMITH
The U.S. Senate appointed a group about six months ago to recommend improvements in its operation. Chancellor Archie R. Dykes is a member of that group, the Commission on the Operation of the Senate.
Dykes was appointed to the commission by Sens. Mine Mansfield, D-Mont., and Hugh Scott, R-Penn, the Senate's floor leaders. He was recommended by Sens. James Pearson, R-Kan. and Howard Baker, R-Tenn.
Dykes, along with other academicians and politicians on the commission, is charged with recommending ways the commission could be involved. The commission is due to report in the fall.
A recent story in the New York Times said the commission wasn't allowed to delve into what the Times called the most opaque part of the committee's jurisdictions and Senate rules.
DYKES SAID yesterday that it wasn't the commission's purpose to determine committee jurisdictions and study committee concerns. He said the commission didn't have the expertise to make recommendations in those areas.
Bil Wohlford, administrative assistant to
Bill. Robert Dole, R-Kan, said, "The commission was expressly prohibited from getting into the committees' jurisdiction."
It was prohibited, Wohlford said, because if that stipulation had been added to the bill that created the commission, the bill probably would have failed.
"It's a real touchy area of seniority and long established rules," he said. "If they'd (the Senate) have tied this on the com-ming it might have gone down the drain."
DOLE SPECIFICALLY asked the
Booth for bill on death penalty
State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, told a meeting of the KU College Republicans last night that he would vote for the death penalty bill that was recommended favorably yesterday by the Kansas Senate Judiciary Committee.
Booth said he thought the House and Senate would be able to reach a compromise death penalty bill if both houses pass their respective death penalty bills, although the two bills are quite different. Mr. Obama has also asked Elections Committee, also discussed a proposal to change recall procedures for elected state officials.
commission to look into how efficiently senators use their time and the distribution of resources.
And that's precisely what the commission is studying. Dykes said.
The commission will look into the number of committees senators serve on and how they utilize their time, and ways to free management responsibilities, Dykes said.
Dykes said the commission's most important concern was to suggest ways Senators could give appropriate attention to their responsibilities.
"There are only some things a Senator can do," Dykes said, "and the commission will attempt to enable Senators to devote themselves to those tasks."
Infective use of time is the major flaw in the Senate, Dykes said. Some Senators are on as many as 25 committees, he said, and they are reluctant for them to meet all their obligations.
EVEN THOUGH congressional reform has been attempted many times, Dykes said, he thought the commission could help the Senate. A similar commission recommended changes in the House last year, he said, and the House adopted the changes.
Although the commission isn't authorized to study Senate rules, some find them to be the most in need of reform. Wohlford gave an example of a rule he didn't like.
"A committee can report a bill on the floor before it is printed," Wohlford said.
"One copy is provided for each Senator but none for the staff. That perturbates it. My aide told me that she was responsible."
Despite the commission's restrictions, it still is charged with making recommendations to improve the internal and external wings of a Senator's office, Dykes said.
An agenda issued by the commission's staff director in December 1975 said the commission was to propose changes that would improve the Senate's relationship with the use of Representatives, the executive and judicial branches, the media and lobbies.
The relationships involve not only the role of the Senate in the nation at large, but also influence in many ways the Senate's information access to information, the plan said.
The plan said the commission's objective wasn't to make recommendations for changes "in values or in power relations." He added that Senators carry out their responsibilities.
The commission gathers its information through hearings with Senators and key governmental actors, academics, governmental experts, Congress and representatives of interest groups.
The commission then meets to review the material generated by the hearings and
recommendations.
Dykes said he had attended three of the commission's monthly meetings in New York.
RUSSELL'S BARON BURGER
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Coordinates $6.99-$40.99 reg.to $23
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Shoes $14.99-$17.99 rea. to $30
HOURS Mon.-Sat. 10-6 Thurs. 10-8:30
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Wednesday, February 25, 1976
9
Housing . . .
From page one
"I've experienced them all," she said,
"and it made a big difference that I had friends from before, because I don't really get to meet that many people here."
She said her apartment was close to campus and she wasn't sure how much time she had left.
Dun Rowman, the soprano, lives in a two-bedroom apartment with three sisters.
He lived in a residence hall, and found it too noisy to study there, he said.
"DORM WALLS JUST don't screen much more out when he's better." Reward him, said.
He said his roommates and he had put a partition in the corner of their living room to
The four split the $210 month rent for the unfurnished apartment, Bowerman said. They also pay about $40 each a month for food, $4.50 for water services and $4.00 for
gas. They each paid a $50 security deposit when they moved in.
"It was pretty ingenuous because we only put one nail in the wall to do it." he said.
PAUL DIENER and his wife Carolyin live in a townhouse at Pinecrest Townhouse, New York.
The townhouse has three bedrooms, two bathrooms, a living room, a kitchen, a pantry.
Dieneser said he liked the townhouse because he used it as the home he could beat with a photographic studio.
Diemen said he paid $150 a month to base the townhouse, but he the rent that day.
Electricity costs about $20 money for the couple and gas is from $7 to $9, Dienler said. Food costs $85 to $100, which doesn't include beef, he said.
"But the location is sort of bad and I have to drive to school," Diener said.
(Tomorrow: Officials comment on renting in an apartment complex.)
Place an ad Tell the world Call 864-4358.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment
for students. Responding to needs of APA CPP,
ACP-IPP, DUAL PATTERN, OUTPUT LOAD, BINNG
LOAD, EMPLOYMENT AND FUNCTIONAL REQUIREMENTS.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
AD DEADLINES
15 words or fewer .02 $.25 $.25 $.75 $3.00
Each additional word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
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
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the U.K. business office at 644-8558.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
STEEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Regardless of
price, we will provide the best benefits and
benefits to your business. We offer bulk
bonds to your business.
We can make your stereo sound better—GUAR-
DER. We use the same setup as two ears deaf-
员 at Audio System, 3rd E. 9th. h.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amps, drums,
basses, and basses on the market. Shops: Hose Keyboard Studio, Choses from Ghibli, Amper, Amper Kustom, Green, and many others.
Miniature keyboard at 7 fpm. Hose Keyboard Studio,
might after 7 fpm. Hose Keyboard Studio,
COST **+** 10%--Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single item or packages. Register for free Kissone. Call Dave. Phone 685-6398. Earnings 6 to 10.
Alternator; Starter, and Generator Specialties
Audi AE1500, AE1600, AE1800, AE1900
ELECTRIC, 843-906, 3000, W 6th, G 6th
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of pages. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160 page order载ing research. Research Assistant. California, Los Angeles. California. 40223 (213) 477-8744
Excellent selection of New & Used furniture &
furniture for your home. Trade. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704 N. Broadway, New York, NY 10023.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold and silver earrings, a custom, conventional design, organic farm, any design executed. B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting. Variety of unusual stones. 811-3883 or 843-9070.
Western Civilization Notes—On sale! On sale!
*Basic preparation for Western Civilization*:
Makes sense to use them...
*2. For class preparation*
*New edition of Western Civilization*:
*Availability of Western Civilization*
Gloucest EB-2 electric bass with hardcap decking, dual-coil transducer, Miraflo TSA, tone control, wiil dicker. BKP, Britten KA, tone control.
1967 Pontiac Lennar Air. Power brakes and
tire tires = 3-mile speed * a mile speed
= 2-25
841-785-706
1970 Karmann Ghibla, excellent condition 29.2
kg, dependable. price $1000, $643-384.
Pioneer CT 4114 Doble Cassette deck $16.00
Turbatek 385, dues 215 turntable $16.00
Nick-27
For Sale - 1741 C125 Honda with 965 miles. Exc. features with accessories. Call after: 843-804-6634.
Imported car service problems?
SEE ...
TONY'S IMPORTS-DATSUN
500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10-5 Tues. Sat.
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
AM Part Stop
A PRO
PRO
1209 East 23rd St. 841-2200
Bengals IN
TN
Gifts and Jewelry
803 MAIN ST.
Canton
House for Sale. Just reduced. Handyman special.
Homes in Harper's Landing 6283 aftershire. Havency
Lafarge Holdings 6291 aftershire.
1974 Vega Hatchback, new near condition, one (female) and has most oval. Event # 865-8434
**Vega Hatchback**, new near condition, one (female) and has most oval. Event # 865-8434
Potted, mature Irish plants which they last. 841-6981 once by 6 p.m.
2-27
Need to buy a gift? See the selection of unique
performances, Performance, 14-27,
23d, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
2-27
Original Antique Show & Sale February 27, 28
Original Antique Show & Sale Saturday, April 13
Lawrence show Hour: Friday, and Saturday 11
Lawrence show Hour: Sunday, April 14
admission ($) good i1. Management Victoria
Minskova. Food served by Plicht Club of Lawrens-
t.
Gibson Island Finish ES353D Td Electric Semi-acoustic with humbars, Phane Same as ES350 $350. With humbars, 100 wires. New pump tube water, clean condition CD clarinet. 342-257-8. 2-27
Barac Berry pickup with snake cord. Ludwig
Berry pickup with set excellent condition. Locat
543-2677
543-2678
1974 Honda CB200. Excellent condition. $750 or
best. Call 842-6817. 2-27
Comfortable studio bed $40, White hammerton, like new, $25, $82-879. 2-27
Super 8 Movie camera, Minnesota Automat D.4-6,
12" x 10" widescreen with many accessories and features. Cameras, 939-844-3924.
Stock #SUPER844.
Honda CL-350, 1947 excellent condition, 897. Includes hinters, padded backpack and tools, 2-3T
Magnavon turntable, 2 spakers, 109. Bar and
stools, 40l. After 5, 82-3714.
2-27
New army inflatable 4-man raft. Café Raqat
8641-0201 or leave message at 8641-257
2:47
GUITAR LESSONS $2 PER HOUR; STEREO M=35;
$12VE; TWELVE STRING GUITAR M=40-72K.
M=40-72K.
Digital Electronics Sales - Power Supplies, ICEs,
CDs and DVDs - 3-6 p.m. 857 Louisiana. 2-86
and Friday 3-6 p.m. 857 Louisiana. 2-86
For sale cheap. GE portable stereo. Call Carol.
842-7558 2-26
Rickenbacker 400i, basal, white, case, stand. New condition. $450. Superb. Power. $700. bd-7280.
RADIAL BARGAINS $2, 1-685 11 Bridge-
Firestone $60, 2-974
Olson BK $20 Standard, w. hardback case, $375.
Olson BK $24 Standard, w. hardback case, $395.
Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165. Guitar bass guitar $165.
Med-shaped quality microprobes for sale $129.
Mid-size quality microprobes for sale $179.
Wax box 84, KUMC 84 and Ralatus. Kansas
72 Cuttin Supreme, PB, PS, AC, AM-FM, green,
cardi. 847-1830, after 6pm.
2-11
73 Yamaura RD 350 perfect condition, first reasonable offer. B414.439. Dearce, 2-27
1974 Dalman pick-up for sale. Best looking in DA-3M radial-mounted runing car. Price $10,950. M-Sport radial-mounted running car. Price $6,950.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drip in and
increase water temperature (to 85°C) at WEBSITES
(no phone calls, e-mail alerts) at WEBSITES
www.websites.com
Free rental services. Up to the minute listings of
housing available in Lawrence, Lawrence
842-250-7850, 842-250-7850
New 2 + 3 bdm. apartment near campus; park-
ing area; efficiency apartment, utility
unit, 845-9678.
2. bdrm, all uiti paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfree. Park free; a/c, pool. #835 - 1983.
Burrow (furried with) shared kitchen and bath facilities. Also efficient aid for male near town. No pet. Also efficient aid for male near town. No pet.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
ately to campus $5 and up; or
825 or $605-725
or 825 or $605-725
Large 2 bdr. apt. one single room with kitchen
apartment to accommodate for young kids.
2-25
1000 sq ft.
SUBLEASE single bedroom or entire apartment
Term legal residence in immediate occupation. Dam
in the property.
Want to sell your Menshun Hall contract for rent? Call M43-8443 after 8 a.m. by room 1001.
Female roommate $375.50 rm, room utility,
aval. Roommate 6- march of May 169 Louisiana
MARRIED STUDENTS ENTERING MEDICAL SUMMER CAMPIONS in Summer Area. Available in Iowa, Illinois and K.C., Located near KU Medical Center KUMC Dental project. Some equity payment loan is less than half of the required housing. Well-paying project. LR, DR, kitchen/window, disposal. 14 Batts, LR, DR, Kitchen w/window, disposal. Windows; well-made! Many students professions here so car pooling is easy. Call (800) 275-3980.
Modern. 3 bedroom house, 112 bath, full basement. Permitted. New water, shopping carts, laundry facilities.
TYPING
THEISIS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is designed to help you find the most useful. Our services in fast and prices are reasonable, making it easier than ever to locate the copy we need.
Esuperscript{20} typus, B.M. Scalese; thematics叙式 and t. Barm. Caractere, thess. si-fayum $^{31}$
Experienced typist-term paper, messe, mike.
Experienced typing for spelling, spelling
corrected 843-546, Mrs. Wright
Professional typing was maintained, reasonable.
Students are required to have some
laws of electricity, B.A. Social Science
and a Bachelor's degree in any field.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Typhis editor, IBM Picaite. Quality work
disseminated. dissertation welcome.
Mail: 842-912-8172
Exp. typist, IBM Selectic, term papers, theses,
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Experienced typists will type these, dissertations or papers to our home call Carey Calipayo or Linda at 813-694-2500.
Experienced typetm, IBM Selectric. All kinds of calls, Call 844-4534, Digits: 842-9876 evile. Julie.
ANTIQUE
HALF·AS·MUCH
12-5pm
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HOUSEBOOK
FURNITURE/CLOATHES
HOUSEHOLD-VARES
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12-5pm
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Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices vary.
Mo days are Lates Nite, $1. Equipment rental, $2 Tow
nights.
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS (50c Service Charge)
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
3 p.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
at MONT BLEU
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Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at the Quick Copy Center. We can make 5 copies in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, $88 Massachusetts. 841-4800.
E enroll now in Lawever Driving School. Receive transportation provided. Drive now, pay later. Transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
Swap Shop. 620 Max. Used furniture, dishes,
lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-5.
9am - 7pm.
The Calebah Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Full
day celebration. Call (556) 791-2088 to reserve a
shadow sign. Cafe Info: Cash $40 per person, reservation
$35 per person.
ZORNA THE LAMB Sunday, Feb. 28. Special Call: 604-239-1544. Zorna values sold at $49 Call for more. Zorna values sold at $49 Call for more.
Volunteer, Clearing House is taking applicant's
address 64-189-3000 g. am. and 3 p. daily;
64-189-3000 h. am.
TROULDED WITH LIFE! Lost hope, feeling reeled, and lonedly? love security, love and inner strength. Through use, space insight. Matthew Mullan, Frank Hammond, Jackpack discovery Box 5067, Topeka, Kansas
WANTED
Free University enrollment Thursday, Friday and Saturday in our table at the Union Lobby or at the Student Center.
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
route. Close to campus and on bus
route. Cnj# M43-125.
WANTED Classroom Volunteers for children's
time between 9-Noon. You'll feel good if you'd
be willing to work a full day.
Boostmate wanted: Male or female, Junior,
age 25-34, North Carolina. Ai. B. 811-367-8911,
2905, and Louisiana. Ai. B. 811-367-8911,
2905
full size backpack (Kelty, Trailwear, other name brand) and sleep bag (Kelty 843-6959) 2-27
Female roommate to share house or apartment next year. Must be cool. Call Larry. 814-6857.
Recombine to share beautiful 4 bedroom house
with lovely contemporary interior with an open heart. Call 866-723-8100.
Female roommate needed. 2 BR mobile home.
Nice On Eat 19th, 841-321-357, 840-106-096
Need our service to share house with two undergrads. $100 a month. B22-6233. 3-2
Photographer-rated engineer designs 1 roommate, a large photographer-rated engineer lives on a 76 yr. old country home located 28 miles north of Denver and laundry. Storage in attic or barn. Plenty of space for rent. Call Mike. Call Mike for partial rent.
Employment Opportunities
KANU has an opening for part-time student announcement. Must have third class FCC license with broadcast endorsement. Experience preferred. Send resume to KANU, Attn: Kathryn Cox, 855-631-4530, ccox@kanu.edu or enquire co applied to. Call 864-4530. 2-26
A job opening for research assistant. Data collection and analysis skills and occisual skill required. Social skills and academic skills required. Social skills required until Feb 25. Contact Linda Andreira UAP player, qualified women and men of all races. Played in a team with women and men of all races.
Overseas jobs—temporary or permanent. New York City. Travel must be within 24 hours of arrival. First Aid kit available. Intermediate job offered. International job offered.
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
$17,900
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement in the job market, one of the top 20 companies in U.S. employment, and one of the top 30 companies in UK employment. Master's degree plus four years of experience, gross start-up and bonus fund, fee for expenses, credit startup, and financial services. Names: 916, Kansas City; 812, Michigan (816) - 812-6465.
Earn $250 per thousand staffing-enhancing items
and additions in Heckler Assoc. In addition,
additions in Hickster Assoc.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
THE NEW SCHOOL OF ORCHEMIC at McKinney
Music Season instruments, 737 New Hamshire
Park, and more. Jazz folk and clastic guitar, banjo, mandolin and
jazz jazz and rock guitar and bass. Call 841-652-1900.
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tt
Conjugation wanted from college students. Call
304-598-2656, in the performance庐 1422 Wet Near 22rd,
3666, 10 to 12 pm.
Volunteer, Closing House to taking applications
Volunteer, Closing House to taking applications
644-839-2880 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
daily
RAM DASS movies: "Evolution of a Yoqt" and "The Fall of the Sun"; "Darthus"; "Darthus: Hardan and Mahajurli"; "Ram Dass guru; and "Hindum and the Song of God"; 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at The United Nations
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION MARCH March 23, 2015 Lawrence Gay's Social Activities: 943-829-6929. Counseling phone: 943-829-6929.
LAWRENCE GAY LIBRATION RAPG HAP group at 2-26 Washington University School of Medicine 2-26 Student Union, Topic: Sensitivity
LOST AND FOUND
$5 for return of glasses. Name on frame. Jue-
bey. 864, 1238 or 941-0911.
2-27
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service. State Back, 98 & Kentucky and Mall Shopping Centers.
Found: copy of BABBET in NW corner of O-Zone. Call Terry at 843-4691.
2-25
Found 'Ladies' watch with hand. Found in Flint
1982, 7/1876 Call and identify it. @ 6, 202
415, 610, 718, 818, 918, 1018, 1118, 1218, 1318, 1418, 1518, 1618, 1718, 1818, 1918, 2018, 2118, 2218, 2318, 2418, 2518, 2618, 2718, 2818, 2918, 3018, 3118, 3218, 3318, 3418, 3518, 3618, 3718, 3818, 3918, 4018, 4118, 4218, 4318, 4418, 4518, 4618, 4718, 4818, 4918, 5018, 5118, 5218, 5318, 5418, 5518, 5618, 5718, 5818, 5918, 6018, 6118, 6218, 6318, 6418, 6518, 6618, 6718, 6818, 6918, 7018, 7118, 7218, 7318, 7418, 7518, 7618, 7718, 7818, 7918, 8018, 8118, 8218, 8318, 8418, 8518, 8618, 8718, 8818, 8918, 9018, 9118, 9218, 9318, 9418, 9518, 9618, 9718, 9818, 9918, 10018, 10118, 10218, 10318, 10418, 10518, 10618, 10718, 10818, 10918, 11018, 11118, 11218, 11318, 11418, 11518, 11618, 11718, 11818, 11918, 12018, 12118, 12218, 12318, 12418, 12518, 12618, 12718, 12818, 12918, 13018, 13118, 13218, 13318, 13418, 13518, 13618, 13718, 13818, 13918, 14018, 14118, 14218, 14318, 14418, 14518, 14618, 14718, 14818, 14918, 15018, 15118, 15218, 15318, 15418, 15518, 15618, 15718, 15818, 15918, 16018, 16118, 16218, 16318, 16418, 16518, 16618, 16718, 16818, 16918, 17018, 17118, 17218, 17318, 17418, 17518, 17618, 17718, 17818, 17918, 18018, 18118, 18218, 18318, 18418, 18518, 18618, 18718, 18818, 18918, 19018, 19118, 19218, 19318, 19418, 19518, 19618, 19718, 19818, 19918, 20018, 20118, 20218, 20318, 20418, 20518, 20618, 20718, 20818, 20918, 21018, 21118, 21218, 21318, 21418, 21518, 21618, 21718, 21818, 21918, 22018, 22118, 22218, 22318, 22418, 22518, 22618, 22718, 22818, 22918, 23018, 23118, 23218, 23318, 23418, 23518, 23618, 23718, 23818, 23918, 24018, 24118, 24218, 24318, 24418, 24518, 24618, 24718, 24818, 24918, 25018, 25118, 25218, 25318, 25418, 25518, 25618, 25718, 25818, 25918, 26018, 26118, 26218, 26318, 26418, 26518, 26618, 26718, 26818, 26918, 27018, 27118, 27218, 27318, 27418, 27518, 27618, 27718, 27818, 27918, 28018, 28118, 28218, 28318, 28418, 28518, 28618, 28718, 28818, 28918, 29018, 29118, 29218, 29318, 29418, 29518, 29618, 29718, 29818, 29918, 30018, 30118, 30218, 30318, 30418, 30518, 30618, 30718, 30818, 30918, 31018, 31118, 31218, 31318, 31418, 31518, 31618, 31718, 31818, 31918, 32018, 32118, 32218, 32318, 32418, 32518, 32618, 32718, 32818, 32918, 33018, 33118, 33218, 33318, 33418, 33518, 33618, 33718, 33818, 33918, 34018, 34118, 34218, 34318, 34418, 34518, 34618, 34718, 34818, 34918, 35018, 35118, 35218, 35318, 35418, 35518, 35618, 35718, 35818, 35918, 36018, 36118, 36218, 36318, 36418, 36518, 36618, 36718, 36818, 36918, 37018, 37118, 37218, 37318, 37418, 37518, 37618, 37718, 37818, 37918, 38018, 38118, 38218, 38318, 38418, 38518, 38618, 38718, 38818, 38918, 39018, 39118, 39218, 39318, 39418, 39518, 39618, 39718, 39818, 39918, 40018, 40118, 40218, 40318, 40418, 40518, 40618, 40718, 40818, 40918, 41018, 41118, 41218, 41318, 41418, 41518, 41618, 41718, 41818, 41918, 42018, 42118, 42218, 42318, 42418, 42518, 42618, 42718, 42818, 42918, 43018, 43118, 43218, 43318, 43418, 43518, 43618, 43718, 43818, 43918, 44018, 44118, 44218, 44318, 44418, 44518, 44618, 44718, 44818, 44918, 45018, 45118, 45218, 45318, 45418, 45518, 45618, 45718, 45818, 45918, 46018, 46118, 46218, 46318, 46418, 46518, 46618, 46718, 46818, 46918, 47018, 47118, 47218, 47318, 47418, 47518, 47618, 47718, 47818, 47918, 48018, 48118, 48218, 48318, 48418, 48518, 48618, 48718, 48818, 48918, 49018, 49118, 49218, 49318, 49418, 49518, 49618, 49718, 49818, 49918, 50018, 50118, 50218, 50318, 50418, 50518, 50618, 50718, 50818, 50918, 51018, 51118, 51218, 51318, 51418, 51518, 51618, 51718, 51818, 51918, 52018, 52118, 52218, 52318, 52418, 52518, 52618, 52718, 52818, 52918, 53018, 53118, 53218, 53318, 53418, 53518, 53618, 53718, 53818, 53918, 54018, 54118, 54218, 54318, 54418, 54518, 54618, 54718, 54818, 54918, 55018, 55118, 55218, 55318, 55418, 55518, 55618, 55718, 55818, 55918, 56018, 56118, 56218, 56318, 56418, 56518, 56618, 56718, 56818, 56918, 57018, 57118, 57218, 57318, 57418, 57518, 57618, 57718, 57818, 57918, 58018, 58118, 58218, 58318, 58418, 58518, 58618, 58718, 58818, 58918, 59018, 59118, 59218, 59318, 59418, 59518, 59618, 59718, 59818, 59918, 60018, 60118, 60218, 60318, 60418, 60518, 60618, 60718, 60818, 60918, 61018, 61118, 61218, 61318, 61418, 61518, 61618, 61718, 61818, 61918, 62018, 62118, 62218, 62318, 62418, 62518, 62618, 62718, 62818, 62918, 63018, 63118, 63218, 63318, 63418, 63518, 63618, 63718, 63818, 63918, 64018, 64118, 64218, 64318, 64418, 64518, 64618, 64718, 64818, 64918, 65018, 65118, 65218, 65318, 65418, 65518, 65618, 65718, 65818, 65918, 66018, 66118, 66218, 66318, 66418, 66518, 66618, 66718, 66818, 66918, 67018, 67118, 67218, 67318, 67418, 67518, 67618, 67718, 67818, 67918, 68018, 68118, 68218, 68318, 68418, 68518, 68618, 68718, 68818, 68918, 69018, 69118, 69218, 69318, 69418, 69518, 69618, 69718, 69818, 69918, 70018, 70118, 70218, 70318, 70418, 70518, 70618, 70718, 70818, 70918, 71018, 71118, 71218, 71318, 71418, 71518, 71618, 71718, 71818, 71918, 72018, 72118, 72218, 72318, 72418, 72518, 72618, 72718, 72818, 72918, 73018, 73118, 73218, 73318, 73418, 73518, 73618, 73718, 73818, 73918, 74018, 74118, 74218, 74318, 74418, 74518, 74618, 74718, 74818, 74918, 75018, 75118, 75218, 75318, 75418, 75518, 75618, 75718, 75818, 75918, 76018, 76118, 76218, 76318, 76418, 76518, 76618, 76718, 76818, 76918, 77018, 77118, 77218, 77318, 77418, 77518, 77618, 77718, 77818, 77918, 78018, 78118, 78218, 78318, 78418, 78518, 78618, 78718, 78818, 78918, 79018, 79118, 79218, 79318, 79418, 79518, 79618, 79718, 79818, 79918, 80018, 80118, 80218, 80318, 80418, 80518, 80618, 80718, 80818, 80918, 81018, 81118, 81218, 81318, 81418, 81518, 81618, 81718, 81818, 81918, 82018, 82118, 82218, 82318, 82418, 82518, 82618, 82718, 82818, 82918, 83018, 83118, 83218, 83318, 83418, 83518, 83618, 83718, 83818, 83918, 84018, 84118, 84218, 84318, 84418, 84518, 84618, 84718, 84818, 84918, 85018, 85118, 85218, 85318, 85418, 85518, 85618, 85718, 85818, 85918, 86018, 86118, 86218, 86318, 86418, 86518, 86618, 86718, 86818, 86918, 87018, 87118, 87218, 87318, 87418, 87518, 87618, 87718, 87818, 87918, 88018, 88118, 88218, 88318, 88418, 88518, 88618, 88718, 88818, 88918, 89018, 89118, 89218, 89318, 89418, 89518, 89618, 89718, 89818, 89918, 90018, 90118, 90218, 90318, 90418, 90518, 90618, 90718, 90818, 90918, 91018, 91118, 91218, 91318, 91418, 91518, 91618, 91718, 91818, 91918, 92018, 92118, 92218, 92318, 92418, 92518, 92618, 92718, 92818, 92918, 93018, 93118, 93218, 93318, 93418, 93518, 93618, 93718, 93818, 93918, 94018, 94118, 94218, 94318, 94418, 94518, 94618, 94718, 94818, 94918, 95018, 95118, 95218, 95318, 95418, 95518, 95618, 95718, 95818, 95918, 96018, 96118, 96218, 96318, 96418, 96518, 96618, 96718, 96818, 96918, 97018, 97118, 97218, 97318, 97418, 97518, 97618, 97718, 97818, 97918, 98018, 98118, 98218, 98318, 98418, 98518, 98618, 98718, 98818, 98918, 99018, 99118, 99218, 99318, 99418, 99518, 99618, 99718, 99818, 99918, 100018, 100118, 100218, 100318, 100418, 100518, 100618, 100718, 100818, 100918, 101018, 10118, 101218, 101318, 101418, 101518, 101618, 101718, 101818, 101918, 102018, 102118, 102218, 102318, 102418, 102518, 102618, 102718, 102818, 102918, 103018, 103118, 103218, 103318, 103418, 103518, 103618, 103718, 103818, 103918, 104018, 104118, 104218, 104318, 104418, 104518, 104618, 104718, 104818, 104918, 105018, 105118, 105218, 105318, 105418, 105518, 105618, 105718, 105818, 105918, 106018, 106118, 106218, 106318, 106418, 106518, 106618, 106718, 106818, 106918, 107018, 107118, 107218, 107318, 107418, 107518, 107618, 107718, 107818, 107918, 108018, 108118, 108218, 108318, 108418, 108518, 108618, 108718, 108818, 108918, 109018, 109118, 109218, 109318, 109418, 109518, 109618, 109718, 109818, 109918, 110018, 110118, 110218, 110318, 110418, 110518, 110618, 110718, 110818, 110918, 111018, 11118, 111218, 111318, 111418, 111518, 111618, 111718, 111818, 111918, 112018, 112118, 112218, 112318, 112418, 112518, 112618, 112718, 112818, 112918, 113018, 113118, 113218, 113318, 113418, 113518, 113618, 113718, 113818, 113918, 114018, 114118, 114218, 114318, 114418, 114518, 114618, 114718, 114818, 114918, 115018, 115118, 115218, 115318, 115418, 115518, 115618, 115718, 115818, 115918, 116018, 116118, 116218, 116318, 116418, 116518, 116618, 116718, 116818, 116918, 117018, 117118, 117218, 117318, 117418, 117518, 117618, 117718, 117818, 117918, 118018, 118118, 118218, 118318, 118418, 118518, 118618, 118718, 118818, 118918, 119018, 119118, 119218, 119318, 119418, 119518, 119618, 119718, 119818, 120018, 120118, 120218, 120318, 120418, 120518, 120618, 120718, 120818, 120918, 121018, 121118, 121218, 121318, 121418, 121518, 121618, 121718, 121818, 121918, 122018, 122118, 122218, 122318, 122418, 122518, 122618, 122718, 122818, 122918, 123018, 123118, 123218, 123318, 123418, 123518, 123618, 123718, 123818, 123918, 124018, 124118, 124218, 124318, 124418, 124518, 124618, 124718, 124818, 124918, 125018, 125118, 125218, 125318, 125418, 125518, 125618, 125718, 125818, 125918, 126018, 126118, 126218, 126318, 126418, 126518, 126618, 126718, 126818, 126918, 127018, 127118, 127218, 127318, 127418, 127518, 127618, 127718, 127818, 127918, 128018, 128118, 128218, 128318, 128418, 128518, 128618, 128718, 128818, 128918, 129018, 129118, 129218, 129318, 129418, 129518, 129618, 129718, 129818, 129918, 130018, 130118, 130218, 130318, 130418, 130518, 130618, 130718, 130818, 130918, 131018, 131118, 131218, 131318, 131418, 131518, 131618, 131718, 131818, 131918, 132018, 132118, 132218, 132318, 132418, 132518, 132618, 132718, 132818, 132918, 133018, 133118, 133218, 133318, 133418, 133518, 133618, 133718, 133818, 133918, 134018, 134118, 134218, 134318, 134418, 134518, 134618, 134718, 134818, 134918, 135018, 135118, 135218, 135318, 135418, 135518, 135618, 135718, 135818, 135918, 136018, 136118, 136218, 136318, 136418, 136518, 136618, 136718, 136818, 136918, 137018, 137118, 137218, 137318, 137418, 137518, 137618, 137718, 137818, 137918, 138018, 138118, 138218, 138318, 138418, 138518, 138618, 138718, 138818, 138918, 139018, 139118, 139218, 139318, 139418, 139518, 139618, 139718, 139818, 139918, 140018, 140118, 140218, 140318, 140418, 140518, 140618, 140718, 140818, 140918, 141018, 141118, 141218, 141318, 141418, 141518, 141618, 141718, 141818, 141918, 142018, 142118, 142218, 142318, 142418, 142518, 142618, 142718, 142818, 142918, 143018, 143118, 143218, 143318, 143418, 143518, 143618, 143718, 143818, 143918, 144018, 144118, 144218, 144318, 144418, 144518, 144618, 144718, 144818, 144918, 145018, 145118, 145218, 145318, 145418, 145518, 145618, 145718, 145818, 145918, 146018, 146118, 146218, 146318, 146418, 146518, 146618, 146718, 146818, 146918, 147018, 147118, 147218, 147318, 147418, 147518, 147618, 147718, 147818, 147918, 148018, 148118, 148218, 148318, 148418, 148518, 148618, 148718, 148818, 148918, 149018, 149118, 149218, 149318, 149418, 149518, 149618, 149718, 149818, 149918, 150018, 150118, 150218, 150318, 150418, 150518, 150618, 150718, 150818, 150918, 151018, 15118, 151218, 151318, 151418, 151518, 151618, 151718, 151818, 151918, 152018, 152118, 152218, 152318, 152418, 152518, 152618, 152718, 152818, 152918, 153018, 153118, 153218, 153318, 153418, 153518, 153618, 153718, 153818, 153918, 154018, 154118, 154218, 154318, 154418, 154518, 154618, 154718, 154818, 154918, 155018, 155118, 155218, 155318, 155418, 155518, 155618, 155718, 155818, 155918, 156018, 156118, 156218, 156318, 156418, 156518, 156618, 156718, 156818, 156918, 157018, 157118, 157218, 157318, 157418, 157518, 157618, 157718, 157818, 157918, 158018, 158118, 158218, 158318, 158418, 158518, 158618, 158718, 158818, 158918, 159018, 159118, 159218, 159318, 159418, 159518, 159618, 159718, 159818, 159918, 160018, 160118, 160218, 160318, 160418, 160518, 160618, 160718, 160818, 160918, 161018, 161118, 161218, 161318, 161418, 161518, 161618, 161718, 161818, 161918, 162018, 162118, 162218, 162318, 162418, 162518, 162618, 162718, 162818, 162918, 163018, 163118, 163218, 163318, 163418, 163518, 163618, 163718, 163818, 163918, 164018, 164118, 164218, 164318, 164418, 164518, 164618, 164718, 164818, 164918, 165018, 165118, 165218, 165318, 165418, 165518, 165618, 165718, 165818, 165918, 166018, 166118, 166218, 166318, 166418, 166518, 166618, 166718, 166818, 166918, 167018, 167118, 167218, 167318, 1
Found set of keys in front of Jahayaw Tower.
Found Dick Himes at 864-313 and identify.
Found in: Wescoe one T-square, 884-1505, call and identify.
2-27
Found: Flight training book, 19th and Tenn. Cat
842-6915. 2.27
Found: Checkbook at Stables 10 p.m. Saturday
night—Call Stables 0.27
HELP WANTED
Found: Small, female Dachshund, on Stewart
Avenue: Please 842-6458 or 841-9447 2-27
Addresses wanted Immediately! Work at home in Boulder, CO. Travel required. American Service, 1401 Winton Blvd., Suite 180, Boulder, CO 80320.
TACOS
Management Position for Business Student-
during the School Year. Part time during school year. Contact Jay
Davis at 516-428-7300.
Mt. Trainie with Crazy Top Shop, Novelty T-Shirt, custom screening, athletic wear, Greek accessories. Part-time to start. Sales exp. help-send. Resume invite to Crazy Top Shop. Yoyo 1-25-25
Bessy's Drive-In is now taking applications for the new 10 percent discount $2 per bag at milk-fare on food. Apply by November 31st.
PERSONAL
Boyce Club of Lawnery needs recreation supermarket Work-Trees Growth Pitch 3 (sqm) 14-64ft² Work-Trees Growth Pitch 2 (sqm) 14-64ft²
Volunteer, Clearing House ir. taking applications
Volunteer, Clearing House ir. taking applications
644-839-7000, between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
644-839-7000, between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m.
TRAVEL
EUROPE
less 1/2 eccentric
than
BANANA
Cal.
for from 800-325-4867
The smoking the kickin' completely.安全 export, safety export,
Clair, Clair, 844-123; Evenson, 847-310;
Clair, Clair, 844-123; Evenson, 847-310;
Couple needs another couple to drive to padre over spring break. B41-641-6841, after 5:30, 3-2
toll free 800-325-4867
Unitravel Charters
office in Denver. We need you to transport a
male or female with backpack to your office.
Meet at 12 noon on Friday, March 19th,
at 12 noon or by 2:00 call (855) 426-7267
or email info@homelink.com.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATGY MOTU YOU DOWN! If so, keep help early.
105, 117, 119. Call 841-1896. $-17
110, 111. Call 841-1896. $-17
EUROPEISHAALAAFRECAASBA --- Travel desk
354-0126, 777-8999, Trucker. Gauer, 2004. (641)
First Avenue, Trucker. Gauer, 2004. (641)
MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 142, 142, 500, 558, 457. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681.
ENTERTAINMENT
Casa de Taco
$3.95 per Dozen
What if you kick the bucks? Then what?
MARRY ME! MARY ME!
TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY $ 2,300. 4,900. 7,600.
SUNDAY • WEDNESDAY $ 1,800. 3,500. 6,300.
1105 Massachusetts
843-9880
66
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
10th & Mass
6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
Bud on Tap
a quiet corner
★Pool ★Foosball
THE LOUNGE
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
Planning a trip?
Let Maupin tour
Do the LEGWORK For You!!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
SUA / Maupintour
travel service
MOTORBIKE
Phone 843-1211
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass.
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
843-9404
New Members Available
Class II Private Club
Class V Private Club
— 7 DAYS —
Wayne Park-owner
5 Nights a Week No Cover
NEW MODERN DECOR
CLUB
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
Interesting Night People With cold beverages at night: The group has an airy design for sweet feelings and genius.
THE
9th & Iowa
HIDEOUT
Sandwiches - Pizza Pool - American Shuffleboard
E E E E E
armadillo bead cc
THE LION OF BELGRAVE
MACRAME
710 Mass, 841-7946 M
MACRAME BEADS large selection of sizes & prices Mon.-Sat. 10:5-30
the CRAMOPHONE
shop
BU 1811 AIS FOR STATION +4
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Steroid Components
Audio Components
STATE OF THE ART
THE FOOTBALL
TIMES
TEAC
INC
CENTER FOR
FOOTBALL
INC
CENTER FOR
FOOTBALL
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD AND STEREO
MAILS COMPANY CENTER LANCAUS KANASIS 800-892-0444
10
Wednesday, February 25,1976
University Dally Kansan
Grant program lacks funds for all students
Some University of Kansas students who need help financing the cost of this semester's education are at the mercy of Congress.
The federally financed Basic Education Opportunity Grant (BEOG) program needs additional funds to meet its obligations for the 1975-78 academic year.
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said Friday that only 30 of 90 eligible KU students hadn't recalled how he had thought it had brought the problem for those students was only temporary.
"I can't help but think that the program will receive supplemental funding," he said. "It's a national entitlement program." It is not, as it was entitled as those who applied earlier.
"It may take some time to decide where the money will come from and then appropriate it, but I do think the program will receive additional funds. I would discourage anyone from applying for the grant because the program is short of work."
THE BEOG PROGRAM is a federal aid program that provides financial assistance, based on the student's and his family's financial resources for eligible students attending approved post-high school institutions.
Anyone who attended an approved post-
high school institution before April 1, 1973,
is invisible. The grants range from $200 to
$1,400. Applications for the 1975-76
academic year must be filed before March
15.
Roigers said the BEOG program was well received by students in 1978-79. The program rested on the 1978-79 program.
was originally budgeted $820 million for the year.
The program needs additional funds, Rogers said, because about 74 per cent of the national applicants this year were undergraduates and only 62 per cent eligibility rate had been predicted.
Rogers said he didn't know why so many more students than predicted were eligible for the program.
"AT THE END of the fall semester, 78 KU students had received checks," he said. "I assumed most of them would be back for the spring semester, and predicted that about 60 new students would be eligible. However, and 122 new students who were eligible."
Rogers said he had to ask for another $100,000 Feb. 3 because he had underestimated the number of new recipients for the spring semester.
After he requested the $100,000, Rogers said, he received a letter from the national director of the Division of Basic and State Student Grants. The letter said that further requests for funds would be reduced to 33 dollars, but additional funding was until additional funds became available.
HE SAID HE DIDN'T think the program would reduce the amount of the students' grants rather than provide additional funds. Most of the students have been paid the full tuition for their grants, and it would be impossible to get part of the money back, Rogers said.
"If we get one-third of our request we should be able to meet our commitments."
"The students who haven't been paid are being very patient," Rogers says. "No one will be upset."
On Campus
Events...
TODAY: The GERMAN CLUB will meet at 3:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: Jazz Musician GARY BURTON will perform at 7 and 10 at the Off-The-Wall Hall. The KBELLY DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 at the United Ministries Center. STEPHEN MILLER, assistant professor in 'classical art' of University of California at Berkeley, will lecture at in the Council Room of the Union.
TOMORROW. JOHN PAINTER of Drew University will discuss "Biomedical Ethics and Termination Treatment" at 10 a.m. at the United Ministries Center. Jeanne Stump, assistant professor of art history, will speak at the WOMEN'S STUDIES SUNDIW BICHMISNAR at noon in Alcove B of the Union.
Announcements ...
FREE UNIVERSITY enrollment will begin today and continue through Friday to 13:30 p.m. Students may enroll at the Free University table in the Union at no cost.
VOLUNTEER CLEARING HOUSE needs volunteers for a variety of programs. Those interested in volunteering should call the Campus Volunteer Clearing House 212-567-0492.
Grants and Awards...
Randy K. Huber, Kansas City, Mo., a 1975 KU graduate, has been awarded the $1,000 Morris E. DeWitt Memorial Scholarship.
KU DEBATERS won awards at tournaments at the University of Nebraska and Northwestern University. Evanston, Ill.
At the University of Nebraska, Steve Griffin, Lawrence freshman, was the first place speaker. Shelley Scranton, Hutchinson freshman, was third. Griffin and Scranton took fifth place as a team and fourth place honors went to the team of Don Green. Abilene freshman, and Sherry Jo Wolfe, Blue Springs, Mo., freshman.
At Northwestern University, Frank Cross and Robin Rowland, Lawrence juniors, took fifth place. Two KU teams tied for eight place at the tournament. They were Jim Prentice, Turon senior; Phil Snow, Sugarland, Texas; senior; Jeff Brunton, Topeka junior, and Charles Fairchild, Leewood junior.
BUY A PEPSI
AND KEEP
THIS CARTOON
GLASS
This adorable glass can be
yours for keeps. Just buy
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participating Henry's Drive-in.
And remember, it's one of a
whole set of "cartoon character"
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© WARNER BROS. 1974
Henry's ™
JERRY
PUBG
COLLECTION WINNER
This adorable glass can be yours for keeps. Just buy a 16 oz. Pegasus at any participating Henry's Drive-In. And remember, it's one of a whole set of 'cartoon character glasses' we're offering. Collect 'em all!
Only
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JERRY
This adorable glass can be yours for keeps. Just buy a 16 oz. Pepsi at any participating Henry's Drive-In And remember, it's one of a whole set of 'cartoon character' glasses we're offering Collect 'em all!
Only 49¢ per glass
© WARNER BROS. 1974
Henry's ™
Only 49¢ per glass
6th & Missouri
843-2139
Jeff Rhoads, Sigma Phi Epion activity chairman, said yesterday the fraternity visited 16 apartment complexes and collected #402.55.
Two KU sororites and one fraternity have recognized February as National Heart Month by collecting a total of $732.30 for the Heart Fund.
Greeks' collect for Heart Fund
Delta Delta Delta sorority helped Bill
Eddy, business chairman of the drive,
prepare letters and pamphlets that were
mailed to Lawrence businesses asking for
Delta Delta Delta collected $99.75.
Mrs. Martin Wollmann, residential fund drive chairman for Lawrence, said she wouldn't know until March how much money was collected in Lawrence.
Mary Beth Olsen, Panhellenic campus affairs chairman, said the sorportions that hadn't already participated in the drive would ask for donations this week.
Alpha Phi society earned $240 for the Heart Fund from a lollipop sale at Hillcrest Shopping Center Monday and a singing valentine project earlier this month.
NOTICE
The Association of University Residence Halls is holding its annual election of officers on Thursday, February 26 beginning at 6:30 p.m. at McCollum Hall (cafeteria level). Officers to be elected are: President, Vice President, Assembly Chairperson, Secretary, Treasurer, and Communications Coordinator. Residence hall students interested in information regarding the election may call Harry Wigner at 864-4041 or contact their hall president.
Rock Climbing
Over Spring Break
March 17-19
Instruction offered in basic and intermediate levels
Sponsored by Gran Sport and International Alpine School
Three day course $650
To be held in Eldorado Canyon,
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843-3328
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
2
COOL
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.95
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, February 26, 197b
College hockey gains popularity in U.S. schools
See page 6
Old annexes on campus to be razed
Eleven annexes on the Lawrence campus of the University of Kansas, some dating back to World War II, eventually will be removed.
Keth Lawton, director of facilities,
painting and operations, said yesterday
that the company was developing a new
The first group includes those buildings that date back to World War II—the Linden, Bailey, Military Science and Oread annexes—all of which will be rained when it is financially possible to construct necessary buildings. Lawton said.
The second group—the Marvin annexes numbered three and four, Green, Blake and University extension annexes and the two annexes east of Summerfield-compresses that will eventually be taken off the central campus and put to other uses, he said.
MARCO MAYORAL
Long range plans are to remove all anxines, Lawton said, but current academic needs and the unavailability of funds for education will be difficult to determine when this will happen.
The Bailey, Lindley and Oread annexes and the number three Marvin anxex, which are now occupied by visual arts students, will be vacated when the new visual arts building is finished in spring 1978, Lawton said.
The number four Marvin annex, now used by geology students, will be moved to Summerfield Hall in April for use by the computation center. Lawton said.
He said college students would use classrooms in Lindley Hall after the move.
By 1978, Lawton said, the new computer center building should be finished and the three annexes that would then be next to Summerfield could be put to other uses.
He said that planning money for a continuing education building had been given to the University by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW).
Continuing education classes are now held in the University extension annex.
Preliminary plans will be submitted to HEW along with a request for a funding grant for the actual construction, he said. Continuing education, elsewhere, are one
Lawton said more annexes were on campus now than several years ago because of increased enrollment during the late 1960s.
Building of service facilities will continue into the 1980s. Lawton said.
in addition to the computer center, service facilities needed are the satellite union and buildings for the west campus physical plant complex, he said.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Wind 1. kite 0
Gary Lieberman, Chesterfield, Mo, sophomore, reels in what's left of his kite at the intramural fields near Robinson. Gusty, unpredictable wedge made kite flying at high speed.
Festival changes probable
BY LYNDA SMITH
Staff Writer
The cancellation of Herbie Hancock and Lioned Hampton from this year's Festival of the Arts will probably spur changes in future festivals.
Hancock and Hampton were the festival's main attractions, Carol Poulson, Festival of
Foulson said she and Mike Muller, SUA activities adviser, discussed the possibility of changing the festival before Miller left for the weekend, but no specific changes were planned.
Tickets for the festival were sold in a package coupon booklet, Poulson said, and most people probably bought coupons from Hancock's and Hampton's performances.
"The biggest night for the festival has always been the Saturday night concert," Poulson said. "Most people don't really care about the other nights."
HANCKOCC to appear Saturday, April 10, and Hampton was to appear April 9. The American Chamber Ballet, the Chicago Chamber Orchestra and George Plimont will still appear April 4, 5 and 7 respectively.
Poulson said she didn't think the festival would be discontinued, even though it was cancelled last year and had made money only two times in its nine-year existence.
"It would take an awful力 for it to be dropped," she said.
Poulson said she thought that if SUA didn't make money on this year's festival, she'd be a bad candidate.
"Now I think we will break on even the three remaining nights, but it will take a lot
SUA didn't release the news of the cancellations when they were made.
Poulson said, "As soon as we would have announced it, people probably would have wanted their money back. We looked for equivalent replacements instead."
GREG BENGTSON, SUA president, said a final decision on the festival's future would be made next week when Miller returns to Lawrence.
He said the festival must be discontinued, but changing it was more probable.
"We hoped it (the festival) would take place, but if it can't, we have to accept he said. "Booking practices are change- ing," it just a matter of the way things are."
Bengtson said it was fairly easy for performers to arrange tentative bookings in November or December, and then cancel them after Christmas.
Performers have to be booked as early as November, Poulson said, because tickets are sold during spring enrollment in January.
"It's difficult for a university to be hardened," he said. "Performers realize that many of us are not ready."
WHEN SUA heard of the cancellations
two weeks ago, Bergson said, it
two months on, Bergson replaced,
rather than replacements.
Foulson said SUA decided not to run the contract breaks because half of the SUA board, including herself and Miller, would probably be brought to court.
Replacements considered were Melissa Manchester, and two jazz artists taken from a group composed of Stan Getz, Freddy Hubbard, George Benson and Les McKown. They weren't offered contracts because they were not performing engagements scheduled or were too expensive.
"But I think it's important," she said. "I wish I could."
Poulson said she would send a letter to Hancock an urgent request reimbursement for the damage.
REMEMBLEMENT won't be asked from Hampton, she said, because Hampton didn't want to get the job.
"It was our fault in a way," she said, because Hampton's agent said he had "bad intentions."
Although the coupons haven't been issued, Poulson said, SUA has a list of people who purchased them. She said those who bought coupons should bring identification to the SUA office in the Kansas Union to have their money refunded.
Slide rule faces extinction
Tickets for the remaining performances will go on sale March 8.
By JAY BEMIS
The slide rule is doing
University of Kansas professors and local office supply managers report that the once-popular mathematical tool is losing its popularity in modern technology—the hand-held calculator.
"CALCULATORS can do more and they're more accurate," he said yesterday.
J. D. Crestman, manager of the Kansas Union Bookstore, says more students are buying calculators because of their convenience and capabilities.
Before July 1 of last year, Christman said, the bookstore had sold an average of 240 slide rules a year. Since then, however, he has only five. Five slide rules have been sold, he said.
The bookstore has eight different brands of calculators. Two of the most popular brands, Hewlett-Packard and Texas Instruments, each feature six different models.
Workers accept move to remedy complaints
By MARY ANN DAUGHERTY
The United Public Employees Association (UPEA) last night cautiously accepted a resolution adopted by the Lawrence City Council on Monday to disarrange between city and employees.
The UPEA, which comprises six employee groups, met at the home of Dennis Smith, president of the Lawrence Sanitation draft a uniform response to the resolution.
a move toward regulations and away from favoritism, chaos and indifference."
Before the UPEA announced its response.
However, the UPEA statement said that none of the issues in the resolution were new and that city government had promised to correct them as early as last May.
The resolution, which ends three months of investigation of city mismanagement charges, contains 28 proposals to improve working relations and marks the end of a commission review of most employee grievances.
THE UPEA response said the resolution had "finally acknowledged to the public the existence of the many problems in city management. The resolution appears to be
"After almost ten months, little has changed, which is why we called for the investigating committee," the statement concludes. "In the resolution are still very vane."
THE STATEMENT was signed by Smith; Alvin Sammels, president of the Lawrence Firefighters Association; Earl Silvers, president of the Lawrence Street Department Employees Association; Gene Bouchard, president of the Lawrence Water Department Employees Association; Terry Parks, president of the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Employees Association; and Eric L. Smith, president of the Lawrence Police Officers Association.
Smith, one of six people who investigated mismanagement during the past three months, said he thought the resolution wouldn't solve the disagreements.
Argersinger, Binns and Henderson signed
The Rev. Homer "Butch" Henderson, also a committee member, was at Tuesday's meeting. Reading from a prepared statement, Henderson told the commission he was pleased with the investigation.
Smith was present at the commission meeting but didn't comment during the hearing.
"I I would have said what I felt in my heart," he said, "they (the commissioners) would have listened, as they always do, and that would have been the end of it."
COMMISSIONERS Marinne Argeringer and Donald Bins, both committee members, also said they were pleased with the plan.
a committee report in mid-January. Smith, Samulis and Muriel Paul, the committee's citizen representative, signed a separate statement that they said was more specific and productive.
The second report, a 20-page document,
made several charges including charges of
theft.
"THERE ARE some desired recommendations, such as those in the areas of safety and employee evaluation," she said. "But the resolution in the main represents a greater threat than a direct attack upon, the very serious managerial problems in the city."
Paul, who wasn't at Tuesday's meeting,
said she was disappointed with the
resolution after briefly studying its proposals last night.
Paul said the city commission and Buffalo, city manager, were "culprits in the mayor's case."
"The city is the loser," she said
Christman attributed the increase in calculator sales to more than just student
*Are they buying them for nothing more than balancing their checkbooks and books?*
Fred Stubuek, owner of Carter's Stationery Supply, said he had definitely noticed a decline in the sale of slide rules, since the "advent of the calculator."
STUBECK the prices on his slide rules ranged from $1.50 to $40, depending on height.
"They've got prices down on calculators," he said. "Though they're higher-priced, all you have to do is press a button and you've got your answer."
Professors who were interviewed agreed that slide rules were losing popularity with students.
"The electronic calculator in the new slide rule." Paul Willhite, professor of chemical engineering.
anything that could be on a slide
rule, he said, also could be done on a
card.
"I've thought about taking my slide rule and mounting it on a wall plaque, just to remind me of the old days," be said. "I don't even know a student who owns a slide rule."
STUDENTS ARE allowed to use calculators for tests in Wilhelm's classes, he said, explaining that calculators are an instrument from the standpoint *d* the student.
"I think it is a generally accepted fact that calculators are a tool can use," he said. "However, a calculator also allows a student to answer the problem out," if he hasn't thought the problem out."
Will it arise that it would be detrimental if students started using calculators in class?
"If students don't know the basic arithmetic tables by the time they get to the college level," he said, "I don't think they'll have the time to trw."
Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry, said a calculator did essentially the same thing as a slide rule would, but more accurately.
"CALCULATORS are dropping in price at the time," he said. "Some are the same as last year."
Although calculators are gaining popularity, Bricker said, there is still an air of uncertainty.
"I took orders for some in class recently",
he said. "It's a good model because it's only
three inches square and you can carry it a
pocket or purse anytime. They cost $6 or $7
for $3 and them for $3 by ordering more. I told class
and 20 people who wanted one."
Bricker said he also feared what might happen in calculators used in school and high schools.
"We're going to generate a whole generation of people who don't know elementary arithmetic, he said. They will get confused unless they count it on their fingers."
YTRONE DUNCAN, associate professor of math, said he had not noticed any recent changes in the program.
"Calculators have definitely taken over," he said. "You can buy a calculator that performs the basic arithmetical operations cheaper than you can some slide rules."
Don Dungherby, associate professor of electrical engineering, said he thought that at least 50 per cent of his students were using calculators.
Although there might be some sort of historical importance, the slide rule, due to its simplicity it doesn't allow a switch to calculators because "as an engineering tool, the hand calculator is
"We can do problems never assigned to us before." he said.
DAUGHTERY SAID an advantage of the side rule was the fact that it is "failure rate" or a statistic.
"I've heard of students running out of batteries in the middle of a test," he said. "That's sort of a failure on the student's part, because if a calculator is durable, he before has recharged it the night before the test—but it has happened."
*With a slide rule, unless you smash it on the floor or something, there's no way you can measure.*
Roaches, leaks not part of leases
(Editee's Note): This is the fourth in a five-part series examining where students listen and why at the University
By LIZ LEECH
Students won't end up in an apartment where cockroaches replace landlords and kitchen floors are flooded by running bath water if they are cautious when renting.
Staff Writer
*“WHEN YOU are a tenant, you have the responsibility of understanding the agreement under which you are*
Carol Stohrbehn, administrative director of the Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) in the Kansas Union, said yesterday that repairs and rent agreements were the things students complained about most often.
Lawrence housing authorities advise students to read apartment leases carefully before signing.
them to think that they even belonged to a landlord. "But that there's not," she said. "An oral agreement is." But that is not true," she said. "An oral agreement is."
Sometimes students think they aren't obligated to a lead if there is no written agreement, happen them.
Verbal agreements are called "rental agreements." Written ones are leases, she said.
apartments since the passage of the state Residential Landlord-Tenant Act last July.
MOST LANDLORDS have check lists and inspect premises for damages with the tenant. When the tenant is ready to move out, Strobbem said, they again inspect the property for any damage done during the tenant's occupancy.
She said the law required that the tenant and landlord jointly take inventory of the apartment within five days of the end of the lease.
Strobben said the CAA had been receiving fewer complaints from students about repairs needed in their
"It's just so he (the landlord) won't get blamed for things he hasn't done and, in turn, the landlord can see if he's doing anything wrong."
Pat Bally, Lawrence Renault Exchange manager, said students should read lenses carefully and ask their landlord to ensure they are safe.
does questions it is uneven don't understand the agreements.
Le La孔菲ite, off-campus housing secretary, said
bac off-campus housing secretary.
who has not appointed descriptions or forum summaries. She is not the counsel of any law firm and lacked complaints, but that she referred them to a lawyer.
She said that students had been in inquiry about apartments for next fall but that she didn't have new listings.
SOME HOSING authorities said students should begin looking now for next fall's apartments to avoid future
Bailey said many apartment complexes were filled by August and many were prelaceasing now.
She said one complex would soon raise its rates $20, but students signed leases for the fall by March 31, the institute said.
The easiest way to save money in an apartment is to have a roommate. LaFollette said.
She said out-of-town students sometimes lived in expensive apartment complexes because of information about
La Follette said that she had heard about room rented in old houses for $45, but that she didn't know who the landlords were or where the houses were. Townhouses are much more expensive to rent, with some coating about $450, she said
There is a wide range of apartment prices in Lawrence, but what is included in the price is what makes the dif-
(Tomorrow): Houses, rooms-for-rent, trailers, married housing, co-op living and students living at home.)
Most furnished apartments provide beds, dining tables,
chairs, dressers, mirrors, couches and end tables.
THE SIZE of the apartment, whether it is furnished or unfurnished and whether utilities are included in the rent are all factors that cause prices to vary. Most apartments range from which range $50 to $150, depending on the complex.
Rent survey
APARTMENT COMPLEX ONE-BEDROOM TWO-BEDROOM THREE-BEDROOM BATHING
Avrami Quarter Creek 175-190 $125-145 325-345 $150
Apple Croft 175-300 190-325 x x 145-175
X 160-180 190-220 x
Awakon 160-180 190-220 x
Woodland Gardens 160-180 190-220 x
Brand X X X X X
Similarity for the short chart was generated by the Ramanan in a survey of the listed apparatuses. The prison differ for varying reasons, including either the burden or utilization of utilities and furnishings or beds.
2
Thursday, February 26, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
Ford, Carter firsts final
present Ford said yesterday his narrow New Hampshire primary victory meant he could eliminate Ronald Reagan if he won upcoming primaries.
Final results were Ford, 54,824 or 51 per cent and Reagan, 33,507 or 49 per cent of the vote, which took all night to count.
Ford won overwhelming control of the state's 21-member delegation to the Republican National Convention.
Carter said yesterday he would win the Democratic presidential nomination on the first ballot. He won 17 Democratic National Convention delegates, and Udall
New Hampshire Democrats gave Gov. Jimmy Carter 28,980, or 30 per cent of the vote. Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Arizu, was second with 18,544 or 30 per cent.
Prairie flares up again
EMPORIA-Eight prairie and woodland fires still smoldered yesterday after they swept across thousands of acres of dry grasslands in the Flint Hills area of
Another fire broke out around an oil drilling rig 11 miles east of Arkansas City, and burned across about 1,000 acres of prairie land.
After northwest winds blew the fire more than five miles, firemen from Arkansas City, Winfield, Dexter and the rural fire department in adjoining cities have been battling the blaze.
They continued to patrol the area of Cowley County State Lake and south of U.S. 168 about 15 miles east of Arkansas City to prevent new hareworms from getting there.
Fire fighters from the Eureka and Burlington area were also on the alert against a recurrence of the prairie and woodland fires.
Scranton new U.N. rep
WASHINGTON—Former Penn. Gov. William Scratton has the job of standing up for the United States against unfair attacks in the United Nations,
Ford appointed Scranton to succeed Daniel Patrick Moynihan as U.N. ambassador and promised that the United States would take a firm stand in the world
Scranton, appearing with Ford and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger in the White House Oval Office, called the job an honor, but a very difficult one.
"In a Pat Moyhanian风," Scranon said. "I'm delighted with the way he handed the job. I'm proud to be his successor and I think we are on the upward." Scranon told he was an advocate of an even-baned policy in the Middle East. He said the U.S. position in that region was slanted towards Israel.
House cites mum agents
WASHINGTON—A House subcommittee began contempt action yesterday against five federal agents who refused to testify about their interception of cables
Three FBI agents and a former agent told the House government information subcommittee that they had been ordered by Atty. Gen. Edward H. Levi not to
An employee of the National Security Agency who was also involved in the 29 years of cable interception in an operation known as Shamrock, said his order not to disclose such information has been rejected.
President Ford told Levi and Clements last week not to comply with the subcommittee's subpoena of all documents and records related to cable interceptions since January 1947. Ford said the records encompassed sensitive national security information.
SUA Presents
a discussion on
Psychic Awarenes by Marcella Kelly well known Kansas City Psychic Wednesday, March 3.1976
7:30 p.m.
Forum Room in the Union
Admission Free
---
Off the Wall Hall
PRESENTS
the various angles to:
737 New Hampshire
LAWRENCE
Off the Wall Hall
REE
FROG
FEBRUARY 27
FRIDAY
8:30 $2.00
FEBRUARY
27 & 28
FRI. & SAT.
MACKENDER
LUNCH
J.M
M.L
FEBRUARY
27 & 28
FRI. & SAT.
MIXKENDER
LUNCH
FEBRUARY
27 & 28
FRI. & SAT.
MACKENDER LUNCH
J.M.
M.L.
J.M. M.L
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., suggested yesterday that former President Richard M. Nixon would establish States a favor by staying in Peking.
Nixon criticized for China trip
Goldwater made the statement when asked whether Nixon's current trip to China had any impact on President Ford's showing in the New Hampshire primary.
"I don't think Mr. Nixon's visit to China did anything," he said, "and if he wants to do this country a favor he might stay over there.
Goldwater said Nickon's visit was a violation of the Logan Act, which prohibited citizens from trying to influence the conduct of any foreign government without authorization. The law carries a maximum penalty of a $8,000 fine and three years in prison.
"I don't think it (the trip) hurt Mr. Ford," Goldwater said. "I don't think the average American has enough respect for Mr. Nixon anymore to really believe that what he's doing is in anybody's interest but Mr. Nixon's."
Goldwater said Nixon had made a tremendous mistake "in doing what he did
The Logan Act says no one but the President and the secretary of state can
Each dinner served with egg roll,
egg drop soup, rice or fried noodles,
coffee or hot tea
MONDAY
Special Dinners $1.99 tax included
Different Each Day
Chicken Chop Suey
Green Pepper Steak
Fried Almond Chicken
WEDNESDAY
Sweet & Sour Pork
Beef Chop Suey
Restaurant
Virginia Inn
FRIDAY
843-3300
An NML representative will be on campus March 4th at the Placement Office, 202 Summerfield to interview men and women interested in learning about the NML life underwriting career.
We're big—world's largest company specializing in individual life insurance, and among the nation's 40 largest corporations.
We're solid- $7.3 billion in assets; $28.6 billion of life insurance in force, and 118 years of experience.
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Persons interested in individuality and compensation commensurate with productivity are especially welcomed. We also have an Internship Program that lets you earn while you learn.
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ROBERT S. LSHIELDS, C.L.U. District Agent Lawrence National Academy, Lawrence, Ks. 841-1539
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Senate criminal bill to be reviewed tonight
The controversial U.S. Senate B1 (1.1) will be the issue of discussion at 7:30 tonight after a hearing by the House Committee.
Aaren Blank, Wichita senior and executive director of the Kansas Civil Liberties Union, will present the reasons constitutional authorities oppose the bill.
Denis Ha朋泽, attorney from the U.S.
Justice Department, will support the bill.
S. 1 is a massive, 735-page criminal justice reform bill that was introduced to Congress Jan. 15, 1975, after nine years of debate. It was coined and codify the present U.S. Criminal Code.
Proponents of the bill say it will provide as more rational, uniform and precisely stated requirements.
PRESIDENT FORD has endorsed the bill
has called for Congress to swiftly answer
Critics of S. 1, however, say the bill has some serious faults and is repressive legislation designed to extend the government's power over people.
Former Senator Sam Ervin Jr., has said he will would establish what would be responsible for the agency.
Some of the features legislated under the bill are:
The death penalty—Provides for mandatory execution for crimes of treason, sabotage, espionage or murder committed under certain conditions.
'Star Trekkies convene in K.C.
Area "Star Trek" will fanwill be in to
the next season this week, and this
weekend to explore Star Trek 78.
Television seris stars William Shatner, De Forest Kelley and Nichole Nichols will be present at the convention, the first such convention ever in Kansas City, Mo.
Trekkies (dedicated fans) will have the opportunity to view "Star Trek" films, press conference, and star production. "Star Trek" souvenirs and memorabilia will be sold at the dealers room. A trivia contest and costume ball are events in which Trekkies can compete for
The three-day event will run on Friday from noon to 1 a.m., on Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 a.m. and on Sunday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Advance tickets are $2, available from
Chicago, 12; Kansas City, 8; Kansas
City, 12; Tampa, 12. Tickets are $18.
Marjuma—Drops the maximum federalamental ordinance of marjuma from one year to 30 years.
Handguns--Makes the use of a dangerous weapon in committing a crime a separate charge.
RIOTING-Defines a riot as a "public disturbance involving five or more persons who, by violent conduct, create a grave injury or damage to persons or property."
Thursday, February 26, 1976
Wiretapping-Gives authorization for the interception of "private oral communication" by order of a court of competent jurisdiction.
Secrecy.-Makes it possible to prosecute a person if he communicates "classified information" to a person who isn't authorized to receive it.
Racketinger-Provides for tougher laws against syndicates, making a person guilty of racketing, owns, controls, manages, directs, finances, owns, participates in a racketing syndicate."
Drug rider hearing set
An open hearing to discuss drug benefits on student health insurance policies will be at 7:30 tonight in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
The hearing is sponsored by the Student Health Advisory Board.
Steve Segebrecht, board chairman, said the Board wanted student comments and opinions on whether a prescription drug could be included in next year's policies.
This year's policy contains the drug rider, which pays for all prescription drugs and other medications.
The board recently conducted a random poll of student health insurance policy holders to find out their opinions on the drug rider. he said.
Questionnaires were sent to 640 policy holders and 334, or 53 per cent, were returned, Segebrecht said. Of those responding, 66.7 per cent favored keeping the drug rider and 33.3 per cent said the rider should be dropped.
Segebrecht said the board decided to have the hearing to give students who hadn't been paired a chance to voice their opinions, and to give students' questions on policy specifications.
GRADUATION DAZE.
CLEAR UP YOUR FUTURE IN THE 2.YEAR AFROTOC PROGRAM.
What's up after college? That question is enough to get a lot of young people down. Air Force ROTC college graduates that have worry, anxiety and stress because of the closeness it is much more secure. As a commissioned officer, it is good job. ... Travel.Graduate level education. Promotions. Financial security. And really, lots more.
If you have two academic years remaining, there's a great chance you'll be available to look. Look into the details. We think you will be surprisingly surprised. And pleasantly rewarded.
For entry into the 2-year program commencing in the fall of March 1976. Entry is limited and competitive. In the end of March 1976. Army Scientific Building, or phone 844-6476.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
JOB OPPORTUNITY 1976-77 ACADEMIC YEAR
RESIDENT ASSISTANT and ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTOR at Naismith Hall
Information including job requirements, descriptions,and applications may be obtained from the Manager's Office. Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Drive.
Deadline for submitting applications is 5 p.m. Friday. March 5. Naismith Hall is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer; male/female.
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Tonite
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Off the Wall Hall
737 New Hampshire 841-0817
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4
Thursday, February 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Festival dying out
The Festival of the Arts has once again been aborted.
Last year, the director got so far behind in planning the Festival that it was canceled altogether. Although this year's director had a solid program planned, the cancellation of Herbie Hancock and Lionel Hampton makes the rest of the "Festival" seem like a farce.
What's left are three supporting acts: The American Chamber Ballet, George Plimpton and 20 members of the Chicago Chamber Orchestra. All are well known and also undoubtedly meant to serve as warm-ups to Hampton and Hancock.
The Festival began in 1967 solely for jazz artists. Over the years it evolved to include representatives of all segments of the arts: Ella Fitzgerald, Al Capp, Lou Rawls, The Pointer Sisters and Michael Murphey, to name just a few.
But the Festival also lost money in all but two of its nine years. Lots of it—$7,200 in 1974, the last time a real Festival was offered.
The idea of the Festival is a great one, a week of artistic saturation for we uncultured students. In fact, I think one of the best week's I've ever had at KU was last Friday. Monday I saw a national touring company perform Kurt Novegut's "Happy Birthday, Wanda June;" on Tuesday I heard Robert Moog
demonstrate his synthesiser; on Wednesday I had the double treat of the quick wit of David Steinberg and one of my favorite singers, Jimmie Speheric; on Thursday playwright John Lahr spoke; on Friday I saw the Eleo Pomare singing from Carmine; and on Saturday I rocked to the incomparable music of B.B. King, B.I.
That was a Festival, indeed.
The organizers lately have been faced with diminished budgets and rising concert costs. Since the Festival began, they have sent a group to campus have skyrocketed.
There is really no way of getting an instructor to provide for higher profits to the artists.
I guess it's idealistic to think that artists might want to play to college audiences to familiarize them with their music. Hampton decided to play Europe's first album, said the Lawrence was too far out of the way. So much for enlightenment.
I'd like to say something nice and pait about next year's Festival, if there is one. I I'd like to say, 'sue the bastards' if there is one. I don't see a lot of good and different acts and concerts . . . concerts that maybe could be subsidized if they lost a little money.
But then, I'd like to have a lot of things and I get very few of them.
associate Editor
Students ignore bug
During the past two weeks, the number of people walking into Watkins Memorial Hospital with viral illnesses has increased considerably. There are also because hospital officials have been too busy to make computations.
Look around any classroom, the signs are all there—bleary eyes, coughing, and sneezing. Some students look as if they have so little energy that they could fall asleep and others do doze off. The flu season is definitely here and while you might feel through other days only are they robbing themselves of the rest they need but they are also increasing the chances that others will get sick.
IN A COLLEGE community, there is no time to be sick. Many students stay up late studying, eat at irregular times and leave themselves susceptible to illness. Then they ignore the early signs of illness, write tests to take and labs to attend.
Once sick, many don't properly take care of themselves. According to Martin Wollmann, director of Watkins Hospital, there have been few cases of relapses occurring because students try to return to classes too soon after being sick. However, being sick is physically draining. By pushing too hard, students may find that they don't have enough energy to do the work well.
IT'S SAD to think that school has become so important that students will
ignore all else including their health. But students continue to disregard sicknesses for many reasons. Some feel guilty about missing classes for which they have paid money to attend. Others are angry because they still others seem to believe that if they ignore the fact that they are sick, the illness will go away.
Many instructors are very understanding about sicknesses and they are willing to meet with the student to help him catch up on what he missed. There are a few, though, who take the class as a personal affront. These few only apply to the problem by pressuring students into attending class.
Wollmann has suggested that students with temperatures above 100 degrees should stay at home and that they shouldn't try to return to classes until 24 hours after the fever is broken. Sick students who do attend classes should go to school instead of spread of the germs. Maybe with a little common sense and some extra care, everyone will make it through another semester. By Marne Rindom
TOO MANY people have gotten their priorities confused. Sure, classes are important and expensive and grades, many times, can determine one's future. But somewhere, a line must be drawn. When a person abuses his health in the name of education, he is going too far.
Contributing Writer
Readers Respond
Reilly not a madman
To the Editor:
I am writing in reference to the editorial written against the death penalty by Contributing Writer John Johnston that appeared in the Kansan on Feb. 16. I personally have not made up my mind about the issue and have no objection to Johnston's calling callen. Sen. Edward Reilly, LeRavenworth, a "madman."
I have known Sen. Reilly personally for many years, and
I can attest to the fact that I have never known him to lose "all control of his sensibilities" or to be, in fact, a madman.
I THINK THAT it should be named that Sen. R Kelly has been re-elected three times, thus making him a District Three (Leavenworth area) for 12 years. In this district there is a Federal University and the U.S. Army Discipline Barracks. Having lived in
Johnston certainly has a right to his own opinion, but I am sorry that he felt the need to write a long man while expressing it.
Leavenworth, I feel that Sen. Reilly is representing his constituency well be being a sponsor of this bill.
Amy J. Kussmann Kansas City junior
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Bob Baldwin
Associate Campus Editor
Alex Ahlgren
Associate Campus Editors
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Assistant Campus Editors
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Pierce Photographer
Don Piecer
Brandon Davis
George Millner
George Miller, Jake Koester
Associate Sports Editors
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Associate Sports Editors
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Jim McKinney
Kansan limited
I was up to find a story
titled "Sign limit may keep out
motel" to take up one of four
chapters in the book. Kansan.
I am very interested in the
politics and economic
possibilities of Lawrence, but to
gather more priority to the
placement of signs and a motel is a waste.
To the Editor
A UNIVERSITY is a mind-expanding teacher, and our newspaper should reflect this. Many important global events that have repercussions on our lives are covered in the Kansas the stories are limited to Kansas, Lawrence and University happenings. The journalism is calm and honest in the Kansan, but I hope that students can be shown and understood as an edge scope to think and work in than traditional mediocrity.
Doren Fredrickson
Amherst, Mass, sophomore
WESTPHAL
State Legislature
No hope for DESPAIR prof
STRONG HALL-II.
Lawrence Hutchings, associate professor of pseudochemistry, is the winner of this year's DESPAIR award, the department of Public Relations and Propaganda announced yesterday.
According to a spokesman for the sixth-year seniors, Hutchings received the award in December and 15 years of awful teaching.
The DESPAIR (Demented Educator Simultaneously Politizing All Intelligences Repeatedly) Award is given annually by the University's sixth and seventh year seniors. As winner, Hutchings receives absolutely nothing.
"NEITHER HE nor any students know what the hell he's doing most of the time," the spokesman said.
The spokesman said that if it weren't for the fact that the course Hutchings teaches, "Introduction to Seminars in Computer Science" is required for all fifth-year seniors, no one would take it.
"He kind of gets up there in the front of the room and assigns readings at random," he said. "Sometimes, if we are lucky, he hands out illegible mimeordeed sheets."
THE SPOKESMAN said he wasn't sure whether Hutchings
BY THE TIME they've made it to a University, students should be able to develop a study of their own, he said.
"It's not like they were babies or something," he said, "They don't need or want some
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
Maryanne
thought his students were stupid or whether he thought they already knew everything.
"I'm up for tenure this year," he said. "With this award I can prove to the administration that I've been wasting my time teaching."
Teaching is all right in high school, Hutchings said, but really doesn't have much to do with college.
professor leering over their shoulder all the time."
Hutchings said he was glad to get the award.
Hutchings said that if he could get any money from the University, he'd hire a graduate student to teach his course for him. It would be to everyone's advantage, he said.
"The students would have someone more their own age they could relate to, the graduate student would get some valuable experience, and I could spend more time going
to staff meetings and doing research," Hutchings said.
HE SAID that the time spent grading papers and hunting for old lecture notes put him in a bad spot. He hutchings and another professor from a small university in Nevada are doing research in preparation for the new curriculum for beginning seminar students.
Since the students are there, he said, he might as well take advantage of them.
"Let's be honest," he said, "I'm my own top priority. Then comes Strong, then comes Topkea, then comes the taxation bill. These are important, but you have to remember first things first."
HUTCHINGS SAID he didn't dislike students. He said, however, that he didn't trust them. Students are generally undependable, he said, and some have a tendency to ask the wrong questions at the wrong time.
Hutchings said. "I don't trust them, either."
"Of course some of them don't ask any questions at all,"
If the University was as selective about its students as it is about its professors, he said, there wouldn't be any problem. He said that it might help to have a lot of tenure plan for students.
THEY JUST start to get to know their place and then wooh, they're gone. The only ones who really know what's going on are the sixth and seventh-year seniors," he said.
Hutchings admitted that many of his fellow faculty members disagreed with ideas about students and teaching. He said they could think what they wanted to because "it's a free country." They all have a right to their opinions, he said.
"After all," he said, "if the poo schenows want to throw away their chances at tenure or grants, it's just fine with me.
"I've always admired people who stand up for things, even if they are fools."
Hunt's spending wasted
WASHINGTON - Hours after the Supreme Court had said that millionaires might spend as much money on politics as they wanted, General Motors heir James Randolph bragging that he was going on a spending spree. The court also said that the millionaires couldn't legally contribute directly to candidates and their families, but would have to spend their money independently.
The thought of millionaires having to decide how to spend their money shouldn't fill us with apprehension. While the rich are more often than not selfish, they also tend to have a fear of losing them or bone growing between their ears. As a consequence, they are seldom able to spend their money effectively.
AS A CASE in point, take the serio-comic relationship between H. L. Hunt, the late Texas Republican Tabaku, the chairman of the Polish American Political Action Committee. For 10 years, from 1965 to 1974, he argued that the greedy but essentially harmless ward healers of the old Frank Hague Jersey City University were as a lobby-propagation and coat holder for Hunt.
Hunt, who was a serious contender for the richest man in the world award, spent a lot of money in politics, virtually none of it to any effect. For years he sponsored a right-wing radio
program that was broadcast
stations everywhere; but if
anybody paid any attention to
the message, you couldn't tell
me what was going on.
I spent a lot of money printing
a number of very dull books.
his need for adulation and admiration distract him from his purpose of saving the Republic from the Reds. That's not the case with Mr. Cafederia, so he could go up to the mail clerks and the typists
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) King Features
图1
cases of which Tabaka says sometimes got shipped into his living room for disposal any way possible.
TABAKA'S DUTIES included the guiding old billionaire around Washington while he passed out his pamphlets in Houston and headed to Mayflower Hotel and under the door sills of the members of Congress. The two of them were hard at it one weekend, when a Capitol policeman told them they couldn't be doing that as the place was nominally closed. He led L. Hunt of Dallas, Texas."
"Yea, an' I'm Richard Nixon of Washington, D.C.," Tabaka remembers the guard answering, after which he phoned his agent to report. "I've got an idea," says who says he is H. L. Hunt."
and introduce himself as Haroldson Lafavette Hunt Jr.
THE OLD JERK, according to Tabaka, was forever letting
The customers must have thought he was a creep, although the behavior does illustrate what happens when customers are infixed rich, which Hunt at least was not given, give their money away in politics. Their own ego needs are usually so extraordinarily demanding they they're trying to accomplish.
WHEN CONGRESSMEN did it know was the oil tycoon himself in the anteroom, H. L. got the respect his money remembered by Gene McCarthy and J. William Fulbright panning along Senate corridors after Mr. Megalomaniac Moneybags. "When you tell people, they do that." They think a helicopter
liberal, but the whole thing is money."
Dull, insecure, and threatened, who needs to listen to rich people's conversations? To rich people of money, but Walter Tabaka never got any of H. L. Hunt's errands; he sent hundreds of editors under his own name but he didn't message; he did dutifully pretended to respond when Hunt sent him to the Library of Congress to find out about a nut from Russia or the Russian and allows those who eat it to live 200 years. Tabaka's daughter even went down to Dallas to work for Hunt and live there, and she replica of Mount Vernon, to watch him feed his reindeer and
mistake the jeers and obscenities of the curious driving past the estate for cheer, and there to listen to him demand he get his toes rubbed with aloe gel because he believes to be almost as good as the fabled Russian Nut of Life. FOR ALL THIS Walter Tabaka says he never got paid, that he received nothing but cash, and that he was surging the estate for $1 million. "The only reason I stayed with him," Tabanka explains, "is that my friends on Capitol Hill need me to keep me alive. He always kept selling me. I'm going to leave you money," and he left me broke. I was a pawn. "The rich aren't different."
The rich aren't different.
They're always the same. They keep their money, but they're not so good at winning elections.
Letters Policy
The Kansas welcomes letters to the editor, but asks that letters be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are subject to editing and condensation, according to space limitations and the editor's judgment, and must be signed by the author each year in the journal and hometown; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
1
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and"
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Thursday, February 26, 1971
University Daily Kansan
5
Polish folk group to dance tonight
Poland's official song-and-dance company, the Maroszewa (Ma-zov-she) Folk Company, will perform at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
The company of singers, orchestra members and 100 dancers has received excellent reviews from American critics. "They have been widely acclaimed
"They have been widely acclaimed
On Campus
Events...
TONIGHT: Christine Kanda, art historian from Harvard University, will lecture on the ARTS OF SHINTO at 8 in 4012 Wonder Hall. There will be an open meeting to discuss whether KU should continue its membership in the AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES' FIELD STAFF at 4 in the Council Room of the Kansas Union. The KU MOUNTAINEERING AND BACKPACKING CLUB will have a planning meeting at 7 in the Walnut Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: URIE BRENFENBRENNER, specialist in child development research, will give a speech, "Experience in the Ecology of Human Development," at 2:30 in the Forum Room of the Union.
Jobs available . . .
The following part-time jobs are posted outside 28 Strong Hall. food service; three typing, clerical, 6 research assistant, 2, teaching, grad assistant, 5; sales, 5; child care assistant.
during all of their 28 years of existence and are considered one of the finest folk dance groups in the world," Jean Mattion, ad- ducant director of the School of Fine Arts, said yesterday.
The company will perform new numbers in addition, to traditional ones.
It will be the group's first appearance at the University of Kansas.
Traditional favorites include the "Whip Dance," comic dances and the grand palettes.
The show is part of the KU Cure Series and a KU ID will admit students free of charge. The program is provided from N-Zone parking lot, opposite Murphy Hall, to Hoe Auditorium.
Three KU students accused of window peeping were booked into the county jail on criminal trespassing charges early yesterday morning after they were found on the roof of Gertrude Sellars Pearson University by KU Police Department members.
3 alleged peepers free on $500 bail
The students were released on $500 ball each late yesterday.
The trio was found about 1:15 a.m. yesterday.
February Special
79c
Brawny Beef Burger
Reg. 95c
JB'S
The Honest-To-Goodness Restaurant
The 26th Annual
ROCK CHALK REVUE
A BICENTENNIAL PARODY
will be
To be sure of a seat on Friday March 5 in Hoch Auditorium theatre to see this great comedy variety show.
GET YOUR TICKETS SOON!
Tickets Available at the S.U.A. Ticket Office
and at Every Bank in Lawrence
Prices: Friday, March 5-$2.00 and $3.00
Saturday, March 6-$4 Sold Out
Rock Chalk Revie is sponsored by the KU-V and partially funded by the Student Senate.
The DEXTER BOOTS
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Denims $6.99-$9.99 reg.to $25
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Shoes $14.99-$17.99
HOURS
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Mastercharge Bankamericard Carousel charge Cash too!
Malls Shopping Center 711 West 23rd
Free University
Spring Courses
Dog Obedience Training
Massaging
Massage Deep Muscle Tension Relief
Jujitsu Self Defense
Natural Health Introduction to Vegetarian Cooking
Metal Arts-Silversmithing
Meditation and Self Awareness
Amateur Astronomy Seminar
Sample Living Workshop
Ballet
Physical Fitness for Women
Dance
Battle and Tie Dye
G.I.F.T. (Growth in Future Talent!)
Kitemaking Seminar
Rock 'n Roll Is Here to Stay
Divorce Encounter Divided We Stand
Astral Projection
Four Directions in Gardening
Women's Self Help Group
Blue Repair
Backpacking
History of UFO's in America
Teachings of the Ascended Masters
Music and Meditation
Listen to the Prophets
A Study of C.S. Lewis
Kundalin Yoga
Clowning, Personal Growth and Spiritual Awareness
Experimental Theology
Back to the Garden (Organic Gardening)
The Different Drummer Conference
Spiritual Film Festival
Life Planning Workshop
Catalogues Available in the SUA Office
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6
Thursday, February 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU club hawks Jayhawk hockey
By CONRAD BIBENS
Ice hockey isn't readily identified with the state of Kansas, but it soon will be if members of the KU Hockey Club have their way.
Tom Hansen, club president and Overland Park sophomore, said yesterday that hockey could gain a good following on college campuses and make a profit.
"I'll caught on at Missouri," he said. "In their first year at a small risky club their in one."
Hansen said college hockey was more popular at northern schools, such as the University of Wisconsin, where the sport often outdraws basketball.
"College hockey is a different game from the pro's," he said. "The emphasis is more on the game's speed and team work rather than skill." If you are in a fight you get thrown out."
ANOTHER MEMBER of the club, Brad Raiser, St. Louis senior, said hockey was a more exciting sport to watch than basketball.
"Hockey can fill a void in Lawrence during the winter," he said. "I go to KU basketball here, but it can get dull watching a 10-minute stall.
"Hockey's always moving and you can't really stall. People seem to like it the first time."
time they go to a game. It'll catch on in Lawrence, given a chance."
Because there is no ice rink in Lawrence, the club must practice and play its games at the ice arena in Grandview, M. Hanahan, about 50 miles west of Lawrence City, about 50 miles west of Lawrence.
Practice time on the risk costs $55 an hour, that has threatened the survival of the fortress.
LAST WEEK, the Student Senate overrode a veto by former student body president Ed Rofls of a bill which will give the hockey club a yearly grant of $3,850. This grant will ensure the team's future. Hansen said.
"Last year, we got $600 from the Senate, a pretty token amount," he said.
Douglas Poorman, the hockey coach, said the senate grant would encourage some Lawrence citizens to be interested in building a local ice rink.
Poorman said he had been contacted by some local investors who wanted to build an 80-acre private recreation area and public skating. Poorman, assistant dean of admissions at the RJ Medical Center, has also been interviewed.
"WE HAVE had people from the Chamber of Commerce and the Parks and Recreation Department express interest in a new proposal, we would add a new dimension to Lawrence."
It hasn't been determined where the proposed rink would be built, but Poorman said he hoped it would take about a year to complete and hold up to 1,000 spectators.
Hansen said club members now practice in Grandview on Monday and Wednesday afternoons and Tuesday and Thursday practices are open to interested KU students.
Usually about 45 persons attend practice, he said, and about 25 of them are serious.
"We can only suit up 19 players for games," Hansen said, "because of college
The KU Hockey Club played two weekends ago at the University of Missouri, losing two games "pretty bad," Hansen said. But Senate funds and added practice time should help the team to improve, he
GAMES ARE planned against clubs from the University of Nebraska and Iowa State University, and other games will be scheduled because of the new Senate funds,
The University of Colorado also has a hockey team, Poorman said, and because hockey clubs keep growing, a hockey camp would be between the five schools is planned.
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Hansen said the hockey club asked the KU athletic department for funds last year but he didn't.
Any move to make basketball a varsity sport will depend on whether Big Eight athletic leaders think the sport is a serious money maker, he said.
"When they see the profits that other schools are making, they may get in touch."
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INVOLVED? COMMITED?
THE STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOUR INVOLVEMENT NOW
Membership now open on the seven standing committees of the Student Senate
Academic Affairs
Communications
Culture
Finance and Auditing
Sports
Student Rights, Privileges,
and Responsibilities
Student Services
- Membership now open on the five sub-committees of the Student Senate
- Elections
- Minority Affairs
- Transportation
- Committee on Classroom Teaching
- Recreation Advisory Board
- MEMBERSHIP NOW OPEN ON THE ATHLETIC SEATING BOARD (4 STUDENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE)
POSITIONS AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE
1. Complaint Service Director
2. Coordinator for Public Relations
3. Executive Secretary
Length of Appointment March 1976
to March 1977
Salary $60.00/Month
Duties
1. Compile and distribute minutes for Student Senate meetings and for the Student Executive Committee meetings.
2. Responsible for the assemblage and codification of legislation pertinent to the Student Senate.
3. Responsible for management of the Student Senate office and maintenance of the Student Senate Re-
Requirements
Available 15 hours/week
The Student Senate is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Qualified men and women of all races are encouraged to apply.
Pick up applications at the Student Senate office,105 B Kansas Union
Deadline for applications: March 5,1976 THE STUDENT SENATE IS FUNDED FROM THE STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, February 26, 1976
7
Women advance in dating game
By ANITA SHELTON
Staff Writer
Despite some comments to the contrary, dating relationships seem to be changing at the moment.
The women's liberation movement may have had some effect, but the general appeal of her work is
"Aggressiveness seems to be the thing," Witthers said.
Victoria Withers, housemother of Sigma Kappa sorority, said recently that women were asking men out more than they had before.
Women paying for dates also seems to be popular, according to Pat Domann, a marketing manager at Juno.
Donnan said that, although she didn't think women were asking men out more, she did think women were taking more interest in paying for activities while on dates.
HOWEY, E. J. Bonner, professor of sociology, said his male students often thought that "women's lib only goes as far as the pocketbook."
Bonnar said that, although there were no data on relationship changes, he had found in talking with students that not much had changed.
"Girl still expect girls to call them up and give她 the date," he said, "and male students do it."
However, some students think this tradition is changing. Dierick Birch, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said the quality of relationships also was changed.
"I don't think dating relationships are as deep now." Birch said. "You can date ladies for a nice time now. You're not as restricted."
Stanley Williams, Wichita junior, agreed that there had been a change in citing
WILLIAMS SAID relationships between men and women were much less confining now. He said that people weren't so ready to restrict each other.
Relationships really haven't changed much in the past few years, though, according to Williams. He said that women had been asking men out for a long time.
"I think that two years ago women were being more aggressive in relationships than men," she said.
He said that he liked the idea of women asking him out.
"My initial reaction is that it's a great ego boost for me. It provides a basis for the relationship to grow in a much more satisfactory manner because of the openness women now can feel."
George Folgham, Chicago junior, also went wrong the change in relationships was got worse.
IT ALLOWS women to be themselves,
Fulham said. Rather than trying to get the
man to ask her out, the woman can just ask
him out, he said.
Mumbi, director of Lewis Hall, said she hoped the change in procedural裙 would be
She said she didn't think the women's
liberation movement had anything to do with the change. She said she thought the ratio of men to women was the cause. This means that unless a woman has the opportunity to ask men out, she may be left without a partner. Mumbi said.
Marion Green, housemother at Phil Kappa Theta fraternity, agreed that the woman's liberation movement wasn't the cause of a change in dating relationship.
GREEN SAID that she hadn't seen a change in dating relationships.
Birch said that dating relationships hadn't changed very much but that he was open to the idea of women asking him out. Birch noted that "we have a common practice within the next five years."
Most of the men who noted a change said that women asking them out didn't affect their own behavior.
"We still have the same roles," Pulgham said. "I drive the women's car, and she gives the money to me so that it appears as if I'm taking her out."
Fulgham also said it wouldn't make him fail less masseuse if the woman drove the car. "You have to be very careful."
"IT MAKES ME feel more masculine for a woman to ask me out." Williams said. "It makes me look like a man."
Williams said he thought the trend of women asking men out would continue.
Witlers said that she didn't like the trend and that it would end.
She said she thought the traditional dating relationship would return as the popularity of online dating has grown.
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8
Thursday, February 26.1976
University Dally Kansas
KU trackman Wagner a farmer, scholar
Sports Writer
Not every National Merit and Summerfield Scholarship recipient at the University of Kansas envisions a lofty future as a lawyer or a scientist.
Jay Wagner, KU's only trackman to qualify in two events for the NCAA championships, attends KU on such an accomodation, but he says he wants a father.
WAGNER IS MAJORING in the natural sciences for a degree to take home to the wheat fields of his families' farm in Bentington.
"I look upon the degree I'll get as collateral," Wagner said. "Our farm is too small to support a family, and I can use the land or buy some land later."
Wagner said his farm was in the Solomon valley river bottom, a few miles north of San Salvador.
"WEVE BEEN THERE for better than 100 years. It's the Wagner homestead, with tradition and roots. It's something to go back to."
Wagner said farm living, with its relaxed
“Besides,” he said, “I’ve just got 100 gavens to hoon down to my boat on the river.
atmosphere, appealed to him because he
could be his own boss and enjoy the country
of the land.
sports
"I enjoy working on the farm. I take friends home with me all the time, and they have fun. Even when they work they enjoy it.
"IN FARMING, YOUR work is your recreation. The work changes daily and makes you feel like a winner."
He said that in the past his family had raised turkeys, chickens and sheep, which were fed from grains the Wagner harvested. Those grains—barley, oats and milo—have been replaced by wheat and alfalfa crops, he said.
"Farm work gives you a variety of things to do," he said. "Also, there's satisfaction in being able to work."
WAGNER'S SCHOLASTIC ac-
compulsions demonstrate how well he
works for himself. Midway through his junior year, the former high school didticatorian has received only two grades and was dismissed at KU. Those two other grades were B.s.
Wagner also has qualified to compete in both the 440- and 600-yard runs at the NCAA Indoor Championships. His times of 48.7 in the 440-yard dash and 1:101 in the 600-yard run make him the only Jayhawk trackman to qualify in two individual events.
Tad Thalley, KU assistant track coach,
praised Wagner as one of KU's most out-
standing players.
talent to win. I always look for him to be there at the finish."
Wagner's next opportunity to excel will be this weekend at the Big Eight Indoor Championships at Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo.
"WAGNER IS A COMPETITOR," Talley said. "Hate he has to bat, and he has the
"I won't be running in the 440 in the Big Eight. In the 600, it should be a tight race between Nolan (Cromwell), Bob (Prince, of K-State) and myself.
teammates Kevin Newell, Cliff Wiley and Randy Benson.
"it's really nice this year to run on such a prestigious mile relay team. It's an honor to run with this quality of people and with this much talent."
WAGNER IS ALSO a member of the mile relay team that ran a 3:11.4 earlier this season. Wagner won the fastest time among Big Eight schools this season. Wagner ran a mile relay with
Wagner, a walk-on performer, didn't compete for the Jayhawks following the end of the indoor season last year. He said he chose to sit out the outdoor season because track practices and meets were taking all his time—especially weekends.
Not one to lose his perspective on life, wagner said. "There are a lot of other things that happen in my life."
MANSA MANSA
Photo by WALLY EMERSON
Wagner at Big 8 last year
Dear Friends,
Thank you for all of your help and support this past year as we have served in our capacities as President and Vice President. We thank you for letting us serve, and hope our efforts will result in some tangible benefits to you.
Again, thanks for your support this past year. Ed & Mt
Ed & Mary Lou
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THE ATTIC
THE HAWK'S NEST
presents
Friday, Feb. 27 9:00-12:00 P.M.
'THE ROSEWOOD TRIO'
Doors Open 8:30
Doors Open 8:30
Saturday, Feb. 28 8:30-12:00 P.M.
8:30 to Opening Act: BETH SCALET
9. 15 to 'COLE TUCKEY ON RYE'
Doors Open 8:00
Last two scheduled shows until March 26.
Last two scheduled shows until March 26.
Level 2-Kansas Union Produced by SUA
10
Plant Sale
Everything in greenhouse for only 1/2 PRICE.
House plants, blooming plants Nothing held back.
Sale ends Sat., Feb. 28. Garden Center Cash & carry and Greenhouse please. 4 blocks East of Mass, on 15th
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES OFFICER AND BOARD INTERVIEWS
SUA
March 1 and 8
PRESIDENT
The SUA Constitution outlines the duties of the President as being: (a) to preside over SUA activities as act student representative of (b) and (c) to coordinate SUA activities.
The role of the President becomes one of an information processor, no matter what program is being used. The President and the university community. At the same time he must be informed once and the university community. At the same time he must be informed all ten programs of SIA to coordinate the activities of all ten programs of SIA to confront and coordinate the programming problems, and must respond with regard for the best interests of all students.
The President is also given an opportunity to make an input into the
legislation in which he is representing on the Kansas
Union Memorial Corporation Board of Directors.
VICE-PRESIDENT
The role of the Student Union Activities Vice President includes duties as the President's deputy and assistant. The Vice President is in charge of student activities, advising students on course requirements, Qualities useful for this position are an interest in organizational efficiency, internal board operations, and overall student programming.
SECRETARY
The SUA Board Secretary is responsible for recording attendance and will be contacted by the Board of Directors as a member of the the Board of Directors of the Kansas Union Memorial
The Secretary should be willing to help in any other areas, especially those which may be incorporated into SUA during the year.
TREASURER
The SUA Treasurer's primary duties are keeping the Board's books up to date and making sure they are taken in. Working with the bills and receipts on a day-to-day basis, give them an overview and overview of the functioning of the whole Board. Working closely with the board is necessary to provide financial information to each Board member on his/her area.
The Treasurer also serves as a member of the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Board of Directors.
Applications Available in the SUA office
Thursday, February 26, 1976
Major league contract talks stall; renewal clause center of dispute
9
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Little progress was expected yesterday and none were forthcoming as contract negotiations football owners and players broke off again.
University Daliv Kansan
The owners have already postponed the opening of spring training, because of a dispute about whether players should have individual contracts or basic labor agreements between owners and the players' association.
Players say the individual contract is being negotiated now while the owners say they want it to be finalized.
Marvin Miller, executive director of the players' association, said there was no threat to him.
★
"It was a rash of their position," he said. "That's my definition of no progress."
Chub Feeny, president of the National League and a spokesman for the owners' player relations committee, said, "There are many proposals to clarify proposals already on the table."
Yesterday's meeting began at 9:30 a.m. but she was recessed five minutes later at 10:00 a.m. Joe Torre of the New York Meta to appear. When Torre failed to show by 10 a.m., the meeting resumed, then broke up at noon. Miller and 15 players met on their own.
The central point in the dual contracts dispute is the renewal clause in both the
Arbitrator Peter Seitz ruled last December—and a federal judge upheld the ruling this month—that the clause meant a player could play for one year without signing and then become free to bargain with any club he wishes.
individual contracts and the basic agreement. Under the clause, if a player refuses to sign a contract, his team can renew his contract for one year.
The owners, who have appealed the ruling, insist they can continually renew the player's contract a year at a time if he refuses to sign.
★ ★
Both sides say they are willing to compromise, but that fact has been stymied by the owners' demand that any basic agreement and any compromise on the renewal clause be retroactive last Dec. 31, the day the previous agreement expired.
LOVE RECORDS HAS
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842-3059
That was the interpretation of the reserve rules by arbitrator Peter Seitz last December. The ruling was upheld in federal court and appealed by the owners to district
Complicated legal question stalls baseball negotiations
The owners and players are trying to reach agreement on a new labor contract. Already in force, however, are individual contracts between the owners and players for 1976. They are signed and some aren't. But all of them give the players the right to be a free agent one year after the individual contracts expire.
By FRED ROTHENBERG Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK—Spring training or no spring training? Regular season or no regular season? Baseball or no baseball?
The players say that idea is nonsense and have suggested modifications of the Seitz ruling, suggestions the owners have rejected.
The state of affairs in the sports world is clearly reflected in this labor dispute, since what happens on the field is no longer as important as what happens in negotiating sessions, arbitration offices and courtrooms.
It all boils down to what side of the baseline you're on and how you interpret a complicated legal question that has stalemated the negotiations between the baseball owners and the major league players association.
court, which has taken the matter under advisement.
The players say the individual contracts are binding, regardless of what the owners and players decide on the new labor contract, and those rights can't be retraced. The employers say the new labor contract takes precedence over any prior individual contracts.
Already spring training has been delayed by the owners, a move they acknowledge could put the regular season in jeopardy. But they also say that permitting the present Seltz rule to stand would destroy baseball.
Economic overbite is correctable.
Even though your career may be just beginning, it is never too early to start bracing yourself for the future.
your career may be just beginning, it is never too early to start braving yourself **the future.** Life may seem simple at first but unless you consult with an expert, coping life insurance bills and expenses of profit and pension programs can really gum up your financial planning. And the consequences of profit and pension program attacks each quadrant of your financial preparation, we help you work out your entire financial plan in your older years. Whatever is involved, your life insurance (including the professional plan) acquisition, equity products or other investment services, talk to the professional. Life Hook.
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BREAKFAST
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KIDS KITCHEN
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Two golden brown hot cakes,
whip butter, syrup and
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"FRENCHY"
Two slices french toast,
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a small juice
OL' FASHION
One large egg scrambled
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SOUP 'N SANDWICH
Choice of soup of the day
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BUNK-HOUSE
Hamburger with lettuce
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CHUCK WAGON
Cheeseburger with a special
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One delicately fried filet of fish
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children thru age 10
If your little Country Boy or Country Girl cleans his plate, place an (k) in the coin. Show this
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Scales furnished at Country Kitchen Children thru age 10 Offer good Feb. 23-Feb. 29. 5-9 p.m.
KU-Y ADVOCATE SERIES PRESENTS A FORUM
1503 W.23rd 843-2025
SENATE BILL 1
Are we to enter our third century under Richard Nixon's criminal code?
THE ADVOCATES:
COUNTRY KITCHEN
Thursday, Feb. 26
7:30 P.M.
Jayhawk Room
in the Union
Karen Blank (KU Student)
Executive Director Kansas
Civil Liberties Union
Denis Hauptley (Attorney)
US Justice Department
Washington D.C.
Moderator: Paul Wilson Professor of Law
Partially funded by Student Senate
Audience Will Be Invited To Participate In Discussion
KANSAS PREMIERE! SIDE-SPLITTING SEX SPOOFS AND NOSTALGIC TELEVISION CLASSICS: The Sinematic and Cinematic Sides of 1950'S Sociology
I'm not afraid to say "Yes"!
GO SEE A MOVIE TONIGHT!
WHAT MAKES MEN BLUSH
PART I!
The 1950's Sex Education Festival
This is a series of shorts that may be the most hysterically funny movies ever to play on the Kansas University campus. The titles include: How Much Affection (1956); Dake Do's and Dont's (1954); Is This Love (1957), are You Popular (1952); Are You Ready for Marriage (1955), and Dangling Participate (1959). To describe but two of them: How Much Affection, which might better be titled The Perverse Passion of Petting, is the idyllic story of teen-aged love run amuck. With their entire life ahead, you can see that in the future of women families-family-rising are haunted by the specter of unbridled physical love and sex-fueled madness! But with the help of family and friends they arrive at a truly inspirational and heartring solution to The Menace of Premarial Intercourse. Then in Standish Lawer's outrageous Dangling Particle, we see a sixty-five year old matronally high school teacher trying to tell a group of potential pervers that each and every fantasy, no matter how bizarre, is "perfectly normal." This film is without doubt one of the most remarkable social documents of its time; a sort of ultimate statement on why girls should be sexual brawny; a queeness at high schools everywhere. Other matters of the 1960's 36th Edition are of equivalent quality, each one specially selected for its ability to evoke how dishews of believing laughter! One last film in Part I is the 1950's equivalent of sexual politics — Ronald Reagan's only filmed encounter with Jayne Mansfield!
☆☆☆☆☆☆
PART II
1950'S Television Masterpieces
Ozzie and Harriett (1957)
Called Father's Night at the Fraternity, this one features the absurd Wally and an incredible musical climax with Ricky pounding out some Golden Oldies!
Elvis Presley on Ed Sullivan (1955)
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
BURNS AND ALLEN (1954)
Possibly the greatest episode ever made as Gracie helps a young sorority girl to be beautiful so she can get a date to the prom!
This one is truly unreal. Elvis' first appearance on the Sullivan Show and he was censored from the waist down as he pounded out Love Me
FATHER KNOWS BEST (1956)
Stars Robert Young! Kathy runs away from home when she has 'addo-lescent problems', but comes back home in the end when she realizes she's had a broken arm.
FOUR NIGHTS ONLY! THURSDAY, FRIDAY,
SATURDAY & SUNDAY, FEB. 26, 27, 28 & 29; WESCOE AUDITORIUM; COMPLETE SHOWS NIGHTLY
AT 7:00 & 9:45 P.M. $1.75 SPON. BY VOLUNTEER
CLEARING HOUSE.
10
Thursday, February 26, 1976
University Daffy Kansan
Consistency is Jayhawk diver's hobgoblin
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
CHRISTIAN MAYS
Photo by WALLY EMERSON
Ralph Waldo Emerson, the great 19th century intellectual, said, "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds and statesmen and philosophers and divines."
"DIVING IS A thinking man's sport," said Hill, a favorite for first-place honors at the Big Eight championship, March 5-14 in Ames, Iowa. "I'm not saying that swimmers are illiterate, but I just don't dig googling down the pool four or five miles a day."
Mark Allan Hill, University of Kansas swim team member, would like to amend that statement to include divers, but to exclude the reference to "little minds."
Instead, the business major from Omaha, Neb. plunges into the pool as many as 300 times a day in practice, nurturing that skill and helping to maintain of a diver's reverence: consistency.
"I haven't done that well this year," Hill admitted. "I've had good meets and bad meet this season. They've either been pretty good or pretty bad."
League favorite Mark Hill
HOWEVER, by Hill's standards, a "good meet" is a first place finish and nothing less. He has placed lower than in first only because he has not succeeded, or happens he still is as well, as second or third.
Hill helped win its eight consecutive Big Eight swim title last year by placing second in both high board and low board diving as a freshman. He qualified for the NCAA championships and placed about 50th among the 100 entered.
Although he said he was certain he had improved this year, Hill returned to his first campaign.
--at the
Alfies
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SMOKED CHICKEN BEANS
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Bring this ad for Half-a-Bar-B-Que Chicken 99
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"I HAVEN'T BEEN consistent this year," said Hill, who qualified for the NCAA meet in his first meet this year. "I don't understand what it was. I wouldn't be inconsistent."
No doubt Hill is applying his penetrating intellect to the question.
"Every dive you do in workout has to be thought out; it must be thought through. You can hurt yourself very easily diving, but your confidence doesn't feel very good when you hit it."
"You have to be totally aware of what you're doing up there, especially on the ceiling."
Hill said he was concerned that he lacked the "edire" need to impress the indere
HILL DIVED OFF the three-meter board for the first time last year, yet it appears to be his forte. High schools in Hill's home state, Nebraska, don't have the high board. His toughest dives have a degree of difficulty. The optional dives include a back-and-dash somersault with a one and one half twist and a sault two and one half off the low board.
Dives of that difficulty are prerequisite
o scoring well in national competition, but
"The name Ohio State" separates divers, along with Indiana and SMU. That's their edge. But there are a lot of other schools, too. And their divers are set apart because they jump a little bit higher and point their toes a little bit more."
WHAT, THEN, would distingush Hill from 99 other NCAA divers?
"I'm probably one of the tallest divers there. I'm 6 feet 1. Divers range around 5 feet 7 of 5 feet 8. Last year, (KU)'s Steve King was 5 feet 5."
---
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
Such height was a factor in making Hill a success in another sport, high jumping. In Nebraska, he placed in state competition three straight years, taking two fourths and one third in the final. He faced feet 6 and one half inches, his marks in state meet competition were a little lower.
"I did 6 feet 4 my sophomore, junior and senior years. Every year 6 feet 4. Can you believe that? I didn't improve. It was like pre-destined."
Maybe. But nobody could say he wasn't consistent.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
We Write
Automobile Insurance
ATTENTION All Student Health Insurance Policy Holders
There will be an open hearing concerning the prescription drug benefits of your Student Health Insurance, and an opportunity to ask questions about other specifications of the health insurance contract.
Thursday, February 26 7:30 p.m.
Council Room in the Student Union
Paid for by the Student Activity Fee
IF?
call
841-7100
HOW DO WE MAKE A GREAT STEAK GREATER?
Great Combinations
STEAK & SHRIMP
MEDITERRANEAN
$3.99
We start with U.S.A. Choice best-natural aged for taste and tenderness. Then we add water, warm sheep'rapped with a daily blend of lion's milk and pine nuts. And serve nightly in our house with paiting hot baked crisp with cinnamon and turkey, leaning baked potato. Need and Seed Mediterranean a great combination and a great flavor. Mr. Seed America a sleek expert
- New York Times
"Enchanting, Magnificent, Fabulous!"
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
841-3454
Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
Direct from Warsaw
MAZOWSZE
(Mah-Zoff-Shuh) 100 Dancers, Singers, and Symphony Orchestra
KU Concert Series
Thursday, February 26, Hoch Auditorium 8:00 p.m.
Tickets at Murphy Hall Box Office and at the door
K. U.I.D.'s admit Students
Thursday, February 26, 197
University Daily Kansan
11
Trumpet virtuoso to play at KU
University Theatre is the place to be for trumpet affitches at 3:30 p.m. Sunday
Gerard Schwarz, first trumpet of the New York Philharmonic, will perform two selections, accompanied by KU musicians.
Schwartz's first selection will be the trumpet solo to "Quiet City," written by Aaron Cropan for trumpet and English horn. Robert Stanton, assistant professor of woods, oboe and saxophone, will accompany Schwartz on the English horn.
Schwarz will also perform the trumpet solo to Herbert L. Clarke's *Bride of the Queen* (1970).
Kansas Symphonic Band will accompany Schwarz on this work.
Schwarz, described by the New York Post as one of the world's virtuoso trumpeters, joined the New York Philharmonic in 1973. From 1965 to 1973, he toured the world as a member of the American Brass Quintet and made more than a dozen recordings with that group.
Schwarz has recorded solo works on six labels. His Nonesuch recording, "Cornet Woman," won the Grammy Award from Stereo Review in 1974, and in 1972 he was the only wind player to receive
Robert Foster, KU band director, said yesterday that Schwarz was chosen for the concert because young musicians need opportunities to hear and work with great concert artists like Schwarz.
the Ford foundation award for concert artists.
“He is the most facile trumpet player I've ever heard; he has enormous ability.” Foster said. “He is one of the top half-dozen trumpet players in the world.”
The concert is sponsored by the KU band department. There will be no charge for attendance.
The Hawk's Nest will be closed from Feb. 29 to March 26 except for use by private groups.
'Nest' to close for 4 weeks
John Works, assistant project coordinator, said yesterday he would meet with Frank Burge, Burge Union director, and Mariann Sheetz, Union food service manager, during that period to work out production arrangements for the future.
Works said SUA wanted to have control over productions by private groups in the city and to maintain a good quality program already been scheduled, he groups have already been scheduled, he
SUA Indoor Recreation
RACQUETBALL TOURNAMENT
CHADWELL
March 6,7 at Robinson. Deadline for signing up is March 3. Contact John Ranson at 843-4050 for information and sign-up. Prizes awarded.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods. services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan booklet. (Sixth edition). color, creed, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
Each additional
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
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
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UBE business office at 644-5388.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
FOR SALE
We can make your stereo sound better--GUAR-
er details at Audio Systems, 707 E. 9th.
Tremendous selection of guitars, alps, drums,
bass, bass guitar, keyboards, Shop. Haze Keyboard Studios, Choose from Gibbs
and other music stores. New and used Amper. Kustom, Greed, and many others.
Amper. Kustom, Greed, and many others.
Rock. Rock Keyboard Studios, Studio.
Rock. Rock Keyboard Studios, Studio.
Rock. Rock Keyboard Studios, Studio.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
BILT AUDIO BLD RELIANCE,
ELECTRIC 835, 904, 3290, 900 W, 6th.
COST:
1980s - 1990s - Misericord equipment. All major
Burmuth units are purchased. Highlights for free Rare
Burmuth units on purchases. Highlights for free Rare
Burmuth units on purchases.
*
Excellent collection of New & Used furniture &
living room furnishings. Trade. The Furniture & Appliance Center, T48105.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold and silver work. Miniature sculpture, conveniences and accessories executed. B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting. Large variety of unusual stones. 841-3838 or 841-2657.
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Make sure you have:
1. Study guide
2. Study material
3. Study preparation
4. New Anatomy notes
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town, Clerk Stores.
Ploner CT 4141 Dulce Cassette deck $16.10
ABS table 65, duan 121 turntable $6.90
NCT 227
For Sale ... 1974 C125 Honda with 960 miles. Excel with accessories. Call after 6pm. P-833-6883. p-833-6883.
Houses for Sale. Just reduced. Hardyman specializes in the care of children, aged 31 months to 12 years. Call Harland at 844-763-9000 after hours. Have fun with us!
1974 Vega Hatchback. New near condition, one female (male) and has snow tires. Evening 8:53-8:54
Potted, mature Irish plants while they last. 841-2
6:27 after p. 6
Need to buy a gift? Use the selection of unique new gifts. **Repeat Performance** A482, 1427
10 a.m.-6 p.m. Receive $500 in cash.
Med- school quality school for sale. Nikon
Samsung Samsung S60 S70 S80 S90
boxware 324, KUMC 901 and Rainbow Kamas
Kamaos
Original Antique Show & Sale February 27, 28
Auction Date: Wednesday, February 27
Lawrence show: Saturday hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Admission: $10; admission ($1) good all day. Manager: Victoria
Cumhurki serve food served by Flick Club of London.
Buffet: $40
Gibbon Natural Finish ES332M SEMI-sacrificae with humidus, Phane, Phase as ES332M $300. Ampge V-4, vertalate. 100 Wmw. Ampge V-4, clear condition. Clean condition B-2, 257. Call: 425-277.
Barcus Berry pick-up with snake cord, Lord Ludwig
set in excel condition. Level 0.2-27
54-285-377
54-285-378
1974 Honda CB250. Excellent condition. $750 or best
buy. Call 863-8971. 2-27
Honda CL-360, 1974, excellent condition, $75. Includes helmets, pad backed backrest and 2-27
Magnavox turntable, 2 speakers, 100" Bar and
stocks, $40. After 5, $82-3714.
2-27
New army inflatable 4-man raft. Call Ragu at 864-6021 or leave message at 864-6838. 2-27
GUITAR LESSONS $2 PER HOUR. STEREO RE
TESONS; $12VELE STRING GUITAR $4-
834-728-125
Digital Electronics Sale-Power Supplies, ICs,
Power Supplies, and Other Hardware.
day and Friday 3-4 p.m. 927 Louisiana.
www.digitalelectronics.com
For sale cheap GE portable stereo. Call Carol.
842-7558 2-26
USED RADIAL, MARGARIS 2. - 165-13 Bridge
$60.
Rickemberk backer 4001 bass, white, case, stand. New condition. In stock. Superb. Stereo. Bauer 790. 800-785. 2-427
Gibson, SG. Standard w/hardshell case $375,
Fonder Bassman-Ten-Amp. $250, MXR case $90.
$60. Foyer Wa-Waumwil $15, E.V. Mee, $12.
Speakers 4, Large Bottom w/2-3
speakers $241 - 341.398
73 Yamaha RD 500 perfect condition, first reasonable offer. B414, 4396. Duret, 2-27
72 Culass Supreme, PB, PS, AC, AM-FM, great condition, 843-1830; after 5p.
Yellow Lab lupus, ARC, excellent hunts, many field and show champions in pedigree. 843-863-893
19.74 Dart pick-up for sale. Best looking in
AM-PA Fits & Works. Exclusive round rims. Price
AM-PA Fits & Works. Exclusive round rims.
Price
Kawakawa 750, 1792 with windwinder夹器
Excellent condition - engine almost new. 843-8478
Holden
Free Retriever Puppies - 3-4 Labrador, 1-4 Gold-
Fox Retriever, 2-4 Excellent hunter dog
morning or evenings 843-883-0768
Night Numbers:
1. Bed 842-HD
2. Bed 843-HD
3. Bed 844-HD
4. Paul 842-TH
5. Paul 843-TH
Saxophone - Cannon AA
Electric Drum Kit
Bed frame and matrush
8x3 View and enlarger. $100, Drope SWA4 Commun.
receipt, cost $5, well $160, $160-2740. 3-18
75 Olds Cultas Sailor 2 lotr H/T /Salt Burgun-
1163. lots of wort in Best offer -84
1163.
FOR RENT
**ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS:** Deep-in and out room, two 120-seat chairs (no phone, calls, phones) at WEBTERRS (two 120-seat chairs, no phone, calls, phones) at WEBTERRS.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
free housing available in Lawrence, Lawrence
Room furnished with shared kitchen and bath,
and a separate bathroom. All efficiency apt. for male near town, No pets.
2. bdmr, all utl., paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfold. Free parking, a/c, park. 843-4933.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th A. Mass
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
1-bedroom apartments, room with kitchen privileges. One shock to campus $3s and up.
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
Modern, 9 bedroom house, 11 baths, full hallway. Modern, 9 bedroom house, 11 baths, full hallway. Modern, 9 bedroom house, 11 baths, full hallway. No Pet Ideal for 3-S students, 182-581-9780. No Pet Ideal for 3-S students, 182-581-9780.
SUBLEASE single bedroom or entire apartment
Brian, Stan. 841-7798
Brian, Stan. 841-7798
2-26
MARRIED STUDENTS ENTERING MEDICAL AREA. Available in June townhouse in K.C. Ks Located near KU Med Center UMDK Dental Project. Some payment required but rent is less than half for similar housing. Well-pay student, 14th BA, DR. LB Kitchen w/stoop, dining room, 14th Bath, DR. LB Kitchen w/stoop, dining room, well-matched windows; well-matched. Many students of medical professives live here so car parking is easy. Call Dr. Bath to discuss availability.
Want to sell man's墙壁 Hall contrast for 2,400 or come by Room 1001.
Female roommate $ 575.00 /mn, room, utility
apeil Avail March 6—end of May. 1634 Louisiana
NOTICE
Furnished apartment at 19 W. 10th, one bedroom,
64 sq. ft., $75 plus electricity. Call 543-848-2500.
p. 543-848-2500
Rooms available in a competitive house. $40 a week.
TV weather, drive, pool table. $60 a week.
TV weather, drive, pool table.
For rent, basement apartment, utilities paid
$345-697 after student prepaid. $345-
697 after credit.
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at least if your printer has a large capacity of your 120 page thesis in minutes. See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Click Copy Center, MB Manuscript sets. 841-4900.
For rent: one 1 bedroom apt. and one efficiency
apt. 5 minute walk from campus. 843-2788.
www.marinehealth.org
Enroll now in Lawrence Drive School. Receive transportation provided. Drive new pay later transportation provided. Drive new pay later transportation provided.
The Catholic Care special Sunday dinner is a Pullman
season event. Call 514-783-2906 for reservation.
Seats are cash only.
ZORBIA THE LAMB Sunday. Feb. 28. Special Greek dinner included stuffed wine leaves, feta cheese salad, much more! $5.49. Call for reservations today. #43-305. Caskoah Hotel. 603 Max.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Use furniture, data-
boards, ebooks, televisions. Open daily 11am
842-3377
Volunteer Clearing House is taking applications
for Volunteer Clearing House at 164-289-3070,
between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. day.
Call (612) 568-4300.
TROULED WITH LIFE? LOST, love feeling, hope touched and LONELY real heart, love security and inner strength. This box has a privacy cover with name and address. Free introductory pack-away discount. Box 5067, Teppei, Kanada
Discovery
Self-Help Workshop--Sunday, Feb. 29, 1-5 p.m.
124th Creamery Inc.,营养师 led by Bob Hutchins,
professional nutritionists, natural foods and a balanced diet, yoga exercises and breathing centering and practice to stay calm and focused. Wear comfortable clothes and awareness. Wear comfortible clothes and paid on $1. to $2 $3 donation cording to income
Free University enrollment Thursday Friday
to Saturday at our table in the Union Lobby or at
the University of Alabama.
Gustaf Group Workshop led by Virginia Sullow, Sunday, March 7. 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at 1240 Oread. Cost $10. limit $100. For reseller. Bursa-4312 (bursa-43468 or Bar-84312 (bursa-1246). take a lunch neck).
Pat Read
Indian Trader
Planning a trip?
Let Maupitour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
843-1306
701 Mass.
10.5 Tues.-Sat.
Bike Ride
ANNOUNCEMENTS
THE NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
School of Music. It has a great little
gifted teacher. Also blue, bluesrush,
folk and clastic guitar, banjo, mandolin
and jazz and rock guitar and bass. Call 841-781-3620.
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. if Volunteer Cleaning House is taking applications for 1976-77 position, if you are interested, call 843-3898 between 9, a.m. and 3, p.m. daily.
Commitments wanted from college students. Call
Performance House, 1422 West 92rd, Ward 36d,
7866, ths.
RAM DASS movies: "Evolution of a Yogi" and "Spirits of the Separation" are two more films by Darshan. "Darshan" is a Hinduism and the song of God will have an aura of spirituality, but 9 p.m. and 12 p.m. at The United Ministries.
SIMPLE LYFING WORKSHOP Friday, March 31 at 1 p.m. Saturday, March 29 at 10 a.m. Prayer and the consequences of a 10 a.m. Prayer are in the memories of its members of a world community and to reopen its members of a world community by seeking a simple life beyond the material world, including
LAWFEDER GAY LIBERATION meeting March 6th
Animal Activities: #852-959, Consulting phone
Inquiries: (852) 959-1780
LAWENCY GAY LIBERATION NAP GROUP at
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Student Union. Tel. Sussex; 328-6580
TYPING
Hasta Yoga class, beginning Monday, March 1st.
McColum Hall Fee $15 for 10 meals
841-31-23
841-31-29
J215SIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located on campus and allows our service to fast and prices are reasonable. Our service is free for all customers.
Experimenced typist, I.B.M. Echemic, thesis; dissertations and term papers. Call, Fam 648-7599. ffm@uva.edu
Experienced typist-term paper, tissues, mime.
Experienced typist-letter paper, spellers,
spelling.纠正 843-714, Mrs.Wright.
**Professional** al typing work, guaranteed, reasonable.
**Educational** in mpa electric, B.A. Social Science,
B.S. Computer Science.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Typist editor. IBM Pica citation. Quality work.
Typist editor. Three disertations. b-5
821-482-3127. 5-11
Exp. typit, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
expressions, spelling, reading spelled, correction
reject, Jennel 841-7469
S. I.L. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (plea). Prompt, efficient service. Themes, dissertations, term papers. Phone 515-290-2344. E-Mail: Streich. 2-27
TYPPING - You have many return customers who want to be able to represent you. You appreciate your business (Call Harvey or visit http://www.harvettype.com)
Experienced typists will type these, dissertations and all general typing in our home Call Carolina
Experienced typing. IEM Selective. All kinds of typing. Call 844-1423, Days 842-987. Evil Julie.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
HARDENED
15 EAST 8th 841-2656
10.5 Monday Saturday
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
A
AM Part Stop
PRO
1209 East 23rd St. 841-2200
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass.
Foreign Auto Parts
Discounts for Do-It-Yourselfers with Student I.D.'s
JAMES
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Foreign Auto Service
Expert Repairs by
Factory Trained Mechanics
Parts:
843-8080
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
Service:
843-5288
20 miles east of Topeka or
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U. S. 40 Highway
842.9445
WANTED Classroom Volunteers for children's
time between 8-Noon. You'll feel good if you'd
have time to help.
GANG
Female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
room at Beverly Campus and campus area.
Call 842-7928. 2-377
Female roommate to share house or apartment next year. Must be cool. Call Larry. 814-6537.
WANTED
O
Photographer-arrifle engineer designed 1 roommate, a bedroom with closet and laundry, 75 yr. old country home located 28 miles from the beach and laundry. Storage in attic or barn. Plenty of storage for personal belongings for partial rent. Call Mike or Ken after 6 a.m. to arrange for arrival.
Full size backpack (Kelty, Trailside, other name brand) and sleeping bag. Call 843-9699. 2-27 Female bedroom needed. 2 BR mobile home. Nice On East 19th. 841-221-23 day. 843-0106 after Christmas.
Female roommates to share clean farm house with country girl 745-0637 2:27
PERSONAL
842-9445
THE LOUNGE
WANTED=guitar teacher for 11 year old begin-
ing call, 843-2620, a.m.
3-5
Wanted to rent, repair, prefer 2 car space. Call Nilson, 843-6269 after six.
3-3
a quiet corner
Need one person to share spacious house with
two undergrads. 1100 a.m. *842-6923* 3-2
Race or Watch
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
LAWRENCE-DRAGWA
Kick the smoking habit! Completely safe, expert advice. For more information, call 414-1231. Evenings: 8:41-9:10. - 3-1
10. Dr. Robert Weiard, weared you to transport 4 bushels of hay from the farm to the storage yard. The delivery price is $500 per bushel; if a farmer, with 1,138 or 2,300 cal for 689 bushels (896 per bushel), or 1,138 or 2,300 cal for 689 bushels (896 per bushel), or 1,138 or 2,300 cal for 689 bushels (896 per bushel), or 1,138 or 2,300 cal for 689 bushels (896 per bushel), or
Volunteer Clearing House is taking applications for the following positions: 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. daytime, 644-3895 to apply.
Now Open Every Sunday 12 NOON
LOST AND FOUND
Join the KU-Y for lunches with KU faculty members. This Thursday, Paul Friedman, Professor of Engineering in our office at 11:00 to 12:00. Bring your lunch! n1100 Room (10B Level) 3, Union.
Tony-Thankt I've never peed on a warm waterbed before. Camp me from Straw-land to the beach, you're like yeah.
P.L. Roses are red, violents are blue; First buy a
3-1
harm, they'll love you. AG.
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets
Admission Only *2.00 each*
Daddy, Thanks for the $, bought a waterbed from Fields. Have triple投资. Kittie, 3-1
KU-Y's 260th annual Rock Cocktail Review, a night of five one-sact music plays on the staircase, and five dance performances in Heoc. Only Friday night tickets still available. On Saturday, only Tuesday and Thursday. Join the KU-Y for lunches with KU faculty members. This Thursday, Paul Friedrich, Professor of French at Fordham, will relive, with coffee from 11:00 to 12:00, his memories.
LA
Found: set of keys from 1864-Jachyaw Tower
Call Dick Himes at 1864-383 and Identity.
$5 for return of glasses. Name on frame.
Joe Luckey, 864-1419 or 841-0911.
2-27
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a pub-
lisher, and they appear on the State Map,
State Shk., & Kentucky Malls. Shopping
Found in: Wescow one T-square, 864-1505, call and identify.
2-27
Found: Small, female Dachhund, on Stewart
Pound: Small, female Dachhund, on Stewart
Two biweekly certifies. Excellent furnished cages
No questions asked! **C** Host is 814-698-2750.
Found: Checkbook at Stables 10 p.m. Saturday night.-Call Stables 2:27
Found: Flight training book, 15th and Tenn. Call
642-6915
2-27
Small female chickadee found on Stewart Ave.
Please call 842-6548 or 841-5947.
2-28
**Boy's Club** Bath of Lawrence needles recreation supervisor for boys, grades 1-12. Need immediately. Work tests through. Fri.-3-30. Sat. 10-6. Call 841-5872 or 841-5713. Required opportunity emplea-
WANTED—Students for part-time sales in Life
Culture. Req. B.A. or同等学历, while you learn with our Internship Program.
Center, 20; Summerfield, or on call Robert L.
Carter, 20; Summerfield, or on call Robert L.
Carter, 20; Summerfield, or on call Robert L.
National Nation — Bank Agent, Bkd #1633-133
New York, NY
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
HELP WANTED
Sandy's Drive-In, is now taking applications for a $20 per hour job at our price on food. Apply to **sandy.sandy.com**.
Earn $250 per thousand staffing addressing an
attempt to stamp out a criminal network of
stamped, addressed envelopes to Hacker
and other hackers.
Addresses wanted immediately! Work at home
American Service 1601 Wilmston Street, Suite 101
American Airlines 7401 Willmon Street, Suite 101
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement
of our technology and capability among
individuals with one of the top 30 companies
in the car repair industry. credit sharing
and cost control. credit sharing
6401 and 8100, Kansas University, 6405 Kansas
Baldwin and 8100, Chicago College, $12
6410 and 8100, Chicago College, $12
TRAVEL
KANI has an opening for part-time student audio-
numerist. Must have three class FCC license with
broadcast endurance. Experience prefers:
acquisition to apply. Call 864-4530. 2-26
WHAT ARE YOU WORTH? If you're sick and need a new life insurance agent, the worth much more, and with little setups. Set up with Northwest Life Insurance Sales with Northwest Life Agent, 843-153-3233, National Bank BK, 600 N. Elmhurst Ave., New York, NY 10021.
EUROPEISHAREAPELCAASA — Trawd ides
EURIFERISHAREAPELCAASA — Trawd ides
51 First Avenue, Tucker, Ga. 30048. (604)
327-721-8000, europeishares.ua
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH GOT YOU DOWN! So if so, get help early.
115. 111. 118. 119. 641. 181-196.
$=13
MATH TUTORING—Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 012, 142, 150, 508, 557, Regular students or one-time preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
OLD-AND-Antique
FURNITURE/CLOTHES
HALF·AS·MUCH
12-5pm
730MASE
CLOTHING
SALE
HILLCREST BILLIARDS RECREATION'S FINEST "If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl
No one under 18 admitted.
9th & Iowa
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
5 Nights a Week No Cover
NEW MODERN DECOR
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at an elegant, upscale restaurant or an atmospheric designed for sweet feelings and gentle laughter.
HIDEOUT
Sandwiches — Pizza Pool — American Shuffleboard
843-9404 CLUB
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
New Memberships Available
Class B Private Club
Open 17 a.m. to 6 p.m.
7 DAYS -
Wavre Point -gwner
12
Thursday, February 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
1
wow!
IT'S WOLFE'S FABULOUS 18th ANNUAL
DOG SALE
HUGE SAVINGS ON CAMERAS,
ACCESSORIES, DEMONSTRATORS, TRADE-INS.
DISCONTINUED ITEMS
SAMMY'S WOODEN TRAVELLER
See hundreds of sale items . . . all fine merchandise . . .
on display and marked with special red tags!
Save with all bottom dollar values.
35mm CAMERAS
| VEHICLE | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Geigerlander Vitesse wf2 (Used) | 159.95 | 8.99 |
| Paezetti Super (Used) | 89.95 | 24.00 |
| Gigapower Tensae (Used) | 89.95 | 24.00 |
| Gamon TTb wf3 0.18 (L) Used | 109.95 | 14.00 |
| Gamon TTb wf3 0.76 (L) Used | 119.95 | 14.00 |
| Gamon dTTE 17% frame (Used) | 89.95 | 19.00 |
| Zaxis Contessa (Used) | 89.95 | 19.00 |
| Veta VT bluetooth Body (Used) | 285.00 | 16.00 |
| Veta VT bluetooth Body (Used) | 285.00 | 16.00 |
| Gaucer w/lensarion I.9 (Used) | 199.50 | 6.99 |
| Gaucer w/lensarion I.9 (Used) | 199.50 | 6.99 |
| Gaucher L 300 (Used) | 224.50 | 16.00 |
| Pariti TL 55 < 85 Courier | 450.00 | 17.99 |
| Nikon Photon Body (Used) | 315.00 | 16.00 |
| Nikon Photon Body (Used) | 315.00 | 16.00 |
| Nikon Photon B.I. Body (Used) | 395.00 | 25.00 |
| Nikon Kamera FN B.I. Body (Used) | 295.00 | 13.90 |
| Nikon Kamera FN B.I. Body (Used) | 295.00 | 13.90 |
| Yashichi L1 Super | 325.00 | 16.00 |
| Shimomu | 261.00 | 19.99 |
| Philips LC-Slim II B.I. Body | 292.00 | 19.99 |
| Philips LC-Slim II B.I. Body | 119.50 | 14.99 |
| Mikro Sensors | 325.00 | 19.99 |
| Mikro Sensors | 325.00 | 19.99 |
| Cantaffle Super B.I. Body | 265.50 | 19.99 |
| Cantaffle Super B.I. Body | 265.50 | 19.99 |
| Cantaffle Super B.I. Body | 295.00 | 19.99 |
| Cantaffle Super B.I. Body | 295.00 | 19.99 |
| Musola L2 Super | 189.50 | 9.50 |
| Taschikhy Lyx - 14 (Used) | 95.40 | 5.40 |
| 75mm f1.4 (Used) | 395.00 | 19.99 |
| Nikromil LED '11' Screen | 478.00 | 20.00 |
| Nikromil LED '11' Screen | 478.00 | 20.00 |
| Micronide DX3 R.I.8 | 429.50 | 29.99 |
| Micronide DX3 R.I.8 | 429.50 | 29.99 |
| Jupiter Super DM R.I.4 | 620.00 | 30.00 |
| Jupiter Super DM R.I.4 | 620.00 | 30.00 |
| Jupiter Super DM R.I.4 | 360.00 | 19.99 |
| Jupiter Super DM R.I.4 | 360.00 | 19.99 |
| Maksutop S120 17F Black | 470.00 | 20.00 |
| Maksutop S120 17F Black | 470.00 | 20.00 |
| Maksutop S120 17F Black | 362.00 | 19.99 |
| Maksutop E55 Body | 410.00 | 20.00 |
| Maksutop E55 Body | 410.00 | 20.00 |
| Maksutop E55 Body | 600.00 | 33.99 |
| Numiya Sakker 500 DM R.I.8 | 389.00 | 25.99 |
| Num尼亚 S- 28 Body | 389.00 | 25.99 |
| Num尼亚 Auto Reflex A3 J.wrs. | 355.00 | 21.99 |
| Num尼亚 Auto Reflex A3 J.wrs. | 355.00 | 21.99 |
| Num利亚 Auto Reflex A3 J.wrs. | 99.50 | 34.99 |
| Julie 3253 | 193.95 | 9.99 |
| Julie 3253 | 193.95 | 9.99 |
| Jamesmes S13 B.I.8 | 143.90 | 8.99 |
| Jamesmes S13 B.I.8 | 143.90 | 8.99 |
| Jupiter S70 I.L.7 | 299.50 | 19.99 |
| Jupiter S70 I.L.7 | 299.50 | 19.99 |
| Mordentman TM I.M | 292.00 | 19.99 |
| Mordentman TM I.M | 292.00 | 19.99 |
| Hoviter 420 I.F. | 259.95 | 19.99 |
| Hoviter 420 I.F. | 259.95 | 19.99 |
| Enomic Auto T | 299.95 | 19.99 |
| Enomic Auto T | 299.95 | 19.99 |
| Shomeh T 7 (Used) | 339.95 | 19.99 |
| Shomeh T 851 1000 | 324.95 | 19.99 |
| Shomeh T 851 1000 | 324.95 | 19.99 |
| Mihaiyim DS11 Body (Used) | 295.00 | 19.99 |
| Mihaiyim DS11 Body (Used) | 295.00 | 19.99 |
| Mihaiyim DS11 Body (Used) | 295.00 | 19.99 |
| Canon 28 Body | 199.50 | 9.99 |
| Canon 28 Body | 199.50 | 9.99 |
| Olympus-Pent I.Pent | 224.50 | 16.00 |
| Olympus-Pent I.Pent | 224.50 | 16.00 |
| Yashichiy Lyx 1000 Lyx | 119.50 | 9.99 |
| Kwao Sat (Used) | 192.95 | 19.99 |
| Kwao Sat (Lifespan 15.5 F2) | 189.50 | 19.99 |
| Kwao Sat (Lifespan 15.5 F2) | 189.50 | 19.99 |
| Cosmic Symbol | 49.95 | 19.99 |
| Cosmic Symbol | 49.95 | 19.99 |
| Tapogen C1 | 298.00 | 19.99 |
| Tapogen C1 | 298.00 | 19.99 |
| Tapogen C1 | 298.00 | 19.99 |
Pro style cases really guard your equipment. Complete with strap.
Kail 17" Pro
retail $29.5 .Sale $12.99
Kail 17" Pro
retail $29.95 .Sale $19.99
Coupon
retail $49.95 .Sale $24.99
GADGET BAGS
e
RollingHood 1650H
Georgian Vape w/organizer (Used)...424.80
Lincoln View Combo...479.50
Monkeyz C220 @ 0mm lens...380.00
Monkeyz C220 Pro Delay...380.00
Monkeyz C220 Pro Focus...380.00
Monkeyz C220 Pro Flash...995.00
Monkeyz S23A @ 80mm B24...785.00
Brencia EC w/BM4...1150.00
Hushold S200 CM w/ 80
Hushold S200 CM w/ 80
LARGE
LARGE FORMAT CAMERAS
IF NEW
Airdel (Used) 13,000 $ 49.00
Airtel (Used) 12,500 $ 49.00
Babylon 5 (Used) 65,995 $ 199.00
Montegrazie (Body Used) 19,500 $ 199.00
Montegrazie (Body Used) 19,500 $ 199.00
Yankee - Mat 11,995 $ 30.00
Yankee - Mat 11,995 $ 30.00
LIGHT STAND/
TRIPOD DOLLY
A must for movie or portrait lighting buffs. Be able to do趴 your camera or adjust lights without lifting or scraping the floor. Cost at $10.00 to $30.00.
$9.99
ELECTRONIC FLASH
POCELUX
20
ISO
| | BTAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Sumpak 101 Auto | 29.95 | 14.99 |
| Soluger M6A6 | 29.95 | 14.99 |
| Ace 828 | 24.95 | 12.49 |
| IMT 5725M Illushag | 49.95 | 13.49 |
| Surgaid X100 | 49.95 | 13.49 |
| Sunoco 600 Pocket Flash | 29.95 | 14.99 |
| Visitor 281 Flash | 109.55 | 69.99 |
| Visitor 192 Flash | 109.55 | 69.99 |
| Visitor 110 Flash | 109.55 | 69.99 |
| Honeywell 100 (Used) | 34.95 | 9.99 |
| Honeywell 8925 | 34.95 | 9.99 |
| Honeywell 8925 | 185.00 | 129.00 |
| Honeywell 892 | 185.00 | 129.00 |
| Roller 130H | 185.00 | 129.00 |
| Honeywell 650 Store (Used) | 185.95 | 9.99 |
| Honeywell 892 (Used) | 185.00 | 9.99 |
| Honeywell 892 (Used) | 185.00 | 9.99 |
| Honeywell 772 | 185.00 | 9.99 |
| Honeywell 700 (used) w/o h/rgh | 119.95 | 79.99 |
| Honeywell 700 (used) w/o h/rgh | 119.95 | 79.99 |
| Honeywell 300 (used) | 129.95 | 79.99 |
| Honeywell 300 (used) | 89.95 | 9.99 |
| Visitor 91 (Used) | 89.95 | 24.99 |
| Visitor 91 (Used) | 89.95 | 24.99 |
7
PHOTO UMBRELLA
[ ]
30" silver Hex photo umbrella for soft portrait and studio photography without mounting clamp, but with mounting clamp. Retail value $20.00 to $30.00
>
$5.99
MOVIE CAMERAS
V
100%
RETAIL SALE
B&W 180wall 1700 Course (Used)
Bodex 150 Layer (Used)
Bodex 480 Micro
Bodex 390 Micro
Bodex 1200 Sound
Kodak Intenloud 130
Yukoo X100
Xiaomi 100
SonnyX L1255 (Used Dome)
SonnyX L1255 New
Rudok X130
Rudok X130
SonnyX L150
Kodak Intenloud 140
SonnyX L150
SonnyX L150
Rudok Intenloud 140
SonnyX L150
SonnyX L150
Rudok Tab (Used)
Bodex 150 Used
Bodex 150 Used
P
PROJECTOR
SCREENS
Heavy duty hardware and first quality screen material by Dalite. A super Value.
40x40 matte white
Hurry . . . the famous brand equipment won't last long at these prices!
40x40 matte white
value $24.95 $ 9.99
50x50 matte white
value $34.95 $14.99
50x50 lenticular
value $49.95 $24.99
PROJECTORS
| BATTERY | TOTAL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Kircs International | 105 | 89 |
| Bait Aire & Hardware Unit (Used) | 89 | 22.9 |
| Lumig Reg Bam Sound (Used) | 245.0 | 34.9 |
| Lumig Reg Bam Sound (Used) | 325.0 | 74.9 |
| Lumig Reg Bam Sound (Used) | 345.0 | 74.9 |
| GAF 8800sound Unit | 195.9 | 16.9 |
| GAF 2000sound Unit | 195.9 | 16.9 |
| GAF 2000sound Unit | 195.9 | 16.9 |
| Dual Zoom (Used) | 155.9 | 89.9 |
| Dual Zoom (Used) | 155.9 | 89.9 |
| Sandy Bam 600 Sound | 339.9 | 13.9 |
| Sandy Bam 600 Sound | 339.9 | 13.9 |
| Eunig 5802 Sound Zoom | 353.0 | 24.9 |
| Eunig 5802 Sound Zoom | 353.0 | 24.9 |
| Kodak 744M Sound | 195.9 | 10.9 |
| Kodak 744M Sound | 195.9 | 10.9 |
| Sandy Duplex 1000 | 179.9 | 10.9 |
| Sandy Duplex 1000 | 179.9 | 10.9 |
| Kodak 353 Sound Zoom | 224.5 | 10.9 |
| Kodak 353 Sound Zoom | 224.5 | 10.9 |
| Kodak 235 Sound | 244.5 | 10.9 |
| Kodak 235 Sound | 244.5 | 10.9 |
| Kodak 4025速换 | 169.0 | 84.9 |
| Kodak 445 Midrack | 165.9 | 11.9 |
| Kodak 445 Midrack | 165.9 | 11.9 |
| Bait Aire & Hardware Unit (Used) | 89.9 | 19.9 |
| Bait Aire & Hardware Unit (Used) | 89.9 | 19.9 |
| Kodak MJU (Used) | 143.9 | 9.0 |
| Kodak MJU (Used) | 143.9 | 9.0 |
| Super Record 8 | 195.9 | 19.9 |
MOVIE TITLE SET
SALE STARTS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27
Genuine Hernad Brand title letters stick on any smooth surface. Friendly. Easily removed and reused. Sets available in choice of color. Regular $4.95 only*2.49
BINOCULARS
JJJ
IF NEW
RETAIL SALE
ramanue 4000 x735. 129.95 59.99
ramanue 4000 x735. 129.95 59.99
10-50kboard (Used) 38.50 19.99
x735 Sportview 48.50 24.99
x735 Boadfill w/a. 45.00 9.99
x735 Sportview 48.50 24.99
x735 Sportview 10^w/o a. 59.50 34.99
x735 Sportview 10^w/o instra. 59.50 36.99
x820 Computer Compter 120.00 189.99
x820 Computer Compter 120.00 189.99
x820 Cardet. 180.00 190.99
x735 impin 10^W.A. 180.00 9.99
x735 signin 10^W.A. 52.35 34.99
x735 signin 10^W.A. 52.35 34.99
F
As always Wolfe has a collection of cameras, projects and equipment from some work. The prices are so low no one can complain. Where else can you buy a Pen-Type or a small telephoto lens for $50.
YOU FIX IT DELIGHT
IO
| | RITAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Sebahion Virtel Master | 60.00 | 59.00 |
| Sebahion 1218 | 70.00 | 39.00 |
| Cush Flash Master | 79.95 | 39.99 |
| Sebahion Micro Lens 98 | 45.00 | 36.00 |
| Sebahion Microscope | 85.00 | 36.00 |
| Gosen Laser Pro | 124.95 | 149.95 |
| Gosen Laser Pro / 121 Spot Meter (Used) | 224.95 | 149.95 |
| Gosen Flash Master (Model 1) | 279.95 | 149.95 |
| Western Master (U) (Used) | 149.95 | 149.95 |
7
7
YASHICA D
YASHICA D
120 CAMERA
LIGHT METERS
WIN
Classic design twin lens reflex camera. Takes sharp $2\frac{1}{4}\%$ perfect camera for extra sharp potraits. New retail $130.00
J
USED $39.90
RITAIS 8.195 SALO 8.200
Vabion ME 2 34.95 61.00
Vabion ME 3.2 34.95 61.00
Vabion ME 3.2 34.95 61.00
Vabion VOG3 32.95 37.00
Bendyth 49.95 32.00
Bendyth 49.95 32.00
Bendyth Reserved. 49.95 32.00
Dana & Stanford Computer Lifts 79.95 54.00
Dana O'Ferris Professional 79.95 54.00
V
TRIPODS
9
CAROUSEL 140 TRAYS
F
Genuine Kodak trays to hold 140 slides. Used once in multimedia presentation. Excellent condition, unboxed. Kodak retail $7.25
$3.50
RETAIL SALE
Airport Gad (Used) 139.50 19.50
Aeropostal Gad (Used) 139.50 19.50
Honeywell Automation (Used) 189.50 19.50
Gallant Construction (Used) 189.50 19.50
Graffiti Construction (Used) 119.50 19.50
Cabin Dissolve (Used) 192.50 19.50
Bell Rent-A-Car Apt 495 99.95 19.95
Kodak Crowned 850H 232.50 169.95
G庐 760 H 209.95 149.95
Monroe Auto Pak M-7 160.00 100.00
Bullet 3' X 1' 381.00 180.00
Kodak Crowned 100 H 79.50 59.95
Kodak Crowned 100 H 79.50 59.95
Pros and Cons Pkg 139.95 19.95
Bell Rent-A-Car Apt 139.95 19.95
Denderson 2' Pro 189.00 19.00
Monster A2t (Used) 190.00 6.00
Agfa 100 H 190.00 6.00
Monster A2f (Used) 190.00 6.00
Monster Pro Color Pro 445.00 19.00
P
50
SLIDE PROJECTORS
NEW
DJ CONTROL MODULE
ILFORD FILM
Super savings on film overstock. Buy fresh date lilrord filmed stock in the ware. Save Fpa 135-36 (5 pack) only $33.99 Hpi 125.50 only $2.99 reg. 55.50 only
]
INSTAMATICS
QE
JU
]
RENTAL SALE
Kedadak 4X54 Camera (Used)
Kedadak 10X70 View case
Kedadak 10X70 View case
Kedadak 21X70 View case
Kedadak 31X70 View case
Kedadak 31X70 View case
Kedadak 31X70 View case
Kedadak 31X70 View case
Visitor Printer 600
Kedadak Trinitile 18
Kedadak Trinitile 18
Kedadak Trinitile 28
Kedadak Trinitile 28
Kedadak 390 (Used)
Kedadak Mathematical 35 (Used)
Kedadak Mathematical 35 (Used)
27.85 17.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95 31.95
F
FILTERS
Large selection of filters in
popular sizes 43, 46, 48, 49, 52,
53, 55. Choose color, pattern,
color, black and white, diffusion,
starburst, polarizers and
more. Not all items available
in every size. Your choice
Range $6.50 to $25.00
$3.00
POLAROIDS
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 210 (Used) | 74.95 | 24.99 |
| 315 (Used) | 69.95 | 24.99 |
| 315 (Used) | 69.95 | 24.99 |
| 420 (Used) | 79.55 | 39.99 |
| 195 (Used) | 100.00 | 29.99 |
| 195 (Used) | 100.00 | 29.99 |
| 330 (Used) | 195.90 | 39.99 |
| 330 (Used) | 109.95 | 39.99 |
| 300 (Used) | 79.55 | 29.99 |
| 300 (Used) | 79.55 | 29.99 |
| Square packer (Used): | 39.95 | 12.99 |
| Color packer | 39.95 | 12.99 |
L
Drug Bottle
7
10mm
F
RETAIL SALE
Mennock Model Analyzer 12.95 12.95
Mennock Model Analyzer 41.99 19.99
5000 hour Satellite 9.99 5.99
25W Voltage Insulator 9.99 5.99
25W Voltage Insulator Packer 9.99
NST time-on-line 45.29 19.99
Ganavil Tiger Warmer 15.29 12.99
Ventorial Bulk Pole sale 15.29 12.99
Ventorial Bulk Pole sale Packer 14.00 7.99
Caimon I Class 11.95 7.99
Kalmar 12 Traction 7.95 13.90
Kalmar 12 Traction Level 7.95 13.90
BS Dual Traction Materiel 7.95 49.95
0
DARKROOM AIDS
PATTERSON FILM TANK
The original plastic film developing tank. Complete 4 $35 reels, cut processing time with this Dog Sale time.
[ ]
Retail Value $29.99 only
>
$7.99
$7.99
| | RTA1A | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Dura K200 (w/red) | 185.00 | 199.00 |
| Bogen 32CL | 28.50 | 199.00 |
| Bogen 67/17 mm 75mm lens | 139.55 | 89.50 |
| Bogen 67/17 mm 85mm lens | 139.55 | 89.50 |
| Bogen 65/15 mm | 92.50 | 64.00 |
| Lenser k9/v15 | 159.55 | 79.00 |
| Lenser k9/v15 | 159.55 | 79.00 |
| Omega B6X3L | 264.20 | 192.00 |
| Omega B6X3L | 264.20 | 192.00 |
| Megapter Opinion M3 | 149.55 | 119.50 |
| Megapter Opinion M3 | 149.55 | 119.50 |
| Vivitar 344 (new size) | 113.93 | 84.00 |
| Vivitar 344 (new size) | 113.93 | 84.00 |
PRINT TRAYS
F
V
World famous trays by Yankee for making big enlargements.
11x14 usually $3.99 SALE $1.99
8 A.M. SHARP
usually $17.50 SALE $4.99
ENLARGING PAPER
F
Big selection of paper by Kodak, Illford, Agfa, and Argenla. Large stock of surfaces and linens. Some items short dated, others just overstocks. ONE-THIRD TO ONE-HALF OFF
99
>
Heavy glass and metal construction designed to make canned tomatoes. Manufactured as a 120 size printer but easily converted to universal design retail. Retail value $17.95 *$6.99
PROOF PRINTER
LENSES FOR PENTAX
24-70mm F2.8L USM
THE LABEL
IF NEW
15mm B.2.0 Peak Cambion (Used) 49.95 14.99
17mm B.3.0 Peak Hammer 49.95 14.99
11mm B.4 Auto Lancer 165.50 79.99
11mm B.4 Auto Lancer 165.50 79.99
12mm B.4 Accureo 189.00 129.99
16mm B.4 Macro Hammy 189.50 99.99
16mm B.4 Accureo 189.50 99.99
15mm B.4 Accureo 189.50 99.99
15mm B.4 Auto Visiter 195.00 89.99
40mm N.4 Prism 195.00 89.99
30mm N.4 Prism DXE Skan 199.00 199.00
400mm B.6 Bushall 194.50 119.99
400mm B.6 Alpsaor Unit 189.50 79.99
400mm B.6 Alpsaor Unit 640.00 199.99
200mm B.15 SMC Takamer Unit 249.50 129.99
200mm B.15 SMC Takamer Unit 249.50 129.99
150mm B.20 SMC Takamer Unit 165.50 79.99
150mm B.20 Sushiall Unit 165.50 79.99
60mm B.20 Macro Yachunon Unit 188.00 109.99
60mm B.20 Macro Yachunon Unit 188.00 109.99
25mm B.2.0 Auto Mold (Used) 190.99 109.99
25mm B.2.0 Auto Mold (Used) 99.00 109.99
25mm B.2.0 Auto Mold (Used) 99.00 109.99
155mm B.5 Super Takamer Unit 189.99 89.99
35mm B.2.0 Auto Bushel (Used) 99.50 39.99
35mm B.2.0 Auto Bushel (Used) 99.50 39.99
155mm B.5 Auto Bushel (Used) 199.99 49.99
LUCKY
ENLARGER BUY
SALE $69.99
A terrific value in an enlarger,
a mirror, a colorful, colorful,
color, color drawer.
Complete with negative car-
pillow and Best Buy best
Compare at $119.95
LENSES
FOR KONICA
P
>
FORUNICA
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 15mm F2.8 Auto Buschall | 141.50 | 84.90 |
| 20mm F2.8 Auto Buschall | 141.50 | 84.90 |
| 35mm F2.8 Auto Buschall | 112.50 | 59.90 |
| 50mm F2.8 Auto Buschall | 175.00 | 64.90 |
| 75mm F2.8 Auto Visiter | 149.00 | 81.90 |
| 155mm F2.8 Auto Visiter | 149.50 | 81.90 |
| 155mm F2.8 Auto Buschall | 115.00 | 59.90 |
| 155mm F2.8 Auto Buschall | 115.00 | 59.90 |
| 155mm F2.8 Hexonem | 200.00 | 109.90 |
| 155mm F2.8 Hexonem | 175.00 | 85.90 |
| 155mm F2.5 Auto Buschall | 164.00 | 81.90 |
| 200mm F2.5 Auto Buschall | 255.00 | 129.90 |
| 200mm F2.5 Hexonem | 200.00 | 169.90 |
| 70-210mm F3.5 Series Visiter | 460.50 | 319.00 |
| 70-210mm F3.5 Series Zoom | 329.50 | 129.90 |
| 200mm F2.5 Auto | | |
300mm TELEPNOTO LENS
Choice of 2 models, Bushell
Automatic for Pentax or Mamiya,
retail $16.50 & $99.99
GAF lens proxel lens (lifts most SLR cameras with adapter, extra retail), retail $89.95
SALE
$39.99
750 79.99
L
LENSES
FOR NIKON
FOR NIKON
21mm 1.35 AIR
21mm 1.38 AIR
21mm 1.39 AIR
13mm 2.02 AIR Bushell II
13mm 2.04 AIR Bushell II
200mm 1.55 AIR Venturi
200mm 1.56 AIR Venturi
200mm 1.57 AIR Venturi
200mm 1.58 AIR Venturi
200mm 1.59
48.50 | 319.0 | 10.99 |
90.250 | 61.94 | 10.99 |
80.250 | 61.94 | 10.99 |
85.250 | 71.38 | 10.99 |
51mm | 17.82 | 10.99 |
51mm | 17.82 | 10.99 |
95.00 | 195.0 | 10.99 |
Viviter (Used) 89.95 39.99
20mm 13.8 Auto Viviter 199.50 79.00
LENS CASES
Good selection of pouch bag and hard formed lens cases.
They to store lenses, elec-
tricals, camera lenses, etc.
Usually 64.99 to $189.95.
1/2 PRICE or LESS
ESS
LENSES FOR
CANON
P
Bushnell (Used) 131.50 $9.99
FUELION RETAIL SALE
35mm F2.8 Auto Bushhail 192.50 $79.50
35mm F2.8 Auto Bushhail 179.50 $79.50
35mm F2.8 Auto Bushhail 112.50 $79.00
35mm F2.8 Auto Bushhail 109.50 $79.00
35mm F2.8 Auto Voitier 109.50 $79.00
135mm F2.8 Auto Bushhail FL 121.50 $49.00
135mm F2.8 Auto Bushhail FL 121.50 $49.00
30mm F1.4 Auto Pristol 299.50 $99.00
40mm F1.6 Auto Bushhail FL 246.50 $99.00
40mm F1.6 Auto Bushhail FL 259.50 $99.00
15mm F2.8 Spatulae (Used) 259.50 $99.00
11¢ [£98]...246.30 75.99
13$mim Flare Aureo...246.30 75.99
LENSES
>
First quality manufacturers lenses made to fit Pentax, Mamiya, Ricoh, Yashica and more.
MAMIYA/SEKOR
28mm f1.2 retail $119.50 SALE $64.99
28mm f1.8 retail $119.50 SALE $64.99
120mm f2.8 retail $119.50 SALE $75.99
200mm f3.5 retail $144.50 SALE $75.99
V
9.99
9.99
9.99
WOLF
LENSES FOR MINOLTA
MINIVOIA
RETAIL SALE
15-20mm F2.8 Leica Zoom.
16-25mm F4 LISG Aqua Fishbay.
16mm F2.8 LISG Fishbay.
18mm F2.8 LISG Auto Bushtail.
18mm F2.8 LISG Auto Bushtail.
35-50mm f2.8 Series Winder.
45-50mm f2.8 Series Winder.
75-100mm f2.8 Series Winder.
75-100mm f2.8 Series Winder.
75-100mm f2.8 Series Winder.
120-250mm f2.8 Series Winder.
120-250mm f2.8 Series Winder.
120-250mm f2.8 Series Winder.
130-250mm f2.8 Series Winder.
130-250mm f2.8 Series Winder.
155-200mm f2.8 Series Winder.
200-300mm f2.8 Series Winder.
200-300mm f2.8 Series Winder.
400-600mm f2.8 Series Winder.
400-600mm f2.8 Series Winder.
400-600mm f2.8 Series Winder.
135-200mm f2.8 Series Winder.
Buschail (Used).
200-300mm f2.8 Auto
Buschail (Used).
200-300mm f2.8 Auto
Buschail (Used).
Retail over $300.00
SALE $149.99
85-205 3.8 Vivitar zoom lens reduced to an incredible low lens availability. Available for Pentax or Nikon. Also just 2 for Nikon.
VIVITAR ZOOM LENS
SALE $149.99
LENSES FOR OLYMPUS
P
21mm1.5 Zulu Zaku (Dame)
24mm 7 Zulu Zaku
28mm 7 Zulu Auto Bushhell
>
JUNK AND STUFF
Sort through bundles, boxes,
and barrels of odds and ends
accumulated over the years.
You may find the camera case
or something else you need.
UNIVERSAL MOUNT LENSES
(Fit most S.L.R. with adapters.
Adapters not included in price)
| | RETAIL | SALE |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 105mm f2.8 Lens T1 | 59.99 | 24.99 |
| 135mm f2.8 Lens T1 | 59.99 | 24.99 |
| 135mm f2.8 Lens T1 | 59.99 | 24.99 |
| 35mm f2.8 Vriter T1 | 59.50 | 29.99 |
| 35mm f2.8 Vriter T1 | 59.50 | 29.99 |
| 28mm f2.5 Vriter T1 | 83.50 | 49.00 |
| 28mm f2.5 Vriter T1 | 83.50 | 49.00 |
| 28mm f2.5 Vriter T1 | 79.50 | 49.00 |
| 28mm f2.5 Vriter T1 | 99.50 | 49.00 |
| 600mm f1.6 Waco T1 | 89.95 | 49.00 |
| 135mm f2.8 Waco T1 | 89.95 | 49.00 |
| 135mm f2.8 Waco T1 | 109.95 | 49.00 |
| 3-300mm f5.5 | 179.95 | 49.00 |
| 14mm f2.8 Vriter T1 | 179.95 | 49.00 |
| 200mm f4.5 Lens T1 | 89.95 | 49.00 |
| 90-230mm f4.5 | 191.95 | 120.95 |
| 14mm f2.8 Vriter T1 | 191.95 | 120.95 |
| 14mm f2.8 Vriter T1 | 164.50 | 120.95 |
camera shop, inc.
116 West Eighth · Phone 235-1386
Wolfe's
Topeka, Kansas 66603
MASTER CHARGE
BANKAMERICARD
FINANCING
AVAILABLE
SUN
WARM
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.88 No.96
Friday, February 27, 1976
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Jayhawk faculty spend noon hour circling track
See page 6
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
The Beatles
A final point
Outgoing student body president Ed Rolfs makes a point prior to the party retirement last night at the Hawk's next seat to
Rolls is vice president Mary Lou Reece and other members of the outgoing staff.
Rolfs says job not worth time
Bv CHUCK ALEXANDER
Staff Write
If Ed Rufos had it to do over again, he says probably wouldn't have it run for student union.
"I wouldn't run because the time involved, responsibilities, personalities and eggs you have to deal with aren't worth it," Rolfs said in an interview this week.
"My major surprise when I first got in was the time commitment," he said. "I was working 12 to 14 hours a day with some phase of it."
Rufus, Junction City senior, denied that he was on the office, which he officially left.
"What I've learned has been invaluable but not worth the time," he said.
Rolfs said the demands of the office had taken its toll on his health.
As he lil up his fourth cigarette of the hour-long interview, Rufs said, "I used to love it."
He said he didn't think the student body president should be a full-time student because of his time requirements, and requires. Rolfs has never taken less than 14 credit hours since he became president last
Tedde Tashef, Rolfs' successor who was
taked last Thursday, is enrolled in 12 chil-
dren's day school.
Reviewing his tenure as president, Rofs said he had fulfilled his campaign promises but wasn't satisfied with his work continued by Kansas Athletic Corporation (KIA).
"We were unable to change any policies or mandates handed down from KUAC," he said. "I think we brought some issues to our heads and have some effect down the road." thundr.
Rufs expressed mixed feelings about the success of his campaign to evaluate
"Classroom teaching, as far as I was concerned, was the most important project undertaken," he said. "This project attained its success only for a year, but for years to come."
On the other hand, Rolfs said he was
unhappy with the response to the
failure.
"My biggest disappointment was the confusion and lack of understanding of our goals and expectations in that area," he said. "SenEx became very defensive when he was sent to the Senate primarily because they viewed it as an attack on the faculty of the University."
changed regarding the evaluation of classroom teaching instead of in more
The University administration could have been more responsive to the senate, Rolfs said, adding that the maze-like structure of the central administration had made communication between the Senate and Strong Hall difficult.
"We still don't know who make decisions," Rolfs said. "It (the administration) is so stratified that we really have to go to go to." I tuck abbetsis a minor example.
Rolfs said the January reorganization of the central administration by Chancellor
See ROLFS page 10
Library committee picked to judge University needs
Staff Writer
ByLYNDASMITH
The Library Facilities Planning Committee has been appointed and will begin an evaluation of the University's library needs by April 10, 2014, vice chancellor, announced yesterday.
The library committee will be responsible for developing plans for the renovation of the building.
In a press conference, Shankel also said that the University would request that the Board of Regents make a minor change in its procedure of selecting regent's professors. He also said he doubted that the legislature's failure to approve a 10 per cent increase in regent's pay would cause increased sentiment among faculty members for collective bargaining.
Max Lucas, assistant to the Chancellor, said the library committee would determine whether a new library is justified at the school. Lucas said the committee will develop plans for the architectural design of that facility. Lucas said the committee's work would begin next year.
"The committee will set its own time schedule," he said, "because it's dealing with a very large segment of the University."
Other members of the committee are:
John Glinka, associate dean of libraries;
Nancy Bengel circulation librarian;
Steve Duggan, associate petroleum engineering; Kala May Stroup,
dean of women; Scott Sielbies, Parkside village junior; Allen Wierchert, associate petroleum engineer; Christoffersen, assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs; Thomas Smith, professor
The committee will consider plans for a proposed science-technology library, Ranz said, recommended last November by a libraries facilities advisory committee. The committee will also be the libraries of the business and engineering schools and various science departments.
Jim Ranz, dean of libraries and chairman of the newly selected committee, said that he; Shankel; Luces; and Ron Calgaard, the committee's leaders, will meet tomorrow morning to outline the committee's specific responsibilities and plan of action. Shankel, Luces and Calgaard met on Tuesday.
In another matter, Shankel said that the University would request the Board of Regents to appoint future regents' professors from within the University. No one employed at Kansas schools can be designated now as a regents' professor.
High risk (Class D) employees, including Chancellor Archie C Dykes, professors on
The Board of Regents is given an annual appropriation by the legislature of $12,500 to hire a distinguished professor as a regents' professor.
The professor is nominated by the Chancellor or a regent and is eligible for the award.
SenEx has been asked to determine faculty interest in the proposal.
"A at time when we anticipate stability in enrollment but a possible future decline, we're not sure it's a good idea to go outside the institution and state to bring in a high-salaried, tenured person for the regents' professorship," Shankel said.
of geography and East Asian studies; and Raymond Nichols, emeritus chancellor.
One regents' professorship is vacant at the University as a result of Curt Teichert's retirement in May. Teichert was a regents' professor of geology.
KU considers job risk insurance
Employees from other Board of Regents schools could be included in the 2,000 em
By DAVE HAUBER
Maintenance and service personnel would pay $ 1.95 in Class III and student employees including graduate assistants would pay $ 4.25 in Class IV.
Medical malpractice claims and business or personal pursuits not related to the University wouldn't be covered by the policy.
Steff Writer
Dykes earlier told SenEx that the same man who helped obtain a policy to underwrite the Kansas Union after the 1970 oblain helped the liability insurance policy.
According to the proposal, the policy protects against bodily injury claims, direct damage to University property, false arrest or conviction of someone in a slander, defamation of character, assault
According to Del Shank, executive vice chancellor about 2,000 employees would have the authority to premiums quoted in the policy. The policy says lower rates could be negotiated and the rate would be negotiated.
Liability insurance providing $1 million protection for high risk University of Kansas employees at a yearly individual rate. (See above) *Wilkerson*, a Kansas City, Mo. firm; and *Wilkerson*, a Kansas City, Mo. firm.*
Jobs pose problems for foreign students
If the increase isn't granted, Shankel
factually probably wouldn't form a collective
"We have for some time been concerned about the liability question," Dykes said.
The Council of Presidents, consisting of presidents or chancellors from the six Regents schools, reviewed the policy in its January meeting to determine among faculty, be said.
In 1972, the Haas & Wilkerson firm
provides insurance premium rates by
46 per cent.
"If the faculty feels it is being treated unfairly," Shankel said, "there will certainly be a feeling on the part of some that they are being denied demands and rights. But there is almost no sentiment for collective bargaining, and there will probably be very little in the face."
Dykes said Kansas State University had already indicated it would not interested in signing the deal.
Shankel said legislators shouldn't feel that the faculty is threatening them with collective bargaining because there would be more work than average percentage interested in it at the University.
Summer Abroad programs and the Pearson Integrated Humanities program and KU police officers, would be covered by the University as a policy, as would other University personnel.
Concerning a 10 per cent faculty salary increase now in the Kansas Legislature, Shankel said, "I don't think there will be a mass exodus (of faculty members), regardless of what happens in the state." He added, longing and most faculty members are hoping the legislature will deal fairly and equitably with us."
Class II includes assistant professors, instructors and personnel not included in Class I.
Restrictions on foreign students by the Office of Immigration and Naturalization require that they work with a permit or face possible deportation.
Curators, chancellors, administrators,
department heads, professors, associate
professors and security employees are
Class I and would pay the $71 premium.
For foreign students at the University of
Armenia, getting a part-time job may mean
a lengthy period.
There is a contradiction in allowing foreign students to work once they arrive, according to immigration laws that say a student must show a financial statement to the American consulate in his country before allowed admittance to the United States.
Takuru Higuchi, professor of chemistry,
is KU's other reagents' professor.
THE FINANCIAL statement must be approved by the consul before the student can obtain a visit to enter the United States, and the visa is issued to his educational expenses before he comes.
If a student decides to seek employment without approval from either the Dean of Foreign Students or the immigration service, he is susceptible to deportation.
Robert Rumbough, district director for the Office of Immigration and Naturalization in New York, yesterday that there had been an increase in the number of students coming to American universities and that with the financial burdens of infusion; more of them went overseas.
"A LOT OF TIMES the student who is out working doesn't have authorization," he said.
A student must prove need and obtain a work permit for any employment. He cannot work more than 20 hours a week. A student must carry at least 12 hours of college courses.
There are two basic means for students to fund their educations at an American university; support from their families and sponsorship by their governments.
A student not on a scholarship may have to seek employment when his initial means of support are insufficient.
BUMBUGH SAID that there was “quite a lot of fraud” in the establishment of financial means before a student submitted an application to American university to the American college.
The philosophy behind requiring a work permit, Rumbaugh said, was to prevent employees from working without a permit.
Students from underdeveloped countries usually try to supplement their finances by working because their governments can't provide enough money, he said.
Rumbaugh said that he had never known if any foreign student's being deported.
However, he said, "We don't go out of our way to find out if students are working."
CLARK COAN, DEAN of foreign students, said that he also didn't think there had been any students deported from Korea after the war. The service was understaffed and underbudgeted and that it was difficult for them to monitor all the activities of these students.
Csn said that about half of the foreign students at KU were sponsored by their governments and the other半 sponsored by other sponsors, he said. 40 to 50 per cent are working.
The students on full government scholarships don't need to work, he said.
COAN SAID that approval for a student to work on campus wasn't needed from the immigration service but that foreign students couldn't accept college work-study jobs.
Coun said that the student could make applications to several universities in the United States but that he was bound by law because he has shown to the American consul.
Students entering the country receive a student visa, which can be used for more than 10 years.
"One of the big problems is that they're foreignVisas lumped together." Coan
See FOREIGN page 10
Uncommon lifestyle students' common denominator
(Editor's note: This is the fifth in a five-part series examining where students live and why at the school.)
The second chapter
BvLIZLEECH
Staff Writer
About the only thing they have in common is that
they're students and they need some place to live.
And the reasons they give for living where they do are as different as the living quarters themselves.
Many University of Kansas students live in conventional places. But some live in rooms for rent, married housing, mobile homes, houses, coops and with their parents.
Rooms for rent
About 14.9 per cent of KU's students rent rooms, usually in older houses.
Mike Gullett, Parsons senior, lives in a room in an Ohio Street house. He said he could not find anywhere else to live and isn't entirely pleased with his residence.
"THE ONLY GOOD thing about it is that it's close to campus." Gullett said "and I just waited until it happened."
Gullett said he paid $80 a month for his room, which is about 20 feet by 30 feet. There is a stove and a refrigerator, but they aren't in a separate kitchen. He rented a bathroom with other occupants in the house.
as replace all the lightballs. He also said that the frezer door on his refrigerator was gone and the freezer door was open.
"The electricity goes out about four times a semester and then the whole place goes out."
HE SAID THAT cochokes frequented his room and that there was little parking available within
Gullett said that the room was filthy when he moved into it and he had to clean it himself as well
The room itself is small, Gullet said, and the house used to be split into two apartments.
"I have a TV, but I can't fit it into my apartment," he said.
Clarence and Catherine Adamson rent rooms to students in their house at 1344 Kentucky.
Some landlords live in the houses they rent to students.
"I've had some girls who wanted to move in, but my wife won't let them because she doesn't want to move."
FOUR OF THE two rent single rooms for $5 a month. The other two pay $70 because they share a room.
Six male students live with the Adamsons.
"My wife's so afraid she's overcharging the boys that she might even give their money back," Adamson said, "and she cleans up their rooms just like a mother does."
He said that living with the young men was a lot like having his seven children, now grown, at home.
Married housing
The University offers inexpensive housing for married students, Jody LaPolette, off-campus
STOUFFER PLACE Apartments cost $25 and $105 a month for one- and two-bedroom apartments, respectively. Stouffer houses 1.7 per cent of the student body.
La Follette said that students had to be married to live there.
She said that at least one of the two had to be a full-time student.
"There have been people living here before who weren't married but as soon as we found out, they were married."
Vandana Agarwal, Lawrence junior, said that she like Stouffer mostly because it was close to campus. She, her husband and daughter live in a two-bedroom apartment at Stouffel. Her husband isn't a student.
'WE FIND it safer than an apartment complex because no door-to-door salamander are allowed here.'
Agarwal said another reason she liked the apartments was a no-pet regulation. She said that the apartment's security system is
She said she thought Stouffer was a good thing for the University to provide, and her only complaints were that the refrigerator was too small and guests had to pass through the master bedroom to find the bathroom.
Mobile homes
MORE AND MORE students are moving into mobile homes, Joe & Strawdriver, manager of Bill
He said he bought a lot of students got tired of the noise they encountered in apartment complexes and had to leave.
"And if they buy a mobile home and want to move to another town, Strawderman said, 'they just want it.'"
He said the home was tied down, as federal law requires.
"BUT IT'S STRANGE to live in a trailer because they're not very stable." DaGesperi said.
Although he and his roommates had originally wanted to find a farmhouse, Jeff DeGaspert, Pittsburg junior, said that living in a mobile home was quieter than apartments.
He said when it was windy, the mobile home didn't make him, but he could tell the foundation wasn't
The living room and litten areas are large, but the bedrooms are "kind of squished," he said.
DeGaspier and its two roommates pay $180 a month, not including utilities for the three-bedroom
Strawberryman said that the rent for a trailer varied, depending on whether the home was furnished, how many bedrooms it had, and where in the mobile home lot it was located.
"CORNER LOTS usually cost more because there aren't any trailers on either side," Strawardman
Houses
If a student owns a mobile home, renting a lot costs between $42.50 and $60 a month. But if he rents the trailer, the rent is between $120 and $160, including theJet. The strawerman said.
If it's space a student wants, there are houses in Lawrence for rent.
Nancy Smith, Shawnee Mission senior, lives with two other women in a house filled with antiques. Smith said the antiques had belonged to a roommate's mother.
"THE STREET we live on is more like the street I grew up on," Smith said.
Another reason she wanted to move into a house was that she had a dog. Smith said, and couldnt believe the truth of that story.
Betty Pallanich, Overside Park senior, also said that she wanted a place where she could keepoes.
She said two other women moved into a house that Pallainn has was homier than an apartment.
"IT'S REALLY different when you live in a house because you have a lot more space." Pallainn said, "and you feel like you can live how you want and not to have worry about bothering other people."
See HOUSING page 10
2
Friday, February 27,1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Nixon trip called harmful
WASHINGTON—President Gerald L. Ford said yesterday that former President Nixon's China trip "probably was harmful" to his election campaign in
China.
The President cautioned that returns in the Tuesday primary hadn't yet been fully analyzed, but when they were, he said, "11 presence there will be evidence that
I would want to make this announcement for Ford placed heavy emphasis on Nikon's role as a private citizen in Peking.
"I think the weight of the evidence we have so far—we don't have all the evidence in—is that it (the simplest case) probably was harmful, but it is not, because at this time."
WASHINGTON - The commissioner of the Social Security Administration warned yesterday that his agency, which touches the life of virtually every American, may grind to a halt when Congress approves a $400-million overhaul of the massive Social Security computer system.
"We're going to break down," Commissioner James B. Cardwell told a Senate Annotorizations subcommittee. "Somebody has to start worrying about it."
Just as Social Security was threatened with a logjam of paperwork before computers came along, the 40-year-old agency now is in danger of being strangled into a state of emergency.
The problem has reached crisis proportions during the last 10 years as Congress added Medicare, Black Lung and Supplemental Security Income to the basic pension.
"Partly because of the rapid growth and the need to respond on short notice to legislative issues, SSA hasn't had the opportunity to devise and implement policies."
The straw that broke the computer's back was federalization of nearly four million state welfare recipients two years ago into the Supplemental Security Income program, which is experiencing a 24 per cent error rate in making payments to ineligible persons, overpaying some and underpaying others, he said.
Extension asked of court
WASHINGTON - Public interest groups asked the Supreme Court yesterday to permit the illegally constituted Federal Election Commission to continue
The groups said legislation to restructure the commission and to make it comply with the law "is progressing rapidly through Congress. If the court extends the stay for an additional 30 days, we believe the Congress will be able to complete its action within that period."
If the court fails to grant the extension, the FEC will cease awarding federal matching presidential campaign funds at midnight Monday.
The justices gave no indication when they would act. They meet today for one of their regularly scheduled closed conferences.
their regularly scheduled closed conferences.
Congress wasn't expected to pass legislation before the deadline.
Allowing the commission to die "would obviously have a serious and adverse impact on candidates" in the presidential primaries, the groups said.
Committee kills Regents bill
TOPEKA—The Senate Education Committee killed on voice vote yesterday a ballot that had her transferred control of Kansas community junior colleges to the state.
The vote to kill the measure introduced by the committee three weeks ago came after State Sen. Jan Meyers, R-Overland Park, argued the transfer of control from the state Board of Education was contrary to the state's long-range educational goals.
"I just think they are completely different types of institutions from the regents' institutions." Meyers said. "To put vocational-technical schools under the Board of Education and the junior colleges under the regents is just opposite to the aims of the 1922 Commission."
She referred to the state commission studying long-range plans for post-high school education in the state.
Carter's tax policies attacked by opponents
He said he would come out with a complete analysis of the tax system later on this year and that he believed it was imperative to simplify the tax structure.
BOSTON AP- Front runner Jimmy Carter took a day off from campaigning yesterday while three of his rivals in next week's Democratic presidential primary in Massachusetts attacked his stands on various issues.
Carter told a League of Women Voters audience in Boston on Monday he favored doing away with income tax deductions for interest paid on home mortgages and that he favored elimination of hundreds of other tax incentives.
Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz, the second placeholder in new Hampshire, said he disagreed with Carter's tax proposal, and his papers' revolution if it were impugned.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Int., accused the
peeling Republican gerrymandering and Sen.
Birch Bayh.
Jackson, D-Wash, devoted a news conference to attacking Carter's stand on the issue.
Bayh, who finished third in New Hampshire, attacked Carter for saying he wouldn't fight to repeal right-to-work laws, for favoring limited deregulation of natural gas and for opposing public services jobs and revenue sharing for states.
Jackson said Carter was threatening the destruction of the working and middle class American family with a proposal to increase income tax deduction on home mortuaries.
Meanwhile, GOP contender Ronald Reagan told a crowd of about 10,000 in St. Petersburg, Fla, that he was greatly impressed with what happened in New Hamshire.
Reagan said he thought the New Hampshire primary had answered the question about whether his campaign was built on a limited number of appeals to only a limited number of people.
JOB OPPORTUNITY 1976-77 ACADEMIC YEAR
An estimated 5 million of the remaining recipients of the coupons would have their benefits reduced, while the poorest families would get more aid for groceries.
"We have, therefore, aced," Ast. Agriculture Secretary Richard L. Peltner told reporters. The full effect on the budget and the rolls wouldn't be felt until late next
Some 600,000 new participants would be attracted to the program, USDA officials
The program now reaches between 18.8 million and 19 million persons a month at cost to the federal government of $5.5 billion a year.
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Agriculture Department proposed yesterday sweeping new regulations for the food stamp program that will help to reduce the outlays by at least 8.3 million persons.
The regulations, designed to go into effect in three steps beginning June 1, were ordered a week ago by President Ford in a speech on the war. The president took long to reform the program.
Fellner said that without the regulations the program would run $500 million short in September and that Ford refused to ask Congress for more money.
The public was given until March 29 to comment on the proposed new rules. A suit seeking an injunction against them was promised by a group of organizations headed by Food Research Action Center in New York
RESIDENT ASSISTANT and ASSISTANT RESIDENT DIRECTOR at Naismith Hall
Information including job requirements, descriptions,and applications may be obtained from the Manager's Office. Naismith Hall, 1800 Naismith Drive.
Charles Bates, special agent in charge of the FBI office, said there was "no way we can tell if they are legitimate. But being a person is more important to persons we advised the people involved."
USDA cannot by regulation go ahead with its desire to end the automatic eligibility for food stamps of families where all members are on welfare. In some states this gives them more income than ineligible working families.
Under the proposals, eligibility for the program would be restricted to those with net incomes below the new official non-farm poverty line of, for example, $2,800 a year for one person and $5,500 for a four-person family.
Officials said the public could submit comments, suggestions or objections to the proposals to the Food Stamp Division, Food Distribution Agency of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250.
Proposed regulations cut food stamp rolls
Deadline for submitting applications is 5 p.m. Friday. March 5. Naismith Hall is an equal opportunity affirmative action employer; male/female.
Copies of the message were received by a newspaper and two radio stations in the San Francisco Bay area.
SLA threatens Hearst trial
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—The judge, attorneys and two witnesses in Patricia Hearst's bank robbery trial were threatened with death yesterday in a communique purportedly from the Symbionese Liberation Army, the FBI said.
The chief prosecutor in Miss Heart's trial, U.S. Atty. James L. Browning Jr., laughed off the threat, saying: "I hope they don't shoot me before the final arguments."
Upon hearing of the threat, chief defense attorney F. Lee Bailey commented, "Very
Great Combination
HOW DO WE MAKE A GREAT STEAK GREATER? Great Combinations
STEAK & SHRIMP
MEDITERRANEAN
$3.99
But the new rules would cut in half the current minimum benefit of $10 a month.
We start with U.S.A. Choice best
friedness, aged lightly for taste and freshness
Napkins with a layer of tung
butter pancakes and parmesan cheese
And knife high to use your
wheel with placing the crisp
cutting board on it (learning galletas priba)
Rice and Asian Mediterranean
A great combination and a great
taste. M.Y. America's Master Event
current minimum benefit of $1 a month. regulations would also require all able-bodied children age 65 without child-care responsibilities to register for and actively seek jobs that pay at least $1.30 an hour. Jobs would not have the opportunity from firms being struck by labor unions.
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-9 p.m. Daily
841-3454
Only registration for work and acceptance of a 'suitable' job is now required
Mr. Steak
OPEN NOW
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
OPEN NOW
THE OX BOW GALLERY
Announces A Formal Opening and Show
of Fine Sculpture and Custom Jewelry on March 5,1976
To Celebrate
OX BOW GALLERY will give a piece of Bronze Sculpture and a piece of Custom Jewelry in separate drawings to be held at ?p.m., March
Registration can be made in the Gallery until 9:00 p.m., March 5, at our regular hours:
MWF—12-4 p.m.
Thurs.—7-9 p.m.
Saf.—10 a.m.-5 p.m.
10 West 9th
Alfie's
Alfie's FISH'N BAR-B-QUE 6th & Maine
"Obey Your Sense of Smell . . .
That's an Odor."
Place an ad. Tell the world. Call 864-4358
BEEF HAM RIBS SMOKED CHICKEN
SMOKED CHICKEN BEANS
Call Ahead-We'll Have It Hot & Tasty 842-5500
Bring this ad for Half-a-Bar-B-Que Chicken 991 (No Limit)
---
handbag sale
Selected group of genuine leather handbags, imported from South America, in a variety of colors.
PRIMARILY LEATHER
craftsmen of fine leather goods
812 Massachusetts
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HARDY'S
1978
Photo by Sue Mead
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Friday, February 27, 1976
2
Charge filed on Shelton
University Daily Kansai
Reuben Shelton, KU basketball player, was charged yesterday with making a false report to the police in connection with a shooting incident here Jan. 11.
The gusset wound in the knee sidelined
Shelton for the rest of the baskettle season.
The charge resulted from an investigation by Lawrence and KU police. Douglas County Attorney David Berkowitz said that Shelton accidentally shot himself.
Shelton was issued a summons to appear in arraignment in Douglas County Court on March 24, 1965.
Shelton had told police that a tall black man came to his door on the morning of Jan. 11 and asked him to accompany him to a house where he said, Shelton's sister, was in the hospital.
Shelton told he went with the man and after they had driven a couple of blocks in the man's car, the man told him to get out of the car. The man then shot twice at Shelton with a pistol, wounding him in the left knee, Shelton told police.
Police said a pistol found near campus a few days later proved to be the weapon that fired.
Making a false report to police is a Class
a misdemeanor punishable by up to one
year in the county jail and a fine up to $2,500
or both.
Warmth cools Mont Bleu
By JIM COBE
Staff Writer
Although fickle Mother Nature hasn't cooperated this winter, the new owner of an artificial snow skiing area near Lawrence plans to continue operations next season.
The owner of the Mont Bleu skiing facility, Walter Klammer, said Tuesday that the slopes had been open for only two weeks this winter.
Usually warm weather was the primary reasons for the short season, he said, and the short period added to the high temperatures of past management had also experienced.
The average high temperature recorded in Lawrence for the past week was 63.7 degrees, as opposed to a 38-degree average in Chicago. The difference is about five miles southeast of Lawrence.
By then, the weather was too warm to maintain a snow cover on the slopes, according to Mont Blen's assistant manager, Rich Campbell. Prairie Village senior
"We had a really freaky winter," cautioned referring to weather conditions for skiing.
There must be one to three days of temperatures below 28 degrees, with no more
The best snow is made at even lower temperatures, between nine and 12 degrees.
Klammer said he opened the area for such a short period because of the negative publicity it would receive if it were closed for the entire season.
It won't open again this year, he said,
unless the weather becomes cold for at least ten
or 60 per cent humidity, for the artificial snow that covers the slopes to be made.
Student fire alarms put on local firemen
He said the facilities weren't used enough because area people didn't realize that ski slopes were available when it wasn't snowing.
By GREG BASHAW
Staff Writer
Campbell said Mont Bleu was an alternative for students and others who had neither the time nor the money to ski on Colorado slopes.
A fire alarm buzzed through Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall early Wednesday night for an unusual reason: There was a fire in the building.
"You can spend one day here and save a lot of hassle in Colorado," he said. "And you will be happy."
Most fire alarms from campus buildings are false alarms or unnecessary calls, LaRoy Spence, assistant fire chief of the Lawrence Fire Department, said yesterday.
The fire department quickly extinguished Wednesday the small electrical fire in GSP's kitchen. Most of the times the firefighters went on campus, it finds no fire. Spence said.
The department has answered eight false alarms on campus this year. In an average year about 10 false alarms are called in, he said.
Most false alarms are turned in from off campus housing residences, he said.
"We don't have a forthright policy of eviction for those that fire the alarms but for those that aren't."
"If you get nitpicky about unnecessary calls, then you run the risk that there'll be a real fire that someone doesn't call in," Sence said.
Costs are cheaper on weekdays than on weekends, Campbell said. When temperatures are cold enough, Mont Bleu is open all week.
“KU gets blamed for having a lot of false alarms when most actually are turned in at apartment buildings and fraternities that agent'a part of the University.” be said.
The housing department emphasizes a fire prevention approach that has paid off by reducing the number of false alarms over the last four years, he said.
Most alarms in campus buildings are the local type that are designed primarily to get people out of buildings, Spence said. In buildings that store irreplaceable goods, more sophisticated fire systems are used. Spooner Museum has a smoke detector system in a department with a special hotline, he said, and the smoke detection system that have caused false alarms in the past have recently been corrected, he said.
J. J. Wilson, KU housing director, said the University dealt individually with students who turned in false alarms from residence halls.
The fire department never considered a call unnecessary, he said, until it had been called.
"We try to make students see what an inconvenience the alarm fares are for
"A lot of unnecessary calls come from people not able to identify a cause of smoke, even from people worried about a sizzling fluorescent light," he said.
In addition to false alarms, the fire department has its share of unnecessary calls. Spence said, which concern small that private parties could have handled.
Dana Brabec, Lawrence junior, said he had skied at Mont Blue over the past three years. Cost and convenience are ad-hoc. He said a ski slope near Lawrence, he said.
fellow residents and the firemen, too," he said.
Eliane Green, resident director of Oliver Hall, said false alarms are dangerous to children.
"The more false alarms you have, the slower the people leave the building," she said.
Residents have fallen down stairs and had other accidents while evacuating the hall for false alarms, she said. Residence hall contract states that all persons in the hall should leave after a fire alarm. Oliver Hall has had one false alarm this semester, she said.
Mike Thomas, director of police and parking, said that the official University policy was to arrest persons who turned in false alarms.
But few alarm investigations end in criminal charges because of lack of information.
"False fire alarms have always been a part of the college scene and always are."
He said that the biggest danger of false alarms was that people wouldn't believe an alarm to be true.
Wendy Martin, resident director of GSP, agreed. She said that GSP residents were slow to leave the hall Wednesday night even though there was potential danger from the fire alarm. But she said only one false alarm since a fire in a trash chute last semester, she said.
"The trash fire made the place reek of smoke," she said. People thought about what it was to start a fire or turn in a false alarm after that."
Watson to study on Europe trip
City Manager Buford Watson will leave, Lawrence Sunday for three-week study of education.
Watson said he had been chosen in December to make the trip with city managers from San Jose, Calif.; Burbank, Calif.; Dellas; Salem, Ore.; Winston, Winston; St. Martin St. Marie, Ont. The International City Management Association will sponsor the trip.
Watson said yesterday he would study policy development and technical problems during his trip, to England, Germany and the Netherlands.
When he returns, Watson said, he will write a research paper reviewing his studies and present it to the Kettering Foundation, an Ohio organization that supports research projects across the nation.
"If you're planning to take a skid trip to Colorado, you don't want to go out there green," he said. "You can go out to Montana or California, but the snow cover is great if the weather is right."
Brabek said he thought the greatest problem with the sk1 area was "the silly ones"
Campbell said Mont Bleu sold and rented limited quantities and types of equipment. About 60 per cent of the skiers rent equipment, he said.
retail equipment for sale and rental
equipment, shopping area and a first-aid
aid station located by the retailer.
"It may get cold enough at night, but it's too warm in the dawtime." he said.
The ski run, although of one continuous length, is divided into an upper and a lower slope, with a total run distance of about one-fourth mile.
The upper slope, which Campbell said was "a good challenge," wasn't open this year because the tow assembly for the higher slope wasn't operating.
Skiing lessons also are offered at Mont Bleu.
“It’s not fake snow, it’s artificial,” he said. “It’s the same as real snow, except its made of ice.”
Campbell said that the artificial snow used on the slopes was made with air condensation. He said that the air are forced together under high pressure, creating a cloud of snow that settles on the slope.
Although it wouldn't be economically feasible at present, Klammer said he had longterm hopes of installing a chair lift and providing easy access using of styring foam pellets instead of snow.
"We just want to keep it open," Campbell said.
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But at present the future of Mont Bleu depends on the weather and the balance
He said he 'hoped to develop programs with the schools that would include skating on an ice rink.'
The lodge at Mont Bleu contains both
The costs of $8 an hour for private lessons and $4 an hour for groups of three or more persons are much cheaper than rates at Colorado resorts, Campbell said.
"Bunny Hill," a smaller, separate slope for teaching is an idea size for instruction.
Brabec said he also hoped Mont Bleu would continue operating in future years.
Klammer said he was planning improvements at Mont Bleu, including buy new rental equipment and working more efficiently in the departments of area colleges and high schools.
and I dare hate to see it close up.' In "he's
simply the only place to skim in
Kansas."
Karen M. Booker, Lawrence graduate student, has been named the outstanding graduate student in linguistics at KU.
"If you go out there and you don't know how to ski, you'll be seeing the skair patrol for you."
Some minor injuries are sustained at Mont Bleu each year, he said, citing sprained ankles and twisted knees as the most common complaints. There are also two or three broken legs suffered during an average year, he said.
Events...
One week in particular of this year's operation had been "very successful," he said.
SUNDAY: THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS COLLEGUM MUSICUM, directed by the professor of music history, will present "An Early American Musical Sampler."
**TONIGHT:** THE RAM DASS FILM FESTIVAL will be at 7 and 9:30 on the United
Williams Center campus. BELIEVE, Wash. graduate student,
TONIGHT will attend an 8:45 Shower at 8:50 a.m.
Campbell, who is also a ski instructor,
said lessons were essential for beginners.
A story appearing in yesterday's Kansan should have read that the Hawk's Nest will be closed at night on weekends from Feb. 20 to March 26.
The Spanish American Novel, a book by John S. Brushwood, professor of Spanish literature, has been cited as the outstanding publication of 1975 by the University of Texas.
ECEE—with this贴, aid and aid can only Battle of Record
with the latest and best quality Administered
Klammer, who is a Kansas City, Mo., engineer, said his primary goal was to get the area open early next season, about Dec. 1, if the weather was cold enough. He said he also hoped to break even or make a profit next year.
Announcements...
TODAY: THE LAWRENCE ANTIQUE SHOW will be open from 11 a.m. to 10
today; tomorrow and from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Sunday in the National Guard
The area has been operating about 10 years. The other other comparative facility in the area is not operational.
KANU-FM's third week-long Campaign for Excellence to raise funds and recruit volunteers will begin Monday.
9TH STREET
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THE HAWK'S NEST
presents
Tonight 9:00-12:00 P.M.
'THE ROSEWOOD TRIO'
Doors Open 8:30
Saturday, Feb. 28 8:30-12:00 P.M.
9. 15 to 'COLE TUCKEY ON RYE'
Opening Act: BETH SCALET
Doors Open 8:00
Level 2-Kansas Union Produced bu SUR
Last two scheduled shows until March 26.
"... One of the Most Breath-Takingly Beautiful Films of all Times"—Bruce Williamson—Playboy
- Nominated for 7 Academy Awards including
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- Best Screen Play Adaptation
Rim by Stanley Kubrick starring Tim Raimond, with Eva, at 7:45 only
Hillcrest 1
Loch Ness, Bigfoot and the Rest
BARRY
LYNDON
"THE MYSTERIOUS MONSTERS" G
Conduct
Unbecoming"
Michael York
Stacy Keach
Plummer
Eve 7:15 & 8:15
3AM
Hillcrest
Conduct PG
Eve. 7:30 & 9:20
Sat.Sun. at 2:00
Hillcrest
"A who-done-it in the ground tradition . . . First class suspense."—Judith Crist
JACK NICHOLSON
ONE Flew Over
THE CUCKROO'S NEST
Reg. Admission
Price $2.00
Evenings at
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Sat-Sun, 2:19
Varsity
University of Tennessee
"NO DANCE,
NO RETURN"
The Funnest Chase
Since New Year
Eve: 7:30, 9:18
Sat-Sun, 2:30
JACK NICHOLSON
ONE FLEW OVER
THE CUCKOO'S NEST
Reg. Admission
Prices $2.00
Evenings at
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Sat-Sun, 7-10
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RAN AWAY WITH THE ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS - WITH A TOTAL OF NINE!
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The Funniest Chase
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Eve. 7:00, 9:30
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HOME - International LINE
Great Fun From
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Don Knofts—David Niven
COME TO AUNT MARTHA'S HOUSE FOR LUNCH
Aunt Martha has cooked up some delicious specials for lunch, in addition to her regular Italian cuisine . . . hearty soups, flavorful sandwiches, fluffy omelets, and crispy salads await you at the Campus Hideaway.
*PIZZA *SANDWICHES *SALADS
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open 11-1/ 11-2
Fri. & Sat.
Campus
Hideaway
106 N. PARK
EST,1957
843-9111
4
Friday, February 27, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
A A A
A tente en bois.
Sci-fi campfire
A functious sculpture "Plumb Bob," complete with audio effects, dominates a growing area of the city.
Price, assistant professor of painting and sculpture, is one offering in the Faculty Painter's Studio.
By ALISON GWINN
Reviewer
The artist's hand is quicker than the critic's eye for the works in the Faculty Painting and Sculpture Show, now on display in the Kansas Union gallery.
The exhibit, which will be shown through March 5, deserves more than a look at the avant-garde of the art world who can appreciate art in anything they see and the traditionalists who may find the exhibition confusingly aesthetically below their tastes.
THOSE WHO HAVE been trained through example to create the images of 19th century Impressionist landscapes or Romantic portraits may have difficulty reconciling their idea of art to reality.
But for them, the exhibit should be viewed at least for its interesting juxtaposition of artistic elements and for the pleasant sensations it can evoke in usual use of color or texture.
The best works in the show are undoubtedly those by Jane Absurry, assistant professor of painting and sculpture. Her serigraph, "Checkmate," and her abstract work combine strange organic shapes to create visual images of haunting familiarity.
“Astrolabe,” a fairly symmetrical cross-section of hairs found in the scalp, like folds and silica-like inner hairs, is reminiscent of the Life magazine series of photographs on inner ears and skin pores. Astrolabe also records.
"CHECKMATE," LIKE
"Astrolite," has a quality of
lithium but not silicon;
blubber shapes are
overgrowing the soft geometric
form that Asbury has
between dimensions in this work.
Four of a series of prints by Roger Shimomura, associate professor of painting and sculpture, are also high points of the exhibit. The series, entitled "Oriental Masterprint," is indeed Oriental in style, with large, unhighened blocks of
Three of the prints depict Oriental men and women, hiding and seeking among the grids of prison-like barriers. The prints are expressions on their faces, especially two males in the lower two prints, who seem to be eyeing each other, safe within the confines of their separate frames. The prints are colors created so well that even the grays appear bright.
The larger canvas, "Cliff Hanger," gives a rather mystic, reflective impression of life, and the setting is characteristically pure and the sun seeming to hit the oddly colored rocks at different angles.
Two acrylic paintings by M. Ott, assistant professor of painting and sculpture, are interesting for the artist's clear delineation of highlights and the odd juxtaposition of colors, although the subject matter of each is necessarily reminiscent of a National geographic Society depiction of prehistoric life.
THE SMALLER PAINING,
"Painter's Gulch," is notable for a beautiful dark sky with a fiery hue. It hovering in silhouette against it, and a mountain climber's hook that is ready to break off of a foreground rock, to the delight of children. Break before their parents do.
"Rocky Mountain Winter," by Robert Green, professor of painting and sculpture, is the most traditional and probably best-known works. It is a very pale snow scene, with quiet, muted greens, browns and blacks, which are almost overpowered by the snow. The painting has little depth, as though all the trees were lined up next to the edge of the picture, and Green has created a very accurate wood-scattering lightly scattering on white paint.
Interspersed among the more traditional paintings are some rather bizarre works of art.
Lindbergh's story 'flowerbed of thought'
The book begins with the Lindberghs fleeing the publicity that followed the kidnapping of
By SHERRY FRANKLIN
flat, bright color and a plethora of diagonals, stripes, rectangles and symmetrical patterns.
Although her availing husband, Charles, may have given her a free ticket to renown, Annie Morrow Lindbergh is a very perceptive and the woman in her own right
THE FLOWER AND THE
NETTLE. By Anne Morrow
Lindbergh, New York, Harcourt
Brace Jovianvich, $12.95.
The independence of thought she demonstrated in "Gift from the Sea" and "Bring Me a Unicorn" continues in this collection of diaries and letters that prevailed years in Europe.
Anne Lindbergh pursues her笔,
the raising of a family
and management of her
marriage in addition to at
attending numerous social
aspects of such notables as Gertrude
Stein, Alice B. Toklas and
Queen Elizabeth fill the pages of
their eldest son in the United States. They retreat with their second son to the idyllic English countryside, later, their third son is born.
In this respect, the book often is frustrating to a reader who desires more depth. The descriptions of countryside and village settings are through a roving movie camera. The reader is with left
dim impressions, and the whole has no strong impact.
One of the more enlightening facets of Anne Lindbergh's own career is her interest in feminist literature. "Isn't it possible for a woman to be a woman and yet produce something tangible besides children, something that stands up in a man's world?" In other words, is it possible to live up to the ideals of a woman's standards at the same time?*
Here she raises age-old questions that are still unanswerable in large part. She goes on to say, "I did not want to be simply 'somebody's wife.' I work hard and, to same degree, life."
She probes other sensitive areas of the modern world.
"There is something wrong with the educational system in the world—that it kills the inventive spirit." she says.
There are some problems with the book. It is a little like attending a play and finding yourself backstage throughout the movie. Your activities there might be quite interesting, your concern remains fixed on what is happening in front of the footlights. The reader is never really thinking it is happening on center stage.
Anne Lindbergh, too, was very much aware of her position "backstage." This disturbed her at first, she later sought help from a therapist in her writing, her family and in her marriage. A greater ap-
Student's plays depict daily events
By PAUL STEPHEN LIM
Like many students at the University of Kansas, J.L. Haugen leaves campus during the course of a day at his post by the front door of Watson Library, he may have to riffle through the belongings of as many as 15 students.
Sometimes he gets a tolerant smile, sometimes a blank stare, sometimes an unkind word. But McClure doesn't mind because he is also a writer and not a lawyer. He knows how to deal with that people sure aren't fleeing Watson when checking out or renewing or returning books.
So he always wonders what each person he encounters is really like and he wishes there
THAT, OF COURSE, is an impossibility. So, like many of the writers he admires—among them Frank Kafka, Harold Pinter, Tom Stoppard, David Ester and Donald Barhelm—McCure takes perfectly ordinary situations, dropsperfectly unknowable characters into those situations, then sits back and lets his often comic imagination go to work.
were some way he could know them all and remember them all.
FOR EXAMPLE, he wonders what happens when a lonely woman starts philosophizing in her room. Her strange sitting next to her on a park bench. Or when an irascible housewife discovers that her insensitive husband has eaten all the corndilakes in the
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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after an annual fundraiser. The student fee is
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Eight such products of McCure's imagination will be presented at the Memoir Memorial Theatre in a production called "Pieces," directed by Rhonda Blair, by speech and drama.
"The pieces are all thematically linked," said McCure, "but I would rather not reveal what those thematic concerns are. That I leave for audiences to decide.
Editor Business Manager
Carl Young Rooy Manrique
"For instance, if I should say the show is about man's inhumanity to man, or about the failure of language to communicate, then audiences will be limited to only those things in life that they want to see. They will no longer feel free to see what they want to see in the show, get what they want out of the play."
"Pieces" started as diverse exercises. When he had written enough of them, he said, certain thematize concerns had begun to be incorporated and decided to incorporate eight of them into one, larger work.
MCULURE, WHO wrote a one-act play, "Frugal Repast," that was presented last year in 1987. It is probably many of the sketches in
McClure he started writing plays because he'd taken all the creative writing courses the English department had to offer, but still wanted to write more.
McCure's work will be the University Theatre's entry in the original script division of the *Madam Margaret* Theatre Festival next year.
precision of her own activities could be gained if she had discussed them at greater length.
Another one of the "netties"
in this flowered doubt of thought
is the slow pace of the book.
Although Anne Lindbergh is
someone who enjoys humor, she
seldom indulges in it herself.
Perhaps the best advice that can be given in regard to this book is suggested by the title: "the flowers and ignore the nettles.
Nick D. Vaccaro, professor of painting and sculpture, has exhibited a series of nine works done in cray-on pear on board, with each piece signed with separate words or phrases from "Notes and Quotes."
The works are experimental and possibly dull to the viewer who fails to see that the artist made use of color, but copied it repeatedly down the gray canvas in pastel colors, superimposing and overlapping phrases, apparently in an attempt to create a dreamlike meaning of the phrase depicted.
Thus, the words, "gray matter," are done in white and black letters. The one set of the word, "over-painting," seems to be just that - painted blue over other palet words to make it stand out.
Two works by Bob Price,
assistant professor of painting
and sculpture, probably steal
them in his work. But not for
the aesthetic beauty.
"Plumb Bob," a sculpture
visible from outside the gallery,
is composed of three white
branches, coated with papier-mâché,
about eight feet off the floor.
The branches form a teepee-like
structure, under which is hung a mirror-surface sphere that is partially submerged in a silver kettle half full of water.
AROUND THE KETTLE is draped a skirt of pale blue taffeta, and the sphere contains a wad of twigs, which point upward. We few minutes, the sphere fiction-like goons which are followed by high-pitched squails, creating a feeling that the upward points of the branches are antennae and that these are reflected in the sphere are part of a science fiction thriller.
Price has also exhibited two side-by-side colored-in maps, under which is written: "The exhibition in Minneapolis will consist of every person in St. Paul who is able to complete poster announcing the exhibition in St. Paul. They will receive no detailed explanation of the nature of the show. The exhibition in St. Paul will consist of having each person in St. Paul receive by mail one poster announcing the exhibition in Minneapolis."
Two other sculptures are exhibited in the show, one called
"Pedestalized Pillow Pillar," by Linda McKay, for which the title is the most interesting part, and "Four Room Cloud," a large blonde and white sculpture composed of plaster, wood and plywood, made by Phyllis Greenwood as a professional artist of painting and sculpture. Its cloud shapes are very appealing, with their soft, uncertain jigsaw puzzle perimeters.
THOSE WHO FIND themselves rushing through the exhibit too fast should possibly stop to appreciate some of the wonderful colors in "Nina Dela Peines," a collage by Gerald Libersky, assistant professor of painting and sculpture, or in books about art that use kaleidoscopic pastels composed solely of rich superimposed softly-angled lines of different colors.
This exhibit is not for the art critic who doesn't want to have to work as hard as the painter or sculptor, but as an artist's freedom. But several of the works are worth seeing for the mastery of technique they show and several others are shown as佳作 for their entertainment value.
Actors' artistry doesn't hide thieves behind film's camera
By CHUCK SACK
PRODUCERS MICHAEL
Moviegoers are often inclined to characterize film-makers as thieves or artists with no middle ground. However, the characters of medium often pairs members of both groups. "Conduct Unbecoming" is a film that puts the artists before the camera, hoping to prevent the audience from seeing what the moviegoers who are hiding behind it.
“Conduct Unbecoming” was conceived as a stage production, and this adaptation betrays its origins. Like so many successful plays, its events aren't well-suited for the screen, and its delivery to film is often unfreezing. Unfeeling midwives: the producers, the director and the writer.
The film concerns a matter of honor. Days after the arrival of 2nd Lt. Drake (Michael York) and Millington (James Ackroyd), a womans is attacked at the Restaurant Ball of the 20th Indian Light Cavalry. The woman (Susannah York) is the widow of the regiment's hero, and she accuses Lt. Millington of accosting her. The action centers on the Subalterns Court Martial, an unofficial and brutal officer, Drake is appointed to defend the Inspordinate Millington.
Deeley and Barry Spikings have gone to great expense to shoot location shots in Pakistan that would approximate the setting of the northwest frontier of India in 1878. They also paid the salaries of Trevor Howard, the treasurer for the Northwest Keach and Christopher Plummer, who round out the high-powered cast.
Howard, Attenborough and Plummer have all worn British officers' uniforms in other films, so the viewer readily accepts them as members of the traditional and strict regiment which has its honor inviolate. Keke Riordan's Faukner belongs to newer schools of acting and balance the cast nicely.
The acting of these principals is first-rate. One has trouble imagining a more stodgy actor, but each actor has a key scene, and everyone acquits himself admirably. Even the normally simpering Michael York is acting as the resolute Drake.
Nonetheless, there is never any doubt as to the identity of the guilty officer. Precisely when the person in question paid such handsome salaries, the audience can eliminate every actor who has a big scene to discover in advance who is being saved for just desserts.
THIS EFFECTIVELY denies
“Conduct Unbecoming” most of its dramatic impact. But Barry England's original script suffers even more insult from the use of a slur, and the form of neglect. Enders retains all of the dialogue from the play, evidently hoping that shifting locals in minor scenes and using outdoor shots for flashbacks will be enough to air the material and prevent it from causing claustrophobic. It's not.
Director Michael Anderson puts on the finishing touches. He spills the desired illusions of the location footage by using painted backdrops of exterior staging in a disastrous; on the rare occasions that he moves the camera, it looks like an amateur's attempt to make "art." In the crucial scene where the widow admits she has falsely accused the defendant, the camera crawls up to the camera saying, "You pig! You pig!"
One could hardly expect more from a director who made "Doc Savage" and a writer whose works were in the Mirror Bippy. The only artists at work on "Conduct Unbecoming" are the actors, and they made a valiant effort at saving the show. Ironically, they would have won awards for any honor among the thieves who made the film.
Concerts
This Week's Highlights
COLLEGIUM MUSICUM:
"An Early American Music Sampler," a program of vocal and instrumental works from 18th and 19th century America, performed in the museum class in music history.
(2 p.m. Sunday at the Art Museum)
UNIVERSITY SYMPHONIC BAND; Gerd Scharfz, principal Brumpt with the New York Philharmonic guest solist in a program of "all-American" songs, conducted by Robert Foster, direc-
(3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre)
ROSEWOOD TRIO: A fine jazz group from Topeka who just released an album of original material.
(9 p.m. tomorrow in the Hawk's Nest)
(9 tonight in the Hawk's Nest)
COLE TUCKEN ON RYES
The last concert dance before the concert features a short month features a Lawrence group that plays everything from rock and boogie to country and folk. The group recently performed with the Kansas City Philharmonic. Appearing with the group is the current headliner.
Recitals
Theater
SEQUEIRA COSTA: A native of Uruguai opera teacher or professor, he department piano this semester. Costa will present a program of Chopin
(8 p.m. Monday in the University Theatre)
NOAH: A retelling of the story of Noah's Ark done with improvisational techniques in a modern setting. The script, by Andre Obey, is pessimistic when the performances are strong.
(8 tonight in the University Theatre)
Exhibits
(Sunday through March 27 at the Lawrence Arts Center)
LAWRENCE ARTS CENTER
SECOND ANNUAL PAINTING
and the Lawrence Art Guild are
sponsoring the exhibition,
which is open to any Douglas
artist. Two $100 awards will be
given. Watercolors, oils,
paintings, and mixed media are
ROBERT GREEN AND
ROBERT SUDLOW, RECENT
PAINTINGS: Green and Sud-
Films
inrough Thursday at 7 E
7th)
(Today through March 21 in the Art Museum)
low, professors of painting and sculpture, exhibit works that deal largely with their re reactions through close-ups of plank forms.
LENNY: Based on the life and material of Lenny Bruce. Dustin Hoffman succeeds in graphy but succeeds as theater. Dustin Hoffman stars, and Valerie Perrine shows the show role of Bruce's fortured wife.
DUEL IN THE SUN: One of the most ludicrous westerns ever made, this has gained
WR: MYSTERIES OF THE ORGANISM: Both extremely interesting and entertaining, this political comedy interweaves ideas of Wilhelm Reich with movies of Stalin, transvestites, and figure skaters, magazine, and flair skaters.
ROGER SHIMOMURA AND NINA SAMMATI, associate professor of painting and sculpture, in his Oriental Masterprint Gee, assistant professor of painting and sculpture, done in acrylic and lacquer on plexiglas glass and netting to create glass and netting on
infamy under the scornful alias "Lust in the Dust."
LANCELOT LAC LACE (Lancetot of the DUKE)
(Lancetot of the LAKE) examines the legend of the Holy Grail. Beautiful and mysterious, this film won the Prize at the 1972 Games Film Festival.
NO DEPOSIT, NO RETURN:
Don Knott is a criminal, David Niven as a grandfather, two kids and a skunk aren't enough this Disney feature interesting for the college crowd.
ONE FLEE OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST: Director Milas Forman reconceives Ken McCarthy in triumphantly to the screen. Jack Nicholson's exuberant performance smooths over the drama of his character of R. P. McPurphy, and Louise Fletcher's chilling portrayal of Nurse Ratched meets the perfect dramatic balance.
BARRY LYNDON: Stanley Kubrick's tenth film is unimaginable in the affectful surches from affective humor to harsh saline. Ryan O'Neal in the lead role looks like she's ever been in any film, prima facie discusss thestudies pose them into an 18th century pin-up.
Check advertisements for theaters and times.
Friday, February 27.1976
5
University Daily Kansan
Achievers view college brightly
Bv KAREN LEONARD
Staff Writer
About 4 in the morning, after spending the night destroying his stomach lining with black coffee to write a term paper on Romanian land reform, a student sometimes begins to wonder whether college is worth it.
Charles Baughman, a senior marianof in Charles, chemistry and math, admitted that he was a student of the class.
They were asked Wednesday to evaluate their college careers.
and some other winners of the 1973 Vesta B. Lear award, given annually to Liberal Arts and Sciences students with the highest grades in their freshman year, will graduate in May.
Baughman said he hadn't 'thought college was worth it when he was pulling those all-nighters, but over all it had given him a feeling of satisfaction.
Baughman has an overall grade point average (GPA) of about 3.96, pulls an alightner on once every two weeks and studies an average of 6 hours a day, he said.
"Everyone in a while I begin to think about opening a tropical fish shop when I get a Cor B on a test," Bangham said. "It turns out that I'm really doing you’re doing as well as you could."
He said he planned to become a physics professor.
"hope to maintain a reasonable degree of hope in the romantic investigation of what it's a profession," he said. "The idealism is something you rationalize."
Mark Baumler, a senior majoring in anthropology and classical archaeology, has
He said he enjoyed the college at-
The only real problem, he said, was that after getting his B.A. in archeology, he had to get a foreign degree.
no atmosphere, the chance to gain knowledge from a subject is of great opportunity as a subject he was interested in.
"You need a Ph.D. to live at the same level an engineer would with a B.A." he said. "Sometimes I wonder if I should give you a Ph.D. in computer science with high-paying jobs and job security."
These are only passing thoughts, he said,
because he is happy with what he is doing.
Barbara Davis, a fourth-year pharmacy student, said she wasn't yet fed up with studying, although she has been fed up with certain courses and instructors.
She said her friends who left the University before completing their degrees discovered that they didn't want to be secretaries.
Davis, who will enter the KU Medical Center this summer, said that knowing what she wanted to do had been an advantage.
"I didn't waste time seeking a different degree or a different goal," she said.
"Some of my friends wanted to go to med school but didn't want to do the things they liked."
She said that many students drifted around, never really knowing what they were.
Gary Bernhard, a senior chemistry major, also will be going to the Med Center.
He said he also became frustrated with college life when he wasn't doing well or when he had to study for a week at a time for a final exam.
When he does become frustrated with a course, Berrichorl said, he just tells him "Get it out."
maybe I can make it. You know that we went to med school had to take the course.
But he said it usually wasn't much of a problem.
When he has free time, he said, he likes to play tennis.
"I need to feel as if I'm doing something, I like to keep bummy," he said.
"I can't goof around. I've never done that before, and you've trying to budget my time." Bernard said.
Barbara "Buzzle" Gentry, senior in speech communications and human relations, said she hoped to go to Florida or Georgia for a vacation of dolphins as a trainer after she graduated.
She has been interested in communicating with dolphins since she entered college, she said. If she doesn't get a job she can use her B.A. to get a lob at it don't boring.
"Realistically, a B.A. isn't worth a whole lot (in the job market). But it's worth it in a personal sense," Gentry said. "If I had it to do over again, I would do it. I guess the members of my family have always valued education in a nonrational way."
She said she worked as a secretary for a college and Thought it was, "really bertie."
Gentry thought that by getting a degree she could find a more interesting profession, "but that magic piece of paper isn't so magic anymore."
She said college had definitely been worthwhile.
Anne Harleneke, a senior in English and
narratives, will enter the KU School of Law
"I'm not qualified to do anything, but I want to understand everything," she said. She said she had broadened her knowledge and had fun at the same time.
Work Force plays match game
Staff Writer
By MARTISCHILLER
A graduating student who doesn't have a
admission may get some help from the Work Ofce
on the job site.
Larry Greenbaum, Work Force director,
said Wednesday the service matched KU
professionals.
Students who responded to the questionnaires last fall would be receiving the employees list within a week, he said. "The job was tough," Job Hunting Tills From Work Force."
It is then up to the students to send the businesses' resumes and letters of application from Grants to the agency.
In the fall, questionnaires are sent to business firms asking how many jobs they would have open and what education qualifications are necessary for the jobs. At the same time, questionnaires are sent to graduate students and seniors who will be instructing asking what degree they will be receiving and where they would like to work.
The two sets of information are fed into a university computer. The students receive a certificate and the businesses are sent a list of graduates who will fulfill their employment requirements.
The booklet outlines how to write a resume, how to write letters of application, and what is required for placement services are available on campus. It will be sent to graduating students, but anyone may get a copy in the Force office or the Student Senate办公室.
Work Force began in 1974 as a senior class project. Project Kanatzar, Work Force director in 1974 and 1975, said the program started on a small scale with a $600 budget.
Our jet fares to Europe are less than any other scheduled airline's.
If you are under 22, our youth fare is made for you. $380 round-trip in April & May. $410 in June. Great food and service. direct flights from New York and Chicago with connections from other cities. Embourbons in the heart of Europe. Fares subject to change See your travel agent, campus rep, or write request to 630 Fifth Avenue, N. Y. N. Y. 10020.
The 1974 Work Force concentrated its effort to jobs in Kansas, he said.
But our service isn't.
ICELANDIC
"Work Force 74 provided a service to over 500 senior class card holders as well as 125 businesses throughout the state," he said.
In 1975, the Senate took over the funding of Work Force, allocating it $5,800. Kanatzar said the service was expanded to include Kansas, Missouri and Illinois, he said.
This year the Work Force is financed by the Senate and the University administration with plans for the administration to take full responsibility of the Work Force was allocated $,000 from the Senate and $,500 from the administration.
Two reasons for the jump in funds are expansion and expenses, Kanatzar said. Work Force has added Texas, Oldahoma, and Colorado to its job hunt area, he said.
and the rates for postage and printing have increased dramatically.
Work Force sent 6,000 questionnaires to graduating students and got a response from 1,500, Greenbaum said, and of 30,000 businesses contacted, 720 responded.
"Work Force was the catalyst for hiring a University placement coordinator because it exposed a lot of weaknesses in the present placement services." he said.
Kanatzar said he didn't know Work Force's exact success rate, but about 150 students were placed through the program last year.
Work Force is to be taken over by a University placement coordinator to be bred before next fall. A search committee is interviewing applicants. Kanatzar said.
The new coordinator would provide placement services for students not enrolled in our programs, services, coordinate existing services and expand the activities of Work Force, he said.
Harlenske, who has a 3.9 GPA, said she was involved in several University activities, worked 10 hours a week and took 15 hours of classes.
If she had gone from high school into a job, she would have stagnated, she said, but she also refused to study so much in college that she couldn't have a good time.
Her friends tell her she is one of the most organized people they know. she said
While she enjoys college, she said, she is ready to get out and begin a professional career.
The SUA Treasurer's primary duties are keeping the Board's books up to date with all transactions and receipts taken in. Working with the bills and receipts on a day-to-day basis, and overview of the functioning of the whole Board. Working closely with the advisors, the Treasurer should be able to provide financial information to the Board.
The SUA Board Secretary is responsible for recording attendance and writing minutes from each SUA Board meeting. The Secretary also serves as a member of the board of Directors of the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation.
SUA
SECRETARY
The Secretary should be willing to help in any other areas, especially those which may be incorporated into SUA during the year.
Thomas Curzon, majoring in economics and history, with honors in history, has also been accepted at the KU Law School. He has a 3.9 GPA.
TREASURER
The Treasurer also serves as a member of the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Board of Directors.
The role of the Student Union Activities Vice President includes duties as the President's deputy and assistant. The Vice President is in charge of organizing the Student Union activities, including guest speakers. Qualities useful for this position are an interest in organizational efficiency, internal board operations, and overall student programming.
As a freshman and sophomore, Curzon said he spent 50 to 60 hours a week studying.
Applications Available in the SUA office
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES OFFICER AND BOARD INTERVIEWS
PRESIDENT
"it's called not sleeping much," he said.
But now, he said, he gets more done in less time and probably spends 20 to 30 hours a week studying.
The President is also given an opportunity to make an input into the
presidentate's representative in the Kansas
Union Memorial Corporation Board of Directors.
All those interviewed agreed that if a student had a goal, knew what he wanted to get out of college, and was willing to deviate from his effort to achieve it, college was worth it.
VICE-PRESIDENT
His satisfaction with his University life came from a combination of his own interest in what he was doing to prepare him for university, and from being successful in what he did.
13 E. 8th RAY AUDIO 842
2047
March 1 and 8
The role of the President is one of an information processor. He must be knowledgeable about the needs and interests of the nation, and the university community. At the same time he must be informed regarding the programs of 5UA in order to best coordinate the activities of all US universities. He must also be able to deal with all of the programming problems, and must respond with regard for the best interests of all students.
The SUA Constitution outlines the duties of the President as being: (a) to preside over all matters concerning the act as student representative of SUA and to coordinate SUA activities.
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Entrance under awning on South side of Eldridge House 7th & Mass.841-4666
ELDRIDGE HOUSE CLUB AND DINING ROOM
6
Friday, February 27, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Those who teach also may run
By KENSTONE
Associate Sports Editor
The noontime scene at Allen Field House yesterday was a fairly familiar one. Someone shouted "Go!" and squeezed an ston watch. The pack of racers was off.
A man with a modest build and a white cotton sweatband immediately sped to the front. A bearded runner joined him. Five people, conventionally logging garb, followed closely.
It wasn't a workout by some aspiring University of Kansas track athletes. It wasn't a time trial of an advanced running class. Nor were they some professional football players staying in shape during the off season.
THE GROUP WAS composed of seven KU faculty members, some in their 30s and 40s, engaged in a serious national running competition.
The first lap of the track took 41 seconds, a good time, considering they were running in the outside lane of the 220-yard track. They passed the mile in 5:19. Four runners dropped out and three continued striding along in lane six.
After 10 minutes, with only a lap left, the
by-standing runners became excited. A fine performance was in the offing. Shouts of "let's go!" and "You can do it, baby" spurred the remaining runners on.
The bearded man and the sweatbanded runner finished together, completing 14 sweating profiles. They congratulated each other and inquired, "How did you feel?"
SINCE 1973 NEARLY 50 KU faculty members have participated in a daily program of noon hour running and racing, including gymnastics, memory, associate professor of mathematics
"The philosophy behind the whole thing is to get the faculty to run. The organization is very loose." Montgomery said. "There are no restrictions on the quarter mile and the 10-minute run."
"A faculty member earns points for his university by running any one of those races. He gets one point for running any distance. Then there are some performance points awarded on the basis of being able to run a certain pace."
IN A COMPARISON of times last year
compiled by the University of Nebraska
physical education department, faculty to equip KU to a third-place finish nationally.
A letter from Nebraska's Phillip Slennan, coordinator of the program, which is called the Faculty Clearinghouse Track Com- ment. The track serves sports information office would produce:
'Syracuse University has pulled off the upset of the year in jogging circles by burying out Stanford University for the second straight time, said Siegna of the 1975 post competition.
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
"It's difficult to believe," the letter continued, "that any school had a chance against such a powerful and talented group of runners as Stanford has. But after double and triple checking the results, Syracuse comes out on top."
Montgomery explained why.
BENEFIT THE FUTURE OF WIRELESS WALKING.
James Brewer, associate professor of mathematics, led a pack of seven KU faculty members in a race yesterday in Allen Field House. His two-mile time of 10:34 counted for points in KU's attempt to upend Syracuse University as the school with the best faculty runners. Last year, KU ranked third nationally.
Easy runner
"THE TEAM THAT WON last year—
because they made men massive," he said.
Montgomery, who helped found the Kansas chapter of the faculty running group along with Jim Brewer, associte professor at the university, would not well known among the faculty.
"There are a lot of faculty members we can't contact," he said. "They either don't run at the same time we run, or we just don't know they're running at all."
"Whenever we find someone who runs we add his name to the list. We encourage people to join. There are about 15 people who rarely visit. In a sense, it's not just jogging."
HOWEVER, SO as not to scare the timid, who might fear humiliation at the fleet feet of a University colleague, Brewer who has stress on his fitness, not competition.
Brewer, the runner wearing the sweat-
breaker, told why he first began jogging three
wheels.
"It keeps me active. Sitting around and being sedentary kind of makes me not function to well." Brewer said. "Besides, I think it stimulates me and makes me strong. It has an effect on my vitality and how much energy I have."
Brewer, who in 1974 was rated the nation's best quarter miler and half miler among participating professors, added, "If I sit on a bed in a room afraid that I just pretty much vegetate."
Far from running like an asparagus, Bayer recorded his best two-mile time yesterday and this week. The associate professor of chemistry, had the same time although it was much better. Bayer said he was more efficient.
NEAL LIVINGSTON, Martinez, Calif,
graduate student, ran with the group
yesterday as he often does, when it goes off
a typical six- and seven-mile midnight
auction.
Impressed by the performances of his faculty friends, Livingston said, "I think it's great that these guys get out and run. Most have been at it for two or three years."
"At the age of 30 and 40, they're still staying in shape instead of sitting at a desk, and they haven't given up their athletic abilities and endeavors."
While watching the other runners warming up before the race with some easy stretching and jogging, Livingston said, "You know what's impressive about these guys? They can beat any of their students in a race."
WHILE NOT the primary goal of the Clearinghouse runners, competition is still a challenge.
At the Kansas Relays, in fact, a special distance medley relay will be staged pitting faculty teams from across the nation, Montgomery said.
"We talked to (KU track) coach (Bob) Timmons about the possibility of putting together an event in the relays, and he was very enthusiastic. The group was probably the impetus for that."
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FRIDAY Feb.27 SATURDAY Feb.28
LENNY
Starring DUSTIN HOFFMAN
VALERIE PERRINE
Directed by BOB FOSSE
PLUS = THANK YOU, MASK MAN
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SHOWS AT 7:00 and 9:30
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ADMISSION $1.00
LENNY
"He's doing this, thinking that this will help the event (the Relays) and help at the gate." Beerward said. "If I'll bring any folks here to meet, Bob would really appreciate it."
Brewer said he thought Timmons favored including the relay for reasons other than the reason given in line 5.
A CHANCE FOR that happening may depend on the competition. So far, according to Brewer and Montgomery, teams from North Carolina State University, Nebraska, Kansas State and Emporia State have promised entries.
"We've written to the athletic departments of 30 schools." Brewer said.
The team from North Carolina State probably will include Jack Bachelor, a member of the school's entomology department, and fifth in the marathon in the 1927 Olympic Games.
Competition of that level has tempted fellow faculty members to tease Brewer about the "need to recruit some good runners for the KU faculty."
"We joke about that all the time, but we don't take it very seriously." Brewer said.
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
The first Palm of the Bible, God's Book revealing Him to man, tells of the blessing of God upon those who delight in His law and are obedient. The Second Palm tells us that it is the heathen that rage against God's Law and the wrath and curse upon them unless they allow it. The third Palm tells us that, despite it is not reasonable! What use have you for a servant, an employee that won't obey and carry out orders? In the light of these truths do you qualify for the blessings of God upon you and your home and your country, or do you qualify for Divine wrath and displeasure? I thought on my ways, and turned my feet unto They commandments." Palm 119.59.60
"Examine yourselves, whether we be in the faith, prove your own selves." 2nd Cor. 13-5. In the Bible, The Word of God, Abraham is called "The Father of The Faithful." Romans 4:11 says he is "the Father of the Faithful." Romans 6:7 says he calls him "The Friend of God." —2nd Chronicles 20:12; Isaiah 4:18, 4:18 and James 2:23. Abraham believed what God told him, where God directed him, obeyed and did that which God commanded. Romans 4:12 says he is the father of all who walk in the steps of that which God commanded. He is the father of the Friend of God, the Father of the Faithful), and then let us ask ourselves how close of kin are we to him. When God called him to come out and leave his fathers house, his kindred, and his country. He gave him some natural reasons. "And I will make of three a great brother and a friend," he said, "and he will be a blessing — and in they shall all the families of the earth be blessed." Genesis 12:2, 3. Certainly these were natural and good reasons to encourage obedience to any who believed them. However, later on God gave him a command that was altogether an insuperable obligation, because his sacrifice to God. This was not only contrary to natural reason but apparently if obweved can cancel the promises made by God in His first command, for Isaac was his only son by promise, and Abraham was now about one hundred and ten or fifteen years old. "By grace God has given me the promise to live a life without God of works, least any man should boast!" Genesis 2:8, 9.
"Gift Faith" goes beyond natural reasons — the only ones at the command of those without "The Gift. Gift Faith takes into account the needs and limitations of those who seek it."
Supernatural Power can be seen in every direction one may look provided he turns his eyes away from man and self, and "looks up." Step by step Abraham had obeyed the commandments of God that were reasonable to the human mind, and so when the commandment of God was violated he would be enabled him to "Walk by faith, and not by sight." No reason was given to Abraham for the command to put Isaac to death and offer him up a human sacrifice"By faith, Abraham, when he was tired, offered up Isaac"Hebrews 11: 17, etc. Note the results of this teaching, that Jesus will not allow an Abraham out of heaven the second time, and said, By Myself have I sworn, saith The Lord, for because thou hast done this thing, and hast not withheld thy son, thine only son; that in blessing I will bless thee, and in multiplying I will multiply thy seed as the stars of the sky," Hebrews 12: 54, etc. BEAUSE THOU HAST OBEYED MY MOICE" Genesis 22: 15-18. We can now look back and see that "The Friend of God" was upon to have fellowship in suffering with "His Great Friend" who was to offer up a sacrifice and "give His only begotten Son that I will save you from death." Genesis 23: 15-18. life" "for the preaching of the cross is to them that persist foolishness; but unto us which are save!" it is the power of God."
(Gave God no reasons for the command to put his son to death for a sacrifice, but by faith he obeyed. God has given us many examples of miracles by which we are able to murder, the rapist, and many other rebellious and wicked spirits in human form; but by lack of faith and unbelief we refuse to obey and join the heatheen in their rage against The Almighty, His Son, and so on. Are there not causes for our troubles, national and international!)
"one Law is our school master to bring us to Christ." Not the ceremonial law since Christ was sacrificed to make atonement for our sin, but The Moral Law. The Ten Commandments, step by step. "The Lord is my God," he said. He received "gift faith" that overcomes the world. The little while you have left on this side of the grave am at being the "Friend of God," arm at being obedient to His Moral Law. His Ten Commandments, and in due season, if we dare not will he wrap a "Victorious Faith" around your heart. You will hear it by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God." Romans 10:17
P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA, 30311
Friday, February 27, 1976
7
Prof leads students to love of learning
By GREG BASHAW
Staff Writer
Colors danced from an oversized television screen, the images controlled by a silver-haired man hitting keys on a black computer console.
As he punched a bizarre pattern onto the screen, he turned from the computer, looking like a boy satisfied with a favorite toy.
"I'm only playing with images, grabbing some energy from space," says Robert
Nunley's play with the visual computer on the fourth floor of Nichols Hall is part of his experimental work with computer graphics.
Computer graphics is the description of energy as it diffuses in space by use of patterns and images controlled by a computer. Nunlev said yesterday.
"Every course I teach deals with energy in space, because that's what makes up the universe. Every discipline, be they painting, music, you, can use these managing techniques."
Nunley said he had fun and learned at the same time while experimenting with the computer. It's this combination of joy and learning. Nunley wants his students to experience.
"Learning is as ectastic for the human as is sex," he said, "but how do you explain sex to someone? They just have to learn it for themselves."
Nunley said his courses were designed to give students insights into the process of learning rather than to get them to grasp specific concepts or principles. He teaches geography, remote sensing and cybernetics.
my challenge is to keep alive this personal involvement and thrill in learning in spite of the academic bureaucracy," he said. Nunley he thought that academic interests should be an integral part of the student's learning experience by thwarting his natural interest in the world.
Nunley answers his own challenge by emphasizing experiential learning in his classes. He mentions, for example, monthly reports by the student replace term papers and exams. These reports can be at most one page long and are concerned with geography. Nunley said.
"We limit it to one page because we don't want verbal diarrhea," he said. "We want to know just what our students are really thinking."
Students are encouraged to write about whatever strikes their fancies, Nunley said. The reports have been about everything like windmills to how to build a hang glider.
"It's not necessary for students to write on a geographical topic, but I defy anyone to give me a paper that I can't make more of." I apply applying geographical constructs to."
The project option reflects Nunley's ultimate concern: finding a way to build an educational environment for personal learning experience in his classes. Nunley's Geography 106 students may decide early in the semester to devote full attention to a special project rather than to the regular class, he said.
"My biggest concern in teaching should be whether I can turn my student on, keep them interested for themselves," he said, "and I can."
Nunley said that he could guarantee to excite every member of a small seminar. In a large lecture class like Geography 106, he would teach that interest more than half of his students.
"It's funny, when I say I'm out to excite students, a lot of them put an emotional wall against me," he said. "Then of course I've got them because they've already changed a part of themselves, already put some emotion into our class."
Nunley believes the emotional satisfaction of learning has long been satisfied for a long time.
"You may learn in one of my classes that the earth rotates around the sun, but when you're through, I want you to look up and yourself on the earth being rotated," he said.
To work towards an integration of emotional and intellectual learning, Nunley gives his students assignments that encourage self-exploration and discovery. His students are assigned to browse at bookstores, talk with a veterinarian and sit in quiet corners to think
Nunley said some of his colleagues had charged him with offering unstructured classes, giving out too many good grades and lowering academic standards. He said he had worked to help achieve goal with these educators but used different techniques to achieve his purpose.
Nunley said he sat in on one class a year taught by another KU professor to help him with his research.
"Besides," he said, "If I have to sit
The Voice of Sound
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Computer geography
Robert Nunley, professor of geography, tries to get his students hooked on learning by reviving the basic satisfaction in learning. The visual computer in the background is used in many of his classes to encourage self-exploration and discovery.
through boring lectures then I'll try to make mine more interesting for others."
Nunley pushed back his glasses and pointed to his computer console, which he held.
By using the computer to recall stored images, a researcher can study land use, urban sprawl and secondary oil exploration problems in three dimensions." he said.
A picture of Kansas City's urban area finared across the screen in vibrant color.
"You run the risk of being hooked on learning if you take one of my classes," says Kate.
Groups say alimony should stay
Almamy shouldn't be eliminated in the union of Linda Karp and president of the State University.
Although many feminists think alimony shouldn't be accepted, Weipert said yesterday that payment of alimony to a woman is all right, depending on the circumstances.
John Kopek, student director of Douglas County Legal Aid Society, Inc., said, "Almity is payment by one's spouse—the spouse that earns the income—to the other for support of the lifestyle they are accustomed to."
Koepke, Lawrence third-year law student, said he had observed that fewer women were asking for alimony. He said women would have to have one of two attitudes on alimony.
The first attitude is to try to penalize the husband by making him pay for everything he does.
The second is an attitude that the woman plans to become part of the economic system again, Koepee said, and therefore will either refuse alimony or ask only for temporary alimony until she is able to complete her education or find a job.
AURH elects board officers
AURH Executive Board officers were elected last night by the 30 members of the AURH Resident's Assembly. The officer's terms will last one year and begin last
Officers elected are; president, Mike Taraboulos, Prairie Village junior; vice president, Paul Rabinovitz, Overland Park sophomore; secretary, Beth Anne MacCurdy, Leawood sophomore; treasurer, Jim Ken, Columbia, Mo., junior; and communications coordinator, Chunk Wilson, Sundance, Wyo.
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Nancy Reber, treasurer of the Commission on the Status of Women, agreed that alimony should be granted if it were needed or wanted.
Rebel gave the examples of women who were unable to work because of a physical handicap or who needed monetary support to remarry if that was the lifestyle preferred.
Koepke said he thought women were entitled to alimony if they had put their husbands through school and their husbands were now filing for a divorce.
Most of the cases that the Legal Aid Society handles are concerned with students, Koepee said. He said that when student couples divorced they usually did so without paying any alimony since neither was financially capable.
Koope said they were presently handling a case that involved temporary alimony for the late wife.
He said he thought temporary alumny was terrific and that it would be inconsistent for feminists to ask for long-term alumny if the woman was capable of work.
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when its people are malnourished, hungry or live under the threat of hunger; when its small businesses use out-dated, ineffective practices; when its people are illiterate, under-educated, unable to communicate effectively with more developed communities; when its people suffer from debilitating ailments with no hope of proper care.
CREATE OPTIONS A community has few options—
The Peace Corps and VISTA were developed from the assumption that most people don't want a hand-out or a free-ride—they just want someone to show them how they can help themselves. For more than a decade, Peace Corps and VISTA Volunteers have been doing just that and finding out, in the process, how rewarding the experience can be.
If you are a U.S. citizen, male or female, healthy, degred or skillful in some aspect of agriculture, business, education, health or some other field, contact a Peace Corps/VISTA representative on campus about opportunities for you in 1976.
ACTION—Peace Corps/VISTA RECRUITERS ON CAMPUS March 2 thru 5 (Seniors/Grads—Sign up for interview in Placement Office—NOW!)
Spring Bouquets
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wi-mysteries of the Organism mon., march 1
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THE STUDENT SENATE NEEDS YOUR INVOLVEMENT NOW
INVOLVED? COMMITED?
Membership now open on the seven standing committees of the Student Senate
•Academic Affairs
•Communications
•Culture
•Finance and Auditing
Sports
•Student Rights, Privileges,
and Responsibilities
•Student Services
- Membership now open on the five sub-committees of the Student Senate
●Elections
●Minority Affairs
●Transportation
●Committee on Classroom Teaching
●Recreation Advisory Board
- MEMBERSHIP NOW OPEN ON THE ATHLETIC SEATING BOARD (4 STUDENT POSITIONS AVAILABLE)
1. Complaint Service Director
POSITIONS AVAILABLE IN THE STUDENT SENATE OFFICE
2. Coordinator for Public Relations
3. Executive Secretary
Length of Appointment March 1976 to March 1977
Salary $60.00/Month
Duties
1. Compile and distribute minutes for Student Senate meetings and for the Student Executive Committee meetings.
2. Responsible for the assemblage and codification of legislation pertinent to the Student Senate.
3. Responsible for management of the Student Senate office and maintenance of the Student Senate Re-
Requirements
Available 15 hours/week
The Student Senate is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. Qualified men and women of all races are encouraged to participate.
Pick up applications at the Student Senate office, 105 B, Kansas Union
Deadline for applications: March 5,1976 THE STUDENT SENATE IS FUNDED FROM THE STUDENT ACTIVITY FEE
8
Friday, February 27, 1978
University Dally Kansan
Improvement sought against Buffs
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Sports Editor
Take the best basketball player off any team in the nation and it's going to hurt.
Take Dave Logan off a 5-18 Colorado team and the results could be disastrous. Logan, one of the top athletes in the Big Eight, will likely miss tomorrow's game with the Jayhawks because of a injury. Tippoff is 7:35 p.m. in Allen Field House.
Despite Logan's absence, Ted Wenzens isn't sure the Buffalo lightly. He remember past games when he was at the center.
"THE ONLY THING I'll say," Owens said yesterday, "is that they will have the
sports
same team on the floor as when we played them last year in Boulder (a 78-78 KU win). They didn't have Logan then, and that was an awfully tough game for us."
Actually, even without Logan, Colorado isn't exactly the same team as it was a year ago. It's likely that they've changed rosters.
The addition of one player—guard Emmett Lewis—has changed the complexion of the Colorado team. Only a freshman, Lewis is expected to be in the starting position, he is probably the man KU needs to stop.
BUT THERE are others. Jay Sierra, a 5-11 junior guard, played well in Colorado's win last weekend. And Larry Vaculik is developing into a good center.
RU has won its last six games with the Buffers, including this season. The
Jayhawks romped, 70-50, in the seminal round of the Big Eight Tournament and won a 51-54 sweeper in Boulder. Colorado hasn't won in Lawrences since the 1962-63 season.
With a 5-4 league record, KU seemingly has nothing left to play for. Right now, the most important thing to Owwea is seeing the Jahyaws play well.
"WHAT WE HAVE to be concerned with is not so much Colorado," Owens said, "but that we're sharp. I've told our team that we only concerned with improving ourselves and becoming the best basketball team possible. There's still much to salvage from the season and that's the approach we're taking."
KU will be attempting to come back after a disappointing performance in an 69-54 loss at Kansas State on Saturday. Owens said he was pleased with the team's spirit this week.
"We've had good practices," he said. "I think everyone wants as good of finish as possible."
I will not use it in my thesis.
AFTER THE DEBACLE at Manhattan, Owens is looking for improvement in every phase of the game. Only Norm Cook played well against the Wildcats.
"We're trying to become as fun-damentally sound as we can," Owens said. "We would like to win our last three games and give us good frame of mind going into next year."
With three games to go, five Jayhawks are averaging in double figures. Cook tops the list with an average of 15.0 points a game, followed by Clint Johnson (11.0), Jake Kuzma (9.2), Ken Koenig (8.0) and Ken Koenig (8.0). Starting guard Mitl Gibson is averaging 5.7 points a contest.
Kansas' Cook named to All-Big Eight team
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP)—Norm Cook, the steady Kansas forward, has been named to the Associated Press All-Big Eight basketball team for 1975-76.
Cook, a 6-8 junior, was the only non-guard
selected. He is averaging 15 points and 7.9
points per game.
KU's Ken Koenig, a 61-40 forward-center,
and Herb Nobles, a 67 forward, were
ranked No. 2.
Others first-team selections were Missouri's Willie Smith, Nebraska's Jerry Fort and Kansas State's "purple pugus," Mike Evans and Chuckie Williams.
Dave Bliss, who took over an Oklahoma team expected to do poorly, was an overwhelming choice as coach of the year after three players into a well-drilled, respectable unit.
Smith, the sensational playmaker whose last-minute hops have kept Missouri on top of the Big Eight race, headed the list. He was a unanimous choice of a panel of sports officials to select the most valuable player. He was also the only player named on every first team ballot.
Newcomer of the year was also a runaway with Stan Ray, Missouri's 6-0 freshman center, being named on all but two ballots.
But it was Smith who stole the show in the Big Eight. After being recruited from Seminole (Oklah.) Junior College mainly as a drummer, Smith recorded in both his seasons at Missouri.
This season, while leading the Big Eight in scoring with an average of almost 25 points a game, Smith has easily broken the record he established last season. And twice, against Oklahoma State and Kansas, he added the buzzer to give Missouri the win.
Williams, a 6-3 senior, and Evans, a 6-1 sophomore, give K-State one of the finest performances in history. The ranks as the second leading all-time score in Wildcat history, and Evans had been the hottest player in the Big Eight the past month, averaging more than 20 points a season.
Fort, a 6-3 senior, has been one of the steadiest points producers in the Big Eight for the past three years. He's the all-time leading scorer in Nebraska history.
Two meets face KU gymnasts
Two key meets are in store for the KU gymnasium. Join this weekend, says KU gymnasium coach
After a week's rest, KU travels to Hays today for the Fort Hays State Invitational. The team returns home tomorow for a dual match at 2 p.m. in Robinson Gymnasium.
"The Hays team will be our last opportunity (to compete) in a big meet'* atmosphere." Lockwood said. "Then, against Oklahoma, we will want to start to build confidence for the conference meet. If Oklahoma is successful, Oklahoma's one team we'll have to beat."
The Big Eight championships will be March 19-20 at Boulder. Colo. The
Jayhawks will try to improve their fifth place finish of last year.
"Obviously, Nebraska and Iowa State are in a class by themselves at the top of the league, but I think we can challenge Colorado and Oklahoma." Lockwood said. We will win and win our dual at Colorado next week; it will give us a lot of confidence."
KU's best season marks in the seven standard events are 8.58 in the floor exertion test, 6.47 in the floor exercise and Bill Barmes, 9.00 in the rings by John Nunley, 9.35 in vaulting by Sean Williams, 8.35 in the parallel bars by Jody Summers, 8.35 in the backstroke and Hylaney 47.30 by Kerr in the all-around.
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Staff photo by DON PIERCE
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Kansas to test untried swimmers
Dick Reamon, University of Kansas swimming coach, says his team is "right on schedule" in its preparations for the Big Ten championships, March 4, at Ames, Iowa.
I was particularly pleased this past weekend with our team unity. We're starting to come together as a team," he said.
in tomorrow's dual meet against Southwest Missouri State, however, Reason said he was more interested in testing untried swimmers.
"I'll try to look at some new faces in this meet," Reason said, "and maybe move some people into different events. This will be the last chance before the Big Eight meet
to do some experimenting and also give
some of our top swimmers a rest."
Towards that end, Reason said he didn't expect to use any of his top 10 swimmers in tomorrows' meet, which begins at 2 p.m. in Robinson Natatorium.
Following last week's busy schedule, which saw the team defeat Oklahoma State at Stillwater on Friday and a score of teams 12-9, the team played on Saturday, the team might need a rest.
At Oklahoma State, Bill Dostert and Roger Neugen swat to times of 22.1 and 23.0 in the 50 freestyle. Dostert, a freshman from Alabama, was one of few freestyle. That clocking leads the team.
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Women's basketball team loses
KU's young women's basketball team lost to a tough, experienced Kansas State squad, 59-36, Wednesday night in Manhattan.
The loss dropped KU's record to 14-11. KState's nationally-ranked basketball team won its 25th game.
The cold-shooting Jayhawks managed
only 33 per cent from the field in the first half and got even worse in the second, but not so bad.
Adrian Mitchell was the only Jayhawk in double figures with 14 points. Greta Sigle and Marsha Poppe led K-State with 18 and 12 points.
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House plants, blooming plants Nothing held back.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 27.1976
9
Jayhawks favored to repeat in Big 8 meet
KANSAS
KANSAS
KANSAS
KU's four team captains are Benson (kneeling), sprints; Lundberg (left), distances; Guinn, jumps; and Guevara, weights.
By GARY VICE
Sports Writer
If the University of Kansas trackmen can equal the performances they have recorded this indoor season, the KU track team should win the Big Eight Indoor Track Championships this weekend in Kansas City. Mo
The Jayhawks, defending indoor champions will enter tonight and tomorrow's competition in the 48th annual NCAA basketball tournament in seven of the 18 scheduled events.
The two-day event will begin at 6 p.m. tonight in Municipal Auditorium with several preliminaries and the finals in the long jump and shot put competitions. The triple jump finals begin at 1:30 p.m. followed by the remaining finals at 7:30 p.m.
THE JAYHAWKS CAN expect their strongest challenge from either Oklahoma, Missouri or Kansas State. KU was defeated by Missouri in a dual meet in Columbia and lost to both Oklahoma and Kansas State at the Sooner Indoor Relays.
Kansas State and Oklahoma each have two returning champions from last year's title meet. The Wildcats have Jeff Schiemel in the mile run and Bob Prince in the half mile. Oklahoma she putter with Randy Wilson, 1,000-ard run champion Randy Wilson.
Assistant coach Thad Talledey, said "Oklahoma looks good right now and K-State has a history of performing well in this game," he added. "I always come in higher than a kite."
HEAD COACH BOB Timmons agreed, "OK
oklahoma or K-State got hot," he could
have done better.
"Missouri is a good dual team team but itink they will have a little more difficulty in playing against Florida."
Timmons said the team's biggest opposition might be themselves if they didn't take the preliminaries seriously and failed to qualify for the finals.
“There are going to be some good athletes who are going to be watching the finals from the stands,” he said. “We just hope none will be ours. They can't be too complacent, they've got to be hungry to win and not let up at the finish.”
TALLEY SAID THIS year's KU squad could be the strongest team in years with a 14-0 record against Florida.
"We have a maximum of 24 athletes we can enter," Tallley said. "This is the first year we've had to cut off guys who can score points for us."
KU women cagers travel to Las Vegas
The KU women's basketball team is off to the fast and furious city of Las Vegas this weekend. But this trip is no holiday for the team.
The trip is business, strictly basketball, as this Monday the women's team takes on the University of Nevada—Las Vegas in a game at the Las Vegas Convention Center.
But that's okay with the team.
"Playing a prelim to the men's game is fantastic," said center Ardan Mitchell.
KU coach Marian Washington said. In the heat of the weekend will be used to promote his program.
The Las Vegas trip is a financial dream come true for the women. It's possible, said Shannon, that the business will turn out well.
paying a portion of KU's air fare, and has also arranged for the team's room, board and transportion in Las Vegas. The women need to make most of the money needed to make the trip.
The women are traveling to Las Vegas via Wichita, where they will play tonight against Wichita State. KU beat Wichita by a tight 69-68 earlier this season.
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BENSON, A SENIOR and the Jayhawk's spirt captain, said, "Waddell is the only one I'm really worried about. One of us will win. We should go 1-2."
The Jayhawks' depth begins with their fine corps of sprinters. In the 440-yard dash, Randy Benson and Waddell Smith rank 1-2 in the Big Eight based on their perimeter in season indoor competition. Benson ran the indoor competition of 47.6 while Soya owns a 48.1 mark.
Smith, who won the 600-yard run last year, said he won't be defending his title because he preferred to run the 440-yard dash.
Smith, senior All-America said, "I never considered the 600 mine tailnote answer. I just won the race. It wasn't important to me. We had indoors are important. Wait till outdoors."
KU also has the top two Big Eight performers in the 600-yard run, Nolan Clemens and Willow Peters, at 1:10:00 at the United States Track and Field Federation National Championships in Oklahoma City. Wagner, a junior walk-on, is only one-tenth of a second back at
KU IS ALSO A strong favorite to win the mule relay. At the Idaho State Meet of Champions in Pocatello, the Jayhawk mile wagon team was a top contender. Berson and Cliff Wiley ran a 3:11.4.
Tallley hasn't announced which athletes will run on the mile relay squad in the Big Eight Indians, but he said they would be on track for a mark of 1:16.1 set in 1972 by Nebraka.
Wiley, the defending champion in the 60-yard dash, has recorded a 6.2 time this season in his specialty and will be teaming up with 6.1.2 sprinter Newell and Laverne Spith.
Freshman harden Anthony Coleman is tied for the conference best in the 60-year high durches with a 7.2 clocking and in the 60-year low durches with his 6.8 speed.
KU'S COACHES ARE concerned with their strength in the field events.
"One thing we don't have this year is we don't have the field events like we had in the past." Tallay said. "We have strength in the past, and I have confidence in us, but we just don't have the depth we need."
Gary Pepin, assistant coach, said, "What d'really like to see is for our shottoppers to look like we do."
If so, the shot putters led by former Big Eight indoor champion Rudy Guevara, would put the Jayhawks in a strong position after the first day of competition.
Govera leads the Big Eight with a loss of 0s-3 and has a lifesate benefit of 62-84. *H*1 is the largest number in the sequence.
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
KANSAS KANSAS
Benson to Wagner: half of the Big 8's best mile relay
second with 58-10%, just short of the 99 feet necessary to qualify for the NCAA championships. Steve Stone, a senior, ranks fifth in the Class A shot patters with 57/2 mark this season.
THE CONFERENCE' leader in the pole vault is Tad Scales, a Lawrence sophomore. Scales has cleared 16-7/2 this season to qualify for the NCAA championships.
Talley said, "Tad has been inconsistent this year, but he has a way of coming up with ideas."
KU will have John Butterfield and Steve Rainbow to challenge Missouri's Nat Page in the high jump. Page, a freshman, has been hit by a fall, but is suffering from a pulled hamstring.
Rainbolt, a also a freshman, ranks second to Page with a 7-0 effort. Butterfield cleared 6-10 for his lifetime best last week against Oklahoma State and Wichita State.
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10
Friday, February 27, 1976
University Dally Kansan
DID YOU EVER MISS ME?
Dinner time
Students at the Campus Improvement Association (CIA) house share their evening meals. The CIA house is a co-loop in which 22 students share such duets as cooking and baking.
Housing ...
From page one
Pallanican and roommates pay $200 monthly rent for their house which includes two bedrooms, a kitchen, pantry, two living rooms, an office, a dining area and an attic with another bedroom in it.
Co-ops
Another group of students lives in one house, but in a different situation.
Twenty-three students live in what they call the Campus Improvement Association
Jerry Levy, Prairie Village school, lives there and said that students shared cooking, shopping, cleaning and other responsibilities.
"IT WAS STARTED several years ago by a group of people in the HDPL Department because they wanted to provide a realistic narrative to dorms and Greeks," Levy said.
He said that there was a relatively high turnover of residents at the CIA house because students only had to give two weeks notice.
He said that rent varied but that average rent was $80 a month, including food.
Although the residents generally get along pretty well, Levy said, there were other issues.
"WE HAD SOME problems with a guy who had a dog that wasn't housebroken and did things on the carpets that people didn't like." he said.
The CIA house is a little bureaucratic, Levy said, because everyone has a position of some sort. The positions were created to ensure that they worked and that almost every one had a position.
Greg Dum, Overland Park senior, also
involved at the CIA house. He said it was chicam.
and that rent was based on the number of vouure feet each apartment had.
PEOPLE COME here and they realize that they have a certain amount of responsibility, and you decide when you move in here that you'll co-operate." Dunn
Dunn said he had moved there because he didn't found aplace else to live, and the City police were nearby.
He said that the younger students there seemed to be closer friends than the older ones.
"We really don't have that tight-kit a social group partly because of our large size and partly because of the turnover," Dunn said.
Living at home
In contrast to a co-op's responsibilities, Diane McEloy, Lawrence junior, lives with her father, and has a job in the office.
"I DON'T HAVE any responsibilities like laying utilities or buying groceries," she said.
McElroy said she had lived in a sorority for a semester but moved home. Then she moved into an apartment but has moved home again.
Studying was difficult in the sorority, she said, and she usually couldn't begin studying until midnight because of "people coming in and out."
Living with her parents doesn't cause her to miss on activities, McEllroy said. She's participating in Rock Chalk Revue and savs she still meets new friends.
McElioy said there was one other minor problem in living with her parents.
"Before I go to formals, my mom always wants the guy to come in so she can take ours."
Foreign students
From page one
MANY STUDENTS want summer and winter break jobs, Coan said, because they can work more hours than during the school year. However, Coan said, restrictions on the number of work permits for the breaks are becoming stricter.
said, "A person could be headed toward Harvard toward the Los Angeles School of Law."
Foreign students either go home for the summer, he said, or stay here and don't
HE ADDED, however, "Nobody's naive
to students without permission."
*Actually, the word is *nobody*.*
Cno stressed that local employers would be wise to check whether foreign students are admitted.
Sanctions against employers who illegally hire aliens don't exist. Coan said that Rep. Peter Rodrigo, D.N.J., had submitted a bill several times that prescribed penalties for employers who illegally hired aliens. The bill has never gotten opt of committee.
"THEY, THE employers, are letting themselves into future trouble if they hire firefighters."
Managers of a local fast food restaurant chain said that they had foreign students working for them but that work permits weren't required. They asked not to be identified because of possible action against the students.
Two managers of the restaurant chain were interviewed. One said she managed the Lawrence restaurant for two years before going to a Kansas City franchise. The other manager now runs the Lawrence restaurant.
"YOU JUST KIND of play dumb," the Kansas City manager said of work permits. "Wifage if they're going to apply, they're going to apply."
The local manager said, "They make excellent employees. The thing is, they have
The Kansas City manager said, "But these guys are willing to work and it's the lazy Americans that aren't willing to work. They (foreign students) have a team spirit. I think it's bred into them. They're willing to do anything."
Neither manager said that he or she was the immigration officer would check for illicit drug use.
"AS FAR AS the immigration office is concerned," one said, "if those guys ever wander in, they (foreign students) just kind of hide.
"I figure it's their own business, but I wouldn't see to them get deterred."
Ted Cloon, night manager for Sambo's Restaurant, 1511 W.2rd, said that a foreign student was required to indicate on an application whether he had a work permit.
No foreign students are working at Sambo's right now, he said, but there have been some in the past. He added that an Arab student had recently applied for a job.
He said that he didn't believe a student should break the law and that he was currently waiting for a job in the educational psychology department.
FOREIGN STUDENTS at KU expressed
recent opinions on working while going to
school.
Mauricio Stzajnowoc, Valencia,
Venezuela graduate student, said, "Foreign
students must have the same opportunities
as other students. Sometimes it is not what
you get paid, it is the satisfaction that you
get from the job."
ANOTHER VENEZUELAN graduate student, Jos Saman, Caracas, an electrical engineering major and president of the Venezuelan Club, said that restrictions on foreign students' working were getting stricter.
"Last summer I couldn't work because immigration didn't let me work," he said.
"During my undergraduate years I had to work."
He said that he had worked summers for the Santa Fe Railroad.
"The experience I had out working for Santa Fe for three summers was a beautiful, beautiful experience. You just brought people in the way that they really are."
SAMAN SAID that 50 per cent of the trackman at the company were Chicano. Foreign students are more used to doing menial jobs, he said, because they have to in their own countries where there is less technology.
Saman said he had a friend at Emporia State College who was deported because of a conviction.
Saman said that he didn't advise breaking the immigration law but that he had many friends and acquaintances.
He said he had a government scholarship now and didn't have to work, but others still need it.
"PUT YOURSELF in the same spot," he said. "You are six or 10 thousand miles away from home and you have to get your car to work." You really don't care how you get it."
Ahmad Golshani, Mashah, Iran, senior,
said, "It is very necessary for some
students to have a job. If there is a
situation I have a job, it should be for
everybody."
He said that most foreign students didn't need jobs and that if they did work on it, they would be better educated.
"THEY COME HERE not to work but to study," he said.
M. Padmanabhan, Madras, India, graduate student, said he thought that working restrictions on foreign students should be relaxed.
"I have heart that many people work without permits but that is very
--dangerous. You can be deported within a few weeks," he said, "Nowadays, anywhere you go you have to have a work permit. Your employer and student students must have a work permit."
Students have enough money for a certain period of time when they get here, he said, but they run out of funds and have to work to stay in school.
HE SAID THAT for eight students might be criminated and that a law enforcement applicant for
Padmanbana said that he was the only student to apply for the job and was told that no American student would accept the $2.30 an hour wage for which he was working.
Criminal law reform topic of controversy
a job might not be hired. Currently, he said,
he is working at a bank in Kansas City on a
6-month work permit for practical
experience. The permit can be renewed for a
total of 18 months of post-graduate
employment.
Staff Writer
By DENNIS VOBORIL
Two separate viewpoints about a controversial criminal law reform bill were presented last night at an informal debate in the Jawhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The massive 753-page criminal law reform bill, Senate Bill 1 (S1), if passed, would revise and codify the old U.S. criminal code.
5. 1 is one of the most repressive pieces of legislation ever to be introduced before Congress, Karen Blank, Wichita senior and professor of Kansas Civil Liberties Union, said.
Foreign students are willing to accept less in job, he said, "because it's only a matter of time."
But Denis Hauptley, from the
Burmese department, said that Sine
was an enormous success in
these decisions.
Both speakers presented their views on it to about 48 people the KU-Y Advocate calls "the most diverse group in
Hauley noted some examples where S.1 would liberalize the current law.
Maximum penalty for possession of marijuana would be reduced from one year to 30 days. He said that a crime involving marijuana would be classified into about 10 different levels, depending on the type of crime.
In crimes involving riot, a person must only show intent to riot to be guilty under the current law, Haplupet said. Under S1, 408, the law actually participate in the riot to be guilty.
"This is 12 times more liberal than the existing law," he said.
But Blank said the bill increased about all penalties for crimes.
She said S.1 provided up to three years in jail and up to $100,000 for fencing in a lot.
provisions in the bill that needed amending.
Hamley said, that there were too many
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Blank said the bill was unamendable because it would be too massive of a pre-credit card.
eroneous criticisms of the bill. He said this distracted from debata on the bill and from its implications.
Hauley said he thought the bill could be amended because it had been amended so many times already. He said that even though the bill was almost 800 pages long, only about 200 to 250 pages covered areas of controversy.
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Rolfs said he's glad to be a student again and has plans to become more active in his fraternity, Delta Tau Delta, and Sacred Hearts, his university's honor society, of which he is president.
From page one
Archie R. Dykes had made matters worse. "People are more accessible than they've been in the past, but I don't think the benefits outweigh the costs," he said.
Rofls, an accounting major, said he plans to teach in May, and to begin work in his family's office.
Two generations of Rolfes operate a bank in Junction City, and it's there that Rolfs said he would be given a year to work this year for my CPA (Certified Public Accounting) degree."
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 27, 1976
11
Recommendation letters unchanged by Buckley rule
By BILL UYEKI Staff Writer
Professors at the University of Kansas say the Buckley Amendment hasn't influenced their responses to letters of recommendations. And two University officials say adjustment to the amendment is going smoothly now.
The amendment, sponsored by Sen.
James Buckley, Conservative—N.Y., gave
students the right to see any reac-
mentations in their files written after Jan.
1975.
However, some KU professors said this week that most students are preferring not to study at KU.
Following passage of the bill, many people said professors would be less willing to write letters of recommendation because students had access to them.
Most professors interviewed who write letters for students applying to graduate
schools said their recommendation letters weren't affected by open student files.
"I haven't had any attention to the Brooke Amendment, Clark Bricker, pricker, or the Board."
Bricker said he wrote at least 100 recommendations each semester.
Most letters aren’t helpful to graduate schools, he said, unless they contain very little.
Charles Hallenbeck, professor of psychology, said students weren't very concerned with access to their records. Most recommendation letters, he said, were "a piece of cake" because they contained an attractive and attractive traits of students.
George Worth, chairman of the English department, said most students waived their rights to their files to get "more and helpful letters" from the faculty.
John McNown, professor of civil
engineering, said more than 90 per cent of the students who waived their right to see recommendations.
Letters would lose their value and become "less forthright," he said, if increasing numbers of students chose to see their recommendations.
Nita Sundaby, professor of education,
said only the wording, and not content, of
her recommendations would be affected by
an open student file.
John Willingham, professor of English, said, "I have simply stopped writing letters for people who wanted to scrutinize their files."
Loda Newcomb, assistant director of the Education Placement Bureau (EPB), which serves more than 2,500 students in the School of Education, said an instructor won't write a letter if he doesn't know the student well or has anything good to say.
"When I write a letter of recommendation, I always write my true perception of the person," she said, "but I might be more cautious about the wording."
Actually, letters of recommendation aren't required by all graduate schools, Arnold Weiss, assistant dean of the Graduate School, said. There is no requirement on recommendations, he said, and it is up each department to decide its own policy.
The percentage of students who elect to see their files is very small, said Willingham, who writes about 40 recommendations a year.
"The students can't get a letter from one
pessimist, they'll go to someone else," she said.
Dwight Mulford, dean for admissions at the Medical Center, and Evelyn Senecal, a psychologist for the School of Law, both said recommendations weren't required for application.
He said some of the past problems were caused by "interim" regulations from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW). The University is now operating under those regulations, Davis said.
Davis said that he didn't know if or when the final regulations would become law but that he hoped the regulations would be more explicit than the previous ones.
that it had taken some time for University schools and departments to adopt the amendment's regulations, but that there wasn't much trouble now.
Mike Davis, University attorney, said
Recommendation letters in graduate school files can be seen by the student only if he is accepted and enrolled in the graduate schools, he said.
According to a higher education agency's newsletter, HEW Sec. F. David Matthes has received an 138-paper draft of final documents. The department will be reviewed by the secretary's staff.
Some problems have been caused at the University by another provision of the amendment. The student must sign a notice of information in his files can be released.
So much confusion in police and parking resulted from the University's attempt to interpret the amendment's regulations, that the University fired a protest with HEW.
Some of the problems with the Buckley Amendment still exist in police and parking. If a KU student and a non-student have the same license, his student's name can be withdrawn from the news media, whereas the non-student's name is released. Also, if a student's stare were stolen, his name can't be released to insurance company until he signs a release.
Mike Thomas, director of police and parking, said his department hadn't received any formal complaints about problems caused by the amendment.
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12
2017.10.15
Friday, February 27, 1976
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University Daily Kansan
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
WOMEN'S ATHLETICS
A coach who is also an athlete. Washington demonstrates the art of getting into position for a rebound.
BALL STAR
From coaches such as Bill Easton, Washington has learned how to coax the best out of her players.
MARIAN E. WASHINGTON
HAPPINESS IS
GIRLS Athletics
During a basketball game, Washington occasionally loses some of the self-control which is strongly evident in her daily life. On this occasion it was a referee's decision that provoked her irie.
Entering Washington's office, one gets an idea of the feelings inside.
Story by Rachel Case Photos by Jay Koelzer
JACKIE ROBINSON
KSS
Washington frequently finds herself the center of activity.
Washington the driving force
Marian Washington--that's the first name that comes to mind when you think of women's athletics at UConn.
And there are good reasons for it.
Washington was appointed as KU's first director of women's athletics in July 1974. She is the head coach of the women's basketball team and formerly was head coach of the women's track team she inaugurated at Kansas, but she has an international reputation in basketball and track circles as an outstanding athlete.
Washington has been a pioneer in the field of women's athletics. Acceptance of the female athlete is one of the biggest changes she has seen since she began playing in sports 30 years ago when she was in the first grade.
"I had a friend who wanted to be a putter shot," she said. "She wrote to her fiance, who was in the service in France, and told him of her interest in shot putting. He wrote back and told her to quit."
Washington said that the amount of money available women's athletic programs was the other big change, she said.
She said she could remember competing on an AAU track team in high school and being eligible for competition in New York, but she had to provide her own money for food and lodging.
"When I first came to KU in 1972, the total budget for women's athletics was $9,000," she said. Sharon Drydale, a professor of physical education, was coordinator of the intercollegiate athletic program, which was then part of the physical education department.
"Teams competed in eight sports: basketball, field hockey, golf, gymnastics, tennis, volleyball and swimming. Swimming had only been started a year before I came. There were only five coaches, including myself. I coached basketball and started a track and field team.
"When I became the athletic director, we convinced the Student Senate to give us $38,000. Now our coaching staff numbers 13 with nine head coaches and four assistors."
Washington's accomplishments don't stop there. Since 1974 she has been instrumental in establishing a network of health centers.
first Jayhawk Basketball Classic for women and conducting clinics for girls for the 10 sports in which KU competes intercollegiately. The women's cross country team was introduced in 1974 after she had become the athletic director.
Despite her many accomplishments, Washington remains modest.
"I'm only as good as the people I have working with
who can have an excellent coaching and
administrative staff."
Pat Collison, administrative assistant to the women's athletics department, said, "Miss Washington is a delightful person. She's very versatile. She can do anything in the team. She's very much a part of each of the 10 programs."
In addition to her duties as athletic director and basketball coach, Washington still finds time to compete in sports. In December, she went to the Soviet Union to play team handball for the United States at the World Tournament. World tournaments are held for sports not included in the Olympics.
Playing basketball and throwing the disc are
playful activities. Both have had a great impact on her life.
And both have had a great impact on her life.
A native of Pennsylvania, Washington played basketball at West Chester (Pa). State college before moving to Raytown. Mo., in 1970 when she won a position on the U.S. Women's Basketball team. The coach of that team, Alice Lee Cox, lived in Raytown and wanted her team close to by practice.
From 1970 to 1972 she taught at Martin Luther King Junior High School in Kansas City, Mo. While there, she became acquainted with former KU track coach Bill Easton.
She began driving to Lawrence two days a week to work with Easton on improving her dissection throwing. She spent all of her training that included running, sprinting and weight training. Her dis Throwting distance increased from 108 feet to
Easton said, "It was a real pleasure to work with She. She's very receptive and follows instructions to Reqs."
"I knew her about as well as anybody. She's a lady, a good athlete and a great student."
THOMAS J. CASEY
An athlete, an athletic director and a basketball coach, Washington is the driving force behind women's athletics at Kansas University.
Friday, February 27, 1976
13
Marriage still viable, profs say
Staff Writer
By JANET SCHMIDT
Despite a recent increase in the divorce rate and changing attitudes toward marriage, some Lawrence and University of Kansas marriage and family counselors agree that marriage still has a vital and functional role in society today.
Data given by the Kansas State Department of Health and Environment show that, while the local and national figures for divorces and annulments have doubled over the past 10 years, the number of marriages has remained relatively stable.
DATA FOR Kansas and the nation show that, although the number of marriages slightly increased from 1963 to 1974, the number of divorces doubled.
Despite this sharp contrast between the increases in divorce and marriage rates, Ewen notes that "the gap between student mental health clinic, said, "The growing divorce rate does not necessarily correspond to the amount of married couples with children."[1] The ceptability of divorce as an alternative.[2]
In 1985, the number of marriages in Douglas County was 456, or 12.7 for every 1,000 persons. In 1974, the number was 637, or 11.4 for every 1,000.
In 1965 the divorce rate for the county was 2.6 for one,100 persons, or 92 divorces. In 1974 that rate more than doubled to 5.3 for every 1,000, or 296 divorces.
Dennis Karpowitz, assistant professor of psychology and director of the psychological clinic at KU, said, "The new program as an institution is declining in a myth."
"Women's liberation has definitely had an impact," he said.
THE INCREASING divorce rate, he said, indicates a change in expectations concerning marriage.
Karpowitz said more people, especially women, expected better and more equal treatment.
"The fact that people expect and seek equality in a marriage means that marriage is still the most viable alternative," he said.
Karpowitz said that among the factors affecting the divorce rate was a decrease in the general population's reliance on religious institutions, such as churches, for moral guidance.
"These organizations no longer have the impact they used to," he said.
THE DECREASE in the number of couples having children has also affected the divorce rate because divorce is more difficult when children are involved, he said.
"A solution is now available to people as the working class, that was not before."
divorce had become more accessible and affordable.
Stan Sterling, social worker with Counseling Associates, a lawrence counseling firm in Boston.
Katz said that, although divorce had become more acceptable as a solution to marital difficulties, the number of people living at KU also seemed to be increasing.
"About 20 per cent of the requests for therapy at the student mental health clinic are from students seeking marital therapy," she said.
"WHILE WE have no way of knowing what percentage of the people who come to the clinic represent the total community of married couples on campus," she said, "there does seem to a heightened awareness of this particular service at our clinic."
Katz said some of the reasons for the increase were the increase in KU enrollment, a greater awareness that children are more loved and a greater acceptance of therapy.
"There is no longer the negative feeling about going to ask for help," she said.
Katz said the function of marital marriage wasn't only to prevent marriages from
"The struggle in dealing with one's own desire for self-fulfillment and the need to fulfill it"
"THE COUPLE finds it difficult to express their changing needs and concerns with each other. Frustration, pain and intolerance mount."
breaking up, but to help couples who were going through separations or divorces.
University Daily Kansan
"Partners feel trapped and bogged down by the overwhelming demands that they experience during this critical stage of life," she said.
Katz said that such factors as the increasing cost of living, the shrinking professional job market, the postponement of having children and financial dependency on parents aggravated already-existing conflicts.
"The goal of marital therapy as we practice it is to help both partners become aware of the intrapysche conflict that get played out in the relationship." Katz said.
Katz said that anxieties related to academic pressures were sometimes made up of stress.
"THIS MEANS that the couple explore the roots of their conflicts, as they originated during earlier periods of their lives."
Dennis Dalley, associate professor of social welfare and social worker with Counseling Associates, said that communication was important in a marriage and that understanding the way a couple communicated with each other was important in helping them solve their marital problems.
"Communication involves both the implicit and the explicit—the verbal and the nonverbal."
Each time this double-bind occurs, the couple becomes more confused about what each expects from the other, and soon haveulty working out problems together, he said.
Some of the marital problems he works with center on double-bind communication, which a person says one thing but which another with other facial expressions, he said.
Dailey said he assisted couples by focusing their attention on the way they communicate and helping them to make it more effective.
FOR EXAMPLE, the husband asks his wife whether he can go out with the boys and she says "yes," but is frowning when she says it, he said.
See MARRIAGE page 14
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I'm not afraid to say "Yes"!
GO SEE A MOVIE TANIGHT!
WHAT MAKES MEN BLUSH
PART!
The 1950's Sex Education Festival
This is a series of shorts that may be the most hysterical funny movies ever to play on the Kansas University campus. The titles include: How Much Affection (1956); Dating Do's and Dont's (1954); Is This Love (1957); Are You Popular (1952); Are You Ready for Marriage (1955); and Dangling Participle (1959). To describe but two of them: How Much Affection, which might better be titled The Perverse Passion of Petition, is the story of teen-aged run amuck. With their entire life ahead of them, this book is a house for a future of vietnam democracy, family-raising are haunted by the scourge of unbridled physical love and sex-fueled madness! But with the help of family and friends they arrive at a truly inspirational and heartending solution to The Menace of Premarial Intercourse. Then in Standish Lawder's outrageous Dangling Participie, we see a sixty-five year old maternity high school teacher trying to tell a group of potential pervers that each and every fantasy, no matter how bizarre, is "perfectly normal." This film is without doubt one of the most remarkable social documents of its time: a sort of ultimate statement on what it means to be a humanist, an artist or queen at high schools everywhere. Other movies in The 1980's x-Educational are of equivalent quality, each one specially selected for its ability to evoke howls of disbelieving laughter! One last film in Part I is the 1950's equivalent of sexual politics — Ronald Reagan's only filmed encounter with Jayne Mansfield!
☆☆☆☆☆☆
PART II
1950'S Television Masterpieces
Ozzie and Harriett (1957)
Called Father's Night at the Fraternity, this one features the absurd Wally and an incredible musical climax with Ricky pounding on some DDG.
☆☆☆☆☆☆
BURNS AND ALLEN (1954)
Possibly the greatest episode ever made as Gracie helps a young sorority girl to be beautiful so she can get a date to the prom!
Elvis Presley on Ed Sullivan (1955)
This one is truly unreal. Elvis' first appearance on the Sullivan Show and he was censored from the waist down as he poured out Love Me
★★★★★
FATHER KNOWS BEST (1956)
Stars Robert Youngk Kathy runs away from home when she has 'adolescent problems' but comes back home in the end when she realizes that she is still a teenager.
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14
Friday, February 27,1976
University Daily Kansan
Middle-age students enroll to learn, aid careers
Bv FLORESTINE PURNELL
Staff Writer
You're never too old to learn. Many people more than 30 years old believe that to be true and have recently enrolled in college in increasing numbers to prove it.
Although the average age of a University of Kareas student in fall 1975 was 21, national figures seem to indicate that students are generally older, Marshall Jackson, an assistant director of admissions and records, said last week.
"The office of admissions tries to meet the needs of all students," he said. "And problems of adjustment faced by older students have been taken into account."
Orientation sessions for the older students were held in the fall, he said. Generally, old students are having problems are referred to other areas of the university.
MAX GRIFFIN, assistant director of admissions and records, said older students weren't treated any differently because the student handled only the admittance of students.
PERIHAS ONE REASON for the in-
venture, age, Griffin said, is the tech job market.
The agency most often referred to by the Office of Admissions, the division of continuing education, handles most older students.
Vivian McCoy, director of student services in continuing education, said there were a variety of reasons for older people being in school.
"For women, sometimes it is an economic necessity to support themselves and their families," McCoy said. "Often, after the new job comes home, there is a need to get into new areas."
"FOR MEN, THERE are often chances for career advancements or a change of career that make it necessary to return to school. Then there are some who return for the sheer learning experience with no intention of using it for a job."
McCoy said a study conducted by her office in 1975 indicated that the average age of older students in the Kansas City area was 37. Females make up 77 per cent of the group whose average schooling was 15.6 and just more than the junior year in college.
Traditional patterns of women marrying at a younger age than men, and women helping men through school, account for the imbalance, McCoy said. As more degree programs become available, the ratio may change.
ONE-TO-ONE counseling, group coun-
selling, career workshops and seminars are
used to deal with problems facing older students. Such topics as "non-traditional routes to learning," "creative retirement" and "life career planning" are used to orient the students to their new role as a student.
"We have counseling to help assess the students' interests, aptitudes and values."
Marriage . . .
From page 13
He said that among the factors important to a successful, working marriage were a healthy self-Image, a sense of one's own identity and the ability to accept interdependence.
"Interdependence does not mean dependence or independence," he said. "It means submissiveness and assertiveness—using effectively for fruitful problem-solving."
Karpowitz said that, if he had to name one thing that was important to a healthy marriage, it would be "plain, effective communication."
*I expect couple to have problems—life brings them. The key is whether they can cope with it.*
The presence of more mature people in classes with younger students has various implications. For example, their history, said their presence made a real difference in his cultural and educational life. He is from Philadelphia.
Occupational testing and referrals to good advisers in academic arenas also helps the student know what is expected.
teachers or professional," Griffith said. "Their presence injects a person who has had real, practical experience into the field."
Griffith said older students, along with him, in his classes, tended to help class problems.
McCoy said, "The idea behind this is that once a person decides to come back, he also decides he has no time to lose and he needs the correct direction."
--found a stimulation of interest in the times when more mature students were in his post-Civil War history class. There tends to be a greater ability to detect trends in history, he said, and relating these trends to personal experiences helps.
"It means something for a great many people," he said. Sometimes it's the first time people hear things from a different person. Then people are more likely to discuss.
W. Stitt Robinson, who has been in the KU history department for 25 years, said he had
HOWEVER, John Clark, professor of history, said he saw little difference in his characters.
"IHAVE A LOT of people who have been
Studios
"There was a lot more give-and-take in my classes between 1068 and 1972," he said, than before "88 or after. 72. Today is a lot less activity." I came here there. There is a lot less activity."
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and
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THRU
MARCH 2, 1976
Kwik
SHOP
Spring Courses
Dog Obedience Training
Massaging
Massage Deep Muscle Tension
Relief
Juice Self Defense
Natural Health
Introduction to Vegetarian Cooking
Metal Arts Silversmithing
Meditation and Self Awareness
Amateur Astronomy Seminar
Simple Living Workshop
Ballet
Physical Fitness for Women
Dance
Batik and Tie-Dye
G.I.F.T. (Growth in Future Talent)
Kitemaking Seminar
Rock 'n' Roll Is Here to Slay
Divorce Encounter: Divided We Stand
Astral Projection
Four Directions in Gardening
Women's Self Help Group
Bake Repair
Backpacking
History of UFO's in America
Teachings of the Ascended Masters
Music and Meditation
Listen to the Prophets
A Study of G.S. Lewis
Kendall Yoga
Clowning, Personal Growth and Spiritual Awareness
Experimental Theology
Back to the Garden (Organic Gardening)
The Different Drummer Conference
Spiritual Film Festival
Life Planning Workshop
Catalogues Available in the SUA Office
OPEN EVERYDAY 7a.m. to 12p.m.
26th Annual
ROCK CHALK REVUE March 5,6
A BICENTENNIAL PARODY
- a great comedy variety show
- with over 300 performers reliving famous stories with some hilarious changes.
This glorious five-show package, enhanced by a 25-piece live orchestra will include appearances by Paul Revere, The Statue of Liberty, Uncle Sam, Mount Rushmore, Cecil B. DeMille, and portions of the Continental and British armies.
GET YOUR TICKETS NOW!
Tickets available at the S. U.A. ticket office and at every bank in Lawrence.
Fri. March 5: '3 $ ^{\circ}$ and '2 $ ^{\circ}$ (second balcony)
Sat. March 6: Sold Out
Performance Begins at 7:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium Theatre
Rock Chalk Revue is Sponsored by the KU-Y and Partially Funded by the Student Sena
University Daily Kansan
Friday, February 27, 1976
15
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods. services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan Booklet. Attendance must be credited, or national origin. PLEASE BRING 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 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not—sterilly affect the value of the ad.
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 items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. All ads can be placed in person or simply calling the UKE business office at 864-1258.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on your hill equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, the GRAPHOMATE SHOES at KIEP are made at the GRAPHOMATE SHOP at KIEP.
Tremendous selection of guitars, saws, drums,
basses, basses and more. Choose from Gibbon
Shop, Shop Keyboard Studio, Choose from Gibbon
Shop, Shop Keyboard Studio, and many others.
Amps, Kutton, Green, and many others.
Nightly after 7 p.m., go to Keyboards Studio,
nightly after 7 p.m., go to Keyboards Studio.
We can make your stereo sound better—GUAR-
DER than a studio earpiece. Data坠 at
Audio Systems, 507 E. 9th.
**COST**
1965 - $350; stereo equipment. All major
units are free. Refundable up to 12 mo.
Pricy Fri, TV A, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV B, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV C, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV D, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV E, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV F, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV G, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV H, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV I, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV J, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri, TV K, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri,TV L, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri,TV M, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri,TV N, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
Fri,TV O, broad phone. Cal Dsn. Free
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ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
tickets. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160 page,
mail order catalog Research Assistance.
Los Angeles, Los Angeles. Call: 922-4
(213) 477-8474.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
AIR CONNECTOR
BELT AIR
ELECTRIC, B492-9006, 9006 W. 9th. h.
BELT AIR
ELECTRIC, B492-9006, 9006 W. 9th. h.
CUSTOM JEWELRY: Professionally crafted gold and silver work. Miniature sculpture, convention jewelry, decorative accents executed B.F.A. degree. Complete stone cutting and variety of unusual stones 81-3858 or 843-9070.
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them-
Pioneer CT 4114 Dulux Cassette deck $140. ART- fortable $65, dual 215 turntable $60. NEXT- 227
For Sale - 1974 C125 Honda with 96 mm. Exc.
Made with accessories. Call after:
843-664-0633
Need to buy a gift? See the selection of unique
gifts at the Performance, Performance,
23d. 10 am - 6pm. 2-27
Potted, mature Irish plants while they last. 241-6981 after 6 p.m. 2:27
Means for Sale. Just reduced. Hardyman specializes in interior design, custom build, call Luzier at 841-1685 or havelay.haven.com.
1974 Vega Hatchback. Near condition, one
(female) and has mow tree. Evening,
842-5434
Medi-school quality microchips for sale. Nabn
34029755118216. Box of 10. Warehouse box # KUMC 8 and Rainbow, Kanagawa.
New York, NY 10022.
Original Antique Show & Sale February 27, 28
August 1-3, 2024 at the Lawrence show: Friday; and Saturday and
Monday. Lawrence show: Friday; and Saturday and Monday.
admission ($1) good all 3 days. Manager: Victoria
sponsor, offers good service by Pfid Club of Los
Angeles, sponsor.
2-27
Gibson Johnson Finish ES3327 $A350 Semi-cushion with humbucks, Phase 1, same as ES3328 $300. Ampel V-4, veritable. 100 Wmw. Same as ES3329 V-4, clean condition C200. Bump, 2-27. qwart 412, clarinet 527.
Baucus Berry pickup with snake cord. Lodwig
Baucus Berry pickup with exotic condition. Loc-
454-257-309.
454-257-308.
1974 Honda CB200. Expected condition $750 or best offer. Call 842-8337 2-27
Comfortable studio bed $22/couch $40. White wainti-
like, new like, 324-875-970
2-27
HLCL-380. 1974, excellent condition. $75. In-
ghest. HLCD-380, backed padded and tools. $650.
hk250.
Magnavox furnishable, 2 speakers, 100* Bar and
stools, $40. For 5, Amita-8714, 31-27
2-27
GUTAR LESSONS $2 PER HOUK STREEO REM
LESSONS $13; LESSONS STRING GUTAR $14 -
7452-728.
New army inflatable 4-man raff. Call Ragu at
860-4021 or leave message at 860-4021
2-27
USED RADIAL, BARGAINS 2, 1-868-13 Bridges
450 Univ. Road, Edison Park, NJ 07930
$20, $80, $125 - Universal 2, 0-GR2M2
13 Univroal $45, New Metallin XR Radials in
Bridges 2, 0-GR2M2
Installation at Ray Stone Rockies 692, 932 - 3
Nickembercken b501 basal, white, easy, ease. New
matching bottom. Superb. $790. 843-725-763
matching bottom. Superb. $790. 843-725-763
Gibson SG Standard w/hardshell case $75,
Fender Bassman Trem-Amp $250, MXR Phase $90,
$60, Faxon Wa-Volume $15, K.V. Mesh W2.5
W2.8, Large Bottom w/2-wing
speakers $241-831.328
73 Cutl Sugareme, PB, PS, AC, AM-FM, great
condition, 843-1859 after 5.00
3-1
Y3 Yamaha RD 350 perfect condition. first reasonable offer. 814-4396. Davet. 2-27
1974 Datum pick-up kit. in best. Look in the manual. 32-channel, dual-port AM-PD radio, coaxial running condition. Pipe rated to 800V, 6A.
Yellow Lab pugs ARC, excellent hunter, many field and show champion in pedigree. 843-886-7500
Kawasaki 750, 179, 1972 with widmanner夹车.
Excellenl condition. engine against new. 835-483.
Kawasaki 750, 179, 1972 with widmanner夹车.
Excellenl condition. engine against new. 835-483.
Free Retrier Puppies - 3 Labradores, 1/4 Gold
mornings or evenings $85-893
or mornings or evenings $85-893
Need money - will call Saxophone-Conte Alto
Need money - will call Saxophone-Conte Alto
need condition condition, 1080p, flat frame and matte
need condition condition, 1080p, flat frame and matte
ix7 view and enlarger, $100; Drake SWA4 Communication cost, $35; sell, $100; 64-381- 3-10
75 Olds Cultan Salon 2 dHR 7 lt. Silver Burgam
w lists of w/stabs. Best offer-83%-116.
116.
TV, stereo, guitar, camera and dark room equipment
TV, stereo, guitar, camera and dark room equipment
DVA, DVA, 300w, 240v, 300w, DVA, GTA, GVA
DVA, DVA, 300w, 240v, 300w, DVA, GTA, GVA
1967 Austin Healey 2000. Excellent buy at $2660
will sell for best offer 1252-6342 MCHK 3-1
***
**
1826 Burk Special 4-door Sedan. Small V-8. Auto.
Excellent condition. Safety inspected. $325.
Bilstein & Co.
Priced to sell fast! Must sell immediately. B&W
ware! Excellent condition. Bought in Sept.
Award-winning, Audition tested. Carson
casionally. Selling for $100. Call 811-5679, ask for
phone number. Only worn once. $20-$30 shoes. Prices
$-2
1972 Trisham TR-6.3, 20,000 mll. roll bar, AM-FM
1974 Trisham TR-5, 15,000 mll. roll bar, AM-FM
1975 Trisham stored snow tires. Imperial car-
mobility.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and pick up your child from the campus (two phone calls, phone) at WEBERTS or 1-800-429-7635.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
rentals for Laurel, Lawrence, Lawrenc
Rental Exchange. 843-200-9200.
2. bdrm, all allu, paid, on campus. Furm. or
free. Unparking. a/c, pool. B3-493-993.
www.bdrm.edu
Room furnished with shared kitchen and bath,
toilet, dishwasher. Also efficiency appliance for meal user town. No pets.
1-4 bedroom apartments, room with kitchen privileges; 2-6 bedroom campus to schools $5 and up. 4-8 bedroom campus $425-$490.
Want to sell man's Naiman Hall contract for request of room. Call 814-394-122 after p. 27 come by Room A.
Female room: $75.20 rm, own room, until
March 6—end of May 168 Lauren
upstairs.
Modern, 3 bedroom house, 13 baths, full basement. Bedrooms include two, one of which is not. No Pets. Ideal for 5 or more. B488-888-8888.
MARRIED STUDENTS ENTERING MEDICAL
SCHOOL. Located in Juneau, wintermorning K-2, C-K.
Area. Available in Juneau, wintermorning K-2,
Located near KU Med Center UMC Dental KC.
Project. Some equity payment required but rent is less than half for similar housing. Well-pop-
ulated. 191 Raths. LR DR Kitchen w/food, disposal.
193 Raths. LR DR Kitchen w/food, disposal.
windows; well-made). Many students of medical
students. Bldg 812-265-0368 between 4:00 to 9:00 P.M. 3-1
812-265-0368 between 4:00 to 9:00 P.M. 3-1
Room offers in a cooperative house, $45. For
room rental, see room #1. Room, dryer, pool table, Gag
Coffee, Kitchen, and dryer pool table. Good
phone calls: 620-793-8211 or 620-793-8212.
Furnished apartment at 19 W. 14th, one bedroom,
720 sq. ft., $75 plus electricity. Call at
843-746-9130. p.m. 843-746-9130.
For rent one 1 bedroom apt. and one efficiency
apt. 8 minutes from campus. Call 643-275-
2900.
For rent, basement apartment, utilities paid.
$450. graduate student preferred,
826-687-6911
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at age 20. She can print out of your 129 page thesis in 5 minutes! See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, 838 Manchesterville suite. 841-4900.
NOTICE
1 BR Frontier. Retail Apartments 1455 per mo
or best offer. Call Coll Calle 862-9675 anime 3-4
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive training in driving techniques and transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
Swap Shop. 620 Max. Used furniture, dish
table, clocks, televisions. Open daily 18:
34-35.
The Cashback Cafe special Sunday dinner is 4 Full
Sunday dinners at the Cashback Cafe each week
each week. Call 825-3951 for reservations.
ZORBA THE LAMB Sunday, Feb. 29. Special Greek dinner included stuffed wine leaves, feta cheese salad, much more! $5.49. Call for reservations today, 843-6500. Caissah Cafe, 803 Mason Road.
Volunteer, Clarifying Room 8; take applications
for Volunteer, Clarifying Room 8;
644-389-288 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
daily.
TROUBLED WITH LIFE! Lost love, feeling hope, rejected and lonely? Real love, security and inner strength? A collection of stories with name and address. Free introductory packet. Discovery Box 5067, Tampa, Kansas
Self-Hire Workshop - Sunday, Feb. 25, 1-5 p.m.
1043 Orac Unit, United Ministries, led by Bob Humphrey,
natural foods and a balanced diet, yoga exercises
and breathing, centering and how to stay calm in
a stressful environment, awareness. Wear comfortable clothes and
washable clothing. $1 to $3 for cording to income
2-27
Free University enrollment Thursday, Friday
from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at UMass Lowell or at the
university table in the Union Chapel or at the
UWB Student Center.
Gestalt Group Workshop 214 by Virginia Sullow, Sunday, March 7. 9 a.m.to 5 p.m. at 1204 Grace. Cost $10 limit.人群 For resale or sale. Cost $414-469 or $841-312 (aseek lunch).
PERSONAL
Volunteer, Clearing House. Take applications
to Volunteer, Clearing House at 644-389-3897
or 644-389-3989 between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m. dail-
y.
BEECIES SHIRT SHOP, 116 E. 6th. Close-outs
and ladies' jacket/suits, sports (outs). Not to
M-T shop.
Kick the smoking habit! Completely safe, expert-
care. Smoking bans in public: Clair, Days,
864-1131; Evening, 844-5170; 9-1
0844-5170; Evening, 844-5170;
Couple needs another couple to drive to Denver over Spring Break Call 814-6611, after 5:30 - 3:2
Daddy, Thanks for the $, bought a watered
from Fields. Have triple投资. Kittie- 3-1
P.L. Roses are red, violates are blue; First buy a
3-1
that I will love you. AG.
Tony-Tankley I've never sleep on a warm bed. That's not how I feel in the berry Fields. Can't believe you. G.
of two images merged onto one by the UK students. In House, October Friday night nights with sixam breakfast. There will be a special screening.
the KUY for juniors, with KUY faculty
for all. Send resume to KUY@kuy.edu.
From 11:00 am to 12:30 pm,
Bring your lunch and join us
at the KUY for juniors, with KUY faculty
for all. Send resume to KUY@kuy.edu.
Mark. Love makes the word go 'round.' For a child of cause and I hope it continues that way because of you and I hope it continues that way because of you.
Counselor's position: Lt. Blir Spring Ranch For Roes.
Correctional service, call Phil McKnight, 844-359-4100.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY fellow hiltier and F.L.
your still the greatest. 2-29
WANT TO BE A WINNER? "LEARNING TO
HAPPEN" in schools to help you improve your relationships
with others through understanding transactional
neuroscience. 3:00-3:15 at 1629 W. IPhone, 843-1011,
3-9:30-3:15 at 1629 W. IPhone, 843-1011.
To the dark-hairied girl I waited on Ft. 2:20 at
8am. I thought you come in at 8:30 and
get some more creations.
TACOS
$3.95 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843 9880
FURNITURE/CLOTHES
HALF-AS-MUCH
12-5pm
730MASS
OLD-AND-ANTIQUE
CLOTHING
SALE
FURNITURE/CLOTHES
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is designed to help you quickly access and manage our Service is fast and prices are reasonable. We want you to be the best customer.
TYPING
Experienced typist—term papers, papers, mites.
Experienced typist—spelling, spellings,
corrected 848-543, Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist, I.B.M. Selective, thesis, discussions and term papers. Call Pam. 843-799-109.
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonable,
cost-effective. BS in electrical, BA Social Science
or job liaison plus 5 years of experience.
Typist/editor, IBM Piece /exec. Quality work with the dissertation dissections. Work with 9-11 March 84: 123-271
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 3-2
Exp. typet, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
dissertation. Use IBM Selectric, written spelling coded
Reagan, Jean. 841-3098
S. L.S. TYPING SERVICE. Experienced, professional work on IBM Selectric (pict). Prompt, efficient service. These. dissertations, term paper. Phone 813-266-2944. Evening Stretch.
*TPYING- We have many return customers who want to give us a call and we appreciate your business. Call Harveys at (415) 378-0601.*
Experienced typists will type these dissertations and send them to our home, Call Carey or Linda at 814-694-0844.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
THE NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
The NEW SCHOOL OF MUSIC at McKinney
Hamphamite has a great gallery of
instruments, a great guitarist,
and classic guitar, banjo, mandolin and
jazz and rock and guitar rock. Call 841-
0811.
Experienced tpmt, IBM Selectric. All kinds of call. Call 848-4533, Day 849; 8623. Evil. July 15.
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
Contingents wanted from college students. Call
Performance Hall, 1422 W. West 23rd, 24th,
306-105, 180-785.
Volunteer, Clearing House is taking applications
for 646-3880 between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. dail-
ly at 646-3880.
RAM DASS movies: "Evolution of a Yogi" and
RAM DASS movies: "Bob Marley" and RAM
DASS movies: "Darshan with Maharaj" and RAM
DASS movies: "Will have two showings-Friday
27 at 10 am" and "m. at the United Mint,
267 1043 Oread, 148 000."
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION MEETING March 16, 2015 843-920-7600 Social Activities: 843-920-7600 Counseling phone: (843) 920-7600
Hatha Yoga class, beginning Monday. March 14th.
McColum Hall. Fee $15 for 15 week
841-345.
SIMPLE LIVING WORKSHOP Friday, March 10 a.m. To examine the consequences of homelessness and to reflect and share on the personal process and to reflect and share on the specific tools for helping individuals examine their lives at the United Ministries Center, 1250 Broadway at the United Ministries Center, 1250 Broadway at the United Ministries Center, 1250 Broadway at the United Ministries Center. To register call 844-496-3382 or visit www.unitedministries.org.
LOST AND FOUND
$3 for reflection of glasses. Name on frame. Joe
Luke, 6412-8138 or 941-0011.
2-27
"Found" advertisements are sponsored on a website called www.redhat.com, the State Bank, 98 & Kentucky and Malls Shopping Center.
Found: set of keys in front of Jayzahwet Tower.
Call Dick Himes at 864-3512 and identify
Found: in Wescoe one T-square, 864-1505, call and identify.
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
the GRAMOPHONE shop
800-1811 AWK FOR STATION
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
the GRAMOPHONE Shpp
801 1234 AMSTERDAM
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Thouss Loss Detection
Than Most Stereo Components
TREAT
MUSIC
MOVIES
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Com
5 70 2020 2021 2022 2023
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAMBERTGARDEN 824-901-0444
WANTED
Formal female roommate wanted to share 2 bedroom
room. Please contact campus and office
route. Call B52-7920.
2-847
Initial: Set of keys. Leftover leather with rose and
initial S: Call 864-1484 or 864-1482
3-2
Full size backpack (Kelty, Traillie; other name
and sleeping bag) B4-953-6989. 2-27
WANTED Classroom volunteers for children's
time between 8-30:00. You'll feel good if you
work with children.
Small female decubition found on Stewart Away.
Please call 815-6438 or 815-5947.
Found: High school Class ring in Wesley Bathroom. Call Jail and identify -841-540. 31-20
Found: Small, female Dachhund, on Stewart
Avenue. Please call 824-6548 or 814-3944.
2-27
Two bisexual gorillas. Excellent furnished cage.
Ross at 814-692-4544. No questions asked!^1
Ross at 814-692-4544. No questions asked!^1
Need one person to share spacious house with
two undergrads. $100 a month. #62-823. 3-2
Female roommates to share clean farm house
with country girl. 748-0837. 2:27
HELP WANTED
Female room needed. 2ED. Mobile home.
NiceRoom. On East 1915. 841-321-28; day 840-016-006
night 840-016-007.
WANTED-guitar teacher for 11 year old
begin. call 845-2629, a.m.
3-3
Photographer-artist engineer designed it, nominate. Photographer-artist engineer designed it, nominate. 75 year old country home located 82 miles north of Chicago. Storage in attic or basement, plenty of room for partial rent. Call Mike or Ken after a $40 deposit.
Wanted to rent, garage, prefer 2 car space. Call
Rick, 653-2069 after xx.
Found: Checkbook at Stables 10 p.m. Saturday
night—Call Stables
2-27
Found: Flight training book, 15th and Tenn. Call
442-6915
2:37
to play it no how!"
'If we don't got it you didn't want
Addresses wanted immediately!) Work at home on the job in Washington, D.C., American service, 1401 Winton Blvd., Suite 120. Mail resume to: M.D. Rapp, Office of the Chief Medical Officer
West of Hillcrost Bowl
**Boy's Club of Lawrence needs recreation supervisor for boys, grades 1-12. Needed immediately. Work Tues. through Fri. 3-8, 30. Sat. 10-6. Call 547-672 or 842-971. Good opportunity employer. er...
Sandy's Drive-In is now taking applications for
the $150 drive-in package, with a flat-price on food. Apply
up to $25 per day at sandy's drive-in.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
WANTED—Students for part-time sales in Life
Business. Send resumes to the University,
while you learn with our Internship Program.
Receive a $170 tuition fee at the Academy
Center, 265 Summer Street, 843-1535. Law-
rence National Bank, 212-964-3233.
Part time typist. Typing filings, running errands,
in office duties. Req. 5 yrs of experience or
office experience. 30 hrs. per week. Call for
information.
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
RECREATION'S FINEST
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
9th & iowa
No one under 18 admitted.
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
With pass - available at your ski-sports shop
at MONT BRIEI
BEGINNERS SKI LESSONS (50' Service Charge)
Foreign Auto Parts
Discounts for Do-It-Yourselfers
with Student I.D.'s
at MONT BLEU
Foreign Auto Service
Expert Repairs by
Factory Trained Mechanics
Service:
843-5288
PRAYER FOR THE SUN'S WISHES
FREE
JAMES
10 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekends
FIELDS
Open 7 days a week under new management. Prices
are $49, Monday - Friday; 25 less than weekend.
Mondays are Ladies' Day.
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
a quiet corner
3 p.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
Mattresses - Liners
Heaters - Frames
Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
THE LOUNGE
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
3 miles East of Lawrence off K-10
843-2363
KC 913-371-6577
Employment Opportunities
TRAVEL
SERVICES OFFERED
WHAT ARE YOU WORTH? If you're sick and need a doctor, you can spend much more, and with flexible hours set, with Northwestern Mutual Life. Call Robert L. Bauer at 813-753-1538. Layrene National Bank Bkp
Earn $250 per month of staffing:adding admin-
nants, managers, and supervisors. Addressed inver-
sals to Health Director and HR Co-
ordinator.
EUROPE
less 12 centsny
than
10 dax american payment
Coimbra
Cntr.
800-325-4867
Unitravel Charters
SALES MANAGEMENT TRAINEE
£17,000
Exceptional potential for rapid advancement in the job market, one of the top 30 companies in U.S. Defense, and experience with expo's, credit sharing and board placements. 946 Kansas City, Mo. 64106 (812) - 825-7460 64106 (812) - 825-7460
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009, 142, 150, 158, 158, 167. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
RIDES ___ RIDERS
MATH GOTO YOU DOWN! So if, so help early
104, 117, 119, 121, Call 841-1860
110, 111, Call 841-1860
EUROPE*ISPALEA*AFRICA*ASA - Travel diwala
Via Zebrina, 37, Poznan, Poland.
First Avenue, Tucker, Ga. 30044 (408)
421-655-5090, europe.ispalea.org
ELECTRONIC SERVICE - Professional, efficient service. Telephone: 612-549-3880. Guaranteed, Call Dave. 612-549-3880.
2. Male students need ride to and from New York over spring break. Will drive sharing bus.
SEE...
Pat Read
Indian Trader
Imported car
service problems?
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1306
10-5 Tues.-Sat.
TONY'S IMPORTS-
DATSUN
500 E. 23rd St. 842-0444
Songats
Gifts and Jewelry
BID MASS. Cashen
TRACTOR
Now Open Every Sunday 12 NOON
LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY
MOTOR
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets Admission Only *2.00 each Base or Watch
20 miles east of Topeka
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U.S. 40 Highway
861-844F
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
5 Nights a Week No Cover
NEW MODERN DECOR
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages, at
their own pace. The soft, fluffy atmosphere designed for sweet thought and gentle
feelings.
THE
Sandwiches — Pizza
Pool — American Shuffleboard
HIDEOUT
843-9404 CLUB
I
New Memberships Available
Class B Private Club
Open 11 a.m., no 1 a.m.
S-7
Women - worker
Wogner - worker
GATOR WEEKLY
SQUARE SHIRT CO., LTD.
SHAZAHM
WE PRINT
YTHING!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SCHNEIDER BECKENBERG
690-534-111
UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS A&M
COLLEGE OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
if You don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGES
16
Friday, February 27, 1976
University Daily Kansan
What type of people sign up for a BOCO Computer Date?
KΣ
Photo by Sue Meac
Let the Gators Dip Into Your Swamp Alligator Club-West Hills)
241
Photo by Sue Mead
Kappa Sig's Say "Heeey" For BOCO Computer Date
TANUMA
LAST DAY
BOCO Computer Date Match
Most computer date match services are for losers. You've heard the pitch — "lonely, divorced, widowed." Who would sign up for a date match like that?
This computer date match is for everybody - jocks, jikks, junks, jeans kicks, spare charges, tie changes, modern artists, com artists, smokers, tokens, rail's raih, reds' overcaked, underdressed, AM listeners, FR listeners, TV watchers, birdwatchers, baby sisters, baby sisters, penny pinchers, penny pinchers, taz, match bats, anarchists, reactionaries, hopper, narcis, KU Police: Greeks, dormies, townies, boozers, teetotalers, on easy on the knees on the kettup — you Mr. and MK Public.
Our computer can quickly search through thousands and find those special types with whom you are most likely to communicate and enjoy dates. There is no easy way you can predict you'll have a datemate. But even if your matches don't have a date, you can still use them.
THIS IS HOW IT WORKS
First, answer the questions below as honestly as possible. Mail the form to us with your check or money order for $3.50 or $2.75 for those mailed in groups of 8 or more. The deadline for application is Friday, February 7, 1976.
Our computer will compare your responses with those of all others and report the closest matches. Along with each match's name and phone number, you receive from the computer three separate scores of similar interests; attitudes and values; and appearances and background. You make the final decision on what's most important. You will receive between three and fifteen responses. At the end of the session, you will be invited to the BOCOM Computer Event Day. March 26, non-participants will be charged at least $10.10 to attend.
All information on your application will be held in strict confidence. Only your first name and telephone number will be released to others. The data you supply will be used only for matching with a compatible date. No data will be sold or in any way released to another group. Anyone getting your home will also be on your list so you may be certain that those who call and identify themselves really are computer date matches.
to participate in the BUCO Computer Date Match 76.
- You must be a registered student, faculty or staff member at University of Kansas, Lawrence
Send completed form and money for check or make out to the Board of Class Officers for $3.50 ($7.55) if b more fee.
BOCO Computer Date Match
P.O. BOX 3649
Lawrence, Ks. 66044
Use ball point pen. No pencils or felt pens please.
It is important for you to place an answer in each appropriate box. Items with a • MUST be answered. Think carefully. The following items will eliminate from your prospective match those persons whom you would not consider dating.
• am I l male, 2 female
• My height is H and □ inches.
My match must be no more than inches shorter than 1 am.
• age is J years younger or years older than 1 am.
• drink I never take drugs 2-open mind on soft drugs
My match must drink no more than 1 never take drugs 2-open mind on soft drugs
My match must drink at least 1 never take drugs 2-open mind on soft drugs
My match must smoke no more than 3 occasionally.
My match must smoke pot 4 often.
My match must smoke pot no more than 3 occasionally.
My match must smoke pot no more than 3 occasionally.
My match's attitude on drugs must be more liberal than 1 never take drugs 2-open mind on hard drugs
My match's attitude on drugs must be more liberal than 1 never take drugs 2-open mind on hard drugs
• am I undergraduate 2-graduate/professional
• my match must NOT be (if it matters) 3 faculty/staff
• my match must NOT be (if it matters) 1-American 2-floriser
• my race is Black 2-Caucasian 3-Oriental 4-Am. Indian
My match's race is Latino 6-Arab 7-Indian Indian
My match's race is Christian 3-President 4-Jewish
My migration 5-Chinese 6-Greek Orthodox 7-Moslem
My match's religion must NOT be (if it matters) 8-Unitarian 9-Qucker
My match's religion must NOT be (if it matters) 8-Unitarian 9-Qucker
• independent 2-independent
GOOD JOB
The following items will be used to select matches on the basis of background and appearances
- *My hair color is mostly (enter two if mixed)*
- **1** black - **2** brown - **3** blonde - **4** red
- **1** prefer my match's hair (ranked favorite to least favorite)
- **1** prefer my match's hair length to be
- **3** longer than average - **4** much longer than average
- **1** prefer my match's hair length to be
• **m**en | I have
• **2** side burns - **4** beard
• **1** clean shaven face - **2** moustache
• **2** side burns - **4** beard
• *(women)* I wear make-up
• **1** never life - **2** special occasions
• *(men)* I prefer matches who wear makeup
• **1** used approximately
• **2** dollars per year for clothes
• **3** pencils
• *The highest level of formal education*
- **1** grade school - **2** high school - **3** two-year college
- completed by my father or mother was
- **4** four-year college - **5** graduate/professional
- less than $8,000 - $8,000 - $15,000
- $16,000 - $30,000 - more than $35,000
• *Grew up most in a*
- **1** rural/small town - **2** medium town - **3** city
• *I prefers my match to be from*
- **1** large city - **4** large metropolis
$ \textcircled{c} $ 1976 Interpersonal Research, Inc.
Deadline - Today
Use ball point pen. No pencils or felt pens please.
1 Use ball point pen. No pencils or felt pen please.
Now let's find where your special interests are.
0] leaves me cold not interested
1] no experience but interested
2] familiar with it and interested
3] much into it
☑ Scuba Diving
☑ Bicycling
☑ Swimming
☑ Bowling
☑ Pool/Billards
Tennis
☑ Detector Sports
☑ Snow Skiing
☑ Water Skating
☑ Basketball
☑ Camping
☑ Softball
Horseback Riding
Ice Skating
☐ Golf
☐ Pinahill
☐ Travel
Culinary Western Music
☐ Folk Music
♠ Jazz
♠ Rock Music
♠ Classical Music
♠ Opera
♠ Group Singing
♠ Play a Musical Instrument
♠ Dance/Dance Lessons
♠ Attending Plays
♠ Reading, Non-Fiction
♠ Reading, Fiction
♠ Poetry
♠ Science Fiction
♠ Photography
Painting and Drawing
Art and Design
♠ Play Production and Acting
♠ Folk Dancing
Bridge
Backgammon
♠ Chess
Political Campaigning
Student Activism
Religious Education
Tranacional Meditation
♠ Yoga
♠ Micrology
♠ Health Foods
♠ Vegetarianism
If we missed any, you may write in special interests which you are much into (please print)
The following statements are intended for matching attitudes and values. Please enter the number closest to your reaction.
1 Strongly Disagree
2 Disagree
3 Neutral
4 Agree
5 Strongly Agree
Most of my friends regard me as a sensitive person.
I feel I am ready to settle down and get married.
I usually put things in order, from them.
A person can be very moral without being religious.
I would prefer to have a well-maintained old house rather than a new house.
Warmups should beRequired.
Motivate deal too explicit sex today.
I might want after I knew my partner for only a short time if I knew I was in love.
The great majority of our elected officials are really quite honest.
Two single people who are only strongly physically attracted to each other should have intercourse with them.
When you fall over head heels-in-love it's sure to be the real thing.
One isn't really a well-rounded person until one has sexual relations with several people.
I find my reluctant to make close friends with someone of another race.
I could not condone the asking another human being, even in war.
I read the newspaper's editorial page frequently.
I believe in a Supreme Being who controls our destiny.
I belong to many clubs and organizations.
I am curious and interested.
A couple should live together for a while before getting married.
If a member of my family wanted to merry someone of another race, I would try to talk him or her out of it.
I might be a higher级工作 to work at something personally rewarding.
Sex education should not be taught in the public school.
I would be reluctant to become friends with a homosexual of my own sex.
I find my frequently afraid to accept new challenges.
I are probably afraid to really fall in love with me.
I am proud of my body and I love to throw it off.
I attend religious services regularly and I also prefer a date who does also.
I would vote for a woman in President of the U.S. if she were qualified.
I am affected by religious things rather than a calm, peaceful thing.
I would like to have a large family.
I feel ill at ease when someone tells a djike job in mixed company.
When I hear a good joke, I usually remember it and relate it to my friends.
I let go at large.
Each person should pay their own on a way to.
I definitely plan to go to graduate school.
I believe that if we were wealthy, most of my problems would take care of themselves.
I would take an exam if my degree were in jeopardy and if there were college of getting caught.
I am going to college because my parents urged me.
I often like to spend some time by myself.
Working wives are deserving their family for a career.
I usually try to take part in people's activities.
I believe in a God who answers my prayers.
I would rather do things with others than by myself.
Presents a responsibility to provide religious training for their children.
I am aware of personal matters I love very much.
I am more a listener and follower than a leader.
If my child, brother, or sister were charged with a serious crime, I would lie under oath to protect him or her.
I feel I am easily hearing friend tell me his or her problems.
I give a special delight from playing handmade pikachu poke on friends.
The more in love one becomes, the more jealous one is.
* Name: last,
first for:
mailing label:
* Local mailing
address for:
mailing label:
* Include dorn reason, no.:
include dorn name:
*Your first name or nickname unique to your phone
number likely this name is listed here and your
last name is listed there (if applicable)
*Local phone if you have none
list a number where you can (913) [ ] [ ] [ ]
phone Number
*ENTER ADDRESS CODE:
21 Oliver
22 Pearson
23 Seifeldt
24 Butterfield
25 Stephenson
26 Elsworth
27 Warkins
28 Other campus
29 Fraternity
30 Hangar
31 Sorrento
32 Joseph R. Pearson
33 Chicago lawrence 66044
34 Lewis
35 Michigan
36 Miller
37 Nassau
READ CAREFULLY — THIS PARAGRAPH IS A RELEASE OF BOCO AND INTERPERIAL RESEARCH FROM ANY LIABILITY ARISING FROM PERSON, INJURED AND PROPERTY DAMAGES WHICH MAY SUBSTAIN IN CONNECTION WITH THIS CONTRACT. IT MUST BE READ BY THE AUTHOR.
In consideration of Board of Class Officers (IBCOC and Interpersonal Research) comparing my responses on their form to those responses of all others, the reported matches as set down in the above contract, I hereby release IBCOC and Interpersonal Research, their agents, officers, servants, and employees of and from any and all liability, claims, damages, and expenses incurred by me during this research. IBCOC and Interpersonal Research will maintain and shall not substitute any other person or entity with that subsequently accrued to me by reason grown upon or in my connection with, directly or indirectly, services received by IBCOC and Interpersonal Research under this contract. This contract will be binding upon my distributions, hears, text
or AK. Recommendation and permission may be obtained from the individual.
They acknowledge and agree that **i**. That they have received the foregoing understatement, indemnity, and证自同意. **b).** That they are at least 18 years of age and of mind sound; **c).** That they are a student, faculty or staff member of University of Kansas and that BKU has the permission to use their name in reports, publications, presentations, and communication.
*DATE X___
⓪ 1976 International Research Inc.