Disparities possible in operation of 2 deans offices
By LIZ LEECH
Some University of Kansas personnel are questioning operations by the offices of the dean of men and the dean of women as a result of a study by the American Association of Dysfunctional discrimination in the treatment of students.
The following questions and implications have indicated:
—That some areas of operation by the two offices were overlooked in detail is depicted by the sub-
directors. They are more needful, however.
-That some disparities in the staffing and budgeting of the offices exist.
That possible implications of the disparities may be resulting in unequal services offered to men and women; that the two offices may have overlaps and that some of those disparities and similarities may be significant.
THE SUBCOMMITTEE studying the treatment of students was part of the TIX Self-Evaluation committee that submitted its report several weeks later. The Executive Vice chancellor; Mike Davis, University general counsel; and David Robinson, former executive vice chancellor for the RU Medical Center, now vice chancellor.
Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director and chairman of the TITLE IX treatment of students subcommittee, said yesterday that the steering committee had asked for the duties and responsibilities offered after that, Waugh said, his committee was to function as a fact-finding force for the steering committee.
"We have overlooked some things and one of the things we overlooked were some budgetary and staff factors in the dean of men and dean of women's offices," Waugh conceded.
He said both offices had responded to the subcommittee's requests for listing of the services offered.
Waugh said the subcommittee, however, didn't request and neither office provided—copies or materials.
THE DEAN OF WOMEN'S office refused to submit a copy of its 1975-76 budget to the Kansan. Figures for the office were then obtained from the 1975-76 University budget in the KU Archives.
The dean of men's office submitted a copy of its budget to the Kansan.
The dean of men's office employs three full-time staff members and two full-time secretaries. The office also employs four half-time graduate assistants, two vice-president assistants, Donald Alderson, deacon of men, said.
The dean of women's office is staffed by seven full-time employees and two full-time secretaries. One graduate student works there half-time. Eight student assistants work part-time.
The total salaries of the dean of men's office full-time employees (excluding the two secretaries) and ten junior officers are:
The total for the seven dean of women is office full-
time, excluding the two full-time secre-
cretaries. 883.80
The Dean of Women's half-time graduate assistant is paid $4,800.
The four part-time student assistants in the Dean of Men's office receive a total of $3,850.
-TELEPHONE EXPENSES FOR the dean of
mrs. offees amounted to $1,464 and the Dean of
Mrs. Offees amounted to $1,464.
The eight pair 'time students assisting workers for the Dead of Women's office a total of $8,400.
The Dean of Men's office showed $6,560 was budgeted for supplies and expenses, not including the cost of cleaning.
—the total amount spent for supplies and
expenses for the dean of women's offices $117,000.
"We didn't get into that (the budget) until it was too late to make the deadline." Waunda said.
The subcommittee worked hard and spent a lot of time reviewing information, Waugh said, but there was no way to make sure it was correct.
Waugh said he didn't know whether the dean of men and women's staff and budget disparities would be a future problem because his sub-committee had never received enough information on them.
Shankel, Robinson and Davis were informed of the differences, Waugh said, and the subcommittee mentioned in its report that a closer look was needed in some areas.
"I DON'T THINK THAT anything we were looking into was earth-shattering, but it doesn't look like it."
Shanki said the reports might be sent back to the subcommittees for further study in some areas.
He said the steering committee would later make recommendations to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes
The subcommittee's reports haven't been released to the public and Shankar said he didn't know of any issues.
He said it was too early to identify the areas that needed further studying.
"There's a lot of interesting information in it (the compiled report)." Shankel said.
Waugh said, "We feel that there are probably going to be other areas that will need to receive attention again because, with the amount of work we had, it was difficult to try to get everything."
Bonnie Ritter Patton, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, said that she had received no complaints about the funding and staffing differences between her office, but that some questions had been raised.
SHE SAID THAT SERVICES available to students should be equal and, if they weren't, they would not.
Because of the difference in the deam of men's and some persons said the services provided by the office.
participated in the two offices. The dean of women's office offered information on housing, including residence halls, schoolhalls and sororities, information about human sexuality, women's security programs, women's social services, career and personal counseling, women's organizations and the Reading and Study Skills Program.
★ ★ ★
See DISPARITIES. page 5
Release of Title IX report is doubtful
A Title IX report containing guidelines to end possible sex discrimination at KU is being studied by a three-member administrative steering committee and might not be made public when it is finished.
Del Stakel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday the report and the committee's recommendations might be returned to the investigating committee. The committee will look at the reasons of discrimination to obtain additional information.
Shankel said that he and Mike Davis, University general counsel, were writing drafts of some of the reports' sections. They will probably issue a statement in the fall to suggest possible areas for improvement at RU.
The report was submitted before spring break to the steering committee. Davis, Shankel and W. Robinson, former acting executive vice chair of the steering committee, are the members of the steering committee.
The subcommittees studied treatment of students, hiring practices and admission policies.
SNOW
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Burge envisions planning needs for satellite union
Vol.86 No.114
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Thursday, April 1, 1976
PRAIRIE
See page 6
Copland smile
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
New York Music Critics Circle Award, grimmed widely at a panel discussion with KU faculty at Swarthmall Hall yesterday
Composer Aaron Copland, winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the
Copland still 'open-eared'
By PEGGY BASS
When one hears the name "Aaron Copland," one concludes up the image of a small man with white hair, wearing a conical hat. But Aaron Copland does more than this.
The 78-year-old Copland revealed to a crowd of about 400 yesterday in Swarthout Hall that, although he is old in years, his musical vigor is as young as when he first entered the music scene in 1917 as a student of composer Rubin Goldmark.
"Music is a living art," he said, "We have broadened our notions about what music means."
Stravinsky isn't the only composer
Copland admires. He said he also had ad-
dresses by Mozart, Wagner and Sibelius.
Traffic Board's request draws Tasheff's criticism
David Del Tredici, and for the music of today.
His interest in contemporary music has led Copeland to take an active part in many associations for the promotion of American music. He has helped organize groups that emphasized Americanism in American music.
See COPLAND page 7
Iragr Stravinsky, a Russian composer whom Copland admires, did so. "And then it was" (1982).
Teddie Tasheff, student body president, yesterday sharply criticized the parking and traffic board's 1976-77 budget request and issued a statement of a parking fees fund of $496.837.
Copland is an example of an "open-ended" composer. His compositions range from ballads to balletics to one of his best-known works, *Spring.* "won a Pulitzer prize in 1945
Tasheff said the state limited how much of the fund could be spent. She said the department could spend $167,000 until the large surplus for the next fiscal budget.
By RANDY CZARLINSKY
Staff Writer
Because there is a wider availability of music, a composer should have an open mind and an "open ear" to all kinds of compositions, he said.
Tasheff said she talked with Martin Jones, associate vice chancellor for business affairs, who told her that the fund originated in fiscal year 1974 when permit fees increased, and the parking and traffic collection collected more money than expected.
The parking fees fund is a combination of money received from parking ticket fines
"You don't sit down and say, 'I'd like to write something.'" he said. "You have to have an idea first. Something tells your listener how much you are an instinctive feeling, not just chance."
Members of the parking and traffic board save different reactions to Taseff's fire.
Hugh Cotton, associate dean of pharmacy and board chairman, would say only that he thought the fund didn't exist. He refused to comment on Tassel's other charges.
Charles Burrows, associate comptroller,
said the fund does exist.
Steve Brown, White City senior and board member, said he had specifically asked Iml Davis, office manager of police and parking, about the existence of such a fund at Tuesday's meeting of the parking and parking committee, that the fund existed, according to Brown.
"I'm glad somebody found out something we didn't know." Brown said.
Copland said composers didn't start writing at the piano until it was shown that
Steve Chucovich, Pleasant Hill, Mo,
junior and board member, said, "This is the
Copland said this American emphasis didn't come until the jazz era of the 1900s. He said more emphasis had also been placed on the availability of all types of music.
He said that although he had a diversity of style he didn't adhere to any number of
"Anyone can turn on to any kind of music," he said.
Dykes fights possible budget cut
The bill was approved yesterday by the Kansas House of Representatives. It cut from 8 per cent to 6 per cent the amount of school boards could increase spending limits.
That reduction could have an indirect effect on higher education funding, because some legislators had previously opposed increases in salaries and other operating expenditures (OE) as high as those in the current KU budget bill.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said in night that the University was contacting legislators and alumni to lobby against a renewed possibility that the University of Kansas' 1977 budget would be reduced in the Kansas Legislature.
Cuts in the public school bill could compel those legislators to renew efforts to cut funding.
The bill was hastily proposed and approved after Gov. Robert F. Bennett vtoed a public school finance bill Tuesday that increased billion more than his recommendations.
Those levels are now an 8 per cent increase for faculty salaries and a 10 per cent increase for staff salaries.
Dykes said he was concerned about the possible effect that a reduced public school funding bill might have on KU's appropriations.
"But you'll be in trouble," he said, if the public school bill remains at its current level.
Buzzi said that if the public school spending limit were increased to 7 percent, "we would be in good shape on higher education."
According to State Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence, some legislators think the reductions in public school funding should be made by more cuts in higher education funding.
Staff Writer
He said there was a trend in the House to keep the two funding bills tied together.
recommended increases 2 per cent higher for both.
Dykes said he had contacted alumni leaders and asked them to intervene as lobbists for KU. He said he was planning to send letters to alumni across Kansas to urge them to contact legislators who return to the state legislature a legislative recess planned for next week.
"There are people mad enough at this point because they're not able to compromise," he said, "that they may say 'The hell with it,' and chop it down to 5 per cent.
By JIM COBB
"And that's a far cry from what we have now."
Buzzard said Lawrence legislators had been lobbying with other legislators to persuade them to raise the public school spending rate and higher education increases at current levels.
He said that he had talked to House
"I don't think we should panic yet," Buzii said. "Sometimes things happen and they can be worked out—that's the reason to have a conference committee."
Speaker Duane S. (Pete) McGill, WRinfield, and that McGill wanted compromise measures. McGill has been a college administrator for state colleges and universities.
The higher education funding bill will be considered in conference committee after discussion.
Buzzed he expected legislators to take a "wait-andsee" attitude, until approval of the bill was reached.
She said she understood that the parking and traffic board established its budget first, then decided the cost of fees, such as parking costs and ticket fines.
"It's a tense and emotional situation," he said. "A great man of us feel very strongly."
"I would hope that some of us would be more open-minded than to make drastic cuts. We should realize the responsibility that we have."
Cotton said Tuesday night that fee increases were necessary to meet the 1976-77 parking services budget. He said several cars had been parked in his area that wouldn't be done without higher fees.
The parking and traffic budget request will go before University Council today.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said he hoped the legislature would realize that KU couldn't raise local taxes to fund raises for higher education.
first time I've heard about it. I'm not surprised, but I didn't think it was that large."
"Now that we know they have a working balance," she said, "we will want help in getting it."
Tasheff said the security and parking departments were separate. Little, if any, of the parking department's budget goes to security, she said.
"Tashef said she didn't think the council would approve the budget
The lower spending limits for the public school bill would mean increased local property taxes to fund increased costs in public education.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said, "It a fund we've always had that fee
receipts go into, but I hadn't" realized the
death was that large until the last few
days."
The security department receives its money from the University and there is usual security at the campus.
"I think there is discontent within several groups that would be affected," Tasheff said. "Handicapped persons and students in the area were distressed over the proposed increases."
"There are no justifications for increases
in the balance of the surplus being so
high."
However, Tashseff said that, during fiscal year 1974, the department spent nothing on new equipment.
Shandel said that in past years public school financing had increased more than
Residence halls aren't getting adequate service as it is, she said.
"In those years, our budget wasn't tied to theirs," he said. "I hope it won't be tied to my own."
Staff Writer
By JERRY SEIB
Budget review today for parking services
University board members will review parking services budget increases today as the school considers an expansion of its parking facilities.
Parking services has requested that its budget for next year be increased by 8 per cent. Parking officials estimate that Hugh Cotton, chairman of the parking and traffic board, plans to
The parking and traffic board has campus parking permits to meet the higher
If parking permit increases requested by the parking and traffic board are approved, the estimates show revenue from parking will be $192,771 in the academic year 1997. $172,871
Parking and traffic board member Steve Chucovich, Pleasant Hill, M., Mo., junior, estimated last night that figure would be $50 million a year's permit receipts of about $165,000.
He said the $165,000 estimate represented permit revenues that would be received at this year's prices and 1974-75 sales levels, the latest available.
Cotton said the fee increases were necessary to improve parking lot maintenance. He said funds that had been earned for parking lot improvements this year were being used in other areas of the parking services budget.
The estimates show that $59,500 of the
★★
Budgets and income
**Morgan Magins** for 1973-78 and 1979-77;
1978-79.
Estimin and revenue (permits and fines)
$240.60
Parking Budgets and Income for 1975-76 and 1976-77;
| | |
| :--- | :--- |
| Fund A (incurses & flares) | $240,000 |
| Fund B (incurses & flares) | $250,000 |
| Fund C | $300,000 |
| Fund D | $300,000 |
| Total | $900,000 |
Perons
$118,771
Motors
$ 7,269
Meters
$ 7,269
Carbureators
$ 13,443
Athletic lids
$ 13,443
Machines
$ 13,443
Total
$602,718
Total expenditures
Sales and expenses
$243,008
Sales and net maintenance
$828,008
★ ★
$80,000 allocated for parking lot maintenance this year. You will cover all parts of the budget.
After the fee increases, only $1,822 of the $9,000 budgeted for maintenance will have to be covered.
Cotton said the maintenance fund was the "fudge factor" in the parking services budget, because more money was allocated to the security service to provide a reserve of revenue.
He said too much money was being taken from the fund, however, and parking lot is empty.
The budget is also being increased because of planned salary increases for employees.
★ ★ ★
Parking services estimated revenue
BREAKDOWN OF PARKING SERVICES ESTIMATED REVENUE FOR 1977
(USD)
Type of Permit Ferry Yard Revenue Summer Yard Revenue Summer Yard Revenue Universal 78 3,750 3 60 $ 40 8 $ 140 Miami Beach 1,494 6,250 10 80 Browny Yellow 663 38,566 361 10,404 141 1,309 Brown Yellow 663 38,566 361 10,404 141 1,309 Residence Hall - Spruce Apale 1,338 29,943 653 6,219 102 818 Compass Pass (currently free) 1,338 29,943 653 6,219 102 818 Compass Pass (currently free) 1,663 6,219 1,373 1,373 109 Service 1,663 6,219 1,373 1,373 109 Hand-Hand 118 5,428 340 114 114 Service 118 5,428 340 114 114 Hand-Hand 21 185 0 0 0 0 184 Daily Field Ex. 71 185 0 0 0 0 184 Machine Ex. 81 185 0 0 0 0 184 Second Car 602 4,124 80 727 37 138
Permit Total Revenue: $123,771.
recalized totals), haven't previously been sold
TOTALS ... 7,863 ... $154,547 ... 9,276 ... $253,091 ... 646 ... $26,323
Percent Total Revenue: $128,771 ... $154,547 ... 9,276 ... $253,091 ... 646 ... $26,323
2
Thursday, April 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Quinlan ruling reversed
TRENTON, N.J., Karen Anne Quinlan's wife won the right in New Jersey supreme Court to allow his comatose daughter to die, climaking a legal battle over her estate.
the court, in a 7-ruling, appointed the father, Joseph Quinian, as legal guardian of his 22-year-old daughter and said he could let her die if he could find competent medical authorities who would agree with him that there was no reasonable possibility she would recover.
the New Jersey attorney general said there would be no immediate decision on whether the state would appeal the court's decision.
"This is the decision we have been praying for," Julia Quinlan, Karen's mother, said.
Teamsters begin strike
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, III. — Teams set up scattered picket lines in several and early today as negotiations on a nationwide contract continued past the midst of
The Teamsters Union represents 400,000 drivers who handle 60 per cent of the nation's manufactured goods.
Representatives of the Teamsters Union and the trucking industry met with President Gerald R. Ford's labor negotiators in this Chicago suburb. The strike deadline had been set for midnight but it passed with no new word from the president, while some Teamsters along the East Coast and in Detroit started picking.
Concert-goers arrested
HAYS—Ellis County authorities are investigating a disturbance that occurred during a concert Tuesday night at Fort Hays State College.
Officials said several members of a crowd attending a Waylon Jennings concert sponsored by the college began destroying chairs set up on the floor of a sports arena.
Several persons were arrested for drunken and disorderly conduct. Sheriff Dave Wasinger said those arrested weren't students.
In the first few rows, 150 empty whisky bottles and several cases of empty beer cans were collected, despite door checks to prevent students from bringing in alcohol.
Vaccine scarcity predicted
WASHINGTON—A representative of the drug industry said yesterday the industry probably couldn't make enough vaccine by next fall to protect every American against a virus similar to the swine flu that killed 20 million people in a 1918-19 worldwide epidemic.
But C. Joseph Stieler, president of the Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association, told Congress there was no reason to believe everyone would want to use the vaccine.
Reagan rips foreign policy
Ronald Reagan spoke to a television audience last night and said the nation was "wandering without aim" in its foreign policy and was dangerously inferior in
Rengan said he didn't want to live "in a world where the Soviet Union is No. 1." and quoted Henry Klusingen as saying his job as Secretary of State was to "be a diplomat in a world where all of us were citizens."
Kissinger's top aide said the quotation Reagan attributed to Kissinger was false and "totally irresponsible."
Hearst's year on the run detailed in Rolling Stone
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Patricia Hearst helped her Symbionese Liberty Army companions research possible terrorist targets and slept with William Harris even though she despised him, Rolling Stone magazine reported yesterday.
In the story, authors Howard Kohn and David Weir report that:
In a story on Hearst's so-called "missing year" in the radical underground, the magazine said she and the Harris received extensive aid from supporters but that Harris' military posture had alienated him around him, including his wife and Hearst.
— The Harrises compiled lists of potential assassination victims, including several Oakland policemen and San Francisco's police chief, and researched a number of bombing targets in the Bay area. Hearst helped research unspecified targets, although she didn't agree with the violent proposals of the Harrises.
— The Harrises planned an ambitious scheme to free two lagged SLA members, Russell Little and Joseph Remuir, but the plan when they couldn't get enough help.
Kohn and Weir didn't disclose the sources for their story, which contains details of Steven Soliah's contact with Hearst and his conversations with Harris.
Solilah refused to comment when he was asked if he was the source for the Rolling Stone article, which makes no mention of his Sacred Abbey bank holdup.
Heart, kidnapped by the SLA in February 1974, was convicted March 20 of bank robbery. He was sentenced to two years.
on state assault, robbery and kidnap charges in Los Angeles.
Heartst said at her bank robbery trial that she continually feared for her life while in the custody of Mr. Moore.
Transit union defies court, plans NY strike
NEW YORK (AP) - A court order barring a walkout of transit workers was issued here yesterday, but union leaders voiced defiance and went ahead with plans for an overhaul of the subway strike at midnight. A strike word strung three million daily passengers.
"They can serve all the injunctions they want," said a spokesman for the 34,000-member AFL-CIO Transport Workers Union. "An injunction won't stop a strike nor end one. Only good-faith negotiations will do that."
But reports from a three-man team of labor mediators who were shepherding contract talks between the Transport Union and the Transit Authority were grim.
The union sought an increase in wages that now average $16,541 a year. But the city was limited under state mandate from raising wages, except on a deferred basis or as a cost-of-living reward for improved productivity.
The Transit Authority claimed it was hurt by its city's fiscal crisis and near-burden on the
Olympia Brewing Company, Olympia, Washington *OLY*#
range
919 with a
whey
invent
national tool. he
years of thrust
of millions of vans
A basketball game tonight between the Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) and the city of Lawrence will be used as a fundraiser and publicity project.
The newly elected members of University Council will fill positions that will be vacated May 25. Council members are elected for three years with staggered
The game is at 7:30 p.m. in West Junior High School.
Judy Kroeger, CAA director, said Monday the basketball game was one of the activities planned to publicize Consumer Week, which continues through Sunday.
Council members elected
Council members are distributed among University schools and departments in the region.
Two positions on the Athletic Board were filled also.
Four substitute members were also elected
Basketball game pairs CAA, city
Thirteen new members were elected to
Tinberre Council during the past two
years.
Some things never change
First hinted at in 1919 with a
runtier for a tool
with which to open milk
and fruit cans', the sleek
steel line of the classic
beer hook had to await
the invention of the beer
can by American Can in
1935.
When employee Dewey
Sampson was detailed to invent
this penultimately functional tool, he succeeded in uniting 30 years of thirsty
throats with the contents of millions of cans
of Ole.
It took will and ingenuity and the result
just can be improved upon. The same goes for Oly.
Some things never change. A great beer doesn't change.
Olympia never will
She said the CAA would match its team against persons from the Lawrence City Commission and the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
Proceeds from the game will go toward general day-to-day expenses of the CAA, Kroeger said, including the printing of consumer pamphlets.
OLYMPIA Beer doesn't get any better.
Kroger said most of the CAA's money had come from the Student Senate. Last year the organization also received revenue-sharing money from the city, she said, but fund-raising activities are still necessary to meet expenses.
In addition to the basketball game, a consumer awareness display is being shown.
Representatives of the School of Law and the School of Business were admitted to the council to ensure representation of these schools, although their representatives weren't among the 13 who received the most votes.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 21;
Education, 3; Fine Arts, 1; Journalism, 1;
Law, 1; Libraries, 2; Minority Affairs, 1;
Marmel, 1; Social Welfare. 1.
A total of 386 Faculty Senate members voted for Council University members and 146 did not.
Elected to the athletic board were Robert Casad, professor of law, for a three-year term; and Gerhard Zather, professor of English, for a one-year term.
Elected to University Council were:
Albert Biggs, professor of electrical engineering; Sherry Borgers, assistant professor of counseling and curriculum and instruction; Robert Gould, assistant professor of architecture and urban design; Richard Sillman, professor of science and Slavic and Soviet area studies.
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian Studies and Oriental languages and literature; Donald Marquis, assistant professor of philosophy; Felix Moos, professor of anthropology; and Don Panton, assistant professor of business.
Flora Silini, assistant professor of piano; Mary Townsend, assistant professor of psychology; William Westerbeke, associate professor of law; Anita White, professor of anthropology; and M. Erik Wright, professor of psychology.
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If you want to dine at China, Japan, India, Thailand, Pakistan
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International Festival
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Place: UNION BUILDING
2:00-5:00 p.m.
10:00-11:00 p.m.
See the cultural displays of various nations at Big 8 & Jayhawk Rooms.
B. Banquet of Nations: 5:00-7:00 p.m.
Songs, Dances, Folk Music, Plays, etc.
C. Performances: 7:00-10:00 p.m.
Everybody Welcomed
Sponored by International Club, funded by student activity fees.
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Shipment of Both Long and Short Sleeve Authentic Western Shirts.
STRAW HATS...$9.00
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Ellizabeth Hanford Dole Attorney and Federal Trade Commissioner will speak on Friday, April 9 7 p.m. Big 8 Room Kansas Union
In connection with the weekend career planning conference, "Careers Don't Just Happen"
Banquet begins at 6 p.m. Tickets are available for $3.50 at
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Sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women This organization is funded from the Student ActivityFee.
Selling something? Call us
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 1, 1976
3
KANU gets programing award
From its offices atp Mt Oread, KANU-
se or some of its private income to
popularize the business.
And since last month, the future has appeared to be bright for the station.
KANU, the University of Kansas' pulp radio station, received an award last month for excellence in children's programming from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) at it's annual conference in Washington, D.C.
And the station's fund-raising drive for programming costs topped its goal of $850,000.
The award from CPB marked the second consecutive year KANU had won an award from the organization. This year, 65 stations were in seven categories at the conference.
Last year the station was given an award for excellence in cultural documentaries, Les Casley, the station's development director and Lawrence junior, said yesterday.
"WE'RE ONE of the very few stations who have won this amount of awards in such a short time," Easley said, referring to the sixth annual conference.
KANU won the CPB child's award for *Programs in Fundraising*, an 80-minute fairy tale. It was also awarded by the United Nations.
Mark J. Klughan, KANU producer,
wrote and produced the program,
which was narrated by A.B. Ewing, 703. N.3r.
said Ewing is an elderly lady who "has a
Performances student awards highlight recital
The Spring Honors Recital last night was more than an evening of entertainment. Scholarships and awards were given to several students in KU's School of Fine Arts after a performance by six soloists and a quartet.
David Wehr, Richmond, Ky., Junior.
Tavid Richmond, Music Club Carl A. Prower Award.
The KU chapters of Sigma Alpha Iota and Mu Phi Epsilon, women's music societies, award awards to Hui Hawley, Independence, award awards to Catherine Peavy, Kansas City, Kan., senior
Scholarships from Pi Kappa Lambda, a national honorary music society, were given to Martin Agee, Fort Collins, Colo.; freshman; Janice Parada, Chesterfield, Mo.; freshman; Alecia Toner, Caney freshman; Kevin Crudler, Plymouth, Mich.; freshman; Karen Laskey, Moorehead, Mo.; freshman; R. Neu, Reu, Coloridae, Neb.; freshman, Joy Hayes, Cleveland Heights, Ohio, sophomore; Carla Edwards, Liberty, Ohio, sophomore; Ondiff Coffman, Bonner Springs junior; and Steve Sumway, Lawrence实习。
delightful way of communicating with people."
Membership invitations from us society
are offered to selected juniors, seniors and
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"Flatlands" was cited by CPB for "developing and reinforcing in children an appreciation for the universal struggled to escape stereotyping."
Klugman said "Flatlands" was a mythical kingdom of two-dimensional people. The people have height and width, but there is a result they aren't well-rounded, he said.
EVERYBODY LIVES behind doors in Flatlands, he said, except for one dissenting "flat," who is constantly exploring and questioning other people. The program ends with a dissonant realizing that all people are locked in different categories and struggling to escape.
The program uses some Beaelles' songs and one song by Randy Newman, but Klugman said it was the weird sound dimmicks that attracted young kids.
EASLEY SAID KANU was exploring the
possibility of making "Flatlands" available as a 'tape grade schools in Kansas. Also, the program will be aired in May as a guest speaker in The Spider's series, "The Spider's Web," be.
Fasley said that in awarding KANU, CPB compliments the station by calling it one of the leading public radio stations in the country.
The station's listeners reaffirmed this belief, he said, with more than $21,000 in pledges last month's "Campaign for Excellence" fund drive. He said there were more than 1,000 listeners who joined the campaign, most of them are from Lawrence, Kansas and Topela, he said but some are from St. Joseph, Mo., and Falls City, Neb.
This year's campaign, which was KANU's third annual fund drive, was its most successful to date. Easley said. The highest figure before this year was $15,000.
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Thursday, April 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Fears fog merger
For a time it seemed as if we would be rushed headlong into an ill-prepared scheme in which women's athletics would be "merged" with men's athletics, losing most all autonomy and perceptibly gaining little. Now, we are assured, the move is being put off for at least a year.
THE WOMEN athletes have expressed a fear of Clyde Walker and the KUAC, perhaps justifiably so. Most of the women's strongest programs are in non-revenue sports such as softball, field hockey and volleyball. Women have no real equivalent of football as a money maker and the basketball squad has just recently been able to offer a few scholarships and schedule some powerful teams. Under Walker, they were afraid that these programs would be shoved aside and all gains would be lost.
Title IX never really said anything about "merging" or subjugating one
program to another—only that the two should be equal. It is now up to the administration and various committees to decide how such an "equal" plan by next vear,
IT'S RIDICULOUS to argue that women's athletics could obtain truly separate but equal facilities. Neither the state nor alumni are going to go for another Allen Field House for basketball and volleyball or a Memorial Stadium for field hockey. But they should go for a few things like dressing rooms for female athletes and better upkeep of the present fields. It seems ironic that the softball team must go off campus to find suitable playing fields.
It is hoped that with a little more thought and planning a program acceptable to both men and women athletes can be developed—and developed with the help of suggestions. By Betty Haeagel Associate Editor
People will pay more for parking privileges
As the parking services division works toward paying expenses, people will find themselves spending more and more for the privilege of parking on campus. For if the recommendations are accepted, all parking permits will be raised for the 1976-77 school year—some as much as $20.
THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas police department is divided into two areas: parking services and the police division. The police division, financed by the state, is concerned with providing campus security and enforcing traffic regulations. The parking services division provides for parking lot maintenance and a system of parking permits and the ticketing of violators.
Unlike the police division, parking services doesn't receive any state aid and must be self-sufficient. The money in the collection is the making of permits and the collection of fines.
REVENUE IS used by the division to pay employees, cover paper and equipment costs and finance maintenance work on the lots. Because of salary raises that occurred this year and are expected for next year, the division has found itself short of funds. This year's prepaid cost of $340,000 far fall short of next year's predicted expenditures of $433,088. Even with the recommended permit increases, the division expects to have at least an $11,000 deficit.
No one will be happy about having to pay more to park, especially when they are parking where they live or work, but at least the new price raises take into account the location of the lot. Now, practically all of the permits cost $30. It doesn't make any difference whether the lot is behind Strong Hall or by Allen Field House. Under the new pricing, permits would range from $50 to $28, depending upon the lot's proximity to the center of campus.
WHAT IT COMES down to is the question of how far a person thinks that
he can walk. If he is willing to park his car and take a 5 or 10 minute walk, he will be able to park cheaper than if he is driving on the back door of a particular building.
The residence hall parking permits, which the proposal would raise from $15 to $17, will still be 50 cents cheaper than they were in 1974. Many students think they have spent more than $1,000 to park in front of the place they have spent more than $1,000 to live in.
THIS COMPAINT is understandable but it won't carry much weight in the parking services division. After all, with the price raise, the division anticipates increased use from residence halls and Sprague Apartment parks permits in 1976-77.
With the system as it is now, there are too many people who want to park on campus than there are spaces. To catch the violators and to insure that the people who buy permits can find places to park, the division must spend money on wages for lot patrollers and on the cost of necessary equipment. These costs then get passed on to the permit buyers.
THIS IS certainly far from a perfect solution but what else can be done? Surround the Campanile with asphalt parking lots and allow everyone to park free of charge? But then who would pay for the enormous expenses of building the lots? Raise tuition to cover the maintenance of lots and then distribute stickers according to need? This would penalize the people who don't own cars.
Parking problems will continue to plague the University. Studies can be carried out to find ways to cut costs and improve efficiency but as long as inflation continues to raise the costs of parking, you are going to keep parking will keep increasing. And except for determining an equitable way to pass these expenses to car owners, there is really little money can do about it. By Marne Rindom
By Marine Kindom Contributing Writer
MEN'S
ATHLETIC
DEPT.
WOMEN'S
ATHLETIC
DEPT.
Clyde
'JUST GETTING Δ HEAD START ON Δ LITTLE REMODELING, MARIAN '
Strong inherits the meek
(Note: The following is an excerpt from the as-of-yet unpublished literary master's thesis of Dr. John D. Academic Underground" written by an anonymous KU administrator. It was originally found jammed inside an old warehouse on the basement of Strong Hall.)
I am a small-time administrator. I am a spilete administrative petty officer. I think my stationery is unofficial.
BESIDES, I am timid in the extreme—at least to the extent of fearing the chancellor (1) for the chance to not be timid, but I am.)
Actually, I don't know a damn thing about my position. I'm not even sure that it is unnecessary. I can't under表型 IX investigation and never have the investigators and the chancellor. I must be doing something right.
o sir. I refuse to see the
cancerolver simply out of spite.
I will probably fail to understand,
you may even think it is the
cancerolver who won't see you
or that you won't be able to tell
I will not be able to tell you
precisely whom I will injure by my spite. I know perfectly well that I am not giving the chance to kill him. I know very well that the him. I know very well that the
gnashed my teeth at them and gnashed insatiably whenever I succeeded in distressing them. I almost always succeeded.
Most of them were timid folk;
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
PATRICK JOHNSON
meaninglessness of my job will harm only myself. (Well, maybe the taxpayers and students).
AND YET, IF I don't seek out
the chancellor, it is out of spite.
My stationary is unofficial?
Good, let it be unofficial
and give me some unofficial pencils,
too!
I have been working at this job for a long time--about 30 years. Now I am 55. I used to have an office on the second floor of Strong; today I do not. I am in the basement.
But in my glory days I was a mean administrator. I was rude, and found pleasure in it. I knew not how to find the office my office needed help, I
naturally—students. But there were also student politics, among them one I really enjoyed to submit and chattered revoltingly. That idiot came to my office very Friday afternoon for a year and a half. Finally I got off the ship and he stopped chattering. I LIED JUST now when I said I was mean. I lied out of pure spite. It's just that I'm sick and being so colorless and unnoticed.
I could not become malicious.
In fact, I could not become anything; neither hated nor loved, neither liberal nor conservative. I cannot even get on committees.
And now I am eking out my days in this deserted corner of Strong's basement, tawning up the windows and useless consolation that intelligent man cannot seriously become anything. Yes, sir, an intelligent 20th-century college student with a more than a decade crot二
BUT I WILL! 我 have already lasted three and I will last four! Five! Six! I will show those gray-hairs up on the second floor what longity is? They will have to pry me out of this room before they are all gone long after they are all gone! They, with their accents and . . .
But you must be laughing at me. I am sure you are laughing at me. I will be lucky to last a minute and know that. The legislature is cutting corners and my basement corner will be one of the first to go. I fear that I will have an experiment in budgeting.
YOU HAVE TO forgive me. I was merely joking when I talked about second floor accommodation a feasible feat attemt at a loke.
what can an administrator talk about in true earnestness and knowledge other than his position?
I just get carried away when I talk about my position. For
My position right now is nothing. It will always be behind me, so I can see it. Do not think that I have not wanted to be an insect; for I have a friend who reaches too close to an insect. It would a considerable step upstairs.
YOU DO NOT have to tell me that my administrative career is finished. I know that it is. I knew long ago, when I first found out who it was that lasts seven decades: fools and brownnesers. I have many times their trade. Yet I sit here with my heart crushed. The bitter. I am not bitter at all. Resentful maybe, but never bitter. (There I go joking again. I must be serious.)
(Note: The author goes on to describe more of his inner frustrations and confusions and relates a story about how he escaped the chancellor's mansion, got very depressed and ended up advising a woman student. The rest of the manuscript will be saved, we find the practical joke who translated it into Russian.)
Polls Hamburger Helber of politics
WASHINGTON-Public opinion pollsters have triumphed in convincing us that their is a neutral sport, that theirs are more accurate than measurement. The abracadabra of numbers helps them. We ought to know better by now, but most of us can still be intimidated by Arab numerals and symbols. We need them. It looks like science to us and
little book which is given to the ward committeeman who totes up the backpack. The ward committee symbol that prefective workers have traditionally used to signify the undecided. The ward committeemen are called clerks, and he knows if he's going to win.
THAT DOESN'T make Mayor Daley a scientist. That doesn't make George
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) Kime Fujitaura
(C) King Features
science, as anybody but a scientist will tell you, is objective. Hence poll-taking is thought to be the most objective activity in journalism.
Brian L. Eckert
ALL DOURTS AS to the hidden, uniscient character of poll-taking are conquered by the pollsters' excellent record of handicapping elections. Chumps that we are, we think that any set of manipulations that can predict accurately must be science. Mayor Daley can predict the outcome of the election by counting hundreds of precinct captains who go around to the voters before the election and ask them how they're going to vote. Each answer is recorded in a
People get so bedazed by the parlor trick of predicting the winners of elections that they're prone to over look the results, which is not moderity. They are bought and paid for by newspapers, television networks, politicians, and panty-hose women. You can ask them that, like anything else that is offered for sale, public opinion polls are
Gallup, who does essentially the same thing, a scientist either. It makes one a political boss and the other the commercial purveyor of an informational pnee that has far more market value than it does truth.
primarily designed for their customers.
Notice the dialogue during the lulls on the weekly Tuesday Night Election Specials. Crankite will say something like, "George Wallace has done especially well with two-generation suburban Bulgarians. According to a Lou Harris poll commissioned by CBS, he is extremely sensitive to the anti-Washington feeling. What do you make of that, Eric?"
THEIR CUSTOMERS use them as the Hamburger Helper of politics. They serve as an important successor from the squallied trigues which occupy journalists and others who make their living off the data. Their data is cranked out and poured over us.
SUPPLYING CUD for electronic ruminants is less important than the role pollsters play in making and shaping issues. It's possible to force pollsters to consider an issue without the help of the opinion surveyers, but it isn't easy. To a significant extent campaign issues are what polsters take poll about. They pick the issues which may account for this year, and because this year that no areas are
It would be interesting to have a sociologist study polling organizations to see how extent the selection of topics is, consciously or unconsciously, determined by the corporations who buy the poll's results. It is hard to
believe that when a poll is commissioned by a television network or a major newspaper it's underlying assumptions aren't skewed by the class, group and economic interests of the executives involved.
THERE IS NO mistaking the biases implicit in the way issues are framed. In most instances pollsters phrase issues as nouns or as noun phrases. Questions involving "inflation" can be phrased differently, a something, a something you can do a something else about. Inflation is a process, a continuous-flow event, or so it can be viewed. Pollls, however, teach the populate a static and rigid concept of inflation overestimates the importance of individual decision-making.
That's useful for beguiling a large number of persons into thinking that they bring their problems on themselves. But then poll-taking and poll information dissemination becomes a problem, not an advantage, to the quo. Without going that far, it it's still clear that our polls do not define public issues in either structural or dynamic terms. Definitions of issues that are more structural or more dynamic values that draw us away from the "centrist" values that pollsters lay dominate public opinion.
POLLING IS ONE of the most successful methods yet invented for making people believe that they are different opinions, all their neighbors are vapid.
conforming centrists. As the late C. Wright Mills once wrote: "Research on political opinion" is all the more curious in view of the suspicion that American electoral politics is a sort of politics without opinion—if one takes the word 'opinion' seriously; a sort of voting without much political meaning of it, with great depth—if one takes the phrase 'political meaning.' seriously."
Those words were written close to 20 years ago. Today a Mills might say that the effect, if not the purpose of public opinion research, is to destroy public opinion, if one takes the word "opinion" seriously.
Letters Policy
The Kuwaitees welcome visitors to the museum, but please be prepared for typewritten instructions. Displayed and displayed items are not allowed. All visitors are subject to a five-day restricted time limited visiting to open hours and the seller's fee. Al-Kuwaiti must provide all required documentation; family and pachytes, others must provide their name and address.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Editor Carl Young
**Yael Aboul-Ghann**, Assistant Campus Editor **Greg Hicke**
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Susanne Shaw Mel Adams
Thursday, April 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
5
Disparities possible in offices . . .
From page one
Some of the services provided by the dean of men's office are the Reading and Study Skills Program, information about human sexuality, housing, which includes housing halls and fraternities, honorary organizations, orientation and minorities.
Ermie Garcia, assistant to the dean of men, a member of the TUX dean of men.
BOTH OFFICES DEAL with students on an individual basis and members of both staffs serve on numerous community and University committees. Sources from each office said they dealt with both sexes instead of members of only one sex.
He said he thought it could be assumed that less work would come out of one office than another if one had fewer people on its staff.
He said the dean of women's office had four women who worked with each of the four women's scholarship halls and the dean of men's office had only one adviser, Kirk McAlexander, assistant to the dean, to advise all four men's scholarship halls.
GARCIA SAID people were wondering whether so many staff members were necessary in the dean of women's office because the one man in the dean of men's office was doing a good job with scholarship halls by himself.
Garcia said maybe something justified
another. But he wasn't sure what it was.
He butted in, but he wasn't sure what it was.
David Davenport
David Davenport, Shawne Mission, won first place and $400 last night in the Moot Court Competition for second-year law students. Joel Goldman, Shawnee Mission, took second place and $200. Stephen Harris and Daniel Lyons, Kansas City, Kan., tied for third place and won $100 each. The contest took place in the Kansas Union.
'Conpersonas to be performed in Washington
"Congersones," an original play by Paul Stephen Lim, Phillips graduates student, will be presented April 7 and 8 at the John F. Kershaw Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
The play, winner in the original script competition of the American College Theatre Festival (ACTF) earlier this year, was first presented last fall at KU.
It will cost about $4,200 to send the 16-member company to Washington.
Tom Rea, associate director of the University Theatre, said expenses would be covered by ACTF and the Shubert Foundation of New York.
According to Rea, about $1,200 will come from Stuart's fund, which will be used for four Stuart funds.
ACTF, will pay for the four-member cast, a five-member crew, director David Cook, playwright Lim and a truck driver, will transport the company's equipment.
Both offices serve both sexes, Garcia said, because of the overlap of housing
Each office is responsible for administering the contracts and personnel of certain residence halls. They each assign a staff member to hire resident directors and assistants.
The dean of men's office is responsible for the training of Joseph Pearson, Tyrannie Turner and Nicholas Ternum.
The Office of the Dean of Women oversees Bathing Instructor Gentrude Sellards Pearson, Coordination
FRED McEHLENIE, associate dean of men, said that the residence directors and assistants were paid by the Housing Office and that the directors' salaries depended on the number of years experience they had and what degrees the directors hold.
As far as residence halls are concerned, McElhene said, the duties carried out by housing personnel in the dean of men's and dean of women's offices are different.
He said the graduate assistant in the dean of women's office dealt mostly with residence hall contracts. The dean of men's housing staff also deals with contracts, he said. To work with students, officers, programs and selection processes for the residence directors and assistants.
DEAN OF MEN Donald Alderson said that his staff was serving students as well as it could with its staff and that the office wasn't having to turn students away.
He said the office had been limited in developing new programs because it didn't know what to do.
The dean of men's office can't afford to hire more full-time employees on its budget, he said, and it is easier to get graduate assistants who work part-time.
Alderson said he had just hired two more part-time graduate students in addition to the four already working half-time. They will work one-eighth time, which equals about one hour a day. Both specialize in handicapped.
Kala Stroup, dean of women on leave,
said the dean of women's staff included
the head of the women's center.
SHE SAID THE OFFICE was able to get well-qualified women because much of the time women couldn't get jobs in other places. There are few administrative jobs for women except positions in women's office, such as the dean of women's office, she said.
McAleenard said there was a repetition of duties between the dean of men's and women's departments.
"A good number of things could be con- sedicated into one office and should be done to ensure that no one is not said. "Why not have one central place to take care of staffing the halls and to
He said he thought the dean of men's office was giving men the services they needed and the office provided adequate facilities even with its smaller staff and budget.
HE SAID I MIGHT look as if women were getting more services from the dean of women's office because they had more money in their budget and a larger staff.
Stroup said the two offices had never only tried to keep up with each other in teamwork.
Acting Dean of Women Caryl Smith was unavailable for comment because she was
Stroup said that over a period of years the growing staff of the dean of women's office had been justified in terms of growing activities and programs, and by the increasing number of women students who used the office's services.
"BUT THE CONCEPT that we only serve women isn't true," Stroup said. "I think that any office they (students) go to they answer the same answers to the same answers."
She said that in the past women had
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Stroup said many people said they thought a special office for women was still necessary, but she didn't know whether it was anymore.
needed a place to identify with which focused on women and that KU didn't have many women professors or administrators to whom women students could go.
She questioned whether other departments and offices were being scrutinized as carefully the dean of women's and dean of men's offices were.
"The functions of the two offices are really the function of one office and it just so happens that there are more people on one floor than there are on the other." Bailour said.
JULIE GORDON, assistant dean of women, said that services for women weren't coming from any other offices, although there was a degree of coordination between the dean of men's office and the dean of women's office.
William M. Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that he viewed the two teachers as equal.
Mechanical and civil engineering majors and space and civil engineering majors ... majors in electronics computer science and mechanical engineering majors
He said the two offices were separated by tradition and that he didn't think that the present time would be appropriate time to combine the offices.
THEERE ARE FEE administrative positions for women here, he said, but the
pros and cons of the job remain unclear.
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Questions were raised by several people about possible unequal treatment of students by two women's scholarship halls, Miller and Watkins.
Miller and Watkins cost $250 per year to live in and the remaining six scholarship houses. Students have about $550. Miller and Watkins are women's halls, and instead of having one large kitchen for students to prepare meals in, the two halls buy their own. Students in the two halls buy their own.
Elizabeth M. Watkins donated the money that pays the residents' rent in the halls. The $250 pays mostly for utilities and maintenance.
Students who don't receive adequate services from one office should try the other office.
Because the halls are limited to women, questions are being raised about whether men are provided equal services in housing situations.
IN A 1930'S KU new release, Watkins was quoted as saying, "It has been my dream to aid self-supporting girls to get an education. I planned the hall so that the girls would have the advantages of life in a small group along with those enlisted by a large unit."
J. J. Wilson, director of housing; that there was a comparable arrangement for them.
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Wilson said that if this was found to be in non-compliance with Title IX, the University might have to duplicate living arrangements equal to Miller and Watkins for men. He said that might entail extensive remodeling of existing men's halls.
Balfour said that Mrs. Wakimu's probably wouldn't be a doctor, but the Miller or Wakimu's
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The University would probably have to match those living arrangements and that would involve quite a bit of money, he said. He said that money would probably come from student fees because there wasn't enough state allocated money.
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6
Thursday, April 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Burge talks of new union plans
By CAROL HOCHSCHEID
Frank Burge has watched the plans for a satellite union develop from their beginnings in 1960 to the actual planning stages now under way.
Overwhelming student support in February of the satellite union proposal was a clear mandate for us to on with on the campus, Kansas Union director, said yesterday.
The administration of the Union, aided by student and University officials, is currently involved in a careful final analysis of the satellite union project, he said.
Specific student needs and available financial resources must be determined before any definite architectural plans can be designed. The building corporation board of directors, Burge said.
"IT IS impossible to say at this time exactly what will be included," he said. "But if things go well, plans should be complete within a year."
for both day and night use, he said.
Burge said flexibility and expandibility would be most important in planning. The changes will also help the firm.
High priority needs for services and program spaces include properly planned food service, a bookstore, lounge areas, recreation facilities, medical services and ticket sales. Burse said.
The food service area should be large enough to include fast food and beverage services a soup-and-salad bar and a delicatessen, he said.
"This area must be flexible in design, so that in the evenings it can serve as a social and party area, especially after basketball camps." Burge said.
A "HOTLINE bookstore service" that would enable students to order textbooks and have them delivered to the satellite office. The store's core has been suggested for consideration.
The satellite union bookstore will be planned to provide space for academic supplies necessary for fine arts, engineering, business and computer science. Burge said. The completed satellite university is located in the southwest campus, near these departments.
The lounge areas must be flexible enough
Burge said the population growth and expansion on the southwest campus indicated that student needs could be met better with satellite union facilities.
A SURVEY conducted last year by the Committee on Purpose and Long-Range Analysis showed that the student body thought additional union facilities were needed and 59.8 per cent of the students said they would be willing to work on such a project through increased fees.
to be used for watching television, listening to music and studying, he said. Meeting
Support of the satellite union proposal in this year's election in February reaffirmed student interest and willingness to contribute to the cost of construction.
"I have heard nothing but enthusiastic support for the development of the satellite
Satellite union surtax to affect nonstudents
The Satellite Union Task Force decided last night to apply a sutax on all nonstudent employees.
The amount of the surtax still has to be worked out. However, a 7 to 10 per cent surtax on purchases was discussed by the task force.
Rofs said students could present their current I.D cards to avoid being charged
Ed Rolfs, task force chairman, said the tax would be levied against University faculty, staff, alumni and visitors. The tax would be added to all purchases he said.
The task force said $500,000 would be necessary to finish the basement.
In other financial business, the task force discussed three different approaches to funding the unfinished basement, which will occupy 10,000 square feet of space in the
Students now pay $3 a semester to the
repairs and improvements fund. A direct fee of $1 a student, the task for said, would be $100.
Under the operations fund there wouldn't be a fee charged but rebates from the Union bookstore would be eliminated. Rolf asks the task force what they thought student reaction would be if the rebates were done away with.
Harry Wigner, Ludell junior and task force member, said students voted for the $7.50 fee to build the satellite union and help organize the rebates as an additional type of fee.
The Satellite Union Task Force, appointed by student body president Tedde Tasheff in March, has told Burge that it should be ready to submit a report on the nature and costs of services for the satellite union by Anil 15.
Under the surplus option, the task force said, money could be diverted from some excess revenues if there weren't any legal obstacles.
A Union surplus of $715,000 exists because enrolment has grown more than expected.
The task force is at a standstill until it finds out what kinds of bonds can be used to finance the satellite union. It plans to meet with Stern Bros. & Co., a Kansas City, Mo., bonding company which is acting as a consultant, to determine that fact.
BURGE SAID the task force had been working to ensure maximum communication and input from students who would use the facility.
Inflation, the increased cost of construction and the high rate of interest on borrowed money has made funding the satellite union a complex issue, Burge said, and available financial resources must be used in response to existing student needs.
"The task that we have of matching resources with needs is consuming all of our data."
Burge said that the budget for the project had initially been set at $2.2 million, but that a final figure couldn't be determined until all plans had been completed.
Epilepsy benefit dance set
Funds for construction of the satellite union will come from the sale of revenue bonds, and the money needed to pay the costs of construction will come from student fees. Burger said.
Chi Omega sorority and Alpha Tau Omega fraternity will sponsor a 24-hour dance marathon this weekend for the Eileenley Foundation of America.
IN 1970, a proposal which was the product of four years of research and evaluation was rejected by the student body, following initial 1986 plans.
The marathon will feature live bands, for all participants and programs by KREE.
The marathon, also sponsored by radio station KBEQ, will begin at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union Money raised will be used for research.
Since then, the service needs of students haven't changed appreciably, Burge said, but the cost of building the satellite union has greatly increased.
The radio station will provide a $1,000 scholarship to the organized living group
"WE'RE URGING people to come watch, drink and have a good time," John Moneymaker. Alpha Tau Omega publicity group is asking consumers the food and beer at a really low price."
THE PRIZES, including calculators,
dinnerers and dinnerers, have been
deemed by bawners.
The marathon will open and close with live music by Tree Frog and Mackender and the band will be arranged by styles such as rock, jazz or big band, played by a KEBQ disc jockey.
"We've had good response from the Lawrence merchants," Mary Paedobarac, Chi Omega marathon coordinator, said. "We've helped everyone we contacted donated something."
MONEYMAKER said only 15 to 20 couples had entered.
One section of the Hawk's Nest will be used for the marathon, and another section will be used by public dancers who make a donation to the foundation.
"We have couples coming in from Ottawa, Kansas City, Central Missouri State—we'd like more KU students to enter," he said.
TO WIN, A couple must complete the 24-hour marathon and raise the most money from sponsors for the foundation. Seventy-five per cent of the money raised by the benefit will be used for research in the Lawrence area.
Couples may register at the Chi Omega or Alpha Tau Omega houses until midnight.
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Moneymaker said sponsors were honing the marathon would raise $5,000.
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The ballots can be turned in at the GCS office or at the GCS meeting at 7:30 tonight
According to Kathy Dugan, spokesman for Gradix, voting results should be in effect on November 3.
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Thursday, April 1, 1976
1
University Daily Kansan
'Kansan Art Reader to be printed by July
The "Kansas Art Reader," a collection of art and artists in Kansas, should be in print by late June or early July, according to editor Jonathan Bell.
Bell said Monday that the material for
the book was in, and other editing and layout
revisions were made.
He said the book would be a paperback containing 250 pages of art and commentary. Half of the book will be examples of Kansas art, including poems and biographies, and the other half will contain commentary from about 20 Kansas writers, Bell said.
Many of articles were written by KU and K-State professors, he said, and the rest were written by independent writers throughout the state.
Bell said that the idea for the book was his own, and that the project materialized after he received a $1,500 grant from the Kansas Arts Commission.
The book will be an introduction to the art
Help-wanted ad for addressers called deceptive
A classified ad in the Kansan has brought several complaints to the office of the commissioner.
The help-wanted ad is for addressers and says the job offers excellent pay for working with children.
If a person answers the ad, however, he receives a letter that informs him to send $5 for a list of companies that need work-at-risk Kroeger, Kroeger CAD, director said Tuesday.
The ad is misleading, she said, because it indicates that if a person writes to the secretary of state, then the president will be in attendance.
Kroeger said three students who answered the ad had inquired about the sex of their classmates.
SHE SAID that according to the Better Business Bureau, most of these companies with "earn money at home" schemes had one thing in common.
A Bureaum pamphlet, "Tips on Work-at-Home Schemes," says, "You require you to buy something before you can begin work. If you answer an ad offering you huge profits for some at-home work, for which you must demand and which requires no experience on your part, you will probably wind up your money instead of learning it."
The problem with the schemes, Kroeger said, is that they appeal to students, ourselves, shut-ins, elderly persons and others. It is impossible to hold even part-time jobs.
KROEGER SAID she would advise students not to answer the ad, and, if they were told that it was an error,
Kroger said one student who had answered the ad felt that if it had been in a student newspaper, it must have been checked first.
Ross Parry, Kansan business manager,
said the Kansan had no way of checking ads
that were posted on his website.
"We wouldn't knowingly print something that was a rip-off," she said.
The ad, which runs to the end of this week,
was paid in advance, probably by mail,
Parris said. She said she hadn't known
about the complaints.
of Kansas he said, and is intended for a general audience.
He said no book had yet been published dealing only with Kansas art.
Copland
From page one
Copland said this popularity of music was due to the high orchestras from going out of business.
"I'm very optimistic because the condition of music is very healthy," he said. "I think there'll be lots of disgusted people if their orchestras run into financial problems. If they can't make money by admissions, they'll find another way."
Orchestras aren't the only ones dependent on popular support for existence he said.
"Not too many composers can live off of their works alone. Usually, they also teach
Copland said he boosted his income by writing scores for films and motion pictures, by writing books and by conducting orchestras.
Copland is in the area as a guest conductor of the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra. He will also conduct a string ensemble in the original 13-instrument version of "Appalachian Spring" this Saturday in Ottawa.
George Bush, director of the Central
Education Program, said that 62% of
all part of the Vickers Lecture Series
CIA director Bush to speak April 26
Bush was appointed director of the CIA in 2014, and he is now following the removal of William Colby. He holds former titles of U.S. Congressman, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations and Ambassador to the Arab League.
The lecture will be in either Hoch
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TONIGHT: The GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL will meet at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Kansas University. ENRIQUE "HANK" LOPEZ will present a Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Lecture on "The Future of Chicanos and Puerto Ricans Through Higher Education," at 7:30 in 314 Wescow.
TODAY: The entry deadline for WOMEN'S AND COED SLOW PITCH SOFT-
BALL TEAMS is 4 p.m. in 208 Robinson.
Events ...
TOMORROW: The 21st ANNUAL STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING CONFERENCE will be in the Union all day. All team representatives of the WOMEN'S and COED SLOW PITCH SOFTBALL LEAGUE will meet at 3:30 p.m. in 206 Robinson, ROBERT SCHOLES, professor of English at Brown University, will speak on "Semiotic Apeaches to a Fictional Text: Joyce's Eveline," at 4 p.m. in the Council Room of the University. WILLIAM JOHNSON, Jackson-Wood Professor of History, will speak at the annual Frank Daints Memorial Lecture at 8 p.m. in 411 Summerfield Hall. A BREED FOR Johnson will be at 4 p.m. in 641 Malot Hall. NORMAN MAIGE, associate professor of voice, and his wife, INCI BASHAR PAIGE, will give a recital at 8 p.m. in Battenford Auditorium at the KU Medical Center.
Jobs available...
The following part-time jobs are posted outside 26 Strong Hall: food service; 2, typing, clerical; 4, research, teaching assistant, 12; sales; 5, child care; 3, child support.
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8
Thursday, April 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Golf team looks to opener
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Don't expect the University of Kansas golf team to win the Big Eight title this spring. It looks as if Okahoma State and Oklahoma will be batting for that honor.
But KU golf coaches Max Kennedy and Jerry Waugh are both hoping for improvement over last year's seventh-place finish.
"We've got some competitive players," Waugh said. "A year ago I didn't feel that the team was quite as competitive as it could have been."
KENNEDY, THE PRO at Alvamar Hills Golf Course, impressed with the team's work.
"We have a great attitude," Kennedy said. "I would say that mental attitude is one of the most important things I do."
The Jayhawks get their first taste of competition today when they compete in the Oklahoma Intercollegiate Tournament at Oklahoma Oka. The tournament ends tomorrow.
The KU squad consists of seniors Bo Dennis, Kriss Kennedy, Jim Pearson and Tom Peterson; junior Gary Chilton and Craig Palmer; sophomores Rick Kenney and Corky Ek; and freshmen Jim Doyle, Bill Groves and Doyle Gerard.
Kennedy described Dennis' game as just the onsite of Chilton's.
"OUR BEST PLAYER, we feel, is Gary Chilton," the elder Kennedy said. "He is very strong big and, big, and hits a long tball cee. Knee knuckles would probably be in his short game."
sports
this makes for consistency in your goll round."
"He's not very long off the tee, but he makes every shot count." Kennedy said. "Because of his tremendous short game, Boo's still a very good player, but everything else is going bad, and
KENNEDY SAID DOYLE'S game fit the same mold as that of Dennis.
But Kennedy also singled out his younger son.
"Possibly our best-looking golfer," the coach said. "is Rick Kennedy."
He said Rick had more of a good-looking, sound game—possessing a long, smooth swing—than anyone on the team, but hadn't yet been able to score well.
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
Gymnast Laurie Propst in N.C. to vault two times
Laurie Prospelt left by jet yesterday from Kansas City International Airport for Charleston, S.C. When she and gymnasts arrived there, they'll take a bus to Roosevelt, N.C.
Sometimes tomorrow, Propst, a University of Kansas sophomore, will warm up, spind off a runway and do a "half-on." She'll then do the trick on more time. She'll then do the trick on more time.
AND THEN SHE'LL be done competing at the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (AIAW) national championships. Two vaults and she's finished.
"Long way to go, isn't it?" noted Propst profoundly.
The trip shouldn't be that out of the ordinary for Prospat, however. Only two weekends ago she traveled to Fort St. Louis and in divinity championships, swimming andiving championships.
There, she stayed long enough to take eight dives off the low board and three off the high. She finished 21st in the low board and placed her place behind teammate Karen Mundy.
BUT WHAT IS PROPST doing at Boone? According to her, probably the same thing she did in Fort Lauderdale—except off dry land.
"For me, it's real easy," said Propto of her vault, which is classified 10.0—one of the most difficult to perform. "In diving, you do a half-twist, right? It's the exact same thing going on to the horse. All you have to do is twist off."
Proptest tried to describe her "half-on, half-off" vault, which qualified for the her
national meet when she scored a 94 in the
east and Dakota the week before
earliest break.
"YOU RUN DOWN, twist on the horse,
and as you push off the horse, you come off
the horse."
Sure. Whatever you sav.
"It's kind of strange," she admitted, "but it was, you know it, you know exactly what was told.
Her teammates have seen it. But even they have difficulty duplicating the map.
Prosp explained, "People on the team have had problems with it because they can't get the feel of being straight up and honest," he said. That's what's the way you go into the water."
IN ANY CASE, Proptim isn't worried about successfully executing her vault. She said she has already begun learning how to cope with the pressure of high-level competition, even though this is her first national gymnastics meet.
She said she learned how to concentrate during the regional meet after making a mistake in the floor exercise, the event that came before the vault.
He said Kris hit the ball fairly long and as equally proficient in all of the phases of the game.
"I DIDN'T THINK about it." Proposal said of the vault, her last event. "I didn't think about it, so I wasn't nervous. I just did it. It was hard to fall, or that girl well fell on her head."
"I was real mad because I had tripped in the floor," she said. "I thought I could have done better." "That's all w's thinking about the horse to the horse is so mad about the floor."
"I just want to be relaxed about it and I don't care what I'm going to do rather than what you're going to do."
"CORKY EK." KENNEDY continued, "is a hot and cold shooter. Doyle Gerard is a good competitor; his iron game is the best part of his game."
After all, she only has to do it twice.
Jim Pearson, a preemed student, was described by Kennedy as an "intelligent
"He doesn't have the power of some of the other boys," Kennedy said, "by the way he attacks the golf course, you can tell he's a very intelligent golfer."
KENNEDY DESCRIBED Palmer as a scrambler, saying "He never looks real human."
He said that Peterson's game was good, but that as yet it hadn't come around to wipe out.
"Bill Groves is probably the best all-around prospect that we have of the young golfers." Kennedy said. "He has good self-control and a strong expectant a lot of good things out of Bill."
WITHOUT THE BENEFIT of scholarships to award, Kennedy said it was very difficult to get top-netch golfers to come to the course because information could change in the next few years.
"We'll be modified somewhat in the next couple years," Kennedy said, "because the NCAA has made a ruling that no school can have more than five people on scholarship" n golf.
"SCHOOLS LIKE OKLAHOMA State that had 15 or 20 now to cut it down to five, and when they do this, the boys that are taking college scholarship are going to other places.
"This is going to spread the talent around, and we expect, in a couple years, to be able to get a lot more qualified golfers than we have now." Kennedy said.
WITH THE YOUTH the Jayhawks have this year team in mind, Kennedy for example.
"We feel like we're definitely on the way up in golf here at KU," he said.
And where might the Hawks finish in the conference this season?
"It could be as high as fourth this year," Kennedy said.
sports shorts
WOMEN'S GOLF - Despite winds gusting to 45 miles an hour and wet playing conditions, host team Oklahoma rallied from a one-stroke deficit and defeated KU in an Oklahoma invitational golf tournament Tuesday at Norman, Okla.
KU, which had led on Monday's round,
placed second with 764 strokes. Oklahoma
State was third with 769. The winners
finished with 758.
Nancy Hines led KU with a third place finish of 178 strokes for 36 holes. Beth Stevens led the women's portion and are coached by Nancy Booster, were Kathy Webb, Diane Nene and Michelle Williams.
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Thursday, April 1, 1976
9
BY KRIS EUKEL
Sports Writer
KU women win doubleheader from Wildcats
The KU women's softball team sent an embarrassed K-State team back to Manhattan yesterday, when it won both games in its third doubleheader of the season, 8-2 and 10-0, at Holcom Sports Complex in Lawrence.
Pitchers Shelley Sinclair and Gloria Graves together pitched the first shutout of the season in the second seven-inning game of the day.
Scoring was impossible for K-State in the first five innings against Sinclair's pitching and a quick KU defense. Sinclair gave up only two hits.
Graves came in for Sinclair in the fifth and made a quick kill, pitching six strikeouts in three innings and giving up no hits.
Kansas couldn't stop scoring, as it rounded third a total of 10 times against a helpless K-State defense. K-State's losing pitcher was Kay Beatty.
It it took KU a few innings to warm up for the first game of the day, but the team began hitting in the bottom of the fourth, starting off the scoring with three runs.
In the bottom of the fifth, the women showed even greater strength. Paula Frank started the inning with a double to left field. Meredith Miller sent her to third with
another double, and Frank scored on a grounder to second by Debbie Kuhn. Edna isls hit a single, loading the bases. But they were soon emptied when Nancy Stout made it to third on K-State errors with a grounder to the shortstop.
The final run was escored in the bottom of the sixth by Frank, who after stealing second and third, was sent home on a single by Miller.
Pitcher Edna Isla and Paula Hernandez combined for a total of six strikeouts in the outing. The pitcher, who was permitted only two runs. The first game's losing pitcher was Nancy Gardner.
"I expected them to be stronger. Although the score doesn't indicate it, they were stronger than last year. But we're stronger too. We just hit the ball well and when a team is hitting there's not much you can do."
factor in K-State's less-than-inspired performance, according to KU coach Sharon Drysdale, who said K-State wasn't what she expected them to be.
The real show of strength must come this Saturday when the women play the University of Nebraska at Omaha, last year's College World Series champion, at 2 p.m. at Holcom Sports Complex in Lawrence.
Dunking permitted to return next year
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—Dunking—the practice of stifling a basketball through the hoop was restored to the sport's amateur league this year, yesterday. It had been banned for a decade
The National Basketball Rules Committee, which governs all amateur basketball in the United States and Canada, has been understudying during games of the 1976-77 season.
KANSAN WANT ADS
The committee had banned dunking before the 1960-67 season in a controversial wrestling event.
Asecomodations, goods, services and employment
are served by the office of the
INVESTMENTS AND MARKETING DEVELOPMENT
DEPT. in New York, NY. The
INVESTMENTS AND MARKETING DEVELOPMENT
DEPT. is responsible for all
investments and market analysis.
Dunging has always been permitted in professional basketball.
CLASSIFIED RATES
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.
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
exactional
word $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00 $3.00
initial
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .04
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 simply by calling the UDK business office
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. ff
TRYST ANN, Master's Series. Open House
Paulua UNION, piano Gregory Wasserman,
wax-resist. recent painting Saturday, April 3. 1976.
Marcin MONROV, Residence 14-2
Louisiana.
BATIK; discharge, Wax-resist paintings; recent work, landscapes, seascapes, self-portraits of Gregory Waugh M.P.A. University of Kansas Institution M.S. 1424 Louisiana State University April 3, 8:00 p.m.
We've moved! Our new location is next to McDainnals, 909 West Burlingham bring this to a ford in the area.
Haircutting specialist Wanda Grammer, formerly of L.A. Clippers, will be attending March 5 to call at her Hairdresser & Co., 423 East 6th St, New York, NY 10017.
BARBER SHOP QUARTET SHOW, presented by the "Barberhawk," Lawrence chapter of HIBERLA, 8:00 p.m. Saturday, April 3rd. Lafayette auditorium, Call 412-764-7612 ticket information
4-2
Need your car washed? Help yourself and KUU
pay for it on Saturday, April 9 at 10 a.m.
or Saturday, April 9 at 10 a.m.
Lawrence Gay Counseling Service's organizational meeting for next year will meet at 7:00 a.m. at 1518 Vermont on April 4. If you are interested in helping, for more information, 4-822-587-8.
LIFE PLANNING WORKSHOP SATURDAY, April 23 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the process of influxing your own future plans and goals. Attendees will learn strength, clarity present needs and define personal strengths that can be used in building for the future by developing realistic plans and strategy for reaching you. Thursday, April 26 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at United Methodist Church, 486 North Church Street, Tucson, Arizona. April 8 & 9, $850 Cost. *U.S. Members Only*
Employment Opportunities
A job opening for full time research assistant at the Office of Data Collection, 341 Fifth Avenue, Place, 111 Hewlett. Data collection, preparing workshop materials, preparing forms, completing evaluation forms. Good typing skills are essential to the view. Application deadline and start date approximately April 1. Equal Opportunity Employer.
Marry Olson and Teri VanGundy Styling for men and women
A HIGH BRAZER STOPPED
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
ENTERTAINMENT
*"Rumoured" the New Age film on spiritual and
psychic themes, but it doesn't appear until April 5 &
4.79 p.m. in IMSC 1200, Grand Central.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and pick up materials from the office, place at WEBSTER'S MOBILE HOME OFFICE.
Free rental service. Up to the minute litings of
books in law, in lawrence. Lawrence Rental
Exhibition. 842-259.
1-4 bedroom apartments, room with Kitchen private
or shared rooms to campup $5 and up. 8f
or $852 or 90-875.
2 bdmr, all util, all pat, on campus, Furn. or
unfurn. Free parking, a/c, pool, 843-1983.
One bedroom apartment to sublease at
unfurnished unfurn. all utl, paid except 1c.
Call 841-2746.
Siblaise one bedroom apartment June-August.
Royal Room two bedrooms paid furnished
9th RI. Mary L. 843-8276
Sublease or take over lease: 1 bdm, unfurn.
Sublease to campus: $12 mo., utilities paid
41-81-208
Sublease for summer semi-formatted three bedroom apartment pool tennis, AC, gas & water system.
MARRIED STUDENTS : entering Dental, Dental Clinic near U.K. Cooperative Dental Townhouse near KU Med. Cooperative 2 BR. DR. patco, out unit range disquali 18 baths; DR. patco, out unit range disquali 18 baths; AVAILABLE, Available May 1 June Call 913-425-2213
40 acre farm, new mobile home, furnished
armland, near Ridgway and Douglas CO. Lake
town, near Ridgway and Douglass CO. Lake
town.
FOR SALE
Carpeted furnished rooms, two blocks to TV, lounge, large kitchen with freezer, refrigerator, washer/dryer, etc. $60 or AC $78 One now, for $125. Furnished apartment at 19 W. 14th. Available
Furnished apartment at 19 W. 14th. Available immediately. 1 bedroom @ $85, 8427-6267 after 6 pm.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LENSE - Regardless of
distance, the STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LENSE is
well suited for both short and long distance
wear. With W100, W200, W300, W400 and W500,
months of wear will not be affected by
regardless of length or angle.
Trombone selection of guitars, piano, drum,
bass, violin, cello, saxophone and trumpet.
580p. Keyboard Studio, Choose from Gibbon
vibes, Ampeg Routemaster, and many others.
Vibes, Ampeg Routemaster, and many others.
After 790m, Keyboard Studios, SoundLab.
After 790m, Keyboard Studios, SoundLab.
COST $160 - Senior equipment. All mentor
instructors must have a Master's degree.
TV A broadcast register for Free Kick
TV A broadcast register for Free Kick
TV A broadcast register for Free Kick
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
touchs. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160 page,
mail order catalog. Research Assistance, 11222
(213) 478-8744, Los Angeles, California
(213) 477-8874. Calls: 4-12
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
Parts, service and exchange units. **BELLO AUTO**
of Western Civilization Notes—On sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
**BELLO AUTO**
1) As study gulde
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
alysis of Western Civilization
Available now at Tow. Criter Store.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture & appliances at Bargain Prices. Buy sell-upply at Applicant & Appliance Center, 704 Mass. 643-2712.
74 Buck Lec Sabre Luxus, all power, ultr. steering, co-drive-mat, 30,000 miles, KI-81, 811-893, KI-811-893
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
HILLCREST BILLIARDS RECREATION'S FINEST "If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
West of Hillcrest Bowl
19th & Mass.
9th & Iowa
Planning a trip?
Let MapiIntel
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
SUA / Maupintour
travel service
RIDE ON THE BICYCLE
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Mails—Hillcrest—900 Mass
OFFER. 841 OLDMOBILE. GOOD CONDITION, BEST
OFFER. 841-7533 AFTER 6 P.M. 4-2
WE SELL FOR LESS-11 TO 630. Good used
furniture includes standard mattress,
new impressions semi-firm mattresses and box springs have 10 yr. warranty, $125 a week.
New upholstery semi-firms and box springs have 10 yr. warranty, $125 a week.
New upholstery semi-firms and box springs have 10 yr. warranty, $125 a week.
New upholstery semi-firms and box springs have 10 yr. warranty, $125 a week.
Yamaha 200 CC twin bike, electric start, like new, 3600 miles. Cell 841-843; after 54,000 miles.
Suzuki GT 550 - excellent condition - just tucked
885, Bruce. G141-413; images 887, 654-4
4-1
Fiat 128. Sedan, New front wheel drive, fully
loaded. 345-780 delivered. Jacked up. Hadoop
improved. 845-862.
73 Yamaha RD 300, Perfect Cond. First Reas.
Call Dave. 841-4396. 4-1
1
PAIR ALTEC SPEAKERS: Monitor Studio a-7-8
PAIR ALTEC SPEAKERS: Monitor Studio a-7-8
Iridestore. Ideal for home, club. Battery: 842-956-8928
Sherwood Evolution 11 Speaker System. New
full warranty. $79 will call. Culk Reli.
$54.99.
One of a kind 1972 TBG. Has overridte AM/FM, hard top. Runs excellent. Expensive $3600 or less. See **ABOUT US**.
Zori Style Sandals. now in At J. C. Penner's.
zizi to fit men and women. $30. Mass. 4-2
1972 CL 350 Honda-with stair and roll bars.
841-2526 1:30 p. 300.
Electronic calculator T-250H-II with AC adapter,
almost brand new. 884-1820.
4-2
Pender Telecom 74 Lw rare, natural finish
VGC $275, 841-6674
4-5
90-230 mm. VIVITAR ZOOM LENS, $100. 841-
6782
194 Brake, EI Camino, Alr, Power Steering, Dish
Brakes, brand new tires, $800; 841-3775, Disc
1971 Handa 175, helmet, $300. Also Peavley Amputation - A-12, 842-13137; see at Richard M. Fitzgerald
HALE-A-SMICH is having an enormous garage sale on Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and chair (or perfect) bed, trunks, dresser, vanity, clothing, unlimited records. Blank design style items from A to Z at 18th St. 2 & 3, larger item types from A to Z at 18th St. 2 & 3.
Pepsi-Cola's only 10d from 3-4 p. Sandy M.
Drive, In 2120 W. 9th
4-6
CHECK OUT THESE USED BUKE SPECIALS. 74 Horns Beach Honda HONDA ATC 90 Wheelchair Bullsoo Balloon Alphas 73 Kindle C8500 74 Yamaha Kenda Honda 1200CC Horizon Horse
1973 Toyota Collea ST 4 sp.4 Excellent Cmd
824-8483, or box W200, 864-8047,
864-8483, or box W200
3 speed Raleigh women's bicycle—one year old-
for good condition $8, or best offer. Call
800-765-2911.
1939 Triumpth GT6, good condition, new radials,
radio mileage, must sell; $1200 or best
bet. 875-495-2400
HELP WANTED
Sterro - Pioneer XS-2500 receiver. Dual 128
Memory. Brand new condition. $700. Call 849
312-656-1011
Go Go Girls, not tequila. Must be 21 years of age.
Apply between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m.
Wife is not required.
Addresses wanted immediately! Work at home with a female therapist in NYC. American services: 1601 Wilmont Blvd, Suite 501, 112-348-3900, wilmontblvd.org.
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer year/earth-round
S. America, Australia, Australia, etc. all fields, $260-
$800 monthly Expenses paid, sightseeing Free
Expenses for tours in New York City,
KA. BOA 449, Berkeley CA, 97407, 4-23
ALASKA
HOCKEY
40 YEARS
1936-2076
armadillo head co
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
large selection of sizes & prices
MACRAME BEADS
Two part time employees for night work in the sandwich shop located in the Opera House on Fifth Avenue.
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and
farm equipment. Call 405-763-2575 or 207-664-8275.
5-11
or 2-56
Wanted: experienced shoe salesman for this summer. McCoy, M4-299, or by call 815-336-8248.
PART TIME - EARN $15 PER WEEK, FOR 3
weeks. TIME - EARN $20 PER WEEK, FOR
14 weeks. BETWEEN $8 p.m. - $10 p.m. FOR
INTERVIEW.
Houseparents wanted. Married couple to supervise, care for child of one or the other may work part-time. Education required with youth desirable. Salary $750 per month. Send resumes to Office of the Director of Group Homes in Wandaleen District, Director of Group Homes in Kinston City, Ka 68101. An equal opportunity employer.
Full and part-time fourniture work. Apply in person at the Drive-In Drive-125. W27 H08. 4-7
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as publicity for our clients. For more information, visit Merrill Lynch Bank - 818 N. Fourth Street and First National Bank - 625 E. 4th Street.
Lost, small, white formate帖. part. Lapstone, blue
formate. Lepstein, blue formate. Cv-4-year-old
(Cv-4-year-old) Call 841-2897, keep up.
The image contains a text block with some illegible characters or symbols.
Last Monday, March the—old blue dark hue umbrella broke. Please return to English Dept. brooklyn Bridge. Please return to English Dept. brooklyn Bridge.
A man's silver band found at laundry mast 4-10
and Mississippi. Call 811-4930 by 6 p.m.
Large reward, no questions asked. Maquintauit
large room, gym need, contact leaves,键
483-394-394
Calculator found. Vicinity Murphy Hall. 843-5
6420.
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than over with Alice, at a rate of 30 pages per hour for your of 128 page thesis in 5 minutes. See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing needs at the Quick Copy Center, $58 Massachusetts.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Max. used furniture, dining pans, lamps, clocks, televisions. open daily 12-5.
The Catfish Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Full
套餐. The Cafe offers a $25 lunch each, $15 each
dinner, call 824-6958 for reservation.
Please contact us at info@catfishcafe.com.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive transportation provided. Drive school transportation provided. Drive school. pay late fees.
FIRSTLINE EYEWEAR
742 MASACHU SETTTS
842 5204
Goldpecker Optical
- PRESCRIPTIONS FILED
AND LENDER
BURSICATED WITH
FLAWLESS ACCURACY
* COMPLETE OPTICAL
SERVICES
YARN—PATTERNS—NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS—CANVAS—CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
MARKETING
19-5 Monday, Saturday
PRO
AM Part Stop
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
1209 East 23rd St
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at a party or event, including a sophisticated an atmosphere designed for sweet feelings and gentle
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
Sandwiches — Pizza
Pool — American Shuffleboard
841-2200
5 Nights a Week No Cover NEW MODERN DECOR
A cartoon character.
HIDEOUT
843-9404
New Memberships Available
B Private Club Class
Open 11 a.m. to 6 a.m.
Class 23
Bowman-boyer
--a quiet corner
Now Open Every Sunday
12 NOON
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets
Admission Only '2.00 each
Race or Watch
FARM TRACTOR
AWRENCE-DRAGWAY
20 miles east of Topeka or 3 miles west of Lawrence
BEGINNING FOR SINGLES facilitated by
SUM Criss. This session will consist of a micro-
sequence or divided persons and others who
are searching for new beginnings. This will be an
searching for new beginnings. This will be an
learn through sharing with one another. Monday,
April 4th, 7:11 pm Sponsored by the Juvenile
Oral Bord.
©
842-9445
After 28 years in business, if George doesn't keep his eye on the floor, he'll be on Monday's George's Paper Shop. Shop 179. (514) 620-8230. www.generalgeorge.com
Nancy's Craft Shift, 300 W. Hilbright Open Thurs-
days featuring New Ideas in Master Craft Plaques
fashioned by Nancy and David Browne.
PERSONAL
Need learning companion? Mixed breed puppies.
Need dog food. 845-0437. All days. Airy-
like.
Becky—april Fools Wow, you finally made it!!
Happy 18th Birthday, love, momme. 4-7
SKATEOARD KING—Your publicity shots are ready, but need identification. Call 864-2142 after you receive the package.
Boo-Boo-He's missing the best part of the day, Sleep-Head. Happy Birthday! EL. 4-1
April's shows bring Gate ZG 4 in cuehers 4-1
FOR A GOOD TIME, CALL BVD AT 864-1553.
WWA-WELL, A WOMAN NOW! HAP-
TED TO DRINK LOUPS. LOPS! ALL 13
DRINKS OF FLORIDA
SERVICES OFFERED
TRAVEL
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627. Regular sessions one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
Mother offers dependable child care in the home,
children and toddlers Monday through Friday-day-
day.
TUTOR
Japan. Fifteen days bargain flight leave 10
tours available. Morail, 28 Marvin. 4-1
4-1
EUROPEISRISA1AFRICA1ASIA - Travel dates
First Avenue, Tucker, Ga. 60448 (308) 625-9700
First Avenue, Tucker, Ga. 60448 (308) 625-9700
Math Tutor with M.A. in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 or 6 p.m.
4-15
TYPING
EUROPE
less 1/2 economy
lare
No charge for travel payment required
INV AM
phone 800-325-4867
Unitravel Charters
Experienced typist—term paper, theses, mite.
Excellent typing, proofreader, spelling, spelling corrections. 843-7250.
Typid/editor, IBM Pica/iter, Quality work.
Typid/editor, Desiree dixtraitensis welcome.
Mail: 845-911-6819.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 4-6
**TREISI BINDING** - The Quick Center is located in the heart of Treisi and provides our service in fast and prices are reasonable. We are located at 3170 North Avenue, Treisi, NY 10526.
Exp. typid. IBM Selectric, term paper theses.
Exp. typid. IBM Selectric, term paper theses,
spelling coded. Jean. 841-3690
Joseph. 841-3690
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 423-476. 4-5.
Replayediert型 HSIM Selecting.
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selective II
(tenancy), Fax 648-7389, tape carrier,
rubbon). Call A68 at 587-828.
Experienced typist will type term papers, theses,
books, and general all typing in my home or
Carolina, 841-694-0844.
Expert typing/reasonable rates; Proofreading;
Expert calling. Call #84218 about 5:39 a.m. 4-20
TIP TOP TYPING GUARANTEED ERROR FREE
TYPING. GRETA, #8241- 8221EN. 4-6
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reasonableness, some law, electric, BA Social Studies, job offered.
Typing- We have many return customers who want to be called to help them with business Call Harvie or Linda 815-9100
WANTED FOR IMPORTANT MEDICAL RESEARCH
WANTED
W. B. Triplett, 944 Ky.
Phone 841-0891
Names and address of persons with blue eyes and predominantly blue eyes in family and brown eyes with predominantly brown eyes in family. Results of study will be returned.
Win and cash prizes in Straw Ink Pizza Palace's
winning game. See page 43.
Call 841-2547 or come by 251st West 4th
& 4th.
Wanted: mature girl to share two bedroom
apartment next year. Call 411-8428 between 7 &
8th Street and 10th Avenue.
252 reward leading to the rental of 4-5 bed-
room farmhouse. Call 821-8016.
4-2
Female roommate to share large 380 bd. CAA.
& 172 units. Keep training: 841-6767
402
roommates only
DESPERATLY NEEDS—Good Musicians for summer progressive band based in Leavenworth, keyboard or vites and violinist. Improvisation and sight-reading skills preferred. 841-692. Mike.
Wanted: Just new sterver component system with pots: Baldwin, Kansas. Day 54-834-2132.
Wait, the word "pot" is on the left.
The word "system" is on the right.
The word "with" is between them.
So the text is:
Wanted: Just new sterver component system with pots: Baldwin, Kansas. Day 54-834-2132.
Home for 2 yr. old, half-disperse half mumky.
Home for 2 yr. old, half-disperse half mumky.
Player. Great companion, Call Debbie, #435-2844.
Wanted: Young couple for late summer job (light housekeeping, lawn mowing, microwaveable chicken). Please contact me earlier but please don't apply unless you can work will till 10. We provide. Travel-wise, you should be a phone call to your telephone calls, please. Apply in writing and give references. Raymond Cert. 1000 Sunsny Dr., San Diego, CA 92417.
WANTED FOR RESEARCH EXPERIMENT ON ALCOHOL. Male volunteers between (weight 145-210 lb) to drink your choice of hard cider or milk. Dr. Crikien. 864-353 for tails. 84-353 for backs.
Graduate Students working on master's degree
dollar bills or 72 to 10 minute sessions call
phone number.
Ball Bark Baseball
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
BALL PARK, INC.
BALL PARK, INC.
Box 3422-U
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAM ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-136
10.5 Sats.-Tau.
THE LOUNGE
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Foosball
"The Facilities & Service To Make It A Perfect Party"
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
The Teepee-The Sanctuary
CLASS PARTIES
REHEARSALDINNERS
SANCTUARY
— FORMALS —
DINNER DANCES
---
10
---
Thursday, April 1, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Senate committee okays budget philosophy
A budget philosophy for the Student Senate's spring budget hearings was approved last night by the Senate Finance and Auditing committee. The hearings begin
The Senate will vote on the budget philosophy at a special meeting at 6:30 tonight in the Cottonwood-Meadowlark Room in the Kansas Union.
The approved philosophy was submitted by Randy McKernan, committee chairman.
McKernan said the philosophy was very similar to the one adopted by the Senate last year. "We were all very proud," he said.
The committee spent most of its two-hour meeting working on the wording of the philosophy, making an effort to keep from excluding certain groups.
'Changeling' set symbolic
The University Theatre will be taking a new approach in the production of "The Changeling." scheduled to run tonight through Sunday.
The set has been taken out of a realistic context and is being presented symbolically to portray a small, 17th-century theater inside the University Theatre. The audience will always be aware they are watching a movie. Greg Hill, faculty designer for the play.
The play has two separate plots. One, a tragedy, takes place in a castle and the other, a comedy, takes place in a village.
Parallels are drawn throughout the play between the rich people of the castle and the poor.
William Keeler, assistant professor of
KU student arrested on marijuana charge, freed on $500 bond
A Lawrence sophomore was arrested Tuesday by Lawrence police on a misdemeanor charge of possession of marijuana.
Police said they found the alleged contraband in the student's apartment while they were searching for him there. They also searched the residence of his arrest, for his arrest on traffic-rated charges.
An officer entered the apartment when he found the door open and after no one answered his calls inside. He searched the apartment room by room for the student and said he saw a box in plain view in an office full of what he believed to be marijuana.
The officer left to obtain a search warrant. When he returned with another officer, the student answered the door. He asked where his apartment was, and told that his apartment was to be searched.
The student returned after posting bond on the traffic charge. The officers finished their search, finding about a pound-and-a-dime that they said they thought was marijuana.
The student then was arrested on the marijuana charge and taken to Douglas County jail. He was freed after he posted a $500 bond.
speech and drama and the play's director, said Tuesday the play was a good example of 17th-century blood and gore, complete with suicide, corpses and dismemberment.
Hill said the blood and gore had been a challenge for those working on props. He said it had been difficult to come up with a solution, but the corpse was carried and still-smoking corpse is carried on stage.
Added to the old philosophy, for example, is the statement, "special scrutiny should be given to groups who possibly duplicate the services of another group."
Part of the story is about a young woman, Beatrice, who is fighting the system, trying to marry the man she loves instead of the one her father has chosen for her.
She hires DeFlores, a deformed, syphilic slave to commit a murder for her, but she ends up becoming his sexual slave. Hill said one of the main ideas in the play
The philosophy also states that "special scrutiny" should be given to groups that are more vulnerable.
"The Changeling" will be performed at 8 tonight and on Saturday, Sunday's performances will be
Mckernan's proposed philosophy was one of three submitted to the committee
Besides voting on the Finance and Auditing committee's proposed budget philosophy tonight, the Senate will also decide whether it will hear the budget requests of three groups that turned in late requests.
Student tickets are free with I.D. Non-student tickets, costing $1.75, $2.50 and $3.25, are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office.
because it was goo general; the other was rejected because it was too strict.
of three submitted to the committee.
Bruce Woner, Hutchinson senior, characterized the adopted philosophy as the "middleground" between the other two.
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
Monday, StudEx rejected the requests of Versuch, the American Society of Engineers and the Undergraduate An-
gewinnere in the second week were turned in after the Feb. 27 deadline.
We Write Motorcycle Insurance
One was rejected by the committee
Let's go out for a night on the town.
Love to, but will your car make it?
Don't let a lemon sour your lifestyle
JOHN HADDOCK FORD
RENT-A-CAR
23rd and Alabama
Call 843-3500
Make Daily Weekly Week-end Rates Overtime
Pinto 9.00 plus tfc a mile 50.00 plus tfc per mile 7.00 plus tfc per mile 1.50 per hour
Maverick 18.50 plus tfc1c per mile 45.00 plus tfc1c per mile 7.00 plus tfc1c per mile 1.50 per hour
Muskebra Torine 11.00 plus tlc1c per mile 70.00 plus tlc1c per mile 9.00 plus tlc1c per minute 1.50 per hour
Granada Pick-up 11.00 plus tlc1c per mile 70.00 plus tlc1c per mile 9.00 plus tlc1c per minute 1.50 per hour
LTD 12.00 plus tlc1c per mile 75.00 plus tlc1c per mile 10.00 plus tlc1c per minute 1.50 per hour
Station Wagon 13.00 plus tlc1c per mile 80.00 plus tlc1c per mile 11.00 plus tlc1c per minute 1.50 per hour
Business Discount
Above Rates Include Insurance
Insurance Laws Require You Must Be 21
WILL COME WITH A BMU
Henry's TM
FLYING SAUCERS
WITH COMPANY
WITH A SWINNER
Only
49¢
with any purchase
Made of quality plastic
in attractive colors.
Henry's thrilling new Flying Saucers are fun for the whole family.
Get yours today.
Henry's TM
6th & Missouri
843-2139
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358
audio reflex
Out of the Heart of Canada
Comes a Distinctly Different
Line of Audio Components.
AGS
"International Grand-Masters in Design/Engineering"
AGS MONTREAL • TORONTO • VANCOUVER • HALIFAX • NEW YORK •
TOKYO • OSAKA • SEOUL • TAIPEI • SYDNEY • LONDON • DUSSELDORF
AUDIO-REFLEX ONLY AT AUDIOTRONICS 928 Mass.
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Sound Set Audio Tv Aux Mp3
Mp4 Mp5 Mp6 Mp7 Mp8 Mp9 Mp10 Mp11 Mp12 Mp13 Mp14 Mp15 Mp16 Mp17 Mp18 Mp19 Mp20 Mp21 Mp22 Mp23 Mp24 Mp25 Mp26 Mp27 Mp28 Mp29 Mp30 Mp31 Mp32 Mp33 Mp34 Mp35 Mp36 Mp37 Mp38 Mp39 Mp40 Mp41 Mp42 Mp43 Mp44 Mp45 Mp46 Mp47 Mp48 Mp49 Mp50 Mp51 Mp52 Mp53 Mp54 Mp55 Mp56 Mp57 Mp58 Mp59 Mp60 Mp61 Mp62 Mp63 Mp64 Mp65 Mp66 Mp67 Mp68 Mp69 Mp70 Mp71 Mp72 Mp73 Mp74 Mp75 Mp76 Mp77 Mp78 Mp79 Mp80 Mp81 Mp82 Mp83 Mp84 Mp85 Mp86 Mp87 Mp88 Mp89 Mp90 Mp91 Mp92 Mp93 Mp94 Mp95 Mp96 Mp97 Mp98 Mp99 Mp100 Mp101 Mp102 Mp103 Mp104 Mp105 Mp106 Mp107 Mp108 Mp109 Mp110 Mp111 Mp112 Mp113 Mp114 Mp115 Mp116 Mp117 Mp118 Mp119 Mp120 Mp121 Mp122 Mp123 Mp124 Mp125 Mp126 Mp127 Mp128 Mp129 Mp130 Mp131 Mp132 Mp133 Mp134 Mp135 Mp136 Mp137 Mp138 Mp139 Mp140 Mp141 Mp142 Mp143 Mp144 Mp145 Mp146 Mp147 Mp148 Mp149 Mp150 Mp151 Mp152 Mp153 Mp154 Mp155 Mp156 Mp157 Mp158 Mp159 Mp160 Mp161 Mp162 Mp163 Mp164 Mp165 Mp166 Mp167 Mp168 Mp169 Mp170 Mp171 Mp172 Mp173 Mp174 Mp175 Mp176 Mp177 Mp178 Mp179 Mp180 Mp181 Mp182 Mp183 Mp184 Mp185 Mp186 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Mp1301 Mp1302 Mp1303 Mp1304 Mp1305 Mp1306 Mp1307 Mp1308 Mp1309 Mp1310 Mp1311 Mp1312 Mp1313 Mp1314 Mp1315 Mp1316 Mp1317 Mp1318 Mp1319 Mp1320 Mp1321 Mp1322 Mp1323 Mp1324 Mp1325 Mp1326 Mp1327 Mp1328 Mp1329 Mp1330 Mp1331 Mp1332 Mp1333 Mp1334 Mp1335 Mp1336 Mp1337 Mp1338 Mp1339 Mp1340 Mp1341 Mp1342 Mp1343 Mp1344 Mp1345 Mp1346 Mp1347 Mp1348 Mp1349 Mp1350 Mp1351 Mp1352 Mp1353 Mp1354 Mp1355 Mp1356 Mp1357 Mp1358 Mp1359 Mp1360 Mp1361 Mp1362 Mp1363 Mp1364 Mp1365 Mp1366 Mp1367 Mp1368 Mp1369 Mp1370 Mp1371 Mp1372 Mp1373 Mp1374 Mp1375 Mp1376 Mp1377 Mp1378 Mp1379 Mp1380 Mp1381 Mp1382 Mp1383 Mp1384 Mp1385 Mp1386 Mp1387 Mp1388 Mp1389 Mp1390 Mp1391 Mp1392 Mp1393 Mp1394 Mp1395 Mp1396 Mp1397 Mp1398 Mp1399 Mp1400 Mp1401 Mp1402 Mp1403 Mp1404 Mp1405 Mp1406 Mp1407 Mp1408 Mp1409 Mp1410 Mp1411 Mp1412 Mp1413 Mp1414 Mp1415 Mp1416 Mp1417 Mp1418 Mp1419 Mp1420 Mp1421 Mp1422 Mp1423 Mp1424 Mp1425 Mp1426 Mp1427 Mp1428 Mp1429 Mp1430 Mp1431 Mp1432 Mp1433 Mp1434 Mp1435 Mp1436 Mp1437 Mp1438 Mp1439 Mp1440 Mp1441 Mp1442 Mp1443 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Mp1873 Mp1874 Mp1875 Mp1876 Mp1877 Mp1878 Mp1879 Mp1880 Mp1881 Mp1882 Mp1883 Mp1884 Mp1885 Mp1886 Mp1887 Mp1888 Mp1889 Mp1890 Mp1891 Mp1892 Mp1893 Mp1894 Mp1895 Mp1896 Mp1897 Mp1898 Mp1899 Mp1900 Mp1901 Mp1902 Mp1903 Mp1904 Mp1905 Mp1906 Mp1907 Mp1908 Mp1909 Mp1910 Mp1911 Mp1912 Mp1913 Mp1914 Mp1915 Mp1916 Mp1917 Mp1918 Mp1919 Mp1920 Mp1921 Mp1922 Mp1923 Mp1924 Mp1925 Mp1926 Mp1927 Mp1928 Mp1929 Mp1930 Mp1931 Mp1932 Mp1933 Mp1934 Mp1935 Mp1936 Mp1937 Mp1938 Mp1939 Mp1940 Mp1941 Mp1942 Mp1943 Mp1944 Mp1945 Mp1946 Mp1947 Mp1948 Mp1949 Mp1950 Mp1951 Mp1952 Mp1953 Mp1954 Mp1955 Mp1956 Mp1957 Mp1958 Mp1959 Mp1960 Mp1961 Mp1962 Mp1963 Mp1964 Mp1965 Mp1966 Mp1967 Mp1968 Mp1969 Mp1970 Mp1971 Mp1972 Mp1973 Mp1974 Mp1975 Mp1976 Mp1977 Mp1978 Mp1979 Mp1980 Mp1981 Mp1982 Mp1983 Mp1984 Mp1985 Mp1986 Mp1987 Mp1988 Mp1989 Mp1990 Mp1991 Mp1992 Mp1993 Mp1994 Mp1995 Mp1996 Mp1997 Mp1998 Mp1999 Mp1000 Mp1001 Mp1002 Mp1003 Mp1004 Mp1005 Mp1006 Mp1007 Mp1008 Mp1009 Mp1010 Mp1011 Mp1012 Mp1013 Mp1014 Mp1015 Mp1016 Mp1017 Mp1018 Mp1019 Mp1020 Mp1021 Mp1022 Mp1023 Mp1024 Mp1025 Mp1026 Mp1027 Mp1028 Mp1029 Mp1030 Mp1031 Mp1032 Mp1033 Mp1034 Mp1035 Mp1036 Mp1037 Mp1038 Mp1039 Mp1040 Mp1041 Mp1042 Mp1043 Mp1044 Mp1045 Mp1046 Mp1047 Mp1048 Mp1049 Mp1050 Mp1051 Mp1052 Mp1053 Mp1054 Mp1055 Mp1056 Mp1057 Mp1058 Mp1059 Mp1060 Mp1061 Mp1062 Mp1063 Mp1064 Mp1065 Mp1066 Mp1067 Mp1068 Mp1069 Mp1070 Mp1071 Mp1072 Mp1073 Mp1074 Mp1075 Mp1076 Mp1077 Mp1078 Mp1079 Mp1080 Mp1081 Mp1082 Mp1083 Mp1084 Mp1085 Mp1086 Mp1087 Mp1088 Mp1089 Mp1090 Mp1091 Mp1092 Mp1093 Mp1094 Mp1095 Mp1096 Mp1097 Mp1098 Mp1099 Mp1100 Mp1101 Mp1102 Mp1103 Mp1104 Mp1105 Mp1106 Mp1107 Mp1108 Mp1109 Mp1110 Mp1111 Mp1112 Mp1113 Mp1114 Mp1115 Mp1116 Mp1117 Mp1118 Mp1119 Mp1120 Mp1121 Mp1122 Mp1123 Mp1124 Mp1125 Mp1126 Mp1127 Mp1128 Mp1129 Mp1130 Mp1131 Mp1132 Mp1133 Mp1134 Mp1135 Mp1136 Mp1137 Mp1138 Mp1139 Mp1140 Mp1141 Mp1142 Mp1143 Mp1144 Mp1145 Mp1146 Mp1147 Mp1148 Mp1149 Mp1150 Mp1151 Mp1152 Mp1153 Mp1154 Mp1155 Mp1156 Mp1157 Mp1158 Mp1159 Mp1160 Mp1161 Mp1162 Mp1163 Mp1164 Mp1165 Mp1166 Mp1167 Mp1168 Mp1169 Mp1170 Mp1171 Mp1172 Mp1173 Mp1174 Mp1175 Mp1176 Mp1177 Mp1178 Mp1179 Mp1180 Mp1181 Mp1182 Mp1183 Mp1184 Mp1185 Mp1186 Mp1187 Mp1188 Mp1189 Mp1190 Mp1191 Mp1192 Mp1193 Mp1194 Mp1195 Mp1196 Mp1197 Mp1198 Mp1199 Mp1200 Mp1201 Mp1202 Mp1203 Mp1204 Mp1205 Mp1206 Mp1207 Mp1208 Mp1209 Mp1210 Mp1211 Mp1212 Mp1213 Mp1214 Mp1215 Mp1216 Mp1217 Mp1218 Mp1219 Mp1220 Mp1221 Mp1222 Mp1223 Mp1224 Mp1225 Mp1226 Mp1227 Mp1228 Mp1229 Mp1230 Mp1231 Mp1232 M
MINIATURE DD MIDI CONTROL
BEAUTIFUL!
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
BEAUTIFUL!
Vol. 88 No.115
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 2.1976
Dog's best friend seems to be KU student
See page 5
Council loses its quorum; can't act on parking fees
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
A proposed parking fee increase is still undecided at the University Council meeting today to拍
After more than two hours of discussion at its meeting, the council couldn't act on the hikes because only 23 members remained, three less than the required number.
Council chairman Frances Ingemann, professor of linguistics, said after the meeting that the fee issue would probably not apply up again at the council's meeting April 15.
The council was considering a parking and traffic board proposal to raise parking fees.
Under the proposed scheme, universal permits would cost $50 per year; blue and red; $38; brown and yellow; $32; green; $28; purple; and white. Other equipment; $17; and medical handicapped $6.
Presently, yearly universal, blue, red,
brown and yellow permit are $32; green,
$25; residence hall and Sprague Apart-
ments; $18; and medical and handicapped.
$30.
The council did vote, however, to amend
the proposed fee schedule to separate medical from handicapped permits.
Tedde Tasheff, student body president, urged council members to vote against the proposed fees because of a parking services fund balance of $469,837.
The price of handicapped permits for the physically disabled was set at $10 and medical permits for people with other medical problems at $36.
The Kansan incorrectly reported
yesterday that the parking service
fund as $400.
But that amendment won't take effect until the council approves the entire fee until
"I think it aiburd to approve a budget in a board that would not find out its own balance."
Tasheff said parking and traffic board members were not aware of the fixed existence of parking facilities.
However, Martin Jones, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, told council members the fund wasn't a surplus but was the only parking services fund.
He said there would be a balance in that land of $302,000 at the end of the fiscal year. He told me that there would be no
Jones said the fund was also used to provide parking services with a source of revenue during summer months, when there is little revenue from parking fees.
Hugh Cotton, chairman of the parking and traffic board, said he hadn't been aware that the fund existed when the board revised the fee schedule.
Cotton said that he had checked with other board members yesterday and that they had agreed they didn't wish to change their fee recommendations.
necessary to provide a source of revenue for major parking lot improvements.
Cotton said the parking and traffic board didn't know about the large balance in the fund because it wasn't a body that made administrative decisions.
One project the board hoped to see finished within the next few years was the paving of O-zone parking lot, south of Allen Park. An estimate that project would cost $250,000.
Before finding out about the large fund, he said, board members were uncertain where funds for major lot improvements would be raised.
★ ★ ★
comic
Before considering the fee schedule, the board approved revisions in traffic rules on May 18, 2013.
Parking increase called essential to improvement
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
A large parking service fund is necessary to pay for major parking lot improvements, Martin Jones, associate vice chancellor for business affairs, said yesterday.
Jones said the fund, which now has about $470,000 in it, is definitely needed when major repair jobs were awarded.
Crowded out
The council voted to specify that; parking meter requirements not be enforced between midnight and 7 a.m., weekdays, and from noon to 5 p.m. Saturdays and Sundays; parking be restricted in residence hall lots to permit-holders during athletic and major meritus; parking permits be issued at no charge; faculty and retiree faculty and staff; and parking lot restrictions be enforced during intercollegiate athletic events.
Cotton told the council that, in spite of the final amendment, the chancellor could lift parking restrictions during major athletic events through a clause in the rules and regulations giving him the power to modify any regulations for special occasions.
With more than 2,500 albums and 5,000 singles in one's home things may tend to give a little crowded. It's a way life though for
This year's budget included a $90,000 allotment for maintenance. Jones said that $10,000 of that amount had been spent, and the remaining $800 would be spent by the end of the fiscal year.
"We must have cash on the barrel before we can sign any contracts," he said.
the maintenance allocation from $90,000 to
$100,000.
rock historian Bill Lee, of 258 Redbud Lane, who teaches a Free University course on rock music.
Next year's maintenance allocation will be $100,000. To exceed that level by dipping into the balance of the fund, Jones said, would require approval of the legislature.
Last year, a project to pave a parking lot near the new law school was paid for by the regular parking services budget, he said. A larger project, like the proposed paving of a driveway at Allen Field House, would have to be paid for by burglary money in the fund, he said.
Parking lot improvements are often contracted in the summer months, he said, and the projects can't be done with funds that would be received the following fall.
The fund isn't only for reserves, he said, because all parking services income is deposited in the fund.
The Board of Regents approves a parking services spending limit, and that is the amount budgeted for parking services each year. Jones said.
In increases in next year's parking services budget were required to cover a 5 per cent increase in the salaries of all classified personnel employed at the University; a 10 per cent increase in other operating expenditures; a new parking services position, assistant director of parking, at an annual salary of $12,000; and an increase in
if revenues don't match this budget, he said the deficit must be taken from the fund.
Students rock around the class
Jones said that the fund had been in existence for about 20 years, but that its current large balance was primarily a result of fiscal year 1974, when little was spent on parking lot maintenance and parking fees were raised.
By BECCI BREINING
A living room jammed with the sounds of such musicians as the Big Bopper, Ritchie Valens and Buddy Holly becomes a
Senate requests Title IX report
By HARRIS RAYL
Staff Writer
The Student Senate passed a resolution last night requesting the Title IX steering committee to release its report on possible violations of the state law in the city of Kansas when the report is completed.
Ed Rolfs, student senator, wrote the resolution and said he submitted it after the Kansas reported yesterday that DeLay responded and said he reported might not be made public.
The resolution also requests Chancellor Achele R. Dykes to order the release of the report.
The Senate also approved a petition by Rolfs urging Shankel to direct the University administration to "comply with the rules and regulations" information from members of the press."
The petition also directs the Senate Communications committee to "investigate and determine how, why and by whom, administrative documents or reports are classified secret." It set a May 5 deadline for the committee's report.
Rolfs said his petition was sparked by the dean of women's office's refusal to submit a copy of its budget to the Kansan Wednesday.
A copy of their budget was requested by
the Kansas because of alleged spurious differences between the office of the dean of law and that of the president.
The dispartisans were revealed recently by a University Title IX subcommittee. In response, the university
The Title IX report, which contains guidelines to end sex discrimination is now being studied by the committee whose report Rolf's resolution requests.
The members of the committee are Shankel, Mike Davis, university council, and David Robinson, former acting vice chancellor of the KU Medical Center.
John Olson, student senator and Russell sophomore, objected to the petition because the Dean of Women's office hadn't explained its reasons for the refusal.
"I think before going into this thing, we should go in deeper than just taking with a ruler."
"You haven't talked with the dean's office yet. I think we have to find out what has happened."
"I think information in the University is being tighter and tighter now and more diffuse."
Rolfs said his petition wasn't aimed only at the dean of women's office.
In other actions, the Senate approved a budget philosophy for its spring budget hearings. The statement, submitted by Randy McKernan, Salina sophomore, was written in an amended form by the Finance and Auditing committee Wednesday.
"My question is who is going to get hurt by this (the report's disclosure) and why," he said. "If someone is going to get hurt, I think the information needs to come out."
The Senate also decided to hear the late funding requests of two student groups.
The Undergraduate Anthropology Association is requesting $2,277.80 and the American Society of Civil Engineers is requesting $605.
WASHINGTON
Senate rules state that no student can serve on the council for more than two years.
The resignation of Adrienne Hyle, Manhattan graduate student, from the University Council was also announced. Hyle was elected to the seat March 24, but it was later discovered that she couldn't serve because she had already served for two years.
The seat now joins to Mark Anderson
a junior pilot, who was runner-up to Hylie
in the race.
Two Lawrence men were injured in a single-car accident last night when the car
suddenly collided about one mile out of traffic overpass on North Michigan. Rodney
Kimberly, 29, and his brother, David Kimberly, suffered injuries from the crash.
Staff photo by DON HIRBE
juries and possible internal injuries and was in good condition this morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, Ricky Howard, 20, 101 N. Michigan, was treated for minor injury.
classroom every Monday night for a group of Free University students who think rock
"Rock 'n' roll is here to Stay" is a tree course being offered for the first time since 1984. University, whose curriculum is a diverse array of non-credit and unstructured classes.
About eight rock 'n' roll fans gather each week at 263 redbud Lamp, Apt. 1, the home of Bill "Mister" Lee, instructor of the course. Lee taught the course six years ago when he was enrolled at the University of Houston to broadcast journalism student. He decided to teach it again when he returned to KU last fall to get a degree in theatre.
Lee, whose friends dubbed him 'Mister Lee' after the Bobettes' 1958 game of the same name, was a disc jockey in Kansas and Iowa for the past eight years.
Rock 'n' roll has been his work and his hobby. Because it remains the focus of all his attention, Lee hopes to teach rock 'n' roll in music history at a university music history department.
"Rock music is a cultural phenomenon that deserves serious study," he said. "It's the single most popular form of music in the world today."
Each week Lee draws from his collection about 2,500 album, 5,000 single and 100 booklets.
discussing what rock 'n' roll is, where it came from and where 'n' it is going
"But most of the time we spend just listening to rock 'n' roll records," he said. "Partly because it's more fun. Partly because rock 'n' roll speaks for itself."
An ability for remembering rock 'n' roll is the tischknife and he uses rook often when playing with his knives.
Learning such little-known facts is what attracted one student to the course.
"What do the Big Bopper, Ritchel Valine and Bucky Holly, three early rock 'n' roll guys form in 1959? They died together in a plane crash over Iowa in the spring of 1959. The day they died is the day that Don McCrean refers as 'the day the Beatles' died in his song "American Pie."
Peters sees the rock 'n' roll course from another aspect.
"I can listen to a song many times, but it takes Lee telling me some obscure information about the song to make it new again," said Maury Peters, 110 Connecticut.
"I've got a business degree, so I look at it from that point of view, too," he said.
Another rock 'n' roll enthusiast, Roger Johnson, 103 Wellington, said he thought that the study of rock 'n' roll is valid from a sociological point of view.
See ROCK page 3
AURH votes down officers' pay hike
Bv DEBI MORROW
A motion was defeated last night that would have reorganized financial compensation for residence hall presidents and vice-presidents and Association of University Residence Hall (AURH) executive board members.
The motion was defeated at an AURH Assembly meeting at Elsworth Hall.
David Barclay, president of McCollum,
made the motion. He asked the office of
business department to allow women's offices to allow a free double-room
contract for all hall meetings or have that cost subtracted from a single room. He also
requested that a single room contract at a double-room
The total cost of the proposal would have been £21,765. Barclay said.
Dan Barnett, Bethesda, Md., senior,
made an amendment to the motion to
include AURH executive board members in
compensation with the hall presidents.
Hall presidents and AURH executive board members now receive a single-room contract for a double-room price. Vice presidents receive no compensation.
The difference between a single-room contract and a double-room contract is
Barclay said he was supporting the motion because it would ultimately benefit hall residents. Demands on time and energy of officers serving the residents, he said, many aren't able to carry a full academic work load and do a good job as an officer.
With more financial compensation, he said, the officers would be able to finance a hard record to carry fewer hours that might require them to attend an extra semester to graduate.
"There is a certain point to where a person must draw a line and set priorities," she said.
He then pointed out the near total lack of volunteers last night for AURB projects because of low funding.
"We must compensate these officers so they can have the time to give to their hall."
Jim Kren, Columbia, Mo. Junior objected, saying an officer was a victim of the attack.
"Each student should consider the time commitment when running for an office,"
Mike Taraboulos, AURH president and Prairie Village junior, said, "It is my belief that the students are elected to help the administration work out problems with and for you. It's not a staffing system. You have the choice of elected officers to be students or staff."
Taraboules also said he didn't know where the money for the proposal would come.
The motion was easily defended, with Bishay and Pendergast the lone supporters.
2
Friday, April 2, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Lebanese start 20th truce
BEIRUT, Lebanon—Moaires and Christians agreed yesterday to a 10-day cease fire in Lebanon's civil war, with gunmen from both sides to remain in place.
The truce, to begin at noon today—4 a.m. CST—was announced after intense international pressure, including the Palestinian guerrillas, with butt
If it takes place, the cease-fire will be the 20th in the war, which has claimed about 14,000 lives since it broke out last April 14.
All previous cease-fires broke down because there was no basic agreement satisfying demands by the Modern majority for more power in the Christian-
The latest truce was offered by leftist Moslem leader Karam Junbait to permit election of a new president. A spokesman for the right-wing Phalangia party, the National Front, said that it was seeking the vote.
However, there was no immediate word from Christian President Suleiman Francki's office on whether he would agree to resign.
The cease-fire was designed to give him a 10-day period to step down but was not continent on his immediate resignation.
Strikers picket 2 hospitals
SAN FRANCISCO--Pickering spread to two major hospitals yesterday as a serker in the hospital said all public services would be closed for the week with a sign of progress toward a settlement.
San Franciscoans, stung by the third strike of city workers in two years, found alternate means of getting to work and around town. They also had to make do with a broken car.
Mayor George Moscone, who has vowed to stay in his office around the clock to serve as a mediator if asked, spent another night on a cot in City Hall.
Several thousand city employees wee off the job as nonstriking city unions honored pocket lines thrown up by the 10 unions representing craft workers who were working in the City.
The Board of Supervisors set up a strike headquarters at a downtown hotel but neither side reported any progress. No talks were under way and none were scheduled.
Preanant student expelled
Using the traditional system, a student who wanted to write a thesis on individualized instruction in music would have to look up all references under "music" and "individual instruction," she would state his subject as a librarian who would use the computer to look up only articles included in both categories.
Barbara Jones, associate reference librarian in Watson Library, used an example to explain the benefits of the new system.
The system is already being used in areas such as education, medicine and chemistry. The latest step is to connect the University with other universities. The System and Systems Development Corporation, two California commercial firms, are collaborating to most fields of science and social science.
The method can handle a larger number of categories. According to Marte Young, science librarian, a student could ask for books in the English language on certain drugs used to treat a particular disease in children of a specific age. A trained
"In my opinion that's not too bad," she said, "if you consider the time you might spend looking through catalogs and writing down references."
HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — An unnwed, 22-year-old student expelled from the Florida Bible College for the ultimate hatred after she became pregnant, is suing the school in a case that began with a petition to stop it.
This will become possible when the last development in the "Selective Dissemination of Information" service is completed this fall.
Students will have to pay for these services. The Lockheed Corporation, for example, charges about $45 for an hour of computer time. With telephone costs added, it could cost a student $15 to $20 for a 15-minute session.
Young said she thought the cost wasn't unreasonable.
Young said she hoped people would become aware of the system. She said only one or two people used the MEDLINE service each month. This service connects KU with the National Library of Medicine in Bethesda, Md.
Two terminals will be installed at KU, one in the reference room in Watson and one in the science library in Malot Hall. The terminals will be cathode ray screens similar to television screens and will cost about $3,000 each.
A student looking for background information on a subject in almost any field will soon be able to plug the subject into a computer to get a written bibliography within minutes.
Graduate students and faculty were most likely to use the system, Young said, but she hoped it would help some undergraduates. "It's not a problem," people were still suspicious of computers.
The new terminals should be installed by the end of this semester but it will take time to install them.
Deborah Jean Clayton, a candidate for a four-year bachelor of arts degree in Biblical education with a minor in theology, was six weeks away from graduation at Columbia University.
librarian, she said, should be able to feed such information into the computer and receive the required booklist within 15 minutes.
Her suit, filed Wednesday in Broward County Circuit Court, seeks her re-statement and a temporary injunction against her expulsion.
New computers will aid student research
The attorney general said that undercover agents from his office were investigating扑泥泵站 stations before a complaint was filed in February.
"I'm just heartstarts for a fine, upstanding young lady like this can be deprived of her education by a like this like," said Clayton's lawyer, Patrick C. Rastatter. Rastatter told the father-to-be also was a Florida Bible College student and was excelled. The student was not identified by Rastater or by the school.
The episode follows by a little more than a year the resignation of the school's founding president, the Rev. A. Ray Stanford, who disappeared in January 1975 and told the college in a tape recording that he had committed adultery with one of his students.
Turnvike users victimized
Schneider added that the oil company leasing the stations was unaware of deceptive sales practices used by some service station employees.
TOPEKA-Atty, Gen. Curt Schneider said yesterday results of an investigation conducted by his office revealed that some service stations along the Karsas
The conference committee proposed a revised bill that would impose the death penalty for seven specific types of crime: murder by an inmate of a correctional institution, murder by contract, kidnap murder, multiple murders, rape murder, murder committed in connection with aggravated robbery and murder of a wif
State Sen. Edward F. Reilly Jr., R-Leavemount, a strong proposition of the death penalty, said he considered the conference committee proposal a reasonable compromise although it abandoned the Senate position in favor of imposing the death penalty for malicious, wilful, premeditated murder.
The station probe centered on high pressure sales, threats of law enforcement arrests if purchases weren't made, sales of unneeded products, overcharges on fixed rate or scheduled prices, scare sales tactics and thefts of property from wrecked or disabled vehicles.
Death penalty bill revised
TOPEKA—House and Senate conferences have reached tentative agreement on a bill to reinstate the death penalty in Kansas.
State Rep. Randal Palmer, R-Pittsburg, a member of the conference committee along with Kelly, said that the report of the committee couldn't be signed and would not be released.
GSC to establish program for training of TAs and AIs
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
Staff Writer
Establishment of a training program for graduate teaching assistants (TAs) and assistant instructors (AIs) was confirmed to graduate Student Council meeting last night.
The program won't start until next year and no details about it have been decided.
Kathy Dugan, spokesman for the Graduate Executive Committee (GradEx), said that the program was a result of the Student Senate Commission on the Quality of Classroom Instruction, which was in charge of Rofls when he was student body president.
According to Dugan, TAS and AIS are teachers in training, and are accountable to the Senate Commission just as professors are required to be so could be told to have a training program.
Dugan reported that the administration was in favor of some kind of, training program and was using the GSC as a guide to ideas and reactions to different programs.
The GSC committee reports on the training programs in the graduates newspaper, GNP, recommended programs organized by each student's department, participate in the decisions made during the programs, voluntary participation in the programs.
Other matters discussed included fee waivers for graduate assistants and the amount of hours required for status as a full-time student at KU.
According to Charlotte Kimbrough, a GradX member the fee waiver request process should be documented.
executive vice chancellor, is the same administrative proposal rejected by the Kansas Board of Regents last year because of the financial consequences.
She said the proposal called for a graduated waiver of fees for TAs and Als
The GSC endorsed an original report of a fee waiver committee that called for a waiver of tuition fees and health fees for all graduate assistants, including TA, AIs, RAs (resident assistants) and other graduates employed by the University.
A committee was set up to define which graduate student employees would be in charge.
Another committee was formed to review the advantages and disadvantages of changing the full-time status of graduate students from a 12-hour to a 9-hour work load.
GSC members will work with Campus Veteran representatives on the status report.
Jim Bailey, assistant to the president of Campus Veterans, said all five other Kansas Regent schools defined the work load of full-time graduate students as nine
Duran said that GSC would like more information on the issue. She was concerned that the nine-hour requirement would be more challenging to graduate students, including graduate assistants.
Graduate assistants have a work load in proportion to the hours they work for the University and hours they are in class. For example, a TA could have a half-time teaching position and take six hours of work to be a full-time graduate student.
Social data reported by census
In other action, the results of a GSC ballot were announced. In the results:
WASHINGTON (AP)—More than a million couples in the United States were divorced last year, the highest number in American history, a new government study found. During the same period, the number of marriages dropped to the lowest level since 1969.
THE REPORT, a profile of the economic and social conditions of the American population, is based on data provided by the Census Bureau. It shows that the number of divorces increased by 6 per cent to 1,050.8 between 1774 and 1975, while the number of marriages decreased by 4 per cent to 2.1 million.
By 1976, the total U.S. population reached 214.5 million, an increase of less than 0.5%.
The profile also shows;
A GCS Constitution was passed. Ellen Reynolds, executive coordinator of GSC, said Wednesday that the GSC had been governed by a set of by-laws before, but that by-law changes were made and it was able to appropriate funds to graduate organizations and paid a half-time employee.
During the same period, the number of
The number of households with a female head increased by 30 per cent between 1982 and 2002.
persons under age 35 maintaining a household entitlement alone double from 1.5
The purchase of low-cost liability insurance for graduate assistants was defended.
-Wives under age 25 showed a strong preference for having two children.
The report shows that the population rose by about 1.7 million people during 1975, an increase of less than one per cent. However, the increase is higher than in the previous three years.
The report shows that although it will be many years before the country reaches zero population growth, the current fertility rate is still about 1.28, which for natural replacement of the population.
Average income in 1974 was $12,840-$
percent low than in 1973 when adjusted for
the recession.
continued their tendency to postpone marriage. In 1975, 40 per cent of women between the ages of 20 and 24 were single, compared to 28 per cent in 1960. At the same time, almost 60 per cent of males the same age were single, compared to 53 per cent in 1960.
THE TOTAL fertility rate is the average number of births per woman according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
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1029 Mass.
International Festival
Date: SUNDAY, APRIL 4
Place: UNION BUILDING
A. Exhibition:
10:00-11:00 p.m.
2:00-5:00 p.m.
See the cultural displays of various nations at Big 8 & Jayhawk Rooms.
B. Banquet of Nations: 5:00-7:00 p.m.
If you want to dine at China, Japan, India, Thailand, Pakistan
all at one time, only $4.00. Tickets
will be available by call or email at 841-5218, 849-2603.
C. Performances:
7:00-10:00 p.m.
Songs, Dances, Folk Music, Plays, etc.
Everybody Welcomed
Sponored by International Club, funded by student activity fees
Bennett blasts Med Center bills
TOPEKA (AP) -Mixed emotions over legislation approved recently by the Kansas House were expressed yesterday by Gov. Mike Huckabee, billing dictenal medical school admissions.
Bennett came down hard on a bill approved 102-18 by the House Thursday which would require the 200 medical students admitted each year to the University of Kansas Medical School to come from geographic areas of the state.
The governor said he believed the bill would base admissions of "political offenders" from schools.
The bill, which now goes to the Senate, mandates that five medical students from each of the state's 40 senatorial districts be accepted to the schools.
Supporters argued that this is the only
Senate reviews antitrust action for oil industry
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate antitrust subcommittee yesterday approved and sent on a bill to break up the tightly controlled petroleum industry.
The measure, which now goes to the Senate Judiciary Committee, would require the nation's 18 largest oil companies to reduce their operations to either petroleum production, transportation, refining or marketing, sponsors of the bill said.
way to put the medical school on notice that it must rain doctors from every area of the state so some will return to their home areas to practice.
Bernett said he would hate to see politics enter into the admissions policies of the university.
The sole exception would be for some refiners, who also would be permitted to engage in the retail marketing of petroleum products.
Pool Tables Coors Foosball Schlitz (Hard & Soft Balls)
JACK'S Goal Post is under new management. Come and have a beer with Marvin. He's really nice and is anxious to serve you.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., said opponents
to the governor counter to defeat
the controversy over
The major oil companies now control the industry by drilling for oil, transporting it through their own pipelines, refining it in their own refineries and then selling their own wholesale and retail outlets.
Pitchers $1.25
Thursday, Friday and Saturday 12 p.m.-5 p.m.
STUDENT STAFF POSITIONS AVAILABLE
for
1976 Summer Orientation Programs
Desired qualifications:
... good academic standing
. . . undergraduate at the University of Kansas
. . . leadership qualities and skills
... knowledge of University programs & activities
Job descriptions & a...
Admissions & Records, 126 Strong
Applications due by Friday, April 2
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
n a world buffeted by ch
the unchanging church
On a fateful day in
Olympia, Brewing Company, Olympia, Washington *OLY18*
October, 1919 Mac C Rosenfeld received Patent #1,200-321 for it a gleaming symphony of spring steel, the church key was used by three generations of thirsty collegians Oly drinkers. Not until the reuse-up was its utility questioned, although the Oly bottle will always keep one on hand for taw-Stubbies and Oliving bottles
ange; consider
key
step
do the
days
ages and
count
ill
ity
The design of the church key has not changed because it was made with skill, ingenuity and simplicity. A great beer doesn't change for many of the same reasons. If it's done right going in, you'll have an unchanged quality of quality. Some things never change. Olympia never will.
OLYMPIA
Beer doesn't get any better.
FAST!
"... when it comes to pizza delivery"
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
PIZZA
University Daily Kanson
Friday, April 2. 1976
Rock 'n' roll
From page one
--bass guitar. He said that he liked the keyboard and that the format was conducted later, when formal was conducted.
"Ivalsyld lies in the fact that pop music in general has been and continues to be an important form of social pleasure," Johnson said.
Bob Wilson, manager of Better Day's Records, said that the study of rock 'n' roll was important because it can bridge the gap between generations of Americans.
"The average 18- or 19-year-old knows only a little about where rock 'n' roll has come from," said Wilson, a group participant. "Studying it can give more understanding of the nature of rock 'n' roll and make it less alien to younger people."
Still another rock m' roll enthusiast, Roy Frederick Dulr Jr. 1171, Kentucky, said he hoped participating in the class would improve his talent for playing the electric
Whether such a relaxed atmosphere will fit into a college setting, Lee doesn't know, but he has been taught to teach a survey course in rock 'n' roll to the faculty of Liberal Arts and Science at KU. If his proposal is accepted Lee will teach the course for two years. But he is dubious of its acceptance.
"The problem with rock 'n' roll is that most people in music history departments don't see beyond classical or so-called serious music," he said. "But rock has a very deep significance in the structure of our society.
"As well as being fun and entertaining,
she has been a statement of identity for you."
*Vivian Woolley*
Teachers' rights as citizens were discussed by a panel at the end of the conference, which involved educators from all aspects of the education field.
Members of the concluding panel included Margaret Gatewood, attorney for the Kansas National Education Association, who had spoken earlier on "Teachers" about the case. F. Lyle, Shawnee Mission attorney, who had spoken earlier on "Students." Rights.
The rights of students, teachers and the public were the focus of the second annual spring conference on "Innovations in Education" Wednesday in the Kansas Union
Teachers' rights topic of education meeting
The panel was moderated by Michael Davis, University general counsel. Other panel members were Jacob Dickinson, Topeka High School student; Moe Hulub, Tonowanda, N.Y., teacher; Joan Markman, fifth grade teacher in the Shawnee Mission and Vivian King, chairman of the Lawyers School Community Relations Council.
set social and moral standards. They have an enormous amount of power and ingenuity.
Lytle, responding to Gatewood's speech, wrote that his labor problems were different from others.
Llee said that rock 'n' roll started gaining power in the middle of the '50s when it sprung from a synthesis of country-western and rhythm-and-blues music. It came at an opportune time when American society was plagued with juvenile delinquency, he said.
"It is unwise and impractical to suggest that public labor negotiations are the same as private."
"Some experts think that juvenile delinquency caused rock 'n' roll and others think that rock 'n' roll caused juvenile delinquency," Lee said. "But either way, teenagers were being recognized as an adult for their behavior or young adults, but people who had buying power—power to buy magazines and, more important, records.
"Public servants have no right to withhold services they are under contract for."
Gatewood and Markman argued that teachers were entitled to the same rights as other citizens. King partly agreed, but the teacher must not set bad examples for students.
"Teaching by example is part of a teacher's responsibility, and this responsibility is stronger than their rights as citizens," she said.
The panel discussed problems of citizen and parental involvement, tenure and what is at stake.
Although the turnout wasn't as big as it was for last year's conference, Regier said, the discussions brought out important issues.
Herold Regier, director of educational planning, said the conference had been a success. About 150 people attended parts of the conference, he said.
The conference was sponsored by the University of Kansas School of Education and by the KU division of Continuing Education. Regier said the School of Education has sponsored similar events for years.
Davis, in closing the panel, said, "The most important thing is that the conference was held at all. Bringing the issues out is what the conference was all about."
"Rock 'n' roll set them apart and labeled their culture. Now, those of us who were born with rock 'n' roll have grown up with it and have validated it."
"He was the first and possibly the ultimate winner," he said. "He was a tatum and he was needed."
Lee's first rock n' roll experience came when he was 11. He saw Elvis Presley in concert in Tacoma, Wash., Lee's home at that time.
Three years after presley, while Lee was living in Hamburg, Germany, with his army parents, he saw the Beatles, who time hadn't yet recorded their first single.
"I really didn't know who they were then, but I liked them because they spoke best. But I loved them."
The movements of the Mozart composition, "Serenade No.10 in B-flat major," blend to create a contrast of musical serenity and frivolity. These variations of theme exhibit Mozart's range of musical ideas.
"Solo for Trumpet and Winds," a composition by Knox, will be performed. Knox is currently a member of the music faculty at Georgia State University.
The concert in Germany was a long time ago, he said, and rock 'n' roll has grown up since.
The concert will include compositions by Wolfgang Mozart, Charles Knox and Anton Schumann.
Chicago chamber group to play Sunday in Hoch
Tickets for Sunday's performance of the Chicago Chamber Orchestra in Hoch Auditorium are still available in the SUA office.
"When rock 'n' roll became popular they said it wouldn't last. That was 20 years ago, and look at it now." Lee said. "Rock stars nowadays set moral standards, fashion trends and even receive invitations from the White House to entertain."
Dvorak is recognized as one of the leaders of the Bohemian school of music. His *Srêmade in D minor*," to be performed by the bohemian orchestra, is a joyful, spiritized piece.
The orchestra, best known in Chicago for its lakeside concerts in city parks, will present a program at 8 p.m. of music, string, brass and wind instruments.
Rock 'n' rock has evolved into variations on a theme, he said, and is a "spintered industry." New types are constantly coming out and supporting themselves, Lee said.
The 15-member group will be conducted by Dieter Kober, its permanent conductor. Kober begin music training in his native Germany. He has a doctorate in musicology and studied composition and studied conducting with Rudolph Gartscher in Chicago and with Iogor Markevich in Salzburg.
As a permanent resident orchestra of Chicago, the chamber orchestra that will perform at KU is composed of some of the best professional musicians in that city. Its repertory includes renditions of old and new music composed specifically for it.
"It rock 'n' roll is to be replaced with something, it must be replaced with something better." he said "The only thing that matters is along and do that is better rock 'n' roll."
A chamber orchestra is a small symphony orchestra ranging in size from 12 to 35 players, compared with the 50 to 100 members of a full symphony orchestra.
Will rock 'n' roll ever be replaced? Lee thinks not.
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Bennett signed legislation allotting $3.6 million for a new computer facility at KU and $2 million for a new radiation therapy unit to the KU Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan
The funds were included in a $13.76 million appropriations bill Bennett signed for new construction at the state's colleges and universities.
Kids of $6.5 million for construction at
FWL were signed into law by Gov. Robert F.
Bentley
Building funds signed into law by Gov. Bennett
"Any group that doesn't look out for itself, that doesn't do all the things necessary to achieve recognition—they aren't going to win."
Looper said much of the militant Chicano movement has not had a lasting 'adhesive quality' "The Chanicos have much to learn from the blacks' civil rights efforts.
Unless they organize and unless they participate in this mechanism they're going to fail.
Loper said that Chicanos haven't paid attention to the power of the vote.
843-6111
An unusual 100 per cent voter turnout in an unusual 100 per cent precincts in Los Angeles which the winning margin for John F. Kennedy in a national race with Richard Nixon, Lopeser said.
Loper, a lawyer and author, made these remarks in a Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Lecture attended by 75 persons in 3140 Wescoe.
The human resources of America need to be fully utilized and Chicago especially must learn to work within the national system. Enrique "Hank" Haack said last night.
9th & Indiana
Chicano political activity urged
He said the influence of the large Chicano voter turnout in he 1960 presidential election was an example of good voting organization.
"In this presidential year if the Chicanos and Puerto Ricans could organize themselves, they could have a profound effect on the election," he said.
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Lopez attributed the Chicano and Puerto Rican's loose political organization to "the disappearing leadership syndrome."
He also said Chicanos were able to move about more freely after getting a good job than blacks and therefore were less likely to return and influence their communities.
Lopez said that militants didn't gain anything.
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4
Friday, April 2, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
心
THE FIELD
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Insane in the madhouse
Anunus, played by Ron Willis (left), professor of theater, points out a special入侵 in his maddness to his assistant Lelillo,
played by Lynx Levy, Lawrence sophomore, in "The Changling" which opened at the University Theatre. Performance will be 8 o'clock and 9 o'clock on Saturday.
The plot is simply that a young woman of seeming virtue Reatice-Joanna, is drawn by passionate desire into a course
Play views skewed virtue
Time, they say, heals all things, so perhaps by opening night the sluggish and uneven tempo of an otherwise admirable production may have been rectified.
The play, by Thomas Middleton and William Rowley, is a 17th century piece of the Jacobone revenge-tragedy sort and it is refreshing (and indeed frightening) to be able to see a production of something—anything—from that period besides Shakespeare.
Staff Writer
Although views of tragedy have changed radically since 1623 we might more apt call them 'sorrowful' because it is curiously modern in its cynical view of a morally skewed universe wherein the villains are often indulgent in disillusion from the virtuous.
This is a review of a "work in progress," so to speak. The necessity of deadlines found me seeing the University Theatre production of "The Changeling" not on open night, but at Wednesday's dress rehearsal. It was unusual that some, at least, of the play's problems were merely symptomatic of that circumstance.
Grateful Dead transcends music trends
By BILL UYEKI
The Grateful Dead is one of the few groups left from the San Francisco music scene of the late 1960's. And for a while it seemed the Dead was hardly surviving.
GARcia RANKS among the vin 'je rock guitarists. There's problems no one better at with vin 'je and no novelive leaves without venturing too far from a song's melody. There may be some who are faster or fancier or less attentive than master at expressing emotions.
The group's attempt to record, promote and distribute its own records flat on its face. But the group negotiated a deal with some of the artists and freed itself to what it does best - play music.
Solo albums from the group's seven members have appeared over the last couple of years, since the Dead quit touring. Two of the most recent albums are lead guitarist Jerry Garcia's "Reflections" and rhythm guitarist Bob Weir's "Kingfish".
By JOHN BUSH JONES
It's a shame more of the album isn't set aside for Garcia's guitar improvisations. Perhaps the limitless creativity of Garcia, which continually adds new material comfortably confined to a plastic vinyl disc with only 20 minutes of music on each side.
Among the standouts on the album is "Mission in the Rain," which weeps with regret. Larry Ragni, an executive compartment provides a blues
Guest Reviewer
Most of the eight songs on "Reflections" are toned-down, laid-back rock, jazz and blues numbers, none of which approaches more than a casual beat. All members of the reflections are associated with the album, along with several session musicians.
Weir joins a tight crew of four California musicians, one being Dave Torbert, former bassist
"Tore Up Over You" is the album's big rock number. Garcia opens with some biting blues riffs and the tempo coasts behind some spunky barron piano runs by Nicky Hopkins. Another notable cut is "Cattifah" which starts with Garcia, Weir and Donna Godcheux combining in wailing, gospel harmony.
Perhaps more accessible for the mass audience is "hugged" Wer's second solo LP, recorded by a group of the same name.
GARCIA EXPLORES new musical tangents with "Reflections," although the album seems uninspiring because it lacks anything faster than a casual pocker rocker.
plot was of moral ones: two pretend madmen vie for the affections of the young wife of old Albius, the proprietor of this 17th century cuckoo's nest. Albius is played to the hilt with doddering bluster by Ronald Willis.
Generally less successful than the Beatrice-DeFlores action, the sub-plot's problem is one of performance.
Uneven performances assus,
the vigorous and visually
striking production was
engineered by the sure hand of
William Keeler, a director
daring and imaginative enough
to have pulled off such a play at
all-and the production's
success is largely his. His,
and Gregory Hill, for the
creation of a gorgeous set
combining opulent luxury with
encouraging decay—the perfect
image for the play's theme of
decadence.
audience an opportunity to see her growing awareness of忍睬 evil and her capacity for duplicity and revenge, all despite her protestations of innocence and honor.
Other performers in the main action lend adequate, although not outstanding, support to the team. When necessary, satisfying, perhaps, are Michael Wise and Larry Jasper, but the general mixture of styles and varying degrees of execution remain a problem.
Meanwhile, back at the comic sub-plot (yes, gentle reader), there's one of those, we see the boy on the right, presumably typical London madhouse. Here is a plot of physical disguises, as the main
John Bush Jones, associate professor of English, is the special drama correspondent to the Kansas City Times and Star.
(7:30p.m. Tuesday at Off the Wall Hall)
BENEFIT CONCERT: Local musicians will perform in a benefit concert for Mike Bilchroth and Medical Center Burn Center.
CHICAGO CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
conducted by Dieler Rober, will perform works for wind brass
Ballet
(8 p.m. Monday at Off-the Wall Hall)
KENJE KAMIYA AND KIYOTO ISHIMARU: Classical guitarists from Japan.
This Week's Highlights
Concerts
AMERICAN CHAMBER BALLET: Five works from a variety of ballets under the direction of Joel Benjamin.
COLLEGIUM MUSICUM: "A
Medieval Renaissance. Spring
works from the 13th-14th c.
tensions that deal with
immersion."
(3 p.m. Sunday at the Museum of Art)
UNIVERSITY SINGERS:
The freshman select choir will be conducted by James Ralston, a music professor in the music, and Martin Hook, Bolivar. Mo. graduate student.
@ p.m. Wednesday in room 102.
Exhibits
His girlfriend, Linda, is a part-time waterbed demonstrator, a writer, and, in her spare time, a Renaissance woman. She is competent, independent and witty.
(8 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch Auditorium)
MADLY IN LOVE with his elusive feminist, David finally asks her to marry him. She says something about wanting to commitments," and David feels like a discarded Big Mac card.
Gail Parent can turn a phrase with a grace to match Woody Allen's, which is not surprising—she's been turning phrases for a living for some time.
LINDA WORKS while David is left at home poring over "101 Ways to Use Campbell's Cheese Soup." It isn't long before he's asked if he'd desire to become a mother: "I tried on numerous occasions to bring the subject of having a baby to him, and that Pop has a baby! . . . I think it would be a great idea if we had one. She would say, 'No, I don't want to bring up a child here; they did foreign films.'
with the New Riders of the Purple Sage.
san't pinpoint the exact day that I became your typical housewife, but I guess it was an early morning, something very close to how: 'You never take me my anpause anymore,' and she said, 'For Christ sake. David, I'm tired at the end of "day" — is dinner ready?'
SURFACE DESIGN CONFERENCE I: A variety of
She, was one of the first female comedy writers for television, one of the creators of "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman," and "The Real Deal" selling "Shelia Levine is Dead and Living in New York."
(8 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium)
RENE GIARD:
"Shakespeare in Our Cultural
Humanities lecture. Girard is a
distinguished professor of
English and French at the State
University of New York at
Park Ridge."
As Beatrice-Joanne, Nancy Opel fares somewhat less successfully, especially in the early moments of the play. Too hard and calculating from the start, she never gives the
country riffs by Hoddinott, and Kelly's foot-draping harmonica interludes, "Home to Dixie," a funky, yet light and driftng, traveling song, has been getting displayed from local radio stations.
(8 p.m. Tuesday in Woodruff Auditorium)
Fortunately, for the overall production, the role of DeFlores is carried by Peter Miner in what is far and away the strongest performance of the evening. Miner's depth of characterization and range of vocal embellishments make him a very appealing man just the attractive scoundrel he should be.
With his deep, resonant vocals, We can easily cross the boundary from rock to country. On this album he sings a fine arrangement of the Marty Robbins' tunes, "Big Iron." Also, "Hymnotize" is a pleasant surprise. The group has a surprise song by Jimi Hendrix and folk, but this cut is surprisingly professional jazz. And if that's not enough variety for the critical ear, there's "Bye and Bye," a bouncy version of a traditional gospel song.
GEORGE PLIMPTON:
THE dearlevi author of "Paper
Cats" and numerous other books
based on his experiences
assuming the roles of
the Amateur willow or the Pro-
The Amateur vs. the Pro."
As a whole, this is an appealing package of folk-rock, country western and jazz music. It's quite a stick studio cut, too, with ample overdubs and touches that are used to create a varied sound.
Weir is one of the most creative rhythm guitarists in rock, thanks to years of backing Garcia.
Parent draws a caricature of role-muddled David Meyer, adapting to his new role: "I
finds out his girlfriend is the kind of person who would stop seeing a man if he saw the wrong movies.
FACULTY RECITAL Roger Stoner, assistant professor of wind and percussion, will perform on the trumpet.
of murder and sexual dissolution—all, she thinks wrong-mindedly, to protect her honor. As if this vicious irony weren't enough, the "honest DeFlores," the ugly reprobate to whom she is drawn for her sake, has denied that; unlike Beatrix Joanna, the villain knows himself to be a villain.
exhibits, some juried, ranging from historical textiles to industrial designs. Works by both students and professionals.
Lectures
THE CHANGELING : A
JASON MIDDleton
by Thomas Middleton
and William Rowley, replete with
murder, subplots, comedy and
WEIR AND TORHERT are both polished vocalists, and they deliver the album's lyrics with smooth and comforting manner.
"Wild Northland" is a notable track on the first side. It's a bouncy Torbert tune, a fine traveler's song aided by rapid
Recitals
(8 p.m. tonight and tomorrow night and 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre)
(Through April at the Kansas Union, the Museum of Art, the Lawrence Public Library, 7E7 and the Lawrence Arts Center)
PUNISHMENT PARK—The first of seven films to be shown in campus during director Peter KU. "Punishment Park" is his most controversial film and represents a demonstration of production to one of the world's foremost political filmmakers. It is a film that unfolded in this country because of its alleghelic attack on the U.S. government's repression of war
THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING--More than 20 years ago director John Huston planned to make his film with Bogart and Gable, only to have to abandon it. Now the dream project has now been realized, with Michael Caine and Sean Connery in the roles.
Theater
(8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall)
David Meyer thinks he has his act together where women are concerned. He's young, hip, wears 40 jeans and has always been a dapper and fierce "killer." His talents include an ability to hustle prom queens and others. There's no problem—that is, until he falls in love with a liberated woman. He goes to her apartment. Meyer's world turns upside down. He spends Saturday night at home waiting for the telephone to ring, or to see him in school, when carefree can't fit him in before his Friday night date. Chronic insecurity plagues him when he
Although David eventually does become a mother, his beloved Linda remains aloof and nothing is permanently resolved. It doesn't matter though, because neither Linda nor David will ever be the same after knowing each other.
Films
(8 p.m. Monday in Hoch Auditorium)
ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOOK'S NEST—So what if it won only slightly more than half of the Academy Awards it was nominated for? The tight ensembles and compensate the viewer who wants to quibble about idiotic Oscars.
WINGS—The first film to win an Academy Award, and a class of students inDirected by William Wallman, Warren Siskin, and Clara Bauer, digital
ON ANY SUNDAY— Everything you never wanted to know about motorcycle sports.
CALIFORNIA SPLIT—
baking celebration of gambling in a showcase for Elliot Gould and George Geiger, who star as the governor of Texas.
Check ads for theaters and times.
Let the myth be put to rest that feminists do not have a sense of humor about their predicament. Gail Parent has put together a spoofer at role reversal in the 1850's in which he uses the chauvain upringings that is anything but serious.
DAVID MEYER IS A MOTHER. By Gail Parent, New York, Harper and Row. $7.95.
By SHERRY FRANKLIN
Lady killer meets his match in feminist sex role parody
Reviewer
Stars strike sparks in sex clash
Reviewer
By CHUCK SACK
One of the oldest and most improbable plot situations is that of the old caswacks—two people who are shipwrecked on a desert island and forced to cooperate despite their incompatible natures. Now, with their new situation this same situation have been stranded at the same theater during the same week.
Both "Sweet Away by an Unusual Destiny in the Blue Sea of August" and "Man Friday" are satirical treatments of the standard plot. The latter is Robinson Crusoe retold from
Friday's point of view. "Sweep away!" shows an economically minded Adam and Eve cast into a modern Garden of Eden.
Maybe it's a result of the current surplus of films that pair mule stars—this weekend alone you can see Goula-Sgalaal McGraw or Neil Jordan, Newman-Redford thing-or maybe it's simply that the battle between the sexes is more timely than the clash between races. but "Swet" competition six ways to Friday.
FOR ONE THING, the Peter O'Toole-Richard Roundtree combination in "Man Friday"
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
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doesn't strike any sparks. Although each man is an acceptable actor, they are both too polished in style and too refined in tactility to be necessary contrast. Jack Gold's static direction compounds the problem, and "Man Friday," for all its attention to Friday's challenging of Cruseus at his most essential dramatic conflict.
"Sweet Away" lacks much of the polish of "Man Friday," particularly in its script, but it is an infinitely superior film. The castaways are polar opposites. He's a hot-headed proletariat; she's an icy character who was the tale of poor boor and rich bitch, and makes the political satire entertaining as well, is the extraordinary attractiveness of the two stars.
To give you some idea of the peculiar chemistry of Mariangela Melato and Giancarlo Giannini, it is worth noting that America studio is considering a native version of this script to be acted by Jane Fonda and Jack Nicholson. That pairing is an accurate approximation of the work by their Italian counterparts.
Raffella (Melato), is given to idiotic distribs against communists in general and the sailor, whose dexterous in particular; invitably, the lady and the sailor, Gennarino (Gianammni), are separated from their comrades up on an uninhabited island.
Giannini, on the other hand, is
THROUGH THE FUROR,
insults and fights that follow.
Melato maintains her cool,
haughty composure, even as
she is superior to reverse their
roles and punish Raffella for the
sins of her economic
superiority in true screen
play. She has been clean and her flesh is brushed throughout the ordeal.
THE NATIONAL CHRISTIAN COMMUNICATIONS FORUM
Richard Roundtree and Peter O'Toole in "Man Friday."
"Swept Away!" is very funny, but it is often cruel and brutal. Director Lina Wertmuller is well on her way to international
a slight figure with sleepy, hooded eyes that pop open in surprise, delight and, usually, fear. A fraggle man who is scarred by a mere slap, and who is finally revealed to be harboring a dream, not only of monetary wealth but also of sexual equality.
recognition, and her sure touch in this film shows why. A former assistant to Fellini, she has taken his ability to discover the behavior, and expanded it suit her own views and style.
The problem in Hollywood will be to find an equivalent to Wertmiller Then, if the film ever gets made, it will probably begin its week as an Italian version of "Robinson Crusoe on Mars."
Friday, April 2.1976
University Dally Kansan
5
DENVER, CO. — A man kneels with two dogs on the grass in front of a large building.
Photo by DAVE REGIER
Campus auartet
Rick Hird, Lawrence senior, says the group of three dogs he owns is the "strangest group of dogs they'll ever see." Hird brings his
dogs to campus regularly and says that when they have an audience, they'll play for hours.
Campus canines' status disputed
Bv DAVE REGIER
Staff Writer
Whether as status symbols or between-class companions, dogs have become part of our daily lives.
There are objections to rowdy and
barking dogs, but students still bring them for
them.
"I bring Rebecca because she follows me, and she won't stay at home," Diane Adreon, St. Louis junior, said Tuesday. "She'll even follow the bus if I'm on it."
Rich Hird, Lawrence senior, said he regularly brings his three dogs to campus
"It's a great educational experience for both logos and a good chance to get exercises," he said.
Another owner said his dog enjoyed the peoole.
"He enjoys meeting people," the owner said. "A lot of people like to see friendly dogs. They get pleasure from him, he gets pleasure from them."
Sharon Brehm, assistant professor of
gaming at the University of Chicago,
so they could have something to care for.
Students are biologically equipped to have families, she said, but they don't.
"Presunably there's a biological necessity to have something to take care
of," she said. "The student has not just himself to take care of, but takes, 'Here is that other being to take care of.' It's a really neat experience."
Dogs that aren't under the control of their owners while in the city limits are in violation of the ordinance, according to Mickey Allen, assistant city attorney.
"If you leave the animal tied to a tree or let it run a block ahead of you, it isn't under the control of the owner," he said. "That's the way the city is enforcing it now."
A canine control officer takes the dogs he picks up to the Lawsuit Human Society.
Jane Hellstrom, an employee of the Humane Society, said $10 was charged to claim the dog the first full day she was left on the farm, even when it included weekends, until 72 hours had passed. Then the Humane Society has the alternative to adopt the dog or put it to rest.
Allen explained that the control officer didn't pick up a dog on the KU campus unless a complaint had been made against a dog or a group of dogs. The officer doesn't go around looking to pick up dogs leashed to trees, he said.
According to the ordinance, female dogs
Vegetable gardens spread
There has been an increased interest in gardening during the past several years in the suburban areas.
The increased interest in gardening has prompted some apartment complexes around Lawrence to provide space for gardening to their residents.
A recent Gallup Poll shows that 51 per cent of all households in the United States will have some kind of vegetable garden this year.
This is the third year that 20-foot square garden plots were made available to the residents of Stouffer Place. There are 129 plots at Stouffer and all but three have been assigned. Judy LaFollette, secretary in the KU housing office, said yesterday.
RESIDENTS of Pine Tree Townhouses, 149 Pine Drive, are allowed two-foot-wide gardens around their patios, provided they restore them to grass before they
The city of Lawrence has also made garden plots available in the 800 block of Pennsylvania and at the intersection of E. Glen Drive and Harper. The city charges $2 rent on the 20-foot-square plots and the garden has use of the plot until the end of
the summer. The city offered 25 plots for rent and still has about 10 plots available
The current resurgence of gardening in the United States is reminiscent of the popularity it enjoyed during the Great Depression and World War II.
Robert Nunley, professor of geography, said there hadn't been a good study conducted to weed out the causes of the present popularity gardening enjoys. Nunley said it is important that people take care of including environmental concern, the natural food fad and the hindie movement.
"People also get a sense of fulfillment out of producing part of the food they consume." Nunley said. "We have 5,000 years of gardening experience behind us. It's part of our instincts and it ties us back to nature."
The economy is also a factor, he said. With very little work, an average family can reduce its annual food bill by $300, according to Nunley.
in heat must be kept in an secure encure
enough to keep other dogs out. Allen said.
"The purpose of this is to prevent 20 or 30 male dogs running together from getting into traffic."
E. Jackson Baur, professor of sociology, said, "People that have dogs should leave them at home. I worry about loose dogs around together and billing someone."
Nunley said he planted part of his garden in late February this year and many of his plants were several inches high already. He said his garden was approximately 180 by 100 feet and had vegetables and some strawberry plants.
A loose dog bit a dog belonging to Jan Newton, Harper sophomore, as she walked him home on a leash Tuesday. The loose dog was not allowed to draw blood from her dog's forstick.
"I tried to scare him off, but I was afraid I was going to get bit." Newton said.
"I have to go over and shut those windows now, making all of us suffer, so that one person can have her status symbol on campus." he said.
Calder Pickett, professor of journalism, complained about trying to teach class last week over the insistent barking of a dog tied up in a corner below one of his classroom's windows.
Despite the threats of barking and biting dogs, some faculty members said they didn't mind dogs on campus. The only reason they say, is that the dogs should be leashed
"I've had dogs brought to my classes and I've liked them," Bremh said. "If the dog is with its owner in class, it causes less commotion. The problem comes from having to lock the dogs outside the building."
Brehm said she would like to see a strictly enforced leash law. Then all owners who wanted to could bring their leashed dogs on campus, she said.
Baur said two dogs had been brought into classroom when he had been teaching.
If someone wants to take an excursion through a huge greenhouse offering a wild assortment of tropical plants, he'll have to leave the city. The variety of Kansas doesn't have such facilities.
"In each case, they've been quiet and well restrained," he said.
"I have occasionally brought my own dog to my office at night, but very rarely. When I'm working and leaving him alone, he gets restless and starts to whine.
The University used to have a conservatory, the Buildings and Grounds greenhouse, but that was torn down when Wescock Hall was built.
"I expect that he'd be happier if I brought him up when there were people here."
The only facility now used as a greenhouse is located on West Campus and is situated on the grounds.
"When they built Wesco Hall they tore down the old green屋舍, which were old and falling apart," Ronald McGregor, professor of botany, said last week.
He said that the current greenhouse, which measures about 100 feet by 46 feet, is nearly the size of a barn.
Former Chancellor E. Laurence Chalmers, Jr., explicitly stated that the greenhouse was to be used for research purposes only, McGregor said.
KU without tropical greenhouse
William Bloom, assistant professor of botany, said that many universities had tropical and ornamental plants for research purposes.
McGregor said those types of con-
servation are usually found at agricultural schools.
"If a person walked through our greenhouse he might find one or two spaces to grow."
Bloom and McGregor said insufficient funds caused the lack of a public conference.
Bloom said the caretaking of a conservatory required the services of a person who had no prior experience.
A part-time student position was budgeted within the last year for the caretaking of species in the greenhouse, Bloom said. But that position isn't yearround and the existing species are research products for the biology classes.
There are two types of greenhouses, according to Bloom. The first type is more
"The first is a greenhouse which contains
Student clerk held at gunpoint during robbery
Three teenagers held a University of Kentucky football game on Saturday when about $490 and six cases of beer Wednesday when they robbed oweens Liquor Store, 910 N. 2nd, Lawrence police said yesterday.
No arrests have been made.
The student told the robbers where the money was, then he was told to go to the back room and stay there. The robbers then left.
The KU student, a store clerk, told police he was behind the counter of the store at 10:30 p.m. when two long-haired males, each about 16 or 17-years-old, entered the store. According to the Student, one youth pointed a bolt-action gun or rifle at him, and the man fled before they were kept. A third suspect waited outside the store with a long-barreled weapon.
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a lot of diverse species," he said. "The kind people often grow in their houses. The purpose for that greenhouse is in the interest of the community."
The second type, he said, is used for the propagation and preservation of endangered species. He said that some universities specialize in studying a certain plankton.
But Bloom said those people were very but because they required a lot of expert help.
County appoints KU professor
The appointment of a KU professor to the Lawrence-Douglas County Public Health Committee was approved Wednesday by Douglas County Commission and the city
The appointee, Carl E. Burkhead, professor of civil engineering, will serve a three-year term which will expire March 31, 2015. The appointee, KU Professor of civil engineering.
He said that there had been a recent increase in interest at KU in a conservatory for the propagation of various species, but that no one in the botany department was interested in developing a collection of that sort.
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Friday, April 2, 1976
University Dallv Kansan
3 sprinters to miss Texas meet
By GARY VICE
Sports Write
The absence of sprinters Kennewell, Cliff Willey and Waddell Smith means a lack of depth for the University of Kansas track at Texas Relays this weekend in Austin.
The Jayhawks have had 131 team victories on the triple crown circuit of the Texas, Drake University and Kansas Relays, but they won't be entered this weekend in several events where they usually rack up points.
"Well, its rather obvious that we're hurting there," head track coach Bob Timmons said. "We can't compete in some areas of the game." We're not even entered in the quarter-mile
relay or the 800 relay. Missing that 800
really hurts.
Wiley and Newell have been barred from outdoor competition this season until the NCAA rules on their eligibility, Smith, a player in the team, issued the Dallas Invitational last week.
"We don't feel like he's (Smith) in very good shape so we will wait until next week."
There is some good news for the Jaeyawaks about the spirt corps. Larry Jackson, big fincher of the team, this weekend to bolster the squad after missing most of the indoor season with a leg injury. Jackson, an All-America, has played in record 9 of the 2012 and 20 in the 200
"We're a little bit concerned about Larry
JACKSON'S RETURN brightens KU's prospects against the Jayhawks' stiff competition at the first stop of the Texas-Kansas-Drake relay circuit.
because he hasn't had the stress of a meet yet," Titmons said. "But, you know, he wasn't that stressed."
"You've just got to go down there to do your best in whatever events you enter."
"We're looking forward to the meet," Timmons said. "All the top Big Eight and Southwest conference teams will be there and so will Texas-EI Paco (NCAA indoor champions). It should be an outstanding meet.
Competing in the second outdoor index of the 1968 World Cup, John Roscoe were slated to run in the
3,000-meter steeplechair. But foot aliments have forced Roscoe to stay home, so senior co-captain Lunder will run his first solo steeplechair of the season. Roscoe, a junior-college transfer, is the national junior college record holder in the steeplechair.
ALSO MISSING THE meet will be sophomore pole vault Tail Scales, Scales, runner-up at the conference indoor championships, said he needed more practice to successfully make the transition to the outdoor competition.
Instead of making the trip to Austin, Scales will join a contingent of trackmen headed for the Emporia State Invitational tomorrow.
Hot hitting KU opens league play
Bv JOHN HENDEL
Sports Writer
Big Eight baseball comes to Lawrence this weekend as the University of Kansas baseball team meets the Nebraska Cornhuskers in a three game series.
Ouigley Field will be the site of a game at 3 p.m. today and a doubleheader at 1 p.m. tomorrow. KU is 8-4 for the season, and it looks like going into a doubleheader Wednesday.
Coach Floyd Temple isn't looking past the Cronhusters, despite their poor record.
"Nebraska doesn't have a good record, but they're in a place where they haven't had much chance to practice yet," Temple said.
RIGHT-HANDER ROGER Slagle will start against Nebraska now. Slagle takes a 5-0 record and a 6.0 ERA into the contest. Rian Brodies (22) and Rob Ahlberg (13)
KU has given Tajewk something this season that past Jayhawk baseball teams have been rather stingy with. Temple is finally getting some bitting.
"We've been getting more balance in our hitting," Temple said. "(Tom) Krattli is swinging better, (Monty) Hobbs and (Brian) Moyer both had a good series in Tulsa. And I think (Carl) Heinrich leads the team in hitting."
sports shorts
WOMEN'S TENNIS—The tennis team is at the Tulsa Invitational today and tomorrow. Team members are Marlene Kirk, Astrid Daksa, Karen Hense, Lynda Helen Knode, Cecilia Lopez, Hannah McCarley and Trace Soellman.
WOMEN'S TRACK—KU will compete at the Emporia Relays tomorrow under the guidance of women's assistant track coach Theo Hamilton. Head coach Gary Pepin is with the men's team in Austin for the Texas Relays.
TENNIS-KU will open the Big Eight portion of its tennis schedule at 2 p.m. tomorrow when the Jayhawks host Colorado on the Athen Field House courts. They are for the use at 2:30 p.m. today by hosting Cowley County Community College.
Heinrich is batting at a .370 clip. Other leading Jayhawk打虎们 are designated hitter Randy Trount (.333), Vince Monslow (.333) and Mover (.327).
TEMPLE SAID HE was proud of the way the team bounced back to win the doubleheader last Saturday in Tulsa after dropping two games on Friday.
"I'm pretty much pleased with the performance of the team so far this season," Temple said. "Our record is good, but it could be better."
Temple said occasional breakdowns in the KU defense have hurt the team. Tempi stressed that the team needed to be able to come back after making an error.
"What we lack in talent we have to make up with 100 per cent effort and very few of us have the time or the capacity."
According to Temple, the primary goal of the team is to keep improving. He warned that to level off now would be bad for the team.
"WE NEED TO KEEP improving and reach our peak for the (Big Eight) tournament, because that's where all the marbles are this year." he said.
The Big Eight champion will be decided in a round-robin tournament in May.
Scheduling problems forced the cancellation of the Jayhawks' trip to Manhattan for the Kansas Tournament next weekend.
scheduled Missouri series, and we aren't
going to be a home date for three
weeks.
"I thought the (Kansas) tournament was during the week but now it conflicts with the
this cancellation leave a hole in KU's schedule. Temple said he was looking for a new role, but the department had not agreed.
didn't expect to get a game.
The Missouri series will be the next action for the baseball team. The Tigers, one of the best batting teams in the conference, will face three-game series here next weekend.
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Friday, April 2, 1976
FESTIVAL DE RUGBY
KU's ruggers will be out to defend their Big Eight title this weekend
Jayhawks host soccer powers
By STEVE CLARK
Sneath Writer
There will be both quality and quantity
the weekend at the first JayaWaihv
invitational.
Bernie Mullin, KU soccer club coach, said yesterday that the tournament would give local fans a chance to view the best soccer played in Lawrence this year.
By STEVE CLAY Sports Writer
Rockhurst and Columbia, both NAIA rowers, are two of the top small college athletes.
Entered in the tourney are teams from Kansas State, Wichita state, Nebraska, Missouri, Rockhurst College, Columbia (Mo.) College and the host Javahawks.
IN DISTRICT PLAYOFFS last semester, Rockhurst and Columbia battled through two averties before Rockhurst scored a point victory.
Rockhurst then finished third at the NAIA national meet.
University Daily Kansan
Saturday afternoon action matches Kansas State and Rockhurst at noon. The winner will face Columbia, which drew a first round bue, at 3.
In the other bracket, Wichita State meets Oklahoma at 1 and Nebraska takes on Kansas at 2. The winners play at 4 and the losers at 5.
Sunday at 10 a.m. the loser of the 5 p.m.
game and loser of the Kansas State-
Rockhurst game play in the consolation
finals.
THE THIRD PLACE game begins at 1
championship match is scheduled for (3,
The first and third place games will be played at Memorial Stadium. All other action is scheduled for the football practice field west of Allen Field House.
Rockhurst and Columbia are the teams to
MULINL SAID KANSAS had a good week of practice while concentrating on conditioning. He also mentioned that certain teams are team finally heading to disappear.
beat. Mullin said, but either Missouri or Kansas could provide an upset.
Juan Damassio, the team's leading scorer last year, may be ready to play within two weeks. Mulliu said. Damassio has been out of action since fall when he injured a knee and underwent surgery over Christmas vacation.
German Gomez and Raphael Santos have been bothered with ankle injuries that have hampered their play. Gomez's injury will keep him from playing this weekend.
Mullin also expressed concern about the amount of contact Moshen Mit has been given.
"MOSHEN HAS BEEN taking a tremendous amount of punishment." Mullin said, "and if we don't get more protection from the referees he will be crimson for life."
Mari has been a scoring machine in his last four games, knocking in 12 goals. Because of the battering he takes during the game, he slows down the week and plays only in the games.
Although the club's record this spring is 4-3-1, Mullin said it was deceivable.
"The competition we've played so far is three times as hard as last year," he explained, "and our record has suffered. But it doesn't show the amount of experience we've gained. We want to avoid what happened last year."
LAST YEAR THE Jayhawks were 14-0
come into the Big Eight Championships, but
they lost.
"We never had to come from behind last year until the tournament," he said, "and
when we did get behind we didn't know how to react and began playing paddle soccer; we did not.
Mullin, in his second season as coach, was optimistic about the improvement of the younger American players on his squad, and likely Steffen VanKeppel and John Nichols.
Lawrence will be invaded by rugers this weekend as the KU rugby team hosts the MKFC.
Teams from all conference schools, except Colorado, will be on hand as KU will host them.
Ruggers host Big 8 tournev
Pairings for the meet won't be made until tomorrow at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the intramural field at 23rd and Iowa Action Sunday afternoon starts at 12:00 with the championship match at about
KU's 5-0 record makes it the favorite, but Missouri and Oklahoma, with the help of football All-America Joe Washington, should challenge.
The Columbian Highlanders and Sigma Nu advanced to the Hill Championships of "C" league intramural basketball play by winning their division titles last night. The Highlanders defeated PO V, 33-24, and Sigma Nu beat Triangle, 48-41, in overtime.
The 51st running of the Kansas Relays has traced two class athletes, meet district coaches and
Officially confirmed to compete in the open division of the April 15-17 RELays are the co-host, world record-holder in the 800-yard race and the Pan American Games.
Relays attract Wohluter, Ray
Wohlhuter will be trying for his third straight victory in the 1,500-meter run, and Ray will enter the 400-meter dash in his first Kansas Rassls appearance.
In outdoor competition this season, Ray, a junior at North Carolina Central, has run only in relay events after passing up the indoor season. Wohlhuter had a strong performance as the nation's second fastest half-mile (1:49.2) and the AU 1,000-yard run test (2:99.3).
"There is no doubt that Wohlhuter and Ray are among the top athletes in the world today." Timmons said. "Both of them are excellent Olympic prospects and the Relays will be a key meet in their schedules prior to Montreal."
Wahhuter, a graduate of Notre Dame, is also considering running in the 800-meter run. He is currently the third fastest in the world in that event with a time of 1:41.
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Friday, April 2, 1976
University Daily Kansan
M
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Mammoth task
This 13.000-year-old mammoth skull was found recently near Ness市 in Western Kansas. John Lawrence, Lawrence graduate student, cleans dirt and plaster from the anatomy of this ancient mammal.
Student finds fossil skull
BY CHERYL HAWLEY
All Richard Rogers was looking for during spring break was paleo-Indian sites. Instead he found a 9,000-13,000 year-old mammal tooth.
Rogers, Larsen graduate student, said yesterday he had been looking for evidence of ancient man in an area between Utica and Ness City to use in his doctoral thesis.
Instead of finding evidence of man, however, we found the four and one-half foot man on the island.
"At first I thought it was log sticking up out of the ground." Rogers said. His "log" was so heavy he had to have five other persons help him dig it up and move it.
The skull weighed about 500 pounds after an application of plaster of plaster and water (3.4 kg) in the lower jaw.
Larry Martin, assistant professor of systematics and ecology and curator of the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History, said the process to preserve the skull by adding artificial hardeners would take about a month.
At the discovery site, Orville Bonner, Museum of Natural History paleontologist, Rogers, cut and paleontology students in the museum. Harrison pushed the skull down an incline into a truck. At the museum it had to be lifted by a host and rolled by cart into a
The skull, found on pasture land owned by Leonard Norton, is the third one for the
museum. It has been at least 30 years since one has been found in Kansas, Martin said.
"It is fairly rare to find such a complete skull." he said.
Rogers said he had found pieces in Kansas of camels, horses and elephants.
The skull, Rogers said, was from the Pleistocene or Glacial epoch of the Quaternary period and Cenozoic era. He explained that at that time, vegetation was also, probably, extinct animals had begun dying. Also, evidence of man was beginning to appear.
For his doctoral thesis, Rogers said, he is putting evidence of ancient man in ecological perspective. His search for records from the region formed by land rises or river settlements.
Rogers has found parts of other mammoths and a horse in the same area where the skull was found. Rogers said that because only the mammoth's skull was found there, it probably died somewhere else. He said a river probably had washed it up and then the animal died. The skull now was exposed because of a gradual land rise, he said.
If the skull had rolled to area more recently, it would have fallen apart, Rogers said. Careful handling of fossils, Martin said, can protect them because they dry out and flake off.
"People without professional help would wind up with a lot of rubble," he said, adding that the company was not responsible.
Wildlife projects face budgetary problems
Staff Write
Proposed budget and position cuts of the Kansas Forestry, Fish and Game Commission could mean curtailment of a subcommittee on reports according to same people on the commission.
Bv CAROL LUMAN
However, Fred Warders of Pratt, assistant director of the commission, said Monday that any statements about where he might be made were "premature."
"Of course you can't help but discuss it," he said. "I don't know if we have no official decisions made as yet."
Govern Robert F. Bennett suggested a cut of about 81 million and 41 positions from the job market.
The bill containing the budget cuts is now before a House-Senate conference committee that is discussing changes made in the original bill by the Senate.
Those changes, however, don't deal with the imbuition but with other agencies included in this study.
If the legislation is passed and signed by the governor, the Surging Ahead for Skippers, Nimrods and Anglers (SASNK) program would be the one most severely affected. The program is the northeast regional office of the commission in Manhattan, said last week.
Among the subdivisions of the SASNAK project are the wildlife habitat improvement program, hunter safety program and a boating safety program.
SASNAK was designed to establish more and better hunting and fishing areas in the
If the budget and position cuts pass, the positions would be eliminated from the
Warders said that even if the legislature cuts the 41.5 positions, not necessarily that they would be cut, but rather
Some commission positions are already vacant, he said, and other employees might be part-time positions. That could mean a need to have would have to be dismissed, he said.
The Manhattan biologist said that although no definite plans had been made about where staff reductions would come, it would be fishery and game biologists I.
commission July 1, the beginning of the next fiscal year, he said.
"We're hipening it (the legislation) doesn't pass, or it gets unended, or whatever he does."
He said the budget cuts might also require the commission to eliminate its 18 mm film library, and call for curtailment on magee. It also could mean limiting the employee's time at phone and pay phone usage, which might hurt the employees' abilities to do their jobs.
There may be an alternative to the situation even if the legislature does appear to be in favor.
The Senate Way and Means Committee just week ended a bill to increase hunting fees.
The profit from those increases, which still must be approved by the Senate, reportedly would make up for the money lost in the budget cuts. That would allow the commission to retain the positions tenially slated to be dropped by the budget outs.
Resident hunting and fishing licenses would increase from $5 to $150 annually, and the antelope, deer and turkey permits would increase from $15 to $20 annually.
Events...
On Campus
TODAY: R.T. AAGEENBRUG, associate professor of geography, will speak on "Lifet in夹丹Dinam廊Chasel as part of the Unity of Faith and Human Dignity Series. ROBERT SCHOLES will speak on "Semitic Approaches to a Fictional Text: Joves's 'Eveline'" at 4 in the Court Room of the Kansas Union.
SUNDAY: The INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL will begin at 2 with the opening of exhibits in the Jayhawk and Big Eight Rooms of the Union. The festival will also feature a banquet at 5 in the Union Cafeteria and entertainment at 7 in Woodruff Auditorium. COLLEGIUM MUSICUM will give a "Medieval-Renaissance concert." PHIHONARY society will initiate new members at 4:30 in the Forum Room. THE CHICAGO CHAMBER ORCHESSTRA will perform at 8 in Hoch Auditorium.
TONIGHT: A 24-hour dance marathon for the EPILEPSY FOUNDATION OF AMERICA will begin at 7 in the Hawk's Nest. WILLIAM JOHNSON of Stanford will speak on "Recent Progress in Biomimetic Polyene Cyclizations" at 8 in 411 Summerfield. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in 173 Robinson.
SATURDAY: THE MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY will present an educational program for children from the ages of 5 to 7 on "Animals of the Earth."
Salaries are commensurate with education and experience. These positions offer a wide-range benefit package, flexible working atmosphere, and modern office facilities. We invite all interested applicants to write Information and Research Division, Department of Planning and Development. One Civic Plaza, Kansas City, Kansas 66101. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M-F.
UNIVERSIDAD DE SALAMANDAS
DEPARTAMENTO INFORMATICO
The Department of Planning and Development Kansas City. Kansas
University of San Fernando Valley
Information and Research Division is expanding to include the following positions which will be involved with a wide variety of applied research and systems activities as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
COLLEGE OF LAW
This position requires a through working knowledge of FORTRAN and or COBOL. Programming experience in business applications is required.
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.
State Bar of California
Tel: (213) 894-5711
Skills in written and verbal communication with both technical and non-technical personnel are required. Graduate experience in social science research and understanding of computer utilization in research environment is desirable.
Research/Systems Specialist
Programmer/Analyst
8353 Segulveda Blvd., Segulveda, Ca. 91343
I am a music teacher. I teach piano, violin, clarinet, and cello. I also play the guitar and bass. I enjoy playing music and taking lessons. I am passionate about music and want to help others learn.
SUA
Presents
THE CHICAGO CHAMBER ORCHESTRA
Sunday, April 4 8:00
Sunday, April 4 8:0 Hoch Auditorium
Tickets '3° at SUA Offices
Try the cool
TEUL
Enjoy this great new drink from Mexico!
We're passing along the recipe used by Mexico City's famed Las Pirárimes bar. The secret is in the way these two great liquors blend so well with orange juice. Try
one, there's nothing like it, Caramba!
1 oz. Southern Comfort
% oz. tequila
Orange juice
Fill a highglass glass with ice cubes. Add the addy and Southern Comfort. Fill with juice, strir and add a cherry.
中野大学
中野大学
Southern Comfort
You know it's got to be good . . . when it's made with
SOUTHERN COMFORT CORPORATION, 100 PROOF LUOUEUR, ST. LOUIS, MO 63132
OPEN HOUSE
See
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS.
2 bed room apts. * on KU Campus. * utilities paid furnished or unfurnished * unfurnished facilities swimming pool. * air conditioned. * covered parking on bus line. * locked dock system roommate service
Now Taking Applications for Fall
Office Hours: Till 8 p.m., Mon., Thurs.
10 - 4 Sat., 2 - 5 Sun.
Lawrence, Kansas 1603 W.15th
913-843-4993
Pizza inn AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA
Pizza inn
AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA
Sunday
Buffet
5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
All You
Can Eat
$1'98
Good Sunday, April 4
All the pizza and salad
you can eat. A deliciously
convenient way to enjoy a
quick lunch with a friend.
Share a pizza to
®
COLUMBIA
Share a pizza today...
925 Iowa Hillcrest Shopping Center Open 'til 1:00 a.m.
Room to rent? Advertise it in the Kansan, 864-4358.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 2, 1973
G
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to race or ethnicity. BUILD IN ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
One two three four five time times times times
15 words or fewer
Each additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 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 items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These add can be placed in person or the call agent the CURB business offer at 844-6358.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. t
TRYST UNION, Master's Series Open House
Paula UDouglass, piano Gary Gwalour Wall, Wax-resist, recent painting Saturday. April 19, 1976.
Marcin Mvonkos, Residence 14-2
Louisiana
BATIK; discharge, Wax-resistant paintings; recent work, landscapes, seascapes, i-sel-portraits of Gregory Waugh M.F.A. University of Kansas City, campus, 124 Louisiana Street, St. Louis, April 3, 8:00 p.m. Saturdays, 4-2
Hattrutting specialist Ward Gramer, formerly a Hattrutting consultant at Barrie, March 21 to call her at Hairtutoring Co. & 845-750-3932.
Need your car washed? Help yourself and KUa
sell your car. Costs are $10 for a 24-hour
time. Costs are one dollar each.
"We moved! Our new location is next to McKenzie's office. We are now on count. Repeat Performance Shop. 4-12
BARBER SHOP QUARTET SHOW, presented by the "Barbarkerhills," Lawrence chapter of HISPANIC HISTORY, 8:00 p.m. Saturday, April 3rd. $65 per ticket; auditorium. Call 492-6513 for ticket information.
Lawrence Gay Counseling Service's organizational meeting for next year will meet at 7:00 p.m. at BIS Vermont on April 4. If you are in need, in helping, for more information, 4-825-5877.
Employment Opportunities
LIFE PLANNING WORKSHOP SATURDAY, April 10th in the process of informing your own business you will be participating in a series of strong, strengthily prepares for and adapts to building for the future by developing realistic goals. B
ENTERTAINMENT
A job opening for long time research assistant at a data collection facility. Resume must include: Place 11, Haworth. Data collection preparation workshop materials, preparing forms, completing evaluation forms. Good typing skills are essential in this position. Please view. Application d iadine and starting date approximately April 1. Equal Opportunity Employer.
FOR RENT
"Summed" the New Age film on spiritual and theology, which will be showcased April 3. A 4, 7: 9 p.m. float that leads to April 3 is free.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listing of
Lawrence, Lawson, Lawrence
Rental Exchange. 842-250-7900.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and pick up your phone (phone call, cell phone) at WEBSITE or PHONE NUMBER.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen privacy
2- rooms to campus $5 and up, 4 bedrooms
$645 or $800-$950
2 bdmm, all itil, paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfurn. Free parking, a/c, 843-9903.
Sublease one bedroom apartment June-August,
one-bedroom apartments paid furnished;
RJF, M.R. Abbey, 843-872-7600
RJF, M.R. Abbey, 843-872-7600
Sublease or take over lease; 1 bbm, unfurn.
or lease to campus; $15/mo, utilities paid;
441-208. 841-208.
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
Goldecker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
842 8208
4
- PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED AND LENSES DUICIPATED WITH FAWLNESS ACCURACY
* COMPLETE OPTICAL SERVICES
Sublease for summer semi-furnished three bedroom apartment pool apartments. AC, gas & water.
MARRIED STUDENTS* entering Dental School in K.C. this summer. Cooperative 2 medical bruns, two dental schools, DR. patio, end unit, range room, 11 baths, clean rooms, equipment. equally clean AC optional. Available May 1 July 10.
40 acre farm, new mobile home, furnished, air-conditioned. Located near Burlington and Douglass Co Lake Pines.
Carpeted furnished rooms, two blocks to Union. TV lounge, large kitchen with freezers, refrigerators, food cabinet, breakfast room. Kitchenette, full bath. One may 15, others June and fall. B42-659 - 4-78
Furnished apartment at 19 W. 14th. Available immediately! 1 bedroom. $85, 4624-879 after 10am.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory damages or old-out products, the GAMMAHOSE shop is the best choice at the GRAMMHOSE SHOP at KIEFS. If
Tremendous selection of guitar, sax, drums, percussion instruments. Shop. New Keyboard Studios, Choose from Gibbon, Shop, Keyboard Studios, Chance From Gibbon, Amape, Rustom, Greco, and many others. Additional gifts include gift cards to Nissan, gift cards to Nissan Keyboards Studios
COST * 10% - Sturgeon equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single item or package for free For Kissone. Call Dave. Phone 865-6889. Earnings 6 to 10.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of
scores. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160 page,
mail order catalog. Research Assistant, Calif.
Los Angeles, Los Angeles Call: 902-432
(213) 477-8474
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialty
BELICAR BELICAR 943-865-9000 BEL AUF
ELECTRIC, 943-865-9000, W. 6th.
Western Civilization Notes—On Sale on Sale!
"New Analysis of Western Civilization!"
Makes sense to use them—
1. For class preparation
2. For class presentation
3. For "New Analysis of Western Civilization"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Clerk Stores.
74 Buck Lé Se Burc Lucus, all power, lift staircase, roof-mounted o-nautical 20,000 miles, phone 841-8835, www.bernic.com
O4 DLSMOBILE. GOOD CONDITION. BEST OFFER.
B14 - 7533 JEFF A 6 P.M. 4-2
WE SELL, FOR LESN=11 TO 630. Good used cars, gas and diesel refrigerators, refrigerators, garage tools, and other springs have 10 yr warranty. $125 a week. Weekly springs have 18 yr warranty. $125 a week.
Phone 1-772-3524 or 324-82888. Topkick 4
phone 1-772-3523 or 324-82888.
Yamaha 20C CC twin bike electric, lift; like new, 360 miles. Call 841-1891 after shipment. 424-577-3543.
Zort Style: Sandals. now in at J. C. Penney's.
zirts to fit men and women. 830 Mast. 4-2
Electronic calculator T200-II-250 with AC adapter,
almost brand new, 864-1830.
4-2
One of a kind 1972 TB2 Has overdive AM FM.
Excellent comfort body perfet. $560 & best
bast offer Call 844-733-2980
1972 CL 319 Honda-with slimy and rocky
411-2952 after 3.0 p.m.
rallors.
1E El Camino, AiR, Power Sterling, Dive
Brakes, brand new tree, $3800, 81-377-339
452
Telescope, Late 74 w/ case, natural finish
VGC 225. 811-6674
4-5
90-230 VIVITAR ZOOM LENS, $100. 841-
6782
1971. Honda 175, helmet, $300. Also Pavement Amy-
4-128. 4-128. call 812-1431 or see at Nicholas M.
812-1431.
HALE-A-SMUCH is having an enormous garage and stairway, plus a spacious kitchen and chair (perfect), bed, trucks, vanity, dresser, cabinet, bench, record player, Plant, old-style console, leather couch, vinyl records, sculpture (tues. from A to Z. East on 15th St., B to C).
Filater 28: Compact stereo; AM FM stereo, BSR record changer, and two Fisher XPG56S speakers. Audio amplifier for 3-8 inch dvdv cassette adapter, converts stereo 8-track to digital player, $15.824-272, 3-9 p. 4-2
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS 14
Yoshida Honda C500, 14 Yoshida Honda PC500, 14 Builtzei
ALPHA 72 Honda C500, 14 Yoshida KO500,
14 Alphea
Pepsi-Cali's only the daily from 3-4 p.m. Sandy's Drive, In-210, W. 9th. 4-6
3 speed Rabighen's bicycle—one year old-
and 4 speed Cavallo's condition, $5 best. Call
612-845-5121.
Ball Park Baseball
1963 Triumphe GT4, good condition, new radial,
radium mileage, must sell $200 or best-of-75.
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
1935 Toyota CELICA ST. 4, ud. Kleenland Conc. 842-5483, or write box 201. 842-5483, or write box 201.
BALL PARK, INC
Sterro--Pioneer SK-2500 receiver. Dual 1529
bkage. brand new. $790. Cable #846
www.sterro.com
Box 3422-U Lawrence, Kansas 66044
15. Kawasaki 1975, 7 months old. LIKE NEW.
Rosewood 1978, Al Pima 1913. NEW.
good. BQ 768-268 after
Diamond sapphire engagement ring. 32 ct. 14 K
yellow gold. Appraised value $300-$400.
Quality, custom skateboard, urethane wheels,
never used, $22. Call Rick-434-2284. 4-6
RX, 170, worth looking, only one month old.
Must stay overnight. Call my time or night.
Must stay overnight. Call my time or night.
Beautiful antique tiffany type 23* table lamp. Original copper frame, lead weighted base at 48%.
72 Honda CB500—low mileage. Gold high bars.
Runs good, must bid -811-224-7171
4-8
1974 Mazda KX 4, excellent condition, only 13,000 km
equipped. Parking is free on day or night. Keep alert.
For Sale: Garrard Record Player, 5 years old,
priced cheap. Call Linda at 844-6616. 4-7
Yamaha S10-530 - perfect condition – extras with
two helmets-Call Dale, 843-7644
4-6
Several used guns in stock, 10% off on all new
guns. Shooting Supplies. $48-789
for 5 and Sat. supplies
HELP WANTED
OVERSAS JOBS=summer-year-round S. America, Australia, Asia, etc All fields, $500-1500, sightseeing Free inform.-mail International, sightseeing Free inform.-mail International, International, Kaio KA, 490, Berkeley, CA, 94704 4-23
BAC, Box 490, Berkeley, CA, 94704
Addresses wanted Immediately! Work at home,
or travel to New York, Boston or other
American services. 1905 Wilson Blvd. Suite
140. 212-783-6611. Seattle, WA 98103.
PART TIME-EARN $75 PEB WEEK, POR 24
TIME-WEEK $100 PEB WEEK, POR 24
613/774. BETWEEN 8 p.m. - 10 p.m. FOINT INST
CLOSE ALL CALLS
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and truck drivers. Experience preferred. Call 409-625-1111
5-11-11
Housenpartner wanted. Married couple to supermarket manager. Work with other expert one or the other may work part-time. Education in the social sciences, training on other experts in the social sciences, training on other experts per couple, plus apartment, food and transportation. Joan Tormel, Director of Group Homes, €10 million; Kate Merrill, Director of Kansas City, Ks. 66101. (An equal opportunity employer.)
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank-9th & Mass., and First National Bank-187 West 2rd.
Lotx small, white formal cat, part Sampson; blue
fur; black ears; brown eyes; blue mouth;
4-year-old male. Call 841-872-3690; keep
in touch.
Full and part-time fountain work. Apply in
part at the Vista Drive-In. 1527 W. Kth. 4-7
Last Monday, March 15—old dark blue umbrella broken broken trippe. Flower return to English Dug.
$3.95 per Dozen
A man's silver band found at laundry mall 9:10 and Mississippi. Call 814-4390 by 6 p.m.
Large reward, no questions asked. Manipurit
large room, gym, need contact, leaves,
keys, 843-304
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts
Bengals IN
The Cathedral
Glasses and Jewelry
803 Mass St.
TACOS
9th & Iowa
Calculator found. Victimity Murphy Hall. 843-5
6429
"If we don't got it you didn't want
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
Black bilboard found: Please identify at 108 Military Science Building
Preproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at a cost of approximately $190 per book of your 125 page thesis in 5 mines! See **in action** for all of your copy and printing instructions. Quick Copy Center, 638 Massachusetts. betts. 841-4900.
Found: Male Brittany dog with collar-tag says
Springfield. Call 842-1646.
4-6
1. Important ring lost 3/21 or in case
2. Loss of important ring found 849-2211
3. If found please call Judy 849-2211
to play it no how!"
Found Board book titled *National Security Manager*,
on which the Navy, Marine Corps, and Women's
Claim at Dept. of Defense, 2008 Wide
PERSONAL
NOTICE
Swan Shot 620 Mass. Used furniture; dishes,
lamps, clamps, televisions. Open daily 12
pm-5 pm.
The Caledon Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Full
Dinner with Wine and Beer. Call 415-796-2300 for
dessert cash payments. Call 415-796-2300 for reservation.
Phone: (818) 796-2300.
After 26 years in business if George doesn't change his name on Monday, the company is based on Mondays' George's Phone Shop, 727-439-5000.
No one under 18 admitted
NOW BEGINNING FOR SINGLES facilitated by Sam Crits. This evening will consist of a microcosm of students who have (terminated relationships and are searching for new beginnings. This will be an amateur learning team with one another. Monica learns from shaping with one another. Monica"s university at United Ministry Center, 1204 Grace.
Erool now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive transportation provided. Drive new, pay later. Transportation provided. Drive new, pay later.
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Naney's Craft Shops. 386 W. 6th St. Open Thurs-
mays 9-7am w/ idents in the Craft Shops and
New Orleans' w- idents in the Craft Shops and
Craft Shops.
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 844-0110. tt
Becky—April Powl! Wow, you finally made !!!
Middle Kid htf! Love, loveo!
4-7
SKATEBOARD K-Your publicity shots are ready, but need identification Call 646-2123 after booking.
SERVICES OFFERED
RECREATION'S FINEST
MATH TUTORING--Competent. experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, Regular lessons or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
Mother offers dependable child care in the home and toddlers Monday through Friday—daily 843-8890 843-8890
Drive-in-clinic for most imported cars
IVAN'S 66
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
TONY'S
500 E. 23rd
19th & Mass.
Call for an appointment
Service hours
IMPORT
DATSUN
842-0444
٥٢
7:30 a.m.-
5 p.m. M-F
Foreign Auto Parts Discounts for Do-It.Yourselfers with Student I.D.'s
JAMES
Parts:
843-8080
Expert Repairs by Factory Trained Mechanics
Service:
947-6288
304 Locust—Lawrence's import car care center
Foreign Auto Parts
THE PALM OF THE SEA
NORTHWESTERN COAST
GANG
Foreign Auto Service
WEST CENTRAL FOOTBALL CLUB
KINGSTON PARK DISTRICT
FEB 24, 1973
SHAZARM
We Print!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
King
SUNDAY FESTIVAL
CECILIA
1035 Mass
849
SHAZAAM
if You don't see it, ASK! »« KING GEORGE'S
'The Facilities & Service To Make It A Perfect Party'
The Teepee-The Sanctuary
CLASS PARTIES
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
REHEARSALDINNERS
LAWRENCE GAY COUNSELING SERVICES
a professional and professional counseling. Are you about your sexual desire? Do you need help in dealing with a gay sexual interest, or love, LF 842-7505.
www.lawrencegay.com
SAMC TUARY
BARN PARTIES
TUTOR
-FORMALS-
Auto repair~lame up, summarizing and more at
Auto repair~lame up, summarizing and more at
6 Tuesday, Wednesday, at 8
Thursday, 84-104-10
TRAVEL
EUROPE*ISRAEL*AFRICA*ASIA - Travel
agency. 20th Anniversary. First
Avenue, Tuckers Gate. 6048 (6)
451-799-3323. info@europarel.com
EUROPE
less than 1/2 ceremony
fare
PMT
Call the office at 300-325-4867
UniTravel Charters
DINNER DANCES
Math Tutor with M.A. in mathematics. Call 841-758-
6201 at 6 p.m. 4-15
TYPING
Experienced typist—term paper, papers, misc
materials. Must have proficiency in spell-
ing, corrected 843-644, Mrs. Wright
THEIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located in the heart of the city. Our service is fast and prices are reasonable for all types of paper documents.
Typist editor, IBM Pcalite claite. Quality work.
Dispersitions distortions. 8-11
Book Number: 841-9287. 5-11
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 4-6
Exp. typist, IBM Selectric, term paper, these.
Exp. typist, IBM Selectric, term paper, spelling correction,
jacket. Jenn. 841-2490
Experienced typist will typify term papers, thesis,
memoirs and all general typing in my home
Carolina, 8419.
Need an experienced (experienced) IBM Selectic II
carbon printer to supply cards, card tubes,
rubber, ribbon). Call Pam at R87-599.
Typing- We have many return customers who know your business. Call Harve or Linda at your business.
Professional typing, work guarded, reassurance, and personal contact. Some legal, give-writing, B.A. Social Studies, and other training.
Expert typing/reasonable rates
Proofreading:
Expert typing/reasonable rates
Proofreading:
Call 812-659-8699 after 3 p.m.
4-20
Call 812-659-8699 after 3 p.m.
4-20
TIP TOP TYP GUARANTEED ERROR FREE
TYPING. GRETA, 482-3221 EVENINGS. 4-6
法
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Open 8:30 a.m. to 7 p.m.
WANTED
P
Wanted: mature girl to share two bedroom apartments; meet young woman <$800 between 7:45 and 10:30 for Sherry
842-8413
Mastercharge
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
$35 reward leading to the rental of a 4-5
room farmhouse. Call 824-8016.
4-2
Wanted: Fairly new stereo component system
Wanted: 2nd Baldwin, Kansas. Day 38-413
Night 59-313
Saturday
WANTED FOR IMPORTANT MEDICAL RESEARCH
W. B. Triplott, 944 Ky.
Phone 841-0891
Names and address of persons with blue eyes and predominantly blue eyes in family and brown eyes with predominantly brown eyes in family. Results of study will be returned.
Female roomsmate to share large 380. CA-
home w/ two others: Guest to curtain $80 mo-
nthly roommate; roommate to curtain $150 mo-
nthly roommate
fort-western good student hight in rent or share
cabin. Fort-western college, at 841-256-9200,
and Kansas City, Please Call Glen at 841-256-
9200.
DESPERATELY NEEDED—Good Musicians for summer progressive band based in Leavenworth, keyboard or vibes and violinist. Improvisational sight-reading, skills preferred. 841-45-Mike.
Calculator* Texas Instruments TI-2550. Will pay
dollar or trade in dollar TI-2550-II Call 842-874-71
842-874-71
Wanted: Young couple for late summer job (light housekeeping, lawn moving, miscellaneous cleaning, Champlain, SALARY $28,000 weekly). Time needed is 4-5 hours each week. You can work four days per week. You can work four days Sept. 10. We provide. Travel: Arrive by plane to New York City and telephone calls, please. Apply in writing and give references. Raymond Cert. 100 Sunset
842·4441
Pat Read
Indian Trader
Graduate Students working on master's degree
will be asked to complete a paid plan for two 30 minutes sessions! Call
(212) 547-5900.
Insight INTO LIFE
Female roommate to share apartment next year, quiet. Cautious, nondrinker, nonsmokers.
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10-5 Sat.-Tau.
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Services
a quiet corner
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Tractor
THE LOUNGE
12 NOON
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Now Open Every Sunday 12 NOON
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets Admission Only '2.00 each
Race or Watch
---
LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY
20 miles east of Topeka or
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U.S. 40 Highway
821-9454
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
5 Nights a Week No Cover NEW MODERN DECOR
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at
their tables are hard to do. A room
an atmosphere designed for sweet thoughts and gentle
moods is one of the best.
Sandwiches — Pizza
Pool — American Shuffleboard
843-9404 CLUB
HIDEOUT
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
New Members Available
Class A & Private Club
— MONDAYS
— 7 DAYS —
Warranty P.O. owner
10
Friday. April 2, 1976
University Daily Kansan
State's fate up to Kansans
By DOMINIC D'ASCOLI
For the year 2000, Kansas will undoubtedly undergo many changes and whether it will continue to do so is a matter of debate.
That's the warning given in a recently published report, "The Future of Kansas."
The report is the work of University of Kansas faculty members Herman Lajan, director of social and environmental research at the U.S. Institute of Architecture and urban design.
The report, released by the Division of State Planning and Research in Topeka, was developed from a study by the University of Kansas on activities, problems and options for Kansas. Actual and potential problems in 18 major resource areas, including population growth, health and natural resources, were examined as the basis of existing trends in these areas.
The report says its purpose is to notify Kansas policy makers and citizens of the options in each resource area, thus allowing agencies' best suited for the future of Kansas.
Some important changes the report says will affect Kansans by 2000 are:
- Changes in population growth and distribution.
- Diversification in local and state revenue sources.
- Changes in educational systems.
- Changes in the types of jobs that will be available to Kansans.
It's hard to imagine any population problems in the wide open spaces of Kangaroo Island, and the increase will increase by less than 1 per cent by the year 2000, the report says, the lack of rural inhabitants will financially restrict governments in these areas from providing housing.
He said that if the projections came true, there would be a need to make Kansas more likely to win.
"One way this could be done." Flentji
adds that to build business in these
Edward Flentje, director of the Kansas Division of Planning and Research, said the report's population projections were because they were based on current trends.
said, "to build up business in these areas"
He said a proposed bill was now before the Kansas House which, if passed, would provide tax credit for any company or person who invests capital in a Kansas business, provides that the business
By the year 2000, the report says, the majority of state expenses will cover human needs such as education, welfare, health, recreation and public safety.
And ever-increasing energy problems will result in large conservation expenses, it
According to the report, the future also should include the improvement of educational systems.
School funding will have to change its emphasis from enrollment numbers to program needs, which more likely will be based on individual needs; the report says.
W. M. Holloway, director of Administrative and instructional development for the School of Education, said he agreed with the report's findings.
He said the demand for program-based concept stemmed from present-day public services.
"People are demanding to know more of just what their money buys," Holloway said. "They want to see a product and we've been giving them a process."
Holloway said that educational systems improved their ability to effectively evaluate the success of teaching techniques, and made it possible to give the public better accountability.
The report also says:
- An overall stabilization of the community college system is needed.
- Social services need improvement.
- — Better services for the elderly are badly needed in rural areas, and programs in this area must be designed to keep the elderly independent and out of institutions.
- The needs of the handicapped must be properly fulfilled.
Future governmental policymakers
will need to seriously consider the problems of population distribution.
The occultation will be impressive to the unaware.
—Labor in Kansas has a bright future. Ken Wendel, associate professor of social welfare, said that he thought the report's recommendations were clear and correct. Reference copies of the report and a summarized version entitled, "Kansas 2025 in Institute Studies and Environmental Studies library, 607 Blake Hall."
Kansans, the report stresses, must realize the options that await them in the near future. It says that if the people act now, using the report's findings as a guide, they can prevent minor difficulties from mushrooming into major problems.
"It's not a terribly spectacular thing," he
wondered, a just-ist-back-and-
watch kind of thing."
Rare occultation of star gets astronomical attention
Just after sunset next Wednesday, at 6:56 pm, the planet Mars will occult the star Epsilon Gineminor, the fourth largest star in the constellation Gemini.
According to Larry Kelsey, assistant professor of physics and astronomy, an occultation is the same as an eclipse except an occultation is the movement of a planet, rather than a moon, across a star, and it isn't as spectacular.
Because it will occur at twilight in the Lawrence area, Kelsey said, binoculars or a telescope would be advisable for the amateur observer.
Kelsey said that 15 to 20 minutes before the occultation, an observer without binocular would notice what looks like only one star. As the bodies get closer, they will become more distinguisheble. He said that they can see last about four and three-quarter minutes.
"Occultations occur probably only twice a decade," Kelsey said.
According to Astronomy magazine, the
last important occultation occurred in 1971 when Jupiter occulted Beta Scorpii.
Aside from their rarity, occultations are interesting because they offer astronomers an opportunity to gather data that they otherwise couldn't. Kelsey said.
But, Kelsey said, more precise instruments have enabled astronomers to see more detail.
Kelsey said that the most important information that to coagulates is about the temperature.
*Occultations are not as prized by professional astronomers as they used to be.*
The refraction of starlight helps to figure out what the atmosphere of the planet might be.
Also, he said, the diameter of a planet could be told by how fast the planet moved
Kelsey said that today, the major information from occultations used by astronomers is update material for a model of the chart exact locations of celestial bodies.
"By timing the exact moment of an occultation," he said, "you can improve the ephemerises and get a better projection of the future."
Frat celebrates birthday
KU's chapter of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity will celebrate its 100th birthday tomorrow through Sunday, with more than 250 of its 1,000 living alumni taking part.
Speakers for the celebration will include KU chapter alumnus Charles "Buddy" Rogers, former film star and husband of silent movie star Mary Pickford, and Tom James, Dallas, Tex., national president of Phi Kappa Psi.
The events open tomorrow with a golf tournament for alumni at the Alvaramar Hills golf course and a tennis tournament at the Alvaramar Hills Golf Course. The events tomorrow are informal dinners by the pledge class and tours of the campus and community. The tours will continue.
James will speak Saturday at a special luncheon which will review the chapters.
The anniversary banquet Saturday night will be highlighted by Rogers' appearance. On Surrey, alumni and active members will attend the event. The institute for the oldest living initiative in
attendance and the new initiate, Mike
Brown, the freshman, Renogir is the fraternity's 1.500th class.
The national organization is celebrating its 150th anniversary this year.
A recognition ceremony for Kansas chapter members who have made significant contributions to society will close the program.
Among the alumn to be honored is the late Solen Sumferield, KU benefactor.
late Solen Summerfield, KU benefactor.
KU owes the song, "Tm a Jayawkh" to George Rowles, a Phi Pi who also is the composer of several Phi Psi songs.
Other prominent alumni of the KU chapter are the late forrest C. "Phog" Allen, former KU basketball coach; Herbert Hadley, former Missouri governor; Larry Winn Jr., Kansas congressman; Ralph Miller, an All-America quarterback; and Charles Black, an All-America basketball player.
The Kansas chapter is the third oldest continuing Greek organization on campus. The Beta Theta Pi fraternity and Psi Beta were established three years earlier in 1873.
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Presents
THOMAS MIDDLETON and WILLIAM ROWLEY'S
THE CHANGELING
April 1,2,3 8:00 p.m.
April 4 2:30 p.m.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE, MURPHY HALL Box Office 864-3982
K. U. students free with I.D.
Mapping plan lot purchase get county OK
The Douglas County Commission yesterday approved a contract to buy 8.54 acres of land at the intersection of 19th and 20th streets for parking at the county 4-H fairgrounds.
The county will pay Loman and Estalene Lathorn $24,000 for the land, which is just over a mile from her home.
The purchase will be financed by count community development money.
Data collected in the mapping project will be used by the county as reference material. The map will show present land uses in Douglas County and can be used for planning purposes for housing projects and natural resource conservation.
The commission also approved a $8,000 contract with the University of Kansas' Center for Research, Inc., for a mapping project.
SUA Presents
SUA Presents
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I I I I
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.116
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, April 5, 1976
Jayhawks win two out of three over Nebraska
See page 6
MILFORD, MIDLAND
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Postmarathon soak
Hours upon hours of dancing is hard on one's feet. Michelle Messer, Leawood freshman, and Steve Lefort, a University of Missouri at Kansas City student, found that out after 12 hours of dancing, the students were more relaxed than those sponsored by Chi Omega, Alpha Tau Omega and KKEQ radio.
The marathon was in the Hawk's Nest from 7 p.m. Friday to 7 p.m. Saturday. Ten of the original field of 12 dancers finished the marathon, raising about $3,200. Of that, about $3,000 will go to the publicity chairman, Alpha Tau Omega publicity chairman, said yesterday.
Short summer classes scheduled
Summer school, normally an eight-week venture, will be offered at University students this year.
KU will be offering intensive courses that will meet for about half of the regular session, according to Jerry Hutchison, vice chancellor for academic affairs.
The full summer session will be from June 7 to July 31.
The intensive courses will meet for half of the eight-week period, Hutchison
Most of the short courses will meet during the first half of the summer session and will be designated Session A courses. The Session B courses, a smaller group, will meet during the second half of the regular session.
Students may enroll for both short- and full-term courses June 4.
IF A STUDENT wants to take a Session B short course, he may also enroll on a Master's degree.
Hutchison said that the standards for short courses hadn't been lowered, and they were still intensive because they would meet for longer periods each day. Actual class "contact time" will be updated as needed.
In past summers, isolated courses have been offered for short periods, Hutchison said, and this year, the Office of Academic Services will offer more departments to offer some short courses.
The number of short courses was increased because some courses, particularly
Both Session A and Session B short courses will be offered by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Education and the School of Engineering.
intensive rather than long-term study. Hutchison said, and because the short courses allow students to more easily take a summer school with travel or work.
Most Session A courses will begin June 7,
the first day of summer school, and most
Session B courses will start July 5. Some
courses in each session, however, will start
later.
As in the past, the Law School will operate on its own schedule, offering classes in two five-week terms. Hutchison said. The first week was June 29, June 28, and the second, June 30, July 31.
Fees for summer school are charged according to number of credit hours, he said, so enrollment fees will be based on the number of hours taken, not the length of the courses.
Hutchison said a pamphlet outlining summer school course offerings was available in the Office of Admissions and Timetables will be available in early May.
University adjusts itself to new KANS-A-N dialing
By MIKE THIESEN
Staff Writer
A state wide telephone system should make placing a long-distance call through an operator a thing of the past for most state offices.
The Kansas Agency Network (KANS-A-
N consolides all intercity telephone
networks in a larger format for private agency
use into a wide-width, more effe-
cient, lower cost-per-call service
than was previously available, according to
Kunkel, state director of telecommunica-
tion.
Kunkel was Friday that KANS-A-N was connected to all state offices in Kansas and some governmental offices in the Kansas City, Mo., metropolitan area.
He said the Thursday activation of KANS-A-N had resulted in only minor problems, mostly from people who didn't know how to use the system.
Susan Sutton, University of Kansas labor relations coordinator and orientation trainer for KANS-A-N, said the biggest problems with KANS-A-N in its first two years were the lack of directories for every user on campus and numerous mistakes in the directories.
Sutton said more directories, which list the KANS-A-N number for each agency or office on the network, should arrive later to avoid mistakes in their would soon be corrected.
THE TELEPHONE BILL KU pays under the KANS-A system may be higher than it was with the WATS (Wide Area Telephone Service) system that the University was using, Sutton said, because of the low rate KU received on the WATS line.
However, Sutoon said, the state's total telephone bill, including all state office fees, was less than $100 a month because of the many smaller agencies that didn't have WATS lines and could now use them.
Planning begins for new buildings
ACCORDING TO SUTTON, WATS users didn't have to worry about paying the bill from department funds because the University paid for the entire system.
But with KANS-A-N, long distance calls will be billed to the department and the extension they are made on. Sutton said. The departments will have to keep a record
Bids will then be taken, and construction
Two major building projects for the University of Kansas and the KU Medical Center are in the planning stages after their completion. The project was last week by Gov. Robert F. Bennett.
That bill included appropriations for a new $4-million computer center to be near Newton Gymnasium and for a $15.5-million computer center to be built on the Med Center campus.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor, said Friday that the computation center's architects were completing drawings and specifications for the center and should be finished by July 1, the day state funding will be released to KU.
should begin on the computation center late next summer, he said.
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said he was "tremendously pleased" that
the funding was approved and that plans
could be completed for the two projects.
Construction on the radiation center also is expected to begin this summer.
"We needed a building in an accessible location that could provide computer services needed for a major university," he said.
Lucas called the computation center "a major addition to the Lawrence campus and a significant benefit."
The center will house two recently approved computer systems and will be built
On Sundays Ave. near Sunflower Road Funds of $3.6 million for the center were included in the bill, in addition to planning funds previously appropriated.
The radiation center will have a total cost of $5.1 million, of which $2 million has been appropriated by the state. The remaining amount for purchasing will be funded by private gifts.
The center will house radiation sources for cancer treatment.
of all long-distance calls to check them with each month's long-distance billing.
I lasc said many such centers were built underground, but the Med Center's building would be above ground. He said he didn't know yet what the advantages or disadvantages of that method of construction would be.
*Departments will have to watch who uses the phone system because they will be locked in.
Sutton said she wasn't sure how each department would pay for its calls. Some departments might not have money set aside to pay the bills and the money would probably have to come out of their operating funds, she said.
Kunkel said that using the KANS-A-N system should be easy if every user familiarizes himself with the procedures specified in the "General Information" section of the KANS-A-N directory before they try to make a call.
THERE ARE THREE types of calls that can be made on KANS-A-N: a call from one telephone having a KANS-A-N number to another; a call from a telephone number; a call from a telephone with a KANS-A-N number to a telephone that doesn't have a KANS-A-N number; and a call made from a telephone without a KANS-A-N number to one that is on the network.
To make a call between two phones on KANS-A-N, the user would first find the seven-digit KANS-A-N number, which differs from the regular phone number.
then dial "8", the KANS-A N- access number, and then the KANS-A N-number.
For instance, a call from the Chancellor's office to KU Medical Center information, both of which have KANS-A-N numbers, would be made by dialing 8-506-5410.
If the originator is calling from a KANS-A-N number to a party not on the network he must dial "8." then the area code and then the seven-digit number.
Calls from a KANS-A-N phone to one not in the system can only be made within Kansas or Kansas City, Mo. Calls to other states would be made through the KANS-A-N State Operator, 561-7898, utilizing a WATS line that is connected to KANS-A-N.
State employee can also make calls from phones off KANSAS-N to a phone on the phone at KANSAS-C.
Sutton said only phones connected to the system that were listed in the state directory could be used to gain access to KANS-A-N
The state doesn't own any of the network, according to Kunkel. It is leased from the Bell Telephone System and private telephone branches.
Kunkel said Texas, Washington and Georgia had networks similar to KANS-A-N and the federal government and the state had more complex, nationwide systems.
Federal investigation of 2 complaints ends
The committee from the U.S. Office of Civil rights (OCR), in Kansas City, Mo., investigating discrimination complaints against the University of Kansas, ended its investigation Friday and met with KU administrators to discuss its findings.
The investigators met with Chancellor Archie R. Dykes; Mike Davis, University general counsel; William Bafour, vice chancellor for student affairs; and Del Lewis, executive vice chancellor, to review the committee's activities for the week
Shankar told the committee "met with lots of people and looked at lots of documents." Most of the documents studied were written about admissions and financial aid, he said.
Shankel said the committee pointed out "some of the good things" in the University, such as SCORMBE, a School of Engineering program that recruits black women to work at the partnerships for women and minorities; and the work of the Office of Affirmative Action.
Put the committee also pointed things out to the Office of Affirmative Action needed to address it.
Shankel said collection of data and revision of affirmative action programs were cited as two of the general problems the committee found.
He said that the affirmative action revision was being worked on and that a special committee from the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses was being formed to finish the revision and consider suggestions for improvement given by the OCR.
OCR was investigating three discrimination complaints against KU. One was filed by two black former KU students about the hiring of replacements for James Rosser, a black, for the position of associate vice chancellor for academic affairs.
The two other complaints, one was about an alleged violation of Title IV of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which bars bars from the cause of nationality or race, and the other denied a charge of sex discrimination by a court denied admission to the KU Law School.
The committee went back to Kansas City to compile its information, Shankel said. Neahsau weren't given Friday, but the ad commissioner had been informed the committee's report is finished, he said.
Committees hear requests
The Student Senate's spring budget hearings got off the ground yesterday when three of the Senate's committees heard statements from 36 student organizations.
The three committees—Academic Affairs, Cultural Affairs and Student Services—have a total of $128,902 to allocate to the department. Students will bear watch tomorrow, tomorrow and Wednesday.
The 43 groups are requesting a total of about $160,000.
The committees didn't discuss yesterday how these funds would be allocated.
Some of the larger requests heard by Academic Affairs were: The Engineering School Council, $4,200; SCoIMREME, $5,130; the Black Business School Council, $3,668;
See BUDGET page 2
Alum recollects first film
By JIM COBB and CHUCK SACK Staff Written
The star was Charles (Buddy) Rogers, a KU alumnus, and the film was "Wings," the winner of the first Academy Award for Best Picture. It is also the first of the great air spectacles.
In an interview Saturday, he discussed the making of the 1926 silent film, which will be shown at 7:30 tonight in Woodruff Auditorium.
"They called him "America's Boy Friend" in the '20s, a dark-haired, boy-fished movie star from Kansas who found success after his very first film role.
Rogers returned here over the weekend to participate in centennial activities of Phi Beta Kappa.
In "Wings," Rogers portrays Jack Powell, a boy-next-door character who becomes an ace pilot in World War I. In the film, he pleasured with the revival of the film.
ROGERS CAME CLOSE to not being in any films at all. After being chosen as one of 20 students in a national search for new Film Academy, the Parmount School of Acting in New York.
to have both of those promised roles given to someone else.
After studying there, he was cast in "Beau Geste" and in "Old Ironsides" only
THE STORY CENTERS on two boys, Jack Powell and David Armstrong (Richard Arlen), who are rivals for a girl's love back home, but conrades in the same flying squad. The love triangle is further the neighbor's neighbor, Mary (Clara Bow), who is in infatuated with Jack that she joins the Red Cross to follow him to Europe.
"I met Dick Arlen that day at lunch with Wellman, and Gary Cooper, who also was playing his first part. The three of us went off and made "Wings."
Lasky told Rogers to talk to a new doctor. William Wellman who then was a nurse.
Because both Arlen and Rogers were newcomers, Clara Bow, Paramount's famous "It girl," was the only established star in the film.
"I was pretty much in awe of her," Renner recalled. "She had a strong, strong smile."
to work with. She'd sit in and hold your hand when you had a close-up - just to give her some space.
IN THEIR ADVENTURES, Jack and David have doftigges with the German Flying Circus, shoot down dirigibles, strafe enemy cars and car or chase a giant bomber.
Although Bow has several good moments, notably a scene at the Follies Bergere in Paris, the film is best known for its thrilling air sequences.
Director Wellman insisted on realism, so there is no rear-screen processing in "Wings." All battle scenes were actually filmed in the air.
Because of this, Rogers had to learn to pilot a plane.
"Richard Arlen had been a pilot in the Royal Canadian Air Force, but they had to teach me how to fly," he said. "My second lieutenant, who taught me how to fly and landed in and out of my plane, turned out to be a five-star general. Hoyt S. Vandenburg."
Neither Arlen nor Rogers, though, was capable of acting the many dangerous actions he was obliged to perform, generally regarded as the greatest stunt man in cinema history, flew the major
See ROGERS page 5
BARNARD J. MILLER
KU alum Charles "Buddy" Rogers (left) greeted at Phi Kappa Psi banquet
Monday, April 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Advertising called deceptive
WASHINGTON—When consumers buy a brand-name product off a store shelf, they should be given the name of the parent corporation which produced it. Semiconductor maker Altera is one such company.
Abourekz said he and five other senators are asking the Federal Trade Commission to require such labeling on all consumer items and in advertising.
He said large corporations often tried to mislead consumers into thinking a gigantic company was a small or family-run business.
"This is not only deceptive advertising, it also robs the small business of its most important asset." Abourez said.
Among what the said were "examples of this kind of advertising," Abourezk cited Dad's Root Beer, owned by the Illinois Central Railroad; Equipment Farms bakery products, manufactured by the Campbell Soup Company; and Sarah Lee products, produced by the Consolidated Food Corporation.
Fromme says film misleads
SAN DIEGO-Lynece "Squeaky" Fromme, the Charles Manson follower who was convicted of trying to kill President Ford, says the characterization of Manson as a conspirator is unfounded.
Fromme, who faces life imprisonment, made her comments Saturday in San Diego while awaiting her assignment to federal prison. She told the San Diego Union in a telephone interview that she watched the two-part CBS movie on Thursday and Friday.
"I wouldn't have followed the man they showed the American public for 10 minutes," she said, adding that actor Steve Wallack, who portrayed Manson, was still in character.
Frontease the actors in the film dismissed their roles because they 'were' of the people they were playing. They played with fear and used hostility to cover up their identities.
Harrises say Patty lied
NEW YORK—William and Emily Harris were quoted yesterday as saying the wrong person was convicted for the 1973 murder of Dr. Marcus Foster, a New York attorney. O'Kelly said
The statements by the two Symbionese Liberation Army members, quoted in New Times Magazine, took issue with Patricia Herbst's testimony on Feb. 18.
He said skin on the witness stand at her bank robberry trial that Russell Little, 28, and Joseph Remio, 29, the convicted men, were in the back seat of a waiting car.
In the interview with New Times, Harris said Patty lied about Little and Remiro being in the car. Little and Remiro themselves were also interviewed and denied
William Harris said, "Nancy Ling Perry and Mizmoun Patricia Sollysisk and 'Clonique' Do. DeFereyez gave the one who carried out the action."
Those three were killed in a shoot-out with Los Angeles police May 17, 1974.
Budget hearings
From name one
and the KU Association for Women Enfuinners. $2,400.
THE CULTURAL AFFAIRS committee's requests included: KU Bands, $10,290; KU Forensics, $8,757; University Concert Hall, $5,725; and University Theatre, $2,440.
The Student Services committee's requests included: Friends of Headquarters, $5,650; the Consumer Affairs Association, $8,730; Campus Veterans, $2,568; and Women's Coalition-Women's Center. $2,206.
Other groups heard by Academic Affairs were: Architecture and Urban Design Student Council, Black 'Tects, American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
Business School Council, Chancery Club,
Combined Health Services, KU Federation of
Student Social Workers, Student Bar
Association, Chicano Law Student
Association, Kansas Defender Project,
Women in Law, American Society of Civil
Workers, the undergraduate Philosophy
Club and the Undergraduate Anthropology Club
Other groups heard by Cultural Affairs were: the KU Folk Dance Club, the KU Science Fiction Club, Tau-Sigma Dance Society and Operation Friendship.
The Student Services committee also heard requests from: KU-Y, Mecha, Volunteer Clearing House and sophomore, junior and senior Classes.
Persons involved in in "Compersonals" feel confident about their upcoming performance tomorrow and Wednesday at the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
"Compensators" was selected last month as a winner in the original play division of the league.
The play was written by Paul Stephen Lim, Phillipines graduate student.
It is set in the New York apartment of a well-to-do advertising artist and requires involved acency. The set was built free-standing, but it was used in an theater big enough, to hold it.
Lynn Levy, coeficial director, said Friday, "We know from the start there was a lot of work that went into this."
RONALD WILLIS, Lim's instructor and professor of theater said, "The technical
From the start, the play was handled as an educational experience. The play was presented the first time exactly as it was written so Lim could see its shortcomings. The actors were given the chance to work with Lim to fully develop the characters.
Lim said it was originally an intellectual play but the actors had put so much of themselves into their parts that there was a connection between the intellectual and the emotional.
Wills referred to the ACTF as the "Rose
towl of theatre" and winning it an honor
given by the Academy.
For Lim, the distinction isn't, as many would think, for one of his best plays.
Miles, the advertising artist, commits suicide just before the arrival of three
Miles! twin brother bursts in on the group,
as yet unaware of the suicide. Intuitively certain something is wrong, the brother enters into the bedroom and discovers the body.
Intense interaction between the artist's faeceee, a woman caught up in high society; her daughter, a nobly 16-year old in competition with her mother; the cynic with his partner; and the twin relationship; and the twin brother, a priest, results in Miles' twin's suicide the next day.
Lim said the twins weren't originally in the plot.
'Conpersonas' actors psyched and confident
IT WAS THEN Lim saw that twins were
50c Schooners all day today at the HAWK
Kansan applications to be due April 16
Applications for editor and business manager of the Kansan for the summer and fall semesters will be accepted until noon Friday, April 16. in 105 Flint Hall
Applications are available in 165 Flint, the dean of women's office, the dean of men's office.
The Kansan board will interview candidates and select editors and business managers for the summer and fall semesters April 20.
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SUA Presents
LAURA NYRO
in concert
Saturday, April 17th
8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium°
Tickets $5, $6 Reserved
"Laura Nyro is back, her three year retreat ended, a fine new album out, and a tour underway . . . she still looks as she did when her cult idolized her as the finest of the women singer/songwriters."
Rolling Stone, 4/8/76
Tickets Available At:
SUA Office
Retirement Records
what the plot needed. He spent four months researching twins and the "genetic blueprint" theory, which says there is a force between twins drawing them to a common end.
The role of 30-year-old Peter Miner as the cycin was his first real acting experience, the first chance he'd had to develop a character.
Miner, St. Louis graduate student, decided to try out for "Okahama!" just to find out what it was like to be part of a theater production. It was in the small part he got that he found a tremendous excitement, seeing how much of himself he could offer.
Victoria Stevens, Los Angeles junior, will be replacing Sheri Scholzman, Overland Park freshman, who can't make the trip because of illness. Stevens has had about a week to learn the part of the daughter, but he isn't having difficulty with the character.
The judging isn't quite finished for "Compersonas." The play will be performed in Washington, D.C., along with six plays that reflect the TPC regular university productions category.
The morning after the first performance of each, there will be a critique by East Coast drama critics. The group that best represents the talent is $4,000 for its school's theater department.
Mechanical and civil engineer majors are area engineering majors, majors in electronics, computer science.
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Be a Montessori Teacher
Attend Program at the Lawrence Public Library, Thurs., April 8, 7:30 p.m.
Presented bu
The Montessori Plus Teacher Preparation Center
for Week of the Young Child
The Montessori Teacher - Preparation Center
and Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool & Private Kindergarten
This program and demonstration for teachers and parents will also count as orientation for the 1976 summer school Montessori Teacher Preparation & Certificate Course, June 7-July 30. You need not be a college graduate to take this course and earn a Montessori Teacher Certificate. You may do the required nine month internship of student teaching (half days) during the 1976-77 school year in Topeka or at Sunshine Acres in Lawrence as you might work part-time or go to school part-time. Six interns selected by Sunshine Acres will receive partial course tuition scholarships as well as a scholarship-stipend toward their tuition and practice学费 expenses.
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EXTENDED
CAR STEREO SALE!
- $ \frac{1}{2} $ price on Selected Models.
—Giant Discount on Scratch and Dent models.
—Savings on entire stock of more than 1000 Car Stereos and Speakers.
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AUDIOTRONICS
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928 MASS. 843-8500
APRIL 10th
---
10th
Monday, April 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
3
County Demos choose favorites
By MIKE THIESEN
Staff Writer
Spring was in the air but the 1976 presidential election was on the mind of more than 300 Douglas County Democrats Saturday.
The Douglas County Democratic Convention at West Junior High School elected 20 delegates to attend the 3rd District Democratic Convention May 1.
Former Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter, Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., and Oklahoma Senator Fred Harris captured the number of delegates to the district convention.
CARTER AND UDALL each won six of the Douglas County delegates, Harris won five, and three of the delegates were elected uncommitted to any of the candidates.
Hal Keltz, Douglas County Democratic chairman, said that although not as many people attended this year's county convention, as compared with 1972, when more than 1,000 people attended, he was satisfied that 328 people of the 1972 convention was one of the largest Democratic county conventions in the state, he said.
KELT2 SAID THAT the 20 Deugles County delegates would attend the district convention, which would probably be in Kansas City, Kan., where 26 of the state's delegates to the national convention would be elected.
He said that eight more Kansas delegates selected by the State Democratic Committee.
Awards given in photo contest
Winners of the Ninth Annual University Fridays' Contest were announced Friday.
The contest is sponsored each spring by the photojournalism departments of the School of Photography at SUA.
This year's entries will be on display Wednesday at the University Terrace Bank, 815 W. 30th St.
Winners of the contest are:
AMERICAN
David Cremasbaum, 3rd dark sergeant; 2 Paul
Dinier, law enforcement junior; 2 Lawrence
Dinier, law enforcement junior.
1. Cremenk, 2. Pierce, 3. Wally Emerson, Lawrence
senior; Honorable Menton, Cremenk
1. Campbell; 2. Emerson; 3. Jay Bogart, Lawrence
junior.
SPORTS
1. Reinald Biskib, Loyola University senior; 2. Pierce; 3. Michael Hughes
2. Reinald Biskib, Loyola University senior; 2. Pierce; 3. Michael Hughes
SCENIC PICTORIAL (Color)
a color book
Harvey, 48, of Greenwich, CT. He worked at Hoboken, NJ; Birmingham, IL; Hilton, 48, Read Clinton St. Louis, MO; Meghan, 29, Tampa Bay, FL; and New York City. Md. associate with Harv O'Brien, Bronxville, NY. Exp. as Reqs. to NYU.
1. Dierer; 2. Stan Pittman, BoenSensor; 3. Eward
Kravitz; 4. Graduate graduate student; 5. Honorable
Murray, Mgr.
ABSTRACT—EXPERIMENTAL (Back and Winner)
- Thackert; 2, Pearl Langdon, Lawrence senior; 3.
ABSTRACT--EXPERIMENTAL (Colar)
1. Susan McIdrew, Sierra senator; 2. Langer; 3. Pittman.
4. Susan McIdrew, Sierra senator.
PONTIAC—PERSONAL FORT WASHINGTON, 3. Pittman, 3. Pittman
Piore, 3. Pittman Fort Washington, 4. Colo., junior.
3. Pittman, 4. Crawford, 3. Pittman
4. Crawford, 3. Pittman
After people were divided into preference groups, they were counted to see how many of the 20 delegates each group would get. The delegates were assigned on a percentage basis. Douglas County rules require a group to have 15 per cent of those attending the convention before it could receive a delegate.
Sen. Robert Byrd, D-W. Va., and Gov.
Greg Wallace, Washington, don't have any
government action to have
Gov. Edmund Brown, D-Calif.; Sen.
Frank Church, D-Idaho; Sen. Henry
"Scoop" Jackson, D-Wash.; Carter;
Harris; and Udall had support in the first step of the county convention. But when representatives found out they didn't have enough people to get a delegate, they consolidated with other groups.
A final count showed that Udall had 98 representatives, Carter had 68 and Harris had 71. The uncommitted group had 51 representatives. Final voting on the delegates from each group was done by the entire county convention.
John Wright, floor chairman for Udall's group, said Udall's six delegates to the district convention from Douglas County were a little more than they had expected. He said he was pleased to see a large number of college students.
"IF NOT FOR student participation, we couldn't have done it today." Wright said.
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Scott Siebel, Prairie Village junior and coordinator of the Jummy Carter for President Committee, said Carter did about as well as they had expected in Douglas County. He said some of the other organizations were very well-organized.
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Howard Klink, Douglas County Fred Harris for President Committee Chairman, said he thought Harris did a little better than had been expected. Klink said he
Carter should do well at the Kansas District Conventions, Siebel says. He said he thought that the next three primaries, in Wisconsin, New York and Pennsylvania, would have an effect on the outcome at the district conventions.
Siebels said he had expected to see a larger number of people at the convention, but he thought the reason for the small increase in convention was a lack of major issues.
students even if they a student's genuine permanent home, he said
University of Kansas students elected as delegates to the district convention are: David Anderson, Lawrence junior; Lynn Knox, Lawrence junior; Steve Treaster, Lawrence first-year law student, and Cathy Hendricks, Prairie Village sophomore. Anderson is uncommitted and the others support Harris.
Keltz said he was pleased to see the number of students as elected as delegates.
Also elected were Dan Conyers, Lawrence graduate student; and Pauline Rosacker, Lawrence junior. They both support Udall.
Siebels was elected as a delegate tor Carter.
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4
Monday, April 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Allocate fees fairly
Student Senate begins budget hearings this week with a newly approved budgeting philosophy. In the past there has been considerable confusion over what basis should be used in judging budget requests.
The committee members scrutinized requests quite thoroughly and attempted to evaluate them fairly. But without a well defined philosophy to guide them, the senators couldn't help but base many of their decisions on personal prejudices. In past years it was difficult for them to recognize organizations to the University with any consistency, and consistency is definitely needed.
This semester the Senate has more than $550,000 that it can allocate to various campus organizations. There will be no allocation made to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation this year. Last year that group received $147,000. This means that even more money will be available for other groups, and thus the decision on how to allocate the funds will be even more difficult. The Senate will have to be cautious that money isn't allocated for unworthy activities simply because there is enough to go around.
THE MOST SIGNIFICANT power the Senate possesses is the power of allocating student activity fees. Every student enrolled in the University pays fee before, every student at KU is a fee by law in which these fees are distributed.
THE NEW PHILOSOPHY calls for funding of "responsible groups that offer strong programs, as so to create a better world." The program includes members of the student body." Under
this philosophy, strong programs are defined as providing "tangible and-or intangible benefits." Emphasis is placed on direct returns and enrichment of the University community, especially currently enrolled students.
The philosophy calls for special scrutiny of groups that duplicate services or benefit only a small number of students. This is an important facet of budgeting evaluations and one that has been a source of difficulty in the past.
GREAT DEBATES have raged over whether thousands of dollars should be allocated to groups such as the Consumer Affairs Association and the Douglas County Legal Aid Society, which are of unqualified rank, or whether it might not serve enough students to justify the level of funding they receive.
Even though the philosophy has been revised to provide the Senate with stricter guidelines, there is still a great amount of leeway in deciding just who should get how much. The new budget has the biggest budgets of many well established organizations. Some may even be cut altogether.
Regardless of which route the Senate chooses, it should be most concerned with establishing a consistent policy. Personal prejudices should be forgotten, and the new philosophy should be closely adhered to. Above all else, the Senate should remember that it is allocating the student activity fee. The allocations should benefit student activities.
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
By DON L. SMITH
Carter no laughing matter
WASHINGTON - The newest kind of jokes in the nation's capital are Jimmy Carter jokes. He is taking his initials too seriously. And it has been Carter's amazing successes in the first round of primaries that he to his newfound recognition
"Carter's ambiguity seems to reflect a refreshing detachment from the old political orders of his predecessor," MacLeish has written. "His clearest campaign promise—to give Clinton a chance, the only promise that counts."
JIMMY, CARTER WAS JUST another politician this time last spring. Few knew him and fewer knew what he stood for; today, many know him, but just as they know, few knew what he stands for.
RUT TO LIBERALS here, the Carter jokers aren't very funny. In fact, many people in this city are worried about Carter.
Carter has seemingly promised everything to everybody. Liberals think of him as a liberal. Conservatives think of him as a liberal. And that is what really bothers political observers here.
In a society that seems obsessed with judging its political leaders on appearance and success rather than substantive power, he says the seem to have won the political ranks to riches award of 1976.
In the first round of primaries he has trampled all except one of the Washington-based can- tiers, Henry Jackson of Washington.
REP. MORRIS UDALL
Freedom brawl stews
WASHINGTON - A gentleman by the name of Stephen Barrett, M.D., chairman of the board of the Lehigh Valley (Pa.) Committee Against Health Fraud, has filed a fore a hide of pure asbestos, but these birds are producing a slow burn. I feel a brawl coming on, and the bird is a grand and gorgeous feeling.
These various spokesmen for
By James J.
Kilpatrick
(C) Washington Star Syndicate
M. BARRETT
mal complaint against me with
the National News Council.
Other doctors, elsewhere in the
country, have recommended
remarkably stiff letters.
BARRETT SAYS I am paranoid. Others charge that I am irresponsible, even the news business have given the news business have given
the medical establishment are outraged by several columns. I have lately composed about the importance of those who have come late to the free-for-all, it should be said that the gang is composed of organic food nuts, non-organic foods, non-ecotectives and other freeborn
citizens They are convinced that a substance known as Laetrile may be useful in treating some forms of cancer.
THE GOVERNMENT and the medical establishment regard Laetrile as a sham, a hoax, and a threat to health from apricot pits and other natural foods, has been known for generations as amygdalin. No scientifically acceptable tests ever have demonstrated that Laetrile causes government has declared it unlawful for any person to import, sell, or distribute the stuff, and the government has not hesitated to seek criminal action against the alleged conspirators.
Very well. So far as I know, as I have said repeatedly, the medical experts are right.
When it comes to treating cancer, taking Laetrile is probably as useful as chewing
juicy fruit gum. Cancer victims who spend their money on Laetrile capsules almost certainly are throwing their money away. A patient would be a fool to pin his hopes on this stuff.
PUT LET US move back the chairs and tables and clear a space on the barroom floor. The arrogance of the medical establishment, in my own view, is either by far more important than the Great Apricot Kernel Gang. Barrett and his swelled colleagues are doubtless sincere, high-minded, dedicated, informed, and reputable fellows, but they never ran for God in an August primary and no one ever elected the Possessors of All Wisdom.
On the brighter side, Jerry,
it's not a kamikaze ... it's
just that the plane's a lemon!
What has become of humility? What has become of professional modesty? What has happened to personal freedom in a free society? What has happened to the immaterial whether amygdalin is or is not a "vitamin." It is beside the point that the stuff may be dangerous in certain chemical situations. Vitamins are matters of wild disagreement and almost nothing under the sun may be dangerous in some situations.
In season and out, I have fought the doctors' battle against overwearing government. But it seems to me time for some of the high-and-mighty ones, the know-it-all ones, to put hubris aside and to die the savage of their ignorance of the human being. It is the sickness of freedom that troubles me. I wish it troubled my lordly antagonists.
Astounding! More than 300,000 cancer victims every year use orthodox treatment instead of Laetrile and they also lose their lives. Eventually you get sick with this life. The proponents of amygdalin insist that many apparently terminal patients have benefited from the stuff, and at least one federal judge, Luther Bohannon of Oklahoma City, accepts their evidence. Maybe the patients are hallucinating; maybe they have been poisoned so What? More things are wrought by faith than this world dreams of.
WHAT MATTERS is freedom. What is at stake is the right of a free citizen to fritter money, and the right if he wants to. The medical establishment is howling that the promoters of Leatrile make money on their worthless product, some of the fees that might be paid to republican doctors "quacks", instead. The republicant doctors can't stand it. Barrett says: "People who
suggestions as to how he'd reform it.
appears to be slipping in Wisconsin and the political reaction in at least one pro-Dudson congressional office last week was that Udall's campaign was in deep trouble in Wisconsin and headed for certain defeat in New York.
In addition, Carter has done better than Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana, Sen. Lloyd Benton of Texas, Sen. John Hancock and Sen. Fred Harris. The only possible Washington contender still in the race is Sen. Frank Church of Idaho and he won't run to Alabama or abrasica primary in early May.
AND BESIDES depleting the ranks of the Washington candidates, Carter has singlehandedly destroyed Alabama Gov. George Wallace's hopes of creating chaos at the Democratic Convention in New York.
Yet Carter's electoral successes have not prompted
Finally, Carter's strongest idea seems to be his personality. He's from the south but one of a breed called the "New Southerners. Carter is soft spoken and not taken to getting involved in emotional confrontations with his opponents. He is often attracted to his style of care paigning after suffering through four years of the Watergate syndrome.
everyone to jump on the Carter bandwagon. One reason for the hesitancy shown by some potential Carter supporters is the strange resemblance between Carter and another politician of recent history, Richard Nixon.
AS SOME REMEMBER,
Nixon also campaigned on an ambiguous stand in 1968. He refused to be pinned down about his stance on the Vietnam War while insisting that he would not win. He was defeated by Nixon ran primarily as a media creation and be won.
Today Carter seems to be following the same sort of strategy. "As president I'd never tell a lie," he has said many times. But in the meantime, Carter refuses to let himself be pinned down on many issues.
SO THE JIMMY Carter jokes aren't about Jimmy Carter the carter of the day. They're about Jimmy Carter the personality, the smiling southern farmer farmer. And they're troubling to some observers.
FOR EXAMPLE, Carter has taken almost every conceivable position on busing: he's against
Another example of Carter's hazy stations centers on the military budget. Yes, Carter must have reduced. But by how much? Well, take your choice. In March 1975 Carter was calling for $18 billion to meet the current Carter revised that estimate to between $8 and $7 billion. And only last week, Carter told the Washington Post editorial cuts of only about $7 billion.
it, but he's against a constitutional amendment to overturn the Supreme Court ruling and finally he's against segregation. He's got all bases worked and that's what he wants.
It appears that again, just as in too many elections, the American electorate is going to make its most important political decision based on personalities, not policies.
**IN ADDITION, Carter has campaigned hard on the issue of reforming the bureaucracy here, because that such can be done. But it won't yet, Carter seems unwilling or unable to provide any
Although the Democratic party had a large stable of candidates in 1972, they had no real lead over the Republican downbroke that preceded the 1972 Democratic convention did nothing but persuade Americans that Vietnam had produced enough bloodshed for the war.
WELL, HOW'S THE OLD REACTOR DOING CHARLIE?
SMOOTH, CHIEF. SMOOTH,
OH, A LITTLE LEAKAGE, MAYBE---
NOTHING TO GET UPSET ABOUT.
© 1970 WMT OPTIONAL FEATURES
THIS YEAR the healthy assortment of candidates in both parties will guarantee that the public will be able to practice its good judgment in selecting a President in November. Past elections have showed that when there is a candidate, the political parties for a candidate, a more able, more highly respected President has been chosen, A President who has
BUT. IN EFFECT, the ?2 GOP convention was not a convention at all. There was essentially no decision made by the delegate. If there was any chance by Nixon as to whether to run.
Guest Commentary
Politics makes comeback
By BRAD JONES
WHY IS THIS health for America and its politics? It shows that people are urging more candidates to enter the race. And this is proving that American morale and the sense of participation are not down the坡, as critics have suggested.
In 1972, there were two incidents that indicated that it must have been a boring year for voters. Visitors to the Republican National Conference brightly illuminated convention floor of the Miami Convention Center. The 1972 GOP gathering had all the excitement and glamour of a circus with Richard Nixon the star and the entire nation, via national coverage, his granddaddy bill of goo-oo eyes kids.
Thus far, 1976 has been a healthy year for politics in America, thanks to the battles for the presidential nomination within both major political parties. Although many of the lesser candidates are already withdrawing from contention, there will still be two or three in each part of the GOP and Democratic conventions finally roll around in August.
come through the battles sound should be ready for the ordeal he will face during the next four years.
The fine array of clever minds and epos that have assembled for the 1976 race is not the only bright spot in this election year. Compared to those who were issues with which the candidates must contend. Four years ago, there two topics recognized and understood by the public. But one, the Vietnam War, was an old issue that, despite its endless interest of youth and the rawness left, was by convention time about to run its course.
THE OTHER WAS the then tumbling economy. The incumbent President, however, knew what to do in the impact of economic debate to the point that it became essentially a non-issue, an issue that carried no weight in determining who to vote for.
This year it is an entirely different situation. Not only are the challengers attacking each other, but Ford has proposed in the area of budgeting and defense, but there also are the heated debates over how to end and now the question of abortion being introduced with in-
Letters Policy
The Kanan 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.
treasing frequency in news conferences and on the campaign trail.
THE REVISION of campaign contribution laws has made it easier for the "little man" to assume a major role in electing his candidate. It has been $5 and $10 contributions that have been made for the major campaigns this year. In 1972, Nixon's $8.2 million campaign budget was procured mostly through huge contributions from wealthy individuals and corporations. The small donations weren't really needed, thus alienating a day person from taking an active part in the election.
The past four years probably have been among the hardest, most memorable challenges America ever had to experience. In those years we were forced to up to what America really is—and what it
We learned that American democracy isn't always democratic, as was illustrated by the disclosures about FBI interrogation of Mr. Obama. We learned that the Central Intelligence Agency was, indeed, a sort of Gestapo in the way it engaged itself in the so-called covert operations in Chile and other nations—all in the name of national security. And, of course, the most destructive blow came from the Watergate anecdote an incident by blunt decision and illegal action by an American President.
WHAT GOOD HAS come of all these nightmares? Very simply, we are much, much more aware of what America is. We now recognize more rapidly its shortcomings and problems, place the FBI, the CIA and the White House did a great deal to cause fear in Americans about America. But we now know that the corruption exists and, in the future, will be able to recognize signs of recurrence of corruption before, we are an enlightened people about the American process. This is a drastic departure from 1972, and virtually every campaign year prior to it, when none of us had any idea about what went wrong, awaiting the results of the first presidential election in our revived nation.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor
Published at the University of Kansas wealdows website www.ku.edu/wealdows/ Publication period: Second-phase postage paid at Lawncrest Post Office, 1203 South Pine Street, semester or $1 a year in Beaufort County and $1 a year in Richland County. Subscription rates are $2.00 a semester, paid through the subscriptions and $2.50 a semester, paid through the subscriptions.
Associate Editor Campus Editor Yasuhoto Editors Associate Campus Editor Greg Hack Assistant Campus Editors Stewart Braney Photo Editor Daniel Fernandes David George Milnor, Jay Koehler Sports Editor George Miller, Ken Stone, Association Sports Editors Ken Stone, Entertainment Editors Mary Ekrap Lead Attorney Copy Chiefs Mary Ann Hudstedton. Artist Jane Maude, Alfonso Gwenn News Editors John Hickey, Brad Anderson.
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Classified Manager Debbie Service Manager
Promotion Director Scott Bush
Assistant Classified Manager Gina Marquardt
Assistant Classified Manager Jolene
Monday, April 5, 1976
5
Art displays spark international festival
The pottery and wall hangings from all over the world filled the Big Eight and Jayhawk rooms of the Kansas Union yesterday as the annual International Festival presented its annual International Festival.
The festival began with displays in the afternoon, was followed by a Banquet of Nations in the early evening and concluded with a natural program in Woodruff Auditorium.
A trip around the Big Eight and Jayhawk was like a quick trip around the world.
The China display included pottery,
sculptures and screens from
monumented China and Taiwan.
From China, it was about two steps to Thailand where wall hangings, tiny bronze dolls and miniature theatrical masks filled the floors of many hotels. It is also a central point on the Thai display.
Japanese students presented a taste of their culture through dramatization of a tea ceremony, demonstrations of origami, paper folding, and flower arranging.
The Indian display exhibited jewelry, fabrics, posters and pictures.
Persian rugs, screens, purses and wavings were included in the Iranian
African displays featured pictures and garments from many African countries. A round Liberian rug and a wall hanging with a circular hides hides hung above the center of the display.
The Brazilian display exhibited leather wood and wool carvings, and a Venezuelan leather bracelet.
Ballet dancers from the KU Ballet Dance Club danced around the center of the room.
The Barquet of Nations served main dishes from Thailand, Iran, the Arab nations and Brazil. side dishes from Africa, India, and desserts from India and Japan.
The evening's cultural performances included a karate performance by Japanese students, a Venezuelan jorro dance, Chinese folk songs, folk dances by the KU folk dance club and a movie and songs from Pakistan.
The performances also included a Thai traditional dance, an Iranian play about industry in Iran and a holy dance and folk dance from India.
Mike Fung, Hong Kong graduate student and president of the International Club, said the International Festival had been an event since the club was formed at KU in 1919.
Student sculpture entries accepted through April 30
All entries in the *Student Sculpture Competition* must be submitted to the SUA of the College of Art and Design.
The annual contest, started last year by SUA and the Office of Student Affairs, is open to all KU students. Its purpose is to encourage students to landscape with students' original sculptures.
A complete description of the sculpture, including cost estimates, description of specific materials to be used and an account of the drawings, drawing, must be submitted for judging.
The sculptor must consider the designated site, which is between the
Kansas Union and Dyche Auditorium, when designing his scubet.
All participants will be responsible for the continuation of the winner of the contest, receive $200.
Entries will be judged by a panel of administrators, faculty members and
The winning sculpture must be finished and installed by the end of the fall 1978 semester and removed by the artist at the end of the one-year display period.
Mark Harris, Lawrence senior, won last year's contest.
stunts in "Wings" for $500 a stunt.
Rogers...
From page one
AFTER SUCCESSFULLY crashing a light Spad in a propre-strawn man's land and smashing a German Gotha into a hillside, Grace broke his back while deliberately cracking up a Fokker immediately after takeoff.
"We had 10 cameras on him," Rogers remembered. "He got out of the plane, carried on his scene, and when they said cut," he collapsed."
Rogers also remembered that the actors and pilots spent much of their time on the ground at Kelly Airfield near San Antonio, waiting for the proper cloud conditions for takeoff. The pilots shot against a cumulus cloud background so the planes would be visible on film.
Once they waited 18 days for clouds
before final leaving to find clouds that had
been there.
When the actors were in the air, their aircraft stop with flying the plane and act as their stairway.
"THE CAMERA WAS on the cowling of the plane." Rogers recalled. "We had the batteries down by our feet, and the plug on our hands. When we got in position, got the planes right, the sun right, and the clouds right, then we'd shoot.
"I had to be the cameraman, director,
electrician—I had to be everything."
But on the ground, the director was king,
"Wings" gains much of its flavor from aid that Wellman received from the U. Army.
However, Rogers said, some of the Army generals didn't appreciate the way the director ordered them around.
"Wellman was a realist and he was tough," Rogers said. "He was a great director and was able to get billions of dollars for him." He also supplies for nothing from the Army.
"We called him 'Wild Bill.' But he'd burgu
un to death with her. And the girl was
going to call on to right up to look good."
Rogers' kindest praise was for his costar, Richard Arlen. "We gave our emotions. We cried and hugged and kissed each other. He was great to work with."
Then Rogers' reminiscing became more serious.
$360 through June 15, and you can book anytime.
If you are 12 to 23, our youth fare is made for New York-Luxembourg, through June 15; $410 June 16 through September 15. From through June 15; $451 from June 16 through September 15. Direct flights from New York Luxembourg in the heart of Europe. Fares subject to government approval. See your agent, write, or call icelandic Airlines, 650 Fifth Ave, N.Y., (800) 800-5512 or 800-5512-1212.
Our jet fares to Europe are less than any other scheduled airline's.
ICELANDIC
We BUY used cars. John Haddock Used Cars
23rd and Alabama 843-3500
--an optical dispensary
Off-the-Wall
Festival of the Arts (April 5-10)
Monday: Classical Guitarists (8:00) —Kenje Kamiya & Hiyoto Isimaru
Tuesday: Benefit Concert for KUMC (7:30) Burn Center and Mike Blitch. —Various Local Musicians
Tbursday: Jim Ringer, Mary McAslin (8:00)
Wednesday: Free Folk Jam
17.20
Friday & Saturday: Billy Spears Band
737 New Hampshire 841-0817
Off the Wall Hall
"I had to buy my pal, Richard Arlen last week," he said. "We started out in 'Wings' together, we'd been pals together, we were locker at the Country club for 40 years.
Careers Don't Just Happen A weekend conference on career decision making April 9,10 Kansas Union
Plipminton's appearance is the second of three events sponsored by SUA this week which were originally planned as part of the Festival of the Arts.
Plimpton has been an associate editor of Horizon magazine, an associate editor of Harper's and a special contributor to Sports Illustrated. He also wrote a review, a New York-based literary review,
Saturday
Friday
"IHAD TOSAYGOY to him. It makes me sad. Milly Wellman passed. Cooper passed first, then Clara Bow. Now Dick I'm. about the last one up on the totem pole."
10:12 a.m. Career Fair
1:30-4:30 p.m. Workshops
Careers Don't Just Happen
Maximizing Black Potential
Beginning a Career at Any Age
Beyond High School Choices
Parents' Workshop
Job Seeking Skill Building
Life-Planning
Walnut, Regionalist, Oread Room
University Dafly Kansan
10-12 a.m. Career Fair
1-5 p.m. Career Fair Business and University personnel will be available to answer questions about job opportunities. Jayhawk Room, Parlor A, B, C. 6 p.m. Banquet, Big 8 Room 7 p.m. Speaker, Elizabeth Hanford Dole Attorney and Federal Trade Commissioner Big 8 Room
George Plimpton, the world's most famous frustured amateur, will speak at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium on "The Amateur vs. the Pro."
Plipmon's work with Sports Illustrated led him to several ventures into the world of professional sports. His first book, "Out of My League," is the story of Plipmon's brief play as a major league pitcher during the 1959 All-Star game in Yankee Stadium.
He is perhaps best known for "Paper Lion," a chronicle of three months in which Plimpton tired out as a free agent in the Detroit Lions summer training camp. His team ended with five plays from scrimmage during a Detroit preseason exhibition game.
Banquet Tickets are available at 2205 Strong for $3.50. Deadline Tuesday, April 6
"Paper Lion" was later made into a movie starring Alain Laido and Laura Hurt.
"I've always wondered to myself if I'd stayed on with Gary Cooper and Dick Arlen?" they stayed on and made almost "would I have stayed in acting like them?"
"I was a kid making $65 a week, with
Clara Row as my leading lady I was young,
I ran the show for a few years."
Walnut, Regionalist, Oread Rooms
PLIMPTON HAS also posed as a
Plimpton to lecture
But when he spoke again, his subject was "Wins" and his voice was a bit wistful.
He paused for a moment. In his life he had been a successful bandleader, a star who made 55 films and received 27,000 fan letters a month. He had married the beautiful Mary Pickford, a Hollywood marriage that has lasted since the '30s.
"But as I look back now I see I took a lot of choices."
Sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women This organization funded from the Student Activity Fee
VISIONS an optical dispensary
841-7421
SPRING SALE of FASHION and BASIC EYEGLASS FRAMES!
200 FRAMES TO CHOOSE FROM ALL AT 50% OFF
- 55 frames were $^{30^{\circ}}$ now ___ $^{15^{\circ}}$
- 23 frames were $50^{00}$ now___ $25^{00}$
- *42 frames were $^{38^{00}}$ now___ $^{19^{00}}$
- 46 frames were $26^{00}$ now___$13^{00}$
FRESHEN UP YOUR LOOKS WITH NEW GLASSES AT LOW,LOW PRICES!
806 Mass. St.
- 34 frames were $^{22^{00}}$ now ___ $^{11^{00}}$
VISIONS
professional golfer, which grew into ms书 "The Bovey Man."
9 F STREET
MASSACHUSETTS
Weavers Inc
Averting Lawrence Since 1857
Weaver's
THE YOUNG MAN WITH THE VEST
From $115.00
Men's Shop----1st Floor
... is the young man on the go. And our collection of Brookfield vested suits of luxurious 100% polyester gives you the luxury look that we know so well in detailing. Choose from single breasted suits with modified European cut, peaked laceps, top-stitching highlights, and more. The vests are single or double vested. Timely plaids and seams or seafoam, melon, metal or gold solids.
HIS MOST recent book, "Mad Dogs and Bears," was published in 1973, and a collection of several stories he wrote for Sports Illustrated about Hank Aaron's quest for baseball's home run record has been made into a book.
... is the
dior, of
100% jo-
lasts ar-
detail'
with
top
are s.
stripes
ids.
Admission to Plimpton's speech is $1.50.
Tickets will be available at the door.
50' Schooners all day today at the HAWK
---
Mr. Steak stacks things in your favor!
Juicy chunks of USDA Choice sirloin.
Just enough onion for extra zip.
Tangy bell pepper.
The flavor comes from aging, not from a bottle.
Marinated 24 hour in our secret sauce.
Crisp vegetables, not charred.
Cooked to order on our flavor-seal grills.
Most restaurants quit two goodies ago!
Taste the difference?
Mushrooms to cap it off.
T
Steak Kebob 'n Salad $1.99
Plate seafood, chicken,
kids' plates for 9c and
the friendliest waltresses
in town.
920 West 23rd Weekdays
11 a.m.-4 p.m.
Mr.
Steak
AMERCAS STEAK EXPERT
6
Monday, April 5, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU wins 2 of 3 from Nebraska
By JOHN HENDEL
Sports Writer
Some good individual performances helped the University of Kansas baseball team capture two of three games from Nebraska during the weekend.
KU won the first two games of the series, and 7-6. The Cornhuskers had the last game.
sports
In the inpper Friday, the Jayhawks found the pitching of Roger Slagle was all they needed.
Slagle struck out 17 Cornhurks, allowing only four hits. Slagle's record is 4-2.
The stinktuck performance was only one short of the KU record set by Larry Miller and Mickey McGrath.
SLAGLE, RETURNING FROM shoulder
Temple with hit piston coach Flady
Temple with hit piston coach
"Today, Shagle looked as good as Ive ever seen him," Temple said Friday. "His fastball was moving and his forkball was really working well."
KU's hitting didn't take a back seat to Shasle, though.
"Two years ago he was throwing in pain every time out. This is the first time he’s done it," she said.
Ron MacDonald, in a slump the first part of the season, had three hits, including a home run. Brian Moyer, Randy Trountr, Andy Gilmore and Carl Heinrich each contributed two hits to the Jayhawk's 14-hit barrage.
"I WAS REALLY pleased with Ron-he'd been hitting in some tough luck lately," Temple said. "I was really good for him. It made you feel better and we need him to have a good bat for us."
KU's hitters fared even better in the doubleheader on Saturday.
Softball team upsets defending champions
By KRIS ECKEL Sports Writer
The KU women's softball team remains undefeated after a triumph over the University of Nebraska at Omaha, last year's College World Series champions, in a weekend doubleheader, 2-1 and 8-7, at Holcom Sports Complex in Lawrence.
UNO scored its only run of the first game in the fourth inning. KU didn't score until the six, when with two out and two on base, UNO bobbled Nancy Stout's ground to short, and Paula Frank and Meredith Miller scored on the error.
Elda Isles pitched the entire first game, giving up only four hits and striking out
The second game of the day was a higher scoring affair which KU coach Sharon
Drysdale called "one of those see-saw types of games," because the load was constantly on the brain.
Gloria Graves, KU's startling pitcher, gave up six of UNO's seven runs, five of which were the result of walks. She struck out three.
Shelley Sinclair came in for Graves in the third inning and pitched a strong four and two-thirds innings to finish the game. He gave up five hits and had three strikeouts.
Nancy Stout was KU's top hit of the game, batting in three runs, two on singles and one double.
"We did't play that well," she said, "but we played better than they did. We came out on the wrong side."
KU's rugby club fell short in its attempt to defend the Big Eight title as Kansas State knocked them off, 13-4, yesterday at the intramural fields at 23rd and Iowa.
KU advanced to the finals with come-
from-behind wins against Iowa State and
Nebraska.
Ruggers lose Big Eight crown
Down 6-4 at halftime, KU scored on a try by Rich Colson to narrow the gap to 6-4. But a try and a field goal by Dave Disney, who ball of K-State's points, ended any KU hopes.
Against Oklahoma, the Jayhawks were behind 3-4 in the second half until Tom Laster scored the first of his two tries to put KU in front. 43.
In the opener against Iowa State, KU trailed 6-1 until the final five minutes, when Steve Framescott scored a try to give KU an 86 win. Bill Allman scored KU's other
Bill McGillvray added a try and a conversion to complete the Jayhawks' scoring in the 143 victory.
A surprising K-State club, only 4-3 coming into the tournament, trounced Oklahoma State, 12-6, and pummed Missouri, 24-6, to gain a bain in the finals.
Women take second
MacDonald, picking up where he left off on Friday, led off the second inning of the first game with a line drive over the 386-foot fence. The defense was unable to home run of the season in the first inning.
KU women's tennis beat every team in dual competition at the Tulsa Invitational Tournament this week at event but still finished second in overall points.
Mark Hannifan, a 100 hitter going into the game, had two hits, including a home run. Hannifan picked on a Dave Bueher快手 defense. He also had three RBs in the game.
The Jayhawks were mudged out by (8) 31 overall points, compared with KU's 30.
Kansas defended Tulsa, 5; Arkansas, 5;
OKlahoma State, 4; South Carolina, Missouri;
Tennessee, 1.
"Brian was the victim of some mediocre food. Temple said, "Kersen did a good job."
ROB ALLINDER once again fell in the second game to the hard luck that has plagued him all season. His record stands at 4 after picking up the loss Saturday.
TEMPEL WAS PLEASANTly surprised by the show of power. "It's been since about 1970 that we've had a pair of home runs in a season, and often we'll hit three in a game," he said.
Starring Clara Bow and Gary Cooper Tonight at 7:30 for 75c.
In 1929, Wings became the first film to receive the Academy Award for Best Picture of the Year.
Tonight at 7:30 for 75c.
WiNGS
Brian Rhodes, 3-2, picked up the win in the first game of the doubleheader. Rhodes won, despite some erratic pitching and four KU errors.
The Jayhawks had pelted Nebraska pitchers for 22 hits in the first two games, but could only manage five hits against three Cornhusker pitchers in the losing effort. Leftfielder Tom Kratt was the only KU player with two hits.
Coming Friday and Saturday:
The 9th International Animated
Film Tournée.
Presented by SUA in Woodruff Aud.
Kevin Kerschen relieved Rhodes in the first two games, picked well, allowing only two in the next.
FACES DISCO
"We didn't play up to our potential," Temple said. "Allister pitched pretty good and it looks as though MacDonald and Krattil are coming around."
Cancellation of the trip to Manhattan for the Kansas Tournament gives Kansas a five-day rest. KU faces Missouri in a three-game set this week at Quigley Field.
REVUE. Your chance to dance to
1. Marty Rock's Disco Tex and the Sexo...
...
Your chance to dance to
2. Ecstacy, Passion and Pain
PLUS, a '1,000 Dance Contest Friday, April 9th
3. The First Choice
7:00-12:00 p.m. at Kemper Arena
The biggest Disco happening to ever take place in the Midwest.
The assistant track coach position, which had been vacant since the Big Eight indoor meet in February, was filled this weekend to assist the assistant track coach at Auburn University.
Caper's Corners, Tigers Records and Kief's
Contestants, Only the First 500 Candidates to Sign Up at
Kemper Arena, 4:00:7:00 p.m., will be allowed to enter
the Dance Contest.
Tickets $5.50 in advance & $6.50 day of the concert at
Caen's Corner. Titers Records and Kiel's.
Faces for Revue '76 Is Open to the Public.
KU hires track assistant
Narewski, 28, replaces Thad Talley who left the KK track staff to head become coach of the Jets.
Head coach Bob Timmons said the new assistant was expected to assume his coaching duties of the sprinters and hurdlers today or tomorrow.
"We're extremely pleased to attract Stan to Karasas," Timmons said. "In my opinion, he is one of the outstanding young coaches in the country."
Bengals in the
Oaks and Jewelry
603 Mass. Cotcah
TN
50° Schooners all day today at the HAWK
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
National Bank (9th & Louisiana)
Mon., April 5, 7:30 p.m., Lawrence
Tues., April 6, 1:00 p.m., 901 Tenn. Gill Bldg.
INTRODUCTORY LECTURES
Wed, April 7, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Realationalist Room
SIMS Non-Profit Organization 842-1225
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
FAST!
FAST!
"... when it comes to pizza delivery"
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
"... when it comes to pizza delivery"
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
The Department of Planning and Development Kansas Citv. Kansas
Information and Research Division is expanding to include the following positions which will be involved with a wide variety of applied research and systems activities as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
Skills in written and verbal communication with both technical and non-technical personnel are required. Graduate experience in social science research and understanding of computer utilization in research environment is desirable.
Research/System Specialist
Programmer/Analyst
This position requires a thorough working knowledge of FORTRAN and/or COBOL. Programming experience in business applications or research projects is desirable. .
Salaries are commensurate with education and experience. These positions offer a wide-range benefit package, flexible working atmosphere, and modern office facilities. We invite all interested applicants to write Information and Research Division, Department of Planning and Development, One Civic Plaza, Kansas City, Kansas 66101. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M-F.
PETER MORRIS
Super Cuts for Guys and Gals only $4.50 Malls Beauty Salon
842-1144 (in Malls Shopping Center)
Buskens
LOOK FOR THE FLEX
Comfort . . . See our Latigo Leather Sandals.
Flexible Crepe Soles or Wood Bottoms.
A large selection to choose from.
Most styles '18 to '20.
MC
shoes
813 Mass. St.
VI 3-2091
You've been there. Now you can help them.
They've got a long way to go. In a world that isn't easy. But with someone's help, you can walk around the world is a friend. Someone to act as confident and guide. Perhaps, it could be you as a Salesian
The Salesians of St. John Bosco were founded in 1859 to
THE MACHINE IS A FUN THING.
serve youth. Unlike other orders whose apostolate has changed with varying conditions, the Salesians always have been — and will be, youth oriented. Today we're helping to prepare young-leaders for tomorrow. Not an easy task but one which we welcome.
And how do we go about it? By following the precepts of our founder, Don Bosco. To crowd out evil with reason, religion and kindness with a method of play, learn and pray. We're trying to build better communities by helping to create better men.
As a Salesian, you are guaranteed the chance to help the young in a wide range of issues (including accommodation counsel or housing assistance), as coached by psychologists... in boys clubs, summer camps... as missionaries. And you are given the kind of training you need to prepare.
For more information about Saleian Priests and Brothers, mail this coupon to:
B-544
Norsk B-544
Salesians OF ST. JOHN BOSCO
Floris Lane, West Haverstaff, N.Y. 10993
I am interested in the Priesthood ☐ Brotherhood ☐
Name.
Age.
Street Address
City___ State___ Zip___
College Attending___
College Attending___
Class of_
---
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 5, 1976
7
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without fee. BIRLING CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
time times time times time
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
later adverbial
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Thursday 5 p.m.
Thursday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months. The ad may be placed in person or by the CUR business office at 864-4588.
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.
864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UKF. We've moved! Our new location is next to McDonalds, 890 West 23rd. Bring this ad for a discount. Repeat Performance Shop. 4-13
LIFE PLANNING WORKSHOP Saturday, April 18th in the process of influencing your own workforce. Learn how to identify personal strengths and how to identify personal strengths by applying ambitions will be placed on building for future success. Plans and action strategies for reaching your goals will be presented on Thursday, April 8th - April 4th, $85 per hour. **$ United States**
Employment Opportunities
A job opening for full time research assistant at IBM Research, LLC (IBM Hewlett-Packard Data collection, preparing research reports), will be offered to a Contact Melded Jolly 604-254 for interim responsibility. April I. Equal Opportunity Employer. Apply online at www.ibm.com/about/international/.
Applications now being accepted for student staff at University Information Center, Deadline April 15th.
ENTERTAINMENT
The Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club presents
the Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club's
demonstrations in silvermithing, rock painting,
and ceramics at the 4th Fair ground, Kansas.
Demonstrations in silvermithing, rock painting,
and ceramics at the 4th Fair ground, Kansas.
Saturday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m.
to 12 p.m.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen pre-
fermenters; 2- to campus $25 and up; 3- or
$483 or 845-792
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and
attend the phone call (212) 754-6938 or the
phone call (212) 754-6938 or the
website www.websterstudents.org.
2 bdrm. all uuL, paid, on campus. Furn.
unfree. Free parking. a/c, pool. 843-9693.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
Lewis, Lawrence, Lawrencio,
Rental Exchange. 842-250-3961.
Carpeted furnished rooms, two blocks to Union, TV louge, large kitchen with frees, refrigerators, food cabinets, breakfast room. Room is fully equipped and may be one May 15, otherwise June and fall. #824-659-7
House for rent rentman months, 3-5 beds.
124 Kentucky, 814-6244. 4-9
MARRIED STUDENTS (*) entering Maternity, Lexington townhouse near KU Med. Center, 2 BR, LRK townhouse near KU Med. Center, 2 BR, LRK basement, low rp range disguise 15 bth room space Available May 14 Cell: 913-425-2519
40 acres farmland, new mobile home, furnished alpine-style cabin with large pool, swimming pool, near Baskey and Douglass Lake Co. Lake District.
Furnished apartment at 19 W. 14th. Available immediately! 1 bedrooms, 885-8427-6690.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.- regardless of any prizes you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products. (We have a full line of accessories at the GRAMPOH SHOP ON KIFF.) **if**
Insight INTO LIFE
RECORDED MESAGE (24 v)
842·4441
Goldecker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
842-109-398
*PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
AND SENIORS
SUPPICHERS WITH
FLAWLESS ACCOMPLY*
*COMPLETE OPTICAL
SERVICES*
Tromendone selection of guitars, amps, drums, basses and string instruments. Hose Shop Keyboard Studios from Gibbon University. Amuse Kutown, Green, and many others. Guitar Studio 1930. gitares.net. Host Keyboards Studios. Soundscape 4570. host-keyboards.com.
COST 10% - Stormer equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single item or package Register for free Kate Davie 685. Earnings 6 to 10. Phone: 858-763-6858. Earnings 6 to 10.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS Thousands of tables. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160 page catalog. Send research Assistant idafo. Idaefo #2086, Los Angeles, Calif. 922-413 (217) 473-847.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists
BELL AUTOMOTIVE
ELECTRIC, 815-969-3000, W. 6th; BELL AUTOMOTIVE
ELECTRIC, 815-969-3000, W. 6th;
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
Excellent trade of New & Used Furniture &
Trade. The Furniture & Appliance Center, Toulouse.
www.furnitureappliances.com
74 Buckle Le Sabre Luxus, all power, 81t stering,
60t stering-c-mata-0,200,000 km, 30 miles
74 Buckle Le Sabre Luxus, all power, 81t stering,
60t stering-c-mata-0,200,000 km, 30 miles
WE SELL FOR LESS--11 TO 6.30. Good used items.
New mini fridges, refrigerators;
New imprinted semi-renewal tags;
springs have 18 yr warranty, $12 a week;
springs have 18 yr warranty, $12 a week;
springs have 18 yr warranty, $12 a week;
4-9
phone 1-772-3523 or 2-842-8888
174 Brakes, el Camino, AiR, Power Steering, Dlce
Brakes, brand new tires, $380, 841-375
- 4-5
Fender Tolecerian, Late 74 w case, natural finish
VGCS $251 - 814-6674
4-5
Pepsi-Cola's only 10 daily from 3-4 p.m. Sandy, 4-6
4-8
Inflight, 2120, W 9th.
3 speed Baltimore’s bicycle—one year old,
very good condition. $5宝 & call. Call
817-264-7250.
1969 Trussville GT6, good condition, new radials,
price: $120 must sell or best for
425-807
1973 Toyota Collea ST 4. spd Indoor. Excellent Cond
lamp. Inside. After a. 584-3041
842-5483, in wagon box 223
842-5483, in wagon box 223
Quality custom skateboard, urthane wheels,
never used, $22 Call R31-854-2324 4-6
155 Kansasw 1975, 7 months. LIKE NK. LWEK
155 Kansasw Bollaston A Plim Pta 1973, Rua
good, 826-762 per year.
Diamond saitificate engagement ring. 32 ct, 14 K
Garage-aged. Appraised value $300-$400.
$200.
Bux. TX10, worth booking, only one month old.
Bux. TX11, worth booking, Call one day or night.
Bux. TX12, worth booking, Call one day or night.
Beautiful antique tiffany type 27 table lamp.
Original core glass, lead weighted base 44
gauge.
72 Honda CB450 - low mileage. Gold high bars.
Runs good, must sell-841-2274.
4-8
For Sale: Garnard Record Player, 5 years old,
priced cheap. Clicind Lita at 864-661-661.
4-7
1974 Marda RX 4, excellent condition, only 13.000
km, not more than 250 miles, 289,
269, any day or night. Keeping it.
-4.6
Yamaha B-350 -350-performance condition—extras with two helmets-Call Dale,843-7044 4-6
Several used gun in stock. 40% off on all new guns and ammunition. Bred's Shooting Supply. 841-272-3820.
Martin Hardshell guitar case $55 new. 864-2022
or 864-2065
1975 Plymouth Duster. Air, automatic. power steering. 6 cy.) 19,000 miles. 842-185.
**Attention Poters:** 30 cube foot. High Firestone hilm case with sewing holes. 20 kiln fire, 6 kiln heat. Welded ductuction. Located 30 miles from Lawrences and the Chelsea River. This house has three beds, bedroom studio, and kitchen. House rental is $120 per month. Phone 915-845-6687; write in: Rt. 2, Box 445, Boxverck, Kan.
FINAL CLOSEOUT MICHELIN STEEL XAS
RADIALS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
MORE TRANSFER MATERIALS.
BACK'S 292 Mass. come thru parking lot
behind Woolworth for fire service).
TRANSISTOR RADIO concentric $9.95 packet size now $2.90. ENTIRE STOCK of MAGNAVOX PRICE band out of POWERFUL SOYN with FEATHER BAND out of $5-$Ray壳器 - $9 299 Mast. $8
Mercer 10-speed bike, also car carrier, sell both or separately. Best offers. Call 414-7480,漏货电话:414-6933。
60,000 miles. 841-2166-John. 4-12
Purdie Fairland Conv. Good tires and top. 10,000 miles. 841-2166-John. 4-12
SHO-BUO迈威特 padel steel, 74 all, allapple body, excellent condition. Call 841-3844. 4-7
DOG WOOD
HAASCH
SADDLE & BUDLE SHOP
Open 3:00 a.m. to 6 p.m.
(Closed on Saturdays)
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the
GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for
free details
RAASCH
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
BankAmericard Mastercharge
BALL PARK, INC
Ball Park Baseball
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
THE LOUNGE
Box 3422-U Lawrence, Kansas 64044
Styling for men and women
Teri VanGundy
a quiet corner
9th and Illinois 843-3034
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Galanit accordion 120 Bass. Stage accordion
60 Bass. Tenor accordion. Excellent concert
accordion. Best condition. Buy 843-595-7270.
HELP WANTED
Houseparents wanted. Married couple to supervise. One or the other may work part-time. Education in the area required or other experience plus a job. Salary dependent upon couple, plus apartment, food and transport. To Joan Tramel, Director of Group Home, ýnex Kansai, Inc., 61801 Kansas City, Ky. 68011. An equal opportunity employer.
OVERSEAS JOBS=summer year/year-round $800 S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. all fields. $560$120 monthly. Expenses paid, aighighting. Free travel. Mail resume to: KA, KA 449, Barnett CA, 97407 4-23 KA, KA 449, Barnett CA, 97407 4-23
Addresses wait immediately! Work at home with an American service 180 Wiltshire St., Suite 501, Boston, MA 02116. Contact Todd Shapiro 1301 Wiltshire St., Suite 501, Boston, MA 02116.
WANTED: TWO HALF-TIME RESEARCH ASSOCIATION (ASC), an international, non-profit organization (based in New York City) for appointments of one-year beginning 1 May 1989 or as soon thereafter an appointment of five years. Research involving foreign and federal and state laws requiring scientific biological specimens; 2 manpower requirements for professional biologists; 3 preparation of reports for the Department of Education; 4 preparation of three short pamphlets dealing reorganiz
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and
trade drivers. Experience preference. Call 593-421-
6705 or visit www.westernharvest.com.
PART TIME - EARN $75 PER WEEK. FOR 4,
30 weeks, pay $120 per week.
BETWEEN Hours 8:00 AM TO 6:00 PM, FOR INTEGRITY.
MAY 1, 2013
LOST AND FOUND
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Full and the Vista Drive-In. 1527 W. Church
4-7
Graduate students working on Morgan degree programs in the human problem field, Dell Partners paid for two 750-mile trips.
Teachers at all lakes, Foreign and Domestic
Teaches, Box 103, Vancouver, Wash. 816-4-9
www.vancouver.ca
Limited small, white formica cat. part furniture, blues
and greens. Call 4-year-old; call 841-328-1890.
© 2006 Kirkland & Sons. All rights reserved.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank in Lawrence, Bank-8th & Mass., Lawrence and Tennessee, and First National South—1987 West 22rd.
Calculator found. Vicinity. Murphy Hall. 842-5
6420
Large reward, no questions asked. Maquintauro
large room, gym need, contact leaves, 445
831-3944
Last Monday, March 15—on old dark blue hue kimono, he married a beautiful British brunette. Please return to English Dept. for details.
Black bilfoil found; identify at 108 Military Science Building. 4-6
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FELDS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Found. Book issued National Security Manager.
Buffett. Claim at Claims dept. 209. Weiser Claim at Claims dept. 209.
last. Important ring but 3.21 between or in
the center of the finger. (This is also why
if found please call Judy B483-1250, 823-1251,
879-6944.)
Found: Male Brittany dog with collar-tag tags
Springfield: Call 824-7642
4-6
Lost One mold cross mechanical pencil between
Oliver and Oliver, Howard. Call 844-7028 or
4030
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at least for the most basic types of your 128 page thesis in 5 minutes. See **in action** for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, $83 Massachusetts; 841-7900.
Calculator found in Strong Hall. Call Bob at 4-786-5727
NOTICE
**Shaw Show**, 620 Mass. Use furnished furniture, dishes,
chairs, etc., televisions, daily open 12:30-
84:37-257
The Cahabat Cash special Sunday dinner is a Pull-five or six course meal featuring different cuisine each week. Call 842-5300 for reservation and information. Cahabat Cash, 643 Massachusetts.
B enroll now in Lawrence Driving School! Receive
transportation and insurance. Req. transportation provided. Drive driver, pay halsey
phone.
NEW BEGINNING FOR SINGLES facilitated by Pan Crim. This crisis will consist of a microbrewery, which will be run by those who have terminated relationships and are searching for new beginnings. This will be an event where students will learn through touch with one another. Monmouth University is hosting the Pan Crim. Plamacy at United Ministry Center, 1204 Godfrey.
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't
come on Mondays, George's George Shop 727
will be open.
Nancy's Craft Shop. 30, W8 8th. Q14. Queen Therese's Guild. 30, W7 6th. Q14. Pioneering new ideas in Plaster Craft Floor and Plaster. Nancy's Craft Shop
We're having big jewelry sale, 25% off
our entire stock. BASH, 12 E. 8th St., down
4-6
SPIRITUAL, FILM FESTIVAL, Zen in America—with Sushi Kuroda, Sat Suhail Bakhsh and Amit Gawande—with Alan Watts. The Whole Earth Festival—with Ran Daean, Susu Satchidanandra, Kiryananda the Suffolk singer and musician, withings at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. at $1.50 Sponsored by the New York City Children's Center 4-1204 Dread.
OPPORTUNITIES
Earn $$$ with your own house plant party business. The cost of the party will be combined with compliance will enable you to earn $$$ to $200 per week, Ideal for students and housewives. Attend an All-Star Parties. 186 Volpe, Marion, MO. Pa. 15166
PERSONAL
Bekky--April Fool! Wow, you finally made!! 11!
Happy 10th kid! Love, roomie. 4-7
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous 842-8101. **tf**
Expertise. Hospitality. A sales and scientific position in a hospitality company to manage sales and operational processes in the provision of Fruit Hall. Rank 10th in the provision of Fruit Hall.
Drive-in-clinic for most imported cars
POLITICAL COMMUNICATIONS
Call for an
Service hours
7:30 a.m.- 5 p.m. M-F
We offer free consulting and reservations services
Planning a trip?
Do the LEGWORK For You!!
Let Maupintour
7:20 a.m.
TONY'S IMPORT DATSUN
500 E. 23rd 842-0444
MOTO BIKER
SUA / Maupintour
Phone 843-1211
travel service
KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mass
SHAZAAM
We Print
ANYTHING!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SINCE 1970
CONTRIBUTOR
if you don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGES
GEORGE'S
The
Teepee-The Sanctuary
'The Facilities & Service To Make It A Perfect Party'
—CLASS PARTIES—
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
REHEARSALDINNERS
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DINNER DANCES
SERVICES OFFERED
Mother offers dependable child care in the house,
and toddlers and幼儿园 first Friday--da-4
849-6899
**MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 117, 118, 119, 142, 142, 500, 556, 827. Regular students or one-time pre-registration. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.**
LAWRENCE GAY COUNSELING SERVICES
with, with, with a professional and professional course on about your sexual desires? Do you need help in
about your sexual desire? A gay relative or friend let us help: 842-723-6900.
Auto repair—tune up numerically and more at the price of $4 per week on 6 Tuesday, at 4:48 p.m. 864-104-108
TRAVEL
EUROPE
less 1/2 economy
than fare
with the advance payment required
Call (800) 325-4867
Fax (800) 325-4867
UniTravel Charters
TUTOR
EUROPEISRAINEALAFRCAVASIA --- Trawled travel agency in the Algarve, Porto. First Avenue, Tuega 60081 (46) 2895-3047
*Math Tutor* with M.A. in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 on 6 p.m.
4-15
TYPING
Experienced typist—term papers, these, mses,
spelling, typing. 843-635-9170, Msg Writ.
843-635-9170, Msg Writ.
**THERIS BINDING** - The Quick Copy Center is located on campus and provides our service in fast and price are reasonable. Our service is free of charge.
Typist editor, IBM PCaleite. Quality work. Please email dissertations欢迎来信 842-9127. M22-9127.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476 4-6
Exp. typed, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
articles, book reviews, reading spelling, writing
reasoned, Joan, 841-3498
Tying-Up: We have many return customers who are loyal to our business. We can easily your business *Carl Harvey* or Linda Hossein.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesas,
textbooks, and all general typing in my home or
company. 841-390-6858
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10-5. Sat.-Tea.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
Professional Tying, work guaranteed, reason-
able prices. Compete for electric B.A. Social
Sciences position. Mail resume to:
800-745-6391.
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectric II
carbon printer. Pat correcting carbon
(brilliant) ink on a matching paper.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th B. ed.
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE BOOKLAND
CUPBOARD
15 East 10th, 814-2366
10.5 Monday-Saturday
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
GARDEN CITY
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fr. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Expert typing (reasonable rates) Proofreading:
Call 815-432-9600 after 5:30 p.m. 4-20
Call 815-432-9600 after 5:30 p.m. 4-20
TIP TOP TYP GUARANTEED ERROR FREE
TYPING. GREA, 842-3221. EVENINGS. 4-6
Expertised typist IMM Selective all kinds of
typing. Call IMM-8424-1423: 842-9578. Evil. Jumble.
Call IMM-8424-1423: 842-9578. Evil. Jumble.
WANTED
WANTED FOR
IMPORTANT
MEDICAL RESEARCH
W. B. Triplett, 944 Ky.
Phone 841-0891
DISPERATELY NEEDDEN—Good maintenance for a computer keyboard and mouse. Light-raising skills preferred. 812-540-3700.
Names and address of persons with blue eyes and predominantly blue skin in family results of predominantly brown eyes in familial Results of study will be re-examined.
Part-time grad student wants to rent or share
room at Kansas City. Please contact 841-289-
3060.
Home for 5 yr, old half-heathered half-husky,
playful. Great team, Good luck! 852-2944
852-2934
Calculate* Texas Instruments TI-2550 Will pay
dollar trade, TI-2550-II, TL-8172, B747-7
1895, B747-7903, B747-8774.
Nest female commitee for summer and fall.
Please call Karen at 814-6618 for 5:30 a.m.
Wanted: Young couple for late summer job light housekeeping, lawn mowing, miscellaneous cleaning. Champlain, N.Y.薪金 $100 weekly. Time: Job may be weekend only. You can work well Sept. 10. We provide: Traveling expenses and private living quarters. No other requirements. Send references. Raymond Cerf, 100 Sunset Ave., New York, NY 10024.
Female roommate to share apartment next year
with quiet. Couch, nondrinker, nonmoist
furniture. Wetness sensor.
Baha'i Faith
Liberal married female to share apartment next year. Call Hiram, 864-1906. Keepying! 4-7 Good used or rebuilt flathead for $30 Mere 12t Stuart Complete or short block. Call Jim 864-2556. Keepying!
PRO
A
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Baha'i Club Meeting, April 5, 17:30 p.m. Odeal Ballroom, Union
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
RO AM Part Star
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
1209 East 23rd St.
841. 220
STATE OF THE ART
YAMAHA
GRAMOPHONE
NO.11 AWK STATION 5480
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
RECREATION'S FINEST
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Storce Components
Audio Components
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it so well."
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
MALL SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE AVENUE 1802 817-644-044
West of Hillcrest Bowl
to play it no how!"
No one under 18 admitted.
9th & Iowa
5 Nights a Week No Cover NEW MODERN DECOR
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at a reasonable price should include an array of sweet treats (or sweet treat senses) and gentle
843-9404 CLUB
Sandwiches — Pizza
Pool — American Shuffleboard
HIDEOUT
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
New Membranes Available
Class A & Private Club
Class B & Private Club
a.m. - 8 p.m.
* DAYS
Waverly P.O.-owner
8
Mondav. Anril 5.1976
University Daily Kansan
ABOUT US
1. 下列说法正确的是( )
By GARY VICE Sports Writer
Cromwell lone Jayhawk winner
Nolan Cromwell sped the Jayhawk's only victory at the Texas Relays this weekend in Austin with a personal record of 47.4 in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles.
Cromwell's mark placed him second on the University of Kansas' all-time list, behind Cliff Cushman's 49.6 clocking at the 1900 Olympic Games in Rome.
Assistant coach Gary Pepin said, "Nolan ran I'm sure one of the fastest times in the world so far this year. Enough can't be said performance that was."
Two other Jayhawk trackmen bettered their top individual performances at the open meeting of the Midwest relay circuit, which was conducted by the University of Texas at El Paso.
Lundberg, a former junior college All-American, broke the middest record in his first year at Fordham.
8:38.4 clocking, but finished in third place. The event was won by the Shocker Strider's Randy Smith, formerly of Wichita State, in 8:31.4, which better met the mark of 8:42.3 set last year by KU's Kent McDonald.
Lungberd, in only his second year of
steelechure coronation, the previous
priest. (1648)
Pedrebarcac's fifthplace toss in the shot put was another outstanding individual performance. The junior college transfer improved his former best of 58-10% with a 29.4% record. The record toss came on his final attempt for the NCAA outdoor championships.
PODREBARAC, WHO HAD a best outdoor tots of 56-1/2 last year, said, "I wasn't bad. A couple more good ones like that and I'll be set this year. It's still early in the season so I've still got lots of time to improve."
Penlai padded Podarebac's performance, saying, "We're really pleased with the way he's coming around. It shouldn't be long before he'll be beyond that 60-foot mark."
The coach also said he was pleased with the team's performance at their second outdoor practice.
"We thought it was a really good early season meet. Most of the other schools have had twice as many meets outdoors as we have had, and the as spring goes on we'll be having them, taking them. I think that everywhere we play this meet was really an accomplishment."
HEAD COACH BOB Timmons directed another JAYSON group this week, at the event.
"I hoped for some good marks and we didn't get it," he said. "I wasn't very nice."
Akers, a senior, won the 220 in 22.0 and was timed at 10.0 in the 120.
"The guy I really think did well was Steve (Akers). He won the 220, placed second in he 100 and anchored the mile relay squad with a 48-flat quarter."
Other winners at the meet were Steve Stone, 56-2 in the shot put; Brian Todd, 200-0 in the javelin; and Mike Wilk, 47-2½ in the triple jump.
**BALMYA A** Matsui, Hiroki
Spot put- 5, Jawilin, R. Roger Hammond, 2.5, Mark Kunze, 2.5, 600-meter intermediate hazard-1 Nunan, 2.5, Berkley, B. Rogers, 83.4, Berg. 83.4, 100-metre dash - 4, Lavernese Water, 10.3, Mike
Soccer club falls in finals
By STEVE CLARK Sports Writer
Sports Writer
KU's soccer club played 60 minutes of good soccer Sunday afternoon at Memorial Stadium. But unfortunately for KU, soccer games last 90 minutes and, as a result, Rohrchau scored two late goals to win 42, the first Jaiyah invitation tournament.
"We played 60 minutes of excellent soccer," player-coach Berrine Mullin said following the game, "and had several wins, but win, we just ran out of stamina."
Rockhurst jumped off to an early 2- first-half lead before KU scored on a penalty kick by Moseh Mirr. KU hosted the game at 8-2 in the second half. The Santos just minutes into the second half.
Despite what Mullin called "the team's physical breakdown," the score remained 2-2 until the 10 minutes, when Rockhurst knocked in a goal to on top. 3-2.
KU reached the finals by recording two shutouts in preliminary action, which ran goalkeeper Rafael Perez's shutout string to three straight. In the first round KU stopped Nebraska, 3-0, as Miri collected all three goals.
Golfers finish last
Rockhurst's Denny Lee, who has signed to play with the Miami Toros of the North American Soccer League, added the final goal, which put the game away.
The Jayhawks will get a chance to redeem themselves when they compete in the Wheatshocker Tournament Thursday at Wichita.
Medalist honors went to Ron Streck of Tulsa, who shot three straight rounds of 71 for a 213 total. KU's top scorer was Craig Palmer who had a 229 total.
50° Schooners all day today at the HAWK
GREEN PLANTS
BEST SELECTION IN TOWN
The Garden Center and Greenhouse
4 blocks East of Mass on 15th 843-2004
Then KU beat the Wichita Wheatbirds, by Missouri, by the identical scene.
Rockhurst's road to the finals consisted of a 3-0 win over Kansas State and a 2-4 victory in the semifinals.
Columbia bounced back in consolation play to edge Wichita, 3-2 and finished in third.
TACOS
$3.95 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts
843 9880
FOR FINE ENTERTAINMENT Bugsys
642 Mass.
TONIGHT IS STUDENT NIGHT
25c Beers
BALCONY OPEN TO EVERYONE
(with I.D. — no cover)
Doors Open at 6:00
J0 Show Starts at 8:00
Curious!!! Call 841-7100
LONG LIVE
LONG LIVE ADVENTURE!
Michael Sean Christopher Caine Connery Plummer
In the John Mason John Caresson Ivan
The Man Who Would Be King
Grandale
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. at 2:30
Jack Nicholson
"ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST"
Eve. 7:30 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. at 2:30
Val
Crusoe saw Friday as an ignorant savant. But how did Friday see Crusée? "A killer possessed by demon's power, guilt, and a fault of a cruel God." I tagged it.
SUNDAY"
Hillcrest
The best documentary ever made on motorcycle. clet sport.
Eve. 7:10, 9:30
Sat. Sun. 2:10
"Man Friday" PG
Bawdy & Brawling
Amusing & Upsetting
Lina Wertmuller's
Peter O'Toole &
Richard Roundtree
Every Word F15 is Overcome the Other
Eve. 7:30, 9:35 Hillcrest
Sat.-Sun. 2:00
Hillcrest
The Student Body"
Tennis team sweeps two
(By an Unusual Des-
tiny on the Blue Sea
of August)
Eve, 7:29 6:40
Sat.
"The Summer School Teacher"
TEXAS TOMS
GIANT $1.00 SALE
4 REG. HAMB./*1 4 FRIES/*1 4 CORN DOGS/*1
3 ONION RINGS/*1 4 BURRITOS/*1 STEAK/*1
BORDERBASKET/*1
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23rd & Ousdahl 842-3340
TEXAS TOMS
fourth in the Big 8, and the Jayhawks were picked as fifth.
KU's tennis team won both of its matches this weekend, beating Cowley County College, 4-2, Friday, and upended in the tournament, Saturday, on Community Field House courts.
KU used CU three-eight in singles with Bill
Clark, now 34-2 in singles. "Tm Headline to
the Top," he said.
842-3340
--in concert
Cowley County wasn't supposed to give the Jahawks any trouble, but the Colorado game was expected to be a different story. The Buffalo were the preseason choice for
In doubles, Kansas won two out of three to capture the match. KU's No. 1 team of Clarke and Headke and No.3 team of Jeff Thomas were the doubles' winners.
DISCO DANCE
Fri.
Apr. 9
8 p.m -
1 a.m.
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION
UNION BALLROOM
Everyone Welcome!
--in concert
Z
TO YE WHO ARE WISE AND FRUGAL WE OFFER
--in concert
B. Franklin
PENNY PINCHER COUPONS!
SAVE 30¢
SIZZ-K-BOB
Coupon Good for Entire Family
Includes French Fries
or baked Potato plus
Stockade Toad. Reg $2.19
with coupon only $1.89
COUPON EXPIRES MAY 1, 1976
SAVE 30¢
CHOPPED STEAK
SAVE 40¢
RANCHER'S STEAK
Coupon Good for Entire Family
Includes French Fries
or Baked Potato plus
Stockade Toast. Rep. $1.49
with coupon only $1.19
COUPON EXPIRES MAY 1, 1976
Coupon Good for Entire Family
Includes French Fries
or Baked Potato plus
Stockade Tost. Reg $3.19
with coupon only $2.79
COUPON EXPIRES MAY 1, 1978
SAVE 30¢
SIZZLIN' SIRLOIN
Coupon Good for Entire Family
Includes French Fries
or Baked Potato plus
Stockade Tavern. Req $2.29
with coupon only $1.99
SIRLOIN OPEN: 11 a.m.-9 p.m. weekdays STOCKADE 11 a.m.-10 p.m. weekends THE FAMILY STEAKHOUSE
P
SUA Presents LAURA NYRO
Saturday, April 17th 8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium Tickets $5-$6 Reserved
Tickets $5-$6 Reserved
"She paved the way for Joni Mitchell, Janis Ian, Dory Previn, and Phoebe Snow and now they've paved the way for her."
Rolling Stone 4/8/76
Past song credits:
Stoned Soul Picnic,
Stoney End, Flim Flam
Màn, Sweet Blindness,
Elis Comin', and When I Die
Tickets Available At:
SUA Office
Better Days Records
Caper's Corners
A Shoen Production
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
PLEASANT
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.117
Tuesday, April 6, 1976
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Title IX report still sought by Senate, Tasheff
See page 9
CAMERON RAYMOND
Staff Photo by JAY VOELZED
Sunpowered
Facing rising fuel costs and trying to best possible unavailability of fuels, some people have done as Tom Dean, professor of architecture, has done and switched to powering their houses by the sun. The 10 per cent increase in building costs can be made up in about seven years, Dean said.
Sun power down-to-earth
By GREG BASHAW
Tom Dean could be called a prophet of the sun or an advocate of solar energy.
Dean, professor of architecture, has brought his energy ideas down to earth by erecting the area's first solar energy house near Grove, about six miles south of Lawrence.
Denn said Saturday that he hoped his two-story solar house, one month away from completion, would be testimony to the application of solar and wind energy use.
"My intent is to build a comfortable and workable solar house," said Dean, a stocky, mustached man new to the University this year. "I think we can make any grand architectural statement."
THIS ENERGY flows into an insulated storage tank in the basement of the house. Dean said the solution, often heated to 200 degrees Fahrenheit, then provides heat, which can be transported throughout the house by a conventional ventilation system
The base of the home's solar energy system is the solar collectors, black metal sheets built into the south slope of the roof. The sheets collect the sun's rays to heat at a rate that can be controlled that flows through coils of copper tubing attached behind the plates. Dean said
Supplementing the solar collectors is a large windmill that will provide energy to heat the system when needed. A Norwegian wood-burning stove that will be placed in the living room is capable of heating the 1,850 square-foot house itself. Dan said.
The home will be hooked up to a utility system with a conventional heating unit to provide warmth during stretches of cloudy, windless days, he said.
"Many solar households have just rubbed it when it got cold because of little sun," Dean said. "But I won't feel bad about it." "When we get cold, when we need it during the winter months."
DEAN ENVISIONS his house as the hybrid of two opposite approaches to solar energy: the purely practical and the scientifically proven.
"Two main groups worked a lot with solar energy in the '60s," he said. "You had the counter-culture hippies trying out the new tech, and the cool kids trying out the 'high technology boys' who did incredible amounts of research but never got out of the lab."
"I'm trying to develop a system for Mr. Middle America," he said. "I've tried to make a practical system for people with an average income."
Economics are the strongest motivation in the push towards alternative energy sources.
Dean said he was working on the energy problems of the average homeowner.
He said solar energy hadn't been more fully developed in the past because continuous use of photovoltaic cells.
**"COMMERCIAL USE of solar energy"
*not a new idea* he said. "In fact, it been
*a long time*."
"It was pretty unusual to rely on other than ordinary energy sources years ago," Dean said, "so much so that in Florida in the 30% over 15,000 successful solar units in hotels and condominiums were disguised as chimneys to make them look normal."
Now, use of alternate energy sources is anything but unacceptable. Dean said he was haoped his solar and wind energy unit to the company for $40,000 cent. Figuring by current interest and utility rates, Dean said, such savings on utilities would pay for his $6,000 system in seven years. Installation of a solar system at the location most costant of the total cost of the building, he said.
THE INTRODUCTION of solar units into new houses makes economic sense because a number of states have passed legislation allowing these types of homes to use solar energy equipment. Dean said.
Following the lead of states in sunnier climates, the Kansas Legislature recently passed such a bill. It is now awaiting Gov. Bennett's approval.
Dean views such legislation as an equalizing of laws that favored conventional construction.
Grade inflation report distributed to deans
Included in the study are comments from the Office of Academic Affairs on grading trends and recommendations on grading, he said.
The report analyses graduate and intermediate grades from the spring of 1970 to the present.
"In the U.S. we've always penalized energy-conscious builders," he said. Before, if a builder put an extra $1,000 on his equipment, he taxed more because of a greater capital investment. So you'd have entire shopping centers without much insulation. They'd waste great amounts of energy and write off the costs on their taxes as operating expenses.
DEAN SAID virtually every part of the
A report on grade inflation at KU is complete and will be made public after it is completed.
Christofersen said he wasn't sure when the dews would be finished with the deserts.
The report was distributed to the deans yesterday, and they will check it for accuracy. Ralph Christofferen, assistant vice president for academic affairs, said yesterday.
Christofersen declined to summarize the report until it was examined by the Council
Work on the grade inflation study was begun last late fall. The Office of Institutional Research and Planning compiled grade data used in the study. Christofferson
The report will be distributed to the chancellor's office, schools and departments for observation after the Council of Deans explains it, he said.
"We would also be pleased to give it to students to examine and see what conclusions they can draw." Christoffersen said.
of Deans, which is composed of dears of all KU schools.
United States could use solar energy and pointed to successful units in public buildings in Washington, D.C., and Portland, Ore. as proof.
The report was to have been completed in December, he said, but the first data compiled in Office of Institutional Research and Planning were incomplete, causing the delay.
Still, the United States lags behind other countries in development of solar energy units, he said. Thousands of solar installations are already in use in Israel and Janan.
Dean entered into an academic career and solar research after what he calls "a killer job."
"After Sputnik went up, I, like everyone else, was convinced I had to do to
See SUN page 2
KU funding to committee
By JIM COBB
Staff Writer
The status of the University's fiscal 1977 budget appropriation is still uncertain because of funding bills by a Senate-House of Representatives conference committee this
That committee will make any major changes in the funding bill before it is sent to Congress.
ADMINISTRATIVE aides for two representatives said yesterday that the bills would be considered before the legislature's ruling. The vote probably will begin tomorrow or Thursday.
This would be contrary to the usual legislative method of returning after the first recess to give final consideration to major appropriation bills.
LADY'S COMMITTEE first cut the salary increases in March from the 10 per cent level, recommended by the governor, to 8 per cent. The committee also cut OEE from the 12 per cent recommended to 10 per cent.
THE NEW METHOD, according to an aide to House Speaker Duane S. (Pete) McGill, R.Winfield, will allow the committee to look at total appropriations and needs to decide what, if any, funding must be cut if expenditures are considered too high.
Speculation has developed that some representatives might attempt further cuts in higher education funding, after the governor last week vetoed a public school finance bill because it was $21 million higher than his recommendations.
State Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, said last week that attempts were under way to cut proposed salary increases and for other operating expenditures (OEF).
After the veto, the legislature drafted a new public school bill that restricted local school boards' spending limit increases to 6 per cent.
Lady, who also is a member of the conference committee, has said he would oppose attempts to cut faculty salary increases below 8 per cent, the present level.
But an aide to State Rep. Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, and House Ways and Means Committee chairman, said the attempts were "just talk."
Although the limitation later was raised to 7 per cent in the public school bill, some observers said they thought attempts would improve their funding and fund the education funding and tie the two bills together.
IEC changes usage of proficiency exam
The Intensive English Center (IEC), a program serving foreign students at the University of Kansas, will undergo a change in its admission policy this fall.
Michael Henderson, IEC director, said yesterday that the uniform admission standards of the Office of Admissions and of foreign students at the university soon apply to foreign students as a result.
To be admitted to KU and considered degree candidates, students must now receive a score of C minus the English Language Proficiency Test battery, a standardized test used by many universities, Henderson said.
In the fall, he said, the test will still be given to foreign students but will be used only to guide the student to tell him how many academic and remedial English courses he should take at KU. He said this was the test's intended purpose.
Those students who don't receive a C-remain in the IBC program until they graduate.
Henderson said the current IEC program was "intently accepted except for this one [performance] issue."
"MANY FOREIGN students thought this was not fair," he said.
But beginning next fall semester, those students who qualify for admission academically will enroll in the school that accepts them. Instead of being counseled by IEC, they will be counseled by advisers in those schools.
"We feel this is a better situation than the students being solely our responsibility"! "If you don't want to be here, you're out."
The change of admission policy affects only the IBC students in the KU program, which serves 25 per cent of the foreign students here.
Henderson said the students would be notified of the change by their instructors.
THE ENGLISH Language Proficiency Test battery is a standardized test made by the University of Michigan. It is now used at universities and departments in different levels of IEC courses.
ANOTHER INDICATION that cuts mats be made was an announcement by McGill, who has opposed increased funding for state colleges and universities, that he would take the place of State Rep. William Bunten, Ropeka, on the conference committee
MGill has said be and other House leaders had promised the House that there would be equality in faculty salary in the school and the district budget limit increases.
Being admitted to KU on academic qualifications and being counselled by advisers in the schools will help balance foreign students' workloads between academic courses and English language courses. Henderson said.
"I want to be on this conference committee so I can have some input and see that"
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said that KU could get by with appropriations in the bill's present form, but that "we would hate to see further cuts.
"WE HOPE our budget will emerge unscathed from the committee," he said. We hope the conference committee, in addition, will try to treat us fairly and induln."
Sharkel said he thought McGill would consider all the facts while serving on the board.
But Carin said he didn't like "being fenced in, because there are so many factors involved," such as other appropriation bills that also would be considered.
Another member of that committee, State Rep John Carlin, D-Smolan, and House Minority Leader, said that he wouldn't comment about what the committee might discuss this week, but that he personally knew the higher education funding bill as it stands.
By KELLY SCOTT
Staff Writer
Step right up!
Plimpton describes amazing antics
See the imposter who once entered the famed brown Marathon two miles from the race's end, frightening the leading runner into a sprint for the finish.
Laugh at his tales of once hitting the ground during a scrimmage with the Detroit Lions without one opposing player's hands being laid on him.
Gasp at the gall of a man who once upriddled Boston Celtic Coach Bill Russell for palling him out of a regular season pro game to substitute John Havlicek.
GROAN AT THE audacity of a musician who told Leonard Bernstein his credentials for playing with the New York Philharmonic "of tea for Two" or "of Deep Purple."
you can stop and relish your good fortune
You've got the ball.
"And I did; for 3 or 4 minutes," he said. Then Frank Robinson blasted a double. Plimpton's major league pitching career ended as he watched Frank Thomas belt one of the longest home runs ever hit out of Yankee Stadium in New York.
"I looked at it (the home run) as an engineering feat." "Look what we had done together"-which is not the right point of view," he said with a smile.
Thrill at the elan of a trapezite artist known as "The Flying Telephone Pole."
Aside from his several attempts at bigtime playminton, Plumpton has played percussion for the New York Philharmonic, worked as an aerialist for the Clyde Beatty Brothers Circus, and been a photographer for Playboy's monthly centerfold.
OFFERS TO COMPETE in a roler derby, wrestle with a professional wrestler named "Haystack something," and perform on stage with the Alice Cooper rock group were made but rejected, Plimpton told the audience.
George Plimpton-writer, editor and participatory expert per experience-told about doing all those things last night to a crowd of more than 100 in Hoch Audiogurd.
Piltonm, loosely commenting on "The Animate v. the Pro." related a series of self-effacing anecdotes about his rigorous career as a participatory journalist.
Plipman said he was first attracted to his work by Paul Gallica, a former sports director for the Washington Nationals.
Plimpton accompanied his lecture with slides of his adventures as an "imposter" to the rulers.
Piltonton he enjoyed baseball more than football, the game he wrote about in his book *The Book of Baseball*.
Plimpton served up his special Carl Hubbell imitation screwball to Richie Ashburn and Willie Mays and got them out on pop flies.
"He thought that by stepping down from the press box, one could hone his perceptions about people with extraordinary skills and abilities," the competition is like at its highest level."
Plimpton's first assignment as a contributor to Sports Illustrated magazine was to retire a side in the post-season, 1959 major league baseball all-star game.
I ALWAYS WANTED TO be a pitcher. Plimpton said. "It's the only place where
THEY SHOWED A tall, lanky Pilming sweep earnestly at a golf ball lodged in the branches of an olive tree the wrote about during his time playing in sweatling Pilming running down the sidelines of a basketball court in a Boston Celtics uniform and Pilming heading back to his corner with a bloody nose inflicted by former light heavyweight champion Archie
His delivery was full of such pokes at his own physical- and cultural-limitations.
"That's not unusual." Pillipman said. "I once went to salute an officer of mine in the
Navy, grazed my nose and bled right in front of him."
not to turn the pages of Tchaikovsky's Fourth Symphony during a performance because Plimpton - who can't read music - was turning them at the wrong times.
Plimpton is a proper-sounding, witty, low-key speaker who slowly and carefully established a warm rapport with his audience.
THE CROWD GRAONED sym
See PLIMPTM mage 2
Preparing for the show show before his lecture on "The Amateur v. the Pro" last night by George Pilment, author of "Paper Lion," prepares his slide Hock Audiolurium: The lecture was attended by about 100 people.
state photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
2
Tuesday, April 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Malpractice limit approved
TOPEKA- The Senate agreed yesterday to accept a conference committee decision that would allow a public hearing on malpractice claims against medical care. The measure does not return to the House.
The Senate had accepted a change last week that would have extended the limit to all licensed service providers—including lawyers, doctors and engineers—but it also extended the rule for non-licensed workers.
House approves flu bills
WASHINGTON—Two flu bills, one authorizing a nationwide immunization program this fall and the other appropriating $135 million for immunization as sought by President Ford, were passed yesterday by the House and sent to the Senate.
Ford said an immunization program must be in full operation by the beginning of September and must be completed by the end of November.
In 1918-19, flipped 20 million people worldwide, including 548,000 in the United States. There are indications that earlier this year among military personnel there were 227,000 infected to the 1918-19.
Labor chooses Callaghan
LONDON—Secretary Secretary James Callaghan, a moderate who favors ties with the United States, was chosen by fellow Labor Party members as secretary of state.
Callaghan had earlier urged Labor members of Parliament to forget past domestic battles and 'wipe the slate clean'. But he warned rival Labor leader Joe Browder that it was not enough.
Chinese protest in Peking
TOKYO—Angry three stoneets at security men and set fire to three motor vehicles as thousands demonstrated in Peking's main square yesterday to protest the killing of a local man.
A Peking resident reached by telephone said the demonstration had overtone of resistance to the radical campaign against Vice Premier Hsiniao-ping, whom he called a "bad guy."
The informant estimated the size of the crowd to be 30,000, but the Japan Broadcasting Corp.—NKH—said it reached 100,000 during yesterday's demonstration; the most turbulent day in China since the violence of the Cultural Revolution a decade ago.
Wichita man sought
WICHTHA—A man fighting for custody of Sisemes twin girls born here Nov. 7 is being sought in connection with yesterday's shooting death of a 19-year-old Wichita
Wille L. Cates, 21, is being sought on first-degree murder charges in the slaying of Michael E. Fair.
Cates, who claims to be the natural father of the Siamese twins, Millie Lula and Anna Marie, has been involved in a legal battle for the twins since he took Millie from a hospital nursery Feb. 12—moments before the twins were to be placed in state custody.
Police said there was no connection between the Siamese twins case and Monday's shooting.
GSC allocates funds
Reynolds said yesterday the recommendation needed further research. She said sociology graduate students would explain their request to GradEx next week.
The Executive Committee of the Graduate Student Council (GradEx) has allocated $4,202.70 to 19 graduate student organizations.
The allocations were made Sunday night after recommendations by the Graduate Student Council (GSC) Budgeting Committee.
Until then, she said, the money will be placed in a fall allocation fund or a contribution.
GradFx tabled a budgeting committee recommendation of $800 for the Graduate Association for Students of Sociology, according to Ellen Reynolds, executive coordinator of GSC. The group had requested $1,200.
Reynolds said she expected that some of the $800 recommended for the sociology graduate students would be allocated, but that GradEx had been uncertain whether to give the entire amount suggested by the budget committee.
Money allocated to graduate student organizations is only about half of the amount requested by the groups. Twenty organizations, including the sociology group, requested a total of $9,572. The GSC has $1,704 in its program fund.
About $1,500 of the program fund remains unallocated at this time.
According to Reynolds, besides the money set aside for the sociology allocation, $501.30 has been reserved for fall allocations and $200 has been put in a continuity fund.
According to the GNP, the graduate students' newspaper, the GSC is getting about $300 less this fiscal year than last year. Last year the GSC was allocated $9,200
The Student Senate gave the GSC a block allocation of $8,918 for fiscal 1977. This amount includes allocation to graduate and GSC office and newsletter expenses.
This year, as last year, 26 cents of each student activity fee each semester was adjusted to reflect the full-time equivalency percentage used to figure the Student Senate income was adjusted to reflect the increased number of students not paying full a tivity fee.
★ ★ ★
Organization Requested Funds
Counseling Student Organization 111 381
College of Arts and Human Sciences 105 450
Geography Graduate Students 369 250
Geography Graduate Students 369 250
Studies Students 158 115
Studies Students 158 115
Philosophy 500 500
Association of the Students of Politics 543 450
Association for Students of Sociology 1,000 undecided
Graduate Journal Council 132 132
Graduate Journal Council 132 132
Administration in Anthropology 738.85 387
Students in Slavic Languages and Students in Urban Manpower 381.15 187
Master's and Public Administration Masters at Public Administration 109.55 109.55
Math Graduate Students Association 718 155
Math Graduate Students Association 718 155
Snow Enth�mology Club 135 135
Human Rehabilitation Graduates 250 170
Social Sciences and Human Rehabilitation Graduates 138.40 55.40
Symbiosis and Ecology Graduate Student Organization 299.50 190.50
HOUSTON (AP)--Howard Hughes, the phantom financier who ruled a business empire valued at more than $2 billion from a series of secret hideaways, died yesterday en route to a hospital for treatment. He was 70.
a chartered ambulance jet half an hour before it landed in Houston, according to spokesmen at Methodist Hospital.
"We've no idea" of the cause of death, hospital vice president Larry Mathis said. But in Los Angeles, an attorney who said he
Hughes, an aviation pioneer, died aboard
Aurela Sederberg, a spokesman for Hughes' Remuna Corp. in Los Angeles, said last night there have been no decisions yet on what will happen to Hughes' empire.
bad represented Hughes for 25 years said the billionaire died of a stroke. The attorney, Greg Bautzer, refused to identify his source.
Sederberg said funeral arrangements for Hughes are pending.
Hughes' death cause unsure, hospital says
"I can't talk about that yet, not now," he said.
Pilot Roger Sutton described Hughes as "very wasted" and "very, very pale." Sutton said Hughes had a thin beard and long, greyish hair.
No effort to dump Kissinger seen
WASHINGTON (AP) - The White House said yesterday that there was no effort to ease Henry Kissinger as secretary of state, despite a statement by President Ford's campaign manager that Kissinger may resign this year.
Ford's press secretary, Ron Nessen, was asked whether Kissinger had indicated he
Bicentennial projects set
Three more bicentennial-related projects will be carried out in Lawrence as a result of Friday's meeting of the University of Kansas Bicentennial Committee.
The projects are: an exhibit at Watson Library titled "Ricentennial of a Book, Adam Smith's Wealth of a Nation," which will begin in mid-April; two unscheduled displays sponsored by the Kansas Geological Survey, "Earthquakes in Kansas" and "Mineral Fuels of Kansas," associated with the University; associate Slavic librarian, dealing with the immigration and national origins of Americans, also unscheduled.
Plans were discussed for the arrival of a Hicentennial Wagon Train Pilgrimage, which will be passing through Lawrence at the end of April, and for coordination of
Plimpton . . .
Rogers Morton, Ford's campaign manager, said in a private meeting with California Republicans Saturday that the secretary "is getting toward the end of a long political career" and may resign before next year.
From page one
"Sports illustrated has built me a protective device not unlike Apollo IX," he
pathetically when Plumpton announced his next sporting venture: 'he'll play goalie for the Boston Bruins hockey team in September.
might not want to serve if the President was elected to a full four-year term.
Finally, sports-writing limits one 'Pimpton said'
Plimpton's next book is about professional football through the eyes of Bill Curry, the former head of the NFL players Association. It is his third football book, but Plimpson said he didn't watch much of that game.
The Curry book could be his last about sports.
Plimpton said he had become curious about the hockey community since he heard that players mailed false teeth to each other as pranks.
He finds it "mass, military and con-
duct many of the things I don't like
about screaming."
"After a while, one team is very much like another, the lestions one finds much more in common."
Sun...
From page one
something for my country," he said. "That patriotism turned out to be teaching."
Dean took a sabbatical in 1957 from a private architectural firm in Dallas, a leave of absence that has never ended because he has been teaching ever since.
BESIDES TEACHING solar energy courses at several universities, Dean has planned many solar installations, including in four houses. The solar collector that powers his home's energy unit is a Dean invention.
Dean said he found himself going beyond the demonstration of practicality in his solar house during the final stages of its design. When completed, Dean's home and surrounding two-and-a-half acres will boast a strawberry garden, a wading pond, a vineyard and a naturally heated pit greenhouse.
Now that he's popped the question, You'd better make a decision-- the right one, Because you can't change your mind later.
"Once we move into the peacefulness out there I just may never want to come in to take care of them."
Dean can forsee only one problem with his solar home.
The decision about how to handle your wedding, that is. Will you hassle with it all, driving all over the state to get what you want? Or will you go to just one place where you are assured of wide selections, service, and a concern for your perfect wedding?
Don't realize your mistake when it's too late to change.
1101 Mass. Another service of the Flower Shoppe 841-0800
Bridal Fashions by Jan
Lawrence's Fourth of July celebration with the Jacee fireworks display.
The committee has also released a booklet listing KU professors who have bicentennial-related topics on which they would be willing to speak.
The booklet was published by the University Bicentennial Office in cooperation with the Office of Academic Affairs.
Court declines Calley's appeal
"There was no immediate comment from the Pentagon. The Army has said it doesn't know if they had to do that."
WASHINGTON (AP)——Former Army LT.
William L. Calley, convicted of murdering
at least 22 Vietnamese villagers at My Lai
Cau, was sentenced to three years in
victory but will remain a free man.
Calley, 32, who has been free on bail in Calley, Ga., was reported route to Stevenson.
Giving no reason, the court declined to review a decision of the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans reinstating Calley's 1971 court-martial conviction.
William Ingen Theatre presents
Mark Twain's Possessive
COLONEL SELLERS
April 7-10 8:00 p.m.
Box Office 864-3982
Partially funded by the
Student Activity Fee
Tuesday-April 6
7 p.m.-10 p.m.
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KU bowlers find fun in leagues
BOWLING
Bowling madness
assuming advantage of a 50 cent a game rate, Rick Ludwig, Shawne Mission sophomore, of the University of Kansas students participate in bowling联赛 at the JAY Bowl in the fall.
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
MIT prof discusses life and death issues
By DAVE REGIER
Staff Writer
An interpretation of the right to life and the right to not be killed was presented by Judith Javis Thompson in a lecture last eight as part of the Lindley Lecture Series.
Thompson, professor of philosophy at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, spoke to about 80 people in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
"Alfred and Bert" were the characters of her illustration.
In her lecture, Thompson used a hypothetical situation to illustrate her ideas on the right to life and the right to not be killed.
Thompson said Alfred a military tank and had told Bert that he would run over him. Both were in open country, so Bert had to move back to the tank, however, had a workmate anti-tank gun
THOMPSON'S LECTURE explained why Bert could kill Alfred in this situation.
"Most people would say that it's normally permissible to blow up the tank," Thompson
She had three arguments why she said she thought it was all right to destroy the tank behind her.
nats, she said. Alfred had forfeited his
not be killed because he had attacked
The first part of this argument, she said, is that there could hill because Alfred had no children.
The second argument she divided into two parts, under the assumption that the right to vote is one person.
The second part. Thompson said, is that Bert could kill because Bert could preserve the information.
IN THE THIRD argument why Bert could ball, Thompson said an independent
"Bert's right to preserve his life is more arrogant than Alfred's right to not be killed."
Bert had a special right to kill Alfred, Thompson said, because Alfred launched the attack. A special right is one that circumstances allow, she said, while a natural right, in contrast, is one that every human being is born with.
Thompson's solution to the problem was that Burt would kill Alfred, but she left the room alone.
"I want to be sure to give you a right to a problem, but not the right for a solution for it."
In a 35-minute question and answer session after her lecture, Thompson responded to questions concerning her ideas about human rights and between rights and duties or obligations.
Mavor to be elected
The commission will probably elect Vice Mayor Fred Pence to replace Barkley Clark as mayor, Mike Wilden, assistant city manager said yesterday.
At a special session yesterday afternoon, he proposed the first major revision clause in law since 1983.
In other business, the commission is expected to adopt a new policy on city financing of streets, sidewalks and sewers in new housing developments.
It's pretty routine," he said. "The vice mayor has always been elected as mayor. She was not."
By BECCI BREINING
If that revision is adopted, the city will install sidewalks and sanitary sewers. The costs for building storm drain sewers, which will then be paid by private volunteers, are
According to Clark, the revision will not inhibit small developers from building.
on construction loans, small companies can't afford to build without financial help from the city, commission members have said.
However, Clark said, most of the developer's costs are incurred on streets and sidewalks.
With the present 10 per cent interest rate
Balanced on one foot, the bower is motionless. He waits, hoping to hear the
Tuesday, April 6. 1876
Phlunk. Sixteen pounds of hard, black plastic hits a wooden floor and rumbles in the air.
Bowling doesn't draw the crowds of a Saturday afternoon football game. Nor does it have the glamorous image of posh Colordao ski slopes.
Some claim bowling is the number one participation sport in the United States. And nearly 400 University of Kansas students wouldn't be without it.
The bowlers at KU compete in handicap leagues, which meet once a week. From the first week of each semester to the week before finals, teams of Greeks, faculty members and others gather at the Jay Bowl in the Kansas Union.
Some nights, when 12 teams fill all six lares of the Jay Bowl, the place is alive, roaring with laughter and the thunder of balls hitting pins.
The commission asked the city manager's staff members to write a resolution on the issue.
TEAMS BOWL three games every night except Friday and Saturday.
The Nads, as they call themselves, are in last place in the All-Campus League competition. But they really don't care and won't let a small team like that bother them.
"I have this deep下窿 craving to be a professional bowler, but at this rate I will never get it."
"I bowl simply because I enjoy it," Dave Petesch, McLouth junior, said last week. "It's relaxing and it gets me away from the grind of classes."
Petersch's teammates agree that bowling's biggest asset is that it's just plain fun, as well as a convenient break from the action marked by fierce competition, they say.
Still, he admits, he has a bit of professional aspiration.
"YOU DON'T have to 'go out' for a team to bowel," said Nadis Marner to John Coletta, Rochester, Mich., freshman. "There is plenty of space; we have intense getting in the way of our fun."
ANOTHER NADS member, David Wayne, Prairie Village freshman, said, "With some sports like gymnastics or karate, a person can't have beginner's luck. Not so with bowling. Anyone could come in here and their first time bowl five strikes."
But, any bowler will tell you that being consistent takes more than beginner's luck.
"A lot of people might ridicule bowling for being an easy sport," said the fourth member of the Nads, Geoff Friedman, Shawnee Mission graduate student, "but just let them come in here and try being consistent. They'll have a really work at it."
WEDNESDAY EVENING SERIES
APRIL 7
7:30-9:00 p.m.
Dyche Hall
1.50
UTILIZATION OF
WILD KANSAS PLANTS
Speaker: Dr Janet Bare
University of Kansas Herbarium
"You don't have to be an athlete to bowl
just practice a lot and have a bit of coor-
dination."
**AMING FOR a strike zone that is only two inches wide, a blower must have a lot of bolts.**
300, the maximum number of points a bowler can get in a game. That required 12
The scores in KU bowling leagues are usually around 150. Most bowlers don't seem to be terribly upset if their scores aren't high. Amidst mock anger and rage, most of laughter, the bowlers are consistent about one thing—they always come back.
"Bowling is a lifetime sport," said Nancy boozer, who helps us ushant Warren McNamara win the championship in coaching women's golf at KU. "In the last two semesters we've noticed there has been a lot of interest."
IT COSTS 50 cents during the day and 60 cents at night to play one game at the Jay Museum.
"It's a great way to become acquainted with people, especially if you a new student in the school."
Boozer said that one of the most popular league nights is "guys'n' dollas" night. Men and women come in any time on Thursday and register to bow that evening. Two men and two women are arbitrarily paired to make a team, she said.
There are other reasons the interest in bowling is climbing. Some bowlers said that weekly television broadcasts of olympic games, tournaments and team matches had helped spark interest.
"People see these tournaments or advertisements for bowling and say to themselves, 'Hey, I'd like to try that.' And there aren't waiting lines in bowling like there are in many other sports," said Warren Rozer, recreation manager for the University of Illinois, who always there willing to give professional assistance free of charge to bowlers who want it. This may be one reason bowlers keep coming back."
WARREN BOOZER teaches six bowling classes for the University. He said that about 100 more people than last year joined the league this year. He said that bowling was its capacity, but that he was hesitant to bowle to open nights, Friday and Saturday.
"I just couldn't believe that people didn't want bowling lanes in the new union, he said. "At least it would've been nice to move the system we how have over there. Isn't recreation one of the purposes of a union, anyway?"
HE SAID THAT he was terribly disappointed when it was decided that bowling lanes wouldn't be built in the new satellite union.
"I really don't want to have to say 'no' to the many couples who bowl on dates on open menu."
Apparently there was no demand then for more bowlin lanes. he said.
LAST YEAR a questionnaire was distributed to KU students, asking what they thought should be included in a new union.
University Daily Kansan
Boozer said he hoped the Jay Bowl could accommodate all bowlers if more people
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In the late night dazzle farewell later
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Crusoe saw Friday as an apparent savage but how did Friday see Crusoe?
A bitter battle over a cruel God, I taught him to dance.
Peter O'Toole
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Sunset
Applications now being accepted for the positions of:
Editor of the JAYHAWKER
Business Manager YEARBOOK
For job descriptions and job qualifications contact Mike McCollam or Steve Brown at the JAYHAWKER office, 117B Student Union, 864-3728 between 2:30-5:00 p.m., M-F.
Deadline: April 16, 1976
76 kay hawker Yearbook
An equal opportunity employer
OPEN HOUSE
See
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS.
2 bedroom beds • on KU campus • utilities paid
furnished or unfurnished • laundry facilities
swimming pool • air conditioned • parking
on bus line • security guards • bonded lock system
Now Taking Applications for Summer and Fall
Office Hours: Till 8 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
10 - 4 Sat. 2 - 5 Sun.
Lawrence, Kansas 1603 W. 15th
LRCx
913-843-4993
SHAKESPEARES
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FREE DELIVERY
841-1777
open mon.-sat. 5:00-1:00
delivery until 12:30
sun. 4:00-12:00
delivery until 11:30
NEXT DOOR TO THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
Careers Don't Just Happen A weekend conference on career decision making April 9,10 Kansas Union
Friday
1-5 p.M. Career Fair Business and University personnel will be available to answer questions about job opportunities. Jayhawk Room, Parlor A, B, C. 6 p.M. Banquet, Big 8 Room 7 p.M. Speaker, Elizabeth Hanford Dole Attorney and Federal Trade Commissioner Big 8 Room
1-5 p.m. Career Fair
Saturday
10-12 a.m. Career Fair
Workshops
Careers Don't Just Happen
Maximizing Black Potential
Beginning a Career at Any Age
Beyond High School Choices
Parents' Workshop
Job Seeking Skill Building
Life-Planning
Walnut, Reneginalist, Oread Room
Walnut, Regionalist, Oread Rooms
1:30:40 p.m. Workshops continued
Banquet Tickets are available at 220 Strong for $3.50. Deadline Tuesday, April 6
Sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women This organization funded from the Student Activity Fee
4
Tuesdav. April 6, 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Secrets threatening
I wasn't exactly thrilled last week when Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said that the University's final Title IX report might be used as an "internal study document" and, therefore, kept secret. After all, I am a journalist.
BUT IT WOULD be wrong for me to react with screams of outrage and cries of indignation. Remember, he only said it "might not" be released. If the press shoots its whole defensive war any time there's a tentative threat to the first amendment, it may not have anything left when a really serious threat comes along.
The Student Senate resolution passed last Thursday that asked the administration to release the report is probably all the reaction the present situation requires. It's sufficient to let the administration know that at least some people think the report should be released.
AND ALTHOUGH the Senate's other journalism-related action, a petition to Shankel asking him to instruct his subordinates to "comply with reasonable requests for information," was initiated by a misunderstanding with the dean of women's office about who was authorized to release what information, it still signaled a concern with openness in college government and administrations.
But if the administration announces that it definitely won't release the Title IX report, it will be time to get worried. For the last several years, federal racial and sexual discrimination guidelines have had more to say about the way this university is being run than most other legislative action combined.
The University's Title IX report, which must be turned in this summer, will have a lot to say about how the University is run in the future.
FOR THE ADMINISTRATION to refuse to release a report that would affect as many people for as long as the Title IX report will be wrong. The workings and procedures of college administration are hard enough to understand when they are public. Students and faculty at least have the right to try to understand.
Not releasing the report could hurt the administration as badly as it would the students and faculty. It would create a sense of suspicion about the administration's motives. An innocent cautiousness on the part of the administration could make it look like it had something to hide, even if it didn't.
NOT RELEASING the report would create confusion and mistrust as actions are taken and allocations are made to "comply with TITLE IX" because those directly affected by the action would have no way of knowing where the compliance would eventually lead.
The administration is probably hesitant to release the report because it's afraid of what the reactions to the findings might be. Their past experiences with discrimination reports make such fears understandable. The administration believes it has a responsibility to keep things as calm as possible, especially during budget time.
But not releasing the report won't keep things calm. All it would do is make things worse for everyone concerned.
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
In the last few weeks the candidates have discovered that the road to the White House is getting rougher. Cameron Johnson, a Democrat, week. Sen. Henry Jackson, Washington Democrat, was spit
On the Primary Trail
Udall has been spending a lot of time and money in the state.
Primaries sift out candidates
The Republicans haven't campaigned in New York, but after his surprise loss to Ronald Reagan two weeks ago in North Carolina, Mr. Ford is working hard to assure me of a victory in Wisconsin.
THE CANDIDATES are all getting tougher. Udall has said that he can be a nice guy and has expressed himself more vigorously in recent week. He sees the campaign as his opportunity to campaign. It is now or never, so
Ford too has been pushed into action. Reagan has substituted television exposure for personal campaigning here. He has been known as the North
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
upon by an onlooker. Alabama Gov. George Wallace was haunted by demonstrators in wheelchairs who were masks of Arthur Bremer, the man who tried to assassinate him in 1972
THESE EVENTS can be forgotten, but the harsh realities of the campaign aren't easy to separate the men from the boys, and the candidates know it. Today's primaries in Wisconsin and New York are being viewed with suspicion. Utah, Arizona Democrat, will soon be forgotten if he doesn't win in Wisconsin. And the campaign of Jackson will be in trouble if he doesn't capture New York.
Carolina victory have caused concern among Ford supporters. The president has been emphasizing the need for in-house staff and expenditures. After attacks by Reagan that the United States was resigned to being number two in world power, Ford has pressed the point that we're one and should stay there.
THE WORD HAS spread that Hubert Humphrey is beginning to make a new mark. The neonator has been supported lot of support towards Udall because his advisers think Carrie Clinton will be coped soon or it will be too late.
today's balloting, There are 66 delegates up for grabs in Wisconsin and 274 in New York, which is nearly one-fifth the number needed to win the nomination.
There's a lot at stake in
THE EXPERTS are predicting a close race between Carter and Udall in Wisconsin. Udall has received the support of six of the state's seven Democratic representatives. The Republican labor coalition, which includes the United Auto Workers, the Communications Workers and the public employs unions.
But Carter's momentum and heavy advertising have combined to give him a slight edge over the Packers. Wisconsin victory and a close second-place finish in New York would give Carter a lead that could help him win.
JACKSON SUPPORTERS see their projected victory in New York as a *springbounce* for the driver's seat. However, the experts say that Jackson's victory won't be nearly as great as he has hoped and that he will have Carter in total delegates.
Jackson is looking for strong support from Jews in New York. The Jewish support of Jackson has always been strong
because of his stands against the Soviet Union's treatment of Jews and his support of Israel. The Jewish vote in New York will account for about 20 per cent of the total, so Jackson has concentrated a lot of time on the effort there. It's not just votes that Jackson is after; either, he is asking Jackson to vote on the first one million dollars Jackson collected for his campaign.
THE MAJOR ISSUES in the New York campaign have been unemployment and the role the government should play in helping financially troubled New York City. Jackson and Udall both friends of labor, an activist firm that promising federal aid for the country's largest city and the jobless who live there.
The New York primary is the wackiest of 50 state plans for selecting delegates. The confusing system was changed only once, in 1974, to give presidential candidates to appear on the Democratic ballot. Carter is taking a case against the delegate selection process to court because some Republicans have been stricken from the ballot.
UDALLLED ALL candidates with 192 supporters on the ballots. Jackson has 184;
Carter, 141; Fred Harris 101;
and Wallace, 16.
Wallace has just about dropped out of the running for the nomination after his losses to George Wallace. He continues to attack Carter viciously, but admits his defeat when he expresses pleasure that he expresses the burden can be held for him to adopt some of his positions.
When the balloting is finished and the results released tonight, Carter should still be the head coach in nomination on the Democratic side. The question is how much of a lead he'll have. If both Jackson and Udall can capture the whole complexion of the campaign would change. However, if Carter can continue his winning journey today, the team may not be much of a contest.
On the Republican side, the Reagan advisers are conceding the loss of a huge state of delegates in New York, but hope to fair better in Wisconsin. If Ford can come home with a victory, the majority of delegates there too, Reagan's sole victory in North Carolina might be as forgotten as a freak accident.
Year of 'exquisite' eating differs from expectations
After living alone this summer and eating most salami sandwiches, I was really looking for a place to dine on exquisite food. My hopes hinged upon one of my new roommates, Bob, who had
down in a comfortable apartment to a splendid table laden with delicacies, we have been forced into the student slum district by the housing shortage. Our apartment looks like an
Our apartment looks like an overgrown shack on the outside
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
developed a minor reputation as a gourmet chef. I had eaten his food and it had seemed to taste up to its reutation.
UNFORTUNATELY, SEVERAL factors intervened to distort the actualization of my vision. Our food this year has been made much more delicious, tasty and economical. However, instead of sitting
There are also logistical problems. Bob's work schedule prevents him from cooking any more than he can prepare during the week. Thus he plans
Letters Policy
The Kansas welcome letters to the editor, but ask that letter be typewritten and no longer than 600 words. All letters are subject to editing and review, according to space limitations and the editor's budget. KU students must provide their names and housing; faculty must provide their names and personal information; parents must provide their name and address.
and has all the modern conveniences of the Depression on the inside. Indeed, we have found it difficult to cook on our antiquated and malfunctioning stove. The oven isn't level, probably because the floor is too cold to handle, then that wasn't any problem during the winter months—we had to use the oven for heat.
THEN TOO, there is the problem of storage space in our tiny cabinets and in our tiny refrigerator with its crackerbox freezer. We managed to convert a couple of closets into pantries.
We also encounter a problem
common among students—
they are too busy to cook,
crab, lobster, shrimp, steak or
cognac. In fact, almost
everything we cook is from the
grocery store or section of the
grocery store.
the menus and Tom, my other roommate, and I end up doing most of the cooking.
AND, ALTHOUGH we don't have BOB's expertise, we can usually produce acceptable dishes. Bob being accustomed to baking is rarely completely satisfied with anything we cook.
He also has some strange ideas about what is acceptable to serve, the way it should be served and who should wash dishes. It seems chefs don't understand how we are doing the cooking, Boh is still the chef. Cups are always accompanied by saucers. Glasses go at the tips of knives, plates are to be situated one inch from the edge of the table. It's no matter that we live in a dump and eat on plastic dishes, they would still be properly served.
TRIPS TO THE grocery store are interesting, too. Anything the average college student buys to provide a quick, easily prepared meal is to be eschewed. We don't buy: soft coffee, burger helper, frozen dinners, prepared foods, cookies, candy, white bread, beer, cake mixes, instant puddings or corn.
All of those things are junk foods, Bob says. Tom and I want to know what could be wrong with corn. Isn't it a standard American vegetable? But they don't eat it on the Continent, Bob answers, reaching for his knife. He quotes something about corn being a kind of maize eaten in America and fed to hogs.
TOM AND I found that
SURRE I 'TALKED TO A PENN PAINTINGS DRAWING TEACHER LAST TRIUMPHIC DAYS AT THE WHITE HOUSE!
I WAS THERE ALL ALONE. I MEAN, I HAD TO TALK TO SOMMEBORO AND NOW JUST TO KEEP FROM GOING NUTS!
NOW THAT I REALLY I'M READY INTO PAINTER AND I PLAN A LOT TO MY PHILODERGON.
JEIRK!
because all the meals on our menu took at least two hours to prepare, we were often in a bind when we had important things to do. We suggested cooking hamburgers because we always have hamburger meat on hand. Bob, however, thinks that hamburgers are American junk food. What do you think we are operating here, a McDonald's?"
It has been an interesting year of good food and cooking experience. but if I ever have to take a photo, I think I'll start using paper.
WESTPHAL
RAZIN
to Caucasus with Love
SLIMDOGSHAH'S GIRL
'YOUR BOUFRIEND!?
Abstention a strong sign
WASHINGTON—The New York Times reports that students and other enthusiasts are failing to volunteer for this year's political campaigns by running in the immediate past presidents are widely seen as a satyromaniac, a megalomaniac and a kleptomaniac, this outburst of indifference shouldn't surprise
BUT DISILLUSIONED people are vulnerable to manipulation. They still carry the faith within them, as they make clear when they say "if only we had a candidate who can represent us or the possessor of any number of other virtues.
minister in fact, that they are gulled, fooled, tricked, misaligned and misinformed by their subordinates, that their orders are ignored. In other contexts it's been frequently suggested
These disillusioned Diogenes are relatively easy to trick. The original model went about with a lamp in the daylight looking up at him, but not really either that he claimed unique powers of moral perspicacity for himself or, as was the case, he was demonstrating there were other things.
SINCE, EVEN if you could define it, there's no way in the world you can tell whether another person is sincere or not. You can tell by the public interest, the game consists in figuring out what outward manifestation of behavior will sucker embittered idealists into imagining they will have a job Gov Jerry Brown, going home every night to his unfurnished apartment, his bowl of brown rice and his pallet of straw after hours of work serving the poor. Peanut testifying that, as he prayed on his knees in the
Georgia governor's office as William McKinley once did in the White House, he sturp up a personal, very intimate relationship with his savior? Or will it be the thought of Jerry
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) King Features
physical and mental handicap to attain the dignity and fatherly judgment that come to them. Judgment is important, because retiree is large enough and who appears nightly on the television in a dark suit next to the Great Seal of the Republic? JERRY FORD HAS reminded us that praiseworthy character doesn't have much to do with anything in a president. Personal probity in high office can be a great burden we have after we get our teeth cleaned. A madman in the White House might push the red button if his aides let him, but other men, who are adjudged quite sane, offer themselves as candidates and talk about the possibility of doing just that all
We are so impressed by the power of the presidency it doesn't occur to us the office may dominate its occupant. The constant plaint of recent criticism has much done, that the huge structures which they administer in law they don't ad-
that presidents gravitate toward the Pentagon because the military is the only chain of command that is the least bit responsive.
"WE MIGHT PONDER how ceremonial and illusionary the office may have become. Is the president more of a good-looking corpse than a chief executive, an Army commander, or a lawyer? Law is limped by the proviso that he never use his power? For a president to function as we've been taught to think he does, he would have to stage a sort of coup d'etat in government. If we set aside the appalling vision of government that Nixon nourished, we could see that what he was trying to do function presidential. In so doing he appeared to us to be a copilot, a man of interest in government. If Nixon failed to run the government for evil purposes—or to be fair, many of us think are evil purposes—what makes us think that another man can run the government against us?
closer to the mark to think of a president as one who presides, who can unleash his Mikado's power only for policies and over which he has no control and only marginal influence.
THE FAILURE of so many politicians to keep so many campaign promises can't be owing only to their rascality. There's no reason to think our generation of politicians are more corrupt and dishonest than they were in Grant's administration 100 years ago. If they weren't corrupt, it would because the government's bigger. But the most troublesome figure isn't the crooked politician. It's the honest ones, the men and
women elected to office who couldn't keep their promises, who failed
They offer the best reason for not volunteering, not contributing money, not voting. When honest, energetic and intelligent people can't do the job, perhaps the fault is with the job. Then the worst case is that people to these offices, to stop telling each other if only we could find the political equivalent of Jesus he'd pass a miracle and make the damn thing work. Apathy, laziness and disillusionment aren't the only reasons for not volunteering in circumstances abstention can be a powerful political statement, much more powerful than participation.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
the evening before each month.
Purchase period. Second-class postage paid at Law-
nancemaster or $1 a day in Douglas County and $1 a
day in Fremont County.
Subscriptions are $2 a semester through
subscriptions are $2 a semester. Pay through the
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Editor
Carl Volmer
**Art Young**
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Betty Haagelian Yale Abulahkhani
Associate Editor Greg Hack
Associate Editor Stewart Bracken
Associate Editors Steve Bracken
Photo Editor David Cushman.
Shaft Photographers David Cushman.
Scout Edition George Milburn, Joy Koehler
Scout Editors
Business Manager
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Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
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Assistant Advertising Manager Advertising Manager Bureau
Classified Manager Debbie Service
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but ores
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Tuesday, April 6. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports groups' requests heard
The Recreational Advisory Board recommended allocations for five University sports groups last night while two Student Senate committees finished hearing other student groups' budget requests.
The committees, student services and cultural affairs, and the Recreational Advisory Board heard requests for a total of 127 night and Sunday; $143,799 is available
The Recreational Advisory Boards' recommendations were: Soccer Club, $1,270.60 (requested $1,692.60) Rugby Club, $56.90 (requested $78.70) Fencing Club, $303.54 (requested $1,667.44) Cricket Club, $258.70 (requested $1,617.37) Ice Sports Club, $281.80 (requested the same).
A total of $6,625.96 was also allocated to the Recreational Services, set up last summer to provide services including joint advertising, for the five sports groups,
The Services committee heard requests from the commission on the Status of Women, $2.550; Douglas County Legal Aid, $9.400; and Native Americans Alliance, $1.550 The committee heard 10 other groups on Sunday.
The services and cultural affairs committees will debate the requests tonight and on Thursday.
The only group heard last night by the Cultural Affairs Committee was the International Club, which requested $7,855 from the committee he'd eight requests on Sunday.
The services committee will re-hear five groups tonight. According to Jeff Rhoads, committee chairman, there is a question about the need for new classes, which are requesting funds for the
first time, might use funds for social functions.
According to Senate rules, senate funds may not be used for social functions.
Riboads said he expected some debate over the issue in the committee's meeting tonight. He said there was a considerable amount of defining what constituted a social function.
He said he thought a lot of the groups the
Proposal asks fund transfer
A proposal by the University of Kansas administration to take over the Student Senate's funding of the KU Forensics Club may result in a 15-cent reduction in the $9.75 student activity fee, Tedde Tasheff, student body president, said yesterday.
This year the club is to receive an $8,755 block allocation from the Senate. The block allocation guarantees the club 25 cents of every semester activity fee paid. Under the administration's proposal, the University would take over about $8,100 of that amount.
Tasheff said she received the proposal yesterday at a meeting with University
Tasheef said she had long wanted the university to take over some of the club's funding and that she would like to see the University eventually take over the club's funding entirely. But until that happens, she said, the club would have the Senate cut any of the club's funding.
On Campus
Events ...
TODAY: THE FACULTY COLLOQUIUM ON AGING will present a talk on "Older People as Natural Helpers" by Shirley Patten at 5:00 Fraser.
TONIGHT: MIMI LOBELL, professor of architecture at the Pratt Institute in New York, will speak on "Gains and Losses of the Modern Movement" at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. A BENEFIT CONCERT for BMitchel and the KU Medical Center's burn center will be at 7:30 on Off-the-Wall Hall. RENE GIRARD, French literary critic from the State University of New York—Buffalo, will speak on "Shakespeare in Our Cultural Crisis" at 8 in Woodruff Auditorium.
Announcements...
The entry deadline for the MEN'S INTRAMURAL 400 RELAY for the Kansas office at Allen Field Headquarters and forms a $1 entry fee must be turned in to the truck office at Allen Field Headquarters.
A second WRESTLING CLINIC will be conducted today for those unable to attend the first clinic, which was instructed by Jim Beltre, brestling coach at La Crosse.
Grants and Awards . . .
CHARLES HOAG, professor of music theory, will be honored as Kansas Composer of the Year at a meeting of the Kansas Federated Clubs April 8 in Independence. Hoag's "Inventions and Interludes," "Two Miniatures for Double Bass and Clarinet" and "Nine Studies for Double Bass" will be performed.
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Senate had funded in the past had indirectly used money for social functions.
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The services committee will also rehear requests from the Commission on the Status of Women and the Women's Coalition-Women's Center. Rhoads said there was some question over whether the two groups provided overlapping services. The committee did not answer whether possible duplication in the services of the two groups could be eliminated.
The six Senate standing committees that bear group requests will finish making their recommendations tomorrow. The Senate will vote on the recommendations next week during two special meetings April 13 and 14.
This year the Senate has a total of $353,235 to allocate Fifty-four groups are requesting
The 48 women of Watkins Scholarship Hall pondered that question for several months before agreeing upon an open house and a banquet to commemorate the 50th anniversary of their hall. The activities took place Sunday.
What kind of birthday party is appropriate for a hall?
Watkins Hall was founded in 1926 by Elizabeth Miller Watkins, the wife of banker Jabez Watkins. In her will she left a foundation fund for Watkins and Miller halls.
Watkins celebrates 50th anniversary
To further celebrate the anniversary, Laura Stevens, Galesburg, Ill., freshman, contacted Arthur Townsend, director of the Elizabeth M. Watkins Memorial Museum, 1647 Massachusetts, who agreed to open the museum for returning hall alumni from 3:49 p.m.
Economic overbite is correctable.
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About 125 alumni from various parts of Kansas and surrounding states attended, as well as about 75 others, Mary Shaw, Sante Fe, N. M., sophomore, and coordinator of the banquet, said.
Marlyn L昂, Lawrence graduate
management team member,
shall, said that the "covenant spirit" he
spread.
part of the hall 50 years ago is still typical and came through Sunday."
"Family Night"
The Family enjoys a 16" Pizza with 2 Toppings
PLUS Dad gets a 15oz. Drink + Italian Salad
Moon gets a 15oz. Drink + Italian Salad
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William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, said he thought the open house and banquet were "a very good way to celebrate."
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THE INTERBANK CLUB
6
Tuesday, April 6, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Better schedule would profit KU
BY STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
Associate Sports Editor
Remember some of the great basketball teams you've seen the University of Kansas play in Allen Field House the last few seasons. Oregon, Washington and Louisville?
You won't see any of those teams next season
Instead, you'll see such powerhouses as Montana State and Central Missouri State.
HIT ITS NOT ALL bad. There are also home nonconference games with Murray State, Oak Roberts and Arkansas. Murray State isn't a big draw here. Only 7,000 showed up to see the Jayhawks defeat the Racers here this season.
And although Arkansas' program is on the rise, the Razorbacks won't make any fans want to play.
Oral Roberts is a different story. The Titans are a top-nominal basketball school. But they're only big draw outside the house, and they will play in Allen Field House, next year.
THAT'S THE WHOLE problem. The Jayhawks may be playing at schools such as Kentucky, with whom they have a seven-year contract, in Louisville, at Fordham in New York's famed Madison Square Garden and at St. Louis University.
But what about in front of their supporters, the home crowd? Why is next week's election so difficult?
The KU basketball coaching staff will tell you it isn't so weak.
"I DON'T HINT OF these schools as poor quality teams," assistant coach Gregory Kellogg said.
schedule to keep young men attracted to us
and get people to play for us."
The coaches will admit that it's much tougher to get the big-name schools to come to Lawrence. UCLA won't come here. The teams are Notre Dame and Maryland. Reid said.
Notre Dame has ended its contract with the Jawhaws.
"THEY WANT TO come to the metropolitan cities where they recruit, and in turn, the voters."
analysis
see them," Red said. "We'd love to keep
us there." The problem is the two
players may "us."
Maybe so. But it seems strange that Digger Phelps, Notre Dame's coach, would call Allen Field House "The Madison," the home of the Irish team, the Irish contract with the Jawhawks.
"LIT ALLM IT'S tougher to get the good teams to come here. Expenses are up for travel and you want to be in a home-and-home contract with them, and when you already have a set number of home games, you can't go over that number and make the team win."
But there has to be more to it than just that. Some feel that playing at KU isn't as desirable as it once was. Many believe that Jayhawk basketball has slipped, and that
Kansas is no longer one of the top basketball schools in the nation.
I DISAGREE. Sure, the Jayhawks' 13-13 season was disappointing. But how can you say that the program has definitely slipped from its best year four at the NCAA tournament? And then last year they won the Big Eight championship, their second straight conference
KANAS STATE UNIVERSITY didn't get the NCAA tournament because of its schist.
Still, there's a trend among many college teams to pick up as many wins as they possibly can and not worry about the quality of the competition.
Missouri had virtually everybody back from a year ago, eventually won the Big Fight and made it to the finals of the NCAA Midwest Regional. But it drew poorly at home for schools like Farleigh-Dickinson, Iowa State or Dakota State, Lafayette and MacMurray.
Kansas can't afford to ever play a schedule as that.
"We've got Southern Cal lined up in a couple of years and we've got a seven-year contract with Kentucky," head coach Ted Owens said. "We're going to play enough for us." Our season ticket holder is going to see good teams, yet still see home games."
Let's hope so. Because if the Jayhawks don't play a good schedule, fans won't come to the nonconference games. Without the defensive department won't make any money.
And for any business, that's what it's all about.
Mohsen Miri a Jayhawk Pele
Sports Writer
By STEVE CLARK
Mohsen Miri is a member of the University of Karsas Krasos Club. But he's not your average 21-year-old Iranian student. He plays on weekends and kick a ball around.
Miri has scored 17 goals in just six appearances with the KU squad, which is roughly equivalent to hitting 17 home runs in six games. And that's just the beating.
Miri, an intensive English Center student from Tehran, Iran, has played before the U.S. National team.
Miri began playing soccer in Teheran 12 years ago. He got his start in a junior program, similar to American Little League baseball.
HE HAS HOSTED his own television sports show. But the topper is being called Goal magazine, a soccer periodical, one long up-and-coming young players in the world.
That's the Mohsen Miri the few but faithful KU soccer fans have come to respect in the few weeks he's been in Lawrence. He worked with his older brother, a KU business graduate.
His experience as in an international player has taken him to England, France, Germany and the United States.
During this same period, when the national team wasn't playing, he was a major figure in Teheran. His pro team was one of seven in Iran that represent the country's major league.
BUT ALONG WITH THE good experiences, which include meeting the Shah of Iran after a couple of important victories, have come the bad
For Miri, there was only one, he said, and that turned all out right. I came during his speech. I was stunned.
"The national team was going to Thailand," he said yesterday. "The coach wanted me to play, but my captain didn't like soccer and wouldn't let me go."
In an average case, that would be the end of the matter. But anything concerning Miri and soccer isn't average. The public furor that arose when it became known Miri
wasn't going to be allowed to play was so intense that the Arm revered its stance and went on for a while.
SUCH ARE THE BENEFITS accorded to soccer stars in virtually every county in the U.S. and Canada.
sports
fact that soccer in this country has a bird
speed is difficult for Miri to comprehend.
"I inran soccer is very important," he said. "Here there is no money, not enough coaches and not enough exposure. But it will grow."
THE ACQUISITION of the legendary Pole by the New York Cosmos provided much needed exposure for soccer, Miri said. Also, the growth of little league soccer has accelerated, and will produce the good American players so necessary to the sport's growth.
A muscular 5-11, Mirt possesses 4.3 speed in the 40-vard dash. But his outstanding physical attributes are just a part of his talents, said player-coach Bernie Mullin.
"HE'S GOT SUCH A good head for soccer." Mulin said, "that he's always where he should be on the field. Plus, he's so darn clever and quick that he only needs half a chance to score. And even then he creates those half chances by himself."
Teammate Stan Kupniski, who has played against several NASL players, said that Miri could be playing in the NASL right now.
"Beyond a shadow of a doubt," Kupnik said. "He's got everything to take in to the pros already. He's as good as most of the players in the league now and better than any of the Americans, including Kyle Rute."
MRI SAID QUITE confidently that he thought he was good enough to play in the NASL. In fact, he's already had a tryout with the league's Washington club, which wrote him asking him to leave KU and to come negotiate a contract.
But even though he declined, opting to concentrate on school for now, Mullin has no delusions about keeping Miri around for three or four more years.
"HE'S ONLY BEEN here a short while, and we've been hoping he won't get too much publicity, because if he does some pro team will come in and snap him up." Mullin said, adding, "and that's going to happen soon enough."
They will pit the Sabres against the Blues in St. Louis, the Vancouver Carnacks against the New York Islanders at Uniondale, N.Y., the Atlanta Flames against the Kings at Los Angeles, and the Pittsburgh Penguins against the Mantle Leafs in Toronto.
"Well, things happen." "philosophized
you love Joy Smith." "You just have to
accept them."
So, instead of playing the crucial first game of the short series at home, the Sabres will host the second-and-1, if necessary, the third game of the series, which will decide whether they win a quarterfinal-round, quarter-final-round, joining division championship teams, which earned byes.
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"The real big one" is Martin's description of the National Hockey League's Stanley Cup playoffs, which begin tonight with the first games of the preliminary round.
QUANTRILL'S SALOON
NHL Stanley Cup play begins in 4 cities today
Basketball Association game booked in their Memorial Auditorium home.
By the Associated Press
But tonight's first game in the best-of-three series perhaps is the most ironic for the Sabres, because they labored all season against the Rockies and had an advantage-only to see a National
"Now," said Buffalo Sabres left wing Richard Martin "the real hip one starts."
Those clubs are the Montreal Canadians, Boston Bruins, Chicago Black Hawks and defending champion Philadelphia Flyers. Their third consecutive Stanley Cup title.
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KU women win five at Emporia
The KU women's track squad traveled to Emporia over the weekend for the Emporia State Invitational and returned with five first-place finishes.
Shelia Calmese led the team with two individual victories. Calmese, who holds the KU indoor best of 7-1 for 60 yards, sped to an average of 29.2, in the 100- and 220-yard dashes.
Celessa Russell, another indoor record holder, took the 440 with a 48.1.
Sheri Lanter captured the 440 hurdles in a time of 1.073.
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Tuesday, April 6, 1976
Shot putter believes in burritos
By GARY VICE
Jim Pordrebacre, 64-27, openly admits he has a weight problem, but he doesn't expect to remain so.
The junior shot putter on the University of Kansas track team has been hunting down "all-you-can-eat specials" to gain weight so he can best his larger rivals on the shot put circuit.
EVEN WITHOUT THE added bulk, Podrebacar has been showing those big guys what a "little guy" can do. He tossed the shot 59-8½ last weekend at the Texas Relays to place fifth, was third the week before at the Dallas Invitational and finished a successful indoor championship in third place showing at the Big Eight championships.
University Dally Kansan
He said he couldn't remember how many slices of pepperoni, sausage and cheese pizza he polished off that night, while the restaurant manager will undoubtedly remember for a long time.
"I want to keep gaining weight as long as I continue getting stronger and avoid getting a big gut," he said. "Right now, I've got to rely on technique to beat those muscles so that the bulk and strength, I can work on my quickness."
Pobreadarac, a graduate of Bishop Ward High School in Kansas City, Kan., has been strenuously "weight training" this year with regular after-dinner excursions to restaurants.
HE RETURNED FROM an "all-you-can-eat" pizza special Sunday night holding his hands on his ample waist.
His favorite late-night food runs are to Mexican restaurants, of which he has become a connoisseur.
He said he had been gaining impetus to perform well at meets because of his fondness for burritos.
"It's a never ending cycle. To get stronger I've got to eat the Mexican food, and I might as well get free Mexican food."
"WHEN I BREAK different barriers, such as a
carrier, get an all-i-CAN-eat trip to (Taco)
from my friend."
"We've been going for milk shakes lately, too. You've got to develop a variety of foods in life. If you don't, your taste buds will die off. I want to have good milkshakes and I like them. And my milk shake taste buds along with the rest."
PODREBARAC, WHO transferred to KU after two years at Wichita State University, starting mixd himself his daily nutrient drink, which supposedly helps him build muscles and gain weight.
"I guess I feel that if I can take this stuff I'll be able to handle the shot better and maybe it'll lighter
He paused to read the label of the protein formula and said, "Delicious and nourishing" it says, nourishing maybe, delicious my ass. It tastes awful. It's like going through torture.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
The drink may have already begun to affect his throwing. At the Texas Relays last weekend, Podre-
SCHROEFFER
Podrebarac's 59-8 $ \frac{1}{2} $ was his best
barac improved his personal best from 58-10½ to 59-
8½.
"I WAS WARMING UP real good," he said, "My three toses were terrible but my next three were all PRE."
The 90-45 toss, which earned him fifth place and made him his first CAA outdoor championships, came after he hit
Podbradac's medals for the Texas Relays and Dallas Invitational were lying on the table beside him. He picked them up and said, "They're pretty nice. They really are."
PODREARAC's PROGRESS this season has been rapid. He begin the year with an outdoor best of 66-15 and the next week he scores 62-14.
With a grin he added, "I wish they'd put money in
medications, you know, put it back in here
(with the medicine) to save my life."
"I need to improve another four feet to make my ultimate goal for this season," he said. "I got a long way to go, but if I make some more necessary changes in techniques and strength I can make it.
"I'm going to slow down my drive in the ring. Before, I was getting so anxious to release 'I' be released before."
"Now I'll be concentrating on relaxing more, coming through with more power and releasing my peak to 180."
"I did that just to give myself some motivation for my training. It helped to pass the time I spent lifting." Podrebares said he should also be competitive in the discourse once he builds up his strength.
PODREBAUR ACAID HIS power would improve with his progress in weight lifting. Last fall, he won the super heavyweight division of the AAU Mountaineer Valley Cup, where he earned 6.4 total in both the snatch and the clean and lift kills.
'Maybe late in this season I could come around in the discus. It would really help the team if I could, but right now I haven't had time to practice on both the shot and the discus. The shot has gotten priority.'
"When I have thrown the disc, the biggest problem was clearing the softball players off the practice field. Sometimes I'd like to stop and play softball with them and maybe hit a few out like Roger Maris."
"BY THE TIME I finish throwing the shot, it's too hard to work with the discus. I'd need a fluorescent discus."
Podrebarac said he transferred to KU after his sophomore year because there weren't other weightmets to train with him at WSU and because there weren't indoor training facilities.
AFTER HIS TRANSFER, he said, he spent a year at a "living in exile" waiting to compete again this year.
"I really started improving after Karl (Salgb) began helping me. I didn't think he'd bother with me because I was already a very intelligent person."
Salb is Kansas' all-time leader in NCAA competition with six shot put titles, three indoor and three outdoor.
"He was able to help me because he had been through all the stages of development I was entering. Now I've got Karl Salb pictures hanging up in my room. He is great."
Plunkett trade completed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Quarterback Jim Pinckett became a San Francisco 49er yesterday when a trade made two weeks for the New England Patriots became official.
Owen is a graduate of Turner High School in Kansas City, Kan., and Wichita State
The 48ers gave New England Tom Owen, a 23-year-old quarterback, their two No. 1 draft choices this year and their first-and-second-round picks in the National Football League college draft.
Plunkett, 21, is from San Jose and was a Heisman Trophy winner at Stanford in 1970 when he led the school to a Rose Bowl championship. Another Stanford product, John Brodie, was the 49ers' quarterback for more than a decade.
The 49ers traded veteran quarterback Steve Spurrier to Tampa Bay last week. They still have journeyman Norm Sneed, 36, who is expected to back up Plunkett.
Plunkett had indicated to the Patriots he would play out his option this year. Plunkett, the first player chosen in the 1971 NFL draft, asked to be traded to the 49ers partly because he wanted to be near his team, a blind widow who lives in San Jose.
Plankton missed most of last season because of injuries, including one suffered in an Oct. 26 game against San Francisco. Rookie Steve Grogan from Kansas State handled the Patriots' quarterbacking, in Plankton's absence and showed enough promise to make the Patriots consider dealing Plankton.
A Program for the Public "Montessori Learning and You" with Slide Show and Teaching Demonstrations
presented at 7:30 p.m.
Mrs. Sharlet McClurkin, B.A., M.A.
President of Montessori Plus Teacher
Preparation Center, Topeka and Sunshine Acres
Montessori Preschool & Private Kindergarten
On the prospect of her returning to the national next week, Prost was less
Thursday, April 8 Lawrence Public Library
- This program and demonstration will also count as orientation for the Summer School Montessori Teacher Preparation & Certificate Course, June 7 through July 30. You need not be a college graduate to earn a Montessori Teacher Certificate. Six student teaching internships may be at Sunshine Acres during the school year.
- This program also especially recommended for parents enrolling their children in Sunshine Acres Montessori Classes in the fall or other Sunshine Acres Preschool Programs, Open house all this week at Sunshine Acres to obtain enrollment materials at any time for the summer session and/or the 1976-77 school year. Suggested visiting hours are 9 to 10 a.m. or 1 to 2 p.m.
"It wasn't the best I ever done," she said, "but I did all right."
The University of Kansas sophomore did better than that. She placed 25th out of more than 120 at the meet - her last one of the year - in Boone, N.C.
"This year is the last for any specialists (one event competitors)," she said. "Next year, you have to be an all-arounder or a member of a team to qualify."
Propst's vault takes 25th
sponsored by
Laurie Propez said she went into last Friday's vaulting competition at the AIAW national gymnastics championships expecting to finish 'somewhere in the mid-
SUNSHINE ACRES PRESCHOOL & KINDERGARTEN FOR WEEK OF THE YOUNG CHILD Enroll Your Child Now for Montessori Kindergarten or Preschool sponsored by
Taking two vaults during the second session, when the judges were at their descent, the judge was on the second vault.
off the 94 she had set in the regional meet one month ago, but was good enough to
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The Department of Planning and Development Kansas Citv. Kansas
Information and Research Division is expanding to include the following positions which will be involved with a wide variety of applied research and systems activities as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
Research/Systems Specialist
Skills in written and verbal communication with both technical and non-technical personnel are required. Graduate experience in social science research and understanding of computer utilization in research environment is desirable.
Programmer/Analyst
This position requires a thorough working knowledge of FORTRAN and/or COBOL. Programming experience in business applications or research projects is desirable.
Salaries are commensurate with education and experience. These positions offer a wide-range benefit package, flexible working atmosphere, and modern office facilities. We invite all interested applicants to write Information and Research Division, Department of Planning and Development, One Civic Plaza, Kansas City, Kansas 65101. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M-F.
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THE ATTIC
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THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts Street
8
Tuesday, April 6. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Students struggle with alienation
By JANET SCHMIDT
With 22,796 students enrolled this semester at the University of Kansas, some students may understand what it means to be lonely in a crowd.
Some, especially during enrollment, may be depersonalized by the University's student body.
Some if their classes are crowded, may think their personal needs have been unfairly ignored to expeditently accommodate the majority's.
Others may feel overwhelmed by compete and excel pedagically.
Some may think that, no matter how hard they try, their levels of performance are far below the desired level.
WHAT THESE students feel is a sense of frustration and separation known as
Still others may feel isolated from the University's social life, or think that the size and mobility of the student population is difficult to develop and maintain friendships.
Alienation, says Dean Kerkman, clinical psychologist with the Student Mental Health Clinic at Watkins Hospital, is a normal part of growing up.
"With it there are generally some technical strangeness of power or laziness at delicately handling them."
Alenation is a negative stage he said, because it begins with a rejection of values in himself.
Significant changes in life, such as graduation from college, often result in a
"DURING THIS stage, certain conflicts arise over commitment," he said. "The person will ask himself: What do I really want and I going—What toward what job or career?"
Although Kerkman defines alienation as internal conflict, some sociologists and psychologists describe it as a conflict between an individual and his social environment.
"Somebody have to find their place and be able to have a sense of self-worth,"
"Mass society factors are as strong or stronger than they've ever been," said Rick Snyder, assistant professor of psychology at North Carolina State University, who have a place of distinction and uniqueness.
Alienation occurs in a society characterized by changing norms and by a mobile society. Snyder said. One reaction to this was to attack the student unrest of the 90%, he said.
Photo prizes to be mailed
Winners will receive $7 for each first place prize for third and $4 for each fourth place prize, each with honorable mention.
Cash prizes for winners of the Ninth Annual University Photography Contest, sponsored last week by SUA and the department of photojournalism of the William Allen White School of Journalism, will be mailed soon.
Grand Prize winners were awarded merchandise prizes from area businesses.
First place winner David Crenshaw,
Overland Park senior, was awarded a strobe flash unit; second place winner Paul Diener, Lawrence sophomore, was awarded a camera bag; third place winner Don Pierce, Lawrence junior, was awarded a camera bag; fourth place winner Mika Campbell, Lawrence junior, was awarded a small strobe unit.
All KU students were eligible to enter the context
Thirty-four students entered about 150 photos in the contest. A $2 entry fee was charged to each student, to be divided among the contest winners as prize money. Judges of the contest were John Filo, Associated Press photographer in Kansas and Dale Monaghan, United Press International photographer in Kansas City, Mo.
"THE UNREST of the '60s was a vehicle for the frustrations of de-individualization—being a number," he said. "Students found a way to vent those frustrations through protests labeled as anger about the Vietnam war."
Some students used the rioting on the KU campus to assert their individuality, and to establish themselves.
"The protests were often just a way of 'getting recognition' sit in the dean's office and be recognized," he said. "And, because it was the day I was against, a sense of camaraderie developed."
There is a noticeable difference between today's student, who seems to internalize his sense of alienation, and the student of his class who expressed it more openly, Snyder said.
"THERE'S NOTHING to fight against now," he said. "Because there's more competition and fewer opportunities on the field, we're more concerned with setting grades."
"I find it more difficult to get in touch with what students are thinking. They're more introspective and quieter than before."
Sakari Sarolia, professor of sociology, said people experienced alienation when they felt their lives were directed by the institutional official institutions and arrangements."
College education is alienating because it imposes standards and expectations upon students that may conflict with their own be said.
The result may be stifling or threatening, Sariola said.
SOME STUDENTS cope with alienation by becoming too cooperative, or "brown-nosing." Sariola said, while others become apathetic.
"If a student chooses this passive-dependent role, he may become doubly alienated," he said. "He does not show the interest of undertaking research projects, term papers and these types of seeking, nor does he succeed in asserting himself to the extent of undertaking research projects, term papers and these types of seeking."
"His academic work is then reduced into
"instruments, routine acts," not much
interesting.
Mike Lacy, assistant instructor of sociology, said student alienation occurred especially when the student's goals were different from the University's.
"BECAUSE OF the job crunch, many students expect the University to provide them some sort of training," he said. "But university is more concerned with education."
Sariola said that undergraduates were probably less satisfied with the education they received at KU than graduate students.
Large lecture classes and an inability to develop a rapport with faculty members contribute to student dissatisfaction, he said. As graduate students, classroom situations and relationships between students and faculty are more personal, he said.
"Most graduate students have an interesting piece of research—a chance to express themselves and do what they want to do." Sarola said.
HOWEVER, ONE undergraduate, Scott Jones, Lawrence sophomore, disagreed that large lecture classes detracted from his education.
"Most of the classes I've had require lab sessions," he said.
Jones said he received individual attention in the labs because the number of samples he tested was large.
Dun Doria, Lawrence graduate student in architecture, said classes became more complex.
Corda said that many of the graduate students were professional architects and that he was sometimes overwhelmed by pressure to compete.
"OUR DEPARTMENT is very small--maybe 15 graduate students at the most," be said. "But most of them are part-time students and commuters."
Robert Miller, chairman of the department of sociology at Baker University, said he thought students at Baker felt less overwhelmed by U-Baker has an enrollment of 799 students.
"You gear by what everyone else is doing," he said. "in one of my classes, there are many people who don't."
already working as architects. Keeping up with them is difficult."
"The greater the number of groups the individual comes in contact with, the more groups it is expected to conform to the values of those groups," he said. "This has been proved in studies comparing the effects of the urban environment to those of the small country."
The number of students at KU is a major cause of alienation.
MILLER SAID alioning depended upon the size and number of groups exerting their influence.
Some KU students may feel especially alienated if they are from a small town and the congenial atmosphere of a high school, where everyone knows everyone else.
Students don't try to meet others because they are reluctant to leave the security of the room.
Jim Thompson, McPherson junior, said some students relied on high school friend-help.
THEN, IF they become dissatisfied, they usually don't know how to cope with it and feel even more alienated from the University, he said.
Thompson, who came from a high school that had 700 students, said he didn't felt intimidated by the large-university atmosphere because KU was divided into small units of students. Thompson lived in a men's scholarship hall his first year at
"It helped live at Grace Pearson Hall my freshman year," he said. "There were only 50 people living there so we got to know each other really well."
Dennis Hale, Towanda junior, said most of his friends were people he had known. He said that many were kids.
"I haven't really tried to meet other people," he said. "But I don't feel alienated."
SOME STUDENTS may become
labeled they have come to Lawrence
Rick Purvis, Compton, Calif., sophomore.
Kathy Kopacz, Chicago junior, lives at Filsworth Hall. She said residence halls sometimes restricted students from getting involved in other University activities.
“IT'S VERY easy to limit yourself to just doing things in the dorms and with people living on your floor,” she said. “It becomes a habit.”
said that Lawrence was much larger than he had expected but added that he missed some of the convenience of living in a metropolitan area.
Some students say it's not the size of the University, but where they live while attending it that determines whether they feel isolated.
Kopacz said that she enjoyed living at Elishaw because she had met so many friends.
"I'll call my room a home, but I don't feel like it is a home," he said. "It isn't warm, but it's hot."
"It's not as close to everything as I would like," he said. "Even Kansas City is an hour away. I miss being closer to cultural activities."
Some people Kopac said, are unhappy at Pihrworth because so many students live
"The girl next door moved out because there were just too many people," she said. "Some people only got to know the people on their floor because that's all they can take."
TONITE
Various Local Musicians in a
BENEFIT CONCERT
for
KUMC BURN CENTER
& MIKE BLITCH
8:00 p.m.
Off the Wall
Hall •
737
New
Hampshire
Off the Wall Hall 737 New Hampshire
All students ora invited to enter. Entries taken through April 30. For more information and entry forms, stop by the SUA Office.
FACES
DISCO
1. Marty Rock's Disco Tex and the Sexo-
lMas
Your chance to dance to
SUA
&
The Office of
Student Affairs
Announces
The Second Annual
Student Sculpture
Competition
2. Ecstacy, Passion and Pain
3. The First Choice
2. Ecstacy, Passion and Pain
The biggest Disco happening to ever take place in the Midwest.
7:00-12:00 p.m. at Kemper Arena
PLUS, a *1,000 Dance Contest Friday, April 9th
Faces for Revue '76 Is Open to the Public.
Midwest.
Tickets $5.50 in advance & $4.50 day of the concert at
Caper's Corners, Tigers Records and Kief's.
Contestants, Only the First 500 Couples to Sign Up at
Kemper Arena, 4:00:7:00 p.m., will be allowed to enter
the Dance Contest.
MOONLIGHT MADNESS
Tuesday 7-9:30 p.m.
FRYE BOOTS
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HAND BAGS Selected Styles 20%-50% off
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INTRAMURAL WRESTLING CLINIC
8:00 p.m. Tues., April 6
South Gymnasium—Robinson
—Wrestling competition to follow at later date
Clinic mandatory for competition
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"Truly the Most Wonderful
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Gone Chalet
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11 a.m. till Closing Nightly
April 1 to April 30
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358
Tuesday, April 6, 1973
9
University Dally Kansan
Profs choose own office hours
Bv BECCI BREINING
Staff Writer
Critics of bureaucratic rules and regulations at the University of Kansas might be glad to know there is at least one district that is not bound by administrative codes.
There is no written requirement concerning professors' office hours.
"Obviously it is assumed that professors will be in their offices when they are needed to advise students." Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said Friday. "There is no formal, written regulation concerning that."
Several professors said yesterday that their departments had no written codes concerning office hours, but that they had unwritten agreements.
"THESE IS a gentleman's understanding in our department that they (professors) will visit the office hours, and they will post their office hours." Robert Burton, chairman of the department of Library and Information.
But a professor usually has responsibilities to the University, and it becomes impossible for him to be in his office at all times, he said.
Burton mentioned research and committee meetings as two responsibilities that
often prevent a professor from being in his office during designated hours. He said that Saturday, Sunday and evening meetings are more likely to considerably his number of working hours.
Burtson said that in some cases it was a legitimate complaint that professors were involved with students.
"I would readily concede that some professors probably abuse their office hours," he said. "But keep in mind they have many other obligations."
DONALD RICHARDSON, assistant dean of the School of Education, said that the school didn't have any formal recorded meetings and negotiated pact concerning office hours.
"We have several informal understandings," he said, "One of which is that each professor hands in a schedule to us and posts it for his students.
"A student who complains because he can't get hold of a professor often has only 30 days to tell him."
If professors aren't in their offices,
they're said, it doesn't mean they
need to work.
"The research that they've done in Kansas indicates that professors across the
Senate still requests discrimination report
Tedde Tasheff, student body president, said yesterday that she would continue to seek the release of a Title IX steering committee report.
After talking with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, Tasheff said she would write a letter to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes today requesting release of the report, which lists areas of possible sex discrimination at the University of Kansas.
She said she would include a copy of a Student Senate resolution, passed last week, asking that the committee's findings be made public.
Shankel had said last week that the report might not be released if the steering committee decided to use the document only for internal study.
TASHEF SAID Shankel told her releasing the report now might hurt the effectiveness of further investigations. He said groups responsible only to the chancellor often were assigned to study problems.
Tasheff said that she understood the administration's position, but that the Senate resolution made her responsible for seeking release of the report.
GEORGE HUGHES, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction, said the hours he spent with students during office hours were often too short because he advised many foreign students.
"Many foreign students require a great deal of individual help and that takes a lot of time," Hughes said. "Others might think that a lot of that time is wasted, but I don't."
If Dykes decides not to release the committee's findings after reading the
Cark said he thought at least half of all professors' meetings with students were by appointment. He said that he wouldn't like to see formal codes established for office
"WE EXPECT everybody to post office hours, preferably directly before or directly after a class, and we simply insist that they meet them." Clark said.
The department of history has unwritten agreements concerning office hours, said John Clark, acting chairman of the department of history.
state are putting in, oftentimes, an excess of 60 hours a week."
Senate resolution, Tasheff said, she will assign the matter to a Senate committee.
Dykes was unavailable for comment last night.
"I am charged and will proceed to get that information made public," she said.
Shankel said yesterday that he and Mike Davis, University general counsel, were still working on a summary of the committee's findings to give Dykes. That summary should be completed this week, he said.
SHANKEL HAD said last week that the administration would probably issue a statement suggesting possible areas of interest in the formation of Dykes of the committee's findings.
Ed Rolfs, student senator who sponsored the resolution calling for release of the steering committee's report, said he hoped the committee report would be made public to show what areas needed further study to comply with Title IX regulations.
"The fewer the regulations the better," he said.
"I don't know if they're bound legally to raise it," he said. "Morally, there is some reason."
Tasheff said Shankel told her the report hadn't been released because the committee was directing its findings only to the chancellor.
Students skip meals
Students at the University of Kansas will
study at the University of Day on Thursday with
a faculty of science.
Mike Pendergast, president of Ellsworth Hall, said Sunday that every residence hall would participate in the World Food Day activities.
RTA GATLIN, Colby junior, said Miller Scholarship Hall would sponsor a child in a foreign country for a year with small homes from each resident as its Food Day activity.
Half of the proceeds will go to GOARC, pondragon.org, Penn
Penrith local charitable organization.
He said that interested students could sign up to skip dinner Thursday, and that the cost of that meal would be donated to charity.
Some men at Battenfeld Scholarship Hall will fast for the whole day in observation of World Food Day, according to David Parris, Manhattan freshman. He said the fast was voluntary and about 30 men had signed up.
Alpha Phi sorority is having a soup dinner
and a canned food collection, Melissa Steinger, president, said. Steinger said the money saved from having a soup dinner donated to Ballard Community Center.
The department of computer science has an unwritten regulation that requires professors to announce at least three office hours a week, said Floyd Horowitz, chairman of the department of computer science.
CONNIE HUME, president of Delta Gamma sorority, said her house was engaging in a "right-to-food" letter campaign to mobilize people throughout the community for the right-to-food support of the right-to-food resolution which is now before the U.S. Congress.
A panel of University professors, farmers and state legislators will discuss the University's role in the problem of world hunger after the dinner.
The World Hunger Awareness Coalition (WHAC) is sponsoring a special meal at 6 p.m. Thursday in the United Ministries and to dramatize world food disparities.
WHAC is also conducting an information fair Thursday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The fair will present information films and films on world food problems.
DON SCHEDI, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts, said that there was no regulation on office hours in the school and that he thought regulations weren't
Yeong-Chung Lien, assistant professor of computer science whose office hours are from 1:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. every day, said his office hours are long because he advises research students and is needed when computers malfunction.
the teacher's office is often his teaching
anyway, and he's always there
away.
Although most of the 15 students interviewed said they didn't have any complaints about finding professors, either because of their bad attitude or two students said they had had difficulty.
"Twenty of our applied music teachers spend about 30 hours a week in their offices, which is where they teach, or very close to it," he said.
For this reason, Schaid said, students usually don't have trouble finding
"THEERE are definitely not enough office hours," said Pat Zakre, Lenexa senior. "Professors are so wound up in their own thing such as research, that you have to catch them on the run to talk to them. A student doesn't have time to do that."
Paul Hadel, Shawne junior, said he often had trouble getting an appointment with a professor because some of his classes were "too technical" that the professors could talk to everyone.
"Lots of times I end up talking with a teaching assistant," he said.
Calgaard said that there had been no discussion about regulating office hours.
"If it becomes a widespread agreement that something should be done, we would certainly want to be alerted to the fact," he said.
---
ROBERT COBEN, deh of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said he would like to see his colleague
"Office hours vary considerably from department to department and professor to professor," he said. "Some keep extensive office hours and others don't."
Everyone who ordered their senior announcements last February should pick them up in the Kansas Union Bookstore Thursday or Friday, April 8 or 9. [Delivery subject to settlement of Truckers' Strike.]
The professors in each department can work it out among themselves, Cobb said.
The
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10
Tuesday, April 6, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Sci-fi more than monsters
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
Good science fiction writing goes beyond monsters and men on the moon, says Robert Scholes, professor of English at Brown University.
Science fiction should project sociological and philosophical problems through the author's imagination, he said in an interview Friday.
If a monster in science fiction stands for more than a monster, he said, "then his
Scholars is the scholar-in-residence in the accompaniment of English for a week at the university.
SCHOLES SAID IT HAD been in only the 40 or 10 years that science fiction had been invented.
A hundred years ago, he said, science fiction was very hastily and carelessly written and was the butt of a commonly repealed joke.
If "something was good, then it couldn't be science fiction; if it was science fiction, then it couldn't be good," he said. "Science fiction has the strongest trend in American fiction writing."
THE ART NOVEL, the kind that wins
because over-refined and had smaller
and more nuanced characters.
★ ★ ★
Scholes, professor of English at Brown University, called Mary Shelley, who created the tale of Frankenstein in 1818, "the founding mother of science fiction."
But he said that it took nearly a century for science fiction to become a recognized literary form.
Frankenstein creator gave birth to sci-fi
Robert Scholes discussed yesterday the development of science fiction writing from the 19th century to the present in a lecture to the University in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Grants to three county agencies were approved by county commissioners yesterday at the Douglas County Commission meeting.
Commissioners approve grants to county bodies
The Probation and Parole Internship,
Douglas County Corrections and Volunteers
in Court programs were awarded grants
from the county for program needs.
The Probation and Parole Internship
numerum received $1,89.35 from the county.
The remainder of the nearly $9,000 budget for the program will come from federal and state funds. Jane Kreps, project director, said yesterday.
two interns, either junior or seniors from the University of Kansas or Baker University, will be hired for one year beginning July 1. Kreps said she would probably begin accepting applications for the program during the first part of May. The university has no transfer students in school year and full-time during summer mothos, she said. They have the same duties as probation officers, but on a smaller scale, Kreps said.
smaller audiences. Interest in the art novel was confined to those who could appreciate the technical resourcefulness of the "virgin performers" who wrote the books, he said.
The commissioners also authorized a grant of $500 to the Douglas County
The interns carry a small case load and gain experience working with paroles, she said. They also familiarize themselves with enforcement personnel and their duties.
Therefore, a substitute was needed and modern science fiction was introduced, he
The remainder of the money will come from state and federal funds.
The grant will be part of a nearly $10,000 funding package to pay the salary for an assistant director for the corrections office, a corrections spokesman said.
Volunteers in Court will receive about $10,000 of its $25,000 budget from the county.
The grant will help fund the Person to Person, Alternatives to Detention and Truncation programs, which are subdivisions of the Court in Court program, the spokesman said.
"The future and alternate time streams opened a new world." Scholes said.
moonlight
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People became interested in science fiction because it projected current social problems, such as ecological disasters, he said.
smeeney's work the first century "A.F.- after Frankstein."
DURING THIS TIME, the works of Fadgall Allan Poe, Jules Verne, Edward Bellamy and Edgar Burrows, as well as many others, use technology, stimulated science fiction, he said.
ETS
COZY TOP SHOP
Scholes said Poe's writing was an example of the metaphysical aspects of science fiction, which deal with speculation about the state of the universe.
Verne's writing, however, was totally unspeculative and was concerned primarily with technical and physical aspects, he worked on the story for which he financially successful science fiction writer.
Bellamy dealt with the dimensions of social commitment and time in his science
BURROWS, he said, was a master at telling a tale, who wrote exotic adventure
He said a new social awareness and literary self-consciousness had resulted in varied attempts by contemporary science fiction writers to find a science fiction language that was as adventurous as the technology of today.
Scholes was H. G. Wells was the first author to combine the metaphysical, physical, social commitment and time elements in science fiction.
Science fiction uses the available information and predicts consequences, Scholes said. However, he said, the material isn't necessarily dated if science answers the previously unanswered question treated in a work.
FOR EXAMPLE, he said, man's landing on the moon has damaged the moon as a result. Science fiction writers could use the information obtained from the moon's ex-planet surfaces.
The moon landing, he said, hurt only such
people as those that had characters who
breathed on the moon.
He said it was hard to draw a line between the best science fiction writing and "trainstream fiction," which he identified as that feature that emphasizes literary techniques.
Writers of both genres, he said, use imagination, a gift for the language and a tool for communication.
Scholes said his primary interest as a critic of fiction was semiotics, the study of sign systems. It includes such things as symbolization, communication systems and traffic lights, he said.
IN SCIENCE fiction, Scholes said he could use semiotics to look for types of plot patterns. He said that semiotics was more useful in analyzing texts, such as the works of James Joyce.
Scholes has written several critiques of Joyer's works.
Through semiotics, he said, he identified features peculiar to Joyce, such as his comments on the culture of Dublin, Ireland, Joyce's birthplace.
Scholes spoke on the "Semiotic Approaches to a Fictional Text: Joyce's Pipeline" last Friday, and gave a lecture on the semiotic difference fiction written yesterday afternoon.
---
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University Daily Kansas
Tuesday, April 6, 1976
---
72 delegates will attend 2 conventions
By CAROL LUMAN
Staff Writer
The Douglas County Commissioners'
Convention elected 72 delegates last
night to attend upcoming district and
state Republican conventions. There,
they are expected to debate the
National Republican Convention this
summer in Kansas City, Mo.
Twelve University of Kansas students are included.
Two of the delegates proposed that all 63 representatives present last night could go to the upcoming state and disband conventions. The motion was approved.
FIVE OF the 63 representatives from the commissioners' convention elected
Of the 36 delegates elected to the district convention, 30 are committed to President Gerald Ford and six are candidates for former California Gov. Ronald Reagan.
The district convention will be May 8 in Kansas City, Kan., and the state convention will be in Topeka. May 22.
Of the 36 delegates to the state convention, 24 are committed to Ford, 11 are committed to Reagan and one will so uncommitted.
not to attend either of the upcoming conventions; 14 will attend both.
**THIRTY-SIX** alternates to each of the coming conventions were also elected last night. Many of the alternates will be alternates at both conventions.
Four of the delegates who will attend
the state convention are KU students. They are Doug Bell, Ft. Scott junior; Tim Pickle, Shawnee Mission second-year law student; Dwight Sutherland, Lawrence sophomore; and Wint Jr. Jergs, Otiwa first-year law student.
Eight KU students will attend the district convention as delegates. They are John Barber, Kansas City, Kan., freshman; Erik Burrows, Philadelphia; David Corman, Wichita junior; Foye, Burnsville, Minn., sophomore; DeHomolik, Wichita graduate student; George Powell, Lawrence junior; George Smith, Wichita graduate and Locle Skim, Kanorad, freshman.
Representatives of the KU College Republicans voiced disappointment at the outcome of the meeting.
THE STUDENTS who supported Ford got sent to the district convention because he, said. Ford votes for Delegate and delegates are overwhelmingly committed to Reagan, Bell said, and they have more than enough votes to negate the vote.
He also said he thought the method used for delegate selection complicated the selection process.
Stuart Kowalski, president of the Kansas Federation of College Republi-
cation, thanked Mr. Hess for being pleased with the number of students elected as delegates to the state convention. I think there was an effort to include students from the "deliberations."
HE SAID the city Republicans used
their influence and numbers to keep the student delegation from attending the state convention, generally thought to be more important of the conventions.
But Douglas County Republican Chairman Jim Landstrom said it wasn't the city people against voting for friends at the convention.
"It was a matter of knowing people," he said.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Lundstrup said the students who were more active in the county Republican party were elected to the state convention. The others, he said, were voting for Republican candidates who were voting for their friends rather than a slate of committed delegates.
Automobiles, goods, services and employment
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CLASSIFIED RATES
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15 words or
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$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
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AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday 5 p.m.
Tuesday 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 UDK business office at 864-3538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
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ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
We've moved! Our new location is next to McDonalds, 807 West 22rd. Bring this team for a discussion.
Employment Opportunities
LIFE PLANNING WORKSHOP* Saturday, April 8th in the process of influencing your own financial decisions a day after you have personal financial needs, meet weekly alternative. Emphasis will be placed on planning and action strategies for reaching your goals and plan actions and action strategies for reaching your goals. Thursday, April 8th - $600 Costs. *United States.*
ENTERTAINMENT
Applications now being accepted for student staff at the University Information Center. Deadline 04/25/19.
A job opening for full time research assistant at A Job opening for full time research assistant at Bucuresti Branch C Research Achievement Center. Prepare workshop materials, preparing forms, completing evaluation form materials, typing forms are essential to the job. Apply 464-5448 view. Application deadline and start date approximately April 1. Equal Opportunity Employer.
FOR RENT
The Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club presents
the Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club show,
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Demonstrations in alive-mummiting, rock painting,
rock carving, sand art, jewelry making, and
Saturday 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listing of
rentals. Lawrence, Lawrence. Rental Exchange. 482-230.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Dwup in and
out of the room. (Call phone, call邮箱) at WEBSTER
(the phone, call邮箱) at WEBSTER.
REMIND ME OF THE BEST TIME TO LEAVE.
14 bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
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40 farm, farm, new mobile house, furnished, air-conditioned, rear Balkan and Douglas Lake. Prices vary.
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—
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Excelent summer renting situation! $150/mo:
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Looking for one or two women graduate students or staff members to share house 3 miles from campus. $100-month and share utility costs at 4-4434 during day or 8430-4282 nings
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Attention Towers: 30 cubic foot. High Firestone warekiln complete with swinging doors, 20 kiln capacity, automatic ventilation. Located 20 miles from Lawrences and Riverside, which has three bedrooms, basement studio and large office space. House rental at $120 per month. Phone 915-864-7860, or write RT, 62 Box, Overlay-Kan.
TANSTUSR RADIO directive $6.50 packet size now $3.00. ENTIRE STOCK of MAGNAXOV
pallet price each price cut POWERFUL SONY with WEATHER BAND out to $35. Ray Stonehamson
$29.2 Mass
FINAL CLOSEOUT MICHELIN STEEL XAS
RADIALLS LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
Woolworth. (come three parking lot
BACK'S 292 Mass. (come two parking lot
behind Woolworth for fire service).
1975 Pipmouth Duster. Air, automatic. power-weaver 6 cyl. 19,000 miles. 842-185.
Martin Hardballd guitar case $55 new. 864-2922
or 864-2065.
80 Ford Fairline Conv. Good tires and top. Only
60,000 miles. 841-266-John. 4-12
SHO-BUO Maverick pedal steel. 7 all, aum
body, excellent condition. Call 841-3844. 4-7
Mercier 10-speed bike also car carrier, sell both or best offers. Best offers: 841-7480, ask for TICKET.
Reel to reel stereo tapes and records—some old,
new some. 841-6128
4-12
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Must sell Sony VPT180 (video tape recorder), camera, tapes, carrying case, success. AUC 8158-4-12 M-12 AKC Basumi jpun=unusal, intelligent African camera, jpun=unusal, Wormed, shorts, 4-11 1-953-4-12
MOTOROLA COLOR TV 1952 model, any reta-
tion. Hasselblad H-604-7470 and H-
111, Billson K-803 - H-104 - 7470 between
Galanti keyboard 120 Bass. Stage accordion
120 Bass. Stage accordion. Excellent
Excellent condition. Emit phone:
845-236-7900. Email: galanti@music.com.
HELP WANTED
GIBSON LS-L. S-Native. Growth Grover Pape, Mandellah
435-7788, $250.
435-7788, $550.
9th & Iowa
No one under 18 admitted.
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and
call equipment. Req's Call Received 40-31-27
or 40-64-275, ects.
Addressers wanted immediately! Work at home on weekdays. Req. Bach or equiv in American Social Service 1031 Wilson Blvd. Suite 510, Boston, MA 02108. Email: bartle@uconn.edu
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer year-round Europe,
S. America, Australia, Asia. Etail, all fields, $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free
travel to Europe. Box KA, 4890, Box KA, 4890, Box KA, 4890, CA, 9740 4-23
Full and part-time fountain work. Apply in person at the Vista Drive-In, 1257 N. Washington Blvd., Seattle, WA 98103. RESEARCH ASSISTANTS—The Association of Systematic Collections (ASC) an international not-for-profit association or appointments of one-year business associates with a strong background in responsible, responsible responsibilities will include: 1) legal research and regulations that affect biologics and others; 2) medical information services; 3) agreement of a telephone 'legal information service'; for professional biologics; 3) preparation of documentation of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlets dealing reorganization of three short pamphlet applying to apply Deadline for information, contact: Stephen R. Edwards 2001 643-8767, Barbara M. Cordes 2001 643-8767, Jennifer A. Mulligan 2001 643-8767, University of Kaiser, Lawrence, Kansas 66045 | 2001 643-8767
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy Styling for men and women
PART TIME-EMAIL $25 PER WORK, FOR 5
MONTHS. EMPLOYMENT CODE: 61174. BETWEEN 8 a.m.-10 p.m. on
Saturday.
Teachers at all levels, Foreign and Domestic
Teaches, Box 103, Vancouver, Waich. 9868-4-9
Graduate students working on Master's degree
studies in a foreign country will be paid
human problem. $21 dollars paid for two IELTS
passes.
Hard labor, $844 per month. Call today, 833-
4-58. Outest East.
Undergraduate teaching assistants in chemistry undergraduates and teaching grads in chemistry 184. Supervise laboratory observation and training in Chemistry 184. Receive a $3,000 for 1% time appointment requiring about 10 hr per semester. Qualifications: Breadth and depth of knowledge in chemistry, including taken and graduated earned in chemistry, and faculty recommendation. Application: Interested student must be enrolled by April 6, 1978. The Dept. of Chemistry plays a prominent role in the development of plaster and incorporation opportunities from women in research.
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downstream Bank-9th & Mains, and First National Bank of South 1807 West 22rd.
Large reward, no questions asked. Maquintauro
brain gym, gym need contacts, lea-
mens, 845-381-2900.
Found: Male Brittany dog with collar—tag says
Sorrentino. Fold 842-7646.
Found Book Titled National Security Manager
Book Covered by Michael G. Weiss, Claise at German dept. 2080, W14
WWW.NATIONALSECURITYMANAGER.COM
Most important ring call 0/3/1 or in event of death. If found please call Jody: 848-2053 or Sally: 848-2056. If found please call Jody: 848-2053 or Sally: 848-2056.
Lost. One gold cross mechanical pencil between Makin and Oliver. Award. Call 844-6758 or 123-4567.
Calculator found in Strong Hall. Call Bob at 4-7
864-5772
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at age 12. You can reproduce your own of your 125 page thesis in 5 minutes! See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing instructions. Quick Copy Center, 882 Massachusetts 811-4900.
Swain Shop 620 Mass. Used furniture, dining,
dishware, electronics. Open daily 12-5
842-3977
The Cabin Hotel special Sunday dinner is a reservation fee (each cash call) Call 423-5000 for a reservation.
Call 423-5018 for room information.
Eroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive transportation provided by driver, new, pay later, transportation provided. Drive new, pay later.
After 38 years in business, if George doesn't
become a candidate on Monday, George's Golf Shop
will be closed.
SPIRITUAL FILM FESTIVAL: Zen in America—with Satori Khonko; Salah Ha Saleh His life is in Wattas. The Whole Earth Festival-with Ram Dass, Swami Jiddukanananda, yankshiandra the Japanese at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. $1.50. Sponsored by a university at the United Center Centres 1204 Ordea
BAY TIGERS
armadillo bead co
MACRAME BEADS large selection of sizes & prices Mon.- Sat. 10:5-30
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10:53
THE LOUNGE
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
a quiet corner
9th & Iowa
The Teepee-The Sanctuary
'The Facilities & Service To Make It A Perfect Party'
—CLASS PARTIES—
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
REHEARSALDINNERS
SANCTUARY
SANCTUARY
— FORMALS —
BARN PARTIES
Sanctuary Catering 843-054O Ask For Ace
DINNER DANCES—
Nancy's Craft Shop. 500 W. 64 St. Open Thursday.
Festival New Ideas in Kindergarten Plaques and
Painting
We're having a big jewelry sale. 25% off our entire stock, BASIN, E 12. eighth floor, 4-6
OPPORTUNITIES
CUSTOMIZED MARRIAGE VOWS wanted for
BROOKLYN, NJ. Brokerage firm
D. Keevleau. To 37918 giving names and
addresses.
Earn $$ with your own home plant party business. Our team will give you free personal help, will give you a per week fee, ideal for students and households. Pa, 15410. Student Parties, 160 Volunteer, 4-9
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 842-9100. iff
Decky-- April Fool! Wow, you finally rande !!! 4-7
Happy 19th kid! Love, love, roone
Experience Hypnosis: A safe and scientific method of relaxing and controlling your mind, Free No charge. There is a sign-up sheet now online for Psychology PRAise Hall Rd., Dubu, Dept. of Psychology 14-64
SERVICES OFFERED
Mother offers dependable child care in the home.
Infant and toddlers Monday through Friday - days
ineligible.
LAWRENCE GAY COUNSELING SERVICES Provide people to talk with, with a professional counselor, about your sexual desire? Do you need help in understanding a gay relation or friend. Let us know.
MATH TUTORING - Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 102, 103, 80, 114, 115, 116, 117, 121, 122, 123, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, test preparation. Reasonable rates. B427-7681.
Auto repair-hone ups, numerating and more at Auto Repair & Supplies 8 & 10 Tuesday at 8:45AM. 864-327-9888.
TRAVEL
EUROPE
less 1/2 ecumenity
than late
to day emergency response
Contact:
800-325-4867
Untravel Charters
EUROFISHAELA*AFIRCAVASIA - Travel diaria
- Destination (2015)
- First Avenue, Tucker Gun 20046 (4)
TUTOR
Math Tutor with M.A. in mathematics Call 811-
3708 after 6 p.m.
4-15
TYPING
THEIR BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is located in the lobby of our Service Center and offers our Service in fast and price are reasonable. We also have a phone line for your convenience.
Experienced typist—term paper, theses, misc.
Experienced typist—spellings, spelling,
experiments, 843-844. Mrs. Wright
Ball Park Baseball
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
BALL PARK, INC.
BALL PARK, INC.
Box 3422-U
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Baha'I Faith
"knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent."
Bahal' Club Meeting, April 5, 17:30 p.m. Oval Ballroom, Union
Typtist editor, IBM Pica stillite. Quality work.
Scientists have been there. Their dissertations welcome.
Phone: 842-913-8212
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 4-6
Exp. typif. IBM Selectric, term paper, theses.
Exp. typif. IBM Selectric, term paper, theses.
Reject. Jean. 811-300-6
Reject. Jean. 811-300-6
Need an experimented lipid? IBM Selectic II
carbonated lipid bag with carbonated lipid in
ribon) Call Fm 843-7297.
Typing- We have many return customers who want to make sure your state. Call Harvey or Linda at 212-657-8900.
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reamon-
ing, computer skills. Reqs some bac+gee, BA, Scaid or
Bachelor's degree plus 1 year of experience.
Expert tying reassessable rates Proofreading.
Expert tying proofreadable rates Proofreading.
Call 842-8590 after 3.00 p.m. 4-20
Experienced typist. JMIT Selective, all kinds of
typing. Call 845-1433 days. 845-9978 eves. JMIT
address.
TOP TYP TOP MAPPING GUARANTEED ERROR FREE
TIPPING. GRATE, 482-2621. EYEENES 4-6
INFORMATION
WANTED
Experienced tylist will typel term papers, theses,
reports and all general typing in my home-
base. 841-692-2300.
WANTED FOR IMPORTANT MEDICAL RESEARCH
W. B. Triplott, 944 Ky.
Phone 841-0891
Names and address of persons with blue eyes and predominantly blue eyebrows. Results of study will be re-
Port-city, great student wishing to rent or share
the campus of Kentown City. Please contact 844-260-
7955 or Kaitly
Home for 2 yr. old half-ahebred half hunk.
Player great call. Player Great Call. Dellebo, 443-254-284
Home for 2 yr. old half-ahebred half hunk.
Player great call. Player Great Call. Dellebo, 443-254-284
Calculator* Texas Instruments TI-2550. Will pay
dollar or trade dollar TI-2552. Call B842-71-67.
***
Need female roommate for summer and fall.
Please call at 814-6614 after 5:30 p.m. - 9:49
Female romancemate to share apartment next year
Female companion to nondiscriminatory, non-age
Must have phone: 864-123-4567
Liberal Camille Bernard, to share equipment
tiny大楼 Camille Bernard, to share equipment
tiny大楼 Camille Bernard, to share equipment
Good used or rebuilt fathad for 50 Merc 12e
Good used or rebuilt fathad for 50 Merc 12e
10 a.m. - 6 p.m. w.p.monds.
4-7
Male roommate wanted, serious student, summer only, own room, extra time $91, 845-1247
Roommate wanted. Grad student preferred. Immediately apply. Req: double duplex, furnished, room quiet, beautiful living space. Resume to: john.davis@hotmail.com
Folding bicycle, good working condition, reason-
ability. Bicycle used after 7 p.m. on April
Lavender. Bike used by 6-12
TENNIS PLAYERS - Experienced tennis player wanted for assts anytime. Tues, or thurs morning. Will be able to play both. Will consider others. Call Norm at 843-781-498 and be politic to the house-in-law if you answer.
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
5 Nights a Week No Cover NEW MODERN DECOR
Entertaining. Night People with cold wares entertains,
and night people with warm drinks entertain an atmospherized atmosphere for sweet love and gentle
humour.
Sandwiches — Pizza
Pool — American Shuffleboard
HIDEOUT
843-9404 CLUB
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
New Memberships Available
Class in Prism Club
Course in Prism Club
— 7 DAYS —
Wave Point—owner
面
Tuesday, April 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
1. ___ 2. ___ 3. ___ 4. ___ 5. ___ 6. ___ 7. ___ 8. ___ 9. ___
10
FALLEY'S
F-
Falley's Fluff Pack Ground Beef 69c lb.
69 $ ^{c} $ lb.
100
Fresh Whole Fryers 49c lb.
49 $ ^{c} $ lb.
2525 IOWA
NEXT DOOR TO GIBSON'S
OPEN 7 a.m.-MIDNIGHT—7 DAYS
PRICES GOOD TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY
APRIL 6-APRIL 11
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
Every Day Low Price
**Mr. Coffee Filters**...100 ct. 89°
Every Day Low Price
Aunt Jane's Pickles...24 oz. 55°
Every Day Low Price
Cigarettes...All Brands & Sizes ctn. $399
U.S.D.A. Choice
Sirloin Steak ... lb. $1 ^{39}$
Swift Premium Bacon ... 16 oz. $1 ^{49}$
Ohse Economy
Minced Luncheon Meats ... 16 oz. $89 ^{c}$
Ohse Brand
Polish Sausage ... lb. $99 ^{c}$
Hot, Medium and Mild
R. B. Rice Sausage ... lb. $1 ^{39}$
IQF Turbot Fish Fillets ... 16 oz. $91$
Six Varieties
Gelatin Salads ... 14 oz. $35 ^{c}$
Beer
89c
99c
ROYAL CROWN or SEVEN-UP
$139
99c
6 pack $109
12 oz.
bottles
ROYAL CROWN or SEVEN-UP 16 oz. 88c plus 8 pack deposit
Every Day Low Price
Frozen Morton Pot Pies...4 $1
for
Every Day Low Price
Frozen Pitcher Pride...4 $1
for
Every Day Low Price
Post Toasties Corn Flakes...69°c
18 oz.
Every Day Low Price Contadina Whole Tomatoes... 14½ oz. 4 for $1
Every Day Low Price Green Giant Mushrooms 2.5 oz. 2 for 79¢
Every Day Low Price Green Giant Cream Golden Corn 16 oz. 3 for $1
Every Day Low Price Green Giant Peas 17 oz. 3 for $1
16 oz. 88c plus
8 pack deposit
Food King
Irregular Sliced
Peaches
39¢
29 oz.
Every Day Low Price
29 oz. 39c Every Day Low Price
Our Own Brand
Ice Milk
½ gal. 69c
Ice Milk
Green Giant Cut
Green Beans
4 16 oz. $1
cans
Every Day Low Price
69c
Every Day Low Price $1³⁹
Crisco Shortening 3 pound can
Every Day Low Price $1³⁵
Crisco Cooking Oil 48 oz.
Every Day Low Price 49ᵃ
Betty Crocker Layer Cake Mix
Every Day Low Price 7 for $1
Friskies Canned Dog Food 15 oz.
Jeno's Frozen
Pizza
4
varieties 69c
Every Day Low Price **Starkist Chunk Light Tuna** ... 6½ oz. **49¢**
Every Day Low Price **Shurfine Grapefruit Sections** 16 oz. **2 for** **89¢**
Every Day Low Price **Fireside Marshmallows** ... 10 oz. **3 for** **$1**
Every Day Low Price **Princella Cut Yams** ... 16 oz. **3 for** **$1**
Green Giant Golden
Niblet
Corn
3 12 oz. $1
cans
Every Day Low Price
Folgers
Coffee
3 pound can $398
Every Day Low Price
Hi-C Fruit Drinks 49c 46 oz. Every Day Low Price
Shurfresh Margarine
16 oz.
quarters
29c
Every Day Low Price
Every Day Low Price
Hi-Dry Paper Towels... jumbo roll 39c
Every Day Low Price
Food King Rice... 4 pound bag 99c
Every Day Low Price
Kleenex Facial Tissue... 2 for 89c
Every Day Low Price
Friskles Buffet Cat Food... 6½ oz. 7 for $1
Every Day Low Price
Jello... 3 oz. All Flavors 5 $1 for
Every Day Low Price
Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar... 5 pound bag $1 ^{09}
Every Day Low Price
Gold Medal Flour... 5 pound bag 79¢
Washington Golden Delicious Apples 10 for 89c
for $1
Crisp—Solid Head Lettuce 4 for $1
Franco-American
Spaghetti
4 15 oz. $1
cans
Every Day Low Price
Texas Ruby Red 8 for $99c
Grapefruit.
Large Fresh each $49c
Pineapple.
Bright Red 3 for $1
Radishes. 16 oz. bag
Delsy
Bathroom Tissue
4 roll
pkg. 69c
Every Day Low Price
Franco-American
Spaghetti
15 oz. cans $1
Every Day Low Price
Delsy
Bathroom Tissue
4 roll pkg. 69c
Every Day Low Price
Tender—Snappy
Carrots
3 2 pound bags $1
Large California Pascal
Celery
3 for $1
Tender—Snappy
Carrots
3 2 pound $1
bags
3 2 pound $1
bags
Gold MEDAL
Large California Pascal Celery 3 for $1
3 for $1
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
Gold Medal
FLOUR
10 pound bag $ 1.39 regular
Limit 1 with coupon $1.93
good thru April 11
COUPON
FALLEY'S
HAMBURGER HELPER
all 2 for 99¢ regular
varieties 2 for $1.46
Limit 2 with coupon
good thru April 11
Hamburger Helper
COUPON
FALLEY'S Handl-Wrap
FALLEY'S
Handi-Wrap
HANDI-WRAP
200 ft.
roll
59¢
regular
79c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 11
COUPON
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
WHEATIES
73¢ regular
18 oz.
89c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 11
COUPON
B
Biomechanics
Biomechanical Engineering
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
Glad
LAWN CLEAN-UP BAGS
$1.39 regular
10 ct. $2.09
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 11
COUPSON
FALLEY'S
SUAVE SHAMPOO
16 oz. 88¢ regular $1.29
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 11 COUPON
MARVELOUS
LUNGE OIL
HAND CARE LOTION
FALLEY'S
Vaseline Intensive Care
HAND LOTION
10 oz. $1 17 regular
Limit 1 with coupon $1.59
good thru April 11
COUPON
FALLEY'S
ANACIN TABLETS
$1.33 regular
100 ct.
$1.97
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 11
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Plain White
ENVELOPES
100 ct. 49c regular
79c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 11
COUPON
FALLEY'S
CHIFFON
Soft Stick Margarine
3 16 oz. $1
pkg.s.
regular
3 for $1.95
Limit 3 with coupon
good thru April 11
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Pillsbury
ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX
15½ oz. 79¢ regular
95c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 11
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Duncan Hines
FUDGE BROWNIE MIX
23 oz. 89c regular $1.13
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 11
COUPON
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol.86 No.118
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Wednesday, April 7.1976
Funding cuts could delay budget
By JIM COBB Staff Writer
If the University's proposed budget increases for fiscal 1977 are cut this week by the Kansas Legislature, KU probably won't be able to meet the May 1 deadline for submitting its budget to the state Board of Regents.
That statement was made by Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, at a press conference yesterday. Shankel also discussed proposed parking fee increases, a federal discrimination complaint against KU and its administration funding of KU's debate program.
Shankler said that KU would have more difficulties if the budget increases were cut but it does not.
by the legislature in faculty salaries and other operating expenditures.
HE SAID the prospects of no further cuts were a little brighter than they were last year.
"We can't wait until the 19th or 20th to know what the budget is and still have it done by the first," he said. "It takes most of a month to put it together."
Keith L. Nitcher, vice canceller for business affairs, said yesterday that further cuts would entail a complete reworking of the fiscal 1977 budget, causing KU and other Regents schools to miss the May 1 deadline for submitting the budgets.
Nitcher said the budget required a week's printing time, and much more time to make many adjustments in allocations within the budget.
Carter edges Udall in Wisconsin primary
By the Associated Press
Jimmy Carter edged ahead of Rep. Morris K. Udall as the voters were tallied early today in Wisconsin's Democratic presidential primary—a race in which the Arizona congressman had earlier claimed that he was the winner of York's contest, for Democratic delegates.
President Gerald L. Ford easily won the Republican primary in Wisconsin, sweeping past challenger Ronald Reagan and saying he was pleased with a 55 per cent victory in Iowa. But Reagan said he was more than satisfied with his 44 per cent of the GOP vote.
The long count was on the Democratic ballot, where Carter votes steadily whitted at a lead that had prompted Udall to claim "a very, very good win for this campaign . . ." in a victory statement last night.
With 87 per cent of Wisconsin's preincts reporting, Carter moved narcly ahead,
Each candidate had 37 per cent of the vote and each led for 25 of the state's votes.
While Jackson was in command in the New York primary, his delegate margin was short of the clear majority he had received in the New York delegate competition.
With 95 per cent of the New York precincts counted, Jackson led for 104 Democratic delegates, Udall for 72, uncommitted entries for 65. Carter for 33.
The New York delegates were elected in separate contests in each the state's 39 congressional districts.
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey of Minnesota could be a beneficiary of yesterday's primary verdicts. Anything that opens the race and divides delegate support could have a negative impact on nominee, who has said he may become a candidate after the primaries are over.
Furthermore, at least 48 nominally uncommitted delegate candidates in New York had said they would support Humphrey at the convention. At least a dozen of convention seats, and the figure is likely to be higher when all the votes are counted.
"IF FUNDS WERE cut," he said, "we'd have to allocate money on a different basis. They (the present allocations) probably wouldn't be scaled down proportionally."
1
Nitcher said that the business office already was having difficulties meeting the requirements of preparing is based upon KU's appropriations as already approved by the legislature and includes 8 per cent faculty expenses, which increases for other operating expendities.
Downtown renovations Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Nitcher said salary changes would be the most difficult change to make in the budget. Much of the work the business office is now doing, he said, involves converting large lump-sum appropriations in legislative bills into a breakdown of dollar amounts to be used in various programs, services and departments of the University.
Downtown Lawrence offers a pleasant relief from the constant concrete of many cities. Lawns and grass and flowers are interpenetrated with benches and places to walk for one’s own enjoyment.
"IF WE'RE WORKING with one amount,
"we have some options; if we have another
amount, there are other options," he said.
"If you wouldn't be across the-board
decreases."
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, said that if cuts were made he would have to "devise a new strategy" to make adjustments in salaries and operating funds throughout the University's academic programs.
Shankel called unjustifiable the assumption of some legislators that appropriations for public schools and higher education should be tied together.
"Naturally, we're thinking about the possibility (less funding), but we've not done that yet."
"TM SYMPATHETIC to the public schools, but I want to see the universities get better."
He repeated earlier statements that KU was involved in a "catch-up program" to receive needed funding that the legislature hadn't provided in recent years.
Regarding other matters, Shankel said increases of parking fees were justified because the cost of operating parking services had increased 10 per cent this year.
He said the increase also could be justified to raise student employees' pay in the parking department to the same level as the company. He said he would repair repairs and parking lot improvements.
"I's reasonable for costs to go up," he said. "But on the other hand, there is reason we accumulate that makes it possible to one or two years without any increases."
Shankel said he still didn't know when a committee from the Department of Health would take action.
SHANKEL SAID THE reserve money could be kept for future use when it might be needed.
release a study that was completed last week of alleged discrimination at KU. He worked in the Kansas City, Mo., office was working on an investigation. The release KU's report for several months.
Shankel announced that the administration had agreed to assume half of Student Senate funding for KU's debate program. He said the administration thought debate was an academic program that should receive University support.
Half funding of debate will be about $5,000. he said.
WORK IS CONTINUING on Title IX reports to be submitted to Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, Shanker said. He said one or both committees for the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses might be asked to do further study.
The report should be completed by July, he said, except for parts dealing with intercollegiate athletics. Title IX allows universities two years to come into compliance with sex non-discrimination guidelines in athletic programs.
Shankel also announced that the first lecture of the new Wagner Lecture Series was next Monday. Speaking will be Dr. Harold Rowerman of Clarenton College, Calif.
Shankel said the series was expected to be an annual program in honor of George Waggoner, former dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
[Image of a man with short, dark hair and a serious expression. He is wearing a light-colored shirt. The background is black.]
New mayor . . .
staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Fred Pence was unanimously elected mayor last night by the Lawrence City Com
munity-manager Marte Argareti winger was elected via major, replacing
Pence. Both will be elected next month.
Budget recommendations set; BOCO refused funds
BY HARRIS RAYL and BARBARA ROSEWICZ
Staff Writers
The Board of Class Officers (BOC) were refused funding last night by the Student Conservation Association.
In other action, the Cultural Affairs Committee completed its allocations, recommending that about half of its $3,454 be given to the International Club. The secrecy of the allocation is possible overlap between the Women's Coalition and the Commission on the Status of Women, and the Academic Affairs Council for eight coordinated mandates for eight groups' allocations.
All committees' recommendations are to be made by tonight. The full Senate will vote
on the recommendations at meetings April 13 and 14.
The services committee voted against funding BOCO because it considered BOCC a sponsor of social functions rather than service functions.
Senate rules forbid the use of funds for social functions.
Fill French, next year's senior class president, spoke in favor of Senate funding
"I wouldn't say it's entirely social, really." French said of other things that could have been done.
Cost of phone system unsure for University
By MIKE THIESEN
Staff Writer
The State of Kansas expects to save thousands of dollars with its new long distance telephone system, but users in University of Kansas offices have yet to be convinced that the system will save them money.
Laurence J. Kunkel, state director of telecommunications, said yesterday that the state expected to save as much as $250,000 a year by using the centralized Kansas Agency Network (KANS-A-N) system that was rat into service A-1.
KANS-A-N connects all state offices in Kansas and some government offices in Kansas City, Mo. to the long distance telephone system. It is designed to give the customer a lower cost per call than with a lower cost agency leased its own telephone service.
BUT UNDER KANS-A-N, all departments at KU will be charged for every long distance call they make. Before April 1, KU offices didn't have to pay for calls that were made on a Wiide Area Telephone Service (WANS) line that was leased by the University
KU offices that made a majority of their calls on the WATS line could find that their telephone bills will be higher with KANS-AN because they will have to pay for calls to the KANS-AN lines, as well as their calls to cities other than Topeka and Kansas City. Kunkel said
Even if some departments at KU have a higher bill, he said, the state will be able to save money because most state offices didn't have a WATS line and regular long distance calls will be cheaper on the KANS-A-N line.
HE SAID THAT if BOCO received funds from the Senate, it would like to see some of the money go to a counseling program for freshmen in the fall.
See KANS-A-N page 3
Jeff Rhoads, committee chairman, raised the question of whether BOCO was asking for funds to help pay off a debt incurred several years ago because of a money-theft scheme, it sponsored, and suggested that BOCO might dissolve after the debt was paid.
French said that he didn't think BOCO would dissolve and that he thought it supplied the University with a worthwhile service.
Rbounds said that if BOCO could come up with service program next year, that the BOCO team would be on the front line.
Cultural affairs recommended allocations for five student organizations last night. The committee had $3,454 to allocate, while funds from the five groups totaled $12,705.
The committee's recommendations, with requests in parentheses, are: KU Science Fiction Club, $150 ($1,455); Operation Friendship, $185 ($185); KU Folk Dance Society, $250 ($2,550); Sigma-Dance Society, $1,220 ($2,235); and International Society, $1,719 ($7,055).
THE INTERNATIONAL CLUB allocation is intended to cover such expenses as newsletters, postage, supplies and advertising.
The committee didn't recommend any funds for the annual International Banquet. The committee agreed that the club could benefit from having a speaker in the fall Student Senate allocations.
The KU Science Fiction Club requested funds from the Student Senate for the first time this year. The $150 committee paid for a special printing of a Science Fiction Club magazine.
The group's request for funds for an off-campus office was turned down. The committee said it would wait to see whether the office had last before allocating money for an office.
Also included in the committee's budget were block allocations of $72,030, which the committee didn't change. The allocations, which were set last fall, are: KU Bands, Concert Series, $25,725; University Theatre, $24,40; and KU Forensics, $8,575.
HOWEVER, DEL SHANKEL, executive vice chancellor, announced yesterday that the University would fund about half of the debate program's funds.
Forensics is to receive 25 cents of each $9.75 student activity fee. However, because of the administration funding, Tedde Tasheff. student body president, said she
See SENATE page 8
Kansan jobs open
Applications for editor and business manager of the Kansan for the summer and fall semesters will be held on Friday, April 16 in 10F Flint Hall.
Applications are available in 105 Flint, the dean of women's office and the Student Senate office.
The Kanan board will interview candidates and select the editors and business managers April 20.
Jucos help ease transition to KU
By PATTY TORIAS
Staff Writer
Nearness to home, lower tuition and smaller classes are major reasons students attend junior colleges before graduation.
Tuition at Kansas junior colleges ranges from $8 to $12 a credit hour for Kansas residents. For a 14-hour semester, tuition could be as high as $188, compared with $288 for KU.
Out-of-state students pay per semester about $700 at KU and as much as $500 at junior colleges.
Terrie Rinehart, Overland Park junior, said Monday she paid $13 an hour at Johnson County Community Center, while he roommate, Cathy Russell, Kansas City, Kan., paid $14 an hour at KU for the same summer session.
During summer sessions, however, it is possible to pay more at a junior college than at KU.
MANY STUDENTS CHOOSE junior colleges because they can live at home and save paying room and board.
Ivy Horing, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said tuition
was higher than when he went to Kansas
City Kansas, Community College.
"I had a good job and picked up some hours," he said. Boring also said he thought some junior college courses were considered easier than University courses and that this influenced the decision of some people.
"They're just big high schools." he said.
Some students said they didn't feel they were ready for a school of 20,000 people right after high school.
Ron McMurray, Hutchinson senior, said, "I had come from a small school. My graduating class was 67 people. I needed the time to adjust from a class of 67 to 20,000. I felt going to a junior college would alleviate the tension."
Students and officials interviewed said that, when junior college students came to KU, they lost few credits. The University accepts academic courses unless they aren't equivalent to those at KU.
EACH TRANSFER student's transcript is sent to the Office of Admissions, Gay Ann Kearney, assistant director of admissions and records, said the transcripts were evaluated to find out which courses would transfer.
Kearney said students then met with their advisors during an early enrollment, which she said would be held at the end of the year.
"We send the junior colleges a list of courses we routinely accept."
Different schools within the University have different policies regarding transfer students.
The School of Journalism assumes the grade point averages of jucu students are equivalent to those of KU students, according to Lee F. Yong, associate dean of journalism, who is in charge of the undergraduate
YOUNG SAID the school accepted basic journalism courses, but gave a proficiency exam for others.
Don Schield, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts,
said that students must have at least a C average, or 2.0
when they entered the school or they would be put on
probation.
Exceptions would be made for students whose low grades didn't coincide with Fine Arts courses, he said.
"We consider each individual an individual," Scheid said.
In the School of Business, the procedure is a little more complicated, according to Mary Soptic, assistant to the
SOPTIC SAID The school allowed students with low grades from other colleges to make up the grades during their careers at KU. The only requirement is that students must have at least a 2.0 grade average when they graduate.
Courses that typically don't transfer are skill courses such as typing and shorthand.
Marlene Nordman, Olmiz junior, lost credits for courses in auto-mechanics, speed reading and fun activities.
"When I talk to people, they ask how many credits I lost. When I tell them, they seem surprised," she said.
See JUCO page 3
2
Wednesday, April 7, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Reagan success analyzed
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Good organization by supporters of Ronald Reagan and Ken. Reagan's recent successes in county delegate selection in Kansas are reasons for Reagan's recent successes in county delegate selection in Kansas.
"I think the Ford delegates had the votes to win but they didn't stick together on their voting," said Dave Aweyen. Ford's seven-state campaign coordinator in Wisconsin, Justin McGee, said the state had "taken a very careful look."
He said a coalition of issue-oriented groups including right-to-life groups, conservative clubs and probably some representatives of the John Birch Society, have been formed to resist the group's influence.
"While the Ford support is much wider spread, I would say it's probably an accurate statement to say that people who support Ford are probably not as in-
Sprayers to be fined
TOPEKA- The state Division of Environment announced that more tones could be expected against aerial sprayers for causing widespread pollution.
A spokesman for the division said a few more fines would be decided by Friday, but that the identity of the companies wouldn't be revealed until next Tuesday.
So far, four sprayers have been penalized with fines totaling $10,500 as a result of palets spraying from too high altitudes and in high winds during March when the wind speed is above 80 km/h.
Committee cuts loan bill
TOPEKA-Transfer of a college student loan program to state administration won endorsement of a Senate committee yesterday.
But the panel, the Senate Ways and Means Committee, refused to pass the proposal to floor action without limiting its range.
The bill containing the proposal originally called for a loan limit of $50 million total, but the committee voted to cut that to $5 million.
Also added was a provision that stipulates no loans may be made to students attending state institutions where the loan default rate exceeds 10 per cent.
The $ 5 million loan fund would be backed by revenue bonds issued by the state, and would provide loans for up to 4,000 students yearly, according to the State of Ohio.
Death penalty to House
TOPEKA-A a conference committee report restoring the death penalty in Kansas for eight types of murder was signed yesterday and sent to the House for approval.
However, even if the House accepts it, the compromise plan isn't likely to be considered by Senate until April 19 when the legislature returns from an amendment.
The Senate conferees got what they wanted in the new compromise when the stipulation was removed that an inmate had to have been convicted of a previous crime. It is likely that this change would not be effective.
The House members got what they wanted in the new agreement when the eighth type of murder was added—that of the second murder conviction either in this or that.
A musical comedy revolving around a
tale of romance and intrigue will be
presented at the Cairo Opera.
'Bells' premieres Thursday
*Bells are Ringing* will be shown 8 p.m.
tomorrow, Friday and Saturday in the hall
MOSS AND TWO other men whom Ella has befriended the search for her.
The play centers on the life of Ella, a receptionist in SusAnswerPhone answering service in New York who tries to befriend many of the subscribers.
Under an alias, Ella meets Jeff Moss, a playwright and member of the jet set who falls in love with her. At a party, she meets Kyle and he into his group of friends, and she flees.
Joel LeClusey, Lenexa sophmore and male lead, said that his main reason for participating in the play was to continue his interest in dramas.
"I also got to know a lot of people a lot better through the play," he said.
Rosie Goldberger, Manhattan freshman and female lead, said that she also participated in the play to continue a previous interest.
"I get a lot of experience in vocal music and since I'm in University Singers, that helps," she said. "Also, the people in the orchestra have to mention about it and that's really impressive."
Parcell said that the residents of Oliver
her mother on the play, and that most
www.parcell.com
ABOUT 35 PEOPLE were directly involved in the production, she said, and
others came to watch and give en-couragement.
Pearcell said director Jeff Fisler, Prairie Village graduate student, was the only person working on the play who wasn't a technician. That made him a believer that a technician technique may be called in.
Oliver Hall received $330 from the Pearson Trust Fund to cover production costs, but Parcell said she didn't expect all the money to be used.
The American Chamber Ballet will present a program ranging from classical ballet to jazzy modern dance at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
The dance style of the group is the outgrowth of the Joel Benjamin Dance Company, which began its presentation in 1980. The group was formed in New Repertory Dance Theater, which developed in New York in 1984 to stage the work of new choreographers. The union of these two groups has produced an exquisite and unique sense of expressive, imaginative舞.
There is no admission charged, but a donation is requested at the door.
Dance program diverse
THE PERFORMANCE begins with "Pas De Quatre," one of the most celebrated ballet dancers of Paris, choreographed for four of the greatest ballerinas of the Romantic Age, the dance is designed to give each of the four dancers an opportunity to display her dancing abilities.
Tonight's program will include six dance numbers performed by seven company members with Joel Benjamin, director of the American Chamber Ballet.
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A duet from "Sleeping Beauty" and two
masters, "Moonstone" and "Muerto," will follow.
The program ends with a jazz dance, "Go ream Go." which is a full-campwork company performance.
BENJAMIN has studied dance with the Opera in Paris, the Royal Academy of Dance in London, the School of American ballet, the International School in Carnegie Hall and the Martha Graham Center for Contemporary Dance in New York. He has performed with modern dance and ballet companies throughout the world.
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Contestants, Only the First 500 Couples to Sign Up at Kemper Arena; 4:10 p.m., will be allowed to enter.
Agency
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OPEN HOUSE
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"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Baha'i Club Meeting, April 5, 17:30 p.m. Dearl Ballroom, Union
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Careers Don't Just Happen A weekend conference on career decision making April 9,10 Kansas Union
1-5 p.m. Career Fair
Business and University personnel will be available to answer questions about job opportunities. Jayhawk房, Parlor A, B, C.
6 p.m. Banquet, Big 8 Room
7 p.m. Speaker, Elizabeth Hanford Dole Attorney and Federal Trade Commissioner Big 8 Room
10-12 a.m. Career Fair
Workshops
Careers Don't Just Happen
Maximizing Black Potential
Beginning a Career at Any Age
Beyond High School Choices
Parents' Workshop
Job Seeking Skill Building Life-Planning
Life-Planning
Walnut, Regionalist, Oread Rooms
1:30-4:30 p.m. Workshops continued
Sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women This organization funded from the Student Activity Fee
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3
Moviegoers neglect political film
By CHUCK SACK
Name a recent political film. What did you come up with? "Z?" "Hearts and Sins" or "The Men's Man"? Chances are, one film that you didn't mention is "Punishment Park."
Your oversight is understandable, "Punishment Park" has not only been neglected, its director charges, but it also has been actively repressed.
Commercial cinema in this country rarely gives serious consideration to patients who suffer when such a dose is surface, it is unhealthy distributors. Witness recent stories about the problems Robert Redford had on him and in the Woodward-Bernstein story.
"Punish Park," made in 1970 during the Nixon-Mitchell law-and-order era, is a salient polarization caused by the Souheat Asian conflict. Peter Watkins, the director, now states that the film exactly mirrors the two years later in the Watergate affair.
The film, which will be shown free at 7:30 tomorrow night in Wooldock Auditorium, will serve as an introduction to the type of movie made by Watkins. It is the first of a series of seven films that will be shown during Watkins's appearance at KU April 11-24.
Set in a near future that now has been bypassed, the story takes place in an alternate time, when the escalation of the war forced the government to invoke the McCarran Act and impose a federal surrction has been declared, and state police and the National Guard have set up camps to handle political dissidents.
Prisoners who are convicted of conspiracy can choose between serving 7-10 years sentence in federal prison, or submarine service. They also can be punished Park. Those who opt for the
review
latter program must complete a $5-mile
route, with within 3 days to be eligible for
release.
Like Watkins' other films, "Punishment Park" utilizes a pseudo-documentary style. The trial of Group 638 and the ordeal of Group 637 in Bear Mountain Punishment Park are both being filmed by a British film unit for a TV documentary.
To add further verisimilitude, Watkins cast real-life radicals and non-actors in all of the roles. Yet the overall effect is unsatisfactory.
The masterful imitation of current documentary conventions underscores the
Plimpton remembers past, braces for future exploits
By KELLY SCOTT Staff Writer
It was comforting to discover yesterday that although his profession is pretending, George Plimpton doesn't try to be anything but himself.
Plimpton, who spoke night in night an appearance that was to have been part of Festival of the Arts, met with members of the Kangaroo and the Council Room of the Kangaroo Union.
He had agreed to an interview but wanted no part of a formal grilling. He shuffled quietly into the room and sat down at first. He preferred not to speak at the podium, but fitted with tape recorders' microphones, so he stood and faced his questioners.
He was properly courteous to the
assistant of predominantly student
journalists.
"If I really wanted to know what it was like to be a student here, I'd have to enroll for a week, maybe move into a fraternity house and the like."
"IT FILLS ME with enormous nostalgia," he said, when asked what he thought about the KU campus, "especially at this time of year.
He spoke casually about his current projects. He's trying to finish a book about Muhammed Ali, who he described as a near mythic figure.
"The trouble is, everyone's writing a book on him," he said. "Wilfred Sheed—one of the greatest essayists-Norman Mailer—that makes it hard," he said.
FROM LAWRENCE, he was bound for Edmonton, Alberta, to encrese himself in the sport of curling for a Sports Illustrated team. He later key with the Boston Bruins in September.
"I imagine it'll be rather tough," he said. "I don't skate very well."
Two efforts to portray Pliplimon in print and movie form have fallen far as far as he is expected.
Alan Alda played him in the film version of "Paper Lion," and a writer for Esquire magazine recently wrote an article after he tried to "be." Piltonon for a week.
PLIMPTON SAID he asked for a disclaimer on the movie because it was so funny.
"I got really hysterical, if you want to know the truth," he admitted.
"It was a weird role," Plipton said of the movie character. "They never mentioned that he was a writer. It was sort of a bit creepy, an amateur trying to make the team."
The movie version had the Plimpton character run into a goal post.
theatricality of the proceedings. Watkins has had far greater success in using a more traditional documentary approach of the "You Are There" variety. Had he created that atmosphere in the tribunal, those scenes would be much more effective.
"I assure you I never did that," he said.
The Esquire article concentrated on trial in the 1920s.
'HE WENT to my barber, wore my clothes, played tennis with me, that sooth the soul.'
This shouldn't be construed as a condemnation of the film as a whole. Although some techniques work against the grain, the film requires more than compensate for such lazes.
The article was "graceless," Plimpton said.
fellow, but I didn't discover until I read a piece that he was angry, had some sort of frustration.
What is most admirable about "Punishment Park" is its intelligent consideration of the alternatives open to its characters. The prisoners aren't simply lumped together into one group; they carefully divided into three groups: militants, semi-militans and pacifists.
With that one word, a description of Plimpton finally materialized. Plimpton is: a huge man with graceful mamertisms, an inventive sense of styling, and a fluid voice and demeanor.
Woodward had canceled a speaking engagement at the University of Denver when Plimpton was there, and Plimpton offered to stand-in for Woodward to help out the distraught student lecture series director.
Nor does it settle for the comfortable clichés that marked the products that came out of the Hollywood "youthquake" of the early 70s. The philosophical similarities and differences of each group are precisely delineated and examined.
But he's not above a little frivolity. He told a story of nearly impersonating reporter Bob Woodward of the Washington Post.
But much of the film's impact has been blunted by the years of rapid change that followed its making. The protest movement has run down and just seems shrill in the final days. The film emphasizes obvious parallels with the trial of the Chicago Seven, looks simplistic.
"I TOLD HIM, "no one knows what Bob Woodward looks like," he said. "I was prepared to unleash all sorts of stories. I was prepared to tell them Nixon was entirely innocent."
Plimpton, who said Monday he was turning to other writing than sport features, said he was a hopeless Detroit Lions and Boston fan—two teams for whom he has played.
"It's like a love affair that doesn't stop," he said. "I've been known to weep if they fall."
All of Watkins' best work has a strongly prophetic edge to it, and in its time "Punishment Park" was no exception. Now the police defused by the current events of yesterday.
The McCarron Act has been repealed, and the distributors who felt that it was too potent five years ago may now feel that it is outdated.
But one of the underlying themes of "Punishment Park" is the way that the media distort events and homogenize opinions to prevent serious examination of And in an election year, that aspect Warkins's work seems acutely prophetic.
Juco ...
From page one
Some students find the change in the size of the schools difficult to adjust to when they graduate.
Riehart said the classes were smaller at more personally involved, with their courses.
BORING SAID HE missed the personal contact between students and teachers.
But Nordman said she was impressed by one of her professors at KU who managed to keep the personal touch although there were more than 100 students in his class.
She had been getting poor grades on her tests and decided to talk with her professor.
"When I first went in there," he said,
"Hells, Marienne. You're having trouble,
with the stairs."
Although one of her classes is larger, the others are about the same size as at Barton County Community College, she said. It was a bit tricky to say exactly when each day that was had for her to adjust to.
"All those people running around reminded me of an ant farm," she said.
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KANS-A-N...
From page one
Kunkel also said that the total KU telephone bill should be lower, because of the lower cost per minute available to KANS-A users.
Controller's office records show that the cost of the WATS lines the University had increased more than $150,000 per month for five lines to $273 a month for the six Kansas City lines. The total bill for long distance calls at KU in January 1976 was $2,290. The bill for January 1976 was $2,290.
MILLIONAIRE AT MIDNIGHT
friday & Saturday 8:30
the Hawk's Nest
NO ONE CAN BE SURE how much the KANS-A-N telephone bill for KU will be because calls that were made on the WATS lines were not always recorded and it isn't known how many calls each department made on the line.
The five offices at KU that were contacted said they wouldn't know what effect KANS had on their telephone bills until they saw the data. They included every long distance call they made.
Steve Owens, student body vice president,
said the Student Senate office's telephone
bill shouldn't be affected too much by the new billing system with KANS-A-N.
Owens said most long distance calls they made in the Senate offices were on the WATS call he expected his bill to be made only made five to 10 WATS calls a month.
Larry Krupp, director of the division of information for the Office of University Affairs, said:
telephone bill could be lower with KANS-A-N.
Knupp said his office made a number of calls to newspapers, press agencies and Topka using the WATS line, paper and University, before KANSA-N went into effect. Now he said they would have to pay much more than the cent of which had been on the WATS.
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4
Wednesday, April 7, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Doctor quota folly
The Kansas House decided last week to take time out from its usual mundane and serious considerations for a little foolishness. It passed a bill requiring the KU Medical Center to admit five students from each of Kansas' 40 senatorial districts before considering other applicants.
FORTUNATELY, GOV. Robert F. Bennett and the Senate took a dim view of the proposal, and the Senate Ways and Means Committee killed it Friday. The unfortunate thing about that 104-18 vote in the House is that the legislators didn't tell us they weren't serious when they first passed the measure.
Now that the bill is dead, news reports have said leaders in the House never intended for it to become law. Being aware that the shortage of doctors in rural areas in Kansas makes good sense, the legislators evidently decided to use the Med Center admissions for political dramatization.
SURELY THE IDEA of putting the Med Center admissions on a geographical quota system is such obvious folly that it needs no refutation. It has been ignored in admission, the danger to the quality of physicians and the unfeasibility of the idea.
Just because a medical student's parents live in a rural senatorial district isn't enough to make sure their child gets
return there to practice. In fact, many medical students are probably willing to make the sacrifices necessary to get into school so they can leave rural KAURAS.
MANY OF THE legislators who voted for this bill are no doubt the same ones who were so quick to criticize quota systems intended to eliminate racial, ethnic and sex discrimination as inefficient, restrictive and unfair.
But isn't it unfair to the legislators to criticize a bill they passed, never intending for it to become law? The idea is that the legislature shouldn't operate along the lines of the Will Rogers saying "The Constitution made someone make a joke, Congress made it a law and that when Congress made a law, it was a joke.
THE MED CENTER bill wasn't a good joke, and it would have been an even worse law. If the legislators really want to do something about the rural problems, they would do well to consider a proposal made by former Ren. Bill Rov.
He suggested that scholarships be given to students who would agree to practice for a set period in designated areas of Kansas Such a sensible approach would have helped election year publicity, but it would come closer to solving the problem.
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
Reagan's bid helps Ford
By DON SMITH
WASHINGTON - Regardless of what liberals and Democrats are thinking this political season, the fact remains that President Gerald Ford is going to be tough to beat.
Although he's been President less than two years, Ford's looking more like presidential material than ever before.
FOR THE FIRST time in his political career Ford is courting
a national constituency, Ford, who had never campaigned for himself outside of his Michigan office. The state has been this year, has beaten former California Gov. Ronald Reagan in all but one of the first round of primaries. And although he hasn't won, they've still been important.
In fact, the Reagan entry into the campaign has probably helped the President. Some would point to Ford's dismal
showing in North Carolina as an indication of Reagan's growing popularity. That might be the case, but just as important is the fact that the Ford campaign was grossly over-confident in North Carolina, leaving many Republicans in expression that Ford himself
THE CHANCES of that happening again aren't too great since Rogers Morton has been accused of plotting, Morton is a political pro,
knows what he's doing and probably won't make the same foolish and often emotionally-provoked mistakes of his predecessor, Howard "Bo" Callaway.
If Ford does receive the Republican nomination, the chances are that he'll be opposing a Democratic candidate who will be trying to mend his own government. Democrats seemed almost bent on self destruction and this year appears to be no exception.
MARK MAYER
"IM NOT SURE LEBANON CAN SURVIVE MANY MORE CEASEFIRMLY!"
Mercv called for in pardon of Hunt
WASHINGTON-Under the Constitution, as Gerald Ford well knows, the President has power to grant reprieves and pardons for offences against the United States. This month the
entering of Democratic National Headquarters in the Watergate in June of 1972. Beyond question, Hunt was deeply involved in that sordid and stupid affair. He pleaded
Another problem for the Democrites will be campaign issues. Issues has either taken most of the issues away from them or is letting the Democrates inaction in their own inaction.
final consideration. Hunt's wife died in an airplane crash in December 1972. He has four children, ranging in age from 12 to 24. Because he has no living mother, he and his other close relatives, the children are wholly dependent upon him both emotionally and financially. The eight-year sentence imposed on Hunt was not final until his death. The President can correct it through an act of mercy now.
FOR EXAMPLE, some of the Democrats have suggested that the military budget should be cut. Somebody had better tell that to the Congressional budget committees that are overwhelmingly dominated by the Republican party and voted just last week to approve the President's 1977 military budget almost in total.
"Damn it," one liberal Democratic congressman said last week. "I don't mind again. We spend all of our time tearing each other up and what are we really doing? Are we playing right into (Ford's) hands?"
FIRST SEN. HENRY Jackson D-Wash., attacks former Gov. Jimmy Carter and then Carter attacks Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz, and then Udall attacks Jackson and so forth.
in their own hands. Currently, there's a jurisdictional dispute between two House subcommittees on health, one in the Ways and Means and the other in the Consumer Commerce. The Democrats on both committees want their respective committee to get the credit for being the first act on this issue. In the meantime, between the two committees, continues little is being done.
The unemployment issue might also be getting away from the Democrats. Unemployment has continued to drop the last few months, which has helped Ford. But in addition, voters this year don't seem to be convinced by Democrats promised to put more people on the federal payroll. New Deal answers for 1970s problems just don't seem to be popular this year.
FINALLY, ITS difficult for any challenger to out stage an incumbent, whether in a city with a strong race. The incumbent has a tremendous advantage and if Ford comes through the Republican nomination unchanged, he'll be in great position.
And more important from the President's standpoint, he hasn't been forced into the position of telling the American people why he'd veto such a program (which he said he'd do if the Democrats passed their proposal).
A. K. RABAH
A POTENTIALLY big issue for the Democrats, national health insurance, is floundering
By James J. Kilpatrick
(C) Washington Star Syndicate
SURELY IT IS pointless to incarcerate Hunt; it is inconceivable that he would take up a burglar's career. He needs no "rehabilitation"; he is an accomplished writer, fully capable of supporting himself. He has now spent almost two years in prison for a political escape in which no one was hurt and nothing of value was stolen. This seems more than sufficient.
Why do we sentence men to prison? Three reasons usually are advanced. The first is simple incarceration: the object is to keep dangerous criminals behind bars, where they cannot endanger society. The second is rehabilitation: the thought is to train men for useful roles in society. The third is punishment. The fourth idea exact punishment for an offense against the state.
Of course this is not to say that Ford doesn't have any weaknesses or faults. He was the one who pardoned Richard Nikon and explained administration against a really comprehensive national health care bill. His proposed military budget is up more than $10 billion over last year while his proposed food budget has been unmercifully slashed almost 83 percent.
Simple compassion adds a
**THIS WAS THE CASE in the matter of the Watergate defendants. They ran up against "Hanging John" Sirica, as harsh a judge as ever sat on the federal bench. His thought was to tterry "Watergate defender by impunity" in the severity of a uneffected unhalf in simple breaking-and-entering cases. He hit them originally with sentences to shock the conscience and to extort their "cooperation" in the investigation imposed in other federal courts in other burglary trials, his sentences were outrageous.
THESE ARE THE issues that liberals and Democrats want the President to confront this But by then it might be too late.
President will receive a petition for commutation in the case of E. Howard Hunt. In the name of Mr. Hunt, the petition should be granted.
guilty. It is no defense to his crime, though it is a valid consideration in a plea for commutation, that he acted under the aegis of a former attorney general in what he then was the service of the then president of the United States.
EXCEPT FOR G. Gordon Liddy, also who merits relief from the persistent ferent, Hunt is the only Watergate defendant still in prison. No useful purpose was derived for being served by keeping him there.
Eventually, after letting them twist slowly in the wind, Hanging John had mercy on five of the seven defendants. Frank Sturgis, Virgilio Gonzalez, Eugenia Martinez, James McCord and Bernard Barker, who shot and killed Mr. Sirkia were released after four to 15 months Sirica had no mercy in his soul for Hunt or Liddy. Their pleas for reduction of sentence were flatly denied.
The imposing of just sentences is the hardest task of criminal jurusprudence. Judges have to explain why Defendant A gets one year, Defendant B gets five years, and Defendant C gets 10 years, when the defendants have made their records and are convicted of substantially identical offenses. Unhappily, these disparities turn up all the time, and as often as not they reflect little more than the position and prejudice on preside judge.
THE CRIME ITSELF, of course, was the breaking and
We are concerned here with elementary questions of crime and punishment. Hunt's crime was conspiracy to commit burglary; his punishment is a prospective eight years in prison, and he is freed. Froxen for the brutal 20-year sentence imposed on Liddy, the punishment given Hunt is the most severe of them all.
An official on the Civil Aeronautics Board, who is a former top aide to a Republican governmentalist and the situation best last week.
LIDDY HAS stonewaled from the beginning: his circumstances, to repeat, are different. Hunt, by contrast, has cooperated fully since his conviction. In the past two years, he has been prosecuted in court, press and in the trials of such defendants as John Mitchell and John Ehrlichman. His prison record is exemplary.
"Things have changed around here ('Washington;)', he said. "It's the new administration and the breath of fresh air that's happening," he said, seem to be baker. And they are doing a bad job either."
County Democrats miss chance
The majority of the Douglas County registered Democrats have ignored the one chance to become involved in the select committee candidate On Saturday only 324 of the 3,500 registered Democrats, or fewer than 10 percent, were present at the Lawrence West Junior High to represent the district convention.
ALTHOUGH KANAS IS ONE of only 19 states that doesn't state primaries, great efforts have been made to the system as representative as possible. Any registered Democrat could have participated; Saturday and any candidate could have been registered until Friday at 5 p.m.
26 delegates will be selected through the county and district selection process. The other eight will be chosen by the
Advanced publicity told of the meeting, and urged people to attend. Telephone numbers were provided for people to call
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
Bernarda Dudley
for rides. Vet, only 324 people managed to attend.
THE KANSAS
DELEGATION to the national convention in Miami will consist of 75 members, of these, 75 per cent, or
Democratic party's state committee, which comprises members selected through a process begun two years ago.
its meeting in May. The 20 Democrats selected Saturday in Lawrence will represent County at the district meeting.
The 26 delegates will be selected from the five district colleges, which includes Douglas County, will select five delegates during
THE PEOPLE WHO were present Saturday found that changes had been made to insure that the delegates would represent the people's choice. The winner-take-all rule has been eliminated. However, through an interpellation, it was determined that only groups whose candidates received more than 15 per cent of the total votes could select delegates.
When the meeting began, a vote of candidate preferences was taken. The count showed that Wallace, Henry Jackson, Frank Wallace, Henry Jackson, Frank
Church and Jerry Brown was below 15 per cent and they were eliminated from the balloting. The two groups were allowed to join one of the remaining groups for Morris Udall, Fred Harris or Jimmy Carter. A fourth group, made up of uncommitted, was also an option.
THE ANOTHER count was taken and each group was allowed to choose an allotted number of individuals determined by the total percentage of the vote. Each group then nominated members of their groups to fill the available seats, and those who were voted on by the entire group. Except for two changes made in the uncommitted group, all the nominations from individual groups were approved.
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So now Douglas County has its slate of delegates to the district convention. The breakdown is: six each for Udall and Carter, five for Harris and three uncommitted. These delegates plus those from Franklin, Carroll and counties will select the five delegates from this district to attend the national convention.
IT CAN PROBABLY be argued that the breakdown isn't truly representative of the preferences of the Douglas County Democrats. What the totals do show is which groups would bring out the voters. The delegates represent the people who cared enough to get themselves and their friends to the junior high. They were the ones who were dedicated enough to spend a Saturday with them and meetings to participate in this important phase of national politics.
FROM HERE ON, the delegate selection will be made for you. For the ordinary voter, Saturday was his only chance to participate. And in Douglas' letter, he said let that opportunity slip by.
The system in Kansas isn't perfect and it probably isn't as representative as a primary provider, because people provide for, though, is the representation of people who care enough to become informed and involved. The sad fact is that this number is so low.
Wednesday, April 7, 1978
University Dally Kansan
5
Talks await teacher pay proposal
By CAROL LUMAN
Staff Writer
School officials in Lawrence District 497 say contract negotiations have been going slowly but should pick up soon when the teachers make a salary proposal.
"You really have to talk about money before you get things moving." Jack Brand, chief negotiator for the district, said yesterday. "Normally, we don't get much done until the teachers come in with their financial proposals."
Both men said negotiations had centered on issues other than salary.
Tony Gauthier, chief negotiator for the teachers, said the teacher group had been studying the salary issue and might make a salary proposal today.
"RIGHT WE'RE just working toward an understanding between the two sides."
The principal issue the Lawrence Education Association (LEA) is concerned with at this time, Gauthier said, is its desire to provide the school board as a professional unit.
The school board and LEA exchanged packages of proposals the first week in December. The first bargaining session was in the third week of January.
Since that time, there have been weekly negotiation sessions. The sessions are on Tuesday or Wednesday and alternate between afternoon and evening meetings.
"We're looking for a contract which will recognize our status as professionals," Gaubert said. "We would also like to enhance our monetary rewards for our contributions."
Another issue the teachers and school board disagree on is planning time for children to participate in the arts.
"THERE IS A SERIOUS difference of opinion on how much planning time elementary teachers should have," Gauthier said.
The LEA thinks elementary teachers should have one hour a day for planning; the school board wants to stick with the schedule of one-half hour per day, he said.
"This is not right," Gauthier said. "Those people cannot do their job well if they are not."
Another issue which the two sides disagree on is parent teacher conferences days.
Gauthier said the teachers wanted more freedom to schedule conferences on the day set aside for that purpose. They also disagree with administration requests that contractors have a say in they leave the building during a time in which they have no scheduled conferences.
THE TEACHERS HAVE no objections to
telling the principal when they are leaving,
check out, or check in; to the last day of animals.
"The teachers don't need to be herded." Gauthier said. "They are professionals."
He said that although the negotiation meetings had frequently involved controversy, they were give-and-take where controversy should be expected.
"Jack Brand and I understand each other pretty well," Gauthier said. "There's going to be controversy, but I think it's productive controversy.
"The beauty of it is that together we can
same direction, contract than either
side (alone) could we."
GAUTHER SAID HE was strongly in
support of deadlocked
negotiation into arbitration.
"We see it as a device that would force both sides to be more reasonable," he said. "It would prevent either side from interacting, so they have a monopoly on what's right."
However, Brand said, the school board disagreed with the teachers that compulsory arbitration in the case of deadlocked negotiations was a good thing.
With the process of compulsory arbitration, Brand said, arbitrators would be negotiating for the same thing in each case. If he were to eventually make them all alike.
HE SAID IT HAD been the experience of other states that had adopted this legislation that all school districts' similar education programs were similar over a period of about 10 years.
This, he said, would destroy the citizen input and the diversity in the school system. "We're going to need more," he said.
ONE OF THE MORE important matters on the job is that he is on professional development he said.
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He said teachers and school board also
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including a new policy.
be added to the teacher duty week next year and that elementary teachers be required to supervise lunch rooms on a rotating basis without pay.
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"I think the teachers have very competent negotiating people," he said. "And I think they (the negotiations) have been very friendly."
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Wednesday, April 7, 1976
University Daily Kansan
7
MacDonald led KU in hitting last season
MacDonald struggling to regain hitting form
By JOHN HENDEL
Sports Writer
Last season, Kansas' baseball hitting power was Ron MacDonald and a prayer for errors. This season the story is different as Hawks except MacDonald have been hitting.
Last week's series with Nebraska, though, may have signaled the return of MacDonald to the realm of hitters. He has been one of four hits for five hits, including two home runs.
Until that series, MacDonald was deep in a slump, something the Jayhawks can't
"When a player gets in a slump, the first thing he does is to think about it, then he worries about it, then he starts to change his mindset," Coach Hawk coaches Floyd Temple said yesterday.
MACDONALD AGREED that his
macdonald beaded by thinking too
much about the slump.
"My timing was off and I was lunging at the ball."
"I set high goals for myself each season, and when I wasn't hitting well, I started worrying about it," he said. "I tried to remember some things and that really messed me up.
Temple said MacDonald had been hitting a ball well, but that he was hitting it directly.
"When you have something that works
"When you are in a slump you have to fight your wav back out of it.
"You can't change, you have to go back to the old way. It worked before; the hills will stay there."
MacDonald certainly had something working well last season when he led the team in six offensive categories as a freshman.
HE WAS THE TEAM leader in batting average (.372), home runs (5) and his 17 runs batted in tied him for the team lead with Randy Trout.
MacDonald's 48 hits, 26 runs scored and three triples also led the team.
"Last season could have been better," he said. "My batting average was high because we played easy teams like Baker and Northwest Missouri State early in the
year. I only had three good series against Big Eight teams."
He said he had been hitting the ball as well as he had last season for about the last test.
"I always seemed to hit the ball right at someone," MacDonald said. "I knew the line drives would start to drop. A few have come in now and that's helped my confidence."
TEMPEL IS IMPRESSED with his second baseman and his ability to play the guard.
"Ron is a sound ballplayer, he doesn't have outstanding range or speed, but playing second, he doesn't need the range he needed at short last season," Temple said.
Fielding was the only area where MacDonald needed improvement last season. But this season, the move to second base on shortstop seems to have erased those problems.
"Second base is a lot different than shortstop," he said. "I didn't have the arm to play short so I would rush my throws and consequently commit errors."
Another thing Temple likes about MacDonald is that he is a good team player. That's evident when talking to him. All he wants to talk about is the team, not himself.
"The TEAM'S ATTITUDE is good. The guys on the team want to win, we know we have the talent to win," he said. "The pitches are nice and hitting are all better than last year."
The champion of the Big Eight this season will be determined by a tournament in May.
"We will be primed for the tournament," MacDonald said.
Track and field's leading couple, Mark
and Franklin Lutz, is coming to the Kansas
"We definitely have a chance to win the tournament."
SUA Film Chairperson Interviews
But right now, Missouri poses the biggest problem for the Jayhawks. The Tigers come to Lawrence for a three-game series this weekend.
Lutz, a former KU spinner, is expected to enter the men's open 100-meter and 200-meter决赛, while his wife, better known as Stephanie, will enter the women's open 800-meter run.
"We're really looking forward to Missouri, we'll really be up as a team," MacDonald said. "I played with a couple of kids and went out the sunnner, so I want to do well against them."
If MacDonald can keep up the pace he set in the Nebraska series, he doesn't have to. But he's a lot tougher.
Lutzes to enter Kansas Relavs
The two runners married early last year, and each is currently competing for the Pacific Coast Club while attending Long Bench (Calif.) State. Neither will be competing for the PCC at the Relays, though.
Interviews for 1976-77 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Tuesday, April 13. If you are interested please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time by Monday. April 12.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
Bob Timmons, meet director and head track coach at KU, said the addition of the Lutzes greatly strengthened the open division of the Relais.
Animated Series Chairperson
Children Series Chairperson
"Having competed for KU in the Relays, Mark is well known and popular in this area," Timmons said. "While he isn't widely known on a national scale, I think most of the fans in this area realize just how tough he is. He's a tremendous competitor."
Classical Series Chairperson
Her specialty is the mile in which she is the current American outdoor record-bolder and the world leader indoors. She also holds the American mark in the 1,500-meter run with a time of 4:08.5, good enough to rank her sixth in the world.
Science Fiction Series Chairperson
Popular Series Chairperson
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Tad Scales, a KU pole vaulter, yesterday suffered an injured knee and bruises when a motorcycle he was driving struck a parked car.
Scales injures knee in wreck
Scales didn't know the extent of the knee injury and was unable to say how long he was recovering.
""It could come around tomorrow, or it could be a couple of weeks. Looking at it now, I'm thinking it's going to happen.
Scales said the accident occurred as he was trying to avoid a car coming from the opposite direction in his lane. Scales said he was running up and jumped to jump the curb but didn't make it.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 7, 1976
7
Rugby fights brutal image
By STEVE CLARK
Why do people play rugby?
That question was asked more than once during last weekend's Big Eight roughly the same way it was in 2015.
Some of the answers offered by spectators at the matches suggested that the participants were, among other things, crazy or masochists or both.
Although the KU rugers disagreed with
the explanations of such amateur analysts,
they were able to maintain their grip.
"Sure it's a rough game," forward Bill Adrian say, admiring those people who don't speak to them they're talking to.
ALTMAN, WHO SEPARATED his shoulder in a game with Oklahoma on Saturday, said his injury wasn't an indication of the roughness of the game, but rather the referee's failure to enforce the rules.
"When you play really good rugby you don't get injured," he said. "Also, when the game is played right, it's played with finesse. like soccer."
Doug Gunn, who suffered a concussion Saturday, said the injury hadn't dampened his enthusiasm for the game. He said he beats the league team's team game with Wichita this weekend.
"The game kind of gets in your blood," he said. "I like the team play. There's no one man that can win the game—it's a team effort."
BECAUSE OF HIS injury, Gunn missed the championship game Sunday between KU and Kansas State. He said that after watching the game from the sidelines, he felt like he was playing this game. But then I realized that's just what I've been doing." he added.
Jon Mellon, a two-year member of the team, said that when he began playing, the rules were the hardest part of the game for him to comprehend.
"Being a football player, it was hard to change from something I wasn't exposed to" he said. "But the rules aren't that difficult to understand and anybody can learn enough about the game to play within a couple of weeks."
KU'S CLUB is A member of the Heart of America Football Union. The Union was formed in 1967 and has grown to a total of 33 official member teams, including three new teams this past
"It's a sport of the future," Mellon said. "It's catching on slowly, but the Kansas Tigers are doing it very well."
Netters host lowly Cyclones
The University of Kansas tennis team will be shooting for its second straight Big Eight dual victory when it meets Iowa State at 2 p.m. today on the Allen Field House courts.
The Jayhawks will be facing a Cyclone squad which has three regulars from last year's last place-Big Eight team. Iowa's Big Eight coach is Chris Tilman's best. Bic Eight tennis coaches' poll:
KU will enter the match following a 5-4 upset win over Colorado last Saturday. Bill Clarke, KU's No. 1 player; Tim Headke, who plays at the No. 2 spot, and Mark Hosking, a freshman who holds down the ball, all won in singles against Colorado.
"Clarke has been our big player all year, obviously. Kirk coach Kirkland Gates said, 'but what is encouraging is the way people like Hosking and Jeff. Thomas have played. They've played well both in singles and doubles, and if our N. 1 team teams are back at the start we can really start back after a slow start, we can really start to come on."
The line up for today's match is: No. 1 singles, Bill Clark (12-10); No. 2, Tim Headle (7-7); No. 3, Greg Buller (21-10); No. 4, Mark Haskin (11-3); No. 5, Jeff Thomas (7-7); and No. 6, Hank Colman (1-10).
giving clinics. So things like that and more exposure are really going to help the
Rod Randel, who plays in the forward pack, said he liked the action, atmosphere and parties, which are as much a part of the game as the play on the field.
"LIKE MOST OF the guys, I'd played football in high school," he said, "and at first I went out to just keep in shape, but I fell in love with the game."
He said he liked rugby because it was fast-moving and exciting. He also said he enjoyed it.
"I really enjoy the contact," he said. "It doesn't really sound too same, but it's a really good feeling to get a solid tackle on someone. And the surge of adrenalin that comes when you have the ball really gives you a lift."
Bill McGillivray, out with turn cartilage,
that in addition to keeping in shape and
protecting the elbow, can also serve
"in high school I was a lineman on the football team and never got to carry the ball," he said. "In rugby, everyone has a chance to run with the ball."
THEY LIKE TO run, hit, play, but they also like to play. Rugby is just about the only sport in existence where, after 80 years of playing, it doesn't bow its ooshing sounds get together and party.
"Rubby has a much more relaxed at-mosphere that football," Randel said, "and we have the right to do it."
Possibly the most interesting aspect of the game is that a team's ability to party is scouted almost as closely as their ability to play.
"If a team doesn't party very well after the game," McGillbury said, "then they get a bad reputation among the other teams."
At the last weekend's tournament, the Miller Brewing Company donated 25 kegs of beer to the players. When the last rugger headed home after Sunday's final there was no beer left, but there were plenty of tunes being sung by the players.
Unfortunately, all of the songs were too racy to be printed in a newspaper. So was the club's pregame chant, which according to some fans is better than the KU's famous "Rock Chalk" chant. It was certainly more unusual.
REPRODUCTION IS BETTER THAN EVER WITH ALICE
Week after week you have been exposed to the newest popularity. Some people have been asking if all this attention and praise has gone to her
Alice is better than ever! Every day we seem to discover another thing she can do. She is getting more interesting people, and she's doing more people, making new friends.
Alice is the exciting new Xerox through in printing technology. She is available in Lawrence only at the Center, 838 Massachusetts Street.
Alice can print while you wait, both sides, almost any paper, do reductions, collate when she prints, and more.
Come in or call (842-3610) and see Alice and the friendly people at the House of Usher/Quick Copy Center, 838 Massachusetts.
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
Royal Prestige, a nationally diversified company has summer work available in many areas of the state.
$1 50^{00}$ per Week and Up
For more information, come to:
Student Union—International Room
Wed., April 7—2:00, 4:00 or 6:00
Thurs., April 8—11:00, 1:00 or 3:00
Applications now being accepted for the positions of:
Editor of the JAYHAWKER Business Manager YEARBOOK
For job descriptions and job qualifications contact Mike McCollam or Steve Brown at the JAYHAWKER office, 177B Student Union, 864-3728 between 2:30-5:00 p.m., M-F.
Deadline: April 16, 1976
76
Jaybaker
Yourbook
EXTENDED
An equal opportunity employer
CAR STEREO SALE!
THRU
U
- $ \frac{1}{2} $ price on Selected Models.
-Giant Discount on Scratch and Dent models.
—Savings on entire stock of more than 1000 Car Stereos and Speakers.
—Don't wait. Sale ends April 1st.
TH
AUDIOTRONICS
- $ \frac{1}{2} $ price on Selected Models.
AUDIOTRONICS STEREO & ELECTRONICS CENTER 928 MASS. 843-8500
APRIL
10th
WOLF
INVITES YOU
Come to our special sale and showing of Minolta and other fine cameras. Our sale features a special purchase of SRT cameras at an incredibly low, low price.
LOW PRICES RIGHT NOW
Quantities definitely limited on SRT 100 and 201.
Our store hours: Monday 8:30 'tll 8:30
Tues.-Sat. 8:30 'tll 5:10
minolta
SA T100
Minolta
You could pay a lot more for a lot less camera. Minolta SR-T 100.
Some people just don't know about the Minolta O 30mm single lens reflex. So they pay more to get a camera that is less expensive than a 40mm. Either way it's a costly mistake. But you don't have to make it. Come in and let us show you how much cheaper it is.
- Patented through-the-lens "CLC" metering.
- Fast, easy handling...compose, focus and adjust
exposure without looking away from viewfinder.
- exposure without looking away from viewfinder
• Computer-enabled, meter-coupled Minolta lens
- Computer-designed, meter-coupled Minolta lens assures sharp, brilliant color slides and prints.
- beautiful black-and-white tones.
the complete medium SD T custom of
- Accepts the complete MINIBRS SR-1 system of lenses and accessories for virtually every photographic application.
- Full two-year Minolta U.S.A. warranty.
MINOLTA SRT 100
MINOLTA JKT 100 with 50mm f2 lens
with 50mm f2 lens
mfa. suaaested
$169 99
retail price $300^00
You can really save even on the new higher cost
Factory Demonstration Sale!
electronic cameras. Wolfe's has lowered prices plus the factory has a rebate. The total effect is a price saving of '80 to '200.
FACTORY DEMONSTRATION Wolfe's people usually know the answers but we also provide the opportunity to go right to the horse's mouth (so to speak). Friday, Apr. 9, 10 'til 5 Sat., Apr. 10, 9 'til 5
The new Minolta SR-T 201. It makes fine photography easy. And easy to afford.
minolta
MINOLTA
Minolta
The Minolta SRI-T 201 is loaded with features, quality and value. Try one and see why Minolta the best cameras are. See the details below.
* Fast, easy handling; information viewfinder lets you compose, focus and adjust exposure without hassle.
- Patented through the lens "CLC" metering, . pro
vides proper exposure even in high-light contrast.
* Built-in sensor.
- Convenient memo holder so you always know what film you're using.
- Shutter speeds to 1/1000 second.
- Accepts the complete Minolta system of lenses and SR-T accessories for unlimited photographic
- Full 2-year Minolta U.S.A. warranty.
BIG CASH REBATES
with 50mm f1.7 lens
MINOLTA SRT 201
with 30mm 11.9 tons
retail price $380%
on lenses and the newest electronic 35mm SLR cameras from Minolta.
XC-E-7 minolta
$219^99
In stock now at now reduced prices, the XK, XE 7 and XE 5.
Couple Wolfe's lower prices with the big rebates and save even more.
● in addition to what you save with our everyday low-prices
● for a wide range of interchangeable accessory lenses
● on the newest electronic 35mm
● lenses (with standard lens) and XE-5 (with standard lens) when purchased with Rokkor-X or Celtic accessory lens, they limit to 10% of the money you Mintola. The more you buy, the more you save. So come in soon for the biggest savings ever on America's most expensive lenses.
NEW LOWER PRICE
OLYMPUS
mfg.
35% SMALLER
NOW AT WOLFE'S.
AND 35% LIGHTER TOO!
The OLYMPUS OM-1 CAMERA
Here's a once-in-a-lifetime chance to get substantial rebates from Minolta.
price $399^95
WOLF
with 50mm 1.8 lens
Limited Time Offer
ROWCOORD II
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 80 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 80 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 50mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 40 | 50 |
| 50mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 40 | 50 |
| 60mm x 2.5" A | 50 | 100 | 30 | 40 |
| 60mm x 2.5" B | 50 | 100 | 30 | 40 |
ROWCOORD III
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 50mm x 2.5" A | 50 | 100 | 40 | 50 |
| 50mm x 2.5" B | 50 | 100 | 40 | 50 |
ROWCOORD IV
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD V
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VI
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VII
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VIII
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VIV
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VIX
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXI
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXII
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXIII
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXIV
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXV
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXVI
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXVII
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXVIII
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXVIV
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
ROWCOORD VXVV
| Package Number | Platinum Price ($) | Metallic Price ($) | Platinum Rate (%) | Metallic Rate (%) |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 10mm x 2.5" A | $30 | $60 | 70 | 80 |
| 10mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" A | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 21mm x 2.5" B | 90 | 100 | 70 | 80 |
| 35mm x 2.5" A | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 35mm x 2.5" B | 70 | 100 | 60 | 70 |
| 45mm x 2.5" A | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60 |
| 45mm x 2.5" B | 60 | 100 | 50 | 60】
CERTIFIED
QUALITY
WATERPROOF
MATTE
Premium waterproof material with mousse-like texture. More than 50% waterproof.
60mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
20mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
18mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
16mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
15mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
14mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
13mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
12mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
11mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
10mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
9mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
8mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
7mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
6mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
5mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
4mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
3mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
2mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
1mm x 14mm
$19
$43
$43
$43
$80
it's here today!
A 23.3-ounce masterpiece!
TRADE-UP TODAY to
Olympus OM-1 camera, the heart of the OM System. The system includes fully interchangeable focusing screens, open-aperture metering, lenses from 8mm to 35mm and a wide range of lens shapes. It's all there in compact, lightweight designs that ➤
OLYMPUS
OM
SYSTEM
you carry 2 OM-1 bodies and 5 lenses in the same space one body and 3 lenses might take up with a comparable system.
Come in for an introduction to OM photography . . . and bring your present camera. It's worth $$$ and those Trade Winds are blowing!
WOLF
CENTER
Wolfe's
camera shop, inc.
116 West Eight Phone 235-1386
Topake, Kansas 66603
8
Wednesday, April 7, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Senate ...
From page one
would propose a 15 cent cut in the forensics allocation, and the activity fee.
The services committee again heard the Women's Coalition and the Commission on the Status of Women to clarify the services provided by the Commission, whether some of the services overlapped.
Kathy Dugan, Lawrence graduate student, said she thought both groups should be funded because they provided different training for the students. They also provide counseling services and personal support, while the Commission was more oriented to supplying women with information on how to deal with abuse.
RD ELOF5, committee member, said he thought the Commission on the Status of Women shouldn't be funded because he believed the issues would be provided by the dean of women's office.
He said he thought the commission probably supplied an important informational service on alternatives for men with prostate cancer, before being done by the dean of women's office.
"We don't need a Commission on the Status of Men to provide information on this issue," she said.
office supplies this," be said.
The Academic Affairs Committee tentatively gave eight groups less money than the original budget, but biggest cuts, with requests in parentheses, Undergraduate Anthropology Club, $165, ($2,777.80); SCRMEBE, $1,850, ($4,130); and Association for Women Engineers, $1,930.
Several members of SCORMEB attending the meeting to discuss their budget needs. The major cut made by the committee in that group's request was in travel expenses. The group requested about $3,800 for meals and other expenses tentatively recommended only $1,500.
HARRY BUTCHER, New York City graduate student who argued in favor of more funding for SCORMEBE, said he thought the cut in travel funding could hurt the group's efforts to obtain scholarship money from industry.
Other tentative funding recommendations by the committee were: Chicano Law Student Association, $45; American Society of Civil Engineers, $25; American Society of Civil Engineers, $25; $480; Business School Council, $110; $500; and Kansas Defender Project, $800.
Sakespeare used revenge as the basis for many of his plays, Girard said, but he used it in other ways.
The character Hamlet, Giard said, reflected Shakespeare's own role as a dramatist. While Hamlet had the choice of taking revenge, Shakespeare's decision was between pleasing his audience by using violence and viciousness or by writing his play to satisfy his own interests as a actor. Giard said Shakespeare did both.
In "Romeo and Juliet," the result of revenge is that the community is stabilized, so the obstructive results of revenge are balanced by the final results, he said.
Former vice mayor Fred Pence was unanimously elected mayor last night by the Lawrence City Commission. Com-
mander of the singer will replace Pence as vice mayor.
In "Hamlet," revenge is the main plot of the play. Girard said Hamlet knew destruction would result from seeking to kill his uncle and this is the play's main point.
Gene Rirand, professor of English and French at State University of New York at Buffalo, said last night that Shakespeare's relevance to our society if read correctly.
Shakespeare's plays are balanced, Girard said, because of the total equality of the conflicting characters. Girard gave examples from several of Shakespeare's plays, often using "Hamlet" to make his point.
GIRARD SAID that although it was frowned upon to combine literary criticism with war affairs, he sahe he felt it gave the strength of Shakespeare greater significance.
Girard, who spoke as part of the Humanities Lecture Series, spoke to about 75 people in Woodruff Auditorium for a book written on "S Shakespeare in Our Cultural Crisis."
Shakespeare still relevant
The commission elects a new mayor and vice mayor every year.
By putting "Hamlet" in a modern con-
tEXT, Shakespeare's work to modern society.
Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager,
said yesterday the election had become fairly routine, and the vice mayor was usually chosen as the new mayor.
Pence elected new mayor
"I've had lots of people criticize the city management form of government because it's kind of removed from the community," Pence said.
Instead of Hamlet choosing between
Fence received the key to the city and commission gavel from former mayor Barkley Clark before calling the meeting to order
In his first proposal as mayor, Pence requested that the commission make itself available to the community for two hours every Thursday evening at city hall.
HE RECOMMENDED a five-week trial period during which one member of the commission would be available from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursdays to meet with anyone who is interested, each week a different commission member would meet with the
Hamlet's surroundings weren't his problems, Girard said. Rather, it was the characters who surrounded him. Girard is to a few of mankind's present problems.
revenge or reconciliation, Girard said to picture humiliated deciding how to push the door open.
"Science and technology are good; it is mankind that is dangerous." Girard said.
mankind that is dangerous", Girard said. Girard summed up his remarks by repeating that Shakespeare's plays could be significant to our society if they were read
"To read 'Hamlet' as being against revenge is the way Shakespeare wanted it read, and the way it should be now." Girard said.
The proposal was unanimously adopted by the commission.
The conferences will start next week in the commission room on the fourth floor of the building.
The commission also adopted a resolution that revives its present finance financing plan.
DISCO DANCE
Fri.
Apr. 9
8 p.m.
1 a.m.
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION
UNION BALLROOM
Everyone Welcome!
SUA Films Presents
PUNISHMENT PARK
a film by Peter Watkins 7:30 Thursday, April 18 Woodruff Aud. Admission FREE
Admission FREE
THESIS COPYING PLANS
from
QUICK COPY CENTER
We are in the copying business and we want to copy your thesis. We have two special pricing plans available to make your thesis copying as inexpensive as possible. Coupons may not be used with either of these pricing plans.
1. TOTAL VOLUME PLAN
Your price per copy depends on the total number of copies we make for you. You may have some copies done on rag paper and some on regular paper and still get the total quantity price. These copies are made on our IBM Copier II and must be made on our paper. Your originals must be on good $8\frac{1}{2}$ x 11 white paper in order to go through our automatic feed. This plan is especially good if you want only 3 or 4 copies of a large number of originals.
Total Number of Copies
Price per copy
100-299
300-599
600-999
1000+
Add .015 for copies on rag paper. Add .01 per copy if you want us to collate.
.09
.08
.07
.06
We will copy your thesis on your paper or ours on Alice, our fabulous Xerox 9200. Rag paper and regular may not be mixed for the quantity price. Alice will copy and collate your thesis at the incredible rate of 120 copies per minute. There is no charge to collate. This plan is especially good if you want a large number of copies of each original.
2. ALICE'S THESIS SPECIAL
After your thesis is copied, let us bind it for you. We can bind your copies in blue, red, green, saddle or black hard covers. In addition, we can bind extra copies in a less expensive flexible-cover binding. The price for hard-bound copies will depend on their thickness and the length of the title, but will be approximately 54.25 each.
1-5 Copies of each original are 10e each
6+ Copies of each original are 24e each
Add.01 for our rag paper. No charge for collating.
THESIS BINDING
QUICK Copy Center 838 Massachusetts
Telephone 841-4900
However, the city will no longer finance construction costs for storm drainage sewers. Instead, these costs will be paid by private developers.
UNDER THE NEW policy, the city will continue to finance such public improvements as streets, sidewalks and sanitary sewers in new housing areas.
among the commission, local residents and developers over the future of the policy
According to Clark, the revised policy has several advantages: It will reduce costs to the city and taxpayers, continue to encourage construction by small developing companies and improve developers' land use planning.
Clark said the revised policy continues to help small developers because the city would still be paying for the most expensive costs, which are for streets and sidewalks.
The new policy, he said, would also improve developers' land-use decisions because they could no longer rely on the city to subsidize mistakes or poor planning.
KANSAS DIVISIONAL CHAMPIONSHIPS IN FOIL
See the best in Kansas fencing
Saturday & Sunday April 10 and 11
Program starts at 10 a.m. Sat. and 1 n.m. Sun.
1 p.m. Sun.
NO ADMISSION CHARGE ROBINSON GYM
ENROLL NOW
Be a Montessori Teacher
and Program at the Lawrence Public Library, Thurs., April 8, 7:30 p.m.
Presented by
The Montessori Plus Teacher Preparation Center and Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool & Private Kindergarten for Week of the Young Child
This program and demonstration for teachers and parents will also count as orientation for the 1976 summer school Montessori Teacher Preparation & Certificate Course, June 7-20 July. You need not be a college graduate to take this course and earn a Montessori Teacher Certificate. You may do the required nine month internship of student teaching (half days) during the 1976-77 school year in Topeka or at Sunshine Acres in Lawrence as you might work part-time or go to school part-time. Six intakes selected by Sunshine Acres will receive partial tuition scholarships as well as a scholarship-stipend toward their tuition and practice teaching expenses.
--quality travel arrangements since 1951
TEXAS
TOMS
GIANT $1.00 SALE
4 REG. HAMB./*1 4 FRIES/*1
3 ONION RINGS/*1 4 BURRITOS/*1 STEAK/*1
4 TACOS/*1 ROUNDUP BASKET/*1 TENDER/*1
TEXAS TOMS GIANT $1.00 SALE
TEXAS TOMS
EUROPE
Going to Europe this Summer?
If you want to save money, *NOW* is the time to make your travel arrangements. You'll save even more money, time and hassles when you plan your trip through Maupintur Travel Service. We handle literally any amount of travel-related expenses. You can travel to elaborate trips that could include reservations for air flights, hotels, ships, cars, trains, sightseeing excursions, transfers and special events (such as tickets to the Spanish Riding School in Vienna or to a speeched opera House). And our services usually cost you absolutely nothing!
The following FARE chart shows the many air fares that are available. Obviously many of the low fares are very popular. And since seats on all flights are limited, you should make reservations as soon as possible.
Our maupintur Travel Service for all your vacation arrangements. Our 25 year professional experience will help you enjoy a carefree summer in Europe.
Your Travel Agent:
SUA Maupintour travel service
Kansas Union Building/900 Massachusetts
The Malls and Hillcress Shopping Center
9:00-5:00 Mon-Fri & 9:00-12:00 Sat
Telephone 843-1211
Type of Fares Round trip Kansas City-London Round trip Icelandic Chicago-Luxembourg Ticket Validity Minimum Stay
REGULAR FARE $768 $569 No Minimum
W S 810 631 —
P 948 727
22-45 DAY EXCURSION FARE* $531 $370 No Minimum
W S 641 620 —
P 661 521
22 Days
22-45 DAY APEX FARE* $450 $332 No Minimum
W S 464 361 —
P 554 462
22 Days
Tickets must be paid for within 7 days of booking. Reservations, payment and tickling must be completed at least two calendar months prior to departure. Cancellation or change prior to departure will result in a 10% forfeiture of Apex_Fare paid or $50 whichever at higher. Seats on this fare are limited.
YOUTH FARE $477 $376 No Minimum
W S 501 401 —
P 555 451
No Minimum
Age limitation 12 through 21. Reservations will not be confirmed more than 5 days prior to departure.
TRAVEL GROUP CHARTER From $378.53 For Specified Flights Only Must make reservations through your travel agent at least 65 days before departure with minimum deposit of 25%. Balance of fare due 60-65 days before departure. Maximum price cannot exceed 10%, one minimum prices for each charter.
*Weekend Surcharge Applies.* W Winter Season
Exception: No weekends charge on any afries Chicago-Luxembourg.
P Spring Season
Exception: Subject to release without notice. P Fall Season
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. April 7.1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Assessment methods: good, services and employment
assessment. Conducts weekly site visit to assess
work environment, creep, creep at national origin, PARKING,
accessibility and other assessments.
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times times times time
15 words or
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
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 5 p.m.
Friday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
one UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These cards can be placed in person or be called by the UDK business office at 864-4538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
We moved! Our new location is next to MEC,
the gym, where we also ad for a aisle
count. Perform Performance Tests.
LIFE PLANNING WORKSHOP SATURDAY, April 13 in the process of influencing your own future plans. In this workshop you strengthen strucrality needs and define building for the future by developing plans and action strategies for reaching your goals. Costs: $750 United States Center, 1200 Eldred. Cost $65 United States Center, 1200 Eldred.
Full day care and complete child development programs in Kindergarten, 1897 West Sixth St. #382-2279
Employment Opportunities
A job opening for full time research assistant at College Place, 111 Haworth. Data collection, preparing workshop materials, preparing forms, completing evaluation forms. Good typing skills are essential. View application deadline and start date online. View application details and women and men of all races apply. If
Applications now being accepted for student staff at the University Information Center. Deadline: December 15, 2023.
Summer employment. Royal Presale, a nationally diversified company, has summer work available for many positions. Apply up and for. More information come to Student Services. Call 612-740-5800 or visit www.summeremployment.com.
4,900, or 6,000. April 8—11, 1,900, or 4,900, or 6,000. March 4–11, 1,900, or 4,900, or 6,000.
ENTERTAINMENT
Laboratory technicians positions to begin on or have at least one year of undergraduate organic chemistry or a related position for one year at full time rate of $600 per month to Dr. R. B. Davies Dept. Chemical Engineering to Dr. R. B. Davies
The Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club presents the Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club's 24th annual "4-H Fair" ground, Kansas. Demonstrations in silver whiting, rock painting, pottery and floral art will be on Saturday 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS! Drop in and wait for the phone (call us)旁边的 a WEBSTER on
Free rental service. Up to the minute littings of
Lewis & Clark Lawncare, Lawrence,
Rental Exchange, 842-250-2900.
2 bdrm, all ill, paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfurn. free. a/c, pool, bc. 843-6935.
1-l bedroom apartments, room with kitchen private
2- guest room to campus $55 and up ¥65
3- or $85-5007.
Corporated furnished rooms, two blocks to Union Station, 301 East 2nd Street, Suite 800, 215-675-4050, www.nyc.gov/nyc/nycstores/furniture/wright/furniture_800.htm; $40, $60, or $120 per room; New York City residents only.
Insight INTO LIFE
842·4441
RECORDED MESAGE (24h)
Drive-in-clinic for most imported cars
Furnished apartment at 19 W. 14th. Available immediately! 1 bedroom. Beds 853-6427 (officex).
BRAKE
Call for an appointment Service hours
House for rent summer months, 3-5 bedrooms
127. Kurtton, 841-6944, 4-9
Excellent summer renting situation! 150/mo. no gas, no heating, small electric; within 4 miles. 841-5044. 841-5044.
Looking for one or two teenage students in or staff members to share house 3 miles from campus. $100 per month and share utility bills at 4:44:34 during day or 89:45 evening. 4-12
FOR SALE
2 bdm. apt., w-carpet, central air, large kitchen, Great location to Union, 3 dorms, 1600 square feet.
Bubblesize: May 15-August 1. Rooms in beautiful
spacious rooms. 2nd floor. $95. A/c C/Y, panel winder, dryer, $85. ufftilt
air conditioning.
Professor's House—20 May-15 August. 3 bedroom, Central airtel fenced room; grand plantation
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-on products available for the sale, you can purchase from the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFEFS.
Furnished two-bedroom house, quiet neighborhood, private patio, crisperies and tomatoes; inn only. 625-837-1400.
Tremendous selection of guitars, arms, drums,
basses, keyboards, and more. Shop *Hoge Keyboard Studios*. Choose from Gibby,
Amery, Amery Kustom, Green and many others.
Buy now at Walmart.com / Keyboard Studios. 1429 W. Sirtd 943-5077. He Keyboards Studios. 1429 W. Sirtd 943-5077.
COREX 106-99~Servo equipment. All major
models (106-99), 106-99+ and 106-99++
V, A band phones, C. Calvive, Phone 842-
530, V, A band phones, C. Calvive, Phone 842-
530.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of topics. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160 page order; ordering Research Assistance, 2206, Los Angeles, Calif. 9025-413 (227) 417-8748.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialties
Battery Electric, BAL 8495, BAL 8609, W. Gith,
ELECTRIC, 8495-8609, W. Gith, 6 hrs.
Sold per Unit.
Nestern Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
make sense out of Western Civilization!
makes sense to use them—
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Home Appliances at 843-571-8711 & Appliance Center, 704
843-571-8711
3) For exam preparation "New Analyses of Western Civilization" Available now at Town Crier Stores.
WE SELL FOR LESS-11 TO 630. Good used furniture; gas and electric refrigerators; refrigerator units; appliances with 20-year springs have 10 yr warranty. $12 a week. Weekly delivery is $24. Topkapi R. Phone 1-727-3825 or 844-8286.
3 speed Raleigh female's bicycle—one year old—condition $0 and condition $8. Call: 848-8612.
7:30 a.m.- 5 p.m. M-F
1969 Trumpit GT6, good condition, new radials.
Love mileage, must sell $120 or best of two.
Certified Pre-Owned.
1973 Touche College Cella ST. 4' spd. 15. Excellent Cond.
280-843-588, or box write Box 15. 864-374-477
864-383-488, or box write Box 21.
175 Kawasaki 1975, 7 months old. LIKE NEW.
175 Kawasaki 1975, Al Pina 1973, New York,
842-762 after 868.
For Sale: Garned Record Player, 5 years old,
priced cheap Linda Call at 861-661-6
4-7
Beautiful antique tiffany type 27" table lamp.
Beautiful antique tiffany type, lead weighted base
a 49.8 mm, 86-108F.
Several used gun in stock 10% off on all new used gun and shotgun 84-285 at 2 and 5 a.m. afternoon. 84-285 at 3 and 5 a.m. afternoon.
72 Honda CB540 - low mileage. High gold hibs.
Runs good, must sell - 841-2274. 4-8
Martin Hardshell guitar case $5 new. 864-2922
or 864-7656.
1975 Plymouth Duster, Air, automatic, power
powerer 6 cyl. 19,000 miles 843-185-80
**
Attention Pottery: 30 cubic foot. High Firestone ware kiln complete with swinging eyes. 29 kiln capacity. 80' x 40' x 12' location. Lease 50 miles from home and direct delivery. Located in which has three bedrooms, house farm kitchen, which has seven rooms, house studio, and house rental at $120 per month. Phone 91-856-3457; or write: N. R. Box, 242 Overlays, Kana Street, New York, NY 10017.
FINAL CLOSEOUT MICHELIN STEAR XAS
RADIALS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
TAXES. 929. $95. (come thru parking let in
Woolworth for fire service). 4-16
TONY'S IMPORT DATSUN
500 E. 23rd 842-0444
TRANSISTOR RADIO SHOCK! $6.95 pocket size
$30.00. ENTIRE STOCK of MAGNAVX
price cut! POWERFUL SONY with WEATHER
BAND out to $3-$Kay Jewelry
$9.29 Mass. 4-9
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free detail!
Ball Park Baseball
Box 3422-U Lawrence, Kansas 64044
BALL PARK, INC.
Mercedes 10-speed bike also carry car carrier, or separate in speed. Offer: B1 641-7848, after payment of $50.
Glandel Excellence 120 Bags. Stage accreditation.
Excellent accordion. Good finish.
Excellent condition. Best offer. Phone # 864-350-7930.
Reel to reel stool tapes and records—some old,
some new. 841-6158.
4-12
GIBSON LA-S. Natural Grover Pond Hardshell
413-785-2900 at Richard's Music Park
413-785-2900 4-8
$250 $250
SHO-BUO迈威锦 pael steel, 74 all maple body, excellent condition. Call 841-3844. 4-7
MOTORGIA COLOR TV 1975, model used.
MOTORGIA COLOR TV 1975, model used.
Hilton, 2111 Kissel B-103 841-7900 between
B-103 and B-104.
Must sell Sony VR110 (video tape recorder), camera, tape cameras, case, keys 810-645-12
4-12
Honda 500/4 130 miles. Rack and back rest.
Barely broken in. Call 842-6215. 4-13
1865 FORD FAIRLANE. Starts and runs real good, new battery, seat covers, grip racing wheel, snow and regular tires. All windows are clear. Floor mat. 400-924-3180, keep trying. $100 firm. 4-13
Honda 360 CB 1280 Lun, Siy bars, rack and back
Rest. Like New. $850. Mail B4-821-631. 4-13
1975 Dodge Van Merriman, AM-FM stores plus
36 gallon tank control coat. AC aisle heat.
34 gallon tank control coat. AC aisle heat.
ARC Baseliun pu-unual, Intelent African
Arms Corps (APC) Wormed, Warmed, 4-11
4-11 1-985-323-008
Small但 comfortable older mobile home for the elderly. The interior is bright and airy and gas and water paid close to bus. Assistance available.
Stereo: Kenwood receiver, AR speakers, AR
turntable, $400 or best offer, A53-6568. 4R
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS.
74 Yamaha DTE250 74 Honda CR125 70 Honda
Yamaha PES20 74 Bulboque 520 Alpina,
74 Yamaha DT250 76 Honda CR 125, 70 Honda
Yamaha DTE250 80 Honda bt at Horizon 80,
W1 8th, w33 4th, w43
Vega, 1971 Hatchback. 4 speed, excellent condition.
Calls Randy. 841-8456. 4-13
OVERSEAS JOBS - summer/year-round $500,
S. America, Australia, Asia. All fields. $500-
$1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free
transfers. Job location: New York City.
Kailey Box, KA 4900, Box 4490, CA 91704. 4-23
HELP. WANTED
Full and part-time tountain work. Apply in
part at the Vistla Drive-In. 1237 W. Kitch. 4-7
Camera, Minela 101, 28, 158, 135, 200mm,
filter, etc. $60 or best offer; 435-508.
4-13
**WANTED:** TWO HALF-TIME RESEARCH ASSOCIATES (ABC), an international, non-profit research institute for appointments of one-year beginners and assistants for appointments of one-year beginners. Responsibilities will include: 1) legal research involving the use of biological materials and others using scientific biological specimens; 2) management of professional biologists; 3) preparation of application for three short paragraphs dealing replication of
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and
storage. Experience: Preference Call 409-721-6385
or 409-721-6390. Scheduling: $11
-$11
PART TIME-EARN $15 PER WEEK, FOR 12 HOURS
MAJOR LINE: JUNE 8, 1974, BETWEEN 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. FOR INFORMATION
APPLICATION
Teachers at all levels, Foreign and Domestic
Teachers, Box 1063, Vancouver, Canada. 8-99-4
250
Hard labor. $844 per month. Call today, 832-
491. Out East!
Graduate students working on Model's degree
predictions, for example, human problems,
e.g., Dolphins, Sharks, and before room,
their model will be tested before room.
$3.95 per Dozen
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
10 14
TACOS
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
large selection of sizes & prices
9th and Illinois
Casa de Taco
MACRAME BEADS
armadillo bead co.
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
Lust. One gold cross mechanical pencil between Laber and Olver, Award. Call 864-7850 or 812-3669.
Found pair of contact lenses in case at corner of 14 and Kentucky. Call 841-6023 after hours. -49
No one under 18 admitted.
Wanted: part-time small appliance, mechanic.
Mechanical aid necessary. Will训, Call
Mechanic.
LOST AND FOUND
**HELP WANTED:** Kansas Students! Company
recruiting representatives are available. Flexible
requirements, etc. apply.
Calculator found in Strong Hall. Call Bob at 4-7
864-5772.
Part-time or full time hastarder Contact Tom
Bell, Elder Realtor or 843-222-6000 10:44
Lawrence
"Sound" advertisements are sponsored as a public
promotion. The company will pay $10,000 for each
Master Bank IB & PW advertisement. Mail:
9th & Iowa
Found. Calculator in Wesco, 4th floor, Identify. 821,965.
Found: chain bracelet with two chains on it, one
class of Grade 7.845-3029.
4-9
Left Black, female can near building C of Jay-
cee. In front, male can near building A of Jay-
cee. On the manshole, female in front. In rear,
guy on left. In front, guy on right.
NOTICE
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
Mary, I found your keys outside 403 Wescoe,
Call 854-8624 to claim.
4-9
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at the Quick Center. We can make 5 copies of it in action for all of our copying and printing needs at the Quick Center. $88 Massau-
cau.
Gold watch, loc near Robinson gym, Instillus U.K.LT on back. Reward: Call 842-7653 4-9
RECREATION'S FINEST
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used for furniture, dishes,
lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12.30.
445 West 3rd Street, New York, NY 10019
The Cashback Card special Sunday dinner is a Full
Rate. The cashback card special is $10 off per visit.
Also each cash back bill, CIS-2580 for reservation
must be received by 3pm on Friday, November 6th.
"If we don't got it you didn't want
to play it no how!"
Euroline now in Lawrence Driving School. Reserve
vehicle for your child. Vehicle transportation
provided. Drive new, pay later.
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't
come back, he'll be on Mondays. George's Shop
tips:
SPIRITUAL, FILM FESTIVAL: Zen in America—with Suzuki Kuroi; Saibah Bala; Life is His life—with Wesley Clark; Wattie The. Whole Earth Festival—with Ram Dass, Swamp Swan, Toni Morrison, Frida Kahlo, Friday 4, April 9. Showing at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m. $1.10. Sponsored by the University at the United States Center 6-49 1204 Avenue
MOTORCYCLE
CUSTOMIZED MARRIAGE VOWS wanted for
a couple on a farm in Brook
D. Knoxville, TN 37192 given name said
name and wedding date.
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Bengals TO
THE
Gilds and Jewels 800 Mail
Cashback
8439880
Couns learn about 'PEOPLE2 ENERGY PROJ-
laboratory' squeezed by KU's *Vowel Democracies*.
Squeezed by KU's *Vowel Democracies*.
Nancy's Craft Shift. 30 w. Wkth 81. Bl Open Thurs-
days.
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
THE LINE NO
BORDER BELIEVER
KING CROWN SPORTS GERMANY
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SHAZAAM
We Print
ANYTHING!
Sat. 10-4
PORTLAND THEATER
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6
if you don't see it, ASK! »» KING GEORGE'S
Teepee-The Sanctuary
"The Facilities & Service To Make It A Perfect Party"
-CLASS PARTIES-
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
-REHEARSALDINNERS-
SANCTUARY
SANG TLAIRY
Sanctuary Catering 843-054O Ask For Ace
BARN PARTIES-
—FORMALS—
DINNER DANCES
Plan now for summer. Creative World Pre-
school for summer 2019. Special summer pre-
school for summer 2019.
OPPORTUNITIES
Earn $$ with your own home plant party business. A class fee of $150 will consultant will enable you to earn $200 to $300 per week. Ideal for students and housewives. Plant Parties, 160 Volpe, Montville, Pa. 15140
PERSONAL
Beeky—April Fool! Wow, you finally made !!!
Happy 18th kid! Love, love, roomie.
4-7
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous 842-810. if
SERVICES OFFERED
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Come one—Come all. May Day Festival—a weekend of education, conversation, and celebration. A celebration of women in women's films. Music at a Women's Coffee House. Films with volleyball. Free meeting. April 12th. Women's Coition and Commission on the Status of Women. Funded by Student Activity Fees. 4-20
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Provide people with, with para-professional
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Auto repair—tune-ups, summerizing and more at low prices after 6 p.m. Tuesday;Wednesday at 10 a.m. on Thursdays
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First Avenue, Tucker, Ga. 20044 (68)
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TUTOR
Math Tutor with M.A. in mathematics. Call 841-
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Call 841-
TYPING
Experienced typist—term papers,医学, mses, nurse.
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Pat Read
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4-20
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Liberal minded female to share apartment next year Call Brenda, 864-1566. Keep trying! 4:7
WANTED FOR IMPORTANT MEDICAL RESEARCH
Calculator* Texas Instruments T-2150- Will pay
dot or dollar tax Texas-I2512-II-Call 8417-8-47
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Names and address of persons with blue eyes and predominantly blue eyes in family, predominantly brown eyes in family. Results of study will be rea quiet corner
W. B. Triplott, 944 Ky.
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Need female roommate for summer and fall housing. Must be at least 18 years old. Liberal-minded female to share apartment next
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Want to sublease one bedroom duplex for sum-
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Roommate wanted. Grad student preferred. Interested in double down. Plummed roomy, quiet, basement suite. $500 per week.
875 used or rebuilt fathad for 50 Merve. (26)
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10 a.m.-6 p.m. weekdays
10 a.m.-6 p.m. weekdays
Female roommate for summer. 2 bedroom, fur-
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Male roommate wanted, serious room,
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Roommate to share large two bedroom home
Starting 6/17. Prefer mature year-round yea-
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TENNIS PLAYERS-Experienced tennis player wanted for any anytime role. Must be a female player will consider others. Call Norm at 843-2781, please be polite to the oriental house-boy, it is his business.
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Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at
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New Members Available
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DOWNSIDE
— DAYS —
Wave Point—owner
10
Wednesday, April 7, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Downtown keeps historical flavor
When the Lawrence City Commission decided to renovate the downtown area a few years ago, people might have thought the Lawrence they remembered would be gone forever. The response to the project changes, however, has been favorable.
Elfridge F. Rowe, local historian and a Lawrence resident since 1931, said yesterday, "I don't think they took away any information." Lawrence was still there, and that's what is important.
"I think it's wonderful. Downtown is so nice with the flowers blooming and the trees along the street. It wasn't a renovation project, it was a beautification of the area."
The renovation or beautification of the downtown area of Massachusetts from 5th to 10th floor.
"LAWRENCE ORIGINALLY applied for urban renewal funds from the Department of Housing and Urban Development in 1965," Nancy Hambleton, former mayor of Lawrence, said. "When the law changed, we reopened in 1877 under the Neighbourhood Development Program. And however we didn't receive any funding until 1971."
Hambleton said that when the federal
grant finally came, only half the
amount was responsible.
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said the remaining money had to be raised through the city commission and the downtown landowners.
"The total cost of the project was $1,044,000," he said. "The federal grant came to about $550,000, so the Lawrence team had to sponsor bonds totalling $855,000."
The rest of the money came from local taxes.
The beautification program included the replacement of old street lights with mercury vapor lights, placement of street lights in the middle of street blocks, improvement of alleys and repair of many sidewalks. The project also renovated many of the downtown storefronts and parking spaces in the four-block area, Wildgold said.
"WHAT MOST PEOPLE don't realize is that the project went far beyond beautification." Hamblen said. "We had to completely resurface Massachusetts and rebuild the street. We did this to get rid of the flood plane that existed there and to make it safer. We also improved utility wires underground, which improved the utility system there."
Another aspect of the downtown
museum is to improve the corner
site and Massa Lake.
"There used to be a gas station there and the corner didn't look too nice when entering the city from North Lawrence." It really the gateway to downtown Lawrence.
The gas station was replaced by the Town Center, an entwav-plaza to downtown.
On Campus
Events ...
TODAY: THE KANSAS ASSOCIATION OF SECONDARY SCHOOL PRINT-
CPAIR will meet all day in the Jawahawk Room of the Kansas Union.
TONKIGHT: KU COLLEGE REPUBLICANS will meet at 7 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. KU YOUNG DEMOCRATS will meet at 7 in Parlour A of the Union. A program on SPIRITUAL CHANTING will be at 7 in the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread. A MUSEUM OF NATURE HISTORY, PARAMAG, Utilization of Kansas Plants, will be at 7 in the Dove Museum Panorama. The UNIVERSITY SINGERS will perform at 8 in Swarthout Residential Hall
TOMORROW: NOON-HOUR INTERNATIONAL will meet at 11:30 in Alcew F of the Union. FACULTY FORUM will meet at noon in the United Ministries Center, 124D Ourea. A program on WORLD FOOD INFORMATION DAY will be at 1 in the Big Eight room of the Union. HOWARD NEMEROV, American poet, will speak on "What Was Modern Poetry?" at 8 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. ROERT SCRANTON, professor of classical art and archaeology at the University of Chicago, will speak on "City Planning in Classical Antiquity" at 8 in the Council Room of the Union.
Correction...
The Kansas incorrectly attributed the last quote in Monday's women's softball story to Nancy Stout. It should have been attested to coach Sharon Drysdale.
Beauty is only skin deep but
paint PROTECTS your car
John Haddock Ford Body Shop
HUFORD WATSON, city manager, said
concern the project is not yet fully
developed, the beautiful project,
and so far.
FORD MUSTANG
Wildgen said that in order for visitors to Lawrence to see the plaza as they came across the bridge, retaining walls had to be built so the area could be leveled.
paint any car
landscaped with trees and flowers. in the plaza area are flag poles and dainters.
$119^{95}
23rd and Alabama
every car hand sanded
Mechanical civil engi-
neature and space-and aeronautic
engineering majors ... majors
in electronics ... computer
Call 843-3500 for appointment
KUMO KUNJI KOHYO
fering full scholarship. All offering $100 a month at the program, two years of the program. Flying opportunities. And all leading to an Air Force offence plus advanced education.
We're looking for certain majors to become Lieutenants.
The Air Force needs pre-
pared students to acclimatize
academic majors. And
entertain programs where you
can fit it, 4-year, 3-year or
1-year.
"The downtown area represents about 20 per cent of the Lawrence property taxes so felt it was important to maintain it. It's felt it was important for the downtown area," Watson said.
If you'd like to cash in on these Air Force benefits, start by looking into the Air Force ROTC.
"The local merchants were very much in favor of the project," he said. "When Massachusetts was torn up in the summer of 73 they formed a merchant association to advertise that they were still open for business."
Watson said the response to the project by downtown property owners was very good.
in Kansas City and Topahe, we really don't need one here in the middle. We're interested in maintaining and supporting our downtown area."
Despite renovation and expansion in the city, Lawrence is the only town in Kansas with a population over 20,000 that doesn't have an indoor shopping mall.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
WATSON SAID, "We might get an indoor mall someday, but with the shopping malls
Mary Barkley Clark said he was in favor of expanding the downtown renovation to the 600 block on Massachusetts, "I think runny of the old buildings and the mill down there," she added. The Center, should be torn down to improve the looks of the downtown area." Clark said.
7.
DENESDAY EVENING SERIES
APRIL 7
7:30-9:00 p.m.
Dyche Hall
*1.50
UTILIZATION OF
WILD KANSAS PLANTS
Speaker: Dr. Janet Bare
University of Kansas Herbarium
THE HAWK'S NEST
presents
THURSDAY
5:00 ρ.m.-6:30 ρ.m.
'12:30 JAZZ ENSEMBLE'
ALAN SOLLENBERGER, on trumpet
with Featured Soloists:
BRAD STROUD, on trombone
Just Returned from the K.C. Jazz Festival
Level 2-Kansas Union
Produced by SUA
Here's your chance to display your Artistic Ability...
SUA & the Office of Student Affairs Announces:
The Second Annual Student Sculpture Competition now through April 30.
Entry blanks and Rules
are available at the SUA office.
Information and Research Division is expanding to include the following positions which will be involved with a wide variety of applied research and systems activities as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
The Department of Planning and Development Kansas City, Kansas
Skills in written and verbal communication with both technical and non-technical personnel are required. Graduate experience in social science research and understanding of computer utilization in research environment is desirable.
Research/Systems Specialist
Programmer/Analyst
This position requires a thorough working knowledge of FORTRAN and/or COBOL. Programming experience in business applications or research projects is desirable.
Salaries are commensurate with education and experience. These positions offer a wide-range benefit package, flexible working atmosphere, and modern office facilities. We invite all interested applicants to write information and Research Division, Department of Planning and Development, One Civic Plaza, Kansas City, Kansas 66101. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M-F.
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Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Thursday, April 8, 1976
Warm-up staae riaht
Vol. 86 No.119
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
One of the dancers from the American Chamber Balllet warms up shortly before a performance in midafternoon at Hoch Auditorium. The company, which is directed by Bej Benji Kernan, has been scheduled for Monday.
Committees end budget hearings
BARBARA ROSEWICZ
By HARRIS RAYL
Staff Writers
Five of the Student Senate's standing committees that bear funding requests for student groups completed their funding recommendations last night.
The entire Senate will vote on the recommendations next Tuesday and Wendy
—ACADEMIC AFFAIRS was forced to be particularly stringent in its recommendations because it had requests for about twice the amount it had to allocate. The committee heard a total of $38,688 in requisitions, but had not $19,178 to allocate.
The other Senate committee that hears
their own reports to Culture Affairs
finalized its response.
Mark Anthony, Academic Affairs
cochairman, said the committee thought that a lot of the groups deserved substantial funding, so an attempt was made to make the cuts proportional to the groups' sizes.
Many of the cuts were in the area of travel expenses, he said.
THE SPORTS COMMITTEE approved the funding recommendations submitted to it by the Recreational Advisory Board, a team of six advisors decides on allocations to KU sports clubs
The Undergraduate Anthropology Club was cut substantively. Anthony said the club was given particular scrutiny because this was the first year it had requested regular Senate funds. The club requested $2,277, but was allocated just $165.
The board had recommended Tuesday the following allocations, with requests in parentheses. Soccer (Bush), $800 ($780); Basketball (Bush), $804 ($1,674.4); Cricket Fencing (Bush), $804 ($1,674.4); Cricket
★★★
Subcommittee to consider Senate funding for KUAC
The subcommittee has been created by a resolution passed earlier in the night by the Senate, which included the committee member, submitted the resolution, which also favors the Senate's cut of KUAC funding last fall and directs the subcommittee to have its members will have on athletic ticket sales next fall.
Tedde Tasheff, student body president,
said last night the bill would be sponsored
by John Broadie, Sports Committee
chairman.
Shapiro said he would like the subcommittee to investigate how KUAC spends its money.
A bill that would reinstate some Student Senate funding of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation will be submitted newly created ticket subsidy subcommittee.
"I'd like to get students into the program (KUAC) and get them to be an integral part of the job."
money and make sure that students are involved," he said.
Tasheff, who favors Broadie's bill that would reinstate about $2.50 of every student's activity fee to KUAC, said she thought the subcommittee's investigation could go on regardless of whether funding was cut.
Club, $258.70 ($600.37); and Intramurals,
$28.81 (the same).
She said the Senate should concern itself with the prices students will have to pay for her classes.
THE FINANCE AND Auditing committee, which considers the Senate's own budget request, allocated $40,709 to the Senate; $42,234 was requested.
"I think that it's our first responsibility to provide this year's students with the best deal on ticket prices possible," Tasheff said.
Jill Grubaugh, Sports committee co-chairman, said Clyde Walker, athletic director, had said he had been disappointed with the loss last fall, but that it wouldn't affect KIAC.
When the Senate decided to cut KUAC last fall, Walker had said that ticket prices were too high.
A block allocation, which is given to many of the larger groups funded by Senate, guarantees a group a certain dollar amount of every paid student activity fee.
Sports also approved the $3,015 athletic allowance for the KU women's basketball team.
Randy McKernan, committee chairman, said the biggest cut resulted from the committee's recommendation to discontinue paying three senators who represent the Senate on the University Council. In the past, they were each paid $250.
THE STUDENT SERVICES Committee made its $23,300 budget recommendations for 10 student organizations in a five-hour meeting.
Fate of KU fiscal bill uncertain
Staff Writer
Rv.IIM CORR
TOPEKA- Action must be taken today by the Kansas House of Representatives if the University of Kansas 'fiscal 1977 appropriations are to be considered before the legislature's first adjournment, tentatively scheduled for this afternoon.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said he hoped to learn more about the appropriations' status today after a Senate-House of committee discussion discussed the bill last night.
The recess probably will last one to two weeks.
Dykes again stressed that there was a close relationship between higher education funding and public school funding in the minds of some legislators.
AFTER LEAVING the conference committee, the bill will be sent to the House floor again where the full House will vote on it. The board must accept committee recommendations.
He said that if the spending limits of public schools were made lower than the 7 per cent limitation already approved, then KU's funding should remain stable at
If attempts to cut proposed salary or operating, expense increases for state schools are made, they probably were made. If efforts by the university, which hasn't yet released its report,
present levels. The proposed increases are 8 per cent for faculty salaries and 10 per cent for staff salaries.
DYKES DESCRIBED the situation in the legislature as "unsettled" and said he hoped "that things would jell over there" after last night's meeting.
cigarette tax by 1 cent a pack, with proceedence paid to KU Medical cancer research.
**HUT**, HE SAID, if the public schools' limitation were cut to 5 per cent or 6 per cent, an effort would be made in the House to be under the Board of Regents, including KU.
The original version of the bill, written by the Senate Ways and Means Committee, earmarked revenue raised by the tax to be used by the Med Center. That provision was later removed, but might be added back to the bill in the House.
A further complication in the public school finance bill came yesterday when the county voted to send the bill to a new conference, which had recommended approval of a Senate version of the bill, but committee members reported that they were in disagreement.
The committee left $50.40 unallocated after it agreed on budgets for the student organizations. The money will serve as a contingency fund for Student Services
ANOTHER BELL that could have a major impact on the University was approved by the Board.
The committee appropriated $50 apiece to seven organizations to supplement costs of the project.
"We don't know what will happen,"
Does she say it all depends on what happens in the future?
IF THE PROVISION isn't added to the bill, it is possible that the tax funds might be used for other purposes.
Ed Rolfs, the committee member who proposed the funding, said the $5 should be allocated for phones funded by the Student Senate because the new KANS-A-N phone service would increase long-distance phone bills.
The bill is expected to raise about $2.95 million and increase the cigarette tax to 12 percent.
ORGANIZATION Absented Requests
Student Services Committee 2,932.30 2,568
Commission on the Status of Women 4,027.30 2,550
Commission on the Status of Women Aid 4,027.30 2,550
Douglas County Legal Aid 9,649.00 9,649.00
Douglas County Legal Aid 9,649.00 9,649.00
ECRA 1,077.00 1,022.24
ECRA 1,077.00 1,022.24
Native American Alliance 1,228.00 1,550.00
Women's Coalition - Women's Center 1,778.00 3,206.00
Women's Coalition - Women's Center 1,778.00 3,206.00
Communications Committees 0 10,194.00 10,294.00
KJK-RP Radio School 10,904.00 10,294.00
Total 79,684.00 79,384.00
Amtrak Athletic School 11,779.00 14,290.00
Engineering School Council 11,779.00 14,290.00
Black American Law Students Association 365.00 3,200.00
Black Teenagers School Council 108.00 3,200.00
SCREMER School Council 1,518.00 3,100.00
Kansas Association for Women Engineers 935.00 2,400.00
Alpha Gamma Rho Civil Engineering Club 113.00 3,200.00
Alpha Gamma Rho Civil Engineering Club 113.00 3,200.00
Chicago Law Student Association 45.00 45.00
Architecture and Urban Design Student Group 686.00 6,816.00
Graduate Student Council 9,018.00 9,018.00
Graduate Student Social Worker 686.00 686.00
Grade 12 Philosophy Club 150.00 130.00
Chancery Club 170.00 170.00
Undergraduate Philosophy Club 77.00 900.00
Airline Attorneys 116.00 1,928.00
Black Business School Council 10,194.00 10,294.00
The bill would increase the Kansas
Organizations to receive the extra $50 for long-distance calls are: Campus Veterans, Consumer Affairs Association, KUY, MECHA, Native Americans Alliance, Volunteer Clearing House and the Women's Coalition-Women's Center.
AN EXTRA $1,500 was also allocated to
See SENATE page 8
Board fines 7 males accused of streaking
Staff Writer
By BILL UYEKI
Discipline action was taken last night against seven males who allegedly participated in a streaking incident at Miller Scholarship hall last week.
Fines have been assessed against members of Pearson scholarship hall who allegedly streaked into Miller scholarship hall the morning of April 1, according to Jay Lindley, Manhattan senior and president of the All Scholarship Hall Council (ASHC).
The action was taken at a three-and-a-half hour opening of the All Scholarship Hall Judicial Hearing.
Seven males, allegedly all from Pearson, streaked into Miller Hall, Lindley said, despite the protests of Elizabeth Green, Miller resident director.
A Pearson resident who wished not to be identified said only six of the streakers were from Pearson Hall. One is from out-of-town, he said.
If the alleged streakers, who weren't identified, attend a Miller Hall meeting next week and apologize, they will be fired $300,000. The police say that for each alleged streaker who doesn't attend the meeting, he said. All monies from the fines will go to the ASHC treasury.
Daryl Webb, Hutchinson senior and proctor of Pearson, said that the streaking wasn't what Miller residents complained about.
"The point was that supposedly the streakers had entered forcibly," he said. Green, contacted at Miller Hall, said the streakers as a whole not to comment on the matter.
Lindley said that the judicial board reviewed cases for the ASHC, and that this was the first case in a long time that wasn't a contract dispute.
The board comprises one representative from each of the eight scholarship halls. It also has two advisers, who don't vote. They are Kirk McALEXander, assistant to the dean of men, and Julie Gordon, assistant dean of women.
"The judgment was made solely by students," Lindley said.
Two Pearson residents had admitted earlier that they had attempted to forcibly enter Miller Hall later the morning of April 1. The board recommended that contracts for the two residents not be renewed for next year, Lindley said.
Concentrated language programs rigorous, demanding for students
By JULIE WILLIAMS
Staff Writer
It's a little like going to boot camp.
That's how one University of Kansa language professor describes the intensive language program in his department. The programs are designed to fulfill the 16-credit hour requirement in one or two semesters, depending on the language.
The departments of French and Italian, Spanish and Portuguese, and German languages and literatures are those that will be offered language programs during the school year.
The department of Oriental languages and literatures offers an intensive program
THE PROGRAM was first conceived in the department of French and Italian in
"The program was created to give people an alternate chance in obtaining proficiency of the language so they could do it in one place, and then spread to it over four," he said.
He said it also allowed students, who hadn't had any French before coming to KU, to major in French without being limited to prerequisite coursework in the required French. He taught eight students from the intensive program became French majors each year.
spring 1972 to give students an alternative to the traditional four semesters of French, Robert Anderson, assistant professor of French, said yesterday.
Kansan wins All-American
"THE STUDENTS study together, work together and help each other so much that a teacher will never be left alone."
This is the 15th conventive semester that the Kansan has received an All-American rating, the highest given by the Associated Collegiate Press.
The University Daily Kansas has received an All-American rating from the Associated Collegiate Press for the fall semester of 1975.
The German curriculum includes two intensive courses, one in the fall semester, equivalent to two semesters of German, and a course in the spring which is comparable to three semesters, Helga Vigliano, German lecturer, said.
"We started with six people about five years ago. Now there are usually 18 to 30 students, though it varies from year to year," Anderson said.
To receive an All-American, a newspaper or magazine must win marks of distinction in four of the categories. news coverage and content editing, editorial leadership, physical appearance and photography. The
Enrollment has steadily increased in the intensive French program, he said, although there were fewer students enrolled this semester than in the fall.
It's been about four years since the intensive language program was developed in the department of Germanic languages and literatures.
derson said. "They can concentrate more on the material."
Dennis Ellsworth, who is now working for the Associated Press in Tokyo and is a visiting professor in semester. Cindy Long, who is now working for the Packer, a publication of the Vance Publishing Corporation in San Francisco, Kan., was business manager
Kansan won the mark of distinction in all categories except editorial leadership.
The Kansan was one of more than 2,000 college publications evaluated,12 per cent of which received the All-American rating.
In the German curriculum, as in other concentrated programs, the students focus on one subject which helps them learn the more quickly and efficiently, she said.
"WE STARTED the program because there seemed to be students who wished to become more immersed in the language, but I think next to being in "Carmen," she said.
*'Students get to know each other very well and there is a sort of group spirit among them.*
Katherine Harris, Overland Park sophomore, said she enrolled in the intensive course because she had heard it was the best way to learn German.
"I think that as far as the course goes, it is hard, but it's worth it," she said. "I'm not."
See INTENSIVE page 2
9
Water hazard
Last night's building storm was sure to follow when the department of buildings and grounds set up an obstacle course of pipes
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
and water sprinklers in the Wescoe courtyard yesterday. Mary Ruan, Leavenworth graduate student, was forced to hurdle one of the students as they tried to get to the water.
2
Thursday, April 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
China gets new premier
10KYO-Mao Tse-tung reportedly raised Hua Kuo-feng to the posts of premier and party first the chancellor yesterday, making Hua his personal choice to be the prime minister.
The 86-year-old Hua, a Mao protege from his own Hunan Province, steps into the premierehip the late Chou En-lai had hoped would go to Teng Hsiao-ping. Premier Chou died Jan. 8, and Hua, then security chief, was named acting premier in mid-February. His latest promotions make him the No.2 man in China.
Teng, 72, has been under official criticism as a capitalist since Chou's death. He was stripped of the powerful positions of first vice president, vice chairman of the People's Liberation Army and National Party.
The leadership changes were a victory for the radical forces epitomized by Mao's wife Chiang Ching against the moderate realist side represented by Chou and Teng. The radicals believe that class struggle must continue to dominate life and the radicals favor setting aside such differences in order to make economic progress.
Harris slows campaign
WASHINGTON—Former Oklahoma Sen. Fred Harris has decided to withdraw from active campaigning for the Democratic presidential nomination, sources
But, they said, all of Harris's active campaigning for votes in the remaining Democratic primary elections will cease.
Harris will remain a declared candidate and will continue to seek the nomination at the Democratic National Convention in New York in July, the sources said.
U.S. conflicts on Israeli aid
WASHINGTON—Another conflict between the Ford administration and Congress over U.S. policy in the Middle East cropped up yesterday when Ford said it would impose a five-year ban on oil exports from Iran.
The Senate included an additional $500 million in a $5.6 billion foreign aid package. The funds are earmarked for Israel as part of $772 million that the Senate
Ford said the extra funds weren't needed to meet the needs of the recipients. The fiscal 1976 and 1977 budget requests provide sufficient levels of assistance to meet those needs.
Senate supporters have said the funds are essential to support Israel's already strained economy.
Sen. Edward W. Brooke, R-Mass, said that if Ford vetoed the foreign aid bill, the United States would be "on the brink of a major executive-congressional
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., said Secretary of State Henry Kissinger had told him there was no objection to the additional funds for Israel.
"The secretary of state informed me that he would not object to providing Israel with the funds that President Ford now wishes to meet." Humphrey said.
KCC allows gas to rise
the increase is designed to offset a wholesale gas price increase granted to Cities Service Gas Co. by the Federal Power Commission.
TOPEKA—The Kansas Corporation Commission yesterday gave four utilities the authority to increase retail natural gas prices.
KCC chairman G. T. Van Bebber said the increase would enable the companies to recover only the increased cost of gas sold to them. He said the cost to Kansas consumers would have no effect on the net income of the rate of return earned by the retail utilities
Van贝勒 said the Union Gas System had been authorized to pass on an increase of $1,205,483; Kansas Power and Light Co. $987,474; Commercial Pipe Line Co. $205,566.
Senate acts on request
TOPEKA—The Kansas Legislature reacted quickly yesterday to a request from TOPEKA. Gen. Curt Schneider that the courts be given greater say on when mental health providers are permitted to work with children.
An amendment was prepared for a bill passed by the House and on the Senate's debate calendar. It provides the mechanism for a court hearing whenever a jury in a case is found guilty.
and Sen Wayne Zimmerman, R-GLade, was prepared to offer the announcement, and Sen. Robert K talking, I-Rola, planned to carry the bill on the Senate floor this week.
The amendment would provide that within 15 days after notice is given that a mental patient is to be released, the prosecutor in the county in which the crime occurred must take into account the fact that the accused
The court could set the hearing and order the patient held until the hearing is conducted. At the conclusion of the hearing, the judge would be empowered to order the patient not released if it was shown the patient continued "to be a danger to others." If such wasn't shown, the judge could order the release to proceed.
The action came after Schneider wrote legislative leaders to point out what law enforcement officials consider a problem.
"I am not convinced that the present procedure assures the citizens of this state the protection they are entitled to when an individual who commits a heinous crime has been convicted."[2]
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
Royal Prestige, a nationally diversified company has summer work available in many areas of the state
of the state.
$150^{00}$ per Week and Up
For more information, come to:
For more information, come to:
Student Union—International Room
Wed., April 7 — 2:00, 4:00 or 6:00
Thu. April 9 11:00, 1:00 or 2:00
Thurs., April 8—11:00, 1:00 or 3:00
SUA Film Chairperson Interviews
Interviews for 1976-77 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Tuesday, April 13. If you are interested please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time by Monday, April 12.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
Animated Series Chairperson
Childron Series Chairperson
About 300 bicyclists will pedal 25 miles Saturday to raise money for the American Diabetes Association during "Diabetes Bike-A-Thon Day."
Sud Moore, University of Kansas football coach, is honorary chairman of the bike-a-don, wich is sponsored by the Allan Clubs and Diabetes Unit of Lawrence.
Classical Series Chairperson
The event will start at 9 a.m. at Deerfield School. Riders will follow a marked route that begins at Princeton Road, continues along Peterson Road and Kasold Drive to county road 438, and then swings back to Deerfield.
Bike-a-thon to aid diabetes
Popular Series Chairperson
Summer School Series Chairperson
First aid and refreshments will be available at five checkpoints along the route, John Michel, publicity chairman, said yesterday. A free lunch will be provided at 2 p.m. at Deerfield, after the ride.
Science Fiction Series Chairperson
learning German much better than if I had taken it over a year and-a-half. I couldn't concentrate on the language as well if I had split it up for other courses."
From page one
Diabetes is one of the leading causes of death in the United States. The number of people afflicted with the disease is increasing, and 600,000 cases of diabetes were reported.
Intensive . . .
**true** will be awarded to cyclists who raise the most money and have the greatest market value.
Publicity Chairperson
MICHAEL, SAID each bicyclist had several sponsors who had pledged a small con-
"Intensive Spanish is better in terms of a learning experience and in terms of the efficiency of teaching as far as the students are concerned," Jon Vincent, associate professor and associate chairman of the department, said.
Michel said that what concerned him most about the effects of the disease was the fact that he had to treat it himself.
"THEY HAVE to follow a very rigid schedule and watch everything they eat," he said.
AN INTENSIVE language program that attempts to recreate the environment of the foreign country is one goal of the department of Spanish and Portuguese.
Anyone interested in entering the bike-
athon or sponsoring a rider can contact
Michel at 864-1570 or Bill Duncan, chairman,
at 843-6037.
Jana Johnson, University City, Mo. senior, said she had liked the accelerated pace and the course curriculum when she took the intensive language program.
VINCENT SAID, however, that the intensive programs took a lot of time out of the students' schedules and that it was just easier for them to learn if they had enough time to teach in-depth courses.
In addition to offerings of romance language programs, the department of Oriental languages and Literatures provides courses in the foreign language of the others. It is offered in the summer.
Robert A. Burton, chairman of the department and approximately 10 students (six women) in his faculty.
Burton said he expected more students in the program this summer because KU's Oriental languages department received national publicity for its summer program.
"We expect to have more students than ever before," he said, "because KU is the only school in the Big Eight that's offering Chinese and Japanese in the summer."
HE SAID that it was much easier and more effective to take a language in a concentrated form, but that most of the student's time should be devoted to course work.
"You shouldn't plan anything else outside of the class and laboratory work. Since it's intensive, if you miss one or two days you're really behind," he said.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 8, 1976
3
Food awareness day seen as only a start
By JANICE EARLY
Staff Writer
The Rev, Matthew Habiger, a member of the World Hunger Awareness Coalition (WHAC), said yesterday that he agreed with criticism that today's World Food Day activities weren't going to solve the problem of world hunger.
"But it's a start." he said.
WHAC is sponsoring an information fair today, with booths representing subjects from food stamps to gardening, from 1 p.m. to the Big Eight Room of the Kansas University.
A special World Food Day meal is
provided by the United Ministries
building, 1294 Organ
After the dinner, a panel of KU faculty, Kansas farmers and State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence and chairman of the House Agriculture Committee, will discuss "What is the Role of Kansas and Higher Education in the World Food Issue?"
Habigare's statement was in response to comments made last week by Roy Laird, professor of political science and Slavic and Soviet area studies, who said that the activities of KU students in observing World Food Day wouldn't accomplish anything.
"These skip-a-lunch days to feed the hungry in the world won't help," Laird said, "because they fail to face up to the reality of the problem."
Laird said the problem of world hunger primarily stemmed from foolish, short-sighted policies imposed on farmers, by their governments.
The main reason nations aren't producing adequate food to supply their populations, Laird said, is that their governments are practicing policies of "disincentives."
"The land may be there and the potential for increasing yields may be there, but the peasant farmers would be penalized to buy fertilizer." Laird said.
HE SAID that politicians of rural nations
expense of decreasing the standard of
labor.
living, such as leaving large tracks of land uncultivated and not controlling prices.
Because the farmers have no organic fertilizer, Land said, nothing is done about the pollination is done about the policies.
He said activities like World Food Day only point out that "we're the gluttons of the world." He said he disagreed with the attitude that "if we would just stop eating so well it would go a long way toward solving the problem of world hunger."
LAIRD HAS been asked to write a chapter on the problem of world hunger for a book to be published by the Iowa Food Center. He will be a panelist in a world food conference held in New York. Laird said he was in favor of conferences like the one at Iowa State this summer.
HABIGER COMPARED the role of the United States in the world hunger problem to that of England in the American Revolution.
Habiger said that the objective of World Food Day was to "eliminate world hunger, but to raise awareness in people's minds of the vastness of the problem.
"Two hundred years ago, during the American Revolution, there was a great cry among patriots that England was abusing the colonists. They were taking advantage of our work, our land, and we threw off our exploiters.
"Iagree that skipping a meal in a dorm is only a drop in the bucket." Habig said, "but it might lead to an awareness that we must change our lifestyles."
"After World War II, the United States emerged as a great world power. Because of foreign investment, and tremendous influence abroad, especially in developing nations, we have become England," he said.
Habiser said it was WHAC's objective to make awareness of the world hunger problem a part of the University's thinking and curriculum.
"We have got to be part of the solution," he said.
SUA art shows still have future
SUA officials say they haven't discontinued plans for future programs related to the arts, despite low attendance at the festival. It is also a part of this year's Festival of the Arts.
But Miller said all three performances were well-received by the audiences, and the performers enjoyed their KU appearances.
"It will be at least a week until we can account for all expenses and make any sort of decisions."
Attendance was estimated by Mike Miller, SUA adviser, to have been 200 at the Chicago Chamber Orchestra concert Sunday night, 120 at the George Pimbleton Monday night and 450 at the American Chamber Ballet performance last night.
Cancellations for performances by Lionel Hampton and Herbie Hancock eliminated the cost to SUA of publicizing and presenting the two shows. Miller said.
Even though plans for this year's festival bad to be canceled, Miller said there was still a possibility SUA could break even financially.
The SUA Board is giving a lot of thought to programs in the arts for next year, he backs.
salt
How the board's meeting Tuesday night,
Howard Collinson, Lawrence sophomore
and 1976-77 SUA Board fine arts members, the group presented a new presentation emphasizing the arts.
Collison said he questioned the feasibility of the festival as it existed now, and proposed a three-week program encompassing activities in the fine arts that already existed at KU. The three weeks involved by guest lecturers and performers.
But no definite plans have been set by SUA for next year's fine arts programs.
"The Board, as a whole, did not vote on the issue, but it looks like it could be a very feasible program." Rosalea Postma, Lawrence junior and SUA president, said.
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Protest art show casual
In mild protest of the annual Scholarship Art Show, a group of KU students is presenting "a less structured and more casual" show tomorrow in Oread Hall.
Heap-of-Birds said that he, Larry Wutterworth, Topeka senior, and Shirley Scheier, Leawood senior, were coordinating the nonprofit show because "the other show seems to show more developed work by upperclassmen so that freshmen and sophomore are left out" and because "the other doesn't encourage women to compete."
Edgar Heap-of-Birds, Wichita senior, said Friday the show would primarily give underschramen an opportunity to exhibit their skills and print books. Few sculptures are expected.
A faculty committee from the art and design departments selects the art to be in the Scholarship Art Show, and makes recommendations for student awards, he
Heap-of-Birds, who won the Ward Lock-wood award in last year's Scholarship Art Show, said there would be no judging, and anyone was welcome to contribute art.
Michael Ott, associate professor of painting and sculpture, said an increase in people interested in art limited the selection of participants.
The Scholarship Art Show will be April 21 through May 7 in the Kansas University Gallery.
Admittance to both shows is free. Purchases may be made of works at the Scholarship Art Show by contacting the artists.
William Inge Theatre presents Mark Twain's COLONEL SELLERS April 7-10 8:00 p.m. Box Office 864-3982 Partially funded by the Student Activity Fee
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GET HUNGRY AT NIGHT?
And who doesn't? Here at Naismith is a complete line of vending machines with a wide slection and variety of choices available 24 hours a day. That may not sound important now, but come this winter when it's cold and blowing it will be mighty nice to be able to get a hot sandwich or a pack of cigarettes at 3 in the morning without having to leave the building.
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---
"Truly the Most Wonderful Happening in Lawrence."
--Gene Chalet Showtime
11 a.m. till Closing Nightly
April 1 to April 30
4
Thursday, April 8, 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Amtrak cut untimely
Lawrence's passenger train system could become only a memory by the end of this year. Decisions affecting the railway are now being considered in Washington.
PRESIDENT FORD has proposed a $60-million budget cut in Amtrak funds for the fiscal year 1977. If it is approved, 19 Amtrak lines, including the Chicago-Houston route through Lawrence, will be discontinued.
The cut would bring an end to the Lone Star route which passes through Lawrence at 1:15 a.m. In 1974, the monthly average of passengers getting on and off at Lawrence was 521.3. A slight increase to 522.9 was shown in 1975. Many of these passengers are University of Kansas students who find the route particularly valuable at vacation times.
THE ROUTE, though, is operating at an annual loss of $5 million to $7 million. This loss, along with the bankruptcy of the Penn Central and the financial deficits of other Amtrak routes, has caused some to speculate that no passenger train system can be profitable. But what must not be forgotten is that Amtrak is not a dying transportation system.
In January 1975, 16,376 people used Amtrak's nationwide service. By January 1976, this figure was up 9 per cent to 17,868 passengers. This may not be surprising, but it does prove that it is a start and there is no reason to believe that the trend won't continue.
DURING THE PAST few years, Amtrak has been improving the system by replacing outdated equipment, bad wiring and other problems. Whether these changes will increase the
railroad's popularity probably can't be determined for a few years. By that time, though, it is hard to say how many breakwalls will have been forced to continue.
Whatever happened to the effort to improve and expand mass transportation systems? As long as the gas shortage scare continued, the railroad system was seen as a valuable means of drawing people away from private cars. But suddenly the gas reappeared and everyone was happy.
IF THINGS continue, someday there will be a fuel shortage that won't disappear once pressure is exerted upon oil companies. At that time, alternatives to privately-owned vehicles will be available; an onshore portation system is discontinued now, a new system may need to be built later at an enormous cost.
The Amtrak route through Lawrence has offered a valuable service to both the community and the University. And if the proposed experimental route from Washington, D.C. to Denver through the wawawaw system would have been the system could become even more popular. Who knows, maybe someday it would even be profitable.
What the system needs is time to prove itself. It needs a chance to show that a passenger train system can become a feasible alternative to cars explained by Mark Rindom. Penetrances can be very influential factors in reaching a decision. When deciding to discontinue the Amtrak route, if care isn't taken, the monetary figure could cloud all other contributing factors.
By Marne Rindom
By Marne Rindom 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.
Economic swell apropos
Bicentennial: Of two minds
In an effort to remind television viewers just how hackeyed the topic of America's birthday is, a guest on the Johnny Carson show displayed an image of a woman in golden eagles, Liberty Bells, presidential portraits and banality.
WHAT HAD BEEN mildly ridiculous became absolutely absurd when he reached the finale of the collection and described the ultimate in the market of American art. He seemed with a picture of George Washington on it. A cattle breeding company had evidently thought it necessary to contribute to the deluge of the exhibition, but no one of "the father of our country," appropriately enough, on its product.
EVERY AMERICAN should know that capitalism is implicit in the democracy that we are so fervently celebrating. The summer when we begin the end of school painfully long birthday party, capitalism and democracy will be congratulating each other and hoping to cohabitate. 200 years of peaceful cohabitation.
Nevertheless, as we draw near to the Fourth of July and manufacturers respond accordingly by further inflating the bicentennial market, this commercialism should be seen from yet another perspective, the defensive.
Because capitalism is so inextricable from the American way of life, what better way is there to celebrate than by giving the system a boost with a large
There is no escape! It seems the buycentennial is everywhere.
A MARKET GLUTTED with bicentennial memorabilia is the result of an economy whose natural inclination is to increase consumerism. We're simply exhibiting a talent for feeding capitalism what it thrives on. You might say we're feeding ourselves our own birthday cake.
dose of that elixir of the economy commercialism.
It's quite a logical thing to do, sort of like Jack LaLanne celebrating his birthday by doing calcisthenics or Fred Aitaire dancing on his birthday.
We're simply doing what comes naturally in a capitalistic society.
In a manner that only our affluent society is capable of, Americans are exploiting their country's own humble nature to build an economy based on capitalism. A plethora of Madison Avenue ideas has materialized into every conceivable type of bienticament item to satisfy the needs of nation addicted to commercialism.
CRITICS OF THE bicentennial market should keep in mind that commercialism and its cohort, the economic instincts of this nation.
The bicentenial celebration will soon begin to fade, and manufacturers will phase out golden eagle decals and plastic Liberty Bells. Some people will have the unusual collections of birthday souvenirs. Others will have only one or two items.
Either way, millions of Americans will have helped feed an economy that is ever hungry for more birthday cake.
Celebration lacks unity
By Becel Breining Staff Writer
It seems ludicrous that minority groups should be criticized for not participating in the bicentennial celebration as it now stands.
LOCAL AND national bicentennial organizers have proclaimed ignorance of why minority groups shouldn't rush into the party and cheer all of our common experience over these glorious 200 years.
Clence Hills, chief of the county bicentennial organization, said recently, "I don't feel we're supposed to make separate activities for blacks and whites." We might just something to celebrate the things we have in common, not our differences."
And W. Sitt Robinson, chairman of the KU bicentennial group said of Indians, "Their heritage has been key and they should take time to look at it."
Whoopee! With this kind of foregish, it's not hard to see why there is an almost total lack of participation in the bicentennial by blacks and Indians in Lawrence. Bicentennial seat toes and dinners with great and wonderful experiences will be the liberty of the United States do not appeal to people who have met with little but injustice and oppression in the nation's formative years.
GEORGE GRIFFT, curator of the Kansas Collection, pointed out that the bicentennial ought to highlight, not mention, the different cultures and peoples.
"I'm not interested in parades, bells and picnics," he said. "I see a lot of celebration but not much reflection. I don't see any bienticual activities that get at the crux of being an American on one hand and being a
member of a minority group on the other."
A NATIONAL celebration of “bienvenious” proportions cannot afford to overlook such basic questions. Students must learn the opportunity to learn more about each other's cultures through examining the differences that were present 200 years ago.
Black and Indian history has been sorely maligned. Precisely because we attempted to adhere to the melt pot theory to the point of collision, most of the work of minority history other than George Carver and the Tuskegee Institute.
PERHAPS THROUGH a little reflection and attempts at communication, the bicentennial could mark a period in which we truly learned some of the heritage and experiences that have culturally shaped our lives. Our understanding could learn more about the source of the mind-set of white Middle America.
Hills says that "the bicentennial here is open for everyone, but we're not going to shove it down anyone's throat." But in its present form, that means that we can get minorities or, for that matter, most thinking Americans involved.
So far, the bicentennial groups have shown a singular lack of imagination and proper direction. But both sides really should be trying to increase the scope of the celebration through information and understanding. Such would make the rest of the bicentennial salebale almost worth it.
By Betty Haegell
Associate Editor
Bv Betty Haegeli
Hughes secrecy satisfying
I never really believed Howard Hughes would die.
Somehow, I thought he would always be around, giving birth to rumor and material to stand-up comics. of course if I ever would have sat down and thought the thing out, I would have realized the man was mortal. But then that isn't one
of those things you sit down and think about very often.
HOWARD HUGHES was an American institution. He had become, over the past decade or two, a legendary and mythical writer whose sort of like reading Santa Claus had been assassinated or
a unicorn had escaped from the zoo.
He is going to go down in American folklore with such past greats as Amela Earlart and William Barker, certain feynesses about him.
enough times in enough newspapers and magazines for the entire literate population of America. Howard Hughes is dead. But
WASHINGTON--By next fall almost every one of us will have been frightened into taking the flu vaccination. No matter what the outcome, next winter we'll be happy we took the shots and
Flu shot mania just a symptom of sick dependence on doctors
the activities of the wealthy;
Hughes was a billionaire and
the richest or second richest
of his time; his family are
usually curious and love to
pediatricians and older people have gerontologists, for the stages of life have become a sequence of medical conditions.
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
We are never supposed to be out of a doctor's care. The radio
THESE ARE bothersome thoughts because we do live in what Ilich calls a medicalized society. Medicine isn't the affair of the sick alone. Sick or well, you go to the doctor. You are not alone. Some are born and, if you're unhappy, your health problems begin with the doctor X-raying your little fetal body. There is a doctor-specialist for every age group. Babies have
TUESDAY'S KANSAS City Times, for example, described the late billionaire as a "slender, good-looking 6-footer with a neat mustache in his most recent photos. This is one of my favorites misleading—the most recent images were taken in 1951.
One way or another, all roads lead to the hospital, a place where many are called to enter and few are permitted to leave. "The average frequency of hospitals was higher than in all industries but mines and highrise construction," Ilch tells us, but who doesn't know? Hospitals are so feared that their reputations alone must contribute to killing their patients. In a stroke victim, sitting in a hospital bed—you can't talk—but you know the chances are one out of 10 or one out of 15, you
"The combined death rate for scarlet fever, diphtheria, whooping cough and measles from 1800 to 1965 for children up to the age of five was about one percent of the total decline in the death rate over this period had occurred before the introduction of antibiotics and vaccines against diphtheria," or so writes Ivan Illich, one of our most perceptive and original social critics. The same can be said with tuberculosis. Improved nutrition, bringing with it a higher resistance, seems to offer a better explanation for some of these diseases than the work of our modern medicine.
DONALD J. RICHARDSON
IF A MILLION die from fire, we'll tell ourselves it would have been two million without the vaccinations. If next winter comes, we won't be able to say we'll the shots saved us entirely, and maybe they will have, but there's reason to think we give medicine more credit for the control of each infectious disease than the evidence warrants.
Howard Hughes' mystique will outlive us all, and may never be as strong as my stigue traditionally in my life because Hughes was involved in so many things that traditionally fascinate and obsess themselves.
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) King Features
CONSIDERABLE DOURT exists that inviting people who feel good to get check-ups helps them. “A review of two dozen studies shows that these diagnostic procedures—even when followed by high level medical therapy—have no impact on survival, writes Ilyin in an excellent little book called “Medical Nemesis: The Expropriation of Health.” “Ironically, the serious asymptomatic disorders which this kind of screening alone can discover allow illnesses in which early treatment aggravates the patient’s physical condition.”
and the television tell us to get our lungs X-rayed, to get our lumps palpitated, our blood pressure down, to put off medical examination just because we feel good. Patients aren't just sick people; they are all people. The healthy person is not an anomaly, he's routine.
grateful to the doctors for giving them to us.
will be given the wrong medicine.
AT THE SAME time national medical health insurance, the high cost of hospital rooms, equiv. access to medical care are difficult in high moment. Although there is every reason to suspect that making more care available will shorten life expectancy, people are demanding it, because it's an American birthright.
AMERICANS HAVE been moviegoers almost since before there were movies; Hughes was a moviemaker and married a movie star as well. Americans are traditionally fascinated by
THERE ARE A few signs of change, however. The interest in exercise and diet for health, not for looks, is growing and you want to look your doctor, are primarily responsible for yourself. A recent article on health in the Wall Street Journal suggested
that healthy ways of living can be expected to do more than any medical breakthroughs or gadgets that are likely to be invented. That's a shift for an institution prone to equate progress with larger marketing opportunities.
We've developed what Illilu calls a medical dependency. Even when we're well, we're passive patients, persons who are done to, who harbor impossible expectations from our physicians, who pay our inquiries, and who may die, intensely care for by alerting sensors and telemetry. We are dependent.
Later Associated Press reports, which quoted U.S. Customs officials as saying the Hughes they saw was wanted, were matched with bair and a beard, probably more accurate.
These are only the earliest signs. In Washington they still debate national health insurance, when everyone who's thought about it knows a massive, and continuous challenge to educate especially young people, about tobacco and food would be cheaper and better for health. How that's supposed to come about as long as schools' free-lunch programs habituate kids of cancer can men cancer of the colon in 30 years will need some working out.
KICKING MEDICAL dependency also involved empathies of medical inpatient if necessary too late in the day for people to be sick at home or to die at home. never mind that it is usually dards, happier and more humane. In less than a century
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Associate Editor Campus Editor Yael Harlan Editor Geek Hassak Associate Campus Editor Gret Alkau Editor Associate Campus Editors Stewart Brantman Photo Editor Staff Photographers David Crawphaw, Sportz Editors George Milne Allen Quakerbush Sports Editor Steve Schmidt Entertainment Editors Steven Schiebeld Copy Chiefs Mary Ann Hudson Edition Jan Mature, Albert Gwin Artist
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THE TIMES' description, however, more accurately describes the mental picture most Americans get when they watch a movie. The photograph of the man in the "neat mustache" has run
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager Assistant Director Promotion Manager Claudia Staff Manager Debbie Service Manager Promotions Director Scott Bush Assistant Manager Claudia Staff Manager Jim Marquardt Assistant Manager Jolene
a proper middle-class death has changed from a picture of a figure in bed expiring with relatives all around to the life on the lily pad on the electronic oscillator flicking to a monotone line.
Pouls
WESTPHAL
'GEE FELLAS, IT SEEMS TO BE QUITTING!'
solve mysteries and be in secrets;
hughes was on a man-
graph figure who went to
mystical lengths to avoid
publicity.
If Hughes was just the second richest man in the world, or just in movies, or just married to an actress, he would still be entitled to at least one article at a month in the National Enquirer.
WHEN THOSE attributes were combined with Hughes' elusiveness and secrecy, Hughes became a mass media figure rivaling Jackie Kennedy Onassis.
It will be interesting to see what eventually happens to the Hughes legend. In a more primitive society it wouldn't be at all surprising for the legend to be handed down from one generation to another but be muted and enlarged as the years passed and eventually grow to Robin Hood proportions, if not larger.
IN A SOCIETY without television and the faddishness the technology seems to bring, Mr. Greenberg said. Arthur Stories would be told about him that had nothing at all to do with the real man. In fact, the real man would tell them he was buried under the ledge.
eventually Hughes would have a religion built around him.
But this isn't as a primitive society—at least as far as communications are concerned. Hughes was an author and neerer the Amelia Earhart level than at the cornerstone of a new religion.
NEVERTHELLESS, THE Hughes legend will still be healthy for many years to come. I suspect that a sizeable minority of Americans will refuse to believe Hughes died; Already the gossip and rumors (Hughes faked it) because of a federal investigation, it's all a clever tax dodge, etc.)
If the longevity of all the Kennedy assassination rumors are any indication, these will also be around a long time.
I'm going to miss Howard Hughes and I'm glad his legend will stay around a while. In an age of Watergate revelations it was clear that it was rather nice to be in relative ignorance about somebody.
0000 0000
Thursday, April 8, 1976
5
'Sellers' tvpifies classical farce
Entertainment Co-Editor
By EVIE RAPPORT
The most interesting thing about the two short plays billed as "Colonel Sellers: An Entertainment," playing through Saturday in the Inge Memorial Theatre, is how unexpectedly enjoyable classical mid-19th century farces are.
The most unexpected thing is how painful bad barry Twain's and William Dalton's fights were.
According to George Weiss, director of the revival pieces, the original "Colonel Carter" was more than two hours long. He cut it down to about 20 minutes and it's still a boring and uninformed piece.
The play was written around a minor character in Twain's and Charles Dudley's novels. It was the story of Colonel Mubbery Sellers is one of those engaging eccentrics that will, at least momentarily, solve his problems and make him a millionaire.
AFTER YEARS of dragging his family around the country to escape bill collectors, he settles in Washington where he hopes to win support for his newest scheme—materialization, a process to restore life to the bodies of people long dead.
Sellers promotes it as a way to save money. Use the materialized corps, he
says, to man the police forces and sit in Congress, saving the taxpayers in thousands.
This germ of an amusing political satire is quickly dropped, however, in favor of a
review
Despite some funny lines and the attempts of the cast to breathe life into it, the play just doesn't move. It has no energy or invention, it plods through expected plot twists, and it displays none of the puckish humor expected from Mank Twain.
story of bebeledger young lovers that
would have known it would from the first mention of it.
IT'S WORTH waiting for the end of this piece, however, to hear the delightful story of Joey Gouffre, who joys by Joy Guffre, who plays the ingenuie in "Colonel Sellers." It's one of those slightly naughty 19th-century songs, full of double meanings and forbidden hints, and she is all the way down.
Then Mark Twin himself, portrayed by Cliff Rackerd with a mistwife in Irish browne.
Indeed they have, and just how well is made clear after intermission when the curtain squeaks its way up on the second short play, an 1846 farce by John Maddison (who was also a famous another funny period song, "Nobody Coming to Marry Me," rendered with feeling and pathos by Tamarra Zook, the audience is plunged into another tale of lovers and their problems--this time caused by aging martinet who worships the duello.
presents a curtain speech, saying, "This play was intended for instruction rather than amusement. I think we have succeeded."
Century-old entertainment headlines Inge presentation
Entertainment from the 1870's will be presented in two plays at 8 tonight through Saturday night in the Inge Memorial Theatre.
BOTH THE martiniest his sister and niece are in love and wish to marry. But, when he learns that one of the prospective husbands was insulted and didn't challenge the offspring, he goes on to offer another young man is president of an antidivision society, he throws the cowards out.
The plays opened last night.
"Colonel Sellers" is a character study of one of Mark Twain's characters. George Weiss, director, said he made the adaptation "a realization of the dressed Age," because he like the character.
Nonstudent tickets for the two plays, "Colonel Sellers: An Entertainment," are on sale at the Murphy Hall box office. All student tickets have been sold.
"I liked the character's optimism and attempts to make money," he said.
He creates one practical invention but considers it too simple to bother with.
The lovers are ultimately reunited and all ends well, of course—this was the 19th century, remember. The dash and vigor of the play, however, overcomes the latent syrup of the plot. The actors play to the hilt the well-drawn characters Morton gave and there's lots of stumping, shouting, hiding and chasing to enliven the plot.
warmer and a vacuum cleaner that blows out instead of sucking in.
Sellers is an unsuccessful inventor. Two of his inventions are a battery-powered foot
Weiss said "Colonel Sellers" was a good example of the American businessman obsessed with making money and with the 1870's corruption in government.
“An Entertainment” is a recreation of the movie, which won the 1980s Liberty Hall hallever a hundred years ago.
The set was designed in imitation of treas-
ter costumes. The hall theater to use on stand
75 ft and 70 ft.
It consists of a couple of old-time songs and "a surprise for the audience," Kevin Keating, Great Bend junior, said. Keating is an actor in both productions.
Stan Haehle, the quavering but determined Slasher in the second piece, is paranoid. He turns to his pimpily collapse instantly into abject terror or bride into enraged dignity.
The small cast performs these interesting bits of forgotten theatrical history well, using the down-front, straight-forward method of performance of the period, yet still managing to get the most out of what's available.
ART SLOAN, as the dim and gullible Hawkins in the first piece and the blustering Major Blowhard in the second, uses his pop-up glasses to create a whimsical right just the note of over-done histrionics.
Carl Packard, as Colonel Sellers and as Christopher Craster; Virginia Help, as Captain Jude; and thankless women's roles; and Kevin Keating, as the young leader man in the first piece and a coarse military man in the second, give admirable performances of his own.
It's unusual to see this style of acting, and it's well worth an evening to take it in, if for no other reason than to see what audiences laughed at 100 years ago.
--for Week of the Young Child
Be a Montessori Teacher
Attend Program at the Lawrence Public Library, Thurs., April 8, 7:30 p.m.
Presented bu
The Montessori Plus Teacher Preparation Center and Sunshine Acres Montessori Preschool & Private Kindergarten
This program and demonstration for teachers and parents will also count as orientation for the 1976 summer school Montessori Teacher Preparation & Certificate Course, June 7- July 30. You need not be a college graduate to take this course and earn a Montessori Teacher Certificate. You may do the required nine month internship of student teaching (half days) during the 1976-77 school year in Topeka or at Sunshine Acres in Lawrence as you might work part-time or go to school pair-time. Six interns selected by Sunshine Acres will receive partial course tuition scholarships as well as a scholarship-stipend toward their tuition and practice teaching expenses.
---
THE ELDRIDGE HOUSE CLUB AND DINING ROOM
---
A new menu. A new night out.
Sunday night is the one night of the week that you deserve something special: not a steak and not a hamburger.
For just that reason, the Eldridge House is offering a new menu specializing in food with an excellent combination of flavor and delicacy. We do not mean for these specialties to be for just any meal—which is why it is only offered Sunday nights. Our new selection includes a large variety of omelets, crepes, and "specialty" dishes, all prepared by our master chef.
For a good meal,new flavors,and superb service-try the Eldridge House on Sundays.
- See tomorrow's ad for our new menu.
G
7th & Massachusetts 841-4666
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6
Thursday, April 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Knoff awaits NFL draft results
18
Still photo by DAVE CRENSHAH
Dreams start early in life. From the time a little boy picks up his first football or baseball, he sees himself as a professional athlete some day.
Most of the time, those dreams are eventually forced to give way to reality. It's a fact that very few people have the ability to make the grade professionally.
BUT BEGINNING AT $ this morning, the dreams will begin taking shape for some of the nation's finest collegiate football players. Finally, after a two-month wait, the National Football League player draft is going to begin
"IT'S JUST GOING to take a lot of hard work to get it back to 100 per cent. I'm willing to put forth that effort. As far as hurting my chances in the draft, I don't really think it should. But who's to say?"
Doctors say Knoff's knee is all right
ONE SUCH ATLETE is KU's Kurt Knoff, Knoff, a three-time BIG-Eight
"MOVING THE DRAFT didn't bother me at all," he said. "There might have
One advantage for Knoff is that the draft was moved back from February 2 and 3 when it was originally scheduled. Unlike most players who couldn't wait to find out where they were going, Knoff welcomed the extension.
in the world. They all said my knee was all right.
By Allen Quakenbusb Sports Editor
selection at safety, is considered one of the top prospects in the nation.
"I feel pretty good about my chances," Knoff admitted on the eve of the draft. "I haven't gotten any definite from anybody, but I don't think they have the chance to do it." There's too much chance of change to be able to afford to do that."
IT'S NO SECRET, though, that a lot of teams are interested in Knoff. For the last two weeks, Knoff admitted he's been busy talking to prospective employers.
THE BIGGEST QUESTION mark for Knoff right now is his knee, which was operated on in the off-season. He's not as comfortable it will affect his chances in the draft.
"That's hard to say, really," Kniff said. "I hope I am, and teams have said I probably will be, but I don't really know. I'm counting on going in the first two rounds."
And apparently the NFL teams have liked what they've seen. Speculation has it that Knoff will be picked in the first round.
"It could possibly, but I’ve got很喜欢 reports from all the doctors in Oklahoma City that three different ones and one in Oklahoma City who’s supposed to be one of the best
been more questions about my knee. With the two extra months, I've had time to get it back in shape. It's really helped me to more than anything."
Kroff admits he really has no idea where he's going. But strong possibilities include Kansas City and Minnesota, two teams that have showed a lot of interest. They come from East Grand Forks, Minneapolis, take a local attraction for either team.
LAST WEAK, THE CHIEFS let veteran strong safety Jim Kearney go in the expansion draft, increasing speculation he would eventually end up with Kansas City.
"I'd like to play for the Chiefs," Knoff said, "but who knows whether I will? It's a good organization."
KNOFF, OF COURSE, is the most obvious of the KU prospects. But there are others.
Fellow members of last year's secondary, cornerbacks Eddie Lewis and T.J. Duffield are being by someone. Offensive tackle Dave Scott stands a good chance of being selected. Center John Morgan and linebackers Rick Burke and Jeff Turner have outside shots.
All the questions will be answered by tomorrow.
Off the Wall Hall
TONITE Jim Ringer & Mary McAslin 8:00 p.m.
Friday & Saturday Billy Spears Band
8:30 p.m.
841-0817
737 New Hampshire
Editor of the JAYHAWKER Business Manager YEARBOOK
Applications now being accepted for the positions of:
For job descriptions and job qualifications contact Mike McCollam or Steve Brown at the JAYHAWKER office. 117B Student Union, 864-3728 between 2:30-5:00 p.m., M-F.
Deadline: April 16, 1976
76
Jayhawker
Yearbook
An equal opportunity employer
The newspaper said Gorman's candidacy for the job was strengthened recently at a
Seattle picks up Gorman
SEATLET AP)—James "Lou" Gorman, No. 2 man in the Kansas City Royals organization, apparently will become general manager of Seattle's new American League baseball franchise, the Seattle Times reported yesterday.
meeting at the Kansas City International Airport with two of the six franchise owners - Business bushrammer Lester Smith and New York State League is expanding to Seattle in 1977.
Smith is expected to confirm the appointment officially when he returns from Australia.
Royals pass on Messersmith
Burke said that the Royals rejected a proposal from Messmerssam and that he wanted to be given a job.
No specifics of the contract were available, but Burke said. "He wants four years guaranteed plus interest. According to his plan, that would come to at least $1.4 million."
THE HAWK'S NEST
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -The on-again, off-again courtship between the Kansas City Royals and pitcher Andy Messersmith apparently has ended.
presents
"He's asking just too much to be realistic," general manager Joe Burke said in Florida yesterday in an interview with the Kansas City Star.
THURSDAY
URSDHY 5:00 p.m.-6:30 p.m.
'12:30 JAZZ ENSEMBLE'
with Featured Soloists:
ALAN SOLLENBERGER, on trumpet
BRAD STROUD, on trombone
Just Returned from the
K.C. Jazz Festival
Level 2-Kansas Union
Produced by SUA
See
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS.
2 bedrooms aft. o & KU campus * utilities paid
furnished or unfurnished * laundry facilities
swimming pool * air conditioned * covered parking
on bus line * security guards * locked system
OPEN HOUSE
Now Taking Applications for Summer and Fall
SUA Films
Office Hours: Till 8 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
10 - 4 Sat. 2 - 5 Sun.
a film by Peter Watkins
7:30
Thursday, April 18
Woodruff Aud.
Lawrence, Kansas
1603 W. 15th
Admission FREE
LREx
913-843-4993
Presents
PUNISHMENT PARK
Research/Systems Specialist
Information and Research Division is expanding to include the following positions which will be involved with a wide variety of applied research and systems activities as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
Skills in written and verbal communication with both technical and non-technical personnel are required. Graduate experience in social science research and understanding of computer utilization in research environment is desirable.
The Department of Planning and Development Kansas City, Kansas
Programmer/Analyst
This position requires a thorough working knowledge of FORTRAN and/or COBOL. Programming experience in business applications or research projects is desirable. .
Salaries are commensurate with education and experience. These positions offer a wide-range benefit package, flexible working atmosphere, and modern office facilities. We invite all interested applicants to write Information and Research Division, Department of Planning and Development, One Civic Plaza, Kansas City, Kansas 64101. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M-F.
FACES
DISCO
REVUE.
Your chance to dance to
lettes
1. Marty Rock's Disco Tex and the Sexo-
3. The First Choice
2. Ecstacy, Passion and Pain
3. The First Choice
7:00-12:00 p.m. at Kemper Arena
The biggest Disco happening to ever take place in the Midwest.
PLUS, a *1,000 Dance Contest Friday, April 9th
Tickets $5.50 in advance & $6.50 day of the concert at Capers' Carners, Tigers Records and Kiel's Contestants. Only The First 500 Couples to Sign Up at Capers' Carners will be allowed to enter the Dance Contest.
Faces for Revue '76 Is Open to the Public.
---
Looking for an Old-fashioned breakfast? Sambo's has it!
*Two (2) fresh ranch eggs (any style)
- Country sausage patty
- Orange juice
- Toast and butter
- PLUS all the coffee you can drink
akfast?
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$1.99 Good Thru April 30
TRY OUR FAMOUS COFFEE
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---
Thursday, April 8, 1976
7
University Daily Kansan
KU netters slam hopeless ISU
PENGUIN
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Mark Hosking defeated Denny Fitz. 6-1. 6-1
"It's awfully hard to beat the bad player," he said.
And there were plenty of bad Iowa State players who could've given the Jayhawks fits with their soft serves and unorthodox style of play. But KU didn't let them win. They crushed the Cyclones, 94, yesterday on the Allen Field House courts.
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
Gates was quick to come to the defense of the Cyclones, who were picked by the Big Eight coaches to finish last (seventh), and because the state didn't field a team) in the conference.
IN WINNING their second straight Big Eight dual match, the Jayhawks didn't lose one set. In fact, only two sets—both in doubles—were even close.
"The fact they (ISU) have no scholarships puts their program in a weaker position in respect to ours," Gates said. "We've got a scholarship program and that gives you a competitive edge. They're a team with a lot of experience but are been competitive with the rest of the league because they lack the No. 1 and 2 men to give them the punch at the top."
KU tennis coach Kirkland Gates said it best.
DESPITE THE WEAK competition, Gates said he still thought his team played well. He singled out his No. 5 and 6 men, Gree Buller and Hank Colman.
"Today's match was good for both of them because they won big, and they've been having trouble winning as of late. It gets hard when you win big. You don't get down on yourself."
It won't be as easy for the Jayhawks when they meet Big Eight rival Oklahoma at 1 p.m. today in the opening round of the Oklahoma City Invitational.
"The players are really keyed up because Oklahoma is the first real tough Big Eight team we've played." Gates said. "I'll be a player. If we win, it will be 44-4—that close."
KU golfers to Wichita tourney
The KU men's golf team begins play in the Wheatshocker Tournament in Wichita today, seeking improvement over their last place finish in last week's Oklahoma Intercollegiate Tournament in Shawnee, OK.
The Jayhawks are sending a five-man squad, consisting of Gary Challion, Jim Doyle, Rick Kenemedy, Jim Pearson and Doyle Gerard, to Wichita.
The Wheatshaker Tournament, which ends tomorrow, is the second outing of the season.
Chilton, the only one of the five golfers who played in the Oklahoma Tournament, checked in last week with rounds of 85, 79 and 76, for a 240 total.
The golfers will play in a dual meet against Nebraska on Friday, April 16, and the North Carolina to Des Moines to participate in the Drake Rivals Tournament April 22 and 23.
KING
PRETZEL
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Pretzels 4/$1.00
Serving Hot Pretzels & Sandwiches
Coors on Tap
900 Indiana St.
SUA indoor recreation DOUBLES FOOSBALL TOURNAMENT
Sunday, April 11-1 p.m. J-Bowl
Sunday, April
Entry fee $1.00 per player
Sign up and pay at J-Bowl
Prizes go to
1st & 2nd place teams
Prizes furnished by
SIRLOIN
STOCKADE
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Deadline April 9,5 p.m.
Absolutely Everything for Your Wedding.
- Gowns for your bridesmaids and your mother, all in your favorite colors and styles.
- Engraved invitations and announcements in every style.
- A wide selection of beautiful gowns to make you the perfect bride.
- Tux rental service for the groom who needs some good help and advice.
- Complete catering service from mints and nuts right down to the details on your cake.
- Help with all the "little" things: gifts, cake servers, ring pillows, etc.
- Floral advice that can make your bouquets and arrangements say "you."
Bridal Fashions by Jan
1101 Mass. A Service of the Flower Shoppe
841-0800
Larry Csonka signs contract with NY Giants
NEW YORK (AP) - Fullback Larry Coskona returned to the National Football League yesterday, signing a contract with New York Giants for a reunion with Coach Bill Armstrong.
Arnsparmer had been an assistant coach with Miami when the star running back handled championships in 1973 and 1974. Since both hedd left Miami, Arnsparmer for New York.
The terms of Coona's contract with the Giants weren't immediately known, but it was clear that the agent, Ed Keting—had been deranged for contract work about $250,000 a year plus a variety of cash bonuses and fringe benefits. In his seven years with Miami, Coona worked 176 games.
York and Csanka for the ill-fated World Football League.
Careers Don't Just Happen A weekend conference on career decision making April 9,10 Kansas Union
Friday
1-5 p.m. Career Fair
Saturday
Business and University personnel will be available to answer questions about job opportunities. Jayhawk Room, Parlor A, B, C.
6 p.m. Banquet, Big 8 Room
10-12 a.m. Career Fair
7 p.m. Speaker, Elizabeth Hanford Dole Attorney and Federal Trade Commissioner Big 8 Room
Workshops
Careers Don't Just Happen Maximizing Black Potential Beginning a Career at Any Age Beyond High School Choices Parents' Workshop Job Seeking Skill Building Life-Planning
Walnut, Regionalist, Oread Rooms
1:30-4:30 p.m. Workshops continued
Sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women This organization funded from the Student Activity Fee
University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
KING
SWIFT FACTORY
George M.
HELPFUL HINTS WHEN PLAYING INTRAMURAL SOFTBALL
1. Keep your eye on the ball.
2. Stay down on ground balls.
3. Wear team T-shirts from KING GEORGE II SHIRT FACTORY.
Give your intramural softball team its own identity.
You can choose designs that we have available or you can make your own design.
When You Look Good You Play Good
842-1521
1035 Mass.
---
8
Thursday, April 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Senate . . .
From page one
MECHA, a Chicago minority group, for a symposium. Jeff Rhoads, chairman of the Student Services Committee, said that MECHA didn't include money for a symposium in its $744 budget request because the organization was discouraged by poor reception of the idea in past budget allocations.
Rhoads said the committee wanted to show interest in the group so that the administration might fund future MECHA symposiums.
Representatives of MECHA were called in last night to present their plans for a symposium once again. However, because of budget hearing guidelines established earlier by the Student Services Committee, they wouldn't personally address the committee.
Douglas County Legal Aid received a recommendation of $9,400 which was equal
A "freeze" was put on $4,000 of that recommendation. It will be released after Dec. 15 if Congress does not allocate revenue sharing funds to the group.
AFTER A DISCUSSION about overlapping services of the Women's Coalition-Women's Center and the Commission of the Status of Women Tuesday night, both groups were funded separately last night.
The Consumer Affairs Association received the biggest cut. The group had requested more than $7,000 for a director's recommended $3,735 for a half-time paid position.
The majority of committee members agreed that only 40 per cent of the Consumer Affair's services were used by students and, therefore, that the Student Senate shouldn't fund full professional courses. In other words, the group should rely on more volunteer work.
Requests for a typewriter were denied to
the Women's Coalition-Women's Center and the Volunteer Clearing House.
The Board of Class Officers was refused tuesday Tuesday night because the committee rejects the board's recommendations.
Senate rules forbid Senate funding of social funding.
THE COMMUNICATIONS Committee had its first budget hearings and made its final recommendations. The University Daily Kansan, JKJH FM Radio and the Friends of United Farm Workers presented their budgets.
KJHJ-FM Radio received its block allocation of $8,575 and also a supplemental allocation of $2,349, $20 over their supplemental request.
The University Daily Kansan received its stock allocation of $6,600, which is funded by the university.
Steve Leben, Communications Committee chairman, said the Friends of United States students funds because the committee decided that the group didn't affect a significant number of students. He said the funds would be used to students through the allocation to KJH-FM.
Wild plants can yield food, medicines, dyes
The cattails that you see in the marsh as you drive by could very easily be a part of your dinner, according to Dr. Janet Bare, director with the University of Kansas Herbarium.
More than 50 people gathered in the Panorama Room of Dyce Museum of Natural History last night to see Bare's program, "Utilization of Wild Kansas Plants." Bare showed slides of many wild Kansas plants and told of some of the uses the plants have for food, medicine, dyes and landscaping.
She said the cattail was very versatile. The upper portion of the flowering spike is good bolt when it is green, she said, and the lower portion is hardened and can be used with flour to make bread.
Bare said many species of plants in the United States were endangered. An endangered species act has been passed by the U.S. Congress, Bare said, but it does more to protect animal species than it does for the endangered plants.
Speaker to discuss CIA
After the presentation, which is sponsored by SUA, Marks will discuss what he has
The influence of the Central Intelligence Agency on U.S. domestic and foreign policy will be the subject of a presentation by John Marks, executive director of the Center for National Security Studies in Washington, eight on Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Marks will show two half-segment segments from documentaries on the CTA produced by the AOL Media Group.
called subversion tactics used by the CIA to interfere in international politics.
In 1973 Marks, who was then staff assistant to the director of intelligence and research at the Department of State, and Victor Marchetti, a former CIA agent, wrote "The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence."
BECAUSE OF information disclosed in the book, it became controversial and set off a series of court battles between the authors and the CIA. It was the first book to be censored before publication by the U.S. government for national security reasons.
In addition to the book, Marks has also written several articles on diplomacy. Interesting topics:
MORE THAN 700 species of plants in the continental United States have been listed by the Smithsonian Institution as being endangered and more than 1,200 are threatened. This about 10 per cent of the plant species in the United States.
"If you find a flower in the woods, you wouldn't put it in an extremely hot, dry, hot area."
Bare said people who attempted to transplant unangered wild plants should remember to place them in environments similar to the ones they were previously in.
Only two of the threatened species are in kansas—a member of the milkweed species and one of the listed endangered ones.
Bare showed slides of various wild plants in Kansas. Among the plants that can be eaten are the syriaca milkweed pods, which Bare said were very good if they weren't too cold. They were served in boiling water for about 10 minutes and served with butter or cheese sauce.
RARE SAID the leaves from the common blue violet were also good if prepared like greens, because they are higher in vitamin C than oranges.
She said many plants were still used for medicinal purposes and many that weren't on the endangered or threatened lists could be used for landscaping around homes.
--animated films from all over the world A collection of films from Italy, Belgium, Poland, Yugoslavia, Canada, and the United States
DISCO DANCE
Fri. Apr. 9
8 p.m.-
1 a.m.
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION
UNION BALLROOM
Everyone Welcome!
--animated films from all over the world A collection of films from Italy, Belgium, Poland, Yugoslavia, Canada, and the United States
On Campus
Events ...
TONIGHT: A BIO-ORGANIC CHEMICAL DYNAMICS SEMINAR will be at 7:30 in 6141 Malto, ROCERT SCRANTON, professor of classical art and archaeology at the University of Chicago, will speak on "City Planning in Classical Antiquity," at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 28, in the U.S.A. lecture on "What Was American Poetry?" at 8 a.m. in the Jawayhawk Room of the Ullman Library.
TODAY: NOON-HOUR INTERNATIONAL will meet at 11:30 in Alove F or the Kansas Union. FACULTY FORUM will meet at noon in the United Ministries Building, 1204 Oread. a program on World Food Information Day will be at 1 in the Big Eight Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: GARY TOBIN, professor of urban studies at Washington University, will speak at seminars on urban housing, race and neighborhood challenges in the United States. He will address social welfare, will speak on "Unity" at noon in Danforth Chapel. THE NATIVE AMERICAN ALLIANCE will sponsor a pow-wow at 6 p.m. at Allen Field House. AZABEH ANNIFOLE, attorney and Federal Trade Commissioner, will speak at UNFLOW DOLL, at 6 p.m. at Allen Field House. A FILM FESTIVAL will be at 7 and 9:30 p.m. at the United Ministry Building.
Announcements . . .
The entry deadline for the Kansas Relays WOMEN'S 440 INTRAMURAL RACE is this afternoon. Entries will be turned in the track office at Allen Field.
Jobs available...
Correction...
In allowing part-time jobs are listed on 28 Strong Hall: food service; 1, tying, clerical; 10, research, lab; 5, sales; 5, teaching, graduate assistant; 11, nutrition & health.
It was incorrectly reported in yesterday's Kansan that the Oliver Hall production of "Bells are Ringing;" would run yesterday, today and Saturday. The play will be presented tomorrow, Saturday and Sunday at 8 p.m. in the Oliver Hall living room.
you haven't seen a program of the finest
Music is love in search of a word *
kjhk FM 91
*Sidney Lanier . . 1875
Partially Funded by Student Activity Fees
RIBS
Alfies
if you haven't seen the
BEANS
CHICKEN
—No Limit—
9TH International Tourne'e of Animation
PORK
Friday and Saturday April 9 & 10 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. presented by SUA
842-5500
FISH 'N'
BAR-B-QUE
BEEF
6th & Maine
BAR-B-QUE BEEF $99^{¢}$
SANDWICH (with This Ad)
TRY & COMPARE THIS
—Tennis courts
A
—Air conditioned
ROOMS FOR RENT
Sigma Nu House
—Close to campus
—Basketball courts
—Recreation area
—Plenty of parking space.
—Large sundeck
—Two acres of grassy lawn
—Huge living
—Kitchen available
—Quiet study areas
—Coed living; Girls top floor; Guys first floor
—'75/month
Two month lease—June - August
—Weight room
Charcoal grill
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
Call Mrs. Mastin
843-5673
between 12:30-5:00 p.m. and 6:00-9:00 p.m.
between 12:30-5:00 p.m. and 6:00-9:00 p.m.
FOR FINE ENTERTAINMENT Bugsys
TONIGHT IS LADIES NIGHT
No Cover Charge for Ladies
25c Beer
BALCONY OPEN TO EVERYONE
doors Open at 6:00 Show Starts at 8:00
Curious!!! Call 841-7100
It's the least expensive Fiat we make. But you'd never know by looking at it.
Standard Radial Tires
Standard Front-Wheel Drive
Standard Independent Suspension
Standard 4-Speed Transmission
Standard Power-Assisted, Front-Wheel Disc Brakes
Standard Rack-and-Pinion Steering
---
TAXIS
The 1976 Fiat 128 Standard.53,349.70 Delivered - Freight and Dealer Prep. Included.
John Haddock IMPORTS
FIAT A lot of car. Not a lot of money.
Ph.843-3500
23rd and Alabama
JOHN MARKS
IN PERSON
Director of the Center for National Security Studies co-author of The CIA and The CIA of Intelligence
A FILM/LECTURE PRESENTATION
THE C.J.A.
CERNAL INTELLENCE SCIENCES
GENERAL INTELLIGENCE ANCHOR
www.generalintelligenceanchor.com
An SUA Forums Presentation:
Thursday, April 8, 1976
8:00 p.m.
The Kansas Union Ballroom
Admission: 50c
WATERGATE • BRIBERY • ILLEGAL WIRETAPPING
ASSASSINATION • GERM WARFARE
DOMESTIC SURVEILLANCE
LAOS • CHILE • CASTRO
A New Line "Focus on America" Film/Lecture Presentation featuring the British documentary film"The Rise and Fall of the C.I.A."
W
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 3, 1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are required to all students without regard to the grade of enrollment. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
15 words or
four
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
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. Items can be placed in porman or simply by calling the TUX business office at 864-3536.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK, tk.
We moved! Our new location is next to Maplewood and we have a deal for a 14-count. Repeat Performance Shop.
LIFE PLANNING WORKSHOP Saturday, April 16 in the process of influencing your own business. In the process of influencing your own business, strengthen clarify present needs and define strengths
Full day care and complete child development
and kindergarten. 1209 West Burch St. 84-257-2272,
Kindergarten, 1209 West Burch St. 84-257-2272
Employment Opportunities
A job opening for full time research assistant at Biread Bureau of Health. Place your resume in www.Data.collection, preparing workbook materials, preparing form, completing research paper and writing an essential. Contact Middled Jolly, 844-244-3960 for view. Application dunline and start date applied. Qualified men and women of all races apply, if
Applications now being accepted for student staff appointments until December 16, 2015. Strong Hall: 844-206-3000.
*
Summer employment. Royal Presign, a nation-ally owned company, will work available in many areas of the area. $15,000 for more information come to St. Louis Union University, 450, or 6:00, Thursday, April 8—11:00, 1:00, or 4:00, or 6:00. Thursdays, April 8—11:00, 1:00, or 4:00, or 6:00.
ENTERTAINMENT
laboratory technicians positions to begin on or
have at least one year of undergraduate organic
knowledge and have at least one year of undergraduate organic
knowledge for a four-year position at full time rate of $8000 per
year to be appointed to Dr R. S. Given
Dept. of Chemistry, KU
FOR RENT
The Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club presents
the Lawrence Gem and Mineral Club meeting
at the 4th Fair ground, Lawrence, Kansas.
The event includes rock paint painting,
lapidary and fracturing on a day with
lapidary and fracturing on a day with
10am to 10am, to 9pm, Sunday 10am
to 5pm.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTBEN MOBILE HOMES, 3490 W. 6th St., Lawrence KS. 68105
Free rental services. Up to the minute listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exchange. 842-250-3100.
2. bdmr, all all, paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfree. Parking a, c/o pool. 843-4993.
14-bedroom apartments, room with kitchen private
bedrooms or to campus $50 and up, bed & bath
or $80-200.
House for rent summer months, 3-5 bedrooms.
124 Kentucky. 841-6244. 4-9
Excellent summer renting situation! $150/mo:
3 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, small electric with in-
房号: 841-504-9684
Looking for a one or two women graduate students or staff members to share house 3 miles from campus at $100 per month and share utilities. at 4:48pm during day at 8:43pm-12:42pm
Sibiuate May 15-August 1 Room in beautiful
building A/C (C house, waerier-dryer) + $83ill
with free meals.
2 bdrm. apt., w-w carpet, central al., large kitchen,
3 dining room, to Union 3, 10-room
$140. rent $100.
Professor's House - 805 May-15 August. 3 bed.
bath airlen airened fence, grand piano,*
*845-0126.*
*845-0146.*
Purified two-bedroom house, house 414, neighbor-
ship, and tomatoes, and aubergines, $435,
summer only, #82-756.
Sublease apartment for summer; utilities paid.
Sale ends close to campus and downtown. 810-6398
6398
Sublease, efficiency amt. May, June, July, August and all electric kitchen units $113,815-629,950
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate occupancy. Also, save money, leave from June 1, 1976 and take advantage of power rates See the attached map block west of Iowa on 25th Street. Phone 842-1553.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hikit equipment other than factory dumps or clone-on products, be careful not to purchase products from the GRAFOMPHON SHOP at KEIFS.
Trémontain selection of guitars, amples, drums,
alto saxophones, bass, keyboards, Choose from Gibson,
Hossei, Hoste Keyboard Studios, choose from Ampere,
Amphore, Kromet, Green, and many others.
Netted at 1 p.m. Hose Keyboard Studios,
netted after 4 p.m. Hose Keyboard Studios,
netted after 8 p.m.
COST 10% -Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single unit or package. Register for free Kexen 6588. Earnings 6 to 10. Call Dave. Phone # 8588. 6588. Earnings 6 to 10.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
tickets. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 165 page,
mail order catalog. Research Assistant,
Los Angeles, Los Angeles. Calif. 9023
(213) 747-8744.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
BALDERA BEL ART, AUTOBELEC,
ELECTRIC, 845-909, 3600 W. 9th.
H. E. Foster & Co., Inc.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use them—
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Creek Steps
Excellent selection of New & Used家具及
luxury traded items. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704
16th Street, NY, 10026.
WE SELL FOR LESS--11 TO 6:30. Good used
materials and electric ranges; refrigerators;
new emergent appliances; springs have 10 yr, warranty; $21 a week. Weekly
income: 1 phone at 7-272-354 or 324-8288. Tops: A-
mpel 1 phone: 7-272-354 or 324-8288.
175 kawasaki 1975, 7 months old. LIKE NEW.
180 kawasaki Ail Pim 1972, made good. 842-768 less.
Diamond solitaire engagement ring. 32 ct. 14 k.
Diamond solitaire engagement ring. $300 value $300:
$500.873-8739
Beautiful artificial tiffany type 293 table lamp,
base glass, load weight base glass
plate, glass 848-8750
glass 848-8750
72 Honda CB450 -low mileage. Gold high bars.
Runs good, must buy -811-224-7121.
4-8
Several used gun in stock, 10% off on all new
guns. Also available for shooting supply. 84-334-2500
after 5 and S&H can be ordered.
1975 Plymouth Duster. Air, automatic. power-ster-
ing 6 cyl. 19,000 miles. 842-185.
Attention Potters: 30 cubic foot. High Fire stoneware kiln prepared for use in propane burners, ready for production. Located 20 miles from Lawrence and Tennant Hills. We have three bedrooms, basement studio, and which has three bedrooms, basement studio, and rentals. Price of kiln complete $800; room rental $150; office rental $760; or rent: RU-2, Box 425, Overbrook, Ks.
FINAL CLOSETOR MICHELIN STEEL XAIS
RADIALLS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
THE LINE. SHOP WITH MICHELIN.
BACK S. $29 Mass (come thru parking left
below Woolworth for tire service).
TRANSIATOR RADIO closeout $6.95 packet size
new $28.95 ENTIRE STOCK of MAGNACVX
price excl. price outFUL POWERFUL SONY with
WEATHER BAND and cut to 35-Ray Stabilizer
929 Mass. 4-9
Mercer 10-speed bike, also car carrier, sell both mercer 10-speed bikes. offers. Call 841-7480, sixk, sink for kex.
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
Reel to reel stereo tapes and records—some old,
some new. 841-6158
4-12
Must sell Sony TVR1100 (video tape recorder), camera, tapes, case access, case. HA8154-4-128
MOTOROLA COLOR TV 1975, model number 4-98-
2111 Kneed B-103 - 844-780 between 4-98-
2111 Kneed B-103 - 844-780 between 4-98-
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Baha'i Club Meeting, April 15, 19
Bahái Faith
5 Nights a Week No Cover
NEW MODERN DECOR
Sandwiches - Pizza Pool - American Shuffleboard
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at an air-conditioned bar by artistry by a atmosphere designed to thoughtfully engage and give pleasure.
Bana 1. Club Meeting, April 3, 19
7:30 p.m. Oread Ballroom, Union
HIDEOUT
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
New Members Available
Class A Private Club
Open 11 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Waverly Beach Resort
Wayne Poolowner
843-9404 CLUB
Honda 500/4 1300 miles. Rack and back rest.
Barely broken仁. Call 82-6215. 4-15
Honda 360 CB 120 ml. Sissy bars, rack and back
Like. Rest like. New K4. Call 82-6125. 4-13
1965 FORD FAIRLANE. Starts and runs real
good, new battery, seal covers, grip raiser
grip rope. All windows. All windows.
in good shape, doors work. Hear
842-3180, keep trying $100 firm. 4-13
TRISPHIC HUY BRAND NEW COMPLETE HP-
TEN CASE FOR ANY BEST OR best offer, Call Apu at 864-319-2500 any time.
ARC Basesit pups-unusual, intelligent African
creature. Worned, 6-11.
4-11; 1-483-252-780
GIBSON L.S.-N. School, St. John's Pupa, Hardtend
BUSINESS WE are at Richland Grove Music or at
843-756-7160
843-756-7160
1975 Dodge Van Mastwezgoan, AM-FM stores plus
36 gallon tank control control, AC Ace heat,
AC air conditioner.
Small but comfortable older mobile home for sale by bn, bath with shower, built-in study, kitchen and living room. Present site has garden spot, outdoor water pad. Close to bus. Ames 4-135
Camera, Minolta 101, 28, 18, 153, 120 mm lens,
filter, etc. $60 or best offer, 943-568-508.
Stereo: Kenwood receiver, AR speakers, AR
turntable, $400 or best offer, 815-658. 41-
Vega, 1971 Hatchback. 4 speed, excellent condition.
$795. Call Randy: 811-4856. 4-13
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
Max. Mk. 69, Honda P500, 74 Boluco 230 Acura
Yamaha DT250, 78 Honda CR 125, 70 Honda
Racing, 70 Honda at horizon II
181 W. 60th St., 84-333-333
1955 Cherry Nomad Wagon beautiful restored, must see to apply. 1855 Cherry Nomad Wagon offers a wide selection of vehicles. ¢4.14
Dodge window with $700 Auto trans. 6 cyl., 65
seats 8 or w/man when a good campers M
box is required.
Yard Sale 1112 Kentucky. April 9, 10, 16 am.
Yard Sale 1112 Kentucky. women clothes size 74,
and urethane and spandex pants size 85.
and urethane and spandex pants size 85.
Shipro - Two, Mamarah (UV speakers, Technilek speaker)
Shipro - One, Mamarah (UV speakers, Technilek speaker)
New condition, $750. Call 811-6481-2920
New condition, $750. Call 811-6481-2920
HELP WANTED
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and driver drivers. Experience preferred. Call 405-431-2867 or visit www.mastercare.com.
WANTED: TWO HALF-TIME RESEARCH ABILITIES (ASC), an international nonprofit organization, as well as two half-time research internships in the ASC. An international nonprofit organization, as well as two半时研究 internship in the ASC, or as soon thereafter as applicable. Research in the federal and state laws researching scientific biological specimens 2) management for professional biology; 3) preparation of replication of three short pamphlets dealing regulation of three short pamphlets dealing replication of three short pamphlets dealing regulations regarding the collection, transmission and regulations requiring at least some college education. The positions require at least some college education with a strong background in field given paired research experience. Salary: $200-$450 per week and research methods. Salary: $200-$450 per week and research methods. Employer: Women minorities affirmative action employer. Women minorities affirmative action employer. Job location: Applicant should apply to JOB 20 April 1976. Job location applications are 20 April 1976. Dyneb Hill Museum R. Edward; Dylne Hill Museum R. Edward; University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas 60165, 8048
PART 1 TIME-EARN $75 PER WEEK FOR 3
MONTHS. TIME-EARN $125 PER WEEK FOR
TWELVE MONTHS. BETWEEN $8 AND $10 PM. FOR
INTERNAL ADMINISTRATIVE.
Graduate students working on Master's degree needed for experiment in making decisions about human problems. Six Dollars paid for two 75-minute sessions. Call Patti, 864-307-foreign noon.
Teachers at all levels, Foreign and Domestic
Teachers. Box 106, Vancouver, Wash. 9866-4-9
8-49
Wanted: part-time small appliance mechanic.
Mechanical aptitude necessary. Will train. Grab job. Travel required.
Part-time or full time bartender Contact Tom
Taylor 312-567-8000 n.43-4223 180-494
Fox Box 754, Lawrence, KS 66301
www.foxbox.com
Hard labor, $844 per month. Call today, 822-491
Oulat East!
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
18th & 9th
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
19th & Mass.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
YARN-PATTERNS- NEEDLEPOIN
THE CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD.
8418 841 7265
10 550 3796
LOST AND FOUND
Housemates were married couple to super-
managers, and they may work part-time. Educa-
tion One or the other may week part-time. Educa-
tion Two must experience with youth direct
career salary $750 per week with
transportation. Send letter of application plus
transportation. Send letter of application plus
Home, e. c. Waysland City, Tralee. An equal
opportunity employment is available.
HELP WANTED: Kansas Students Company
corporate employee. Job title: Software
Developer. Job location: Kansas. Please
email: rick@kansasstudents.com
Community College Teaching Job Excellent comp
sion. Send resume to Squire's Searc
box SG2. Oversee Office of Student
Assistant.
Found: chain bracelet with two chains on n. chains
Class of D, 843, 849-2092
4-9
Lost: One gold cross mechanical pencil between
Lost: Oliver and Owen. Call 844-7604 4-12
Lost: Oliver and Owen. Call 844-7604 4-12
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a pub-
service through April by First National Bank of
aweance, Downtown Bank-29th & Mass.
Mortgage, Downtown Bank-29th and First National Bank-187th West 21rd.
Found pair of contact lenses in case at corner of 14 and Kentucky. Call 811-6452. aforementioned.
Lost: Black, female cat near building C of Jayaprakash Mtinsen. Missing since Thursday, 4/1/76, answers to the name "Tweety." If anyone has information please contact 843-5284. Reward: 4-13
No one under 18 admitted.
Mary, I found your keys outside 4035 Wesley.
4:5 Call 864-1024 to claim.
4-9
The notebook paper on 10th and Ind. Science
fiction on front. Call 842-999-9999. A42
NOTICE
Found: Calculator in Wescoe, 4th floor. Identify:
864-2555. 4-9
Blue billfold Thursday, April 1st at Bugsy's, 81-
49
8003
Gold watch lost near Robinson gym, Initalis U.K.I.T. on back. Beward. Call 842-8533. 4-9
West of Hillcrest Bowl
RECREATION'S FINEST
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
dishware, clock televisions. Date 12-5-8.
643-331
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at a rate of 10 pages per second; make copies of your 120 page thumbnails in 5 minutes in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, 68 Massachusetts, suite. 841-4900.
The Cashman Care special Sunday dinner is a Full
Meal for $20.00 with dessert. The cashman care
cashback. Call 815-938-0998 for reservation.
(For other events, call 815-938-1474)
Borrow now in Lawrence Driving School. Respect
the copyright of the materials provided. Drive now, pay
the deposit. Registration provided. Drive now, pay
the deposit.
9th & Iowa
After 26 years in business, If George doesn't
be able to keep up with the new Google Maps on Mondays George's Map Shop, Shop 507, will be closed.
SPIRITUAL FILM FESTIVAL: Zen in America—with Sukki Han, Bala Saba. His life is his work. At The Walt Disney Watts. The Whole Earth Festival—with Ram Dass. Swami Subhasakandan. Krynandaau the Suffolk singers at p.m. and 9:30 p.m. $150. Sponored by the Ministry of Education 1204 Oread.
CUSTOMIZED MARIAGE VOYS wanted for
Brooklyn, New York. Bridgman
brok D. Keaville, 37910 giving name and
phone number to VOYES AT 212-588-3646.
BIG SALE- Our entire stock of jewelry now
all heats 50% off. Bad, B.
Dishown, (8)
4-12
Plan now for summer. Creative World Press
agrees to hold a celebration of our
gramen's openings for spring too. Call 843-259-
6010.
OPPORTUNITIES
Nancy's Craft Shift, 90 w. Bk 61. Open Thrusters!
Nancy's New ideas in plant craft plaques and
plastic art design in ideas in plant craft plaques and
plastic art design.
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Earn $2 with your own home plant party business. Get the perfect consultation will enable you to earn $20 to $300 per week. Ideal for students and housewives. Plants, Party Plates, 160 Volpe, Monroe,矿区, Pa. 1346
Pat Read
Indian Trader
> PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
AND LENDER
GUPPELED WITH
PLAYWEEKS ACCURACY
> COMPLETE OPTICAL
SERVICES
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARI
Goldnecker Optical
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10-5 Sats.-Tau.
—CLASS PARTIES—
SANCTUARY
"If we don't got it you didn't want
842-5208
"The Facilities & Service To Make It A Perfect Party"
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
to play it no how!'
— FORMALS —
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
REHEARSAL DINNERS
-BARN PARTIES-
TRAVEL
The Teepee-The Sanctuary
Sanctuary Catering 843-054O Ask For Ace
-DINNER DANCES-
Auto repair-tune ups, summertime and more at
Autolink-6 Tuesday to 6 Wednesday at
thursday, 864-1046
SERVICES OFFERED
PERSONAL
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009, 142, 500, 558, 827. Regular lessons or one-time test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 843-7681.
Do the LEGWORK For You!!
SUA / Maupintour
MADAME LENA, E.S.P.-PALM BEADER-AD-
buy a dream or astrology book and get your
problems fixed. For more information, call 821-6331.
For $83. South Topeka. Topper Ks
For make one roommate. Slightly used. House rent is $150 per month. You will not accept less than $1. Call Mark, 412-363-8111.
TUTOR
travel service
Come one—Come all. May Day Festival—a week-long, file-back conversation, and celebration. Film, book, music, and theater. See Women's Films Music at a Women's Museum and a volleyball. Free Children's April 12th Festival. Free Coaches' Coalition and Commission on the Status of Women's Coalition for education and information. Funded by Student Funds.
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Mall's—Hillcrest—900 Mass.
Planning a trip?
Alcohol is Americas' number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous 842-8101. If
EUROPE
1/2 economy
all airlines required
UNITM
800-325-4867
Untravel charts
TYPING
**Math Tutor with M.A. in mathematics.** Call 841-
3708 on p. 6.m.
4-15
Bicycle Ride
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/ite, Quality work
Authorized personnel, dissertations welcome.
Mail 482-9417-8218
Experienced typist—teen paper, meses, tes.
Experienced typist—teen paper, meses, tes.
spelled correct: 843-5236, Me, Wright.
spelled correct: 843-5236, Me, Wright.
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located in the heart of Madison. Our service is fast and private, requiring no phone calls or e-mail. We are here to serve you.
Exp. typet, IBM Selectric, term paper, thesis,
research paper, writing reading, spelling proofing,
Jenn. 841-300
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
armadillo bead co
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectric 12
(ribbon) with ACM Paint at 640-728-3950.
(ribbon) Call Paint at 640-728-3950.
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. 5-11
MACRAME BEADS
BALKAN RANGERS
FOR THE PRESENT
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10:5-30
large selection
of sizes & prices
on Sat 10.5.30
Professional typing, work guaranteed, reassurance, some low-priced, electric B.A. Social Services, some low-priced, electric B.A. Social Services.
Expert typing /reasonable rates: Proofreading:
Export calls, Call 842-6300 after 30:00 m. 4-20
Calling, Call 842-6300 after 30:00 m. 4-20
Experiential typet. IBM Selectric all kinds of
typing. Call: 842-344-125; 842-978-063. Eject:
842-978-063.
Typing--Term papers. Book reports, Misc. Nouns only-Ph. No. 842-9289
4-14
Experienced typist will type term papers, thesis,
experiments, general typing in my home
biology, Carlson, 841-9984.
WANTED
MEDICAL RESEARCH
W. B. Triplott, 944 Ky.
Phone 841-0891
Need female roommate for summer and fall.
Please call Karen at 841-6681 to see 3.50 p.m.
Names and address of persons with blue eyes and predominantly blue eyes in family and brown eyes with predominantly brown eyes in family. Results of study will be returned.
Male roommate wanted, serious student, summer
own, own room, extra nice $85. 413-8427
Want to subluate one bedroom duplex for 22
rooms? Call 848-922-578. Between
6 and 7 eavings
Folding bicycle, good condition, reason-
able wear. 843-6067 by 7 p.m. or
4:15
Lawrence.
Roommate to share large two bedroom downstairs
starting 6/17. Prefer mature year-round rent.
Room is private.
TENNIS PLAYERS—Experienced tennis player wanted to play doubles or three hours more, but prefer pigeon fights. Will consider other players but will consider others. Call Norm at 843-2741. A polite in the oriental house-boy if he answers.
To want to borrow j.D.R. Tolkien calendars to
photograph them. Call 864-6313.
4-12
Female roommate for summer, 2 bedrooms, fur-
niture, laundry, water closet, warmth. Warranty
distance by campus. Call 453-819-2706.
Insight INTO LIFE
Recommise wanted. Grad student preferred. Im-
prudent. Excellent. Bright colored. Duplex
display. Double room, room with beauty,
beautiful decor. Private suite. Private
room. Perfect for study.
Roommate wanted immediately and summer, 2
room in Cincinnati on bus line. $78 each
and 40-hour contract. 94-298-7560.
RECORDED MESSAGE (24hrs)
842·4441
Ball Park Baseball
NOW YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
a quiet corner
BALL PARK INC
DALL PARK, INC.
Box 3422-U
Lawrence, Kansas 60444
1
THE LOUNGE
12 NOON
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets Admission Only '2.00 each
Now Open Every Sunday 12 NOON
Tractor
Race or Watch
LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY
20 miles east of Topeka or
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U. S. 40 Highway
842-7945
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
10
Thursday, April 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
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4. What is the range of the data?
2023.08.17 19:45
New hope stirs faculty club quest
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
For 26 years, University of Kansas faculty members recovered from the rigors of the classroom in a faculty club, situated adjacent to Jayhawk Blvd. from the Kansas jobl
Since financial problems closed the club in 1967, the KU faculty hasn't had such a refuge. But some faculty members hope to see that change.
SenEx has decided to select one faculty member who will determine whether KU administrators will support a new faculty club.
That faculty member will be chosen later and will be a Gold, professor of English and Seneca.
memname a small group of faculty members "who have been carrying the torch" continue to seek a home for a faculty member, dean of research administration said.
SINCE THE original club, housed in the current University Relations Center, closed, the group has raised funds in hope of completing it and later, building another one, he said.
Lack of support from the University
administration eventually ended both of
these projects, he said, and the money the
groom raised was returned to donors.
Snyder said he is now looking into a couple of possible sites near campus for the
Green Hall and Spooner Museum, both of which will be vacated when new buildings to house the School of Law and Museum of Art are completed, have been suggested at
SenEx meetings as possible sites for the club.
However, those buildings wouldn't be good sites, Snyder said, because they are on state property, and a liquor license can't be bought for a building on state grounds.
SNYDER SAID a liquor license would be important to a faculty club, which would collect dues and operate like any private club, it offering the same services as private clubs offer to maintain membership.
The original faculty club had a liquor license, he said, because it was located on property then owned by the Endowment Association, not the state.
Snyder said he would prefer a location unlawfully pursued because of the liquor license, problem.
KU is the only state university that doesn't have a faculty club, Snyer said. The Wichita State University faculty has a country club and golf course, and the Kansas State University faculty has a club in a hotel located near the campus, be said.
IT IS unusual for a university as large as it be to without a faculty club, Snyder said.
"It's really a great pity," he said. "There is no place the faculty can get together to discuss it."
Snyder was a newly elected member of the faculty club board of directors when a large debt forced the club's closing in the fall of 1967. The building was then converted for housing at the Endowment Association, before it became the University Relations Center.
In 1851, Robt. Roberts, then general manager of the Kansas City Star, donated $200,000 to the Kansas City Star.
He said the department hadn't thought the enrollment decline would be so drastic.
THE CLUB housed a dining room, lounges, two libraries and a meeting room, serving as a social center and gathering place for the faculty.
When the club was closed, its assets were sold at a public auction, Snyder said, and sales went through.
A small balance left over from the auction was deposited with the Endowment Fund. The balance is now valued at $16,597.
"I don't think it was visualized as being as busy as it turned out to be," Jones said. "It was as if iturned out to be."
Oread High School, an experimental high school for KU practice teachers, into a faculty club. The high school experiment had been abandoned.
Low enrollment stirs Naval ROTC study
Snyder said he and other faculty members met in the spring of 1986 and formed an organization to keep the idea of a faculty club alive. Snyder was then elected
IN 1972, Raymond Nichols, then chancellor, told the group that KU would financially support a new club if the faculty could generate enough interest and funds to
He said that a wire report reported Tuesday that four Naval ROTC units at
Snyder and other faculty members began membership drive and fund-raising efforts.
A number of students had enrolled in the calculus and physics courses, only to find difficult. Jones said. Those students had to do dropped from the Naval ROTC program.
The Naval ROTC program at the University of Kansas is under evaluation by the Department of Defense because the junior class has fewer than the 17 students required for the continuance of the program.
The junior class originally had 52 members but that number has diminished to only 12, according to Capt. Ray Jones, professor of naval science.
"The scholarship students are the bulk of our people." Jones said.
The group was prepared to buy a house vacated by Phi Kappa Tau fraternity, only to discover that the house needed more furniture. The group suggested the group look elsewhere.
Jones said yesterday that he attributed the decline in Naval ROTC enrollment to a requirement, added in the fall 1973 semester, which said that all Naval ROTC scholarship students must take calculus and physics.
With the funds it had raised still intact, Snyder's group decided to try to build a new club near the old site, in a parking lot across Jawhawk Blvd. from the Union.
other schools were being discontinued and in the end, under evaluation, including KU's program.
"Charliecoll Dykes received a letter some time ago, he said, 'telling him the program was up.'"
Jones said that recruiters were working harder to introduce more people in Kansas to the program, and that the continuance of the KU unit wasn't in doubt.
"Therein lies our basic problem," he said. "If you were an applicant from Hays, where would you have been?"
"We're trying to establish our image on campus as a fun group to belong to," he said. Also, students in the program have worked with counselors counseling they wouldn't ordinarily get."
The principals and alternates will have their choice of schools to attend.
Jones said that, nationally, 2,000 scholarships would be given to next year's freshman class. They will be awarded to members of a group of 4,400 principals and alternates selected from an initial list of 40,000 applicants.
THIS TIME, the administration refused to give University funds for the project because KU was committed to building a museum, today nearing completion.
*Probably to Colorado, so you could ski,
or Miami, where you could lie on the
beach.*
Snyder said the group returned the money it raised or asked donors to designate it for use elsewhere, and the group abandoned the project.
The administration of Chancellor Archie R. Dykes has shown some interest in
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Hair found in river may be from human
The Lawrence police and fire departments are waiting to hear from the KBI to determine whether a small lump of maggot infested, light brown hair pulled from the Kansas River Tuesday evening is from a human.
Jess A. Cornellus, Shawnee Mission sophomore, was fishing Tuesday when he discovered the lump of hair. He told police that his line lassoed as he pulled it in. Then he wrestled it back and pretended it in he found the hair on his book. then reported the incident to the police.
Police and fire department officials have decided to delay dragging the river until the killed boat is removed.
A dragging boat was taken to the river that evening to Cornelius' fishing site, near Inyasha Fireform factory, 8th and New York. It was too dark to begin a search, police said.
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helping establish a faculty club, Snyder sat but Dykes went the club to be self-affirmative.
Snyder said the faculty had proved it could receive support from the community, but establishing a club would require additional help from the University.
"We've lost some of the social contact a
justice system should have, but alone would
justify University support."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.120
Friday, April 9, 1976
Four Jayhawks, 21 Big 8 players drafted by NFL
See page 6
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
I. M. KOHLE
Legal streaking
David Milbradt, Hays senior, carts his nearly lifesized mute painting to the Oread. Show west of the stadium yesterday. Milbradt's painting is unittiled.
Subsidy proposal to KUAC
Staff Writer
By HARRIS RAYL
Legislature acts to finish murals
They also took exception to Curry's interpretation of Kansas history. The legislators especially objected to the blood on John Brown's hands, the terrorsides and skulls of Confederate soldiers, and other examples of what they called "those atrocities on that wall of horror."
By KAREN LEONARD
But if contemporary art critics are impressed, the legislators back in 1937 weren't. For one thing, they questioned Curry's adherence to facts. His critics contended that pigs don't curl their tails when they eat, that skunks curl their tails when they eat, and that humans walk and that the coat of Curry's Herford sheep is too red and not "natural-like."
ANGRY CURRY left without signing the murals he had completed. One of them, "The Tragic Prelude," is considered one of Carry's greatest works. It depicts a towering figure of John Brown, arms outstretched, holding the Bible in one hand and a rifle in the other.
CURRY DEFENDED his work, saying that he was trying "to get into his pictures the iron that is the Kansas people, not a soft, snowy presentation."
The legislators weren't dissuaded and only the preliminary sketches for the eight panels in the central rotunda were completed. In 1946, Curry died.
The sketches were hung on the walls of the Governor's office and for years nothing was known about them.
The Kansas Senate gave final approval yesterday to a bill allocating $40,000 for the new murals, sending the bill to Gov. Robert F. Bennett.
Hayes said artists had objected to the idea of trying to interpret another artist's work, but he intended to "stick to his guns" and use the original idea.
About $707,000 in funds will be generated annually from students—either through combined ticket sales and Senate funding or through ticket sales alone.
Thirty years after John Stuart Curry's death, the Kansas Legislature is considering hiring another artist to finish the work it wouldn't let Curry complete.
When the Senate voted to cut the KUAC subsidy last fall, Clyde Walker, athletic director, said the price of football tickets would be raised next year to $21 and the price of basketball tickets would be raised to $16. Currently, they are both $10.
At a subsidy level of $1.20, football tickets would cost about $19.40
Messie said Walker had revised his decision and that ticket prices should instead be subsidized. If the Serena decides not to subsidize KUAC next week, these would be the approximate ticket prices next fall. These prices would generate about $80,000.
Curry, a famous American social-real artist, was commissioned in 1937 to paint murals on the walls of the state Capital building.
Several artists have volunteered to paint the murals from Curry's sketches. Charles Rivers, who grew up in Chicago, did the work.
A proposed schedule of student ticket subsidies will be presented today to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation's Todd Tassle, student body president, at Teddie Tassle, student body president.
FOR EXAMPLE, if the Senate decides on a subsidy level of about $4.20 out of every student activity fee, next fall's football tickets would cost about $9.70.
The proposed schedule lists possible athletic ticket prizes at different subsidy levels. It was authorized last night by the Senate's Sports Committee of the Senate's Sports Committee.
Under the proposed schedule, the higher
the Senate's ticket subsidy, the lower the
Senate's vote share.
But after the schedule is worked out with KUAC, Tashseff said, John Broadle, Sports committee chairman, will submit a bill to the U.S. Senate and ask the partial Senate funding to KUAC.
BROADCAST SAI'd his bill would reinstate a block allocation of about $50,000 to KUAC. To supply those funds, he said, the present $7.5 student activity fee would be increased from $1.80 to $2.40. This would increase the semester activity fee to about $12.00, the same as before the Senate cut KUAC's funding last year.
Political controversy arose over the murals because the legislators didn't like the work Curry already had completed and refused to remove expensive Italian marble slabs from the walls of the central rotunda to make way for the final paintings.
Dong Messer, KUAC business manager, attended the subcommittee meeting and recommended that he be emphasized that he was not to express the optimism of the KUAC board or to try to influence his views.
The two increase next year would have generated about $252,000. Brodie said.
those who are interested in painting the murals, he said.
HAYES SAID that he wasn't an artist and didn't know what would become of the marble slabs that had originally created the sculpture. He then spent paintings would be hung over the marble.
Lawrence artists questioned were unenthusiastic about the project.
Raymond Eastwood, retired chairman of KU's department of painting and sculpture, said, "I don't think anybody else could paint this." He said he didn't think many people would want to try.
The only difference the amount of money will make, he said, will be in the amount the legislators have "to bribe an artist" to do the murals.
Mike Ott, current chairman of the department of painting and sculpture, agreed that almost any artist had a conception of the finished painting that wasn't expressed in the preliminary sketches. But it was, he said, Curry's death with only preliminary sketches, wouldn't be able to interpret what Curry really had in mind, he said.
OTT SAID THAT he would like to see an artist do an original work, which would cost $10 million.
"This seems to me pretty seedy," he said. "The whole situation has been rushed into and we should consider alternatives. It smells of strong-arming."
Robert Sudlow, professor of painting and sculpture, said he intended to write a book on his experiences.
GREG MYBERB, Lincoln, Neb., junior,
asked MESH why some other universities
charge lower subsidies and lower ticket
prices for athletic funding than KU.
"Each one (school) floats out its own balance and sees what figures and what doobles it sees."
Messer replied that every school operated under different circumstances.
Messer said that he thought Walker opposed higher ticket prices but KUAC would be forced to raise them because of business needs if the Senate didn't provide subsidies.
He also said that although KUAC based its ticket prices on the need for generating about $300.00 from students this year, he added that "it is a more conservative figure of about $290.00."
THIS IS done, Messer said, because it is very hard to predict the KUCA's yearly growth.
"Financially speaking, it's a very high risk business," he said.
Tasheff, who supports Broadie's subsidy bill, said Wednesday she thought the Senate should be concerned with the prices students pay for athletic tickets.
"I think it's our first responsibility to provide this year's students with the best experience possible."
"I think we have the commitment to bring it up before the new Senate," she said.
DAVE SHAPIRO, a member of the Sports Committee, said he opposed Breadbill's bill. He said that he wanted the Senate to withhold KUAC funding this year so the subcommittee could determine the effect a cut would have on the athletic program.
Shapiro sponsored a bill, which was passed by the Sports Committee Wednesday, that created the subcommittee. He said he wanted to establish the subcommittee so the Senate could study how funding the funds and the impact of a funding cut.
He said this cut would determine whether KU students would receive the same athletic services without the subsidy as they do with it. He said he thought that if ticket
sales didn't decrease as a result of a cut, then the Senate could stop funding of KUAC without hurting either the program or the benefits to students.
HUT. SHAPIRO said, if the higher ticket prices caused a decrease in the number of students buying tickets, then he thought the Senate should fund KIAC.
He said the only way to find this cut out was to cut KUAC one year to see what happen.
Broadie, in reference to Shapiro's argument, said, "I see some reason in postponing the decision (to reintroduce KUAC funding), but I feel we should remember the students that we benefit (with lower ticket prices)," he said.
"With the possible exception of the UDK, the Student Senate benefits more students by funding KUAC than by funding any other student organization," he said.
Title IX disclosures promised to Tasheff
By BARB ROSEWICZ
Staff Writer
Tedde Tasheff, student body president, said last night that a confidential copy of the IX steering committee report had been released by Del Shanek, executive vice chancellor.
Tasheff said he didn't specify when that might be.
The Title IX report, a study of possible sex discrimination at KU, is made by being made aware of the report.
The committee has stated that it might not publish release the report, but might release a report.
The steering committee is composed of Shankel, Mike Davis, University general counsel and David W. Robinson, former acting executive vice chancellor for the Kansas City campus and now vice chancellor for clinical affairs.
THE STUDENT Senate passed a resolution at last week's meeting requesting the public release of the steering committee's report when it is completed. The Steering Committee released the report to the Archie R. Dykes release the report if the steering committee refuses to release it.
The resolution was submitted to the
Student Senate by Ed Rolfs, student senator.
Rolfs said last night that the document was going to have a serious and long-range impact on students at KU and should be released.
He said that he wouldn't be satisfied with a summary of the report because it might include recommendations for ending discrimination at KU, but might not include the information on which the committee's interpretations were based.
*More important than the recommendation,* they get to the endpoint, *he said*.
All of the secrecy surrounding the Title IX report increased desires to have the report
ROLFS SAID if the administration did not release the report, he planned to join in a request for it with Randy Czar琳灵k. He also said the Freedom of Information Act.
The Freedom of Information Act states an access to federal executive bodies by adding the following terms:
If an agency withholds records, it must prove that the information falls under its jurisdiction.
Bv.JIM COBB
Staff Writers
KU funding vote expected
TOPEKA—The University's fiscal 1977 appropriations are expected to be considered today, after the Kansas House of Representatives voted to approve the bill and failed to adduce for first access.
Speculation at the Capitol was that a House-Smate conference committee report, which hadn't been released as of last night, was considering funding in funding for the University of Kansas.
The House did give final approval to a supplemental funding bill for KU for fiscal year 2016, which included additional operating funds for the Lawrence campus this year and about $7.5 million for future plans.
said. "I've been told there were no major changes."
The large 1977 appropriations bill, which includes $43.1 million for KU, will be considered sometime today before the legislature adjourns until mid-April. House Speaker Duane S. "Pete" McGill, R-Winfield, said last night.
STATE REP. JOHN Vogel, R-Lawrence,
said he expected that the funding bill would
be considered before noon today, and he
was optimistic about its approval.
Vogel and other legislators said that they thought the conference committee had recommended that about $30,000 of a request for the Bureau of Child Research be
That would leave $17,477, which would be used to fund additional half-time funds for the bucks.
"I have a feeling it will go through," he
Vogel said the funding bill wasn't considered today because copies of the conference committee's report, including a statement, were not needed for distribution on the House floor.
ANOTHER delay came after the Senate and House disagreed about a public school funding bill. The Senate refused to send the bill to a new conference committee as the House had requested Wednesday. But yesterday afternoon, the House approved a measure to authorize the bill as recommended by the first conference committee.
That version calls for a seven per cent spending limit on local schools.
A bill that would raise the state cigarette tax by one cent a package with revenue proceeds from the cigarette tax.
Med Center, wasn't considered yesterday even after it was placed on the House calendar.
"I think it would be a tremendous asset for KU," Buzzi said. "We have a chance to become a national cancer-treatment center."
Kansan jobs open
Applications for editor and business manager of the Kansan for the summer and fall semesters will be held on Friday, April 16, in 106 Flint Hall.
Applications are available in 105 Flint, the dean of women's office and the Student Senate office.
The Kansan board will interview candidates and select the editors and business managers April 20.
SUNDAY
Late night discussion
after speaking to a Union Ballroom audience for more than two hours, John Marks, executive director of the Center for National
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Security Studies in Washington, D.C., answered students' quest in question 28 of the book "CAG and the Cult of Intelligence."
CIA political influence topic of SUA forum
StaffWriter
By JANET SCHMIDT
Professors and students on college campuses all over the country are among the charms the Central Intelligence Agency carries in its bag of dirty tricks.
Known as clandestine services, the CIA has infiltrated campuses for more than 10 years to recruit students and faculty as undercover agents, John Marks, executive director of the CIA's Studies (CNSS), Washington, D.C., said last night in the Karasan Union Ballroom.
The presentation opened with a half-hour segment from "The Rise and Fall of the CIA," a documentary on CIA intervention in Iraq, produced by the British Broadcasting Corporation.
Marks spoke for more than two hours to about 130 people on CIA influence in domestic and international politics during a program sponsored by SUA Forums.
The notion that other countries are too irresponsible to choose their own form of
"I don't see why we need to stand by idy and watch a country go Communist just because of the irresponsibility of the people."
MARKS INTRODUCED the film with a statement made in June 1970 by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger on the CIA's secret war in Laos;
government is the justification used by the CIA for its covert operations. Marks said.
"The notion that we know best is the tragic flaw in our national policy toward other countries," he said. "And the CIA is important because it can be used secretly."
RECRITING college students and professors as secret agents is one of the ways the CIA influenced foreign governments. Marks said.
He said that professors were used to recruit foreign students to work in undercover operations in their native countries, and that he was used with American students, he said.
Marks said the CNSS was working with the National Student Association to organize a nationwide campaign to get the CIA off college campuses.
Marks presented a list of CIA operations, including CIA involvement in the Bay of Pigs invasion against Fidel Castro in the '60s; Vietnam; Watergate; Angola and illegal drug trade.
"THE CIA IS in effect the political police of the United States around the world," he said.
Marks said that the methods used by the CIA are only symptoms of more serious crimes.
Imperialism and corruption in See CIA page 5
2
Friday, April 9, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Inaury ties Butz, Callaway
WASHINGTON—A Senate investigator yesterday linked Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz with efforts by Howard H. Callaway to persuade the Forest Service to approve an extension of his Colorado ski re-port onto nearby federal land.
Butz has denied any involvement with the University department. However, the Agriculture Department is the parent agency of the Forest Service.
Owen Malone, chief investigator for the Senate Interior Committee, said a note, which appears to be in Butz' handwriting, was found written on an Interior Department memo urging that the Forest Service be encouraged to take that would pave the way for the expansion of Callaway's Created Butte
Callaway, a former Army secretary, resigned as President Ford's campaign manager.
A tentative decision had been made by local Forest Service officials to oppose immediate expansion. But 5½ months after the meeting in Callaway's office, the service tentatively approved the expansion proposal, reversing the position taken by the lower-level officials.
The expansion is still awaiting final approval.
Harris ends primary runs
WASHINGTON—Former Oklahoma Sen. Fred Harris withdrew as a contender yesterday in the remaining Democratic presidential primary elections.
Harris decided to throw his support to any other Democrat and said he would remain a declared candidate through the Democratic National Convention in New York.
"Iam still a candidate for President of the United States," Harris told a crowded rally and news conference. "But our national effort in the primaries ends today."
Harris ran a self-declared "New Populus" campaign, calling for breaking up economic monopolies and price controls on the oil, auto and steel industries. He
His full-time campaign staff of about 30 will be cut to six or less. Arlo Gubriek folk conks to raise money will continue.
At the convention, Harris said, he hoped to make an imprint on the party platform.
Gold standard evaluated
WASHINGTON—Proposals to eliminate gold as international money and establish flexible conditions for currency exchange rates are ready for approval by the Federal Reserve.
The initial impact of the changes on the lives of Americans probably would be negligible. The proposals are designed to create a more stable economic environment.
The proposals require each IMF member "to direct its economic and financial policies toward the objective of fostering orderly economic growth with reasonable
price沙发
Johannes H. Witteveen, the managing director of the IMF, predicted to newsmen it will be late next year, at the earliest, before enough nations have approved the proposals to put them into effect.
China picks new premier
TOKYO-An estimated 100,000 Chinese wavers banning, singing revolutionary songs and beating gongs, cymbals and drums, marched around Pekin's Tien An Men Square yesterday hailing the appointment of Hua Kuo-feng as premier and condemned guest Teh Haijo-ing.
The official Hainau news agency said the latest shifts in the hierarchy were endorsed by "several million" jubilant citizens in all parts of the country, including Chinese guards facing the Soviets along the frontier in Sinkiang, thousands of rulers from Peking.
The speedy appointment of Hua, 56, as premier and party first vice chairman on Mao's proposal Wednesday, makes him the No. 2 man in China's ruling hierarchy.
Teng, 72, the target of several weeks of harsh criticism as "the unrepentant capitalist-landlord stripped of his right to land on Mao's back" and his hired managerships subject to his future behavior.
But neither official Peking broadcasts monitored in Tokyo nor Japanese news reports from Peking have reported Teng's whereabouts.
DUs remember counselor
About 125 friends gathered at the Plymouth Congregational Church yesterday for the funeral services of Lloyd Houston.
After being weakened by pneumonia and flu, Mr. Houston died peacefully in a coma Monday in Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was 94.
Among those gathered were 50 members of Delta Upsilon fraternity, whom Mr. Willett served as president.
Mr. Houston had been a member of the DH-dampler at KU since he came to WYNE.
As special counselor and a man who had a dollar when it was needed, Mr. Houston was a brother to many. He set up a fund with the Endowment Association through which DUs can get short term loans. Since 1927, he opened his home at 1347 New Hampshire to students, young married couples and an elderly couple that couldn't afford room and board elsewhere.
Mr. Houston had no children but was involved in the lives of Lawrence young
people as a member of the Kiwis club the school board, and as chairman of the city council.
He made the initial donation for construction of the recreation center in South Carolina.
He published accounts of his experiences with young people in two books, "A Countdown" and "The Fountain," which dealt with his half-century as counselor at the DU house, and "A Directed Bull Session," which summarized 32 years of philosophical dialogue between a group of young people.
In a brief eulogy, Terry Bullock, Topека lawyer and DU alumnus, recalled a conversation he had recently with Mr. Houston. "I don't think I had brought him the most pleasure in life."
"Houston said life with his wife, Bonnie, came first, and then said, "stories like these," and pulled a letter from his pocket. The letter, from a doctor Mr. Houston had cureded 20 years earlier, thanked him for his support and advice.
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The Satellite Union Task Force heard planning recommendations from Frank Burge, Kareas Union director, at its meeting last night.
Staff Writer
LREx
BY CAROL HOCHSCHEID
Burge said student response to existing Union services and programs had indicated a great need for additional student union facilities. Students have approved using
The task force will incorporate its findings and Burge's suggestions into a final report, which the five-member force will ratify Tuesday evening.
"This Union is so heavily used that it's returning nearly $30 per square foot an hour."
Lawrence, Kansas 1603 W. 15th
Satellite union plans presented by Burge
"Matching your statement of needs with our resources is the most interesting and challenging task we've had for a long time." Burue told the task force.
The Union, which encompasses a 250,000
employees and generates an annual income of
18.4 million, burgee fees.
A public hearing will be at 7 p.m. Sunday in the International Room of the Union to listen to student opinion about the satellite union.
He stressed flexibility in all phases of planning for the satellite union, and said architectural design should lend itself to expansion and interior improvement.
This was the last meeting of the task force before it starts a final draft of recommendations for presentation to the Student Senate later this month.
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Ed Rolfs, task force chairman, said the taskforce felt that good exterior design was
Food service areas should be bright and pleasant with emphasis on fast service, be
be viewed equally in the budget proposal. Burge said consideration in planning should be given to building "people places" that are moreatable and enjoyable as well as functional.
as important as interior design and should be viewed equally in the budget proposal.
The task force had earlier considered allowing franchise food service in the satellite union, but Burge said menus of franchise fast food restaurants have been proved to be too limited for successful student union sales.
"As a minimum, we've got to have adequate vending facilities available for all customers."
"Students demand a broader menu offering than a franchise could offer" he
The bookstore facility should be modest in size, yet efficient. Burge said.
Burge also suggested that food service be available "almost round the clock."
As student population grows in the southwest campus area, extended student banking services in the satellite union will become increasingly necessary. Burge said, "We need to research theobates of obtaining a local bank to serve the satellite union."
"Let the money-handlers handle the money," he said.
After architectural plans for the satellite union are completed, the actual construction should take 12 to 18 months, Rolfs said.
baseball
Burge commended the task force for its effective and thorough planning.
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you haven't seen a program of the finest animated films from all over the world A collection of films from Italy, Belgium, Poland, Yugoslavia, Canada, and the United States Friday and Saturday April 9 & 10 7:00 and 9:30 p.m. presented by SUA
Air Force issues 22 rebukes
WASHINGTON (AP)—Air Force Secretary Thomas Reed sent letters of admonition to 22 military and civilian officials yesterday for accepting hunting invitations from Rockwell International Corp., a major defense contractor.
being looked at, and out of these could possibly come stiffer actions than admonitions."
Pentagon spokesman William Greener said at a briefing that other cases "still are
The Pentagon said the letters were issued "for attending defense contractor sponsored hunting facilities during the period 1971-1974."
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Fair to explore job opportunities
A career fair designed to answer questions on job opportunities and career options will be today and tomorrow in the Kansas Union.
Friday, April 9, 1976
It is sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW).1.
University of Kansas professors, representatives from the KU Medical Center and area businessmen will be available to inform students about possible college majors and career opportunities. Kris Balloun, Olathe junior and cochairman of the Career Fair, said yesterday.
Questions will be answered from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. today at the fair, followed by a banquet at 6. The fair will continue tomorrow beginning at 10 a.m.
The fair will be in the Jahawk room and in Parlors A, B and C.
"We started thinking about the fair at the beginning of last semester." Kris Ballau, junior and fair cochairman, said yested at the event. "It's comprehensive and something that
everyone in the University could find useful.
The seminars include topics such as:
careers don't just happen: you've got to
plan; maximizing black potential toward
education; managing your dance: do you
know where you're going?
Other workshop topics focus on alternatives to college, job skill building and beginning a career. The workshops will include Walnut, Regionalist and Oread rooms.
"The fair isn't limited at all to women," Robinson said, "The publicity materials make it available to all people and it was made with no racism or sexism involved at all."
The program will include a guest speaker from the Federal Trade Commission, Dr. Michael Dole, Dole, a Washington attorney will speak at 7 o'clock in the Big Eight Room.
The CSW says its goals are to help women realize their career options, help women
Workshops carry the theme of the fair, Careers 'Don't Just Happen', will be tailored to your needs.
The dance was originally a war dance of the Klawo tribe, Brown said, but now is used in ceremonies.
Indians to powwow today
Haskell Indian Junior College also will perform in tomorrow's powermaking with an artist named Amy Giles.
The Native American Alliance (NAA), an organization of American Indian students from various tribes, will sponsor a powwow at Allen Field House today and tomorrow.
The program starts at 6:30 tonight and lasts until midnight. It will resume tomorrow at 1:30 p.m. and last until midnight.
The powwow will consist of a dance contest tomorrow night featuring war dances and special tribal dances. A Gourd-dancing tribe will dance both nights. Special tribal dances will be performed by many different tribes.
The Gourd dance was originated by the Kiowa tribe, David Brown, president of the Kiwanis. The song for the dance is sung in the Kiwanis. The song was taught by the Kiwanis to Indian tribes in the plains, Brown said. The Gourd dance will be the Omaha Gourd Clan from Wayne.
Brown said the NAA had wanted to hold a powwow for some time. The idea has had much encouragement, he said, because of the hard work that goes into stimulate cooperation and enhance
WILLIAM JASE THEATRE
William Ingo Theatre presents
Mark Twain's
COLONEL SELLERS
April 7-10 8:00 p.m.
Box Office 864-3982
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make their own choices based on what they want to do in inform them of alternative or unforeseen risks.
Brown said the powwow is a multi-tribal gathering "to promote cultural awareness via tribal dancing, singing and social interaction."
relationships with KU, Haskell, the city of Lawrence, and surrounding communities.
The powwow also promotes Native American awareness at KU, and shows prospective students with Native American heritage in an exist that express their heritage, he said.
The NAA has received encouragement from KU, Haskell, the Lawrence Indian Center and the Native American student Baker University in Baldwin. Brown said.
The CSW was created in 1968 to work within the Association of Women Students (AWS) to examine sex discrimination and the status of women on the KU campus. The AWS later dissolved and the committee became the CSW in 1970.
In last year's regatta, the team of Ray Munger, Overland Park park and Leean Roberts, Lawrence sophomore, won the Miller Cup.
Brown said he expected a large turnout for the powwow. It is open to the public and there is no admission charge, although donations are encouraged, he said.
Linda Robinson, assistant to the dean of women and adviser to the CSW, said the Commission had sponsored careers programs in the past.
Sailors to race at Lake Perry
The University of Kansas Sailing Club and SUA will host the third annual Miller's Collegiate Cup Regatta 9 a.m. tomorrow at Lake Perry.
The University of Iowa and Southwest Missouri State University will compete with KU in the Midwest College Sailing Association sanctioned regatta. Kansas State University has also been invited to compete.
There will be eight regulation races in addition to the Miller Cup race. Each school will enter two teams that will compete in all eight races.
Dwight Rix, Wichita junior and Randy Wright, sophomore took second in the third round.
The Miller Cup race is run backwards from the regulation races, and each sailor, skipper and crew, must drink six cans of beer before finishing the race.
The Miller Brewing Co. will provide beer and trobables in the reattava.
University Daily Kansan
The rotating women's crew of Debbie Bauman, Overland Park senior; Peggy Bacom, University of Florida sergei Chapel, Neb., graduate student, and Roberts took third last year.
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
In the next to the last verse in the Bible, God's revelation of Himself to man Jesus Christ says 'SURREY I COME QUICKLY! AMEN' The first word is *surrey*.
Considering what will happen "when He commits to make up His jewels," and considering the evil apparent on every hand, one might be inclined to hesitate in joining the Apotheke in his invitation for the Lord Jesus, who is the only way out of this world. 13:41, 42, we read that in the end of this world "The Son of man shall send forth His angels, and they shall gather out of his kingdom all things that offend, and them which do iniquity; and shall cast them into fire." 14:19.
"He that endureth to the end shall be saved." Be thou faithful unto death, and will give the crown of a covenant of 'if' I'll not endure to the end" will be an offence in that day, "for he that putteth his hand to the plow and looketh back is not lift—offensive" for the kingdom of God. "If you should put the crown on the earth, death, eternal death All profane fools will be found toendif, whether it is from cursing or taking the name of God in vain by insincerity of worship and profession. Sabbath desecrateres offend; using the dayGod sacrificed for His own honor and to be a blessing in man to giving others a chance to do the same." On Him while He is near," using this day for his own work, profit, pleasure, sports, and satisfaction of the lusts of the flesh. In view of Christ's words in The Sermon on The Mount - Matthew 5:27-32 who go about in public nearly must classify as women or children, even if they are not sure what to take after them in their heart. Those who put away wife or husband, except for the cause of fornication, in that day will be gathered up by the angels for "fuel for the furnace!" A few hours ago a man contacted the writer asking where it was in the Bible that a woman that wore a crown of a crown of a crown of a crown of a crown of Certainty that which is abonable to be counted will be counted offender! That might fail to tell of others who offer and do injunctly Pontius Pilate, who on account of fear and favor are afraid to stand for that which they know to be right; or like Judas would sell the Mastor God's Laws and Commandments are offensive to our generation. Herin lies the answer to the question: Why do the heaen热烈?
In these days when it seems that "everybody is doing it," it is not pleasant to think of Christ's angels gathering all for the furnace of fire. Instead of praying Him to "Come quickly, it must be inclined to come," we must pray Him to "Look before you burn the barren down the barren fig tree. Lord, cut it down it yew, leave it while it grows."
longer, stir up your people to dig about it, dug it, with the hopes it will bring forth fruit, and not have to be cut down!
Why is it that we do not pay more attention, why do we not continually drum solemn such enemble, even terrible truth, into our hearts and mindal Why Christ "in cometh to make up His jewels" there will be a discerning "between the righteous and the wicked, between him that serveth his own goodwill, and between him that serves what appears that much of the teachings of Christ to his disciples in the parables is forgiven, forsaken, and not applied to our lives and problemifl, in our testimony and witnessing we talked as much about the danger of being "tares, offenders, doors of Iniquity," and the danger of being gathered in the end by the angels for the furnace of Jesus' life, because they have been "born again" and that Christ "dwells within," doublets would not have such a big job of "feeding the fire of the furnace."
Ephesian 2:8, 9, says: "For by grace are ye saved through faith; and not of yourselves: is the gift of God; not of work, lest any man should boast: 'Time and again have heard great men, and good men, who have been saved,'" The author of such can do, absolutely nothing to get saved, it the gift of God. "Such advice usually brings to mind the passage where a man asked Christ if there were few that be saved, and His answer: 'Serve to enter in at the door.'" The author does not mention that the gift of God **not be able**. — Luke 13:24. The writer is not concerned about upsetting another's doctrine, unless it is the doctrine that uses one Scripture to cancel another Scripture. in the "temptation scene" when the devil Scripture to offer the Scripture Christ acted upon, Christ told him he was not sure what he wanted. Yet all he lest any be found tares and offensive and "food for the furnace fire" in that day, when they are supposed to be, and think they are, good wheat for the master's garner. The Bible does not contradict it. Apparent that the garner of our blindness, stiff-necked, and uncircumcision of the heart
“And, oh, what a weeping and walling, when the loat were told of their fate. They cried for the rocks and the mountains to fall on them and hide them from the face of Him that sitleth upon the throne, and hide them from the lamb. They cried, but their cry was too late.”—Rv 6:14-17.
"Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter. Fear God and keep His Commandments; for this is the whole duty of man. For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil." Eccles. 12:13, 14, REPENT, TURN FROM EVIL, AND MAKE YOURSELF A CANDIDATE FOR "THE GRACE OF GOD THAT BRIEENGH SALVATION"
P. O. Box 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
4
Friday, April 9, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
心
Bernard Faye
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENEF
Tapestry patterns
A collection of Fabric Design International works at the Kansas Union Gallery displays a variety of textile printing and dyeing methods. The display, which consists
entirely of professional works, parallels a similar display of student tapestries at the Lawrce Public Library.
Beauty marks textiles
A combination of graphic design and artistic beauty marks the works of two textile exhibits on display in conjunction with the Surface Design Conference.
By MARY ANN HUDDLESTON
Fabric Design International, in the Kansas Union Gallery, comprises 36 works by professional designers and teachers from all over the country.
That combination has produced some visually stunning results.
THE INTERNATIONAL STUDENT Fabric Design Competition, at the Lawrence Public Library, exhibits 39 works by students from universities and art schools. The University of Kansas students have works exhibited there.
Each of the works reveals the artist's concern for aesthetics. He is well as design, with careful attention paid to color and
Displays such as these demonstrate beautifully that textile printing and dyeing belongs as much to the realm of fine arts as to the home economics department.
Several of the professional works in the Union Gallery are
quilted screenprints. The most beautiful of these are by Leonor Davis of Buffalo, N.Y., entitled "seeding" and "Angel Women."
BOTH WORKS, machine-quilted on cotton velveteteen, are among seven named to the Judges' Selection of Exception. Quality. *Angel* *Aesthetics* unusual depiction of angels in high-heeled shoes hovering on a lush green earth.
Another outstanding judges' selection is "Seasons: Fall," by Patricia Dreher, a professional from Moyan, Pa. Done by her husband, she application on unbleached cotton, it depicts the goddesses classically posed among the trees. Their bodies and the bases of the trees are floral in the rushes and golds of fall.
THE STUDENTS' exhibit equals, and perhaps surpasses, the caliber of work in the professional exhibit.
The works by KU students Barbie Douglass and Missy Crawford, the authors of *junions*; and Shigeko Spear, Lawrence senior, are of good quality but they lack some of concern in their intellectual inclusion.
Douglass" "Ship Wreck" is a sinking ship block-printed on
cotton with Speedball oil ink.
The muted blues, grays and greens make an effective, watery background.
"Competition with Wax and Dye" by Goodell demonstrates an unusual technique with an abstract batik print in the background of a brilliant red done in direct application.
"Melvaig," by Elizabeth Munro, student at Texas Christian University, resembles an abstracted Japanese floral design. She uses flower shapes on a striking flower shape on a striking black and white background.
Oriental themes are prevalent in both exhibits.
SPEAR'S SCREENPRINT technique in "Spring Ocean" lends itself to highly stylized fish and waves.
Chunghu Choo, professor of metalmasonting at the University of Iowa, said, "It was challenged when we moved from new in and unfamiliar ways."
Comments by the exhibits' two jurors summarize the impact of these exhibits on design as an art form.
Movie's many weaknesses trivial to children viewers
Janet Levin, associate professor of textile arts at the University of California, crafts in Oakland, said, "Siblings like the present one make it possible for art forms, such as sculpture, to be recognized and to grow."
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
Several years ago, film critic Andrew Sarris published a collection of his reviews titled "Confessions of my mistress" and honored of his writing, but Sarris' phrase has stuck with him. As an occasional opinion-giver myself, I've often wondered if I don't unwilly more about myself than do about my subjects in this column.
So let me confess a few things. In the two hours I allotted to compose my comments, I requested. Should I let it out that I think that Stanley Kubrick is a shallow-over-rated fraud? How can I deal with a new Nicholson film that has been out for three months already? And I dread that I have to review a new Bererman film.
The trouble is, none of my
So I am genuinely relieved when my editor assign me an assignment, and I'm in Bears. It's a guaranteed success, has no hallowed director, is fairly anonymous, my editor has my full critical abilities to bear.
The charm of the kids isn't exactly what makes "Bears" work, either. Tatum O'Neal of *Nickelodeon* and Alfred W. Lutter of "Alice Doesn't Live Here Anymore" is the head benchwarmer, but the rest of the team is made of kid glasses, who been in a feature film before.
The fact that none of these kids shows any evidence of method acting is a minor pleasure, and adding Walter
finely honed tools can do the job. The directing is awkward, the acting too obvious, and the script is packed with schaltz and spur-of-the-moment moves, in matters, because "Bad News Bears" is a children's film that works.
The "Bad News Bears" are a group of improbable little league baseball players. In their first game they lose 26-0 when their coach forfeits after one hour and 45 minutes. The Bears haven't even had their first win by the championship they make it to the championship game at the end of the season.
Matthau as the coach helps too. But the key to "Bad News Bears" is that the kids really act like children. Undoubtedly this will cause some anxious moments for some parents. The kids are clearly not lightly profane the way youngsters of that age are.
That's why it is useless to go into great detail about the film's shortcomings. The people who will respond to it best could care less and more effectively understated camerawork. They'll be too wrapped up in the taxing problems of deciding who on the team needs supporters, and whether the player needs her first bra.
It doesn't matter to this audience that director Michael Ritchie and screenwriter Bill Lancaster probably thought they were creating a story about a group of misfits instead of a portrait of average boys and girls. They will love it.
Meanwhile, I'm left worrying about the review for Ingmar Bergman's "The Magic Flute." I'll have to confess for that?
(8 p.m. Thursday at Off-the Wall Hall)
MILLIONAIRE AT MID NIGHT; Rock 'n' roll with theatrical touches by a local group made up of some former members.
DAYHILLS: A band from Ireland that plays riddle fiddle and string guitar with flute. Walk on amateurs will be allowed to perform between
(8:30 tonight in the Hawk's Nest)
Highlights
EUGENE FODOR: This 24-year-old violin virtuoso has been called the "Mick Jagger of the World" and won the winner, the first from the Western world, in the International Chalkovski Violin Competition.
CHAMBER CHOIR: James Ralston, professor of choral music, will conduct the chamber choir in Mozart's "Coronation Mass" and "Solem Vespers." They will be accompanied by the Lawrence Chamber Players. Players in the University Theatre)
(8 tonight and tomorrow night at Off-the-Wall Hall)
BILLY SPEARS BAND: A BAN-
dler, grass-grader Spears,
put together a band of
guitar and band and has been touring the country. He returns to
touring with the band.
barely resembles the original image he had pictured. Started more than a century ago, this is one medium which has snowballed in popularity to the point that it has become a picture-oriented society. The importance of photography can only increase in years to come.
(8 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch Auditorium)
Concerts
GLADIATORS AND
CULDEN: Two films by
director Peter Watkins. The
film explores the futurized
priorities, and centers on
televised combat games. The
second reconstructs the
destruction of the Scottish
and Clan China after the 1745
Jacobite Ursuline.
Films
(8 tonight, tomorrow night and Sunday night at Oliver Hall)
BELLS ARE RINGING: A musical comedy with a plot of romance and intrigue, produced almost entirely by Oliver Hall
The Ninth Annual University Photo Contest, sponsored by SUA and the photojournalism sequence in the School of Journalism, is an opportunity to show your skills and creativity.
FACULTY RECITAL:
MFA in Business
faculty member in the department of organ this semester,
will perform a program of
bioassays.
THE BIG HEAT: Glen Foro stars as an idealistic police
IT'S A SHAME the contest aren't being displayed in the press, but where they had been in the past. The bank offers quite adequate display facilities, but it's not always suitable for students as the Union.
COLONEL SELLERS: En-
tirely the name of a boy.
Age in the form of two plays:
"Colonel Sellers" is a study of a
character from Shakespeare's
*Graded. Age.*, "Slasher
and Crashor" consists of an old
time farce and a "surprise" for
a boy.
(8 tonight and tomorrow night in the Inge Theatre)
More than 150 photos were entered in seven categories in the University Terrace State Bank, selected as winners. They are being displayed at the University Terrace State Bank, until the first week in August.
Recitals
(8 p.m. Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall)
The seven categories are grand prize (overall), news-feature, picture stories, scenic, sports, portraits and abstract. The two contest judges were photographers from news wire agencies, resulting in the three most realistic, or people-oriented, pictures for the winning photographs.
WAR GAME and PRIVILEGE: Another Watkins double-bill, WAR GAME is a made-for TV movie that depicts the struggle of those who have on England. PRIVILEGE is a commercial film starring Paul Jones and Jean Shrimpin. In 1966 it shared one of the prizes at the Cannes Film Festival with Antonion's "Blow Joe."
Theater
photography as an art form. "You just get the light reading, take the picture, and get it processed and printed," they say. "What could be simpler?" As a multitude of variable lenses, even a video photographer, and the image one records on film sometimes
By BILL UYEKI Staff Writer
detective whose anticrise campaign turns into a personal vendetta after the murder of his wife
The exceptions were the photos in the scenic and abstract categories. In these groups, the subject of the pic-
Photo winners display variety of talents
SR 1476
9TH INTERNATIONAL ANIMATION FESTIVAL: A top-choice selection of all types of animation from all over the world.
ALL THE PRESIDENT'S
MEN: Roberti Redford and
Hoffman Journalist
debted store, the White House, that is.
Alan Pakula directed, with
Jason Robards, Martina Balsamiel
THE MAN WHO WOULD BE KING: John Huston has finally realized his dream project, and he will have to share Sean Connery and Michael Caine's Tweedledum and Tweedleedum camaraderie is perfectly suited to this exotic, rugged moral, adventure story.
PHANTOM OF THE PHARASE Brian Farrington's manic park rock'n'grip features Paul Williams and William Finley as last years' star.
both magic and priceless moments in human emotion. The fleeting, spontaneous laughter of a child has been captured in these photos by the two Kansan staff photographers.
Check ads for theaters and times
THE THREE WINNERS in this group possessed the required qualities. Mike Campbell expresses the easygoing atmosphere in an old men's domino game, and Wally Bogar captures the emotions of a church revival service. Perhaps most stunning of the contest entries is Jay Bogar's third-place photo story on the delivery of a child—from start to finish. Contrasting Joy and gratitude—are all conveyed in this revealing story.
Dave Crenshaw's and Don Pierce's winning shots in the news feature category capture
Picture stories, used often in full-page spreads in magazines and newspapers, require a different approach from that of single photographs. The artist captures the certain nuance, intimacy, flow and dominant subject themes throughout the story.
THERE PROBABLY WILL continue to be critics of
Stan Pittman's second and third place scenic color pictures are examples of this. In one of them, he portrays the motion of a carnival ride with a skillful blur shot.
ture is not emphasized as much as how the photographer interprets the subject's meaning and how the subject's is conveyed to the viewer.
This picture, taken by Dave Crenshaw after a minor traffic accident on campus last fall, is the grand prize winner in the Ninth Annual Photography Contest, sponsored by SUA and the School of
Collision winner
Festival turnout is disappointing
By KELLY SCOTT
Staff Writer
It's going to be hard for me to sympatize with people who complain that they can't find a way to work with them after witnessing the attendance at the three events sponsored by SUA this week from the abor-
In the space of four days, Both Auditorium was the scene of a concert by the orchestra concert, a speech by a bestselling and well-respected author.
The poor showing was embarrassing to the people who did attend but it did not prevent us of excellent entertainment.
The chamber orchestra, directed by Dicker Kober, filled Hoch with as rich a sound as many full orchestras. The audience, which was evidently captivated, refrained from applause between movements of Mozart's "Serenade No. 10 in Bflat major," applauded between the first three. Director Kober was delighted, and prefaced the four remaining movements with whimsical discourse on what the audience was about to hear.
Yet perhaps 200 people attended the Chicago Chamber Conference over 100 heard George Plimpton Monday, and 450 watched the American Chamber Ballet on its seating capacity is 3.800.
The audience loved Kober's
commentary, and the titters and guffaws of some of the musicians indicated that the orchestra did also.
Four members of the orchestra teamed up for Charles Knox's "Solo for Trumpet and Winds," which was billed as a Bicentennial salute. The last selection was a sprightly "Serenade in D minor, by Danny Brown," film out into the spring evening, most of us felt we had spent a special evening.
One needn't have been a sports fan to enjoy George Plimpton the next night.
Plimpton charmed his small audience with his wit, his intelligent perceptions of sport and some terribly funny anecdotes of his work as a lawyer. "One—who lives" his stories.
The house lights were up for most of his talk, so Plimpton saw how few people were in the audience. He still spoke enthusiastically, and the meager audience responded. After his extemporaneous remarks and a slide show of his more ridiculous moments in sports, he talked for an hour or two minutes taking questions from the floor and giving each a thorough, thoughtful answer.
The American Ballet juxtaposed the classical with the modern for an interesting effect in their performance Wed-
It was a young, inventive group giving equal time to new
forms of ballet while paying homage to the masters.
Two of the classical dances were well-danced and polished. "Le Pas De Quatre," by Pugru, was a beautiful and fanciful opening dance. "Moonstone," an original dance choreographed to the music of Tchaikovsky by the troupe's band. Benoît featured the troupe's best dancer. Sally True-Oligiby in a romantic portrayal of youthful emotion.
Benjamin also choreographed the best of the modern ballet that was danced, "Portrait," in 1974. He was fascinated to watch as they presented first a classical number and then a brash, modern exercise. The last performance presented at KU was in 1974.
It's questionable whether KU
Certainly the Festival suffered this year when big name attractions Herbie Hanck and Catherine Schwarz contracts with SUA. It broke the spell of the planned week-long event, and it seemed it to three separate events.
People who bought festival coupons and who probably would have attended several of the attractions, didn't. Coupons for each ticket would give tickets to the events had to be purchased. Given a second chance to consider whether they really had time or could afford it, many people probably just $3 and headed for the Wheel.
Carol Poulson, director of this year's festival, isn't sure.
wants a Festival of the Arts, or deserves the hard work of the people who endeavor each year to put one on.
Part of the problem, Poulson said, may lie in the stigma that is now attached to the festival.
"People say sure, it's a good idea," but nobody shows up. Pooul said Wednesday. "KU players for not showing up to concerts."
“It's going to be hard to sell the idea again,” she said. “After the disappointment last year and now this year, people give up. In fact, they give up too easily.”
Poulson said the cancellation of Hancock and Hampton made the difference between a successful festival and what happened this week.
"If we could have kept the entertainment and kept the prices down, I think it would be better," she said. "Harcock would have sold out." It isn't just the students who have failed to support the various artists who come to KU. Students who are involved at the events they. Are, after all, part of the university community.
"When you're in a college town, things are relatively cheap to go and see. Poulson went out to City and tried to see any of those three, it would cost you much more. It's just disappointing that more people won't take vacations with jobs that do come to Lawrence."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekly
journal. All rights reserved.
Second-class postage paid at Law-
nce university or $1 a day in Double County and $1 a
week in Single County. Subscriptions to
subscriptions are $2.00 a month paid through the
University.
Editor
Carl Voorne
Associate Editor
Campus Editor
Associate Editor
Associate Campus Editor
Gray Hue
Associate Campus Editor
Business Manager
Beverly Barris
Assistant Business Manager - Advertising Manager
Assistant Business Manager - Classified Manager
Classified Manager - Debt Service Manager
Friday, April 9,1976
at
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New Black Panhellenic to unite black Greeks
Staff Writer
By KAREN RAYNES
They can be recognized on a campus any day with T-shirts that are pink and green, red and white, black and gold or purple and gold.
The shirts signify that they belong to any of the five black fraternities or sororities on campus.
The organizations recently banned
teacher to form the Black Panellencio
Caucus.
Members said this week that the council had been formed to bring unity to the black Greek organizations and to aid them in working together with black students.
thomas Vaughn, Chicago law student,
came up with the idea of starting the Black
Pacific Legal Alliance.
The council now consists of one member from each black fraternity or sorority and also a member of a social organization on campus.
The members were unanimous in their expressions on the goal of the council to bring together black Greek organizations and students in general.
Dexter White, president of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity, said the Black Panhellenic was a base to bring black students together.
He said that because there was no Black Student Union on campus, the Black panhandle could serve as an interaction between universities and sororities for all black students.
Arvetta Gumby, president of Alpa
kappa Alpha sorority, said the council
had agreed to accept her.
KU never had WATS line, operator says
The University of Kansas didn't have Wide Area Telephone Service (WATS) to Kansas City and Topeka before the new long distance system was put into use, according to Emadeane Barland, chief university operator.
According to Barland, a WATS line can be used to call any phone within a certain radius of the WATS phone or within a certain area code. KUU didn't have this kind of phone said, because the lines that the University had were only in Kansas City and Topeka.
PALAND SAID Wednesday that KU had Government Exchange (GX) to the U.S.
Yesterday's Kansan said KU had five WATS lines to Topeka and six to Kansas City. Those lines were actually FX and GX lines, Bartland said.
Barland explained that KU had only four long-distance lines to Topena and five to Kansas City. The other two lines were used by the athletic department.
Records from the comptroller's office show that the athletics department not only has records of these events,
USE OF the FX and GX lines at KU was discontinued April 1 when a new long distance system, the Kansas Agency Network (KANS-A-N) was put into use. KANS-A-N connects more than 500 state offices.
KANS-A-N is expected to save the state $250,000 a year in its total corporate bill by consolidating all privately leased long-term loans that each state agency had been using.
Barland said records were kept by her office of the number of calls made to the Kansas City area and Topeka. Any KU department wanted to know how many calls it made on those lines can call the University operator, she said.
Between 450 and 500 calls, costing about three cents each, were made on the Kansas City FX and GX lines every day, Barland said.
Although KU paid for the Kansas City- Topeka calls made by every department on the direct lines, under the KAN-A-N department will be charged for every long distance call it makes, including those to the Kansas City area and Topeka.
Barland said anyone have questions about KANS-A-N could call the University of Oklahoma.
Jay Hennings, president of Omega Phi fraternity, said the council brought black fraternities and sororities closer together.
"One never loses the fact that we are all black people working toward a common goal."
"It is definitely a worthwhile
organization," he said.
Most of the members felt that the council could be beneficial to the students on campus.
Gwen Young, president of Delta Sigma Theta sorority, said the council also served as a meeting place for its planning committee that would sponsor functions for students.
James Belt, representative for P.O.W.E.R. L.T.D., an organization for P.O.W.E.R. L.T.D., the council helped provide needs and service to broader social awareness in the community.
David Sims, Council representative for
Line snags seaweed, not hair
According to the members, the most important thing gained by this council will be to bring harmony between black fraternities, sororites and the students.
Kappa Alpha Pi fraternity, said the council hoped to bring everybody together for a national celebration.
CIA activities
A substance pulled from the Kansas River Tuesday by a fisherman turned out to be fresh water seaweed, instead of a lump of human hair, as was thought possible by police.
Marks said intelligence gathering had a positive function in protecting the national security.
A KBI official announced yesterday that
the government hidden behind a guise of national security. The effect of this is the undermining of the whole democratic system, be said.
“There is a basic function inside government to collect intelligence,” he said. “It’s not a good idea to get completely rid of the CIA.”
"THERE SHOULD be basic limits below which we will not go as a country," he said. "The dirty tricks of the CIA should be below those limits."
From page one
Short of changing the entire system, Marks said, he would like governmental policies and intervention into foreign countries to be more open, formulated by Congressional vote or handled through a national organization.
security center on protecting the country when it really needs protecting and not cutting off individual liberties," he said. "I would draw a distinction between what is needed to protect the nation during wartime and peacetime."
However, Marks said, he didn't agree that the CLR could be abolished as an information source.
--the identify of the substance was determined by chemical tests at the KBI's lab in
"The problems surrounding national
MARKS TRAVELS around the country speaking to groups for the CNSA, a public interest group comprised of eight people and funded by private foundations. According to Marks, his speaking events are part of a public education campaign.
He and Victor Marchetti, a former CIA agent, wrote "The CIA and the Cult of Intelligence," the first book to be censored by the government before publication, Marks said.
More than five per cent of the book was censored by the CIA, he said, for a total of 250.
Both Marks and Marchetti are still under injunction by Federal District Court Judge Albert B. Ryan in Virginia. They made two plea to the Supreme Court and both were denied.
--the identify of the substance was determined by chemical tests at the KBI's lab in
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Jess A. Cornelius, Shawne Mission sophomore, had snagged the substance with his fishing hook and reported it to the police because of similarity to human hair.
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Saturday
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7 p.m. Speaker, Elizabeth Hanford Dole Attorney and Federal Trade Commissioner Big 8 Room
10-12 a.m. Career Fair
Workshops
Careers Don't Just Happen Maximizing Black Potential Beginning a Career at Any Age Beyond High School Choices Parents' Workshop
Job Seeking Skill Building Life-Planning
HAMMER REGIONAL, GREAT ROUNDS
1:30:4.30 p.m. Workshops continued
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Friday, April 9, 1976
University Dally Kansan
NFL teams draft 4 KU players
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
Associate Sports Editor
Kurt Knoff and Steve Taylor passed the room. Their eyes were fixed on the phone.
Edwin Lewis and Dave Scott took it easy. They did a little running and lifted weights. For guys who were waiting to hear whether they were selected in the National Football League draft, those two KU players were as cool as could be.
But once that phone rang—that is, when it wasn't a friend asking "Heve you been drafted yet? What round is it?" and it was funny. I laughed. And they end, they all felt the same way -esthetic.
KNOFF WAS THE first one to get the call.
It was the Denver Broncos. They picked KU's three-time All-Big Eight defensive back in the second round.
"I was getting pretty nervous," Knoff said. "I just sat there all morning waiting
for the phone to ring. It rang ab out seven or eight times, but it was always somebody
The future rang for cornerbuck Eddie Lewis next. The San Francisco 49ers 48-20 in overtime.
SCOTT. AN OFFENSIVE tackle, was the chosen by the Atlanta Falcons in the fourth quarter.
"I didn't know anything about it until I came home and my roommate told me I had been picked in the second round," Lewis said.
"I wasn't nervous a bit," said Scott, a 64,
270-pound offensive tackle. "I was just a
little impatient, but no anxiety. It just so
happened that I got the call right at the end
of a prayer meeting. That shows you I was
prepared for anything."
And then Taylor, who had seen all of his baddies给他 with win, got when his heir had seen him.
"NERVOUS. I was so nervous me and my wife just looked at the phone and prayed." the said 6-4, 210-pound corner back. "I've been by this phone since 11-cock (a.m.)."
nabbed him in the sixth round. Taylor was beside himself.
All of the KU draftees were glad it was over-Knoff especially.
"I'm so excited," he said. "I couldn't be happier. I'm going to a good town. It's a lot of fun. And I'll be at a place where people know me because of the Big Eight."
All of the players said they were happy with the teams that drafted them. However, none of them had thought they might be drafted by that particular club.
Taylor said, "I had talked to the Chiefs
pick me." But I tellly. I'm happy they pick
me.
"They play my style of ball. They play the roughhoused defense. Their defensive backs
Oklahoma, the national college champion the past two years, and Colorado each had six players selected. The Sooners' proudest moment came when Leroy Salem, All-America defensive lineman, was taken by Tampa Bay as the first player of the entire season.
Nebraska and Kansas each had four players taken through the first six rounds. The other three teams each had four players taken through the first six rounds.
Other first round selections were Joe Washington, Oklahoma running back,
Draft reflects Big Eight power
KANAS CITY (AP) — Thegridron-proud Big Eight Conference had 21 players chosen in the first rounds of the National Football League draft yesterday, including seven in the opening frame and the most glamorous selection of all, the No.1 pick.
Seven rounds were expected to be com-
pared with the NFT headquarters in New York.
are considered hitters, and that's the way I like to play."
Not all the players knew what they were to do in the immediate future.
All of the players were pleased with the round they were selected in. All of them said that they had hoped they would have been better, or higher, but that it didn't really matter.
chosen by San Diego; Billy Brooks, Oklahoma wide receiver, Cincinnati Troy Griffin, Colorado State guard, Kenor Konsar, Colorado offensive tackle, Green Bay; Pete Brock, Colorado center, New England; and James Whitelake, State defense tackle, Minnesota.
"I know nothing about their personnel," Scott said. "I don't even know who their coach is. I shall find out soon but not tonight."
Dave Scott, Green Bay took Colorado defensive back Mike McCoy, Kearns City picked out Missouri wide receiver Henry Rickey and the Rams snapped up Red Bossness, Nebraska center.
Colorado offense tackle Steve Young was the first player taken by Tampa in the third round. Also in the third, Cleveland won the fourth game against Atlanta chose Kansas offense lineman
In the second round New Orleans tabbed Missouri running back Tony Gailbreath, Denver took Kansas defensive back Kurt Murphy and Dallas take Kansas defensive back, Tampa made everyone in Oklahoma happy by selecting Dewey Selmon and keeping the famous Horns defensive back.
In the fourth round, Oklahoma wide receiver Tinker Owens was taken by New Orleans, Nebraska running back Tony Davis was grabbed by Cincinnati and Pittsburgh took Nebraska defensive back Wonder Monds.
Oklahoma defensive and Jimbo Elrod was taken in the fifth round by Kansas City.
Of course not last night. That was the night for celebrating. Or for some-
KU golfers bring up rear
Defending champion Oklahoma State took the lead after 36 holes of play yesterday in the Great Plains Invitational Golf Tournament in Wichita.
The Cowboys, who have won the tournament each of the past three years, cheered on the Wichita Tigers. This victory was second with a 598 total followed by Wichita State with 592.
The KU squad, which finished last in the Oklahoma Intercollegiate Tournament last week in Shawnee Ola., is bringing up the rear once again.
The Jayhawks' score of 620 leaves them in 10 place in the 10-team field, with 18 holes out. They were 7-2.
Ruggers travel to Wichita
KU's rugby club tries to get back on the winning side this weekend when it travels to Wichita for a game with the Wichita Rugby Club.
Last weekend KU finished second in the Big Eight tournament. The KU rugers disposed of Iowa State and Oklahoma in preliminary action before falling to Kansas State 13-4 in the championship match. The lower loss KU's season record to 7-1.
Sunday's game with Wichita won't be a guaranteed win, according to Jon Schwarz, who played two-two-game, two-time series.
"They best Oklahoma a couple of weeks ago and Oklahoma was one of the better teams in the league."
"They're an excellent club," Mellon said.
Wichita and KU played last fall and the Jayhawks lost, 22-18. During the fall portion of the rugby schedule, Wichita compiled an 11-1 record, including a fourth-place finish in the 40-team Lone Star rugby tournament in Houston.
Bill Altman, Brian Hunter and Bill Bittner this week's game because of injuries.
Next home action for KU will be Sunday, april 18, when former KU club members
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April 1 to April 30
University Dally Kensan
Friday, April 9, 1976
Speed scarcity slows KU
By GARY VICE
Staff Writers
The University of Kansas track team takes a break from the Midwest relays circuit to compete at the Arkansas State Invitational tomorrow in Jonesboro, Ark.
The Jayhawks, suffering from an uncharacteristic lack of depth in their sprint corps, should be better suited for the Arkansas State meet. It's similar to conference competition because it has only two spring relay events.
Coach Bob Timmons sized up the Jaihawks' pilgrim, saying "I think a conference will have to happen," since we're not at full force now. You got to have depth in the sprints to win in the relays and that's where we're hurting now. We're some fast people who aren't running."
KU's aliments are easily diagnosed. Sprinter斯凯维 Newell and Chiff Wiley are awaiting a ruling from the NCAA about their receipt of allegedly excessive financial aid. They can't compete until the NCAA rules them eligible.
Their present ineligibility has brought about Timmons' decision to use freshman hurder Anthony Coleman in the sprint relays.
"Anthony ran in the quarter-mile relay in high school as well as the high hurdles so it shouldn't be too difficult for him," Timmons said. "I think he'll do a fine job for us."
"Well, I was a pretty good spinner in high school," Coleman said, "but I wanted to concentrate on the hurdles this year and try sprinting next year.
Coleman said he had ambitions of becoming a spinner, but the sudden move to a new room was so hard.
But Coleman is needed to run 110 yards, not 220, as part of the 440 relay squad.
"Right now I'm not in any shape for sprinting. When I get in tip-top shape, I'll be able to run well. I think my best race is a 220."
Hoping to ease the sprint deficiency is Waddell Smith's return to competition. The AL-America midfielder hadn't competed in a single game since 2013, and Smith briefly quit the team earlier this year.
Kansas soccer club hosts Columbia College, O-State
Local fans will have two chances this weekend to view the KU soccer club in action against player-coach Bernie Mullin calls strong opposition.
Columbia College, Columbia, Mo., comes to Lawrence for a 2 p.m. game tomorrow at the intramural Fields at 2xrd and Iowa. At 2 p.m. there will be Oklahoma State in Memorial Stadium.
"They're (Columbia) a very good club," Mullin said yesterday. "For all practical purposes they played Rockhurst to a tie last week."
Mulin was referring to Columbia's 2-1 loss to Rockhurst College in the Jayhawk Invitational. In that game the one-goal kick left Mulin and Kick after a questionable call by a referrer.
"Columbia is not unlike our team," he said. "They're big and strong on defense."
"They're also a truly international team, with players from Asia, Europe, Africa, South America, Central America and the United States."
Soccer is a varsity sport at Columbia, which means they'll bring all their players.
something KU can't do for road games.
Mullin said Oklahoma State also defended Pheasant to last week in the third place game of Prep.
KU traveled to Stillwater earlier this spring to play the Oklahoma State Cowboys, and he is set for a return.
and said he wasn't in shape for outdoor competition until now.
"I think that their beating us twice in a row will help our players get up for the game," he said. "They're a strong team, and they have to work with them, and we'll have to go some to beat them."
Another Jayhawk who had missed the season's first two outdoor meets is pole vaulting champion Michael Kohlen. Big Eight indoor championships, planned to make the Arkansas meet his first of the outdoor season, but won't be able to compete after a motorcycle accident Tuesday.
Timmons said he wasn't sure when Scales would be able to reuild the team.
"He's real sore now," Timmons said. "He's going to be out for a little while. His leg wasn't cut too badly, but he's bruised pretty badly."
WOMEN'S TRACK—A 12-member women's track squad begins competition today at the Wichita State University Relays. The meet ends tomorrow.
sports shorts
WOMEN'S GOLF-KU hosts a triangular meet with Stephens College and Missouri University at 9:30 a.m. at Alvamar Hills golf course. Members of the KU team are Kathy Walth, BRI Boehr, Diane Nance, Michelle Williams and Joan Casey.
WOMEN'S TEENIAS "THE KU women's tennis team left yesterday for the Big Eight women's tournament at Norman, Okla. Making the trip were Astrid Dakca, Cissela Lopez, Tracy Spellman, Lynda Hillen, Marie Lane Cook and Hannah McCarley.
OU squeezes past netters
The KU tennis team tried to balance the pairings by juggling its line-up against Oklahoma yesterday. But the Sooners still won, 5-4, in the opening round of the Oklahoma City Invitational at the Oklahoma City Center.
napped the Sooners' Paul Lockwood, 7-5, 7-4. Hosking, who was switched from his regular No. 4 spot to No. 6, defeated Brian Crozer, 7-6, 6-7.
KU coach Kirkland Gates mixed things up by moving Hosking down, switching Greg Buller from No. 3 to No. 4 and moving Hank Colman from No. 6, to No. 3
The Jahwahs now move into the consolation bracket, meeting North Texas State.
Softball team still undefeated
Nationals are coming into focus for the KU women's softball team, which uphold an undefeated record by humiliating South Carolina on Tuesday in Sturgeon Bay's doubleheader in Saratoga Springs.
But before the Jayhawks start thinking of the College World Series, they must meet Wayne State (Neb.) at 2 p.m., tomorrow at Holcomb Scores Complex in Lawrence.
The Jayhawks fared much better in doubles, twinning two of the three matches. Clarke and Tim Headkite won their No 1 doubles by default while Hosking and Thomas knocked off the OU team of Mark Crozier and Les Topp, 6,2-7,5.
Oklahoma had too much strength in singles, winning four of the six matches. Bill Cox and his team defeated Hooking, now 13-3, were only KU players to win in singles. Clarke, KU's No. 1 man,
Wayne State finished third in last year's College World Series, KU coach Sharon Drydale said she thought Wayne State would have another good team this year.
KU has defeated SMSU four times this season. Dysale said the first game of the doubleheader was one of KU's better games so far this season.
"Our defense came along and matched the offensive hitting and pitching strengths we've had in the last 10 games, she said. She's been an integral part of it. I think it needs a little more pressure."
But the women didn't get much experience with base runners in the first game and pitcher Gloria Grabs was largely responsible. Grabs pitched her second shutout of season, ending the game in five innings. Grabs one walk away from a perfect game.
2 baseisper Beth Springgate was KU's strong hitter of the day. Springgate smacked one home run, batting in two of her three RBIs in the process.
SUA Film Chairperson Interviews
Interviews for 1976-77 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Tuesday, April 13. If you are interested please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time by Monday. April 12.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
Animated Series Chairperson
Children Series Chairperson
Classical Series Chairperson
Popular Series Chairperson
Science Fiction Series Chairperson
Summer School Series Chairperson
Publicity Chairperson
University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
Tiger bats to test KU hurlers
By KELLY SCOTT
Sports Writer
If baseball fans can tear themselves away from the first week of television major league baseball they should see an exciting game between Raymond andtomorrow at KU's Quigley Field.
KU puts its growing recognition as a possible Big Eight power on the line as the Missouri Tigers hit town for a three game series.
Missouri is considered by most to be one of the best hitting teams in the Big Eight, and at 28-9, the strongest team KU has played this year. Eight MU players are currently on the day. Pitcher John Piechocinshi today's starter, is S4 with a 5-13 ERA.
The Tiger All-American catcher Mark
Mark Williams, a rising prospect, is back,
for your hitting 372.
But KU has some impressive statistics of
its own, Roger Slagle, will start at 3 p.m. today, brings a 4-record and a 0.46 ERA. He's the first Friday against Nebraska made this la
Rob Allander, who is pitching strongly but receiving little help in his starts from KU fielding, starts the nightcap tomorrow with a 3.34 ERA and a 1-4 record.
It's KU's hitting that has surprised preseason skeptics. Five KU batters are hitting over .300, and Ron MacDonald, last year's .372 team leading hitter, blasted out of a hitting slump last weekend against Nebraska.
Brain Moyer will again lead off in the Missouri series. Others in the tentative starting line-up, are Monty Hobbs, Ron MacDonald, Tom Kratttil, Aldom Gilmore.
Carl Heinrich, Randy Troutt, Lee Ice and Mark Hammifan.
If the fielding behind KU's pitching and batting would come together, the team would be in a good position for the Big Eight. The bench pressure at Temple has said, is "for all the marbles."
Temple said the eliminating fielding errors that have plagued KU all season and cost them the second game of last week's victory. The crucial in the team's play against Missouri.
"We can't make mistakes like that and expect to beat MU," he said.
Use Kansan Classifieds
GRAMOPHONE shop
842-1811...Ask for Station No. 6
New Album on Atlantic
Led Zeppelin
Picasso
Reg. '6.98
Now $3.99
O YAMAHA
Acceptance
EW inc.
Bering & Brothers
REVOX
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-93-842-1544
Shirtings With Character
From GANT and CREIGHTON shirtmakers we feature a compact but very interesting collection of dress shirts in both long and short sleeves. . .
Solids and neat patterns
The Town Shop the men's shop downtown
from $ 12^{00} $
MARIA AND BENNY
THE ELDRIAGE HOUSE CLUB AND DINING ROOM
Eldridge House Sunday Specialties:
BEEF STEAK SOUP—a lot of full-bodied flavor.
GARDEN GREEN SALAD - crisp bed of lettuce topped with cucumbers, mushrooms, olives, bean sprouts, and much more!
SAUTEED CHICKEN LIVERS AND FRIED MUSHROOM CAPS— delicacies to start off the perfect meal.
STEAK AU POIVRE—a choice rib eye served with rice or potato and a homemade loaf of bread.
CREPES POULETTE—a delightful blend of chicken and mushrooms.
QUICHE LORRAINE—the old fashioned way.
DENVER OMELET—diced ham and bacon sprinkled with vegetable and served with sliced tomatoes or hash browns.
SPANISH OMELET—hot spiced tomatoes, green peppers and onions.
BAR-B-QUE BEEF SANDWICH—enough for the biggest appetite. CREPES DE BANANA AND CHEESECAKE—two perfect ways to finish your meal.
And there is more!
Enjoy Sunday night out at the Eldridge House
7th & Massachusetts
841-4666
8
Friday, April 9, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Illicit campaigning charges upheld
Dave Shapiro and Mark Anderson, former candidates for student body president and vice president, were recently found guilty of unethical campaign practices by the Association of University Residence Hall (AURH) Judicial Board.
The board on March 25 said Shapiro and Anderson had been guilty of door-to-door campaigning. Neither was present at the meeting.
The two had been charged in a petition submitted Feb. 17 to the Student Senate Elections Committee of State, minutes of the vote, and Sellhards Pearson Hall. The matter was later referred to the AUHR board.
As a result of the board's meeting, Shapiro and Anderson were issued a warning about their actions during the campaign.
Jamis Zumwalt, AURH Judicary Board
Board of Attorneys. "The board as a
group may see any file at our office."
would help. We just hope the actions taken will keep this from happening, again."
She said the complaining women had been insulted because Shapiro and Anderson didn't show up at the meeting. She said that the March 25 meeting had been the second one called and that Shapiro and Anderson had responded to neither.
"It was like a slap in the face," she said. But Shaparla said he and Anderson didn't attend the meetings because they felt the contempt of them and that it wasn't worthwhile to attend.
"The way it was phrased make us look like the bad guys forcing ourselves onto people and that just isn't true," Shapiro said. "We were escorted by a resident at all times and only went to doors of people we knew and only went our escort, who also was a friend, knew."
Shapiro said the action taken by the board was a force because it didn't set any pointers.
"There were no rules set or punishments," Shapiro said. "So we aren't supposed to do it again--but what's to happen if they also does it? Will they only get warned?"
Shapiro said he thought the accusations were blown out of proportion.
Although it may not have hurt his campaign, he said, "Well, it didn't help."
Steve Owens, student body vice president,
said he was glad it wasn't made into a big problem and that he thought the whole campaign was fairly clean.
"As far as the future is concerned," Owens said, "it might be a good idea to provide the Senate office with copies of AURH's campaign rules so candidates could pick them up when they file for office. You can't always sure about the rules ourselves."
Bruce Woner, Senate Elections Committee Chairman, said the elections committee wouldn't pursue the matter any further.
If the swine flur comes in this fall, the University of Kansas should be ready for it.
By DAN BOWERMAN
KU prepares for flu vaccine
President Gerald R. Ford asked Congress last week for $135 million for swine flu vaccine for 215 million Americans. The House approved the plan Monday, 354-12. The president's largest ever attempted—will call for the vaccine to be ready in September.
Martin Wollmann, director of student health services at Watkins Memorial Hospital, and Tuesday that when a vaccine would be able to receive vaccinations, would be able to receive vaccinations.
The swine flu, which originates from pigs and hogs, has characteristics similar to other more common flu viruses, according to Russell. Bussell, professor of microbiology
"There is nothing essentially different. From reports I've seen, one could have told the difference between it and other flus until the virus was isolated," he said.
On Campus
Events...
TOMORROW: The MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY will have an educational program for children ages 5-7 at 9:30 a.m. in 682 Dyche. A ROUNDBALL RECEPTION will be at 6:30 p.m. in the Union parlors, followed by a dinner at 7 in the Union Ballroom.
SUNDAY: Stuart Levine will speak on "America Through Painting" as part of the bicentennial Lecture Series at 7:30 p.m. at the Kansas City Area Regents' Museum and the KU CHAMBER CHORH and LAWRENCE CHAMBER PLAYERS will present an all-Mix program at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre, Murphy.
TODAY: Approximately 85 students and faculty from universities in a ten-state region will be on campus for the AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF AERONAUTICS AND ASTRONAUTICS Region SIT Paper Conference. An URBN STUDIES SEMINAR, featuring Gary Tobin, Washington University, will be from 9:30 a.m. to p.2 m., in Room 207 of Marvin Hall. The WOMEN'S STUDIES SANDWICH SEMINAR will meet at nook in Cork for 2 the Kansas Union cafeteria.
The KU MUSEUM OF ART will present a program of music, mime, dance and storytelling entitled "Spinning a Yarn" at 2 p.m. Sunday. The program will be in the museum's main gallery and is open to the public without charge. It is being presented in conjunction with one of the museum's current exhibitions, "Introduction to a Collection: Western Textiles from the University of Kansas of Art," which is on display until May 25 in the museum's downstairs gallery.
Announcements...
The first annual Wichita State University FRISBEE TOURNAMENT, sanctioned by the International Frisbee Association, will begin at 8 a.m. Saturday with registration on the WSU campus east of the Life Sciences building. Contests for maximum time aloft, accuracy, distance and "guts" will be held.
wwwwwww
Billy Spears Band
Tonite & Tomorrow
8:30 p.m.
at
Off the Wall
Hall
737
New Hampshire
41-0817
Off the Wall Hall.
841-0817
THE 100% PATRIOTIC.
TRUE-BLUE
AUTOMOBILE CORPORATION
GREAT AMERICAN NUT SHOW
A ONE-MAN EXTRAVAGANZA
CONCEIVED, WRITTEN & PERPETRATED BY
MICHAEL BROWN
WITH SONGS, STORIES, GRAPHIC DISPLAYS AND SNAPPY SAVINGS ABOUT THE NATION'S MOST MEMORABLE MISERS, MURDERERS, FRUMPS & PRAUDS IF YOU MISS IT, YOU'RE A LUNATIC!
A NEW LINE PRESENTATION
Tuesday, April 13, 1976
8:00 p.m. 50°
Woodruff Auditorium
An SUA Forums Presentation:
SenEx elects chairman
J. Eldon Fields, professor of political science, was elected yesterday chairman of the 1978-77 SenEx during a caucus of new SenEx members.
Bill Blessing, Kansas City, KA, seni.an,
was elected vice chairman of San Exx
Fields was one of six faculty members chosen by University Council to join three previously-elected students on the 1976-77 SenFx.
Other faculty members elected to SenXen were Jacob Gordon, associate professor of history; Elizabeth Shapiro, professor of history; Ron Olen, professor of economics; Frances Horwitz, professor of psychology and of human development; and Nancy Denney, associate professor of history.
They join students Blessing; Jm Willis, Salina sophomore, and Ellen Reynolds, Salina junior.
elected to SenEx last month by the Student Senate.
Joel Gold, professor of English, was elected presiding officer of the new University Council. Mary Lou Reece, who was elected assistant presiding officer.
The new University Council consists of 26 previously-elected faculty from this year's council, 13 faculty members elected by the Faculty Senate last month and 12 students chosen by the Student Senate last month. Gilda Tashseff, student body president, is
Tede Tasheff, student body president, is automatically a council member.
Faculty members on the council serve
in-year term. Students serve for one year.
The 1976-77 SenEx and the new University Council will take office for one year on May 25. The 1975-76 SenEx and University Council will remain in office until then.
close your book and open your eyes to ten full days of film photography video
APRIL 16
APRIL 17
ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN
SECOND WIND
POUR LE MEILLEUR ET POUR LE PIRE APRIL 21
TONY BILL - Producer APRIL 21-25
CLAUDE JUTRA - Canadian director APRIL 16-25
ALAN J.PAKULA - Producer, director APRIL 17-20
ROBERT REDFORD - Actor, producer APRIL 16-17
plus more films, speakers, workshops
"No other cases have been reported, but there is concern that it is a warning sign of an epidemic for this winter," Wollmann said.
SPEAKERS
He also said that no vaccine for the swine flu exists right now.
april 16-25 1976
refocus
phone 319-353-5090
The swine flu is of a kind that caused an international epidemic in 1918 and 1919, killing 20 million people worldwide and 548,000 in the United States.
"The vaccine is just now starting to be prepared, and it should be ready no later than 2018."
"We are still awaiting word of how distribution will be handled." Wollmann said. "All that is known is what is coming out of the White House."
He said that the United States Public Service didn't have any plans for bandwound students.
Wollmann said that there was no cause for alarm, though, because no cases of swine flu had been reported except those at Ft. Dix.
After lying dormant for nearly half a century, the flu afflicted six army recruits at FT. Dix, N.J., two months ago. One of the recruits died.
IOWA MEMORIAL UNION
UNIVERSITY OF IOWA
IOWA CITY IOWA 52242
PREMIERES
About 1,000 KU students were hit by the swine flu in the fall of 1918. Three of those students died from the swine flu, which was then called the "Spanish influenza." The epidemic was believed to have originated in Spain.
Loiskman, infection control officer at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, said that if money for the vaccine available, he would be ready to distribute it to the public this winter.
Wollmann said that he guessed that batches of vaccine would be available at different times and that priorities would be made to decide who got the vaccinations first.
"The elderly and the chronically ill will be vaccinated first as they are more susceptible to diseases." Wollman said. "Then it will be given to the rest of the population."
Ball Park Baseball
NOW YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the
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BALL PARK, INC.
Box 32412, Lawrence, Kansas 68044
The
The Teepee-The Sanctuary
"The Facilities & Service To Make It A Perfect Party"
—CLASS PARTIES—
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1976-77 KU Pom Pon Girl and Yell Leader Tryouts
Pom Pon Girl Clinics
F
7-8:30 p.m.-Allen F. H. East Lobby
Yell Leader Clinics
APRIL 12 (Mon.)
APRIL 14 (Wed.)
6:00-7:30 p.m.-Allen Field House
APRIL 20 (Tues.)
You can be a part of the nationally recognized University of Kansas pom and yell leading squads which have traditionally become a source of pride for all KU followers. The requirements for trying out are as follows; (1) regularly enrolled University of Kansas student, either undergraduate or graduate; (2) possess a minimum 1.8 overall grade; (3) demonstrate an interest in helping further boost KU athletics into national prominence.
The KU pom pon girls and yell leaders are sponsored and governed by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. All students interested in this club will be urged to attend clinics to be conducted prior to tryouts for each group. Questions will be answered and routines for trying out will be taught
APRIL 13 (Tues.)
APRIL 14 (Wed.)
APRIL 27 (Tues.) Finals Clinic
APRIL 15 (Thurs.)
APRIL 20 (Tues.)
- Pom Pon Prellms-Saturday, April 24, Allen Field House Annex, 10 a.m.
★ Pom Pon Finals-Thursday, April 29, Allen Field House Annex, 7 p.m.
Yell Leader Tryouts-Wednesday, April 21, Allen Field House, 6:00 p.m.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 9, 1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to their background. BIRNG ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FUNKHALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer ___ three times your time times your time
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional ___
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
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 adds can be placed in person or mobile, and the UDK business office at 644-4538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. t!
"We've moved!" Our new location is next to McCormick Stadium, and for 4+15 counties. Repeat Performance Shop.
LIFE PLANNING WORKSHOP SATURDAY, April 17th in the process of influencing your own business in the process of influencing your own personal strength, clarity and integrity will be placed on building for the future. Your plans and strategic strategy for reaching your goals Thursday, April 8 & 9, 4:43-6:44 Cost $ United States.
Full day care and complete child development
programs. Kindergarten, 129 West South St. 843-227-
832 and Kindergarten, 129 West South St. 843-227-
832.
Employment Opportunities
A job opening for full time research assistant at Research Achievement Place, 111 Haworth Ave., New York, NY. Work on workshop materials, preparing forms, completing evaluation forms (old typing forms are essential for these tasks) and creating a view. Application dailine and starting date apply. Qualified applicant may equally Employ宝庭 Qualified man
Applications now being accepted for student staff
Deadline April 16. 105 Strong Hall. 844-350-360.
April 16. 105 Strong Hall. 844-350-360.
SUMMER FUN OUT EAST! Earn $211 per week!
today for any interview. 843-385-413
4-13
Laboratory technicians positions to begin on or above grade II, with a background of have at least one year of undergraduate organic chemistry or equivalent. Prior one year at full time rate of $600-$750 per hour, plus 10% salary to Dr. S. Givens, Dept. of Chemistry, KU.
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
The Lawrence Gum and Mineral Club presents
the "Fair Grounds Dance," Mt. the 4-H Fair ground, Lawrence, Kansas.
The club hosts lacrosse, lacquery and faceting and fencing from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence Lawyer,
Rental Exchange. 842-2500.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen private-
2- bedrooms to campus $55 and up. $85 or
$405 and up.
ATTENTION STUDENT REMENTS: Drop in on am
phone (the phone calls call) at & WESTERN
phone (the phone calls call) at & WESTERN
2 bdrm. all uti, paid. on campus. Furn. or
free. Free parking. a/c, pool. 843-4993.
Looking for a one or two women graduate students or staff members to share house 3 miles from campus. $100 monthly and share utilities. at 4:48pm during day or 843-683-412- nings.
Bobbiesh May 15-August 1 Home in beautiful
designs A/C/ C/P, waffer-detier, $200, utilities
$300, insurance $150, taxes $100
2 bdm. apt., w-carpet, central air, large kitchen,
room; 120 sq. ft. to Union, 3 to Downtown.
$440. mo. $803. nc.
Professor's House -20 May-15 August 3 bed,
fenced yard; fenced garden; grand plaza 49-
845-0164
Furnished two-bedroom house, quiet neighbor-
ly. One bedroom and tomatoes, $145 per-
month only. 824-756-756
Sublease apartment for summer; utilities paid;
furnished close to campus and downtown 841-
250-7053.
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate occupancy. Also, save money, lease from June 1, 2015 to September 30, 2015, now before it's too late. Park 25, Apartments, block of west walls on 28th St. Phone 412-844-7860.
Sublease efficiency apt. May June, July Gala-
nese and all electric kitchen. $115-$425
5 p.m.
Female female to share two bedrooms fur-
mula $37.50 plus 1¢; 4½
14th Calb. 842-952-63
Large 1 bedroom A/C apt. Meadowbrook for sublet. June-July. Call 841-288-935. eats 4-15
For aunterm--two bedroom apartment, fur-
rent $145; two-bedroom apartment, fur-
rent $415-517 or $64-670.
4-13
Free Room for a responsible couple in the home and a young couple, comfortable, and near campus. Light housekeeping cooked in exchange for room. Available to fill. Bill Anderson - 844-688 (phone no.)
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular lift equipment other than factory equipment or close-out products, the best way to learn and test equipment is at the GRAFMACHAT KIERES.
Trombone selection of guitars, amp, drums,
saxophone, clarinet, bassoon. Choose from Gibbon
Shops, Shop Airplane Keyboard Studio, Get
COST * 10% -Stereo equipment. All major brands Guaranteed best prices in this area Single items or paired Items Register for free Kiss Coffee or paid Call Dave. Phone: 888-6258. Earnings 6 to 10.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
tables. Send $15 for your up-to-date, 160-page,
manual catalog. Research Assistance, Los Angeles, Los Angeles. 8023
(217) 473-828, Los Angeles. Calif. 4-123
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialist.
BELL AUCTIONS
ELECTRIC B43-8000, 2000 W. Gph.
9/17-19, 9:30AM.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them
3) For exam preparation
*Western Civilization*
*New Anatomy of the Body*
*Available now at UW*
WE SELL FOR LESS--11 TO 630. Good used
warehouse and semi-rental; refrigerators:
New interior cabinets, new shelves;
springs have 10 yr, warranty; $125 a week.
Springs have 10 yr, warranty; $125 a week.
Phone 1-728-9495 or 354-8388.
Torka 4-899
Phone 1-728-9495 or 354-8388.
Diamond softwear engagement ring, 32 ct, 14 K
钻石柔软婚戒价值 $200-$300
$800. A&B-8590
$1200. C&C-13260
Beautiful antique tiffany type 25" table lamp,
frame, lead weight, frame load weight, glass
484.875-875
1975 Plymouth Duster. Air, automatic. power-
4-er. 6 cyl. 19,000 miles. 842-185.
Affention Fletcher: 30 cubic foot. High Fire stoves, fire hose, fire extinguishers, two shelves, four propane burners, ready for production. Located 20 miles from Lawrence and Lexington. Facilities include three bedrooms, basement studio, and kitchen. House rental is $128 per month. Phone 913-655-4844; mail R. 2. Box 45, Overbrook, Kamloops #8244.
FINAL CLOSEOUT MICHELIN STEEL XAS
RADIALS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
BACKS. 829 Mass. (come thru park) set 4-16
bear Woolworth for tire service.)
TRANSISTOR RADIO CLASSIC to $6.95 pocket size
nOW $2.00, ENTIRE STOCK of MAGNAVOX
POWERHEAD $2.95 price cut POWERFUL SONY with
BATTERY BAND cut to $5-Ray System
$9.25 Masr
Mercer 10-speed bike, also car carrier, sell both the bikes they offer. Sales: 811-748-6402, six ask for. Tix: for them.
Reel to reel stereo tapes and records—some old,
some new. 841-6158
4-12
Must sell Sony VTR110 (video ticker, recorder)
camera, tape, cameras, case, access. GN45-618-4-12
Rounds 50/14 7'0" miles "hits" Back and back rest.
Barely broken in. Call 842-6215. 4-13
Small but comfortable older home for sale at be. bath with shower, built-in study. Small but living room. Present eas has garden spot, gas 240L, close to house. 4-135 752-241-211
TERIBUFIC BUY! BRAND NEW COMPLETE HP
DEVICE WITH BEST OFFER or best call Phil at
612-398-4577
Stereo: Kenwood receiver. AR speakers. AR
tamperable $40 or best offer. A35-508. 4-13
Honda 360 CB 120 ml. Stir bars, rack and back rack. Like. New. Kupi. Call 842-6215. 4-13
1975 Dodge Van Maxiwagen, AM-FM stereo plus
36 gallon tank engine control AC Aux fire
36 gallon tank engine control AC Aux fire
Camera, Minolta 101, 28, 185, 13, 250 mm
filter, etc. Mimosa or best offer. 943-568. 4-13
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
Yamaha 500 R125, 72 Yamaha
Yamaha 500 R125, 72 Yamaha
Yamaha DT250, 76 Honda CR 125, 70 Honda
C500, 72 Honda CB500, at Horizon Honda
CB500, 72 Honda CB500
Voga, 1971 Hatchback, 4 speed, excellent condition.
$785. Call Randy, 814-4856.
1955 Chevy Nonad Wagon beautiful restored, must see, appraisal not for cheap, seriose look, good shape, well cared for. 2000 Chevy
Dodge window van $700 Auto trans. 6 cyl. 165
seats Dodge wagon = a good camp car
843-787-9077
AKC Bazenjl puns-unusual, intelligent African breed. Marmal wormed. Worneds. shots. Very loud.
Yard Sale 1113 Kentucky, April 9, 10 a.m.
- sale includes lawn mowers, lawn
tools, new and used, furniture, etc.
MUST SELL 350 Suzuki. Excellent condition.
Rick Lallam Killump, 843-7922. 4-14
Stirrer, Two Marquette GV speakers, Technique SL,
Stirrer, Two Marquette GV speakers, Technique SL,
new condition, $750. Call 811-641-3921.
Bass guitar, Custom Bass Amp; plenty of power,
good shape, Call Ned. 925-5888. 4-15
Pontiac Firebird, 1969, excellent condition, automatic console. Free烘干, with vinyl top jig.
89 FORD VAN-E-300 sell or trade for 69-70
Murray or Cameroon. 4-13
**savar Car Cassette model, model number FT**
**serving $100, asking $75 or best offer**
Call 841-2349
Email info@savar.com
2 ESS-AMT-1 speakers, excellent condition $500.
4-16
4875.
Black lab puppies for sale $15. Call 841-3298. 4-15
**Women's 5 speed Schwimm Suburban blueyellow.**
**Women's 4-speed Schwimm Suburban blueyellow.**
**Russell bragsily haggle. Call Lyon, 814-4771 amyr.**
**Lyon:** Lyon, 814-4771 amyr.
1967 Fiat 850 Coupe, new paint, needs timing.
4-15
Bulldoor 843-0088.
HELP WANTED
**OVERSEAS ** ADBE, summer intern at New York Europe; **MARCHA** a summer intern in New York Europe; **WORK** with Wills, International Center for Health Research; **WITE** with Johns Hopkins University Center for Health Research.
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and truck drivers. Experience preferred. Call 408-431-3925.
For Sale -15% BW TV, and med-sized refit;
choice $5 or best offer. Cat (A) at
$828.
choice 32.
WANTED: TWO HALF-TIME RESEARCH ASSISTANTS - The Association of Systematic Collaboration, is seeking two half-time research assistants on behalf of the Institute. It is seeking two half-time research assistants 1 May 2019 or as soon thereafter as possible, providing foreign, federal and other assistance using scientific biological specimen 2. Manage the research preparation for professional biologists; 3) preparation of replication of three short pamphlets dealing reef restoration and regulation regarding the collection, transport and storage of three short pamphlets dealing reef restoration and regulation regarding the collection, transport and storage of three short pamphlets dealing reef restoration and regulation regarding the collection, transport and storage of three short pamphlets dealing reef restoration and regulation regarding the collection, transport and storage of three short pamphlets dealing reef restoration and regulation regarding the collection, transport and storage of three short pamphlets dealing reef restoration and regulation regarding the collection, transport and storage of three short pamphlets dealing reef restoration and regulation regarding the collection, transport and storage of three short pamphlet
PART TIME- EARN $15 PER WEB. FOR 3
MONTHS. COME OUT AT 8:00 AM.
BETWEEN 8:00 A.M. to 5:10 P.M. FOR INDEX
Teachers at all levels, Foreign and Domestic
Teachers, Box 106, Vancouver, Wash. 9846-4-9
Hard labor. $444 per month. Call today, 835-
431. Out East!
Part-time or full time bartender. Contact Tom
544-768-1932 or 832-1282-1848.
60, PC Bath, 701 Fashion St.
Houseparents wanted. Married couple to supervise children, provide meals and other the may work part-time. Educares One or the other may work part-time. Educares experience with youth desirable. Salary $750 per week. Send resume to Wounded Knee Transportation. Send letter of application to Group House, 9 o'Woodman Drive, Director of Group House, o Wounded Knee City, Ks 6410. (An equal salary of $340 per week.)
HELP WANTED! Kanaan Studentu Company
carpenter, IT job available now, possible
to work with software. Please visit:
www.kanaan.com
TOMMY BROWN
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
20 miles east of Topeka or
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U.S. 40 Highway
891,9445
Drive-in-clinic for most imported cars
1811 W. 6th
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets Admission Only '2.00 each
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Service hours
7:30 a.m.-
5 p.m. M-F
Call for an appointment
IMPORT
DATSUN
842-0444
LOST AND FOUND
TONY'S
500 E. 23rd
AUTOMOBILE
Lost! One gold cross mechanical pencil between
Oliver, Redward, and Oliver. Call 647-8640.
4030. 4-12
"Pound" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Downtown Bank-8th & Mass. Motor Bank, Downtown Bank-12th and First National South-187 West 22rd.
Now Open Every Sunday 12 NOON
Found: chain bracelet with two chains on it, one says Class of 748, 842-3092.
4-9
Found pair of contact lenses in case at corner of 14 and Kentucky Call 841-6523. afternoons 4-9.
Community College Teaching Job Excellent
Information, Application (Application) 5.
Search for: [Name] [Job Title] [Department]
--found for the foot and the Science
fiction on front. Call 841-996-eyearn. 4-12
Gold watch lost near Robinson gym. Initials U.K.I.T. on back. Call 842-5830. 4-9
Found: Calculator in Wesco, 4th floor. Identify.
864-5555
4.0
Marketing majors—part time until summer. Good
past and experience. Call for interview 843-806-9067
Mary. I found your keys outside 4035 Wesley.
4-9684-8244 to claim.
The notebook form found on 100 and 120 Series
form on flat. Call 849-9900.
Race or Watch
10. Black, female cat near building C of Jayhawks.
11. White, female cat near building C of Jayhawks.
12. Answers to Ui's name "Twenty." If anyone had answers to Ui's name "Twenty," they would be black.
Billbilfoed Thursday, April 1 at Bugsy's: 841-
4903. 4:40
NOTICE
Swap Shop. $200. Used furniture, dishes,
pots, pails, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12
pm-7:30 pm. Call (855) 629-5838.
Found: Set of keys on leather ring. South of Potters Bay. Call Dave. 804-288-16
4-16
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation services. Get your driver's
transportation provided. Drive new, pay later.
Pay later with no restrictions.
The Canish Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Full
Dine or Coffee, free of charge. For reservation
cash only. Call bilbill@canishcafe.com for details.
O
After 26 years in business, If George doesn't
work on Mondays, George's George Shop,
754-890-1355, will be closed.
SPIRITUAL FILM FESTIVAL: Zen in America—with Sukiro Kuchi, Sai Bahal. His life is His Life. A documentary by Watts. The Whole Earth Festival—with Ram Dass. Swam Sutandhakanda. Kryananda the Soft Man. Festivals at 7 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., $1.50. Sponsored by the United Aircraft Association at the United Centraal Institute 204.
CUSTOMIZED MARRIAGE VOWB wanted for
daughter of Steven and Katherine
brook DE. Knowles, TN 79139 giving name and
address to his wife.
Plan now for summer. Creative World Pre-
presents: A celebration of book
openings for spring too. Call 843-250-
6901.
BIG SALE~Our entire stock of jewelry now
with all heads 50% off! Baskets,
8 (Downtown), 4-12
Earn $8 with your own home plant party business. Call us at 516-292-2300 for consultation will enable you to earn $20 to $30 per week. Ideal for students and housewives. House, Pa. 15416. Party Plants, 160 Volpe, Mountaineer Park, Pa. 15416.
OPPORTUNITIES
Insight INTO LIFE
RECORDED MESSAGE (24 h)
842·4441
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1306
10:5-Tuesday.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
Tractor
X
$3.95 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
bengals
in The
Castan
TACOS
Aaron, Happy 21st How's the about to go?
"The little animals" tonight? Love Me
4-9
1105 Massachusetts
SERVICES OFFERED
TRAVEL
The Second Annual Student Sculpture Competition
Does not miss it - entries available
The ACM
Experience Hypnosis: A safe and scientific method of relaxing and controlling your mind. Free! No charge. There is a sign-up sheet now outloud on the Internet, www.hypnosis.org and Rubs, Dept. of Psychology, 842-7534. 4-13
SHAZARM
WE PRINT ANYTHING!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
MATH TUTORING - Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 610, 612, 614, 616, 618, 620, 622, 624, 626, 628, 630, 632, 634, 636, 638, 640, 642, 644, 646, 648, 650, 598, 586, Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
For sale only a roommate. Slightly used, house
will not accept less than $1. Call Mark 45.
Will not accept less than $1. Call Mark 45.
Come one—Come all, May Day Festival—a week of education, conversation, and celebration. Meet the Women's Cinema Music at a Woman's Cinema, Films Music at a Woman's Cinema, Plants and plants, and volleyball. Free classes in English, French, Spanish, its coation and Commission on the status of women. Funded by Student Activity Fees 4-30
843 9880
MADAME LENA, E.S.P.-PALM READY-AD-
R to buy a dream or astrology book and get your
insight into the signs of your problems. For more information, call 621-8321
or come to $300 South Topeka Blvd. Toplea
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous 848-8101. **tf**
EUROPE less than 1/2 evening fare
if you don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGES
TUTOR
TYPING
Un:Travel Charters
Math Tutor with M.A. in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 on p. 6.i.
4-15
THEIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is a service that allows you to bind your Our services is fast and prices are reasonable.
West of Hillcrest Bowl
No one under 18 admit.1
A
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
842-8206
Goldnester Optical
9th & Iowa
RAASCH
[ADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP]
9am-3pm 9:30 am
FINE SELLECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
2009 W en 842-8413
BankAmericard Mastercharge
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Bahái Faith
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
Styling for men and women
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
One roommate wants to share beautiful one-
room spaces. They want a large 80-unit
monthly units;付费泊房、 own rooms, etc.
They also want a quiet, private space.
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Bahal's Club Meeting, April 5, 17:30 p.m. Oral. Breadball, Union
Experienced typist—term papers, sheets, mite
experiments. Send resume to: spelling,
spelling: 843-704-6333, Mrs. Wright.
RECREATION'S FINEST
Want to borrow a J.R. Tolkien calendars to
photograph them. Call 844-6131. 4-12
Typist editor, IBM Pica/tec. Quality work.
Computer science dissertations web site.
8-11 Naidu, 921-827-311
Typing—Term papers. Book reports, Misc. Monographs only—Ph. No. N82-9289.
4-14
HILLCREST BILLIARDS RECREATION'S FINEST
yth and Illinois
WANTED
843-3034
Exp. typid. IBM Selectric, term paper, theses.
Exp. typid. IBM Selectric, term paper, spelling correction.
Jean. 841-369-3050
Folding bicycle, good working condition, reasonably priced 842-6067 7 p. p. p. 6-12
Experienced typist. IBM Selectr all kinds of
typing Call 844-1423; 842-9978. Julie.
Liberal unminded female wanted to share two bed-
room rooms in the building. Call HI815-8099. Keep in touch:
6-4-5
Experienced typist will type term paper, theses, manuscripts and all general typing in my biobook. Carriage 811, Ballentine 326.
need an experienced ixploit? IBM Selectric II
(ribbon). Fail Pan at RAM 802.64 (ribbon).
(bibbon). Fail Pan at RAM 802.64 (ribbon).
Roommate wanted immediately and summer, 2 bdrm. in Brooklyn, Apr., on bus line, $75 and roommate, $100.
Someone to drive a car from Charleston, S.C. to Lawrence soon. 841-6219 eve. 4-15
Expert typing /reasonable rates. Proofreading.
Expert typing /reasonable rates. Proofreading.
Call: C812869 after 5:30 p.m. 4-20
Call: C812869 after 5:30 p.m. 4-20
Recommees wanted. Grad student preferred:
1. quiet, thoughtful, pleasant.
2. double, duple. Roomed, room. Quite, beautiful,
comfortable.
3. nice, spacious, open. Roomed, room.
Residential to share large, two bedroom down-
stairs units. Starting 6/17/14. Prefer mature year-round use.
Fully furnished with kitchen, laundry and
TENNIS PLAYERS--Experienced tennis player wanted for sets anytime Tues or Thurs morning. A nice man to play with will consider others. Call Narm at 843-2781, please be polite to the oriental house-boy if he
Female roommate for summer 2 bedrooms, fur-
ruled apartment with a walkout. Wearing
distance to campus Call 843-7521
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses - Liners
Heaters - Frames
Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS;
GRAMOPHONE
422-1871 ASK FOR LOCATION
shop
YAMAHA
Audio Components
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion
Than Most Steroid Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AND STEREO
MALLS SHIPPING CENTER LAWRENCE KAUSS 1832 0544
STATE OF THE ART
THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
5 Nights a Week No Cover
NEW MODERN DECOR
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at
the restaurant. The desserts are designed for sweet taste and gentile
delivery.
843-9404 CLUB
Sandwiches - Pizza Pool - American Shuffleboard
HIDEOUT
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
FISH
New Members Available
Class & Pride Club
Open 12 p.m. to 8 a.m.
Wave Set-owner
Wave Set-owner
10
100%
Friday, April 9,1976
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
30%
University Daily Kansan
Rural service Kugel's first goal
By MARION ABARE
Staff Writer
KANAS CITY, Kan.-Robert A. Kugel,
executive vice chancellor for the Kansas
city campus since April 1, said yesterday
that he would strive to tackle problems of
health care in its state's underserved
and poor communities and put
"problemsome" tunes behind.
Kugel, who met the press here with Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, has developed rural health care programs in his previous positions.
He said a similar type of program has been developed in New Mexico.
"We were able to develop a rural health program in a community near the north central part of Nebraska, which was a cooperative affair with the community and with the medical center in Omaha," he said. The government program has been developed in New Mexico.
Kugel said he would like to arrange a Kansas Health Day in the early fall, patterned after programs in Nebraska and New Mexico. On that day, community leaders would come here and to the Wichita Academy of Music, where emphasis would be on medical students, he said, it also would be helpful to nursing and all health aid students.
"THIS HAD A very salutary effect in the other two states, where the communities could get to talk to young people," he said. He said that the communities could chart what they had to offer and that students heard that someone was interested in them.
Dykes said he didn't support a bill that would pull medical students from some colleges. But he didn't have a basic idea. The proposed legislation would require the entering class of 200 medical students be composed of five qualified students from each of the 40 senatorial districts.
Proponents of the bill, which has been sent to the State Senate Ways and Means Committee and is dead for this legislative session, seek a means of educating more physicians who would practice in western Kansas.
DYKES SAID, "The bill, of course, was a response on the part of legislators who were deeply and appropriately concerned about the quality of health care."
Kugel also said he would try to open up as many lines of communication as possible to the new audience.
"We had a suggestion in a meeting earlier today on how we could post new positions so people know what is going on. That may help us with problems, but I think a good one," Kugel said.
Poet-prof reads variety of verse
From a repretoire that included humorous riddles and serious love verse, Howard Nemeroy, professor of English at Washington University, read his poetry last night to about 40 people in the Jayhawk room of the Kansas Union.
Nemenov, a consultant on poetry to the Library of Congress from 1983 to 1964, read selections from his books "New and Selected Poems, Gnomes and Occasions, Stories, Fables & Other Diversions"; and wrote the book "The Blue Swallows," which received the First Theodore Roetheke Memorial Award in 1988.
Nemerow was invited to the University by the KU chapter of Phi Beta Kappa and the United Chapters of Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar Program.
He will visit three English classes today.
Meeting scheduled to aid handicapped
A meeting for all physically handicapped students to get acquainted with two graduate student assistants hired to help them work. Tuesday in the dean of men's office.
The office recently hired Martha Pearse, Wichita graduate student, and Harlan Harber, Lawrence graduate student. The two faculty members handcapped at the University of Kansas.
Put all your love in our basket.
Send the
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It's a loving gift of fresh, fragrant spring blossoms in an embroidered, woven basket. It's the perfect way to send your Easter greetings. Tim Eafen sends our basket of love. They'll love you for it.
REACH OUT AND TEAM THE
THE FTD FLORIST WAY
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1968
Robert Kugel
Nye's Flowers 939 Mass. 843-3255
He said he was also meeting with all departments and he had visited Wichita Wednesday. Wichita is an integral part of the school, he said, and in ways which can be strengthened should be fostered. He said he planned to visit Wichita weekly.
THE "TROUBLESOME time" Kuehl referred to was the shutdown Dec. 1 of the cardiothoracic unit because of allegedly unsafe conditions.
Kugel said, "I've read all the materials related to the cardiothoracic area. I'm convinced the survey group (an investigative team of three nationally known doctors) did an excellent job of assessing the status and made an excellent report which was acted upon by Chancellor Dykes and Dr. Robinson.
"The report indicated the level of function was satisfactory and commensurate with other (heart) units in this part of the country."
He said a search committee had been interviewing for a new chief for the cardiothoracic unit and one would be selected in the near future.
MALCOLM ARNOLD, cardiothoracic surgeon, was hired March 15 and has been training a team for the resumption of heart surgery.
Kugel, who said he had been reviewing all of the Med Center, stated two major objectives.
First, the Med Center must offer appropriate opportunity to qualified students for various programs and must constantly review health, medical school and nursing school programs so that they are of highest quality, he said. A second major and very important role for the Med Center he said, is excellence in patient care and related services.
Kugel, a pediatrician, said his position was almost totally administrative but he would like to have one half day a week for consultatory work with children.
DYKES SAID during the press conference that Kugel's experience as a
primary care physician and his understanding of health problems in underserved areas qualified him to work on this priority.
Dykes said, "There is no question in our minds but health care delivery must be the top priority of the Med Center in years ahead.
"We must find new and imaginative and effect ways of addressing the problem to the needs of our society."
Kungul succeeded David W. Robinson, who served as acting executive vice chancellor of the University.
Kugel comes to the Med Center from the University of New Mexico—Albuquerque, where he received his doctoral sciences. Before that, he was with the University of Nebraska College of Medicine from 1968 to 1974, as a faculty member, a medical student, and the department of pediatrics and dean.
DISCO DANCE
Fri.
Apr. 9
8 p.m.
1 a.m.
LAWRENCE GAY LIDERATION
UNION BALLROOM
Everyone Welcomel
We BUY used cars.
John Haddock Used Cars
23rd and Alabama 843-3500
THE ONLY 1 ...
BEEF
RIBS
HAM
G's CHICKEN BAR-B-Q
530 West 23rd
"THE TASTE IS IN THE SAUCE"
The right way to pour beer never changes Since the dawn of organics, 100 A.D., brewmasters have urged discrimination drinkers to pour straight into the head, and not into a tilted bottle.
Although blatantly defiant of sacred拄链 tradition, the original method has the memorious tone between the head and the drink itself, trapping the carbonation below. The beer doesn't go flat. The method works.
When it comes to pouring beer, the brewmasters were right from the beginning. When it came to making beer, so was Oly Skill and ingenuity just can't be improved upon. Some things never change. Olympia never will.
CLEAR FOAM
OLYMPIA Beer doesn't get any better.
"Delightfully outrageous."
L. A. TIMES
PHANTOM
of the
PARADISE PG
In LRrack Store
Eve. at 7:30 & 8:30
Sat.-Sun. at 12:30
Granada
112 H. 45th St., Suite 200
@
Burt Reynolds in
"HUSTLE"
Jack Nicholson & Fave Dunaway
THE GREATEST DETECTIVE STORY OF THE CENTURY
REDFORD/NOFFMAN
"ALL THE
PRESIDENT'S MEN"
"CHINATOWN"
At times it appeared it would cost them their jobs, their reputations—and maybe even their lives.
Hustle 7:30 Hustle re-show
China 9:14 on Fri & Sat.
Sunset
Eve. 7:20 & 9:55
Sat.-Sun. Matinee at 1:45
Olympic Brewing Company, Olympia, Washington VOLLEY
PG Hillcrest
Winner of FIVE Academy Awards Including Best Picture and Best Actress
"ONE FLEW OVER
Varsity R
TEXAS - DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
THE CUCKOO'S NEST"
Evenings 7:30 & 9:45
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
Walter Matthau
Tatum BAD Neal
"THE
BAD NEWS"
Bears PG
with Vic Morrow
Evenings 7-10 & 9-10
Mid May 3-10
Hillmore
Sean Connerly and
PG Michael Caine
The Man Who
Would Be King
Evenings 7:15 & 9:40 Sat. & Sun.Matinee 1:55
Hillcrest
Information and Research Division is expanding to include the following positions which will be involved with a wide variety of applied research and systems activities as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
The Department of Planning and Development Kansas City, Kansas
Skills in written and verbal communication with both technical and non-technical personnel are required. Graduate experience in social science research and understanding of computer utilization in research environment is desirable.
Research/Systems Specialist
This position requires a thorough working knowledge of FORTRAN and/or COBOL. Programming experience in business applications or research projects is desirable.
Programmer/Analyst
Salaries are commensurate with education and experience. These positions offer a wide-range benefit package, flexible working atmosphere, and modern office facilities. We invite all interested applicants to write Information and Research Division, Department of Planning and Development, One Civic Plaza, Kansas City, Kansas 61610. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M-F.
SUA and Fool's Gold presents the amazing
BONNIE RAITT
Tickets on sale at the SUA Office Klef's McKinney-Mason Better Days Capers Corner-Kansas City Mother Earth-Topeka
with special guest Mose Allison
Thursday, April 29
8:00 Hoch Auditorium
QUANTRILL'S FLEA MARKET
THREE HUGE ROOMS OVERFLOWING WITH THE BEST SELECTION OF ANTIQUE AND GOOD USED FURNITURE, GLASSWARE, MEMORABILIA, HIGH CLASS JUNK, BARGAINS. EVERYTHING IMAGINABLE!
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TEXAS
AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT—HOME COOKED FOOD
Open Every Saturday & Sunday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. 811 New Hampshire Lawrence
TOMMY HANSON
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Powwow problem
Monday, April 12, 1976
Russell Blackbird appears unconcerned as his son Travis struggles with a loose-fitting headband during a performance of the Guard dance at the Native American Alliance.
Union plans to be ratified
The Satellite Union Task Force will ratify its final recommendations for construction of the new satellite union tomorrow night.
Kansan jobs open
Applications for editor and business manager of the Kansan for the summer and fall semesters will be accepted until noon Friday, April 16, in 105 Flint Hall.
Applications are available in 105 Flint. The name of women's office, the dean of men's office, is not displayed.
Last night's public hearing was scheduled so that student opinions could be heard before the task force made its final report, but no students attended.
The Kansas board will interview candidates and select the editors and business managers.
Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, said the lack of attendance indicated that the task force had been successful in compiling data. But that students were satisfied with its work.
The Satellite Union was approved by a vote of the student body in February.
Recommendations that are ratified tomorrow night will be submitted to the Student Services committee for approval and then sent to the Student Senate Thursday night.
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.121
KUAC bill goes to Senate
By HARRIS RAYL and BARBARA ROSEWICZ
A bill to reinstate partial funding of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) will probably be presented at the Student Senate meeting tomorrow.
The bill was reviewed at the StudEx meeting last night.
Other bills to be presented at tomorrow's meeting concern student health services, the forensics block allocation, additional identification on publications funded by the Board of Regents as an auditor' s position and the six standing committees' budget recommendations.
Jim Cox, former parliamentarian, was introduced as the new treasurer. He was appointed by Teddie Tasheff, student body president.
The bill that would reinstate partial funding to KUAC is sponsored by John Broadle. It would give KUAC about $80,000 generated from a $2.40 increase in the student activity fee.
The bill faces a possible complication at tomorrow night's Senate meeting. StudEx last night couldn't put it on the regular agenda along with other bills to be considered by the Senate because it wasn't included in the Student Senate Record—the official newsletter sent to senators before each Senate meeting.
SENATE RULES STATE that any bill that would alter the Senate's Revenue Code, including Brocade's bill, must appear in the senate. The rules would be considered. According to Tashseff, the rule was aimed at making certain that senators would know about important legislation such as changing the revenue code; they would be aired to come to the meeting.
Broadie said he had simply overlooked the rule, which was brought to his attention at the StudEx meeting by Jon Josserand, Johnson senior.
For Brodie's bill to be heard, the Senate will have to vote to suspend the rules. Broadie said he would make a motion to do so at the meeting.
The Senate voted last fall to cut KUAC funding from the budget being considered this week by the Senate. Before that cut, the KUAC was to have received $14.5 of every student activity fee paid during the next month, which would have generated about $140,000.
IF BROADIE'S BILL passes tomorrow.
next year's ticket prices will be $15.50 for football and $10 for basketball
This year's football and basketball tickets were $10 each.
The funding would be in the form of a ticket subsidy. This means that by funding KUAC, the Senate would lower the ticket prices that students would pay next year.
Under Brodie's bill, the student activity fee would be $12 next year, the same as this year. If the Senate defeats the bill, the activity fee will be lowered to $9.60.
According to Doug Messer, KUAC business manager, KUAC will generate $15 million for the school year, either through a Senate subsidy, athletic ticket sales or both. If the Senate votes against funding KUAC, ticket sales will be $20 for football and $15 for basketball.
TASHEF SAID she met with Clyde Walker, athletic director, Friday about the proposed Senate subsidy. She said he had approved of the proposal but had said that if the Senate decided to subsidize KUAC with lower amount than Broadie proposed he would have to pay more. Tashef saffled, however, that Walker didn't say what he would do if the Senate decided
to decrease the size of the subsidy proposed by Broadie.
Jossner and Ed Rolfs, both members of StudEx, said they opposed reinstating KUAC funneling. They said they expected to be over the bill at tomorrow's meeting.
Rufa said he saw no justification in Senate funding of KUAC. He said the Senate's money should be used for student loans, not for the school district. KUAC, he said, wouldn't be hurt by a cut.
ROLFS ALSO SAID the ticket subsidiary was unfair because it taxed those students who didn't buy football and basketball in licensed prices provided to those who did buy tickets.
"I think it's patently unfair," he said. "Those who are going to benefit from the process of voting in a primary are."
All students pay a student fee activity, which would be used to subsidize KUAC under Brodie's bill, regardless of whether they buy athletic tickets.
Rolfs said KUAC was a nonprofit organization that made a profit, KUAC made a $70.00 profit last year, Rolfs said.
www.KUAC.org*
See KUAC page 2
KU receives $80-million budget
By JIM COBB
By JIM COBB Staff Writer
University of Kansas administrators are sleeping better and breathing easier following Friday's final legislative approval for a bill that would increase $80 million for the Lawrence campus.
In addition to feeling relieved at the end of a year-long process of budget preparation and a four-month struggle against possible legislative budget cuts, administrators said they were pleased with the final result, regardless of some cuts in proposed funding.
"I feel a sense of relief," Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said last night. "What pleases me most is that despite all of the criticism and negative comments of the legislature, it's been a very good year for higher education."
spend nearly $24 million of hospital revenues for fiscal 1977.
Among the most controversial parts of the budget, increases in faculty salaries and other operating expenditures (OE), weren't cut by the legislature after they originally were cut by the House Ways and Means Committee in March.
The remainder of KU's operating funds will come from university fees, federal grants and other sources. The Med Center also received legislative authorization to
Those increases remain at 8 per cent for faculty salaries and 10 per cent for OOE. The Med Center's hospital will be allowed a 12 per cent OOE increase.
with the exception of hospital expenditures,
the center from the governor's recommendation.
All the increases in salaries and OOE.
The planning stages of the budget, which will be submitted May 1 to the Kansas Board of Regents, began more than a year ago. The board's session began, concerns about the budget have kept university administrators working long hours and developing new strategies to convince an increasingly educated student body that need for more higher education funding.
The approved budget bill for all Board of Regents institutions is now on its way to Gov. Robert F. Bennett for signature. It includes $43,137,237 for the Lawrence County government fund and $23,515,000 for the KU Medical Center from general revenue funds.
Threats to further cut those increases were made by some legislators, particularly in the final weeks of the legislative session. University administrators and the Douglas County legislative delegation were told that legislative increases would be cut to 5 or 6 per cent.
The original 10 per cent salary increase proposal was part of the last step of a
three-year plan to raise KU's faculty pay to the level of many comparable universities.
The budget bill tred an uncertain path through the state legislature. It was sent from the House to the Senate, to the Ways and Means Committees of both houses, into a Joint House-Secret conference committee to back to the floors of both houses on Friday.
Minor changes and deletions were made at each step of the legislative process.
See BUDGET page 10
★ ★ ★
Budget requests left mostly intact
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
When the Kansas legislature convened in January, it seemed the University of Kansas might see large chunks of its budget requests sliced away.
★ ★ ★
Salaries and salaries:
Unclassified salary increases 10
OBD Operating expenses incomes 8
New Classification positions 12
New Positioned position 27.4
Visual Area Building 8,030 lbs. $1,803 lbs.
Computer Service facility 1,560 lbs. $2,700 lbs.
Computer Service facility addition 2,700 lbs. $2,700 lbs.
Maloit Hall addition 600 lbs. $400 lbs.
Maloit Hall addition 600 lbs. $400 lbs.
Special Projects 13,936
Law Enforcement Training Center 131,323 83,370
Literary development 203,974 83,370
Literary development athletics 203,974 83,370
Audio-Reader 20,000
TW Production of educational equipment 14,940
TW Production inib 50,000
Reading Lists 34,868
State生物学 program 15,854 117,325
State Biology traverse 12,854 117,325
Traverse 17,477
But when the budget finally passed the legislature Friday, most original KU requests were intact, and in some cases, KU received more than it asked for.
In the Lawrence campus budget requests, all construction projects were fully funded, the 24.7 unclassified positions requested were granted and 74 new classified positions—one more than requested—were created.
Faculty salaries were increased by 8 per cent and other operating expenditures (OE) by 10 per cent, KU had requested 10 and 12 per cent increases respectively, but Chancellor Archie R. Dykes last night was be pleased with the final increases.
"WE'RE MOVING ahead," Dykes said. "Some of our sister states will not get comparable salary increases this year." The low salary is the final stage of
Dykes said early legislative attempts to cut the salary increases to 5 per cent had made it difficult to hold even the 8 per cent increases.
a three-year plan to upgrade KU faculty salaries. The plan had called for salaries to be 16 percent higher.
The legislature had appropriated the high increases the first two years, but some legislators were reluctant to follow through. Because the result was the smaller 8 per cent hike.
The salary increases are the final stage of
But Dykes said that, in spite of that, the plan had been in 'three exceptions' that he described as "significant."
The increases are moving ahead of inflation, he said, and faculty salaries now run up.
IN ADDITION TO the accumulated 28 per cent salary increases made during the past three years, the University's OOE funding increased by 30 per cent during the same period, he said.
"Few states can equal that record," Dokes said.
Construction fund requests granted in full by the legislature included $1.7 million for
See MONEY page 2
Film medium stilted in beginning, never grew up,director says
By PEGGI BASS
Staff Writer
The film medium was "thrilled in its adolescence." savs director Peter Watkins.
Watkins a political film maker, said yesterday that a conscious desire to entertain had narrowed the use of cinema.
Watkins, 41, was invited to the University of Kansas by the departments of English, speech and drama and history, and will be here until April 20th. The group will be given a series of films by SUA.
"I don't know why the cinema is the only art expected to only entertain," he said.
"That's why the cinema stopped growing 30 years ago."
HE SAID YESTERDAY that he organized six trips to the United States partly for
"I learn a great deal," he said. "I think it's very urgent to do a running check on the media. They affect us in an enormous way." *Looking at Watkins, most films are too*
According to Watkins, most films are too artificial and are synthetic experiences.
"Very seldom does a film have any reciprocal meaning because the public is looking at something totally contrived with professionalism," he said.
"But then, the cinema has always been shocked by honey," he added with a said
"HE IS THE MOST Gifted, as well as most dedicated and serious, of current film history."
Watkins, who says his films aren't entertainment-oriented, began his career in the late 1950's with three short antiwar war films, with an amateur casts and financed himself.
Edward Ruhe, professor of English and coordinator of Wakiki's schedule, said that
"And his usual formula-simulated newsreel-documentary with a fantastic or futuristic element—has produced some of the most engaging and powerful films of the past decade."
Watkins said that he dealt with contemporary problems such as nuclear war and political manipulation through the mass media which are subjects of controversy because of public reaction against them.
He said he usually works with a 'mature of basic preparation and improvisation' and uses amateur casts because he says he has worked to make a lace the believability of the films.
BBC, which owns the release rights to the film, agreed to make it available for theatrical release but still won't allow it to go anywhere in any way in the world. Watkins said.
"The government makes it clear all the time what it doesn't want," he said. "But there are some uncomfortable questions that must be asked."
one of his films, "The War Game," was
based on a British Broadcasting
Corporation (BBC).
The film deals with the results of a thermonuclear attack on Britain and the United States.
Watkins said he had been hurt and angered by the BRC and he found it unacceptable.
"There were a lot of bad feelings toward me because I'd done the unthinkable," he said. "England is a wasteland now. I have no intention to go back there."
He said he left Britain soon after the banning of "The War Game" for the Scandinavian countries, where he has been for the past three years.
**WATKINS'** FILMS have sparked controversy in most places where they have been shown. SUA will **show** tonight at 7:30 **tonight** in Woodruff Auditorium.
"The Gladiators," a severe comment on the present and a speculation of the future, won the Golden Asteroid award at the Golden Festival of Science Fiction Film in 1968.
"Culoden," called by some critics as working first "professional" film, has a kind of shock.
Other films to be shown are: "Privilege", an allegory of the mass media's attempts to divert attention from what Waltkins calls "the War Game" (also on Wednesday; "Fallan" (The Trap), which deals with problems arising from the peaceful use of nuclear power, on April 20; "Edward Vadim," a biography of the Norwegian painter, April 21.
Watkins will be appearing after most of these showings.
1976
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Film maker Peter Watkins says today's films are too artificial
2
Monday, April 12, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
Hearst offers to testify
SAN FRANCISCO—Patricia Heart, facing a maximum penalty today of 25 years in prison for armed bank robbery, is willing to testify about the criminal activities of her one-time fictitious associates to lighten her sentence, sources say. Heart's attorneys declined yesterday to comment on her future as a prosecution
Sources said Heart is resentful of terrorists who she believes are responsible for her predicament. They said she has offered to tell all she knows about bombings, murders and members of the radical underground network who protected her as a fugitive for more than a year and a half.
Chinese purge continues
TOKYO-China's army vowed to crack down on supporters of ousted Vice President Xi Jinping, giving him spread to five Chinese operatives. P broadcasts talked since yesterday.
"From offices to barracks, from sea islands to frontier outposts, a revolutionary atmosphere of unity in struggle now prevails in these People's Revolutionary Army units stationed across the country," the official Hsinhuua news agency said. Liu Hsing-yuan, commander of Chenu units, said the struggle would go on to "a greater depth," meaning there still were backers of Teng's policies to be won over or purged.
NRC strikers aive appeal
NEW YORK—Newwriters, technicians and other employees on strike against the National Broadcasting Co. appeased yesterday to all political candidates not to run for office in New York.
"Anything you do or say -law, on film or tape—is in fact a crossing of our picket lines and a defeat for us in our attempts to end the lockout and negotiate a contract," they said in a telegram to all presidential candidates. They also urge the candidates not to allow NBC reporters a place at their press conferences and
"You need not fear that communication with the public will be significantly cut off for you," the strikers told the candidates, saying that thousands of other news
Hiiackers en route to Libya
BANGKOK, Thailand—Three Filipino Mosques holding 10 hortensies flew out of Bangkok aboard a Philippine Airlines DCS jet this morning, and officials said they
Thai officials said that the jet took off at 10:41 a.m. and that the flight to Karachi would take three hours and 50 minutes.
The gunmen, using their hostages as shields, walked across about 500 yards of runway from the short-range BAC111 to the waiting long-range DC8.
The officials said the hijackers then released 10 of the hostages they had seized when they seized the plane Wednesday. They kept only the chief pilot of the BAC111, the vice president of Philippine Airlines and eight crew members of the DC8, which was flown in last night from Manila at the demand of the hijackers.
HAYS - Gov. Robert F. Bennett blamed the Democrats yesterday for what he called the most political Knights I legislative session he had ever witnessed.
Bennett, in an interview with a Hays radio station, said the Democrats had a field day with the session and blamed them for blocking voting on important issues.
The governor said that if the lawmakers didn't hold the line on spending, there would unquestionably be a tax increase next year.
Bennett blames Democrats
Bennett said he hoped to save money by vetting several bills presented to him this year. He said lawmakers had already spent $17 million more than his budget.
From nage one
The Audio-Reader program, not included in the original budget request, was given $20,000 and received a new classified position.
Money requests . . .
Requests for the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center, library development, the Water Resources Institute and the Bureau of Child Research were granted, but in smaller amounts than requested.
HOWEVER, SMALLER FUND requests for eight special programs were cut from the budget. Those programs not funded are a re-entry program for adults returning to college, a project for instruction improvements, women's athletics, expansion of buildings and grounds at the State Hospital, equipment, a television production laboratory, a reading clinic and additional funds for the State Biological Survey.
The KU Medical Center will receive the salary and OOE increases. The Med Center was also granted in full a requested 12 per month in funds for operation of the hospital unit.
The legislature also allocated $600,000 to offset the loss of revenue from a federal capital grant fund, which was eliminated in 2015. It also requested $25,000 for nurses' overtime pay.
Applications available for grant
College Republicans refused jobs
Service to the University or the Lawrence community is a primary consideration in the selection of the award winner. Scholarship, financial need and references are of less consideration.
About 20 College Republicans from the University of Kansas met disappointment Saturday when they were told there weren't enough volunteer jobs for everyone who wanted one at this summer's national Republican convention in Kansas City, Mo.
Applicants must be undergraduate or graduate students regularly enrolled for this semester and the fall semester.
By BECCI BREINING
Applications should be returned to the
office by April 23. Interviews with the
SUA are due on March 25.
In recognition of student efforts during the Kansas Union fire in April 1970, several universities offered scholarships to SUA Union. It was suggested that SUA use the gift to provide scholarships for deserving students.
Applications for the University-
Community Service Scholarship Award will be
closed by December 31, 2017.
The students were attending a convention of the Midwest Federation of College Republican Clubs in Kansas City, Mo., and had expected to be interviewed by the Republican National Committee about experience and interest in the party.
But, according to Stuart Kowalski, chairman of the Kansas Young Republican Federation, when it came time for the interviews, the committee simply refused to talk to them, saying there weren't enough jobs.
The scholarship amount is determined by the amount of annual interest accumulated on the original gift. The recipient of this year's scholarship will receive $300.
"I WAS LED TO believe that there would be several hundred general assignment jobs such as being pages, doing errands and other odd jobs," Kowski said yesterday.
"I got a phone call about a week ago from the former director of the Midwest Young Republicans, who said, 'Bring all the people you can, and we'll give them jobs.'"
Kowalski said that, as it turned out only 20 to 30 jobs would be available, and students from all over the nation would compete for them.
"I'm really irritated about it," Kowski said. "I was told to really push it with the Republicans here because Lawrence is so close to Karasan City and we could commute."
"They didn't want to oblieve themselves.
They'll wait to the last minute and call up
and say 'We need 50 volunteers by tomorrow morning.' "
Kowalski was recruiting the appropriate number of volunteers was a big problem.
"I was under the impression that there were more than 250 jobs open," he said.
ONE REPUBLICAN who expected to
one volunteer job was John Barber, 3020
Don Stinson, representative of the College Republican National Committee in Washington, D.C., couldn't be reached for comment. Stinson was in charge of organizing interviews at Saturday's convention.
Lucille Smith, Kanorado freshman, said the selection committee said it had to cut back on volunteers because of limited space in Kemper Arena.
Barber she he still thought he had a good chance of being selected from among the nationwide applicants because he lives in New York and was needed for four different political campaigns.
HERRIN SAID she thought she still had a chance of getting a job after her application was reviewed. She said she might apply to work for Ronald Reagan's or Gerald Ford's election committee, as the selection committee advised.
Dee Nese Wagner, Holsting sophomore,
the National Republican Committee
it said it didn't have time to conduct
interviews in Kansas City as it had promised.
"The national chairman of College Republicans, Carl Rove, is supposed to negotiate with the Republic National Association to volunteer jobs as promised, Wagner said.
"They made it sound really rough. Apparently they wanted to get only the people who were really interested," she said. "They told us that the volunteers might get on the floor only once and maybe wouldn't even work in the building itself."
Both Smith and Mary Herbin, Jarnestown sophomore, said they had been told there were no other homes nearby.
In other action at the convention, the KU College Republican Club was recognized as a co-chairman of the election treasurer of the Region Seven College Republican Clubs, and Barber was appointed communications director for the West Federation of College Republican Clubs.
KUAC bill...
From page one
completion of the School of Law building,
$1.6 million for beginning the visual arts
building, $2.7 million for beginning the
computer service facility, $270,000 for an
addition to Robinson Gymnasium and
$460,000 for an addition to Malott Hall.
Also, $100,000 requested to replace the roof of Hotel Hall was granted in full
"They'll probably make a $150,000 profit this year," he said.
MESSER SAID last week that KUAC figured its budget on the basis of less money it expected to take in, because of the difficulty of estimating each year's revenue. He said that while KUAC expected to take in about $307,000 during the next school year from students, it based its budget on the budget for some years, 1280 or sometimes, he said, KUAC takes in more than the conservative figure used for budgeting.
Joasrand said he thought KUAC wanted a lot of money and, as a consequence, it was more expensive.
"They waste money left and right--so I don't want to see students' money paying
showing todav
At 7:30 tonight in the sculpture studio in Bailey Amex, "Art for Tomorrow" will be shown again with "Christo's Valley Curtain," "The Noguchi; a sculptor's World." "Boukles and Company" and "Kinetic Art."
The producer and the business manager (for the 1977 Rock Chalk Revue have been asked to submit)
Eight of the 15 films selected as outstanding contributions to sculpture at the 9th National International Sculpture Hall will be shown today in Bailey Hall.
Kathy Hannah, Topea junior, will replace John Schwartz, Wichita senior, as producer of the Revue, Jim Parker, Kansas City, Kan., junior, will replace Roger Campbell, Leawood junior, as business manager.
The NISC was sponsored by KU, the New Orleans Museum of Art, the University of New Orleans, Tulane University and Xavier University.
At 3 p.m. in 2A Bailey, four films featuring well-known sculptors will be shown. They are "Art for Tomorrow," which includes such artists as Schaffer, Chicco, and the artist Hunt; "Chicago Picasso" and "The Great Sale," which is about Alexander Calder.
Officers selected for '77 Revue
In response to Rolfs' argument that only those students who attend athletic events should have to pay for them, Broadle said they would hardly could be compared with a city tax.
for it," he said. "I think it's a very loosely run organization."
"A CITY WOULDN'T make only the
people who have children going to school
on campus."
Tasheff, who supports Broadie's bill, said last week she thought the Senate should be concerned with the prices students have to pay for athletic tickets.
"It is my real hope that even those who
it's in my belief will at least vent to bring it"
"on the table."
In other concerns, the Health Advisory Board will present a resolution to accept the student health insurance contract from Blue Cross and Blue Shield.
Steve Seeglebich, chairman of the board, said he didn't foresee any increases in the student health fees for next year. The time-student tuition fee is the same as student's tuition fees reach semester.
BUT SEGEBRECHT reported that student insurance premium rates would increase for next year. The premiums would increase for a single student policy from $121.20 to $251.88 and two-party insurance from $251.88 to $399.84 for a family policy from $699.84 to $511.82.
The Senate's share of the forensics
addition would officially be changed by an
amendment.
The administration stated last week that it will supplement the debate program's fit.
This would cause a 15 cent reduction in the student activity fee. Therefore, the revenue code will be changed to read that 25 cents of each student activity fee.
Tasheff clarified that the administration's new funding commitment was an addition to administrative funds already given KU forensics.
The six standing committees that heard student organization requests last week will present their budget recommendations to the Senate for discussion and approval.
The committee had a total of $336,175 to allocate to student organizations who raise funds.
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Needlepoint tote bags- 25% off
Sale good through April 17
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Crewel Cupboard
Entire stock of crewel kits- 20% off
Spring Sale
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An SUA Forums Presentation:
Tuesday, April 13, 1976 8:00 p.m. 50° Woodruff Auditorium
Monday, April 12. 1976
3
University Daily Kansan
Improvements for Watson top priority despite cuts
By JERRY SEIB Staff Writer
Staff Writer
- Library improvement remains a top priority despite recent cuts in Watson Library budget requests, University administrators said Friday.
Speaking at an open forum for faculty and staff members, Sandel said a $500,000 books and publications budget increase for the university would be at both the University and state levels.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, agree that it had been impossible to match the talent of these students measured by James Ramz, dean of libraries.
"THIS IMPROVEMENT of the library was our highest priority this year." Shankel
- But the library will receive a new cataloging system, six new unclassified and three classified positions, and $10,000 or $400 increase in student wage funds, he said.
Shankal's remarks were in response to a question on why there had been cuts in an audience member said Ranz had considered an "austere" budget request.
"There is a small difference of opinion between some of us and the dean of libraries about what is an austere budget," Shankel said.
"THE CHANCELLOR and I recognize the library has been underfunded in the past," Shankel said. "We can't undertake a new library because we have accumulated in 10 years in one year."
He said one of the reasons the request had to be cut was that the state budget office had sliced a library capital improvement fund from $25,000 to $13,000.
Dykes compared the current library situation to the problems faced in the KU computing center two years ago, when it became apparent that KU's computers were outdated and a new facility was needed.
A special request was made to the governor, legislature and the Kansas Board of Regents, he said, and the result was a compromise with the governor, which will both be added this summer.
Dykes said that making the library im-
Owl Society selects 15 men for honors
Owl Society, the junior men's honorary society, has selected 15 men for membership. Members are selected on the basis of academic achievement and participation in student activity ties.
The new members, all sophomores, are:
Joel Bruggen, Atchison; David Dyer,
Leeward; Kent Erickson, Madison, Kan;
Paul Eckert, Bradford, Douglass, Alan
Hundley, Wellington; John R. Mitchell,
Leavenworth; John R. Mueller, Winfield;
John Nettles, Prairie Village; James Orn,
Prairie Village; Steve Owens, Salina;
effrey Rhoads, Leaworth;
Brian McDowell, Westcott; Dave
Tomlinson, Overland Park; James S.
Willis, Salina.
provenances, included in the new budget, had required some "rather significant reallocations" from other areas of the University.
"TO DO THAT on a major scale would cause disruptions in other areas," he said.
A special committee was holding the
opening day of the library to build or
build a new library. Dykes said.
Dykes and Shankel commented on a variety of other matters, including possible wasteful spending, parking for employees, departmental evaluations, the state offices' new long distance telephone system and personnel) appointments.
An audience member told Shankel she believed many KU departments were spending money unavailably near the fiscal year. She said the funds allocated at the beginning of the year.
Shankel said that money must either be spent or be returned to the state at the end of the year. He said departments tried to keep the limit, taking advantage of all funds.
"I WOULD HOPE there are no cases where we are spreading state funds for these projects."
In response to a question about providing a parking place for each KU employee, Shankel said there weren't enough parking places for such a system.
"If there were," he said, "there wouldn't be any parking problems."
A building and grounds department employee told Shankel the scarcity of parking places made it difficult to reach buildings to make deliveries.
The employee said he knew of a case in which a campus police officer called a wrecker to haul away a state vehicle that had broken through the wall while a RU prolapse made a delivery.
Shankel he thought it was possible to designate parking places for building and grounds vehicles near every campus building.
In response to a question about departmental evaluations conducted this year in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Shankel said the criteria used in the evaluations should be made available to faculty members.
SHANKEL SAID that regular departmental evaluations were important, but that methods for conducting evaluations was still "open to discussion."
Under the new KANS-A long distance telephone system, individual University data servers can be used.
Shankle said, because they bear none of the cost of the old University-wide lines.
DR. RONALD J. KOEHN Chiropractor
Announces the Opening of His Office for the Practice of Chiropractor aft:
The KANS-A-N system, initiated April 1 in all Kansas state offices, is a network in which state offices are charged for each location. The network is regular long distance rates. At KU, it replaces a line on which any number of long distances could be made for a single charge.
SUITE 202
901 KENTUCKY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Office Hours by Appointment
The State Department of Administration determined the system would be cheaper for state offices as a whole. KU had no voice in the system change. Shankel said.
Dykes told the audience that personnel vacancies weren't always filled immediately because of a "shrinkage factor" in the university budget.
HE SAID HE DIDN'T know whether the KIS-A-N system would be cheaper for KIS-
The state allocates a salary fund, Dykes said, then sets aside a percentage of that fund, that can't be spent. That is the amount of the fund the state estimates won't be spent because of employee resignations or absences.
843-4678
AS A RESULT, Sykes said, when a position becomes vacant, it often can't be filled until the next fiscal year so KU can meet its budget.
For fiscal 1977, the shrinkage factor will be two per cent for unclassified salaries and five per cent for classified salaries, he said. Dykes called the shrinkage factor a "Self-suffilling prophecy" because the state continued it each year on the basis of the size of the company. But KU has always had to inset an established shrinkage figure, it appears unavoidable to state officials reviewing the previous year's figures, he said.
Women should develop a sense of identity and become involved in challenging and stimulating subjects. Elizabeth Hartford and John Wesley attended Friday night as a Career Fair banquet.
As a result, Dole said, many frustrations and disappointments that can arise in any care setting are on the rise.
"Become involved in subjects that can provide a real meaning for your life so that you look forward with eagerness to each day's undertakings." Dole said.
In doing so, she said, women can counteract the "Madison Avenue image of women without meaningful identities." This image manifests itself, according to Dole,
so that women are hysterical "other over washing detergents or choosing the proper
Career plans focus of banquet
Dole also focused on her career as a member of the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and explained her job as a commissioner.
She said a Federal Trade commissioner wore three hate," as acting as a legislator, a judge or an attorney.
Dole said the goals of the FTC were to enforce the Federal Trade Act and to protect
"We try to enforce the Federal Trade Act, which prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or
practices affecting commerce." she said.
As a government employee, Dole said she forsaw an ever-increasing wave of women in government and more women preparing themselves for careers.
The Career Fair continued Saturday with workshops on job planning, beginning a career in construction.
Kala Stroup, dean of women on leave who conducted two workshops, said the career planning workshops tried to help students assess their capabilities.
Stroup and she thought the fair was a good idea and wished that more people had heard of it. Stroup said.
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APRIL 8-9 TWO WEEKS OF FANTASY/DOCUMENTARY AND PETER WATKINS
APRIL 8 PUNISHMENT PARK
WODDNUPF AUDITORIUM 7:30 PM
APRIL 12 THE GLADIATORS & CULLOGEN
WODDNUPF AUDITORIUM 7:30 PM
APRIL 14 PRIVILEGE & THE WAR GAME
WODDNUPF AUDITORIUM 7:30 PM
APRIL 20 PALLAN (THE TRAP)
FORLUM ROOM
9:30 AM 7:30 PM
APRIL 21 EDVARD MUNCH
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Improve your game of pool as well as in other games right here in our lobby. One of the important aspects of your college life is being able to break now and then to relax. To make it easy for you we have ping-pong tables, a pool table and games that you can check out such as monopoly, chess and checkers. With almost 500 residents, it's no problem finding an opponent! Take a break! Move to Naismith today!
POLAND'S CYBERNETIC CHAMPIONSHIP
Pom Pon Girl Clinics
1976-77 KU Pom Pon Girl and Yell Leader Tryouts
7-8:30 p.m.-Allen F. H. East Lobby
DUNLAND
Yell Leader Clinics
APRIL 12 (Mon.)
6:00-7:30 p.m.-Allen Field House
APRIL 14 (Wed.)
APRIL 20 (Tues.)
APRIL 22 (Thurs.)
You can be a part of the nationally recognized University of Kansas pom pon and yell leading squads which have traditionally become a source of pride for all KU followers. The requirements for trying out are as follows: (1) regularly enrolled University of Kansas student, either undergraduate or graduate, with a minimum of 4 years of experience (3) have a sincere interest in helping further boost KU athletics into national prominence.
The KU pom pom girls and yell leaders are sponsored and governed by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. All students interested in learning more about becoming a teammate to tryouts are urged to will be answered and routines for trying out will be taught
APRIL 13 (Tues.)
APRIL 14 (Wed.)
APRIL 15 (Thurs.)
APRIL 20 (Tues.)
APRIL 27 (Tues.) Finals Clinic
★ Pom Pon Prellims-Saturday, April 24, Allen Field House Annex, 10 a.m.
★ Pom Pon Finals-Thursday, April 29, Allen Field House Annex, 7 p.m.
★ Yell Leader Tryouts-Wednesday, April 21, Allen Field House, 6:00 p.m.
4
Monday. April 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Oninions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Raise cigarette tax
The Kansas Senate has passed a bill that would raise the cigarette tax in Kansas by one cent a pack. The bill as it was originally introduced would have provided revenues from the tax for cancer research at the University of Kansas Medical Center. The version the Senate approved and sent to the House passed on Friday, directly for the Med Center, but was passed with the understanding that the legislature would appropriate such money from the state's general fund.
THE REGULAR session of the legislature ended without passage of the bill, but the House still will have a chance to approve the tax when it reconvenes on April 19 to clean up unfinished business. The House should approve the bill, which would raise the tax from 11 cents to 12 cents a pack.
The tax increase would supposedly generate about $2.9 million annually. The original bill would have credited 10 per cent of all cigarette tax revenues to the Med Center's radiation treatment fund. As the bill now stands, the amount that would be granted to the fund is unknown.
SEN. NORMAN GARR, R-Westwood and chairman of the Assessment and Taxation Committee, said it would be up to the Ways and Means committees of the legislature or the Governor to take the steps necessary to see that the
proceeds of the tax go to cancer research.
Sen. Ross Doyen, R-Concordia and the original sponsor of the bill, wanted to use the revenues generated by the tax to expand cancer research at KU into one of the leading programs of its kind in the country. KU officials supported the legislation. It would be a big boost to the University.
IF THE MONEY were relayed to the Med Center, the tax would be very commendable. As everyone knows,
"The surgeon general of the United States has determined that smoking is hazardous to your health."
Smoking and cancer have been directly linked, and most smokers will readily admit that cigarettes play havoc with their lungs. Therefore, those who claim that the increased taxes will be a burden and infringe on their rights must also pay the investment. Those who benefit most from the research done at the Medical Center will be those who have contributed the most through the tax.
An intensive cancer research program would be a very worthwhile venture for the University of Kansas. The bill should be approved. And the research department could pay the University and not merely bank the increased revenue for a rainy day.
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
The university of Missouri has been criticized for grade inflation and a general deterioration in the faculty of its nursing school during the years. There can be little doubt that some students who receive degrees and some faculty members who hold secure jobs are repped as incompetent 50, or even 20, years later. A bachelor's degree is no longer the mark of distinction it once was, nor does it guarantee an economic return to the student's and state's investment.
College can be beneficial
IN HER BOOK," The Case Against College," Caroline Bird contends that for all but the 25 per cent of students who actually love to learn, college is just an aged vat for 18-years for whom the economy has no immediate use.
SHE COMES down particularly hard on liberal arts degrees and traditional "liberal" education.
Bird rejects the contention that college provides better jobs, a more satisfying life, higher values or a broadened horizons. But it is primarily a mark of class distinction, and the erroneous presupposition behind the egalitarian desire to give students the degree that degrees would make everyone equal. Bird says.
"Faith in personal salvation by the liberal arts is professed in a creed intoned on
Guest commentary
Dean of persons needed
Though no one knows exactly what is in the Title IX Self-Evaluation Committee's report on discrimination at the University of Kansas, it was revealed recently that investigation in at least one area was insufficient.
By DAVID HAUBER
Until the report is available in its final version, the reasons for the disparities will remain unknown.
THE QUESTION has been raised that the operations of the dean of men's and the dean of women's offices have not been carried out. It appears to be on the short end of staff and budget allowances.
There are several reasons that might account for the differences between the two offices.
ANOTHER FACTOR, pointed out by William Balfour, vice president of the college that was in the spirit of righting past wrongs, women have been allowed to find a job in the dean of college. "We couldn't find one anywhere else."
First, it is well known that Emily Taylor, former dean of women, built a bastion for the women's movement. She left a large group of followers in the dean of women's office.
A final reason might be that the dean of men's office is not as aggressive in seeking more information than the dean of women's office.
Although the two offices are separated by tradition, as Balfour has said, they are
considered to be under the same roof. However, the traditions of these offices will leave them in a vulnerable position in relation to Title IX if they remain separate but unequal.
THE TRADITION of having an adviser to students first got official recognition in 1914 when Mrs. Eustace Brown was applauded by the visor by Chancellor Frank Stright. At the time, Strong was reacting to "licentiousness" among the student- body, wearing numbered wrist bracelets, "the male students, wearing numbered wrist bracelets, would physically inspect women's ankles in the dress numbers, the women's ankle bracelets in search of their "mates."
In 1921, John Dyer was appointed KU's first dean of men. Dyer defended the creation of the office, saying, "There is an evident student need for an adviser and friend who will be respected and trusted counselor" and loyal representative with all others in the University and community."
WHEATHER THE needs of students are being satisfied today and whether the offices provide help is doubtful. Certainly, emphasis on enforcement of social and sexual restrictions on men and women isn't the same as it was during the "adultery" era in the women are offered "consciousness raising" and the men are . . . well . . . the men are.
The two offices handle, among other things, housing and counseling problems. I polled 50 students by telephone—selecting every tenth name from random columns of the student directory. Of those students, 30 students used the dean of men's and women's services and, if they did, for what reason.
OF THESE CONTACTED, 24 were women and 26 were men. Twenty-four students said they had never had contact with either woman or man who had contact with either office, 16 were women and 10 were men. Two men who had contacted with the dean of men's office also had had contact with the dean of women's office.
The reasons for contacting the offices were broken down into three categories; housing, career and career counseling, or both.
A SOLUTION to the office's problem of facing Title IX restrictions and the possible overlap of duties, especially in areas not related to sex, like the titles. The labels of dean of women and dean of men only confuse and mislead.
One man and one woman sought both housing and career-counseling information. The remainder, 12 women and eight men—45 per cent of the 26 persons who had contacted the offices—sought information on how to access counseling students who had contacted the offices said they were satisfied with the experience.
If the majority of people use the offices for housing information, then that service should be separated from the more sex-specific subjects like career and personal counseling.
One office, separated into areas that serve both sexes, would be far better than the across-the-hall, separate but unequal situation that now exists.
have never considered college as anything other than the proper place for me. There are, however, many students here who seem to have selected college as the least undesirable
ceremonial occasions such as commencements. It is blasphemy to take the premises literally, and if you don't understand what the words mean, you are only admitting your lack of grace," she says.
David Hauber is a senior in journalism and a former Kansan staff writer. 355
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
Liberal arts education is, for Bird, little more than a cultic amalgamation of esoteric widsom maintained by charlite professors at the students, parents and the public.
PERSONALLY, I find this and several other birds Bird has to say a little hard to swallow. But then, I've always considered myself one of the 25 per cent who love to learn. I
of several bad options. Perhaps it is, in part, the ingress of these students that has caused the deterioration of the University.
That deterioration is itself a problem of considerable difficulty and diversity. For example, consider the statement that a bachelor's degree has been devalued. That statement is not true because that the social and intellectual status a degree once commanded has been diminished. Certainly their economic value
is also greatly reduced when degrees are, as it is said, "a dime a dozen." But those criteria for evaluating degrees are usually quite low, and benefits from my degree, the personal progress I have made.
I don't intend to say that every class has been an intellectual delight. There have been other classes continually searching for the best professors and the classes with serious students, I have managed to leave myself in charge of what it has all been worthwhile.
I THINK, contrary to what Bird says, that my life has been enriched—enriched in a way reading a big stack of books or in the classroom classes, as she suggests, could never have accomplished.
GENERALIZING ABOUT other students is quite a different matter. As long as a college has associated with it mystical attributes to which it belongs, the students will be vulnerable to the merchandising schemes some colleges are now using in
an effort to overcome the problem of declining enrollment. Radio stations broadcast commercials promising, "If you go to Harvie's Library arts College, you will discover your potential in the process of sorting out your life goals."
A DEROMANTICIZING of college is needed for students to become aware of the shortcomings and problems with their courses, perhaps they will be able to exploit the latent potential of universities, which has too often lain dormant. Certainly that is a problem both students and professors need to deal with here at KU.
Although it is probably impossible to reverse the general deterioration of the University because it results from sheer effort and from outside our control, a careful analysis of KU's potentials and limitations in terms of the benefits each student hopes to gain go a long way toward preserving the query we still have.
THIS IS THE STATE SPEAKING.
YOU ARE IN COMPLIANCE WITH SIPULATIONS
OF STATUTE 806/73-4. PERMISSION
GRANTED FOR INTIMATE RELATIONSHIP?
1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURE
'Inside story' not whole picture
WASHINGTON — The frequency of the "tight shot," as it is called in TV, is usually accounted for by the size of the cathode-ray tube. If you want detail, the most you can show on
No, the tight shot is actually
close, as they also say in television, you want to get back to what you detail? Why don't we sacrifice detail for "the big picture"?
By Nicholas von Hoffman
(C) King Features
a TV screen is two faces. With that explanation, the subject is dropped.
BUT THE TIGHT shot isn't merely a technical device of photography to get around the fact that the world is true that you have come in
our preferred way of presenting stories, people and events. The best way is to print journalism. The best reporter is the one who gets "in the inside story." Go a step further and take on the challenge that the only story is the inside story.
surely and that whatever aspects are readily visible on the surface are lies, deceptions and truth is in the center of things.
TRUTH ISN'T A good word to use here. We are less interested in truth than we are in reality, and that's why the watergate, we want the real one, and we were given it in Woodward and Bernstein's "All the President's Men," which not only made a statement, it story, it took us inside. We had something better than a front row seat; we were taken there, on the scene, eyewitness news, slapped in the face by ex-
The novelists were the first to go looking inside for reality. That what's balance and Dickens's sense of identity in clinical analysis begins around
Zola's time and from him you can draw a straight line to "Hospital,"" "Airport,"" "Koajak" and "The Blue Knight." There is a parallel discussion of journalism which moved in to the figures in the news; warts and all.
MODERN EDITORS use the expression "warts and all" a lot. Capturing the wart on the tip of the public figure's nose is proof you're not playing favorites but telling it like it was invisible, at 15 it's a minor blemish and at five with a telephoto lens it is a grotesque disfigurement. But that's reality. The tight shot is what satisfies us, what we demand. The girl manages the girl maneuver which primes shot so tight you'd think they'd be of interest only to practicing gynecologists.
Readers Respond
Meeting story inaccurate, grad students say
To the Editor:
On behalf of the Graduate Student Council, we would like to correct the many inaccuracies in the Kansas article of April 2 summarizing the GSC meeting of April 1.
headline refers to plans in the College office to offer an orientation for new TAs and Als, and a request from the college for suggestions from TAs and Als on topics to include
To begin with: GSC is not establishing any teacher training program, nor anyone who has been taught to our knowledge. Perhaps the
NEXT: IT WOULD be inaccurate to say this program (orientation?) teacher training? is the result of the Student Senate Commission on the Quality of Classroom Instruction—and an even worse mistake to say that TAs and AIs "are accountable to the Senate Commission just as professors are." We had no idea the Senate Commission was so powerful that they could faculty answer to it! It should be noted that there is on-going discussion throughout the University (and GSC) on possible teacher training programs, but whether they will be mandatory and the form they will accept has not yet been set. GSC Committee has published a teacher training report in the March GNP.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekly
journal, *The KU News*. Subscription periods. Second-class postage paid at Law-
ncoln Post Office or $1 a month in Memorandum or $1 a year in Douglas County and $1 a
week in Burdett County. Subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through
the subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Bett Helgaksh
Yael Aboulakhk
Associate Campus Editor Greg Hack
Assistant Campus Editors Jim Bates,
Kyle Kudron
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Associate Customer Manager Client Service
Clientized Manager Manager Double Service
Business Manager
Next: A committee was formed—not on fee waiver proposals, but to gather information on the category of fees mentioned in the fee waiver proposal endorsed by GSC.
NEXT TO LAST: The article states "The purchase of low-cost liability insurance for graduate assistants was defeated by one vote" GSC is the third highest in years was almost equally divided. Whether students are able to purchase this insurance will be
decided by the administration, not by GSC.
Last: The new GradExe
elected by GSC ballot was
announced at this meeting,
although not mentioned in the
lecture, and with a high
opportunity to list the new GradExe
members at this time: Bob Chovetti, Lawrence graduate student; Kathy Dugan, Lawrence graduate student; Jeffrey Mackenzie, graduate student; Charlotte Kimbrough, Lawrence graduate student; Bill Remmers, Lawrence graduate student; Mary Jane Sisk, Lawrence graduate student; Mary Jay Williams, Hoyt graduate student.
A FEW WORDS of praise (however faint). The article was accurate on several points. GSC did endorse the original report of the fee waiver committee, which called for a graduate waiver of tuition fees for students at RAS (RAS are not, by the way, "resident assistants"), and other graduate assistants employed by the University. GSC also discussed the Campus
Veterans' proposal to change full time hours from 12 to 9 for graduate students and GSC formed a committee of GSC and Veterans to do further research on the proposal.
Thank you for the opportunity to correct the misleading information in the article and to provide information which was, unfortunately, left out of that article. Better luck next time!
Ellen F. Reynolds
Executive Coordinator, GSC
Lawrence Graduate Student
Bob Chovetti
Spokesman for GSC
Lawrence Graduate Student
Page decried To the Editor
"Politics take tact" in the March 30 edition of the Karsan was a refreshing and well written editorial.
Jim Bates should be given the local editorial award for the best piece this year. Sometimes it seems as though the editors aren't writing writers are ignoring local events in their commentaries.
It is always good to be an
aspiring Jack Anderson or a Nicholas von Hoffman when you're pounding out editorials for the student paper, but lately he's writing for writers for the Kansas practice editorial "Afghanistanians."
HAVE YOU NOTED how much political writing deals with the hundred mechanics of conducting a campaign? The question is complicated, organization, the effectiveness of his TV commercials, how good his mailing lists are—this is a central concern in the newspapers. The candidates themselves have taken to discussing on the telly the minutiae of their campaign
There was little commentary on the Senate elections, but a lot of news coverage. There has been talk about almost anything related to things of local importance in the last few months. Instead, we have been treated to bees and trips to western Kansas. Little has been said about University football on the Kansas Game Pace.
I was beginning to think that the Kansas had a stable full of sacred cows over in Flint Hall milkshopping the presses. Jim Bates, who we are, keep the audience on hold for governance and student issues.
Jacob Riis, H.L. Mencken,
Horace Seerey, and Sam
Clemens (maybe even Bill
White) will be giving you an
inspirational slap on the back
for your efforts.
Lawrence Graduate Student
The more you move the camera in, the larger the wart gets, but at the same time the less there is to form a judgment about the human being on whose person the wart grows. Some people can't see his feet or his torso, for the screen has been filled with an uglyling fleshy growth of overpowering reality.
IN RETURN FOR an
INexperienced contact with
wartiness, we have given up
our time. We can tell
anything else can make sense
without a background; a
matrix, a context. All words,
gestures and symbols derive
from our previous experience
frame in which they are found.
Much if not most of TV footage that comes out of the White House consists of the press secretary or some other figure talking brief in front of a blue curtain. Sometimes, in interviews at place, there are outaway shots to reporters writing notes, or the TV correspondent will do his closing comment on the lawn with the White House for the background. It doesn't help much. The feeling of void is strong. You might face "like Face the Nation" or " Meet the Press." The participants always look like four men locked into a weightless anti-gravity chamber.
Trivialization is an inherent danger of attempting discourse without a frame of reference. It's only the names of the objects that continue to have wild, agreement meanings.
A SECOND DANGER is petrification. New meanings can't be derived from changing circumstances, because there are no specific shot perceptions. Hence the agreed understandings of words and phrases are those of the past. Obviously, a society can't change easily, but a society today. However, when the society is changing over extended periods of time but the terms of public discourse become changedlessly ossified, speech is less likely to formulate. This may explain the repetitive mustness of politics the last decade or so. Speech can then be backed up by news of the behind news? Part of the continuing popularity of 1930's movies is owed to their having been shot at a longer period than it can comprehensibility of the proscenium stage, and a few people still enjoy that.
They're willing to trade less reality for more meaning, but most audiences quickly get used to the idea that they want to get in there, they want the giant, free-floating, three-quarter faces on the TV screens, the candidate on the airport tarmac—the only place where I can learn to engine, and the reporters pressing their microphones and themselves in, in, in on him to snatch the real out of him so he can be more millions to eat, as men once their magic, totemic animals.
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Monday, April 12, 1976
5
How's your seat feel now,
University Dafly Kansan
By WARD HARKAVY
By WARD HARR
Contributing Writer
Mr. Richard M. Nixon
San Clemente, Calif.
Dean M. Niese
Dear Mr. Nixon:
As per your request, I am sending to you my comments on 'All the President's Men,' a movie starring Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman.
First, let me thank you for a most enjoyable evening, for without your participation, albeit behind the scenes, this movie wouldn't have been possible.
I would advise you not to see the movie, *President. Messrs. Redford and Hoffman*. Mr. Redford is a senior in Woodward and Carl Bernstein; they also are convincing voters who report their beliefs, including Donald Trump. They are吧
I must admit, Mr. President, that I was struck by the similar feelings I got from the book and the movie. My impression of the book was that it was about honesty and honesty of the two young Washington post reporters. I also admired the singular lack of egg in the pages of the book; but I regretted the tinge of self-servile in it. The author does not say the same for your tapes. No offense.
YOULL BE RELIEVED, I'm sure, to know that much of the book was left out of the movie, probably for reasons of time. For example, the book conveys the accurate impression that a human being wasn't the only people working on the Watergate saga. However, the movie, while
it concentrates on establishing a simpler dramatic thread, barely hints that anyone else, save the New York Times, did anything about the break-in.
Now I'm not saying that the book and movie weren't exciting. Indeed, they both were rousing, but it was excitement in a documentary, straightforward sense.
I hope you'll forgive my saying that the
review
The merit of the film, as it was with the book, wasn't in the denouement, but in the unraveling of the nasty Watergate story. The chase was indeed more satisfying than the kill (your abduction), although I sure want to get the kill continued to be satisfying to some of us.
Watergate saga was incredibly stimulating
but sometimes truth is stranger than fiction.
This preoccupation with the chase is healthier than too much concern about the kill. It would dishearse you to know, Mr. Kawasaki said, "You enjoy themselves at your expense. But that wasn't the film's fault. Everybody knew how it was going to end, but they all wanted to kill."
IT SEEMS THIS spring that one's
I beg pardon to correct your statement of some years back, Mr. President. Indeed, not only the press but the public is kicking you around. In fact, they are kicking you up and down the aisles in theaters all over the country, but, I diress.
Alan Pakau, you might recall, directed the very fine "Klute," a movie noted for its tension and expository skill. Much to your chagrin, I must say that he has done well with "All the President's Men." The brightness of the erase Washington Post newsroom is a stark contrast to Jenny Kowalski's beautifully with sinister nighttime Washington. The film's documentary approach makes its tension real, rather than overly manipulative.
THIS DOCUMENTARY approach falters only occasionally. One can forgive the scene of Woodward and Bernstein furiously trying to stop an invasion being inaugurated. This was surely a minor fault. And I also thought that the reporters' error in writing that Bob Haldeman was implicated by Hugh Sloan before a grand jury had indicted him for serious error in the book than in the film.
thoughts are turning to Helen Gahagann Douglas, clachers, cloth coats. White House Nazis and stonewalling. (In "The New Yorker" doesn't even deal with your coverup.)
Quiniski had she became interested in doing the series after observations she made as an urban affairs reporter. After the oooping of two major shopping centers in her city, she became apparent to her that the downtown area was headed for serious difficulty.
She said more and more buildings had been vacated, and many retail businesses
DEL BRINKMAN, dean of the School of Journalism and director of the foundation, presented the award to Quinlisk for his six-part series on the "promise and problems" The series was printed in the Eagle and Beacon during the week of Oct. 26, 1875.
Reporter wins award for series on Wichita
Thankfully, sir, we weren't treated to the spectacle of Woodward and Bernstein as boys, dreaming of the day not when they held a sword or a dagger, in a day that they helped to toplea a president.
The award, sponsored by the KPA and the William Allen White Foundation of the University of Kansas, is a medallion honoring a Kansas newsman who demonstrates enterprise in developing and writing news story during the preceding year.
Dores Quinlisk, a reporter for the Wichita Eagle and Beacon, was presented the third annual News Enterprise Award Friday at the annual Kansas Press Association (KPA) convention in Overland Park.
Quinikish said she discussed the issue with persons who were in a position to excite interest, make decisions and put up the money for redevelopment.
The noisy, busy newsroom, the informal but pressurized news conferences, the harried editors, the jangling of phones and the clatter of typewriters—all seem to be authentic. I hate to tell you this. Mr. President, the generally honest efforts most honored journalists have been presented in the movie in a mature, responsible way.
She said the city hire a consultant to draw a downtown plan, and the people of Wichita had been involved in stirring in efforts to get the development plan moving.
Not only is the environment authentic, but the supporting cast is excellent, even though the complex interplay, that was so important in the book, of the hundreds of inhabitants of Watergateland has been sacrificed in the movie.
were closing, bat city government and community leaders were doing very little to address the problem.
THE CODDLING and caiding of news sources may shock some viewers, but I've heard that the way good reporters work. Merefully, there was no "Doll, get me President," but there is "President's Men" gives a glimpse of what this kind of journalism is really like.
The first News Enterprise Award was given to John Lee, a former city hall reporter for the Hutchinson News, for his story, "The Milkgate Affair."
The recipient last year was Stan Rose, publisher of the Johnson County Sun, for his story on Gov. Robert Doorking's intention to lift the state's announcement of Doorking's decision
AFTER CONDUCTING interviews, Quinlan said, she organized the material in a simple and direct way, so the average citizen could understand it simplifications.
Quinikis said response from the series had then good and a number of actions were like this.
Jason Robards Jr., who plays Washington Post editor Ben Bradleade, and Jack Warden and Martin Balsam seem to move around in the same room. Should. For that they are to be commended.
As for your guys, well, Robert Walden, as Donald "Dirty Tricks" Segettii, and Stephen whom as the prince Hugh Sloan, and heaped upon it too, fouled even you and John Mitchell, Mr. President.
Dick?
INCIDENTALLY, I can now tell you that the man who, as "Deep Throat," betrayed your administration, is Hal Holbrook, the actor who plays Mark Twain all over the country. Frankly, I wasn't suprised. I had a feeling it was he.
400 attend Indian powwow; Balfour, Hutchison honored
About 400 people attended a powwow sponsored by the Native American Alliance (NAA), an organization of American Indian students, during the weekend at Allen Field House, David Brown, president of the NAA, said yesterday.
He said he thought the program had been very successful, attracting local students and residents and visitors from Nebraska and Oklahoma.
"There was a lot of dancing and a dinner involved," for all the people involved." Brown said.
Brown said the powwow's purpose was to stimulate cooperation and enhance relationships between KU, Haskell and residents from Lawrence and surrounding communities.
and Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor of academic affairs and adviser
During the powwow, William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, received a Pendleton blanket. A tribal ceremonial presentation was presented to following an Indian dance honoring Balfour
"The University really pitched in," Brown said, and the Lawrence Indian Center. Haskell and the Indian Club at Harvard University in Baldwin helped make it successful.
"This is the first powwow we we've and we hope that we'll be able to have one every day."
BUSCH Bottles
25c All Day
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Today at the HAWK
---
25
Mr. President, I'm sure that you're familiar with other films about journalism, including "The Front Page" (1930) *Five Faces* and "Sex Education" (1940), "Deadline U.S.A." (1962) and "The Front Page" (1975). If you are, this movie will shock you. No one in "All the President's Men" yells "Stop the press!" but he befuddled copyboy about "adlai shynu".
Unfortunately, no actors were recruited to play Mr. Mitchell, Mrs. Mitchell, Messrs. Haleman, Ehrlichman, Ziegler or yourself. Might I be so bold as to suggest Barton MacLane for Mr. Mitchell and Fred MacMurray for yourself?
But this is a nigling matter, Mr President. In all, I can recommend this movie to you as an excellent film of an excellent book. Redford, as producer, could have sensationalized it, but he wisely chose to play it straight. He would have been foolish to embellish the exciting material your administration gave him. Best wishes.
SUA Presents
LAURA NYRO
in concert
Saturday, April 17th
8 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Tickets $5, $6 Reserved
"Laura Nyro is back, her three year retreat ended, a fine new album out, and a tour underway... she still looks as she did when her cult idolized her as the finest of the women singer/songwriters."
WHAT THEY DO in this Burbank, Calif., branch of the Walt Disney Park is to appear as a guest judge at the event.
Unfortunately for you, Mr. President, this is probably the most authentic depiction that has ever been filmed of journalists at work.
Rolling Stone,4/8/76
See Laura Nyro this Saturday night Climax of the Kansas Relays weekend
A Concerned Citizen
Tickets Available At:
SUA Office
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We haven't got time for the pain.
You know what you hear on commercial radio stations. News, commercials, music, commercials, spots, commercials and more commercials. You won't hear that on KJHK. We're a non-commercial station so you won't hear one commercial all day. Instead you'll hear occasional programs about KU and Lawrence. Mostly you'll hear a lot more music because we haven't got time for the pain of commercials at KJHK.
Kansas Jayhawk Radio Partially funded by Student Activity Fees
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6
Monday. April 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Benson's 46.2 breaks KU record; 3 'dancing elephants' reincarnated
By GARY VICE
Sports Writer
Randy Benson broke the school record in the 400-meter dash and led a barrage of personal record-breaking performances by the University of Kansas track man, who won decisively at the Arkansas State Invitational this weekend in Jonesboro, Ark.
Benson's 46.2 mark in the 400 shattered Benson Olson's marking set in 168 at the Chelsea Fashion Week.
Several other careerests paced the Jayhawks to their convincing victory Saturday as KU won with 179 1-3 points followed by host ASU with 97 1-3.
THE JAYHAWK WEIGHTMEN contributed 64 points to the team's total with 1-2-3 finishes in both the shot put and the javelin, and a strong 1-3 showing in the discus. The meet was scored on a 10-8-6-4-2-1 point system.
The shot putters led the dynamic KU weightmen, with both Jim Podrebaras and Steve Stone tossing the 18-pound shot over the course of a six-minute that distance this season. The trio's accomplishments make KU the nation's only team to have achieved the number who have exceeded the 60-foot barrier.
The only other time Kansas had three 60-foot shot putters was in 1970, when the trio of Karl Salb, Steve Wilhelm and Doug Kouprich captured the famous "dancing elephants."
PODRIBARAC, A JUNOR, won the event with a 60-8½ loss. Stone was second at 60-3½ and Guevara took third with his 59-2¼. Guevara, who has a personal best of 62.
4 3/4, has thrown the shot beyond the 60-foot mark in several previous peets.
THE JAYHAWKS, WINNERS of six of the 18 events, also won the 440-yard and mile relays. The 440-yard squad of Laverne McCarthy, John Kovacs, and Larry Jackson sped to a 41.0 clockling while the mile relay squad finished in 31.23. Benson, the Big Eight's defending 440-yard champion, anchored the mile relay team of Jimmy McCall, Steve Akers and Jay Waugh.
McCall and Wagner also posted career bests competing in their individual events.
sports
McCall, a freshman, churned to a 14:9.8
clocking in the 800-meter for third place,
and Wagner finished second behind him.
A junior walk-on, ran his lap in 46.8.
THE JAYHAWK'S DISTANCE runners
the JAYHAWK's victory,
posting seven individual records.
Bill Lundberg and Glenn Harter finished the 1,500 in second and third place, respectively. Andersen, and Bergman, cocaplain, followed in 6:70.0 and Harter followed closely in 3:47.5.
Lundberg also finished third in the 5,000 clocking a 14:29. Teammate George Mason said a fourth in 14:29, and Tom McDonald said a fifth in 14:29. The record holder in the marathon, also finished
second in the 3,000 steeplechase with an 8:55.2.
LARRY JACKSON REMOVED all doubles that he wasn't fully recovered from an indoor season leg injury with a blistering 10.2 mark in the 100-meter dash for second places. With the same time, Lavern Smith was injured, but both marks were aided by the wind.
ASSISTANT COACH GARY Pepin said he was pleased with the team's performance.
Pepin said, "It certainly is encouraging for the coaches and the athletes for us to do so well. It gives us a good bright outlook on life." He especially liked the (Kansas) Relays this week.
The two sprinters also finished 2-3 in the 200. Jackson, the Big Eight's defending 100-yard dash champion, ran the event in 21.4 and Smith finished in 21.5.
"We still feel like we can develop a lot more. We have many talented athletes on this team, and they are just coming around to the performances they are capable of."
Arkansas State Invitational
Team to compete
Kentucky 7-1, Kentucky 4-0, Arkansas 5-2, Texas Tech 4-8,
6. Memphis State 32. 7. Hodgens 36. 8. Arkansas-Pine
Buff 30. 14. 9. Holden 14. 10. Henderson 10. 11.
3,000-meter stipple爬坡 - Mason 8.5-2.3 Javelins - Ikea
O'Brien II - blister sleeve - Mason 8.5-2.3 Javelins - Ikea
Lundberg II - blister sleeve - Mason 8.5-2.3 Javelins - Ikea
Lundberg III - blister sleeve - Mason 8.5-2.3 Javelins - Ikea
Givova 94 - 80% - M-3 McCall II - Jackknife - Smith
Smith - 80% - M-3 McCall II - Jackknife - Smith
Givova 94 - 80% - M-3 McCall II - Jackknife - Smith
Ji Bentler II - blister sleeve - Mason 6.5-2.3 Tupipe - Winded (M)
19.24 - 18.46 - Mile Kileer - Mason (MCall, MCall)
19.24 - 18.46 - Mile Kileer - Mason (MCall, MCall)
MARBLE
sports shorts
MEN'S TENNIS - Beat No. 1 player Bill Clarke, KU beat North Texas State, 6-3, in the second round of the Oklahoma City Thunder to meet Southern Illinois-Carbondale on Saturday, the match was postponed due to a COVID-19 SUA tournament in two weeks.
WOMEN’S TENNIS—Tom Kivistev’s squad upped its record to 2:21 following its third-place performance at the first annual NCAA tournament in Oklahoma. The top two players, Astrid Daksa and Cecilia Lopez, again led the way, helping KU defeat Iowa State before losing to Oklahoma State—a team KU had beaten last season. This time, consultation match against Nebraska. 9-4
**RUBGY:** Dave Grauer scored three tries (12 points), but it wasn't enough to overtake him. Rangers rogger lost, 18-14, yesterday in Wichita. In the "B" game, KU triumphed, 18-7. The next match will be the third annual alumnium tournament for Sunday at the 23rd and Iowa field.
The previous course record was held by Karen MacGee, who cared a 74 in winning the Women's State Amateur tourney at Alvamar in 1973.
WOMEN'S GOLF—Beth Boozer shot 36 on the back and front ninth to break the Alvaram Hills women's course record with Stephens College in a triangular match. Missouri's total of 365 traced KU's and Stephen's scores of 340 each. Other KU golfer were Kathy Webb, 86, Nancy Holeins, 79, and Casey Tense, 102, and Michele Williams, 103.
MEN'S GOLF-for the second straight week, the KU men's golf team has finished a tournament in last place. The Jayhawks finished with a score of 931, just three points behind the Great Plains Invitational Tournament Thursday and Friday in Wichita.
Kansas also finished in the cell two weeks ago in the Oklahoma intercollegiate Team.
Shawnee tourney, grabbed the Great Plains championship by posting a team score of 871. It was their fourth straight Great Plains title.
Oklahoma State, which also won the
Second place went to Tulsa with an 866 total, and Wichita State placed third with 822 strokes. Nebraska edged Missouri for fifth, finishing the 54 holes of a wiial with a 914 total.
KU's top scorer in the tournament was Johnathan Duncan, who shot 228. Right behind was Jim Dioley, who shot 228. Other KU scorers were Rick Kennedy, son coach Chris Waddle and David Girton, Jr. 242, and Duyke Girton, Jr. 248.
The Great Plains champion was Tulsa's Ron Streck with a total of 207.
BASKETBALL AWARDS-Norman
SUNDAY 10:30 AM and a first team All-Big Eight selection this year, was named the recipient of the PhoGn Prep Saturday night at KU's annual tournament.
The trophy, which is named after KU's immortal coach for 39 years, is annually presented to the most valuable player, as chosen by a vote of the team members. Previous winners include Jo Do White (Stadium Sharks) and Johannes Klivisto (Klivisto, 1973-74) and Rick Sickle (1975).
Cook led the Jayhawks in both scoring and rebounding this year with respective percentages.
Featured speaker for the event, which more than 400, was head coach Ted Owens.
Miri scores 8; soccer wins 2
Mohsen Miri continued his scoring rampage as he scored all eight of the KU soccer club's nine games this weekend. KU won its third straight Saturday and bounced Oklahoma, 6-3 Sunday.
Against Columbia, Miri put in two early goals before Columbia scored to make it 2-1 at halftime. Columbia completed the second period to deadlock the second period to deadlock the contest.
"We had the game in the bag and let it get away," said Bernie Mullin, player-coach. "We's certainly disappointed at not winning the game. But, at the same time, a tie with a team as strong as Columbia is quite an accomplishment."
Sunday's game was less than five minutes old when Miri scored a goal after taking a long pass from Pat Cailahan. Miri added three goals and the Jawkhs led 4-1 at intermission.
Oklahoma State fought back in the second half to within one, 4.3. But Miri added the final two goals of the day to put the game safely out of OSU's reach.
Moore dissatisfied with practice efforts
THE BRIGHTEST SPOT of the scrimmage was the running of Johnson, a highly touted junior college transfer. He gained 118 yards on only eight carries, including two longdown runs. Clay Benny was also scored, gaining 82 yards on eight carries.
--might be the only quarterbacks available in the spring game next week.
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
the defense were unimpressive Saturday. Moore singled out running back Wardell Johnson and defensive back Caleb Rowf for finding little but to get excited about.
"I DIDN'T SEE THAT many good lick it," he said, "and that was kind of disgusting. There was a lot of people being唱 and singing, but there wasn't much good tackling."
Moore was unhappy following Saturday's scrimmage. He simply hasn't seen the progress so far he hoped for this spring. Yet Moore and his teamsters aren't putting forth a complete effort.
Applications
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Running back Bill Campfield made a brief appearance after missing the last three weeks because of a pulled leg muscle. Campfield rumbled 33 yards for a touchdown.
Sports Editor
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
Three players were injured in the workout, but none were believed to be serious. Offensive tackle Lindsey Mason and linebacker Jim Young both suffered injured ankles and center Mike Wellman left early with a knee injury.
After suffering a twisted knee in last week's scrimmage, quarterback Scott McMichael didn't play Saturday. With Nolan Cromwell out for track, only Mark Vicendesc and Mark Lissak were left to direct the team.
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
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Moore said he didn't know when McMichael would be back. He said there was a woman in the room.
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Today at the HAWK
University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
"WE'RE NOT AN AGGRESSIVE football team," he said. "The players appear to have their minds on other things than football. That shouldn't ever happen on a good football team, and you can quote me on that."
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
Qualifications
There are only five days of spring football practice remaining. Bud Moore, KU's head coach, said it would be a good time to get
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SUA Committee Chairperson Interviews 1976-77
April 21-26 at 6:30 PM
SPECIAL EVENTS
-publicity chairman
-local concerts chairman
-concerts coordinator chairman
(security, ushers)
-summer orientation chairman
-publications chairman
-fall orientation week
PUBLIC RELATIONS
TRAVEL
-library chairman
-travel fair chairman
-group flight chairman
-group flight chairman
-publicity chairman
-general trips chairman
... Christmas ski break
... Spring Break ski trip
... Padre Island
... Bahamas (Christmas)
... Green River Trip
Orientation Shuttle
Mardi Gras
... K-State Football
FINE ARTS
-poetry hour chairman
-Kansas Union Gallery chairman
-picture lending chairman
-library chairman
FREE UNIVERSITY
-instructor coordinator
-publicity chairman
-catalogue chairman
OUTDOOR RECREATION
-wilderness discovery chairman
-mountaineering-backpacking chairman
-canoe club chairman
-travel and recreation chairman
INDOOR RECREATION
-head coordinator "advertising"
-Quarterback Club
-air hockey
Sign up in the SUA office beginning April 12.
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
For Information contact the SUA office 864-3477
Monday, April 12, 1976
7
KU pitchers cage Tigers twice
Photo by CORKY TREWIN
MI
Softball team's record 12-0 after Wayne State double
MU fan Kris Haulk sticks up for Tiger player Thiel
While the men's baseball team was manhandling Missouri, the KU women's softball team was having a picnic of its own, as coach Sharon Drydale's players beat Wayne State (Neb.) twice Saturday at the Holcom Sports Complex.
Outscoring and outpitching their opponents at every turn, the Jahayhaws took a doubleheader from an unexpectedly easy Wayne State club. 10-0 and 11-2.
Coach Drysdale, noting the obvious, said, "I thought they played very well until we started to hit, and even then we won on our hitting more so than on their mistakes.
THE TEAM'S RECORD improved to 12-0 for the year.
"I think they allowed our hitting to destroy their concentration. They played about as well as anybody else that we've faced, probably on a par with UNO."
UNO IS THE UNIVERSITY of Nebraska-Omaha, which was the College World Series champion in 1975—and a victim of the KU softball team earlier this season.
In the first game, KU and Wayne State
wayne scores 15, tour-and-dash-4
6.
came up to the plate at the bottom of the fifth, all runs broke loose.
Two strikes were on Kuhn. On the next pitch, she hit a home run to left field. Janet Brown singled on a grounder and took second on a sacrifice bunked by Teresa Brown. Beth Springate drove Brown in with a home run of her own.
PAULA FRANK AND Meredith Miller
the PAULS bring KU a total of five runs
for the 10U.
The bottom of the sixth wasn't much different. Kansas went through the entire season in third place.
KU pitcher Edna Isles gave up just three hits, left six Wayne State players stranded and walked only three in recording her first shutout of the year.
THE LOOSING PITCHER in the first game was Suzy Scheefs.
Gloria Graves started the first five innings of the second game for Kansas, struck out 5 and knocked out Bobby Cox.
Their 358 hitters weren't hitting. Their two best pitchers gave up 23 hits in two games. Their infielders weren't polite with them. The ball was Roger Shale and Tom Krarth. There were Roger Shale and Tom Krathy.
By KELLY SCOTT
But by the time Paula Hernandez relieved him in the top of the sixth, Kansas has bumped.
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Yes, the Missouri Tigers had their patient with the University of Kansas baseball team.
THE JAYHAWKS, BEHIND the two-hit shutout扑击群 of Slagle and six RBIs by Krattli, blasted the highly toured Mizouz team out of Quigley Field. They took two from the Tigers, 7-0 and 10-7, then lost the night on Saturday's doubleheader, 6-4.
For once, the Jayhawks put everything together. Single and Mike Love reduced the Tiger batting average to .181 for two games. The KU hitters came through in the clutch. One last double-digit hit was solid, committing only three errors throughout the three-game series.
"WHEN YOU HAVE GIVEN pitching, the fielders are just more alert," coach Floyd Temple said. "Sound pitching leads to good careers." The team's offense was careless, and we had great pitching.
University Daily Kansan
MU'S JACK KRUSE took the only two hits off Shagle, a single apiece in the fifth and seventh innings. Stalk struck out 11 and hit one out of nine big bats of Missouri, to call it a day.
Righthander Slagle was all they wrote for the Tigers in Friday's single game. Coming off his 17-starlock win over Nebraskaita last season, he won in provina that that game wasn't a fluke.
Behind Slagel, the Jayhawk batters were taking their toll.
Designated hitter Randy Traut rrapped three hits off losing Tiger pitcher Jim Ptochicinski, while Lee Ice, Ron MacDonald and Kraftti all had two. Catcher Adir Gilmore drove in two runs on a single pitch in nining and a sacrifice fly in the seventh
"I WANT YOU TO BE sure to tell them how pleased I am with all the people who were out in the stands." Temple said. "We know our crowd that practically ever before."
An unusually large (and loud) crowd turned out for the Missouri series.
The crowd was particularly audible in the seventh inning of the first game.
Missouri catcher Mark Thiel, grumbling over a call behind the plate, was ejected from the game by bumpie Larry Zerbia. Thiel stormed off the field and sat fuming in the stands, which was definitely enemy territory.
EVIDENTLY STILL SMARTING from the KU basketball team's loss to Missouri late in the season, KU's answer to the question is the win. Theil prolonged and pronounced grief
But Thiel was finished badmouthing; he let his girlfriend answer for him.
T Temple said, "I know it had an effect, having all those people out cheering for us. I must have has a little bit of the harm in them, and may better when they can hear that crowd."
ON SATURDAY, MISSIOUR came to play baseball. They shelled started Rob Allinder early in the game for five runs, three coming on Thiel's third inning home run. Missouri third baseman Mike Lally then reached first on an error by Mark Sweeney, to second on a passed ball and scored when Frank Shellenback made it to first.
But the Hawks came back with three when Krattli drilled a home run to left field, scoring Hannafin and Ice. Ice had an injury, hitting four for four and scoring twice.
Missouri got two more runs in the top of the sixth, and going into KU's half of the season, he was an ace.
THEHEN THE STORYBOOK stuff manned. The inning began innocently enough when the opposing pitcher threw a Randy Webster. Then the obviously tiring Mountain pitcher Tom Wild walked Brian Moyer. Ice got his fourth single of the day, and he ran for 8th. Then he walked MacDonald, and ice went.
"I WAS SURPRISED they left him in." Krattli said afterwards. "It was pretty obvious he had lost some of his fastball. He went to the office just got behind, then gave me a fastball."
The bases were loaded for Tom Kraitti and he promptly tripped to deep right center. That made six RBI's for Kraitti, who earlier had made a diving catch in Friday's game to prevent a potential Missouri run.
Missouri coach Gene McArtor chose to stick with Wild, and he gave up another single to Gilmore, scoring Krattli. Then Trout walked.
"Our hitters just did their job," Temple said. "There weren't any flakes. Those kids were on fire."
It was tough luck for Allenr, who was pulled in the Missouri half of the fifth. Mike Love came in to stop the Tigers and wound up with the win.
Up stepped first baseman Carl Heinrich,
who poured home to run give KU 10 runs
and scored a home run.
"ALLINER TRIED REAL hard, and at least he didn't lose." Temple said. "It's no disgrace to give up some hits to Missouri, they're a fine hitting team."
"I was very pleased with Mike's performance," he said of Love. "It was our first opportunity in a long time to use him, and he just did great."
Brian Rhodius went out to the mound for KU in the second game to try to collect the Jayhawks' first series sweep all year and found a determined Tiger line-up. They scored three runs in the fourth inning on Lally's home run to dead center.
"YOU CAN'T SHUT OFF a good打弄 team forever," Temple said. "Rhodes threw his fastball with two strikes and he got abold of it and put it out."
KU answered with four runs in their half of the inning, but Missouri came back with a run in the fifth and two in the seventh to win. 6-4. Rhodes left the game in the fourth, relieved by Love, who finished the day 1-1. Together, they gave up 10 hits.
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Flovd flogs Masters opposition
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - Ray Flyd—never pressured, never pressed—a tusk carried a stroll through the Georgia piney woods yesterday, paused to strike the golf ball 70 times and ambled home with perhaps the easiest Masters victory of all time.
Floyd, a 30-year-old one-time playboy
male, won the 40th annual spring tour
weekend.
par, matching the tournament record for 72 holes set by Jack Nicklaus in 1965.
Floyd's winning margin of eight strokes was one short of the record—but it couldn't have been.
Only handsome young Ben Crenshaw—who gave a flock of giggling girls a little thrill when he hiked his britches above his bed, and then set off 18th hole—could generate any challenge.
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8
Monday, April 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Watson gets women's history set
By JANE MACAULAY
A new set of microfilms, The History of Women, will make the Women's Studies collection in Watson Library one of the most extensive in the Midwest, according to Linda Parker, associate reference librarian.
The set, which will arrive in installments during the next few months, contains microfilms of books, periodicals and documents dealing with women's history from 1795.
Parker, who was responsible for ordering the $24,000 set, said librarians at a recent conference in Chicago had praised the size of importance of the University's collection.
She said its usefulness wasn't limited to specialists in women's studies.
"It's a resource for any serious scholar," she said, "for politicians, sociologists, historians or anyone interested in the history of science."
PARKER SAID the good thing about having the collection on microfilm was that students would have easy access to many publications other than books.
in a bookstore," she said. "That includes the underground literature of earlier days, pamphlets that were handed out in street markets and stores. You didn't possibly obtain in any other form."
'You get ephemera that you couldn't buy
She said another advantage was that students were able to go straight to an answer key.
"It's tremendously exciting to read a woman's diary from the time of the suffragette movement and realize that they were contending with the same obstacles at the beginning of the century as we're dealing with today," she said.
THE NEW set consists mainly of American works from nine different sources. Some famous collections are represented in it, including the Sophia Smith collection from Smith College, the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger collection, and the same Adams Memorial collection from the University of Illinois.
Other works come from the Miriam Y. Holden collection, Boston and New York public libraries, Scripps College for students, Avery library and Yale University libraries.
Parker said the set had been bought with money from the women's studies book fund,
which allows the library to buy books of an interdisciplinary nature, works from small feminist presses, underground material and dealing with the women's movement.
SHE SAID the collection would be complete if another set offered by the Women's History Research Center could be bought. It would contain material on the feminist movement of the late 1960's and early '70s, the only areas not fully covered by the women’s movement. The departmental administration hasn't approved the $3,927 necessary to buy the set.
The women's studies collection has developed as an outgrowth of the KU women's studies program. The program offers classes in departments such as history and psychology, with a special emphasis on the women's movement.
The nucleus of KU's collection is the Gerrison collection, acquired by KU in the 1950s. This originally belonged to Aletta de Baldwin Dutch feminist of the late 18th century.
Parker said Jacobs had insisted on using her maiden name throughout her life but when the collection was bought by the John Smith family, it it was given her married name, Gerritton.
'Conpersonas' gets varied reviews
"Congersonas," winner in the best original play category of the American College Theatre Festival, received mixed reviews last week in the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
The play, written by Paul Stephen Lim,
Philippines graduate student, and produced
by University of Kansas students and
playwrights, was adapted after the
play's first performance.
David Cook, director, said they had an excellent critiquing session, hearing the critics' opinions on the play's strengths and weaknesses.
"I thought they were fair and entitled to their opinions." he said. "I think the play played better here (KU) in its academic environment."
The group that rated best in the critique will receive $4,000 for its school's theater department. The results won't be known until May.
Funds for library addition under study by committee
The Library Facilities Planning Committee met Friday and began to work out figures to be used in requesting funds for a library building program.
The new library will house collections, such as science, math and music, that would be best served by a library west of campus. Watson Library is to be altered into a more efficient building for other collections.
The main problem with planning, Wieich said, is that statistics on student enrollment at the University of Kansas cover only the next 10 years and enrolment is expected to decline in that period.
Allen Wiechert, associate director of facilities planning, said construction would begin in 1880 and be completed in 1882. The committee decided to plan for facilities that would fulfill the library's needs to the year 2000.
Wind dampens sailing meet
The second annual regatta sponsored by the midwest College Sailing Association was limited by high winds to only two races Saturday.
A KU crew of Ray Munger, Overland Park parker, and Jeff Snyker, Arkansas City senior, finished second to the University of Georgia in Southwest Missouri State finished third.
Southwest Missouri State won the Division A ace, and the University of Iowa placed second. KU's crew of Ken Levy, Prairie Village junior, and George Abbott, Kansas City, Kan., junior, was unable to finish the race because of high winds.
The four other scheduled races have been postponed until early summer.
The Third Annual Miller Collegiate Cup Racoe, sponsored by the Miller Brewing Company, will be held on Wednesday, July 18.
A KU student was assaulted by an unidentified male exhibitionist Friday night as she was walking home from the Lawrence Public Library.
Male exhibitionist assaults KU student
Jim Ranz, dean of libraries, said that many factors, including a shift in population and the closing of small colleges, might affect enrollment after that.
The student told police that a man approached her on the sidewalk at 1230 Tennessee with his pants down to his knees and grabbed her by the arm as she passed him.
But, he said at least two-thirds of the space wouldn't be affected by enrollment.
The student said she immediately began screaming loudly. Residents of a nearby house heard her and let her in their house after she broke free from the man's grip.
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Police were unable to locate the assailant.
He was described by the student as being white, 20-25 years old, about 5 feet 10, and dark-baired.
Scot Siebels, Prairie Village junior, said this was because Watson "isn't a fun place to study." But he said he thought use would considerably once improvements were made.
The committee agreed that another problem was that the present facilities, especially Watson, weren't being used much by students.
---
BUSCH Bottles
Ranz said different uses wouldn't cause serious problems because the new facility wouldn't have a fixed function. He said rooms could be converted into classrooms, offices or science laboratories after the library was built.
Today at the HAWK
Kala Strop, dean of women on leave, suggested that changing functions of the University might cause changes in library requirements.
The committee will meet once every two weeks to discuss these and other problems.
Cook said KU's chances of getting the money "just as good as anyone else."
Cook expressed a different feeling about the newspaper reviews.
He said that he recognized the difficulty in meeting deadlines, but that the reviews were rather shallow. He said they should be written on a deeper literary and theatrical level.
The audiences' reaction to the play's use of homosexuality and its treatment of a woman is varied.
The play bothered some of the audience because it was "over their heads," he said, although that reaction was the exception rather than the rule.
About 500 tickets for Nyro's KUcert had been sold when it was announced that the entire tour, the first since her album release in February, would be cancelled, Miller said. Few tickets had been sold for the other tour engagements, he said.
The Laura Nyre concert, scheduled for
the next week, will be along with the rest of her midwinter season.
"It went a bit fast for them," he said.
Mike Miller, SUA adviser, said yesterday that full ticket refunds could be obtained at the NYS Bureau.
"We really saw very little of each other," Cook said, but many watched the other ACTF productions and visited various theaters in Washington.
After the performances and critiques, cast members took advantage of their time in Washington, D.C. before returning to Lawrence yesterday morning.
Nyro concert tour canceled
It was decided that the expectedly poor attendance on the concert tour wouldn't be beneficial to Nyro's image or to her album sales, he said.
Mon., April 12,
8:00 p.m., 901 Tenn. Gill Bldg.
Wed., April 14,
TM° Program INTRODUCTORY LECTURES
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Regionalist Room
transcevement Mediation and TMA are service marks of
WPC-U-S, SJM, Sigma, a nonprofit education organization
842-1225
SUA Film Chairperson Interviews
Interviews for 1976-77 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Tuesday, April 13. If you are interested please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time by Monday, April 12.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
Animated Series Chairperson
Children Series Chairperson
Classical Series Chairperson
Popular Series Chairperson
Science Fiction Series Chairperson
Summar School Series Chairperson
Publicity Chairperson
Publicity Chairperson
The Gertison collection is in Spencer Research Library, but is being filmed on microfiche to make it more available to students.
THE EMPHASIS of the collection is European works, mostly from 1850 to 1920. Half of the 4,000 volumes are in nonEnglish languages.
Sherlene Hawkins, microforms librarian,
said microfilm film is printed on a flat card
Hawkins said the Gerritt microflesc and the History of Women microfilms would become available to students as soon as they entered the library.
It might take some time to catalog them, Hawkins said, but librarians on duty will be able to find a particular work if the student can name the book and the author.
HILLCREST BILLIARDS RECREATION'S FINEST "If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa No one under 18 admitted.
Selling your bike? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
---
TO YE WHO ARE WISE AND FRUGAL WE OFFER PENNY PINCHER COUPONS! B. Franklin
B. Franklin
SAVE 30+
SIZZ-K-BOB
Includes French Fries
or Baked Potato plus
Stockade Tong. Reg. $2.19
with coupon only $1.89
Coupon Good for Entire Family
COUPON EXPIRES MAY 1, 1978
SAVE 30¢
CHOPPED STEAK
Includes French Fries
or Baked Potato plus
Stockade Toast. Reg $1.49
with coupon only $1.19
Coupon Good for Entire Family
COUPON EXPIRES MAY 1, 1976
SAVE 40¢
RANCHER'S STEAK
Coupon Good for Entire Family COUPON EXPIRES MAY 1, 1976
Includes French Fries
or Baked Potato plus
Stockade Tost. Reg $3.19
with coupon only $2.79
SAVE 30¢
SIZZLIN' SIRLOIN
Includes French Fries
or Baked Potato plus
Stockade Toad. Test $2.29
with coupon only $1.99
Coupon Good for Entire Family
COUPON EXPIRES MAY 1, 1976
SIRLOIN OPEN: 11 a.m. 9 p.m. weekdays
STOCKADE 11 a.m. 10 p.m. weekends
THE FAMILY STEAKHOUSE
THESIS COPYING PLANS
from
QUICK COPY CENTER
We are in the copying business and we want to copy your thesis. We have two special pricing plans available to make your thesis copying as inexpensive as possible. Coupons may not be used with either of these pricing plans.
1. TOTAL VOLUME PLAN
Your price per copy depends on the total number of copies we make for you. You may have some copies done on rag paper and some on regular paper and still get the total quantity price. These copies are made on our IBM Copier II and must be made on our paper. Your originals must be on good $8\frac{1}{2} \times 11$ white bond paper in order to go through our automatic feed. This plan is especially good if you want only 3 or 4 copies of a large number of originals.
Total Number of Copies
Price per copy
100-299
300-599
600-999
1000+
.09
.08
.07
.06
Add .015 for copies on rag paper. Add .01 per copy if you want us to collate.
2. ALICE'S THESIS SPECIAL
We will copy your thesis on your paper or ours on Alice, our fabulous Xerox 9200. Rag paper and regular may not be mixed for the quantity price. Alice will copy and collate your thesis at the incredible rate of 120 copies per minute. There is no charge to collate. This plan is especially good if you want a large number of copies of each original.
1-5 Copies of each original are 10¢ each
6+ Copies of each original are 2¢ each
Add .01 for our rag paper. No charge for collating
THESIS BINDING
After your thesis is copied, let us bind it for you. We can bind your copies in blue, red, green, saddle or black hard covers. In addition, we can bind extra copies in a less expensive flexible-cover binding. The price for hard-bound copies will depend on their thickness and the length of the title, but will be approximately $4.25 each.
QUICK Copy Center
838 Massachusetts
Telephone 841-4900
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 12, 1978
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to students from any institution, or national origin. FREASE BRAKE ALL COMMANDS TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times time
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
ERRORS
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.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or on the UDK website the UDK business office at 643-559
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
We've moved! Our new location is next to Market Square. We also have a 4-15 count. Repeat Performance Shop.
Full day care and complete child development
program. Bachelors, Masters, and Kindergarten,
109 West St. West 84-222-6350, www.kindergarten.com
Employment Opportunities
A job opening for full time research assistant at the Place, 11. Haworth Data Collection, preparing workbook materials, preparing forms, completing evaluation forms and training employees. Milled Jobly. Milled Jobly. 644-3446 for interview. Application deadline and start date are shown in the place. Qualified men and women of all races apply. *f
Laboratory technicians position to begin on or
have at least one year of undergraduate organic
laboratory training. The position is for one year
and must have a minimum of three years of
law required. Send resume to Dr. R. Givens
SPRING FEVER
OBTAIN SUMMER WORK!
'844 per month—
see the world
call today 843-9351
SUMMER FUN OUT EAST! Earn $211 per week!
Call today for an interview: 834-521-4
4-13
FOR RENT
Summer employment: largest moving and storage company in Midwest is accepting applications for warehouse and van helpers for this summer. 4-16 12095 W. 63d, Shirwaukee, Ks. 4-16
Summer employment for women: larger moving applications for women for women to prepare for relocation and Leavenworth area must have own a City and Leavenworth area must have own a City. Moving Services, W 03rd, W 64th, Shawne, Kane, Moving Services, W 03rd, W 64th, Shawne, Kane,
ATTENTION STUDENT BENEFITS: Drop in and
read the instructions on the screen.
(For phone calls, phone) at WEBSITE:
www.website.com/telephone/408-723-9185.
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence Lawrenthe,
Rental Exchange, 842-350-2900.
2 bdm. all itil, paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Free parking. a/c, pool. 843-493-1093.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
ly set and 2- to campus $53 and up. #f-
ric or $843 or 648-925
**Boulaine** Map 15-Aug-1983 I. Rooms in beautiful
architecture of the old house.
A/C / C, panoramic window, dryer ¥40, *uplifting*
exterior with large windows.
Leaking for one at two, women graduate with 48 hours of fieldwork. The student came in at 4:44am on 30th April 2015 during day B-IBD-2200 with Call A at 4:44am on 30th April 2015 during day B-IBD-2200
2 bdm. apt., w-carpet, central air, large kitch-
room, 30'x15', to Union, 3 down-12
south, 4100 sq. ft., $49,900.
Furnished two-bedroom house, quiet邻居,
product berry tomatoes and lettuce, $125
per month.
Sublease apartment for summer; utilities paid;
furnished close to campus and downtown.
4-14
Bahái Faith
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Baha'i Club Meeting, April 5, 19:30 p.m. Oral Ballroom, Union
- PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
AND LENSES
DYNAMICIZED WITH
FLAWLNESS ACCURACY
+ COMPLETE OPTICAL
SERVICES
Goldpecker Optical
FIRSTINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
RL19-ANXW
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate occupancy. Also, save money, lease from June 1, 1976 and take advantage of lower rates. See us at www.ibc.com/accommodation/blocks west of Iowa on 25th St. Phone 842-1455.
I
Sublease, efficiency apt. May, June, July, July-
guard and all electric kitchen; $115, $84-0299 on
delivery.
Female vegetarian to share two bedroom furn-
ishings. $475 plus 1 e-mail. 4-13
Call: 843-9332
Largest 1 bedroom A-C ap. C meadowbrook for
sublet. June-July. Cali 811-282-85. e-4-15
For summer- two bedroom apartment, fur-
miture available close to campus, $125 per
Call 841-3174
Free Room for a responsible colleague in the home
retired, retired or in the process of relocating.
easy campus. Light屋keeping and
cooking asked in exchange for room. Available
in May. Call Don Anderson 846-4488 (repeat)
2 bdm. apt, all utilities paid, $40 a month. April and May 1603 Louisiana,支付 4-14
Get your summer & Fall Rentals now. NO PETS.
843-1601 Lymph Real Estate 2237 Ohio
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS- Redirected of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment at that factory dumps or close out products, other than the RAM brand. **b** **tf** the GRAMMONY SHOP at KIEFS.
Tremendous selection of guitars, arpa, drums,
piano, basses and percussion. Shop "Horses Keyboard Studios, Get Cabs from Horses Keyboard Studios, and many others. Amber Kutten, Green, and many others. Shop "Horses Keyboard Studios, Get Cabs from Horses Keyboard Studios, and many others." 1429 W. Shrd. #343-5007
COST + 18%--Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single item or package order. Register for Free Koss. 630. Earnings 6 to 10. Call Dave. Phone 847-630. Earnings 6 to 10.
ACADEMIC RESEARCH PAPERS. Thousands of
topic. Send $1 for your up-to-date, 160-page,
case order catalog. Research Assistance,
Los Angeles. Call: 928-7473
(213) 477-8474.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator. Specialist.
Piets, serve and exchange units: BELL AUDIO
SYSTEMS.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
1. As study guide
3) For exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" Available now at Town Crier Stores.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Kitchen Appliances. Includes The Furniture & A
Center, Lady Takes the Furniture & Appliance
Center, Lady Takes the Furniture & A
Center, Lady Takes the Furniture &
A
Diamond softiane engagement ring, 32 ct. 14 K
white saltine value $250 - 14 K
845 - A6759
845 - A7590
Reel to reel声频 tape and records--some old
some new. 841-6188 4:12
FINAL CLOSEOUT MICHELIN STEEL XAS
RADIALLS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
ROOF. 292 Wash. (come thru parking lot in
back.Woolworth for tire service). 4-16
Must sell Sony VR170 (video tape recorder)
camera, tapes, camera case, access. hse 845-6-12
Must sell Sony VR170 (video tape recorder)
camera, tapes, camera case, access. hse 845-6-12
Honda S50 1/48 3 miles. Rack and back rest.
Barely broken-in. Call 822-6421. 4-12
Honda 360 C20 CB 1200 ml. Siyar back, rack and back.
Like new. Like $850. Bid: 842-6812. 4-13
TERRIFIC HIPHY BRAND NEW COMPLETE HIP
HYPERFORMANCE OFFICE FOR $855 or best offer. Call Paull at 603-421-7676.
1975 Dodge Van Maxwagon, AM-FM sterile plus
64 gallon tank control, vent control AC Ace heater,
36 gallon tank control
Stereo: Kenwood receiver, AR speakers, AN
tankar, $400 or best offer, $85-136. 4-13
Small, but comfortable older motorhome for
large groups. Air conditioning, heated seating,
gas and water paid. Climb in Basking
Slope, off-road.
Camera, Minolta 101, 28, 158, 35, 120 mm lens.
filter, etc. $60 or best offer, $48-54
4-13
Vuga, 1971 Hatchback, 4 speed, excellent condition,
$785. Cans Randy, 841-856. 4-138
AKC Basenii puns-unusual, intelligent African breeds. Males, 3 months, Warmed, Sheep. Very adaptable to changing climates.
CHEK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS.
74 Yamaha 500, 72 Honda CBL 350, 72 Yamaha
74 Yamaha 600, 74 Honda CB 125, 74 Yamaha
74 Yamaha DT250, 74 Honda CR 125, 70 Honda
74 Honda CB 500, at Horton's Island
181 W. 6th St.
1855 Chevy Nomad Wagon beautiful restored, must see to appreciate not chap, serious interior. 1855 Chevy Nomad Wagon beautiful restored, must see to appreciate not chap, serious interior.
Dodge window van $100 Auto trans. 6 cyl. 85.
Dodge window van $299 Auto trans. a good camp gear.
Bugatti K437-707-707
MUST SELL 320. Suzuki. Excellent condition.
Call Rick Lickman, 843-7922. 4-14
bengals in the
Cotton Cities
Casimbah
Gifts and Jewelry 803 Mass. Cashman
Drive-in-clinic
for most imported cars
Call for an appointment
Service hours
7:30 a.m.-
5 p.m. M-F
TONY'S
500 E. 23rd
IMPORT
DATSUN
842-0444
Planning a trip?
Let Maupintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
Storme - Two Marantz GY speakers, Technic ST-14
and New condition, $799. Call 811-256-3080.
New condition, $799. Call 811-256-3080.
99 FORD VAN-E-20 sell or trade for 69-70
Mustang or Cameroon.
4-13
Pontiac Firebird, 1980, excellent condition, auto-cleaning. Blue with white vinyl top; $245.81
841-745-6300
841-745-6300
Bass guitar, Custom Bass Amp: plenty of power,
good shape, Call Ned. 842-5586. 4-15
Savvo Car Casette player model number FF7
Savvo Car Casette player name asking for 7 or best
Call 641-2843
Call 641-2845
T
2 ESS-AMT-1 speaker, excellent condition. $200.
842-4785. 4-16
WE SELL FOR LESS-11 to 6:30. Good used furniture, gas and electric ranges; Refrigerators; Have Lawnways—weekly free delivery. 1228 Estl St., Rxk, Rhode Island. Phone: 1-725-373-2552.
Baldwin amp. with super sound $90.841-5504.4-13
Black lab puppies for sale $15. Call 341-3298 4-15
For Sale--15" BW TV, and med-sized refig.;
choice 82% choices or best offer Call Gary at (714) 365-2000.
SUA / Maupintour travel service
1967 Fint 850 Coupe, new paint, needs timing.
Call 843-0088.
4-15
People Smile when you're riding a "Bicycle
Dike" for sale. People Dike
Dike for sale. Great condition.
Call 518-620-3744
70 Oel-GT 29,000 miles, new paint, exhaust:
6 mails, railsg, 842-581-358, 4-18
Women's "S"校服 Sebiwun Suburban bicycle, barely five years old. Women's headwear, haggle Cally, Liahs, 491-491 anytime.
Cheap, new 300 m Lens 85-205 f 5.8 screw mount
Virgil, 847-645, 1-267-0743 Leave a message.
Copyright © 2014 Pearl Publishing.
FIG 1Xi-9. Good cond. still under warranty.
Fit with Pioneer $4,000 or $6,000.
Call after 6:59. 4-16
MG 1100, looks and runs great, under 50,000 miles. 841-3028. 4-14
5-string Conqueror Bandi~$40~ Sony TC125 Tape
4-16
Call Pad. Cust Call #82-416
1961 Ford Galaxy 4D, AT, runs good. $200 or
less.
1961 Ford Galaxy 4D, AT, runs good. $6.99 or less.
HELP WANTED
Centura 12-string guitar with Sanyo 4-16
carbon channel 8-bat. 745-6645.
Ovation 12 string guitar. Excellent condition.
Price reasonable. 841-6184 after 6am. 4-16
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass.
Part-time or full time hartender. Contact Tom Hastings at 843-269-1000 or 843-269-1088. 168 W. Fox St., POX, IL 60750.
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer-year/year-round
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-
infirm info., write passport, signature, Free
inform...Write, internship, job.
Ka. Box 449, Berkley, CA 94704. 4-23
Help was needed for custom harvesting combine and
call. Please call Preferred Call 405-431-2591 or
405-645-2375 evenings.
BELF WANTED: Kansas Students Company
Technology Engineer. Job location:
stc. jobs available now. Flexible
payments. Call (212) 843-6500.
Marketing majors—part time until summer.
Good pay and experience. Call for interview 843-509-1217.
Help wanted: two attractive ambition ambitious men. Job title: Sales Manager in different departments. Mr. Voik fillerent Shopping Center & Supermarket. Please send resume to: job@careers.mcg.com
LOST AND FOUND
Community College Teaching Jobs. Excellent app-
portions for Master's degree or foreign equiv.
Box 802, Eggenlein 07162. Box 803,
4-14
Lost: One gold cross mechanical penket between
Oliver and Oliver. Retrieve 664-7980
+ 412
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1306
10-5 Tues.-Sat.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank-9th & Macy's, Downtown Bank-10th & First National South-1807 West 23rd.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Flatted Sheets
712Mass.St.
WATERREDS
Lost. Left. Brown cat near building C of Jayapura, answers to the name "Tweety". If another answer to the name "Twinkle" appears, then Lost.
FIELDS
Therme notebook on 10th and 1d. Science fiction on front. Call 842-9589, avenues. 4-17
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Found: Set of keys on leather ring. South of Potters Point. Call Dave. 864-288-4. 4-18
Found a watch and keys near Union. Call and
identify. 841-3364. 4-14
Found: Puppy, black with white paw. Found in
Cinema Park April 5. Call Fawn. Found in
Bucharest April 7. Call Fawn.
Found: 1 coin purse, outside Strong, April 8.
664-829 to claim.
4-14
Lake Matter Terri Mix! stubby legs, long body
Bear: 843-9119 & grey hair weight 4-14
Reward: 843-9119
Found: Change purse in Weecon Cafeteria Thurs.
morning. Call 863-761-509. 4-14
Steven J. Otto; your bike has been found.
Describe and claim. Call 842-7620. 4-14
Reward for items returned from stolen purse.
Pictures, Lyme, 149-153, picture. No quo-
nition.
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at least when you have a large number of your 120 page thesis in 5 minutes See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing needs at altamonte Copy Center, 588 Massachusetts 269-4900.
Swap Shop 620 Mass. Televisions used furniture, dishes,
clock websites, open daily 12-5.
183-3177
The Cashback Care special Sunday dinner is a Full
Weekend week-end meal. Call 815-692-3700 for reservation.
We provide a free breakfast.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive $1,000 in scholarships provided. Drive new, drive new, drive new.
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't want to close the business on Mondays, George's Package Shop, 1049 E. Dutton Blvd., will be closed.
Nancy's Craft Shift. 60 w. Width 41. Open Thur-
Sunday. New ideas in plastic craft plaques slim-
fitting new in idea plastics for craft plaques slim.
Open Thur-Sunday.
Plan now for summer. Creative World Pres-
chool for children 2-18yrs. Special mention:
Kids Play School, 843-359-850
843-359-850
BIG SALE-Our entire stock of jewelry now
at all, each beads 50% off. Bash,
(Downtown), 4-12
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 842-0110. tf
MADAME LENA, E.S.P.-PALM READ-ADER-
NOR. Buy a dream or astrology book on all
problems. For more information, call 821-6331
or come to $303 South. Topeka Blvd. Tupelo.
The Second Annual Student Sculpture Competition
Don't miss it! certifies availability
Experience Hypnosis: A safe and scientific method of relaxing and controlling your mind. Free No charge. There is a sign-up sheet now outstation. Visit www.experiencedhypnosis.com or Rubs, Department of Psychology, 842-7534, 4-13
Come one—Come all. May Day Day Festival—a week of education, conversation, and celebration. Don’t miss the Women’s Films, Music at a Women’s Coffeehouse. Pot luck picnic and volleyball. Free movie nights. Women in their Coition and Commission on the Status of Women. Call 644-8944 for registration and information.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
ORTHOGRAPHY MUSEUM
1234567890
SOUTH FIRE NO
HAWK STATE
KING SWIMMING DRESS CO.
CROWN LIN
SHAZAAM
WE PRINT
ANYTHING!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
$3.95 per Dozen
1105 Massachusetts
TACOS
Casa de Taco
KING
WESTERN COAST
GOOGLE
1035 Mass.
842-1521
if You don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGES
SHAZAAM
The Teepee-The Sanctuary
me facilities & Service To Make it A Perfect Party"
CLASS PARTIES
WEDDING RECEPTIONS
REHEARSAL DINNERS
SANCTUARY
— FORMALS —
-BARN PARTIES-
DINNER DANCES
INTERESTED IN NO-PRIORLY LOW COST JET
TRAINS FOR MID-SEASON HOLIDAYS?
For East EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS have been helping people travel on a busidet with maxitravel.com for 20 years. For more info call toll free 822-525-5900.
Hot Hoo? *Blushing Bull* Bull Driver? Red Eye?
What's happening down at Quantitative? T15 Mass
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 601, 002, 603, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 010, 142, 490, 550, 588, 627. Regular sessions or one-line text preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681.
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT. Virtual jewelry
by the Skyscraper. From a small, modest
home in NYC to an expansive studio in
Santa Fe, Argentina, present pieces by
Melissa A. Fountain.
toll free 800-325-4867
UniTravel Charters
TRAVEL
EUROPE
less 12 cecemny
tian 1 fare
NW Co., Ltd.
600-837-4900
TUTOR
Math Tutor with M.A. in mathematics. Call 841-758
6 up 3 p.m.
4-15
TYPING
THERS BINDING--The Quick-Clip Center is
available at your home. Our service is fast and prices are reasonable.
Our service is fast and prices are reasonable.
Experienced typet-term paper, theses, mite. trained typet-terms. spotted, miscured. 843-784, Mrc. Wright.
Typist editor, IBM Pica silvite. Quality work. Dispersitions dissertations. 8-11
482-851-9278
Exp. typist, IBM Selectic, term paper, tapes, exam.
Beg. typist, proof reading spelling contributed. Jean, 841-260-3900
Need an experienced typa? IBM Selectric II
(tonnell) can make tape, carbon
(billon). Call Pam at 848-729-1065.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 5-11
Expert typing/reasonable rates; Proofreading:
Expert calling 641-7238 after 5:30 p.m. 4-20
Calling 641-7238 after 5:30 p.m. 4-20
Experienced tytllist will type term paper, books,
documents, all general tytllist in my iperl.
841. 694-0984 4-21
Experienced typist IBM SelectR all kinds of
typing Call 684-1423 days. 845-9078 eves. Julie
Kleinberg
Typing—Term papers. Book reports, Misc. More
only—Ph. No. 842-6289.
4-14
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
9th and Illinois 843-3034
Ball Park Baseball
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
Box 3422-U Lawrence, Khnasas 60444
HORIZONS HONDA
Sales, Parts, Service
Professional typing, reasonable, work guardian,
Civil Engineering electric. B.A., Social Science
Certificate in ELECTRICITY.
1811 W. 6M
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
WANTED
Male roommate wanted, serious student, summer only, own room, extra size $81.44-$423.99
Roommate wanted. Grad student preferent immediate occupancy possible or begin May 1. Up duplex. Furnished, roomy, quiet, beautiful. AC, room; $70, plus utilities. #84-3789.
Folding bicycle, good working condition, reason-
ble damage, 642-708 after 7 p. p. or box-
Lawrence.
To want to borrow old J.R.B. Tolkien calendars to
photograph them. Call 864-6131.
4-12
Liberal minded female wanted to share two bedroom Jayhawk Towers apartments for 76-77
Someone to drive a car from Charleston, S.C. to Lawrence soon, 841-6219 eve. 4-15
One roommate wants to share beautiful one-
room space. Each room has $800 month, utilities paid, pool own room, etc.
I will provide a roommate survey based on the
Roommate waited immediately and summer, 2 bdm in Octedera Ap, on bus line. $75 and $85 on weekends.
Someone to sublime fully furnished 2 bedroom
flat with private Call Chuck G506,
Gadry 832-814-314
4-18
Calculate Texas Instruments T1-2500. Will pay
pup dollar or trade T1-2500-I1. Call 842-617-416
www.txinstruments.com
Wanted: Young couple for late summer job (light housekeeping, lawn mowing, miscellaneous Champlain, $210 per month, Champlain, earlier in the week). Do not apply you can work till September 10. We provide: travel expenses and private living quarters. No credit checks. Send references. Raymond Cerf, 1000 Sunset Ave., Raymond, CA 94037.
NON smoking room takes 2 hamburg shirts
775.50 per shirt plus one shirt.
Plus call Byron. 842-4433
4-16
Keyboardist wanted for prominent jazz-rock
and pop band. Reqs: Bach deg in music,
have good equipment. Contact John at 841-325-1220.
Wanted part-time help for upholsterery shop.
Need hard working. Willing to learn trades. $40-$50/week.
Wanted: Young people for late summer job vacations. Work from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., every week August to September. Lake Champlain and New York will be held. Lake Champlain and New York will work till Bemr. 10, we provide lawering and capping calls, please. Apply in wilting and give referral letters to the local office.
Want to meet nursing student attending KUCM
meet year to year at apartment 864-115. Uses
phone number: 864-115.
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Monday, April 12, 1976
University Dally Kansan
On Campus
Events ...
**TODAY:** "JOBS WITH FUTURES" will be the subject of a lunch and learn miniworkshop on noon in Annex A of the Continuing Education Building. An ANTHROPOLOGY COLLOQUIUM on "Origin, Dispersion and Adaptive Radiation of Malagasy Primates" will be at 4 p.m. in 627 Fraser.
TONIGHT: EMILY HOWELL, the first woman hired by Frontier Airlines to plot a 727 Boeing jet, will speak on aviation at a buffet supper at 6:30 in the Crystal Room of the Eldridge Hotel. OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at 7 in the Baptist Student Center. For information, call 841-5783.
ROBINSON GYMNAISM will be open for public use from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.
weekdays, 8 am to 10 p.m. Saturdays and 1 p.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays.
A GERMAN READING of Lesing's play, "Mimna Von Barnhelm," will be given at 8 at the home of Warren Mauer, professor of German, at 2202 Westdale: HOWARD R. BOWEN, professor of economics and education at Claremont (Calif.) Graduate School, will speak on "The Consequences of Higher Education" at 8 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. MICHAEL SCHNEIDER will give a faculty recital on the organ at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. "Edward Mubyride: Father of the Motion Picture" will be the subject of an ART HISTORY LECTURE at 8 in the Forum Room of the Union.
ALLEN FIELD HOUSE will be open for public use from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday. It will be closed Friday through Sunday.
INCOME TAX ASSISTANCE will be offered from 1 to 4 p.m. today and tomorrow in the Governor's Room of the Union.
Announcements . . .
The first complete English edition of LUTHER'S WORKS has been presented to the University of Kansas School of Religion by the Lutheran Layman's League of Kansas. The life and political career of FRANK CARLSON, former U.S. senator and governor of Kansas, will be the subject of a history project for the Kansas Collection at Spencer Research Library. The project will include taped interviews scheduled to begin in May or June in Carlson's home in Concordia.
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The Senate first gave final approval to the bill Friday morning by a vote of 35-1. In the House, a token offer from one member of the minority concurred with the conference committee's report that recommended only minor changes from what previously had passed both the House and Senate.
"I think when all is said and done, we did a lot better than we thought we halfway through the session. State Rep. Lloyd O'Neill told me on Friday. "It looked oozed plain by a while."
rouse Speaker Duane S. "Pete" McGill, R-Winfield, who had appointed himself on the conference committee last week, delayed signing the committee's report and then acted out a postponed, outspoken critic of increased higher education funding this year.
"I it's a matter of what's practical," he said. "Quite a number of representatives thought that they (the salary increases) will be 5 or 8 per cent, so this is a compromise."
passed in the two houses earlier in the session. Lady, who is chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee and was a member of the conference committee, said he thought the appropriation package was the right amount.
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State Rep, William Bunten, R-Topke, said he thought the legislature had been under investigation.
"There's no doubt about it," Buten said. "We feel that we meet the need very well. The governor's recommendations were almost completely followed."
"At the first of the session there were comments about a moratorium on all building projects," he said. "But that would not be enough, and next year when costs would be higher."
State Rep. John Vogel, R-Lawrence, said he was "worn to a fraanze" after the legislature adjourned for first restress Friday, but said that he also was pleased with the funding, especially for new construction and capital improvements.
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Vogel said he was concerned about the prospects of getting more higher education at universities.
"I have an idea that if the same group of legislators is back next year it may be difficult to do as well as we did this year," he said.
Vogel and others said the legislature was becoming more concerned about spending. Bunten said that he expected next year's预算 wouldn't be as large as this year's.
"We certainly can't increase 10 per cent
he said. "We'll just have to see
bow things on."
Rick von Ende, executive secretary of the University, said that the character of the legislature would change next year, and the governor was expected to fiscal 1978 funding would be received.
Dykes said that there was "obviously a sustained commitment in the legislation and by the senate."
"That's heartening for the future," he said.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.122
Tuesday, April 13, 1976
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Inadequate funds might force cut of field hockey
See page 8
Staff photo by DAVE CREENSHAW
Disco disc iockeu
Spinning discs at recently revived discotheques can bring the
jockey as much as $175 for a four-hour night. Mark Booth, a D.J. at Bugsy's, says the money is only part of it--he enjoys his work.
Disco popularity growing
By CHERYL HAWLEY
Lights flash in patterns throughout the room while couples, elbow to elbow, perform various presentations and latex dances. The music is "the bass of 'New York.'" Setting the tempo and mood for the evening's entertainment is the man playing a guitar or the record turntable—the disco disc looKEY.
Although the discotheques in Lawrence started just this year, five disc jockeys from Bugs' and the Eldridge Disco agree that they are rapidly gaining popularity.
Discs are popular here because they are new to Lawrence, even though they've been around for four or five years along the way. KJHK station manager, said yesterday.
"It always takes awake for things to get to the Midwest," he said.
"IT'S A CHEAP way for people to go out and have a good time."
"People are tired of rock and roll. They want a change." he said.
Steve Doocy, KJHK disc jockey, said Lawrence hadn't had a place to dance for some time. Pogo's in Kansas City, he said, has the closest disco to Lawrence.
The change to disco music and dancing isn't just a fad, Spike Santee and Ted Oshirak, disc jockeys for the Eldridge Disco, said, because record companies have started producing and musical groups have begun recording disco records.
Economics also plays a part in the upspurs of discs throughout the country. Mark Booto, a Bugsy's disc jockey, the disc jockey's pay of $115 to $175 for a four-night was more appealing to a bar owner than the $40 average cost of a live band.
MONEY, HOWEVER, isn't always the reason for being a disco jockey. All the disc jockeys said they liked their work and they thought it was fun.
Krobot, Doocy, Charles Hoarde and Gary
Shorman, who work for KJHK, work under different circumstances.
Krobot said the KJHK disc jockies work in pairs and are not since the 1950s. The disk is a single disc.
"We're in the business as a service for KJHK," he said.
Because the station is student-funded, it
has a responsibility to offer a good time to students, he said. When KJHK disc jockeys are hired, a fee is paid. However, the money should be paid to station for the use of equipment.
The KJK disk jockeys have worked at the Hawk's Nest and at private parties for
See DISC JOCKEYS page 5
Study indicates KU defies grade inflation problems
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
Grade inflation, a national trend of steadily climbing grades, isn't a serious problem at the University of Kansas, and students have actually declined in the past two years.
Those are the conclusions of a study of grades at KU during the past five years. The study, compiled by the Office of Academic Affairs, was released yesterday.
Grades at KU inched steadily upward from 1791 to 1873, but in the two years since that time they had grown by almost a third.
Senate to determine budget, ticket subsidy
A Student Senate budget for next year will be discussed and approved at the Senate meetings tonight and tomorrow night at the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
A bill that would give $80,000 to the university and raise the property activity fee by $2.40 will be presented. The Senate last fall cut the KUAC allocation of $75,000.
Next year's student activity fee would then be $12, the same as this year.
Jr Grabumb and John Broadbeer, sports
men in the uniforms, are split in their
views of the tickets.
The Senate also will allocate $33,325 to
student organizations, which requested
BROADIE IS sponsoring the bill
Grbaugh said yesterday she was against the bill because it gave student dollars to a corporation that never had to show the Senate where its money was being.
She said that as a non-senior, she hoped to be given time at the Senate meeting to discuss her concerns.
She said the Senate should wait a year to
Ticket funding bill expected to fail
Staff Writer
A bill to reinstate partial Student Senate funding of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) seems headed for defeat.
Only 14 of the committee 42 members attended the meeting last night, so the committee couldn't officially vote to take action under consideration at the Senate's meeting tonight.
At least that the consensus of members of the Senate Sports Committee who met last night to discuss the bill. Even the bill's sponsor, John Broadble, sports committee co-chairman, said he thought it would probably be defeated.
A quorum, which is 22 members for the committee, is required for any official vote.
By HARRIS RAYL
committee, is required for any official vote. A bill, however, doesn't require a committee recommendation to be submitted to the Senate.
AN UNOFFICIAL hand count was taken on the bill at the end of the meeting, when 12 members were still present. The vote was 8-4 against the bill.
Broadie's bill would give KUAC about $90,000 generated from a $2.40 increase in the student activity fee. If the Senate votes to pay it, Broadie may pay a $9.60 semester activity fee next year.
But, Broadle emphasized, because only a small fraction of the committee was given directive reflections of the general feeling of the committee. He said that he had talked with several of the members of the committee and one who told him they would support his bill.
**BROADIE'S BILL** is aimed at lowering student ticket prices. Under the bill, next year's ticket prices would be $15.50 for football and $10.00 for basketball. If the bill is defended, KUAC has said that ticket prices will decrease to $20 for football and $15 for basketball.
TEDDE TASHEFF, student body president, said she favored the bill but didn't know whether it would pass. She said there were people who supported the ticket and also supported the ticket prices, but also people who didn't want to raise the student activity fee.
find out what would happen to ticket sales without the allocation.
She said she didn't expect the bill to pass because a two-thirds majority vote of the House would not approve it.
This year, football and basketball tickets both cost $10 each.
The Senate voted last fall to cut KUAC funding from the budget. Before that cut, the KUAC was to have received $4.15 of every student activity fee paid during the next school year, which would have generated about $140,000.
Ed Rolfs, Liberal Arts and Sciences senator, also has stated that he expected the two parties to reach an agreement.
Broadie's bill faces a possible complication when it is introduced on the Senate floor. It won't be on the normal agenda other other bills to be considered because it will be presented to Student Senate Record—the official newsletter sent to senators before each meeting.
SENATE RULES state that any bill that would alter the Senate's Revenue Code, as Broadie's would, must appear in the Record so that senators will know when an important piece of legislation is going to be considered.
For Browder's bill to be heard, he must get a two-thirds majority vote to suspend the new immigration law.
Tasheff pledged during her election campaign to keep the student activity fee low.
If the Senate decides to suspend the rule, another two-thirds majority vote would be required to pass the bill, also because of concerning bills that alter the revenue code.
Dave Shapiro, who opposes the bill, said he thought the issue came down to whether the Senate should fund those groups that benefit the largest number of student groups that couldn't survive without Senate funding, the policy he supports.
SHAPIRO HAS SAIED he wanted to cut KUAC's funding for a year so that the Senate could determine the impact of its funds on KUAC. He said that if KUAC ticket sales didn't go down as a result of the higher prices, he thought the Senate could justifiably cut KUAC. But, he said, if fewer tickets were sold than the higher prices, then KUAC should be funded. The only way to determine this would be to cut the subsidy for a year, Shapiro said.
Broadie argued against Shapiro and said that the Senate should not hurt students with a higher ticket price to study the impact of a fund cut.
"I think it's (a KUAC cut) a definite
'I think it's' he said, 'I think we have a re-
straint on you.'
"We can't sacrifice next year's students for the sake of an experiment," he said.
Deans ambivalent to 1977 budget
Staff Writer
Several deans and department chairmen said yesterday that the fiscal 1977 University budget could be better, but it could have been worse.
Bv JIM COBB
Although none of the seven deans and department chairmen interviewed said they were thrilled with the budget, few ex-educators agreed. They hoped for more funds in fiscal 2018.
"I's pretty much a hold-the-line budget," we
have "We have a lot of very expensal
proof."
It’s pretty well-distributed misery “it’s pretty well-distributed misery,” Dean of the School of Fine Arts, said.
He said his school would just try to maintain its present level of instruction.
THE SCHOOL of Fine Arts, he said, wasn't getting as much salary money had been hoped and would be using most of the increases approved by the Kansas Legislature to correct "serious internal inequities" in salaries.
It's hard for any amount of resources to suit that kind of explosive growth rate," he said.
Fichler said the number of students in the School of Business had grown 43 per cent in 2015.
Salary increases for fiscal 1977, as approved by the legislature, will be 8 per cent and increases in operating expenditures will be 10 per cent.
GORDON WISEMAN, associate chairman of the department of physics and astronomy, said the 10 per cent increase in oxygen levels taken up by inflation in his department.
Inflation in the costs of supplies and equipment was a problem often mentioned by the deans. Pichler said that the costs of supplies used by the University, such as paper, books and research equipment, were the most cost items in the Consumer Price Index.
Mooser said the school would emphasize additional dollars gained in merit salary and a student's ability to learn.
Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that he was pleased the college would receive new staff and assistant instructor positions and that KU, in comparison with universities in the state, had received some increases in funding.
"The inflationary rates for scientific equipment are much greater than for or-
He said prices for undergraduate instructional equipment and for graduate students' research equipment were increasing dramatically.
"WE HAVE people here who are performing at the top of their fields. They're very hard to get into, faculty members," he said. "Inevitably the market works—other things being equal, faculty members will certainly take salary and account when making job decisions."
"IT'S NOT just this year," he said. "Chronic underfunding is a recurring problem. The acquisition of new resources may help the organization catch up with increases in enrollment."
Increased size in some schools, such as the school of Business has caused serious problems.
"But the 10 per cent increase will be a great help," Wiseman said.
Pichier said he was pleased with a three-year legislative program to increase KU's salaries. This was the last year of that program, and he wants to level the level of many other universities.
Moeser said the School of Fine Arts was "just being eaten up with printing costs."
Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, said a free-market analogy could be used to demonstrate the needs in his school for higher salaries.
With a $2.40 increase in the proposed activity fee with the ticket subsidy allocation and a 15-cent reduction in the Senate's funding of the forensics program, she said, the student activity fee would be $12.00 if the fall, the same as this year.
would have to be discontinued and cheaper
printing methods would have to be found
the school, Moeser said, was spending as much as $6,000 a year printing programs for events. He said nicely printed programs
"I THINK it's developed on its own," he said. "There has been no university policy for it."
sign for the University, according to Ralph Christeness, assistant vice chancellor for Education.
Even during the period from 1971 to 1973, when the GPA here was on the rise, it wasn't increasing as fast as nationally, according to the study.
The study sites a survey, conducted by the University of Michigan, that showed the GPAS at 197 schools had increased over a period, compared to the 0.102 rise at KU.
SOME DEPARTMENTS of the University will receive little of the requested funds.
Christoffersen said one problem in comparing GPAs from the KU and Michigan studies was that the Michigan students had grade listings, only the changes in grades.
The Bureau of Child Research, according to its director, Richard L. Schleifbusch, had hoped to receive about $122,000 to extend the bureau's services across Kansas. That request was cut in the legislature to fund two additional half-time positions.
Christofensen had no explanation for the downward trend of the past two years.
Grades took a smaller hike to a peak of 1904 in 1973, then declined to 2194 in 1976 and finally fell to 1845.
"We'll just try to find another way to do the same thing," Schielebusch said. "It will make it more difficult to extend programs out into the state for children."
THIS MEANS it is impossible to tell whether the actual grades at KU are higher or lower, only that they rose less, Christdfersen said.
Schielebusch said the additional funding might be used to match federal grants or to receive funds from the Social Rehabilitative Services office in Topeka.
"IT'S HARD to get funds through the legislature for our programs," Schiebelsehau said, "because there's always so many things a university needs. In the end, an off-campus program like ours isn't as high in urgency as others."
"I was surprised and pleased at the results," Christoffersen said. "I think this indicates that grade inflation is not the problem here that it is nationwide."
The largest part of that increase occurred in the first year of the study, when the GPA increased.
Over the five-year period the study covers, the University-wide grade point average (GPA) increased slightly more than one-tenth of a grade point, from 2.008 in 1963 to 2.075 in 1972 and are based on a four-point scale, on which an A is 4 points, an F is zero points.
But, Christoffersen said, he hopes the grade inflation statistics make KU grades more meaningful in the eyes of prospective employers.
OTHER BLLS to be presented concern a student health insurance contract, the student health insurance application to KU FORESENS, a line of clarification added to Senate fund publications, the establishment of a paid auditor's position and recommendations of six standing committees.
See SCHOOL BUDGETS page 5
He said the bureau's work was divide, into a research program and a clinical training and service program. The research program has been made possible because of available grants and federal aid.
Business not completed tonight will be continued at the Senate meeting tomorrow
Charlifesson said he was surprised that grades had declined since the adoption of a new standard of testing.
The policy allows students to withdraw from a class without receiving a grade.
See GRADE INFLATION page 2
LAKESBORO, OHIO — A woman plays softball on the grass field of Lakesboro High School in Akron.
Playing to the crowd
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Behind 10 runs after only two innings of pitching, Sue Van Ness, Leeward sophomore, reacts to the razzing of her teammates and opponents yesterday. Van Ness was playing third base against Brooklyn in the second game of the series.
2.
Tuesday, April 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
State faces Medicaid loss
WASHINGTON—Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan., introduced a bill yesterday to repeal an amendment of the Securities Security Act which might jeopardize state laws in his district.
passed. The Kansas senator said there was a possibility that his state could lose $24
million in federal money this year...
Hospitals may take states to court under the Social Security Act to contest prices set by a state for in-patient services performed by hospitals for Medicaid
"If Kansas chose not to comply with 60,000 patients could be without these services," Pearson said. "Should the state force to comply, part of its sovereignty will be waived."
This requires the states to forego their immunity from being sued, as provided in the 14th Amendment. The secretary of HEW was required by a recently enacted amendment to the Social Security Act to withhold 10 per cent of a state's Medicaid money if it refuses to waive the immunity.
Rape bill protects victims
TOPEKA—The admissibility of evidence concerning a rape victim's past sexual conduct will be restricted by a bill signed into law yesterday by Gov. Robert F. K
"This is progressive legislation that does much to protect the legal rights of rape victims." Bennett said.
Under the bill, evidence of a rape victim's sexual history would be inadmissible as evidence unless a judge in a hearing out of the jury's presence, determined the
The hill was introduced in the 1975 legislative session by Sen. Jan Meyers, R-Overland Park.
Bennett proposes pay plan
TOPEKA - A proposed state employee pay increase which grants raises only on the basis of merit for certain Kansas public employees is designed to reward hard work.
Bernett made the comment in defense of his recommendation to grant pay hikes to state employees making more than $1,000 a month on only the basis of merit as
Some have criticized the suggestion, declaring state employees would be scrambling to please their boss and rewards would only go to "apple polishers." Bennett said he didn't think department secretaries heading the various state departments were vulnerable to "apple polishing."
Under the governor's plan, state employees making less than $1,000 a month will receive a flat five per cent increase effective July 1.
Legislation to implement the governor's plan was introduced in the Senate just before the legislature adjourned until April 20.
Grade inflation . . .
through the first 12 weeks of a semester. Previously, a student could withdraw only if he or she had completed the course.
From page one
Christoffersen said that meant about 140,000 withdrawals from courses were processed each semester, so many that he changed a change in the withdrawal policy.
THE STUDY did show that the number of students withdrawing from classes had risen sharply since the new policy was adopted, and now nearly 10 per cent of all classes are dropped by the end of the semester.
The cost of the policy has been too great to the University in clerical expenses and too great for students in time wasted in courses never completed, he said.
Christoffersen said he thought the University would adopt a policy in the next few years allowing students to withdraw through the first eight weeks of the semester.
THE STUDY showed the GPA is highest in the Schools of Social Welfare (3.437) and Education (3.368), followed by the Schools of Engineering (2.987), Pharmacy (2.948), Fine Arts (2.972), Business (2.894), Journalism (2.898), the College of Liberal Arts Sciences (2.842), the School of Architecture (2.827) and the School of Law (2.651).
Over the five-year period, the School of
Architecture GPA increased the most, 0.178, while one school, the School of Education, experienced a GPA drop of 0.022.
Christopher said there wouldn't be changes in specific departments as a result.
"We've asked the deans to check the study, then to look at individual courses and try to make their grading uniform throughout the departments," he said.
THE DEANS of two schools were reluctant to predict any changes were made in the school system.
"I think it would be premature to try to reach conclusions on what those data say." Dale Scannell, dean of the School of Education, said.
Scannell said the changes in the withdrawal policy made it hard to evaluate the
He did say that he thought the GPAs both in the University and his school were too high, and that the School of Education had looked into ways of reducing its GPA.
Robert Cobb, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said he had anticipated that the study would show GPAs were declining.
Cobb said the College Assembly was considering adopting a class withdrawal policy to allow students to withdraw from school through the first six weeks of the semester.
"I don't know whether it's good, bad or different. he said you can make what you want."
Eadward Mybridge became known as the "father of the motion picture" for his development of one of the first camera shutters that enabled him to show the pose of an animal in rapid action. Gordon Kessler, author and historian, said last night.
The Assembly will vote on that later this month. he said.
Muybridge's development of stop-action photography resulted from an 1873 bet between former Calif. governor Leland Keele and his friend James Robert Keene.
Speaking in the Kansas Union, Hendricks gave a biography of Muybridge (1830-1904), an inventor and pioneer of the motion picture.
Muybridge, by this time, was well known
w of high-quality photography and had done
few important work.
Thinking it an impossible task in the beginning, Muybridge took less than a week to prove Stanford correct by making two boards slide past each other at the touch of a spring, thus developing one of the first camera shutters.
Stanford, owner of race horses, bet Keene
that when a horse is running there is a point
when all four of its feet are off the ground.
Photo pioneer lauded
Hendricks won the Venice Biennial Prize in 1965 for distinction in historical writing. He has written biographies on artists Thomas Eakins, Albert Bienstadt and Eadward Muybridge, and is working on a book about another artist, Winslow Homer.
America's 'nuts' honored
Most Bicentennial celebrations honor only the more stately figures of American history, but a show tonight will honor the "nuts" of our history.
Michael Brown, professional actor and song writer, will present his widely acclaimed "The Great American Nut Show: The Musical," at Moors in the Karaus, Hallway Bell.
The show was previously in New York and is now on national tour.
Mike Miler, activities adviser to SUA,
aid yesterday that the show was 'a light-
weight experience', he said.
characters with costume, song and anecdotes.
Those examined in the show range from the little-known Emperor Norton—who, in his own words, "was a man of great importance in the United States in the 1800s"—to such people as John Dillinger and Calvin
Brown began his career at LeRuban Bleu, which was at one time New York's most popular playground.
Before his first engagement ended, he had established a record 45 consecutive weeks.
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every car hand sanded
Expert body and collision repairs. Free estimates.
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23rd and
Call 843-3500
Alabama
for appointment
TONIGHT: A LATIN AMERICAN STUDENTS' round table on "The Role of Today's Youth in the Future of Latin America" will begin at 7 at the St. Mary's College of Arts and Technology Road. RICHARD DIETRICH, German architect, will speak on "Meta City and New City Building Systems" at 7:30 in the Forum Room of the University. SUA FORUMS will present actor Michael Brown and "The Death of the Foursome" derers, Frumps and Frauds at 8 in the Union Ballroom. A FREE STUDENT RECTALT will be given at 8 in Swarthout Hall. Performing will be Daryl Jones, Topea teenager; Diane McCarty, Lawrence graduate student; Keren Kendall, Leawood teenager; Beauford Woods Va., sophomore; Beafound Woods, Kerberonkson, N.Y. senior; and David Orn堡, Lawrence junior.
TODAY: VOLUNTEER INCOME TAX
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- Need CLUB BULLETINS printed and mailed?
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GIRLS AMATEUR NIGHT
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For Winner of the
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Show Time is 10:00 p.m.,
Tuesday, April 13, 1976
Girls Sign Up in Advance.
N. 9th "BIRD" Lawrence, Kans.
843-9800 Membership Available
AURH STUDENT POSITIONS
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THESE OFFICES
AURH, Dean of Men, Dean of Women and Housing. THEY ARE DUE APRIL 21. THE POSITIONS MUST BE FILLED WITH A RETURNING HALL RESIDENT. Applications will be screened before interviews which will start April 21.
ACADEMIC RESOURCE CENTER COORDINATOR—
This is a ten hour a week job for someone who qualifies for WORK STUDY. The wage is $2.20 PER DAY and the amount requested in addition to a typing skill of 35 words per minute or better. Part of the duties will be up dating applications, managing a central purchasing plan. In addition the ARCCH will work with ARCS to develop policies and procedures for the RSRP and catalogs all AURH resource materials with the office secretary. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and encourages qualified men and women to apply.
OFFICE
SECRETARY—
This position requires that the individual be in the AURH office from 9 a.m. until 12 noon every week day. The position requires that cemans must qualify for WORK STUDY and be able to TYPE 60 on a computer. The TER. in addition clealth skills and a knowledge of machine offices are requested. A knowledge of short-nand would be helpful, but not required. WAGE is $2.20 PER HOUR
FOUR 1976 SUMMER INTERNS
in addition to the above responsibilities it is also necessary that the secretary handle her office corp. duties, AURH and Board of Appraisals. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and en-
gagement qualified men and women to apply.
These positions will be for June and July and pay $250 per month. Room and Board will be provided at Olive Hall. A list of charges is available wherever applications are received. A letter of recommendation is required and a letter of recommendation is considered acceptable. AURH asks that applicants consider taking only 3-4 hours of summer school while working as an intern. Experience from living in a residence hall is also required. Students may offer opportunity employer and encourages all qualified men and women to apply.
COMMITTEES, BOARDS,
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XX Pearson Trust Committee XJudicial Board
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XX Board of Appeals Campus Affairs
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X Committee Chair is open
XX Committee Membership is open
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 13, 1976
CAA cut proposal called harmful
The Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) would have no choice but to cease operations if a recommendation by the Student Services Committee to cut the student allowance is accepted by the Student Senate, Judy Kroeger, CAA director, said yesterday.
The Student Services Committee will advise an allocation of $8,237.00 for CAA at Senate meetings tonight and tomorrow, instead of the $8,730.00 requested.
The committee recommended that a $7,317.68 personal services request by CAA be cut in half. The personal services request is the full-kit administrative director's salary.
"TO SUGGEST that CAA be cut back by
If the recommended allocation is accepted by the Student Senate, Kroeger said, CAA wouldn't be able to serve students or the community as well as it does now.
half is to suggest that the director handle the same amount of work in half the time and at half the pay," Kroeger said.
She said this was impossible.
"We would have no choice but to cease operations at this level of funding," she said.
The committee's reason for the cut was that CAA doesn't serve enough students to warrant full funding. The committee said that only 40 per cent of CAA's inquiries were from students and that 60 per cent were from other Lawrence residents.
The committee also said that the CAA office could operate on volunteer labor, with a part-time paid director, instead of a full-time director as CAA has now.
KROEGER DISAGREES with this reasoning.
Since she became director in March, she said, she has noticed the number of students at her school.
Last year, for the month of April CAA received 59 student inquiries, or 40.7 per cent. Another month, for the month of per cent. However, Kroeger said, this year from March 25 until yesterday CAA had received 88 student inquiries, or 68 per cent, from community members, or 35 per cent.
Work Force aids some seniors
By HARRIS RAYL
Staff Writer
With the current economic slump and the national economic unemployment rate around eight per cent, graduating students from public schools will face a tight job market this spring.
But Work Force, funded by the University and the Student Senate, has tried to help in its three-year existence by matching employees with employers in Kansas and five other states.
ABOUT 1,280 students and about 700 companies responded to the mailing. The information was then run through a computer program that helped them identify and state preferences with those of the companies. The students who filled out the cards received lists of the companies in their records.
Last fall, it mailed about 5,000 inquiry cards to graduating seniors and graduate students. The students were requested to attend a workshop which of six states they would like to work.
At the same time, cards were mailed to about 30,000 companies in Kansas, Illinois, Oklahoma, Colorado, Missouri and Texas, who then what majors they would be hiring.
Because most of the 5,000 students didn't respond or receive computer mice.
Work Force will post company preference lists in various KU placement offices.
Engineering majors graduating this spring, for example, can find the list of companies interested in hiring engineers in their placement office in 4010 Learned Hall.
Other placement offices that will have lists are: 105 Flint Hall (journalism), 202 Summerfield Hall (business), 223 Carruth (music), and 238 Strong Hall (liberal arts).
LARRY GREENBAUM, Overland Park junior and Work Force director, said yesterday the 700 responses from 30,000 about his role was about as good as could be expected.
"The way the economy is going, we might have expected less than that," he said.
Greenbaum also said when so many mass-produced cards are mailed, a two per cent response wasn't so bad, when no gifts were included to elicit replies.
"We don't include whistles in the letters," he said.
Greenbaum said he was more concerned about the lack of student response.
"I was sort of disappointed that we only got 1,200 cards back (from students)," he said. "They don't take advantage of something that they didn't have the very much and could bring them to a job."
GREENBAUM SAID the companies that
responded ranged from small businesses and banks to oil companies.
One company, an ice market in Texas,
wrote: "Congratulations on your program;
however, we employ only common labor. I
work with a team of 31" - class 31- A helluva time to look for a job.
But occasionally, a nasty reply will come in. Greenbaum said.
A company in Texas returned its card and wrote: "We need apprentice-trained men to work with their hands. We already have too many butts-sitting book scholars. So long, we can't get them out of the habit of just sitting."
Work Force has expanded its operation the last two years. During the 1974-75 school year, when only the Senate fund the program, only about 15,000 companies in Kansas, Illinois and Missouri were contacted.
BUT BECAUSE OF the benefits of the program, Greenbaum said, the University has partially funded the program this year. The additional funding has enabled Work Force to contact twice as many companies in three more states than before.
Oliver, McCollum halls targets of 6 bomb threats
Six telephone calls threatening bomb
last nine days. Two KU resident halls.
McColm Hall received two calls April 4,
one at about 8 p.m. and another at 10:30
p.m. The building was evacuated for more
than an hour.
At present, the University is planning to reorganize its placement services. According to Kala Stroup, dean of women on the UWM faculty, the placement services under the direction of a full-time job placement coordinator. She said that Work Force would probably also fail under the direction of this co-ordinator, whom she appointed to fill the position, she said.
At 3 p.m. Sunday, McColum received another call threatening an explosion. Police said yesterday the building wasn't evacuated.
Oliver Hall was three times the target of bomb threats this weekend. Friday at 5:30 p.m., a call came in threatening an explosion. Another call followed about 10 minutes later. The building was emptied for about an hour, police said.
SUNDAY MORNING at 12:38. Oliver
maintained a threatening bat, but the
buffalo was overpowered.
The penalties for conviction are from one to five years in prison or a fine of not more than $5,000.
Bob Ellison, KU police captain, said calls of this kind were labeled "terroristic threats" under Kansas law and were considered felonies.
The calls weren't made by the same person, Ellison asked me when he caller was.
Ellison said that the buildings involved in the bomb threats weren't always evacuated. Every case is a separate consideration, he said.
The Work Force office is in 101 Kansas Union. Office hours are 1:30 p.m. to 5:30 m.p. Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Greenbaum said any students with questions about the program could call the office at 864-7572.
"EVERY ONE is a judgment call, there is input each time," he said. "Each case is weighed with information available at that time."
The information considered in making the decision to empty a place that is threatened, Ellison said, includes what the caller said and where he was located in events and where the caller threatened.
"Delightfully outrageous"
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Hustle 7:30 Hustle re-shown
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Sat. & Sun. Matinees 1:55
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Kroger said the statistics showing the number of students who used CAA's services didn't include the actual number of students aided by CAA, because its educational materials were far-reaching in benefits.
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---
"JUST BECAUSE we don't deal directly with students doesn't mean we don't affect the outcomes."
Although salaries may be a very low priority in the eyes of the student senators, Kroeger said, salaries are very important as far as the services CAA cap offer.
Without a full-time paid administrative director, Kroeger said, the CAA couldn't maintain its present level of professional service.
She said the director must be in the office full time to be aware of all pending complaints. In addition, the director handles all inquiries, does all the office work, writes and prints consumer educational materials and produces TV and radio broadcasts
Last year the Student Senate allocated CAA $7,524. In addition CAA also received $1,500 in revenue-sharing funds from the city. Half of the $1,500 was received in January and the other $750 will be received by June.
SUA Film Chairperson Interviews
Interviews for 1976-77 Film Chairperson positions will be held on Tuesday, April 13. If you are interested please sign up in the SUA office for an interview time by Tues., April 13.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
POSITIONS AVAILABLE:
Animated Series Chairperson
Children Series Chairperson
Classical Series Chairperson
Popular Series Chairperson
Science Fiction Series Chairperson
Summer School Series Chairperson
Publicity Chairperson
SHAKESPEARES PIZZA "as you like it"
PIZZA
FREE DELIVERY 841-1777
open mon.-sat. 5:00-1:00 delivery until 12:30
sun. 4:00-12:00 delivery until 11:30
NEXT DOOR TO THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
--and get an Easter Basket filled with cheese and things.
You don't have to stop getting Easter Baskets just because you're an adult.
Come to THE STINKY CHEESE SHOPPE
809 West 23rd St.
THE STINKY CHEESE SHOPPE
842-7434
Next to McDonalds
University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20,1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
4
Tuesday, April 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
The Great Debate
Good morning, soap opera fans, and welcome once again to the new-ending show!
In our last episode, as you remember, the subsidy was missing and feared dead. The Student Senate had removed it from the student activity fee and split the remaining budget between student service organizations and a reduction in the activity fee.
MANY PEOPLE thought that settled the issue, at least for this year, for although the new student body president had said during he campaign that the subsidy deserved reconsideration, she also pledged to keep the activity fee down.
Poor fools. They should have known. The subsidy has withstood worse attacks before and survived. The subsidy is one KU tradition that refuses to die
And so the Senate finds itself spending the week before Easter in debate about whether to resurrect the subsidy. Both chambers have their old fired arguments and fire away.
THE PRO-SUBSIDY people will stress and stress once again how many people buy football tickets. The antisubsidy people will stress and stress once again the KUAC's lack of responsiveness to student desires and the number of places the money could be spent more effectively.
About the average students, on those
rare occasions when they talk about the Senate at all, will grumble that the Senate is "___-ing around with our money again."
THE MAIN battleground for the newest subsidy debate will probably be a table drawn up by a special Senate subcommittee. The table, which is based on the KUAC's philosophy of getting $307,000 from students one way or another, shows what ticket prices will be at various subsidy levels.
This table could be a good thing if it teaches senators to look at the subsidy and the prices as a unit. If, for example, the Senate decides on a $1.20 increase in the activity fee (from $9.75 to $10.95), with the increase going to KUAC), football tickets would cost $4.00 while the sports prices would be about $20 with no subsidy, the net savings of 40 cents doesn't seem like such a great deal.
THE $6.10 savings to ticket buyers that a $4.20 increase in the activity fee would mean is, admittedly, a much better deal for the ticket buyers. It isn't, who don't buy tickets and still have to pay that extra $4.20 at enrollment.
And that, especially when combined with the sporadic, faddish way the Senate continues to handle the whole issue, can also a good deal for the Senate's image.
By Jim Bates
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
Dear JJ.
In recent weeks I've been a nervous wreck. I in the midst of an identity crisis that's tearing me apart. The first symptom showed up several weeks ago. I noticed that I had a bruise on my neck and peanuts. I couldn't get enough of them. It just doesn't make sense. I hate peanuts and I know I'm not pregnant. My psychiatrist told me that sub-consciously I wanted to be an elephant. But I told him that I don't know. I'm known as a loyal Democrat.
Politics beget complexes
Anyway, just as the urge for peanuts was becoming unbearable, people started forgetting my name. My secretary called me Jimmy yesterday at a fund-raising dinner last week as the president of the university.
AS IF THAT weren't enough, a peanut shell punctured my gums and required oral surgery. I had no trouble with the operation, but then commented that with a grin as big as mine, I had to be from Georgia. I insisted that I had not been treated, but he refused to believe me.
Please help me. Who am I? Smiley
Smiley
Dear S.
K-State, too, without faculty club
Readers Respond
Stop the presses! ! In the Kansan of April 8, under the headline "New hope stirs hope" John Snyder, Seib, Henry Snyder is reported to have said that KU is the only state university that doesn't have a faculty club and goes on to take an active role in University has a faculty club. Either Snyder is misinformed, or Sebid did not correctly report what Snyder said, or a comma was inserted in line 2, which is probably closer to the truth.
To the Editor:
TO SET THE record straight, KU is not the only state university without a faculty club. Kansas State University does not have a faculty club. Purdue does not have a faculty near the campus to which many faculty members belong, but that is different from a faculty club. Fact: I belonged to that club and was not a faculty anyone staying at the hotel, and 21, can join the club.
should be a feedback system to the instructors of would-be reporters as to the accuracy of their stories or "facts." It is unfortunate that erroneous information gets reported as fact and more unfortunate that it doesn't be convenient to have ratings of journalists. Four stars after their name means they have demonstrated responsible reporting and their stories have a validity factor of 99 per cent, three stars for 80 per cent, two stars for 60 per cent, one star for 40 per cent, and one meaning the story should be read for enjoyment and not factual content.
The points are 1) people should qualify their statements as fact, understood to be fact, opinion or hearsey; 2) there
Streak minor
M. A. Johnson
To the Editor:
M. A. Johnson
Lawrence Graduate Student
tering the resident director's apartment. The second complaint concerned the seven males who forcibly entered the hall when they were specifically told not to do so. The fact that all of them had nothing to do with any of the complaints filed.
I think the Kansan did a great injustice in the reporting of the All Scholarship Hall Judicial Board proceedings concerning the two incidents at Miller Hall. The two incidents of the proceedings was directed toward the two men of Pearson accused of breaking and en-
Cheryl Hatfield
Phoenix, Artz, freshman
Hypnosis OK
To the Editor:
ire the March 25 article on
hypnosis, it is quite true that
hypnosis is all in the mind of
the hypnotized person, but to then
conclude that hypnosis does not
exist makes no sense at all. In
scientific imagination" is scientific
according to Dr. Holmes, it still
can lead to such exciting things
as the total absence of pain
during major surgery without
the use of anesthesia. I know of
the method of "natural
suggestion" which could achieve this.
Similarly, the uses of hypnosis have ranged from recovering lost memories to helping smokers kick the habit.
Moreover, sometimes the world gets a bit too orderly and structured. Hypnosis can be a pleasant and safe way to escape for a while. In conclusion, we should better living, and we should continue using this tool until we find something better.
Richard Rubes
center. I was only a freshman and didn't realize you had to go early to beat the rush. The doctors didn't have time to get
Richard Ruces
Lawrence graduate Student
year's funding is concerned,
you'll only be asking for
peanuts. I guarantee that the
faculty will remember your
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
name. As far as the smile is concerned, it's a hopeless case.
and my condition makes walking impossible. Do you have any suggestions?
I'm a graduate student at KU.
Five years ago I contracted
some sort of skin disease. My
sister had been sick with
splatches, so we went to the health
to me that day so I came back the next morning. My condition had deteriorated. Some nurse came over my mouth and I've been here ever since. I graduated through correspondence courses. I was afraid to move for fear that my sister won't get near me now
Dear JJ,
The Biodegrading Woman
Dear BW.
Stay put in the lobby. Once they confine you to a room you might never get out.
Down and Out
Nobody understands me. They think I'm cold. My sub-
sistence is in the cold. They say I have no feelings. But everyone knows I have a heart of gold. (So what if it is the size of a pea, it would bring over $100
Dear DO.
a place in the sun. Yet the people refuse to pay their taxes and curse me for the price of victory.
They say I think only of money, but it is really their welfare plan. What price pay for their love? Why do they hate me?
Dear J.J.
As Sheriff of Allenwood, I stole Moore from the rich and gave him to the poor. This field was a success. We won victory on the field of battle and
EVEN MAID MARIAN,
whom I have supported so
generously, refuses to live in my castle.
As an old quarterback once told Bill Cosse, "Do a fly pattern past the parked car on the right; go out toward the third car in the nook-hook, at the post office and then keep on running."
JJ
TURNIP CREEK
POST OFFICE
BAIT
1976 WWT SPECIAL FEATURES
"IT'S A LETTER FROM THE POSTAL SERVICE ORDERING US TO SHUT DOWN FOR ECONOMIC REASONS IT WAS MAILED FOUR AND A
Tax resister back in the dock
WASHINGTON—In Karl Bray's last letter mugged out of a Federal penitentiary a week ago, he had no hope of getting on its appeal bond before April 15, tax day. His enemy, the IRS, see to that. At this writing, his former prison system is unknown to his friends and sympathizers, who tend to be angry, honest and ineffective right-wingers of the Libertarian persuasion.
BRAY SEEMS TO be of that sort, insofar as one can tell by
reading the clippings on his case from The Salt Lake City Tribune and by intuiting; a liberal-minded Libertarian who knew his head that the Constitution doesn't mean what it says.
The man's troubles began in 1 June, when he put full-p袍 ads in the Salt Lake City mall and asked government's right to impose wage and price controls and daring the authorities to take action, saying the IRS, which has the responsibility of administering the law,
W $ \sqrt{5} $ $ \mathrm{P H} \Delta L $
WESTPHAL
DONALD DUCK
'SPEECH TIME IN 5 MINUTES, MO!'
IF BRAY had any sense he would have quietly capitulated, he would have been apologized and apologized to the IRS. they can wreck you so easily. They can take your car, your bank account, your house without even going to court.
control program, immediately demanded to see Bray's books.
Honesty is no defense either. They can always show you did your taxes wrong, because it is almost impossible to do them right. The IRS's own figures indicate that income returns prepared by outfalls like HR Block are incorrect, but the greater the expertise of the tax preparer the more likely the possibility of mistakes. Thus, 75 per cent of middle-income returns prepared by accountants are prepared by the tax preparers, lawyers, and get this, 75 per cent prepared by the IRS itself are incorrect.
WHICH IS BUT another way of saying there is no right way of preparing your taxes. You are always wrong. How can it be? You cannot, nor does it understand the regulations, nobody can obey them. When a law is violated daily by millions of people or a law is so compulsory that nobody can obey it, the law is open for selective enforcement. Because the authorities can't hope to prosecute all the violators, as they are not prosecuted. There are selected lawbreakers are picked out. Wherever there is selective enforcement, there is corruption and there is using lawbreakers to get someome other extraneous reason.
Bray ought to have known that, but there is a certain type of right-winger who doesn't realize that in a democracy you
do what the officials tell you to do. Instead, he wrote a book (impetuous Taxation) and Fanny imposed more trouble. According to a more trouble. According to a
False hope postpones the day of enlightenment and despair.
BRAY APPARENTLY is immune to that emotion. The following year, 1975, finds him
By Nicholas von Hoffman
(C) King Features
DONALD J. MORRIS
THE NEXT YEAR, 1974, we find Bray being convicted of a federal misdemeasure charge of "illegal possession of Internal Revenue Service seizure stickers." The judge gives him the maximum six-month sentence and an IRS hush. But he also found Bray say, "Seizure notices would be put on cars and property in the local (Salt Lake City) area and it would be good publicity and would cause raid citizens to call the IRS." Bray's supporters say that the stickers were Xeroxes that anyone could tell weren't genuine. But don't you sleep better knowing the IRS has undercover agents to spare for infiltrating minuscule right-wing meetings in Salt Lake City? You can't have anybody have, and why won't one of these 10,000 rampaging, vote-maddened politicians tell if elected he will bride the IRS?" So what if he's lying?
UPI dispatch from Salt Lake City印发了 In The Los Angeles Times (all we get is got press clips on this fellow), the IRS subpoenaed Bray's bank account to get a list of all those who paid for a copy of the book by check.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekly
address: 100 East 25th Street, KU, Kansas City,
Missouri, 64103. Second-class postage paid at law-
ency and/or by $1.00 per semester or $1.50 in Deaslon County and $1.00 in
Michigan counties. Subscriptions are $2.00 per subscription and
subscriptions are $2.00 per subscription through the
University of Kansas.
Editor
Carl Young
ROUTE
Cousin
Larry Young Campus Editor
Attore Editorial
Bett Harrington
Yael Aboulahchi
Business Manager
Exec
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Advertising Manager
Assistant Business Manager
defiantly back in the prisoner's dock. This time they have him up for claiming 15 dependents on his W-4 form, 14 of whom are uninsured. He has been given him for refusing to fill out his income tax form. Like a lot of right-wingers, Bray believes that being compelled to fill out the form is a violation of his rights against self-incrimination. He doesn't understand that the federal bench has recently ruled that the only unconstitutional measure he has committed the last 100 years is to fail to give the judges large enough and timely enough pay raises. In this trial the prosecution alleges that the judge irritable irreverencies on his tax return like, "Gou straight to hell . . . Do not pass Go . . . Do not collect $200." Poor boy, he didn't understand that the IRS will charge $200 an insultingly low figure.
AFTER THE JURY convicted him, the judge denounced him, saying Bray "comes awfully close to preemption and correction government." He lawlessness. "It'll also get you a two-year sentence and $10,000 fine. On top of which the judge, one Wills W. Ritter, said he was going to have criminal consequences against Bray for accusing his honor of accepting a $20,000 bribe.
You'll always get a stiffer sentence for trying to make the government live by its own laws than for trying to overthrow it. So we cannot expect to see Karl Bray and question him out of prison walls for some time. But he will, if he has它 right, he is a minor boy in Utah, where, evidently, tax defiance is slowly gaining the respectability that draft defiance had a few years ago.
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 13, 1976
5
From page one
A request that was completely cut by the legislature was for new portable television equipment for the radio-television-film sequence of the School of Journalism.
Bruce Linton, director of Radio- Television-Film, said the lack of equipment "put us that much further behind in trying to resolve real problems of local television production."
HE SAID THE program would continue despite an incomplete job without the device.
"We'll just have to try again next year," he said.
Wiseman said the physics and astronomy programs had never completely recovered from a shortage of funding for new equipment several years ago. He said that the physics department wouldn't be able to build any new programs with the 1977 budget, but that the department planned to make solid improvement in the existing programs.
position and two vacant positions would be filled as a result of a contract made with the Social Rehabilitative Services.
Theorede Ernst, dean of the School of Social Welfare, said the budget wouldn't have a great effect on that school. He said the budget would not change from the 1977 budget, but that one new
COBB SAID that he was "both pleased and disappointed" with the budget, a statement with which most deans were in agreement. Moeser said that he wasn't really pleased with what the School of Fine Arts would receive but that his school wasn't going to be hurt much worse than other schools in the University.
"It's pretty well-distributed misery," Moeser said.
Disc jockeys . . .
From page one
groups such as the College Republicans.
Each time they entertain with disc music,
they are very popular.
"WE'RE A MOBILE unit." Doxyc is an advantage of having the use of the JKIK resources in the station's 2,000 mobile 5.5-inch singles. Doxyc said all the disco records we use are donations from record companies or the jockeys own collections.
Krobot said, "It's all for the audience so that they'll have a good time. We run dance contests and give away awards—anything to get them motivated. The neat thing about the disco is that you develop rapport with the people most likely to become friends with the people there."
A disc jockey must be able to relate to the crowd, Booth said, and the key to success is having an audience.
"How many interesting things can you say in an evening?" he asked.
The disc jockey has to talk enough to the audience think he's not just playing.
THE JOCKEY DOESN'T do a lot of talking, Oshirak said, because people don't really listen to "spinners." Oshirak prefers the term spinners to jockies, because he believes it suggests a closer communication with records.
"I personally feel music is the main draw to discos," not gimmicks," he said.
The jockey does talk more to introduce a
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song he thinks is good but may be unfamiliar to the people. Oshik said.
"I really get a personal high from watching people dance and have fun. If it weren't for them, I'd be standing up there bored," he said.
SOME OF the disadvantages of the job mentioned by the disc jockeys, were problems with setting up equipment, having to deal with many and repeated requests for the same song.
Two highlights of their jobs, the disc packers are, are meeting a lot of people and working very hard.
Oshikari is plagued by a problem that non-
okinaries are fatigant—watering eyes or
burning eyes.
The music also can cause problems. "The beat starts working in your brain, it
pounds into your mind and takes awhile to get out of your head," Santee said.
Each disc jockey enthusiastically admitted that the advantages outweigh the disadvantages.
EACH OF the discs have their own special features. At Bugsy's, Booth works a light show and is accompanied by a drummer. He said Bugsy's has the biggest backdrop in the United States and drops for KU students is sometimes free.
Doocy said the disc jockey was "like a cheerleader at a ball game. You've got to hype up the crowd, establish the music and set the atmosphere. The ultimate goal is to have everyone dancing. When nobody dances, obviously, you've goofed."
The Eldridge Disco, a private club for people over 21 years old, features two jockeys each night and a computerized lighted dance floor.
KU BAND MEMBERS 1975-76 Annual Spring Formal Banquet
Sunday, April 25, 6:00 p.m.
Elks Club 37O5 West 23rd
PROGRAM:
Mr. Russell L. Wiley, Guest Speaker Band Awards
Elks Club 3705 West 23rd
Showing of "Sunbowl 76" Films Other Entertainment
Prepaid to those paying fall band fee $5.00 all others, including guests, family and friends.
Sign up for all reservations in the Band Office, Room 214 Murphy, no later than Monday, April 19.
The commission is expected to sign an agreement with the Endowment Association that the city purchase for the North of Central Park, at 6th between Tennessee and Kentucky, Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said yesterday.
Procurement of park land is expected
Although the land, a blacktopped area between 6th and the Kaw River, will be developed as part of Central Park, he said.
Constant died several years ago and left the city $250,000 for the park, Wildden said. Eventually, the city will extend the park to a distance of about 30 feet between 2nd and 3rd at Indiana, he said.
Purchase of land belonging to the Kansas University Endowment Association for an extension of Central Park is expected to be made on November 10. Attendance at its regular meeting at 7 tonight
it will be named Constant Park, in honor of he was named Terry Constant. a local bank
In other business, the commission is expected to allocate $120,000 for improvements to the Holcom Sports Complex. The improvements include building new baseball facilities and adding basketball and tennis courts.
$2164.00
Have you thought about earning this much this summer?
SUMMER OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS
Interviews at
10 a.m.
1:00 p.m.
4:00 p.m.
7:00 p.m.
At Parlor A Student Union TUESDAY,APRIL 13th ONLY
SUA Committee Chairperson Interviews 1976-77 April21-26 at 6:30 PM
-publicity chairman
-local concerts chairman
-concerts coordinator chairman
(security, ushers)
SPECIAL EVENTS
PUBLIC RELATIONS
PUBLIC RELATIONS
-summer orientation chairman
-publications chairman
-fall orientation week
TRAVEL
-library chairman
-travel fair chairman
-group flight chairman
-publicity chairman
-general trips chairman
Christmas ski break
Sorina Break ski trip
. . . Orientation Shuttle service
... Mardi Gras
... K-State Football
... Spring Break ski trip
... Bahamas (Christmas)
... Padre Island
... Green River Trip
FINE ARTS
FREE UNIVERSITY
-poetry hour chairman
-Kansas Union Gallery chairman
-picture lending chairman
-library chairman
OUTDOOR RECREATION
-instructor coordinator
-publicity chairman
-catalogue chairman
-wilderness discovery chairman
-mountaineering-backpacking chairman
-canoe club chairman
-travel and recreation chairman
INDOOR RECREATION
-head coordinator "advertising"
-Quarterback Club
-air hockey
Sign up in the SUA office beginning April 12.
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
For Information contact the SUA office 864-3477
SUR
TRAVEL
Spaces Still Available on the
Cheapest Flight to Europe from
Kansas City
Departing June 16 to Paris Returning on August 12 from London PAN AM 707
$391.75*
Travel Arrangements by SUA/MaupIntour Call 864-3477 For More Information
AIRPLANE
★pro-rata share of charter including taxes and administrative fee; subject to change
6
Tuesday, April 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
FALLEY'S
Ohse Wieners lb.
Always Good Hen
79c
Turkeys
1
10-12 pound avg.
Falley's Fluff Pack Ground
49 $ ^{c} $
Beef
69°C
2525 IOWA
NEXT DOOR TO GIBSON'S
OPEN 7 a.m.-MIDNIGHT—7 DAYS
PRICES GOOD TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY
April 13-April 17
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
GLOSED EASTER SUNDAY
Big T Brand $1 89
Bonless Hams ½ or whole lb.
Columbia Armour
Sliced Bacon ... 12 oz. 79c
Fresh—Whole Fryers ... lb. 49c
Swift Premium—All Varieties Brown-Serve Sausage 8 oz. 89c
Regular—Hot—Mild R. B. Rice Sausage 16 oz. $1 39
H & D Brand
Whiting ... 24 oz. pkg. 89c
49c
Every Day Low Price
Kraft Miracle Whip...32 oz. 79°c
Every Day Low Price
Hellman's Spin Blend...32 oz. 89°c
Every Day Low Price
Seven Seas Family Italian Dressing 8 oz. 49°c
Coors Beer
6 pack $129
12 oz.
cans
Every Day Low Price 100 ct. $89¢
Mr. Coffee Filters
Every Day Low Price $398
Folgers Coffee 3 pound can
Every Day Low Price $399
Cigarettes all brands & sizes
Coca-Cola 64 oz. 69c
64 oz. 69c
Falley's Potato Chips
Falley's Potato Chips 9 oz. bag 59c
Every Day Low Price
Green Giant Corn ... 16 oz. golden 3 for $1
Every Day Low Price
Green Giant Cut Green Beans 16 oz. 4 for $1
Every Day Low Price
Green Giant Peas ... 17 oz. 3 for $1
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Contadina Whole Tomatoes ... 14½ oz. 4 for $1
9 oz. bag 59c
Bordens Ice Cream ½ gallon 88°C
Jello Gelatin
3 oz. 5 $1
for
Every Day Low Price
**Borden's Sherbet** ... ½ gallon **88ᵃ**
**Viva Napkins**...140 count **49ᵃ**
Every Day Low Price
**Shurfine Pineapple**...15¼ oz. **2 for 89ᵃ**
Every Day Low Price
**Food King Mixed Fruit**...29 oz. **59ᵃ**
Shurfresh Colby
Longhorn
Cheese
10 oz. 89c
Every Day Low Price
Every Day Low Price
Food King Irregular Sliced Peaches 29 oz. **39c**
Every Day Low Price
Food King Applesauce...16 oz. **5** $1
Every Day Low Price
Food King Pears...29 oz. **55c**
Every Day Low Price
Food King Whole Purple Plums...29 oz. **49c**
Grade A Medium
Eggs
Dozen 49c
Morton
Frozen
Dinners
49c each
Every Day Low Price 29¢
Shurfine Margarine...16 oz. quarters
Every Day Low Price 55¢
Aunt Janes Iceberg Dill Pickles...24 oz.
Every Day Low Price 69¢
Delsy Bathroom Tissue ...4 roll pkg.
Every Day Low Price 39¢
Hi-Dry Paper Towels ...jumbo rolls
Gold Medal
Flour
5-pound 79c
bag
Every Day Low Price
Falloy's
Cottage
Cheese
23 oz. 89c
Gold Medal Flour
5-pound bag 79¢
Every Day Low Price
Falley's Cottage Cheese
23 oz. 89¢
Every Day Low Price
Fireside Marshmallows...10 oz. 3 for $1
Every Day Low Price
Princella Cut Yams...16 oz. 3 for $1
Lindsey Ripe Olives...6 oz. 49¢
Fresh-Tender Asparagus lb. 49c
Fresh-California
Strawberries
qt. 89c
Southern Grown
**Sweet Potatoes** ... 5 lbs. $1
Golden
**Sweet Corn** ... 5 ears 79ᵃ
Michigan
**Jonathan Apples** ... 3 lb. bag 69ᵃ
Always Good Charcoal 10 pound bag 89c Every Day Low Price Angelfood Pan-0-Cake each 99c Every Day Low Price Fresh Pineapple each 49c
Fresh Pineapple each 49c
MISTLETOE'S QUIK
A PILOTING GAME
Fresh-Green or Top Red Radishes or Fresh Green Onions 2 bunches 33c
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
NESTLE QUIK
$ 1.59 regular
32 oz.
$2.09
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru april 17
COUPON
$ 159
FALLEY'S
West Maple
Endust
FALLEY'S
SUCCESS FOOD SUPPORT
79c
---
COUPON
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
Betty Crocker
ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX
16 oz. 69c regular
95c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 17
COUPON
69c
FALLEY'S
Cheerios
CHEERIOS
75¢ regular
15 oz.
85c
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good thru April 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S
CHEERIOS
75c regular
85c
Cheerios
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
Sunshine
VANILLA WAFERS
49c regular
11 oz.
67c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 17
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Sunshine
CHEEZITS
49¢
regular
10 oz.
65c
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FALLEY'S
Keebler
DELUXE GRAHAMS
13½ oz. 79¢ regular
97c
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FALLEY'S
TAME
CREME RINSE
97¢ regular
8 oz.
$1.55
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FALLEY'S
PEPSODENT
Dental Creme
7 oz. 77 c regular
$1.44
Limit 1 with coupon
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COUPON
FALLEY'S
LISTERINE
Antiseptic Mouthwash
regular
97¢
$1.45
14 oz.
Limit 1 with coupon
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COUPON
FALLEY'S
Duncan Hines
FUDGE BROWNIE MIX
23 oz. 89¢ regular $1.13
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 17
COUPON
Tuesday, April 13. 1976
7
Professor says higher education worth its price
By RITA RIDDER Staff Writer
Higher education provides tremendous benefits make it well worth the billions spent on it every year, Howard R. Bowen, professor of economics and education at Claremont Graduate School, Calif., said last night.
Bowen's speech, "The Consequences of Higher Education," was the first of the Waggoner Higher Education Lecture Series, begin last spring to honor George R. Waggoner, former dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
He said that with this growth, the concern for student's individual personalities had diminished, and a remarkable change in society could be observed. These observations prompted him to conduct a study on the importance of education on students and society, and the value of these effects in relation to the money they cost Americans.
BOWEN TOLD an audience of about 50 in the Kansas Union that America's "love for education has resulted in a phenomenal growth in colleges and universities across the nation.
He said that the $25,000 the average person spends for a four-year education is take an investment because a college education usually results in a larger income.
He said that a desirable change in people usually takes place during their college years. People become more tolerant, more open-minded, and more self-expression from their work, he said.
They also have more self confidence, he said, and are more involved politically and socially, keep jobs longer and handle money better.
COLLEGE LIFE can also produce some negative effects on individuals. He gave the students more-educated people tend to be less tidy, and a greater tendency to use alcohol and drugs.
Bowen is known for his work on the economics of higher education, both in the management of institutions and the formation of public policy.
University Daily Kansan
He has worked with the U.S. Department of Commerce and served as president of Grimell (iowa) College and the University of Iowa.
Acme
20% Discount on "CASH AND CARRY"
KU
3 Convenient Locations
CLEANERS & LAUNDRY
(On Most Dry Cleaning)
HILCREST SHOPPING CENTER—925 Iowa
DOWNTOWN—1111 Massachusetts
MAILS SHOPPING CENTER—711 West 23rd
After good times., April 13 to thurs., April 15
Place a Kansan want ad. Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to their financial condition. BIRLING 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
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
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.
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
10 items, $35.80.
Found items are 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 644-1358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. We've moved! Our new location is next to McDennis, W90. West E27. Bring this ad for a discount. Repeat Performance Shop. 4-13
Employment Opportunities
Full day care and complete child development program for students in grades 1-5 and Kindergarten, 1299 West Belfair St. #842-327-2272.
A job opening for full time research assistant at the Achievement Place, 11 Haworth. Data collection materials, preparing forms, completing workshop materials, preparing types of skills are essential. Contact Mildred Aglewitt. Application dnoiline and starting date apply. Qualified men and women of all races apply. tfr
WANT A JOB WITH PLENTY OF OVERTIME?
Call 843-8779
— Must relocate outside Kansas
— Must untie apron strings
Laboratory technicians positions to begin on or be at least one year of undergraduate organic chemistry and have at least one year of undergraduate organic chemistry. Applicant must be at full time rate of $600-$700. Personal interview to Dr. F. R. Given de. Department of Chemistry, KU
SUMMER FUN OUT EAST EASY Earn $231 per week!
Call today for an inquiry. 893-835-4
1-13
SPRING FEVER
OBTAIN SUMMER WORK!
'844 per month—
see the world
call today 843-931
Summer employment: largest moving and storage company in Midwest is accepting applications for warehouse and van helpers for this summer. Summer jobs include Moving Services 12905 W. 63d, Shawnee, KS. 4-16
Summer employment for women: largest movers in New York. For applications for women packers to prepare equipment for construction jobs in City and Leeward area, must have own house and business. Moving Services, 9 W. Grd. 825, Shawan, Kauai.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION RENEWS: Drop in at
ATTENTION RENEWS: drop in at
(phone call, calls) at WEBRITER
(phone call, calls) at WEBRITER
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
rental housing available in Lawrence, Lawrence
2 bdmr, all utl, paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Free park. a/c, pool. 843-1993.
Sabinae May 15-Aug 14 I rooms in beautiful
room at Browne & Co. $2,900 A/C (C) piano, weather dreser, $300 + uuffilling
$400 bedding
2 bdmr. wtp, w-warp, central air, large kitchen,
Great kitchen, Great kitchen to Union, 3 dows
from Main St., 843-800-8433; 843-800-8434
Furnished two-bedroom house, quiet neighbor,
fenced backyard with tomatoes, $155;
ammer only $75-756.
Sublease apartment for summer; utilities paid;
furnished close to campus and downtown. 641-
285-7020.
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate delivery. Also, save money leave from June 1, 1976 and take advantage of lower rates. See website www.nationalbank.com/bankwest of west on 23th Bsll. Phone 842-1455.
Sublease, efficiency ago, May, June, July, August and all electric kitchen bills $151-$625 after tax.
Female vegetation to share two bedrooms fur-
ther along. Call 842-832-9351 e-1, 418.
Call 842-832-9352
Larger bedroom A/c A/pt. Meadowbrook for
updates. Call 841-2882 e-views 4-15
For summer nights in apartment, furnished,
utilities paid to campus. $123 at
841-7517 or 864-7690
Free Room for a responsible couple in the home. The house is quiet, comfortable, and near campus. Cooking asked in exchange for room. Available May. Call Don Anderson 844-1688 (844)
$ 2 below, all insurance paid, $ 4 a month, April
pay, $ 6 below, no insurance paid. Get your
amount and Rental Rates now. NO FEES!
Savings on Insurance:
Get your summer & Fall Rentals now. NO PEEKS.
843-1601 Lynch Real Estate, 2237 Ohio. 416
Uprights room for rent. 2 blocks from campus.
Room number 81-471, reasonable.
Available June 14. 81-471.
Subbass-Meadowbrook studio ap. June 1-August
4. Studio plus electricity Call 842-501-
6 on 6 p.m.
For summer: 2 dorm. A-C-Garage-w w-car
furniture. 3 dorm. large-gard-ware-col-
4-色彩 Call Bob. 841-2428
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hill equipment other than factory, dumps or close-out products, are available from the GRAPHOMATIC SHOP at KEIFS, if you wish.
COST + .40% - Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single-channel packages. Register for free Kiss Audio packages. Call Drive. Phone 842-6588. Earnings 6 to 10.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amp, drums,
instruments, percussion, basses, and more.
Shop 'Rose Keyboard Studies. Choose from Gibbon,
Amy, Ampler, Kunsten, Grace, and many others.
Add instruments, percussion, basses, and more.
After 50 minutes, Rose Keyboard Studies,
percussion, basses, and more.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
LED AMPLIFIER, BELL AMPLIFIER,
ELECTRIC, 845-369-9000, W. 6th, Hc
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization?
Makes sense to use them—
1. For exam preparation
"New Anatomy of Colorization"
Available now at Toxton Girl Magazine
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Appliances for your home. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 7811 W. 26th St., Denver, CO 80209.
FINAL. CLOSEOUT! MICHELIN XAS
RADIALS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE HIGH ON
THE ROAD. RAY STONE.
BACKS. 925 Mass. (for love or
hindwool WOOL for fire service).
4-16
basin but comfortable older double honeymoon for a couple. Rental is $1,250 per month, gas and water paid. Catering is $180 per person.
Honda 505/14 3.00 miles. Back and back rest.
Barely broken-in. Call 842-6251. 4,19
TRIPHIC MUF BRAND NEW COMPLETE HP
TURBOCHARGER WITH OVER 60% AUTOSPEED
at $25 or best offer call Phil Atkinson at
(814) 739-5830
Camera, Minolta 101, 28, 18, 153, 200 mm
filter, etc. #50 or best offer, #43-5658
4-12
1905
Honda 360 CB 120 lb. Ski bums, rack and back
Like. Like new $50. $50. Call 879-4515
4-11
Dodge window van $700. Auto trans. 6 cyl., 65.
Early model - a good campain. great.
Great: 843-707-707
MACRAME READS
Stereo: Kernwood receiver. AR speakers.
turntable, $40 or best offer, A$35-658. 4-13
BEADS large selection of sizes & prices Sat. 10-5:30
armadillo bead co
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
Amantha 360 Mx, M9 Honda PESO 520, Balanced 840,
Yamaha DT2500, 76 Honda CR125, 70 Honda
Roadster DT250, 80 Honda at Horton Ridge
18W, W11th 84-333-3233
Vega, 1771 Hatchback. 4 speed, excellent condition.
$775. Call Randy, 811-8456. 4:13
MUST SELL 320 Suzuki. Excellent condition.
Rick Lallamucki, 811-792-7828. Add:
Bass guitar, Kustom Bass Ampl. plenty of power,
good shape, Call Amit. N42, 854-3689.
4-15
MUST SELL $350 Suzuki. Excellent condition.
Rick Lalomik Hill, 843-792-1922.
1955 Chevy Nomad Wagon beautiful restored,
appreciate, not cheap, serious injuries
and damage.
1964 Honda Civic. Excellent condition.
Pontine Firebird, 1969, excellent condition, auto-
motive, white with blue vinyl tip $7,450
841-4704
2. BSS-AMT-1 speaker, excellent condition $500.
822-4756 4-16
69 FORD VAN-E 200 sell or trade for 69-70
Motor or Cameron.
4-13
Baldwin amp. with super sound $90. 841-5004.
4-14
Savoy Car Console套件 player model number FT7
Carrier 100$! asking $100- best 4-15
Bolt 841-234-178
1967 Flat 850 Coupe, new paint, timing.
Kit 843-0088
4-15
For Sale—15" BW TV, and mid-sized refit.
Your choices are best offer. Call A24 at
1-800-333-9767. Refine CAT 423-
Women's S speed Schwinn Suburban bicycle.
Women's S speed Schwinn Suburban bicycle.
Refractory handle. Call Lyla, 841-4711 or refractory handle.
Call Lyla, 841-4711 or refractory handle.
WE SELL FOR LESS-11 to 6:30. Good used furniture, large glassware (guaranteed). Refrigerators; appliances (guaranteed). Howell Lawsuies—weekly free delivery. 1322 East Hewlett Avenue, Kelp, Tehama. Phone 1-728-3527 or 545-8288.
Black lab puppies for sale $15. Call 841-2986 4-15
Cheap new 200 m Lens 85-205 f 3.8 aperture
Vivitar 864-745 1-677-0547 Leave a message.
Copyright 2010 Pearson Publishing.
70 Opel-GT 29,000 km, new paint, exhaust;
mag, radials, magnets 843-581-S35 4-16
AM-FM绳 1. Good cond, still under warranty.
AM-FM绳 2. Good cond, still under warranty.
*all after 8:44, $6,873.00* best **4-16**
*all after 8:44, $6,873.00* best **4-16**
People Smile when you're riding a 'Bikepod'
Dive Bike for sale. Great condition.
Call DME Bike for sale. Great condition.
Setting Conqueror Banjo~$00~ Sony TC125 Tape
Centura 12string guitar with case Sanyo 4-
channel ear band 874,665
Ovation 12 string guitar. Excellent condition.
Pricen, reagency: A41,481 start $4.99.
Eliminare CR 250M Motocross, perfect condition.
Balinese CR 350M Molotov, perfect condition.
Call 411-7757 and ask for Kadley. 4-16
61 VW BUG needs engine work, best offer 842-
8764. 4-20
Yasileh TZ, X- $135, Mamiya Seker, $65.
Sylvan RD, 10-speed, Daupa, $255.
$75; Sylvan 10-speed, Daupa, $255. 4-18
Bicycle for sale. Arkau-16-speed. Like new. $9.
Ask App. No. 9, 1332 Tenn.
4-15
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS XDBH - international/yearn/location Europe, USA, Australia, Japan, China, Korea, Canada, Brazil, Argentina, South Africa, India, Indi
Community College Teaching Jobs. Excellent appl
introduction (Application #1). Search the
Box 8025. Box 8032.
Part-time or full time batteries Contact Tom
845-969-1800 or 843-432-1883 184-
PO. BOX 16, Fax 843-432-1883
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and truck drivers. Experience preferred. Call 465-431-7200.
Marketing majors - part-time until summer. Good
pay and experience. For interview 839-9464.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
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Experienced Installation man to do car stereo and CI. Excellent call. Pay 841-3727. 4-16
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"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank—9th & Mass., and First National Bank—1807 West 21rd.
Black. female cat cat near building C of Jay-
ward, answers to the name "numbows." If anyone has
answer, to the name "twisters." If anyone has
an answer, to the name "snowbells."
Found: *Set of keys on leather ring*. South of 4 Potters Park. Call Dave. 864-2688
Found a watch and keys near Call. Call
identify. 841-3564
4-14
Loc: George, dark, brown and white. Springer.
Spainl. Reward: 842-4166. *a*;414
Lest: Male Turtle; Mix: stubby leg, long body
Leward: Dark grey, & greys hair; Male
Lawd: 849-919-9
4-14
10-25
Found: 1. coin purse, outside Strong. April 8.
641-86239 to claim.
4-14
Found: charge purse in Wescoe Caterers Tours.
morning; call 843-7609 evenings.
4-14
Steven J. Otto: your bicycle has been found.
Describe and call. Call 842-7620. 4-14
Last, Women's gold Omega 4.77/16, 81-
Away hwld. If found call 914-814-2000.
Bell, Hoyle
R-board for items returned from stolen purse.
Walden w.jID, vides picture, glasses. No ques.
too many photos.
Found: on campus. Female dog, part English
Spaniel. White with brown marking. Call 815-342-6070.
Reward-$25 for return of Vol. II Quantum Theory of Atom Structure, by Mistler Staring from physics office. No questions asked. Return $25. Ragadai, 13 A Mallot, or contact Phone office.
Left at 5 probably on or 120 between Mass-Tem-
ple and St. Stephen's Church in New York.
Right at 9 probably on or 140 between Jew-
elry/Silverware and any jewelry/Jewelery.
*Found Jeffrey La France's wallet.* 1131 Ohio. 4-15
NOTICE
Ship Shop $20. MaaS. Must. Use furniture, dining
chairs, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12:30
84-337-371
The Catholic Care special Sunday dinner is a Full
Supper. The Catholic Care special Sunday dinner is a Full
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In case of cancellation, call 525-674-3901 for reservation.
After 82 years in business, if George doesn't
close on Mondays, George's Golf Shop, 727
510-6499, will be open.
Nancy's Craft Shop. 90th W 6th St. Open Thurs-
undays. Feature new ideas in plaster clay plaques and
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8
Tuesday. April 13, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Future of field hockey uncertain
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
Amidst rumor, reports of conflict and apparently contradictory statements, the future of the University of Kansas women's field hockey team has come into question.
The team's coach, Jane Markert, said yesterday she was told in a meeting last Thursday with Marian Washington, assistant athletic director for women's sports, that her sport had been cut from next year's budget.
"I WAS TOLD THERE would be no program and that she (Washington) gave me no budget," said Markert, KU's coach the past two years. "One of my hockey players played in the Sports Committee that hockey wasn't included in the budget."
However, Washington said last night,
“There's nothing new (to report about the
team's future). As soon as we take a look at
the budget (budget) picture, we'll make a
decision.”
Dial Shenkel, executive vice chancellor,
said this past weekend that no final decision
had been made on the future of the hockey
union. Markert said she was told there
had been.
"I WAS TOLD NOT TO talk to anyone about it and that it wouldn't be official until it came out in the papers," Markert said. "I was surprised when that announcement would be made."
Sprinters take Wichita honors
Freshman sprinters Celessa Russell and Shella Calmese collected one first-place finish, three second-place finishes and a school record between them in leading KU's class record to its second-place finish last week at the Wichita State University Relays.
Kansas State ran away with the meet, scratten 172 to Kansas' 82. Behind KU were Dodge City Junior College with 63. Fort State with 43 and Emperor State with 39.
Russell, a Topeka native, brought her best time in the 440-yard dash down from 58.1 to 56.3. A KU record. She placed second in the Charmaine Kulman, who joined in a 56.1 L.
Calmise, who says she's mistaken for a seventh-grader when her opponents opps he 41-94-pound frame, won the 100-meter dash in 12.5 and was runner-up in the 200-meter dash in 25.2, despite a stiff 15 mile an hour headwind.
Together with teammates Russell, WSU Relays 400-meter hurdle champion Sheri Lanter and Nannette Lee, Calmese added a second place in the 440-yard relay.
Other top KU performers were Jessie Riddle's shot put of 45-11, Adrian Mitchell's third place long jump of 17-3 and Carrie Waugh's fifth place in the lavinel.
Besides winning the intermediate hurdles in 1:06.4, Lanter added a fourth in the 110-meter hurdles. KU's Connie Lane was third in the intermediate hurdles behind Lanter.
According to the women's athletic department's final budget request, made available by the Sports Committee last week, the department will request $182,793 for nine intercollegiate sports. Field hockey wasn't among them.
The threat to her team's future and published statements by Shankel and Washington have caused confusion and said Marie Faust, the team's co-captain.
The team really doesn't know the truth of
sports
"We heard some really bad rumors and "were really upset about it," she said. "And if the rumors are true, we're going to take some action."
the situation, but its members are trying to find out. Faust said.
In a hastily called meeting Sunday night, the team decided to send its representatives to meet with Shankel and Chancellor Archie R. Dykes to present reasons for keeping the sport, said Nancy Lambros, the team's other co-contain.
"WE WANTED TO TAKE action as quickly as we could because time is
Clarke paces tennis today
If you haven't seen Bill Clarke, KU's undefended 0.1 singles man, you won't get too many chances after today. Clarke will lead the KU tennis team in their 2:30 match against Northwest Missouri State on the Allen Field House courts.
KU's opponent placed in the top 10 in last year's NCAA Division II tennis championship.
After today's match, KU will have only two more home meets.
Clarke is now 15-2 after wins against Oklahoma and North Texas State in the Oklahoma City University Invitational Tournament last weekend.
The KU team split its two matches in the CU tournament, losing to Oklahoma in 4-2. The BCS championship game ended in a tie.
"Our play against Oklahoma was somewhat disappointing," coach Kirkland Gates said. "We feel we can beat them. We can't, when they come to Lawrence May 1."
After Clarke, the rest of KU's line-up is Tim Headke (10-7), at no. 2 spot; Mark Hocking (14-3), at no. 8 spot; Thomas (9-4), at no. 5 spot; baker (3-12), No. 5, and Hank Collier (3-21), at no. 6.
The doubles teams will be Clarke and Headtke (7-6) playing No. 1, Buller and Coleman (2-10) at No. 2 and Hosking and Thomas (10-4), at No. 3.
After meeting the Bearcats, KU travels to Lincoln, Neb. for a match with Nebraska to
KU plays Washburn today
Sports Writer
By JOHN HENDEL
After a successful series against the Missouri Tigers, the University of Kansas baseball team goes on the road today to take on the Arizona State in a doubleheader at 1 p.m. in Topeka.
Mike Love (1-2) and Kevin Kerschen (3-6)
will get the starting assignments from
their teams.
Temple said yesterday he hoped the extra love for Love and Kerschen will aid the team in their quest to win. The relied mainly on the pitching of Roger Slagle, Brian Rhodes and Rob Allinder so
"THREE FITCHERS AREN'T enough," Temple said. "Love and Kersen need to pitch. I know they can do the job if they get the work."
With the doubleheader scheduled between series with Missouri and Kansas State, one would expect the Jayhawks to look past today's games. But Temple bites to differ.
"We aren't taking Washburn lightly," Temple said. "We can't think that all we have to do is take the field and we've got them beat. We're not that good.
"You have to be careful. Some of these teams can beat you even when you play."
TEMPE SAID HE THOUGHT Washburn was a good team and their secondplace finish in the Kansas Tournament last weekend supported his view.
KU played the Ichabods twice last season with the Jahyhaws capturing both games by scores of 2-1 and 12-5. Kansas will take 13-8 in the second game, playing in the tournament last weekend.
The Jayhawks travel to Manhattan April 16-17 to play Kansas State in a three-game set. The Wildcats won the Kansas Tournament, beating Washburn in the final game.
The next home action for the Jayhawks is
1 p.m. doubleheader April 20
against Washington.
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"KU's had a good program for the past six years," Markert said. "Our skill level is high. The field hockey team is kind of unique; they are a closely knit team. They work hard together and I think there's a value in that."
Contact the Office of the Vice-Chancellor for Hairs, Facials, and Skin Care 227 Strong Hall
LAMBROWS, WHO RETURNS for a third year on the team at the center forward position, and Faust, who will be graduating from college, interest on campus for field hockey existed.
According to Faust, a meeting with saxett will take place tomorrow. Markert will visit the city.
In fact, Markert said, her team's only play date in Colorado this year was canceled when, midway through the season, her budget was cut.
"Bringing the issue out in the open will help a lot," Lambros said.
There has been mention of starting a club team, but Markert said she thought it would be too expensive.
for an interview with our representative
We will visit your campus on
AND SHE ADDED," I don't know now or budget works, but if there is a problem we (each of the 10 sports) should share the deficit rather than choo one off."
for an interview with our representative
Markert also said that Washington wants to start a public relations office with the city's mayor.
THURSDAY, APRIL 29
CARRYING A SQUAD of 22 last year, KU's field hockey team qualified for regional competition. While only two state schools have teams (Emperor State is the other), KU has enjoyed success in Midwest play, defeating clubs and colleges from Ohio, Kentucky, Springfield and Worcester, where Central Missouri State University is located.
Markert coached at CSMU before coming to KU. She will return there next year. She has been at KU as a graduate student in college education, pursuing a doctorate in that area.
She disputed the first contention by saying that her team usually traveled no further than central Missouri. Other KU coaches make much longer trips, she said.
MARKERT'S TWO-YEAR sabbatical leave from CMSU ends this semester.
Despite her imminent departure, Market she would attempt to defend her store.
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"I hope at least that we get a chance to present the positive aspects of having a field hockey team," she said. "Granted, we don't have the skill level that the eastern schools have. I don't think the reasons (given for eliminating the sport) have been total justified."
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THE TWO MOST COMMON reasons for eliminating KU field hockey. Market said, were that the team often had to travel out of town to play at a venue of interest in field hockey here was low.
The women's sports department couldn't use her departure as an excuse for dropping her sport, she said, because "I don't feel they'd have any trouble finding a coach. I know of one who's already inquired about it."
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Ap man fall Frid Ap dean office Th didat man
K
Cut in full-time grad study requirements examined
By JANICE EARLY
Staff Writer
The Graduate School Council is studying a request by the University of Kansas Campus Veterans to consider the possibility of changing the name of their graduate study from 12 to nine hours a semester.
Jim Bailley, assistant to the president of Campus Veterans, says the requirement penalizes student-veterans attending graduate school at KU because few of them take 12 hours a semester.
He said last week that student-veterans wanted the work load lowered because many of them worked to support themselves and their families, while attending school.
He said that under the G.I. Bill such veterans couldn't receive full benefits because they were less educated.
UNDER THE PROVISIONS of the present G.I. Bill, accredited schools and universities are allowed to set their own criteria in certifying students as full-time students.
The six Kansas Board of Regents' schools are
nearly umassive in using nine hours a semester as their class-load criterion for certifying graduates
KU is the exception, requiring a 12-hour-a-
semester class load for full certification.
What this means, Bailey said, is that KU veterans receive fewer benefits under the G. Bill than student-veterans at other schools for the same number of semester hours.
He said the amount of benefits were based on a sliding scale. A KU veteran receives ($303) a month for taking nine hours, which is considered three-fourths time, yet a veteran taking nine hours at any other Regents' school receives full-time classification and receive $270 per month.
BAILEY SAID HE pointed out this inequity to the Campus Events Advisory Board several months ago as "a sounding board for advice on where to go from there."
William M. Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, suggested that Bailey write to 13 Midwest universities to find out how they handled the problem.
Because changing the work-load requirement would involve all graduate students, Bailey presented this information to the Graduate School Council (GSC) last week.
Seven of the 13 universities require nine hours or less for full-time graduate students.
Ellen Reynolds, executive coordinator of GSC, said GSC didn't have enough information to make a recommendation to the Graduate School. So a committee was formed to look into the possible consequences and advantages of changing the requirement.
BAILEY SAID THE Campus Veterans were faced with having to present a compelling argument for changing the requirement to the Graduate School. He said that so far, the veterans had been provided no reason for keeping the requirement the same, except "that's the way it's always been."
William J. Argersinger Jr., vice chancellor for research and graduate studies and dean of the graduate school, said there were several reasons why the institution should not delegate changes by the schools of the other Regents.
Arngersinger said KU differed from other schools in the number and variety of doctoral programs offered at the institution; programs have been recognized as outstanding at both the regional and national level, he said.
Argerstein said KU also had a historical advantage. He said the Graduate School, which was organized in 1896, was one of the first to formally have graduate programs.
THE BASIS OF a 12-hour requirement of full-time,
students in also a historical one. Arranger sold.
Years ago, graduate students who were engaged in full-time academic activities and were doing a lot of things besides coursework, were enrolled in nine hours on the average.
A full-time student is considered to be full-time in academic pursuits, Argersinger said and normally doesn't have any kind of competing activities, such as employment.
But the average graduate student usually has an assistantship or is working in the University.
considered full-time if he takes nine hours of course work and has a quarter-time teaching or research position or six hours of course work with a half-time position.
TO DETERMINE the number of graduate students, the University divides the number of graduate hours by nine and arrives at a figure with the full equivalent (FTE) student count.
The amount of state funds and student fees the University is authorized spend $ determined by the
Because graduate students who have teaching positions take fewer hours, nine was determined as the average hours a student was considered full-time.
Argeringsian said he wished the University could devise a system that looked at a student's work outside the University, and recognized it in determining full-time status.
Arsinger said this wasn't the same as saying anyone who took nine hours was full-time.
See VETERANS page 3
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Mike
CLOUDY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, April 14, 1976
Vol.86 No.123
Old parking lot soon to be part of Constant Park
Budget recommendations receive Senate approval
See page 3
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
The Student Senate approved and left unchanged last night budget recommendations for student organizations made by four standing committees.
The Senate had to adjourn before deciding the fate of the Student Service committee's budget, which will be considered at tonight's meeting.
In other action, a student health insurance contract and an official change in the Senate's funding of the forensics program were also passed.
A bill for the reinstatement of partial funding of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) through a student ticket subsidy was not presented.
TEDDE TASHEFF, student body president, called a special meeting of the Senate for tomorrow night to discuss the possible ticket subsidy, because Senators weren't notified in time to consider it at tonight's meeting.
She said she had planned to inform student senators about the bill before last.
ACADEMIC AFFAIRS Requested Allies.
Alpha Rho Gamma 853 $113
Architecture and Urban Design 683 $113
Black Tectos 686 $108
Black Tectos 2,201 $108
Air Armoration of Aeronautics and Air Armoration 900 $77
Black Business Council 900 $77
Black Business Student Council 3,200 $108
Black Business Student Council 3,200 $108
Kansan jobs open
Applications for editor and business manager of the Kansan for the summer and fall semesters will be accepted until noon Friday, April 16, in 105 Flint Hall.
Applications are available in 105 Flint, the
dean of women's offices, the dean of men's
offices.
The Knasan board will interview candidates and select the editors and business managers.
night's meeting adjourned, but it recused too quickly during the Student Services
The ticket subsidy bill wasn't on the Senate agenda or in the Record, the Senate's newsletter. According to the Senate's Revenue Code, senators must be notified in advance when an important piece of legislation is to be considered.
Therefore, the Senate would have had to have been notified about the bill last night to allow the senate to pass it.
Tasheff said she was preparing notices about the ticket subsidy bill for tomorrow's
LAST NIGHT's meeting was abruptly recessed during debate about Student Services recommendations for the Consumer Affairs Association.
Senators who opposed the Services budget recommendations disagreed with the committee's decision to cut a full-time director's salary.
Juli Anderson, student senator, supported Senate funding of a director's salary.
'If the Senate does not fund a full-time
Student Association for Combined Health 515 260
Engineering Student Council 418 1,778
Advancement of the Ace-warded Women Engineers 3,450 133
Administration of Civil Enginers 3,450 133
American Society of Civil Engineers 480 828
UK Federation of Student Social Workers 688 1,325
Black American Law Students Association 4,149 163
Black American Law Students Association 4,149 163
Women in Law 1,977 310
Undergraduate Project Association 1,977 310
Undergraduate Project Association 1,977 310
RACHEL FM Radio 10,004 10,924
Friends of the Unified Farm Club 100 8,054
Friends of the Unified Farm Club 100 8,054
KU FACilities 8,275 3,430
KU Facilities 8,275 3,430
University Corner Series 25,725 25,725
University Corner Series 25,725 25,725
International Club 8,980 1,715
International Club 8,980 1,715
KU Science Fiction Club 1,455 1,300
KU Science Fiction Club 1,455 1,300
The Times 2,825 1,220
The Times 2,825 1,220
Student Society and AUDIENTING 62,254 12,694
Student Society and AUDIENTING 62,254 12,694
The University Fund 11,717 7,117
director, the Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) will cease operations," she said.
Sue Smithe, president of the CAA board, said that if no additional funds, including outside funds, were found, the CAA would have to close by July 1.
The CAA HAS APPLIED for additional outside funding from the United Fund for four years and was denied each time. Tashseff reported. She said that the CAA was seeking revenue sharing, but wasn't sure if it would receive any money.
Jeff Rhoads, chairman of the Student
Jeff Rhoads, chairman of the Student
opposed total funding of a full-time degree.
opposed total funding of a full-time degree.
"I think it is very dangerous when you start funding salaries," he said, "because the next thing would be funding increases to salaries."
Rhodes said the organization served students and residents of the community and, therefore, the community should have access to learning of leaving the Senate to fund the program.
THERE WASN'T AS much discussion over the budget recommendations of the Finance and Auditing, Academic Affairs, Communications and Cultural Affairs
——The Academic Affairs Committee's budget was amended to include a breakdown of the Graduate Student Council's allocation for graduate organizations.
Ellen Reynolds, executive coordinator of GSC, said a $400 allocation to a sociology graduate organization was included in the GSC recommendation. An $800 request by Dr. Sander Hornung for the organization had been tabled earlier by GSC pending an extra budget hearing of the organization.
Reynolds said that the $400 that remained from $900 set aside for the organization was (R) $12,000.
KEVIN FLYNN, (Student Senate) executive secretary, recommended that the Senate select a new committee.
See SENATE page 2
Senate meeting smile
Mary Robinson
Jill Grubaugh, co-chairman of the Sports Committee, planned to speak before the Student Senate last night on the proposed KUAC
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
ticket subdued. Discussion of the subsidy was postponed, however,
ticket subdued. Discussion of the subsidy was postponed, however,
sad she is opposed to the proposed ticket subdued.
sad she is opposed to the proposed ticket subdued.
Employes surveyed want insurance
University employees apparently still favor the purchase of liability insurance coverage even if rates for some employees would be higher than planned.
In response to a questionnaire from Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, 519 of 637 employees (81 per cent) responded and indicated they would participate in the policy. The policy would be purchased with other Karasaa Board of Recents schools.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes will take the results of the survey to Friday's meeting in Washington, where he will give a speech.
comprising chancellors and presidents of the Regents institutions.
THE SURVEY WAS the second one since liability insurance for KU employees was first considered earlier this year. The latest survey was made following changes to make high-risk employees pay a larger portion of the policyl's cost.
The policy would protect KU employees at Lawrence and the KU Medical Center, against a "arising from medical activities," but they don't include medical malpractice insurance.
W. B. HARVEY
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Looking into the future
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, William Bailour, vice chancellor for student affairs and Edward Jallian, director of special events for Office of University Relations, attended yesterday's
Visual arts building construction underway
By MIKE THIESEN
Construction of the University of Kansas' new $7.5 million visual art building was officially started yesterday, although contractors have moved on to build the area and excavating for the foundation.
Outdoor ceremonies were held at the north edge of the construction site at the northwest corner of 15th and Naimshi Drive, between Marvin and Lindley Halls. The new building will be attached to Fowler Hall, which will be remodeled.
If the council does vote to purchase the policy, Shankel said, it would probably be unlawful.
Construction of the building, originally scheduled to begin in March 1975, was delayed for about a year when the first bids the state received were about $200,000 over the appropriated amount for the building. Changes were made in the architectural and structural specifications and new bids were accepted, with the $7.75 million appropriated for the building.
THE BUILDING IS now expected to be ready for occupancy in the fall of 1978.
Students and faculty from the University's visual arts departments, administrators from the Arts Department, and ministers were on hand for the brief ceremony, which included remarks by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and the unveiling of an artwork representing a building and a sign marking the construction.
Dykes said that the fine arts departments
would be more of a unit when the visual arts center was completed.
"The new building will enable us to pull together virtually all art and design departments"
The new building will have areas for painting, drawing and printmaking, sculpture, interior and industrial design, graphics design, illustration and film, weaving, ceramics, silversmith design and administration of exhibitions gallery and sculpture patio will be included.
James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said that placing the visual arts building in the center of the campus showed that "the School of Fine Arts is entering the mainstream of the university."
THE VISUAL ARTS division of the School of Fine Arts is now housed in 13 different locations on the Lawrence campus. Many of the structures which will be razed when the new building is completed. Other areas used by the visual arts department at the Hall and Broadcasting Hall will be remodeled.
THE FACILITY WILL contain about 115,000 square feet of new space in addition to the 29,613
The new building will be six levels high, but because of the terrain of the building site there will be only three full floors and three partial floors. The two additional floors north by Jayhawk Boulevard and Marvin Hall.
Shankel said Dykes had indicated there seemed to be enough interest among the state schools to purchase the policy, but it would take a final decision would be made Friday.
UNDER THE REVISED policy, Class I employees—including administrators, deans and directors—would be charged $100 a year. Class II employees—assistant deans, assistant directors and department chairmen—would pay $50.
Class III employees—including faculty with ranks of instructor through professor, and technicians at the Med Center—would be charged $25, and Class IV employees—students, teaching assistants, instructors and others not classified—would pay $ 25.
Under the original policy, Class I employees would have paid $17.Class II, $13.60;
Class III, $11.90.
CHANGES IN THE rates and re-classification of some employees were decided upon at the March Council of Presidents meeting.
Of the Class I, high-risk employees answering the latest survey, 59 indicated they would purchase the policy, while 12 said they wouldn't.
Parking permits to be discussed
Proposed higher parking fees will again be on the agenda when the University Council meets at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon in 108 Blake Hall.
The council approved revised parking and traffic regulations at its last meeting April 1 but, after a lengthy discussion on the fees, fewer than the 26 council members needed to take formal action on the fees remained at the meeting.
The council had been considering a new fee schedule proposed by the parking and traffic board which would increase the price of parking permits for the 1976-77 school year.
Under the board's schedule, universal parking permits would cost $50 annually; medical and handicapped permits, #4; blue and red zone permits, #38; brown and yellow zone permits, #32; green zone permits, #28; and residence hall permits, #17.
2
Wednesday, April 14, 1978
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
Hearst's luna collapses
SAN FRANCISCO - Patricia Hearst, the newspaper heirs convicted of joining her kidnappers in crime, has a collapsed lung, authorities said last night.
Heart was reported in good condition after undergoing minor surgery at 8:30 a.m. CST yesterday. San Mateo County Undersheriff Harold Barker said.
He didn't say at what facility the surgery on Hearst, convicted last month of bank robbery was done.
Barker said Heart complained of a respiratory problem about $16.10.
One of her attorneys, Al Johnson, said she underwent surgery for the total cost of $38,595.
Earlier, federal and state prosecutors met behind closed doors to discuss her potential role of informer, and it was reported she already has begun to provide
Drought loss hits farmers
WELLINGTON—The director of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service estimated more than 2,000 of the 3,000 farm operators in the champion wheat growing county in Kansas will file for and get disaster payments on their drought-ruined crop.
even then, director Merle Frame said, many wouldn't recover what it cost them to plant the seeds that didn't grow. Some will lose the added money then spend for it.
Frame has worked out these dimensions of the disaster in Sumner County, on the Oklahoma line below Wichita in south-central Kansas. Sumner has led Kansas in the production of wheat in the past 12 crop years, and in the latter five years has averaged 37 bushels to the acre.
Of the more than 480,000 acres planted to wheat last fall, 30,000 acres have been abandoned and the remainder will average only 14 bushels to the acre.
If the 37 bushel average could have been realized, production would have run more than 17 million bushels. Prospects now are for less than seven million. With wheat selling for $3.34 a bushel in Wellington yesterday, the potential loss was $36,740,000.
Senate re-enacts jobs bill
WASHINGTON—Ignoring warnings of a probable new veto, the Senate passed an emergency bill that works job bills to replace the one that President Obama selected earlier this year.
Ford vetoed the earlier, $6.1 billion measure on Feb. 13, calling it "little more than an election year pork barrel."
Backers said the full $3.3 billion would only be spent if employment reached 9 per cent. At the current jobless level of about 7.5 per cent, they said, the amount would be around $1.6 billion.
Bennett reviews public TV
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert F. Bennett declared yesterday he saw no reason to create a new bureaucracy for public television in Kansas.
Bennett said he would ask the state Board of Regents to study how best to proceed in expanding the state's public television system, and have them report on it.
The governor said he believes the state has the capability to develop existing television facilities at the state colleges and universities and the present three TV centers in Oklahoma.
Senate meeting . . .
— The Communications Committee's brief recommendations were passed with no异议.
—Cultural Affairs recommendations also were approved with little discussion.
from the Senate's unallocated funds.
Howevon he said he would wait and submit
their votes.
From nage one
—The Finance and Auditing recommendations were approved after an unallocated $1,065 was moved from a bank account to a Senate line item of supplies and expenses.
The student health insurance contract that was passed included major medical, education and child care benefits.
THE INSURANCE WILL be written by Blue Cross and Blue Shield, the only insurance company that applies for the CU Insurances Program. The chairman of the Health Advisory Board.
Sayers to stay on park board
CHICAGO (AP)--Gale Sayers, KU assistant athletic director, said yesterday he had no intention of resigning from the commissioners of the Chicago Park District.
A citizen's action group called Friends of the Parks has attacked Sayers on his poor attendance record at board meetings, saying it has become even worse since Sayers took a full-time position on the KU athletic department staff in 1973.
Sayers, a Lawrence resident and former Chicago Bears running back, told the board, "I am still a commissioner of the park district and will remain as long as Mayor Richard J. Daley says I'm a commissioner."
The price of insurance will increase next year from $121.20 to $156.36 for a single student policy, $251.88 to $339.96 for a two-year policy, and $368.84 to $511.92 for a family policy.
Kyle Ward, a Blue Cross and Blue Shield representative, said that such increases were common in other insurance groups this year.
He also said that Blue Cross and Blue Sailfoot lot $125,000 on the KU student health insurance.
Senate's funding of the KU forensics program was officially cut to a 10-cent rather than a 25-cent allocation of each student activity fee.
IN PRELIMINARY matters, Ed Rolfs, senator, said the formal recommendations of the Satellite Union Task Force will be at a student services meeting tomorrow.
The administration said last week that it would supplement funds it already gave forces. This resulted in a 15-cent increase in treatment activity fee, which now stands at $9.60.
New members of the Union Memorial Committee also were announced. They are Greg Bengston, Jon Josserand, Mary Lou Reece, Jeff Rhoads and Julie Riggs.
DR. RONALD J. KOEHN Chiropractor
Announces the Opening of His Office for the Practice of Chiropractic at:
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Architect combines biology and building
Information: 864-4934
By SUSAN BOLING
Dietrich said natural electromagnetic fields were produced by the sun and artificial fields were produced from lighting in many office buildings.
DETRICH SAID this was related to the artificial electromagnetic fields found in artificial environments where impulses produced an unfavorable effect on the biological system of organisms. He stressed that a balance between natural and artificial electromagnetic fields was essential in a building.
Dietrich said he found through his research 30 per cent more disease in high-risk patients.
The increasing use of artificial materials in construction has caused a decline in the relationship between man and his environment, Richard Dierich said last night.
Dietrich, who spoke to about 30 people in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, is visiting the University as part of a lecture sponsored by the German Cultural Institute.
An experiment done by scientists on pigs, Dietrich said, has demonstrated the biophysical effect that a building's environment has on pigs. Man们 were placed in surroundings similar to those of an office building, where they saw the pigs deteriorated and proved to be dependent on the construction of the pen, Dietrich said.
An example of a threatening architectural environment is a high-rise building, Dietrich said. In a study of large and small cities, he said, it was shown that people in large cities have a 52 per cent decrease in disease than people in smaller cities.
"Solar radiation is extremely important for vitalism." Dietrich said. "The influence of sunlight is related to the hormonal process of the body."
Dietrich said, "I'm not saying you should constantly expose yourself in the sun, but you should expose your skin."
"The most healthy animals were in the pens constructed with old-fashioned materials such as wood or brick," Dietrich said.
ELLIOTT GOULD DIANE KEATON PAUL SORVINO
R
The traditional Japanese house is the perfect example of the relationship between land and people.
Ditrich said that it was possible to build a cool and comfortable house without expensive construction.
"THE OUTSIDE and inside of the house melt into each other," Dietrich said. "The natural forces of the sun and wind relate in nature to create an effective way in conditioning the house."
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AURH
AURH STUDENT POSITIONS
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THESE OFFICES-
AURH, Dean of Men, Dean of Women and Housing, THE ARE DUE APRIL 21. THE POSITIONS MUST BE FILLED WITH A RETURNING HALL RESIDENT. Applications will be screened before interviews which will start April 21.
ACADEMIC RESOURCE CENTER COORDINATOR—
This is a ten hour a week job for someone who qualifies for WORK STUDY. The wage is $20 PER HOUR. There are 30 PER QUESTION requested in addition to a typing skill of 35 words per minute or better. Part of the duties will be updating information on a central purchasing plan. In addition the ARCZ will work with ARC's to develop policies and procedures RSSP and catalogs all AURH resource materials with the office secretary. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and encourages all qualified men and women to apply.
OFFICE SECRETARY—
This position requires that the individual be in the AURH office from 9 a.m. until 12 noon every week day. The individual must qualify for WORK STUDY and be able to TYPE 60 MONITE OR BETTER than an AURH knowledge of knowledge of office machines are requested. A knowledge of short-hand would be helpful, but not necessary. WAGE IS $2.20 PER HOUR.
In addition to the above responsibilities it is also necessary that the employer responds for AURH and the Board of Appeals, AURH is an equal opportunity employer and enlisted qualified men and women to apply.
FOUR 1976 SUMMER INTERNS—
These positions will be for June and July and pay $250 per month. Room and Board will be provided at Oliver Hall. A list of charges is available wherever applications are picked up. Applications should show the student's blue card and indicate that she or he is recommended, considered acceptable, AURH asks that applicants consider taking only 3-4 hours of summer school while working as an intern. Experience from living in a residence hall is also required, and an opportunity employer and encourages all qualified men and women to apply.
COMMITTEES, BOARDS,
EMPLOYMENT COORDINATOR—
XX Pearson Trust Committee
XX Auditial Record
XX Board of Appeals X
Campus Affairs X
Housing Services >
Contracts >
Programming >
Employment Coordinator
X Committee Chair is open
XX Committee Membership is open
Selling something? Call us.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 14.1976
3
City okays park land purchase
By JANET SCHMIDT
An agreement to purchase land from the Kansas university Endowment Association for the creation of a city park was approved by the Lawrence City Commission.
In a 5- vote, the commission agreed to pay $42,000 to the Endowment Association for a blacktoped area directly north of bth, and pay $16,000 to the Endowment Association. The park will be called Constant Park.
The purchase of land for Constant Park is part of a city plan to develop riverfront land, nearly north of 6th and extending along the Sacramento River, tracks to the city water plant on Indiana.
The park is named in honor of Tommy Constant, a local builder who left the city $250,000 for a park when he died several years ago.
Of that $2,000, $6,000 has already been spent by the city to purchase four lots east of the station.
In other action, the commission deferred a decision to the Park and Recreation Department to alleviate an alleged shortage of baseball facilities at the Holcom Sports
Complex behind Gibson Discount Center.
Representatives from several local baseball and softball leagues appeared before the commission to protest the use of the baseball diamonds at the sports complex.
Walt Hokw and Tom Murray of the Louie Holom Baseball League (a youth hardball league), said the league's time on the field was being usured by softball teams.
"The city has allowed to many softball teams to materialize," Houk said. "We think it's grossly unfair to put softball on diamonds used by the league for practice."
"If the commission allows this, the team can win that can be drawn over a commission or over baseball." Hokai said there were 175 teams in Lawrence; about 130 of the teams were in Boston.
Fred DeVictor, director of the park and recreation department, said priority in the use of the diamonds should go to both softball and hardball teams' tournaments.
DeVitor said that the number of softball teams using the diamonds should be limited to a maximum of 20 players.
Commissioner Carl Mibek said the problem was the use of the diamonds by adult teams. He said youth teams should be given preference.
Dean Burkhead, Lawrence resident and lawyer, agreed with Mibec, but said he was concerned that the Holcom league seemed to use the diamonds more.
could use other diamonds in Lawrence for practices.
Burkhead said he has had to represent too many juveniles in the city court.
"I feel that if we can get the youth to participate—get them off the streets and into the baseball park—we won't have so many in juvenile court," he said.
In other commission business, the commission approved an application to request $29,200 from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Of that $29,200, $100,000 has been committed by the city to construction of low-cost housing in addition $285,000 has been allocated to Loop which will run through East Lawrence and connect the downtown area with the proposed U.S. 98 bypass east of Lawrence.
Of the four diamonds at the sports complex, two diamonds can be used on specific nights for baseball and softball leagues in Lawrence. At other times, all games are played, including Holcom, the American Legion and men's softball teams.
POEMS WANTED
THE KANSAS SOCIETY OF POETS is compiling a book of poems. If you have written a poem and would like our selection committee to con-ference publication, send your poem and a self-dressed stained scalloped envelope to:
Veterans
From page one
For example, a graduate student who may teach half-dime at another school would be given the same consideration as a teacher who worked half-dime for the University.
Argersinger said some of the ramifications of lowering the full-time load would be that many students would lower their own load, even if before the change, they had been taking 12 hours. He said this was because of programs, which wasn't usually a wise move.
The teams prefer the diamonds at Holcom because they are regulation size, are lighted at night and are in better condition than on the court. Hank Booth, 1731 W. 230 Tet., said.
"We would have to make individual students longer said. "But the students are worth it."
Bailey said many campus veterans weren't aware that requirements for fulltime graduate students at KU were higher than other schools.
To make them more aware, the Campus Veterans are manning a table in front of Wescoe Terrace on Wednesday and Thursday. They have a petition to be
--signed by all graduate students to lower the requirements.
Mayor Fred Pence moved that the commission leave the decision to the park and recreation department, and work on it to build more baseball and softball facilities.
He said there was an increasing concern about graduate veterans getting less benefits.
MODE JOHNSON, a member of the committee to study the change and also a student-veteran, said he favored the change.
Southside Church of Christ 25th & Missouri
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REGISTRATION FOR CLASS OF '77 Committee Chairperson and Committees
If you are interested register on Thursday, April 15 or Friday, April 16 at the Alumni Association Office room 103 in the Union.
Interviews will be the following week.
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4
Wednesday, April 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
SCHOOLS
SEGREGATED
Mix private schools
Since the Supreme Court's landmark decision in Brown v. Topeka Board of Education in 1954, the federal government has been in the process of actively intervening in public schools to achieve racial integration. Now the Justice Department is urging the court to exert more enforcement assistance to public schools. The court has agreed to review a case involving two black students who were denied admission to two all-white private schools in the Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C.
THE JUSTICE Department decided to file a brief as a friend of the court because it thought the growth of all-white private schools could lead to two school systems—one white and rich, the other integrated and poor. The specific law at issue is an 1866 statute broadly guaranteeing all citizens equal rights.
A few years ago it would have been a simple matter to line up all librarians in sight to support the broadest court decision possible for extensive desegregation of private schools. But now that intervention of the federal government into private affairs has become associated with the ominous presence of Big Brother, this issue will require more painful deliberation. Certainly neither librals nor conservatives have dissolved into closet
racists over night, but they have begun to take action. The government in regulating private affairs,
THUS THE ISSUE has become clouded. If government can intervene in private schools, what are its limits? If private schools are immune to desegregation, are public schools consigned to second-rate status? The 1866 statute says that all persons shall be free from compulsory contracts. That could presumably apply to private schools, provided the court finds the statute constitutional.
Racism has proved to be extremely difficult to overcome when it has lain hidden deep within the minds of individual citizens, expressing itself subtilly, yet forcefully. Effectively it is not always possible to situation discriminates is often difficult even when the facts of the case are clear on their face.
Such pragmatic considerations will probably enter into the court's decision. But no matter how difficult may be the implementation of the constitutional law of the land, racism and unequal educational opportunities are too fun-loving and illiberally threatened by tradition for segregation, even in private schools, to be tolerated.
By John Hickey 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.
"Hello, I'm John and I got your name from the uh .."
"BOCO Computer Date Mate right?" was the response.
Date match incompatible
So began many an unsure computer date call. Some of the conversations improved, others struggled along until the end. For some matchups, the phone call was the only contact established. Others arranged to meet with the person this was done to see what type of person a computer would decide was a compatible match.
FOR THE 1,200 students involved in the matchup, the whole affair got off to a rocky start. First, a delay in obtaining the names caused some to believe that the project was a hoax and was convicted of unauthorized university students out of $3.50. Finally, the names arrived the evening before the day of the scheduled dance. There was hardly any time to get anything arranged.
But the舞衣 was carried out as scheduled. Of the 400 people there, some were with dates, others carried their lists and for matches, but many seemed to just wander around.
EVERYTHING DIDN'T end with the dance, though. Since then, many matches have met in various places and have been played. One thing that has come from the matchups is that people have discovered which areas of campus are most adaptable for finding someone you've never seen or encountered. That discovery that, when meeting in crowds, carrying a fencing foil can be as effective, if not more so, as wearing a red rose. If someone has met you with the matchup, I can say that it has been interesting. I did it for the fun of it and it has been fun. I've met some nice guys even though I didn't get matched up. (One girl) claims she did. At least he was a close enough fascimile to make her happy.) I also didn't get matched up with a friend of my fifth-grade class (this also happened to me).
with was someone who was more compatible with me when he was a stranger. When he called me up and spoke part of the time in an English accent, sometimes in a German accent,
What it led to was a meeting with him and his friend during which it was revealed that his friend's major accomplishment was eating a MacDonald's hamburger in one bite. What the
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
and 80 on shared interests, but
it's the 14 on attitudes and
values that makes them totally
incompatible.
THE GAME SEEMS to be coming to an end. The number of phone calls is dwindling and it now appears that if I want to talk, only eleven people on my list may have to take the initiative.
and sometimes with no accent at all, I should have left well enough alone and hung up. But I didn't.
My list contained, like many of the female participants, the maximum of 15 names. Many of the male participants received only four or six names. This was because the woman who completed the application, 2.6 men completed it. There were 191 participants.
meeting showed was that on a compatibility scale of one to one hundred, two people can rate 93 on background and appearance
mostly male, who received fewer than three names and will be refunded their money.
PEOPLE SEEM to be loo- at the experience with varying reactions. Some are glad it's finally over, others are still boping to meet the rest of their matches.
Care to place your bets on the outcome of the game?
I didn't go into the affair expecting to find "Mr. Right." did it because of curiosity and for some excitement. And after I learned he was doing the bad, I think it was worth it. After all, I might have gone through life never knowing that there is someone who can act as a hamburger in one bite—of course, he had to fold it first.
"CLOSE BY THE STURY BATSHAN THE BALL UNHEEDEN SPEED, 'PRIMARIES DINT MY STYLE',
SAID HUBILE, 'STRIKE ONE, THE UMPIRE SAID.'
Job hunt disheartens seniors
It's that time of year again. The flowers are blooming, papers and tests are cropping up and the average senior at the University of Kansas is frantically searching for a job.
Not that this is any recent
dergling an economic recovery during the past year, but most experts are predicting that even fewer jobs will be available for workers who work in a fact, one said smugly on TV the other night that it used to be
By Betty Haegelin Associate Editor
Supposedly we've been un-
concern, KU seniors have always looked for jobs. But not when a competent group had to search, really search for employment. And maybe never before have they had to search so fran-
that all you needed to get a good job was a college degree and reasonable aptitude in your field, and that you must graduate, he said, must be able "to walk on water without falling" and must have friends. My friends were not amused.
And neither was I. I realize that a university is not a trade school and its graduates shouldn't feel that they're entitled to a job automatically. But after four years of hard work, you're in the right courses, even when you'd like to take pads—you should be able to expect something from the system.
Don L. Smith, the Kansan's Washington correspondent, and I have been developing a theory in recent years and I think it's finally time to test it on the public. Our theory is very
and you're devouring an incredibly delicious peanut butter and jelly sandwich, you might feel that you've got the ball first and 10 on the other team's 15-yard line. On the other hand, if
In my biased research, a majority of this year's crop is still searching. Most of my best friends only one has landed a full-time job for next year. It's not really that my friends are incompetent, but that there just seem to be any jobs opening up.
I don't find it at all humorous to pull into a gas station and find a KU French grad pumping petrol. Neither am I overcome by great gales of mirth upon seeing you compared to an elementary education major's—one who has found a job, that is.
Sometimes their despair is well-hidden. They can laugh at their predicament, recall the number of letters they've sent and tell by their checkbooks which they've spent on resumes.
simple. It's based on the idea that life is like a football game. When you look at your life as a football game, it’s often much describe your feelings and the situations in which you find yourself.
Some even make wagers on when they're likely to land a job . . . always taking the negative of the bet. Then there are those who don't talk about it. They're tired of having to tell their parents, "No, I haven't heard from anybody yet," and even more friends by making up excuses that sound like excuses.
But all the same there's pain behind the laughter and bitterness in the silence. One one's ego is helped by a letter that says you're not wanted, no matter how nicely its phrased. And a placement director telling you that you should have
FOR EXAMPLE, if you've just aced a midterm in biology
you're taking 20 hours of classes this semester so that you can graduate and then with two weeks to go you're informed that you need 22 hours, you have your defense backed up with have your defense backed up against the goal with a first down on the two yard line.
Gridiron politics faces fourth and 45
After awhile you start thinking in these terms constantly. Your life is a football game. But our research has indicated that a more highly developed application of the football theory is found in politics. In looking at politics you have to consider how people egg" question. Which came first, politics or football?
MANY PLAYERS have made the transition from football to politics. Jack Kemp, former quarterback for the Buffalo Bills and a member of U.S. House of Representatives, Howard Cassel has been considered a possible candidate for the Senate. And everyone knows of President Ford's link with the game, how he turned down a job at Fox News and how he played one too many games without a helmet.
In politics there are ratings
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
and polls and betting, just like the NFL. Predictions are another big part of both football and basketball. Prudential College Scoreboard, you watch Walter Cronkite's Election Night Results. Both sports have underdogs and have no political analysts are just like their counterparts in pro football. They don't know anything, at least not as much as they do in the NFL, but their own variation of the draft.
IN COLLEGE football, jocks often have the reputation of not having much "upstairs." Most college players also hold true for politicians.
Of course the political world has its rookies and its veterans, too. There's always a guy like Jerry Brown trying to break into the line-up. There are others like Hubert Humphrey, who
have been knocked around the league for years, but who just love the game so much they never play at home. Also those politicians who are team players and those who are simply in it for their own glory. That old master of the hidden rules was an example of perfect example of the latter.
STRATEGY PLAYS just as big a part in politics as it does in football. The coach and manager are essential to a winning candidate. If you want to make it to the playoffs and eventually the Super Bowl, you have to test the defense of your team. You need to find a weakness. And when you find that weakness you have to hit hard and fast with the right play.
THE FOOTBALL theory has really crystalized in recent weeks with the resurgence of
In the world of international politics, defense is the key. This may be the point where the United States defeats the football analogy. They forget that global politics isn't a game. If you push the other country back so far that it thinks it's fourth grade, you shouldn't stay with the ground attack. They'll go with the Bomb!
that famous old cheer, "We're Number One!" Ronald Reagan has challenged the defensive statistics of the United States, and had been called to defense. He has said that we're the toughest, and we intend to stay that way. Democratic hopeful Henry Jackson has also gotten into the act. He says that if he were to be selected as vice president into Lebanon to help keep the peace there.
a job is no substitute for the real thing.
In fact, the statistics of the game probably hurt as much as the statistics of a hit, suggesting to know that you're among some distasteful numerical nuisances, and perhaps being drawn to articles such as this.
For it's being written by one of those "lucky" persons who isn't searching for a job. You see, I'm among the growing region of seniors who are oiting for grad school, either because they want to do something or we want to do something that requires further education.
My case, naturally, is among the latter. At present I'm agonizing over a choice between two law schools; heckly two law schools, that's how it seems. I'm only putting off for another three years the mad
dash for a job. Law, so I'm told,
is another of the many fields
that is simply being glutted.
So how do you win such a game? Do you simply lie and say you never really wanted to work in your field anyway? Do you check out the job prospects before ever enter the school or college? Do you ask to sigh with it and take your chances with what you've got?
Of course, nobody but we unemployed or soon-to-be-unemployed seniors have to be at the forefront of the market will surely improve by the time that the rest of you graduate. And even if it doesn't, you've got it all planned so you'll be one of the lucky ones to be the job or gets into the graduate school your choice, right?
Sure, buddy, sure. Anything you say.
An All-American college newspaper
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--864-4810
Business Office--864-4258
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
daily, second-class postage paid at Law-
donation periods. Second-class postage paid at Law-
donation periods. $12 per semester or $18 a year in Douglas County and $1 a year in Goulden County. Subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through the U.S. Postal Service.
Editor Carl Young
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Betty Haegelin Yael Abel叭alkah
Betsy Hargenl
Associate Campus Editor
Associate Campus Editors
Greek Back
George Back
Stewart Paper
Photo Editor
Staff Photographers
George Millman
David Creshaw,
Sports Editor
Allen Quakebush
Associate Sports Editors
Stewart Support
Entertainment Editors
Mary Ann Hudsonston,
Mary Ann Hudsonston,
Jamie Mauger
Artist
Weselph News Editors
John Hickey, Brendan Anderson,
Wire Editor
Kelly Scott, Chuck Alexander,
Contributing Writers
John Johnston, Jim Bates
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Linda Babbage
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager Assistant Admin Manager Advertising Manager Claimed Manager Debbie Service Manager Promotion Director Scott Bush Promotion Director Assistant Manager Assistant Manager Identified Manager Joanne Marquardt Identified Manager
Publisher
News Advisor David Day
Business Advisor Suzanne Shaw
Mel Adams
Member Associated Collegiate Press
old,
colds,
l.
a.
and d.
to
Do
or
our
your
not?
we?
job
by
you
in't,
ness
the
ceeing
5
Wednesday, April 14, 1976
University Dally Kansan
'The Consumer Advocate' ends
The Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) terminated its half-hour television program, "The Consumer Advocate," last month. Katherine Duggar and Judy Krogeran CAA陪记者上Monday.
The Cablevision program was seen at 6:30 Monday nights. It was devoted to the discussion and investigation of consumer television programs. University and Lawrence communities.
Kroger said the program took a lot of time to plan, write and produce, and she was ready to go.
BESIDES PRODUCING "The Consumer Advocate," Kroeger said she handled all complaints and inquiries of persons seeking consumer-related information, did all general office work and handled public relations and consumer education.
Kroeger said she questioned whether Cablevision had been reaching many people, which was another reason for ending the program.
She said she didn't think that the talk
was funny. The woman akaused her
very interesting for a bachelor's
THE PROGRAM HAD presented topics as varied as used car sales, vegetarian diet and gardening.
Kroger said she preferred using shorter spots on the radio. She is working on getting people familiar with different areas of interest could answer listeners' questions.
Michael Murphey to perform at Hoch
Michael Murphy will appear in concert with Emmylou Harris at the University of Chicago.
Murhey, who recorded the songs
Wildfire in Hoch Audorfjunior
in Hoch Audorfjunior
CAA currently provides five radio stations with consumer information tips on a regular basis.
General admission tickets may be purchased at the SUA office.
During the fall 1975 semester, the past director of CAA, Carol Bobe Strohbein, an eight-week radio program broadcast on Audi Reader called "Consumer Report."
Kroger said that she was interested in to get more communication between
`IF CONSUMERS could understand better what goes on in businesses, there are few alternatives.
businesses and consumers through similar programs.
She has approached the University department of radio, television and film (RTVF) with the idea of producing another Cablevision program.
Citizens' meeting tomorrow
The first meeting of a five-week experiment on citizen contact with Lawrence city commissioners will be tomorrow at 7 noon in the conference Room in the First National Bank.
Mayor Fred Pence will be available to address problems and bear complaints from residents.
The commission plans to continue the Thursday night sessions with each commissioner taking turns in alphabetical order at leading the discussion. Commissioners of the Board of Governors
Pence proposed the sessions at last week's commission meeting because he said he had heard many people complain that the community movement was too removed from the community.
He said he chose Thursday night because the district's traditional night residents shopped downtown.
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An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer
George E. Nettles Jr., Pittsburgh, was elected executive vice president for the coming year. Regional vice presidents are William S. Kanaga, Greenwich, Conn.; Lawrence Hickey Jr., Aden, Okla., and Philip F. Anschutz, Denver.
Docking, president of the Union State Bank of Arkansas City, currently serves as executive vice president of the Alumni Association and is honored from KU in 1948 with a business degree.
Robert Docking, former Kansas governor from Arkansas City, has been elected national president of the University of Kansas Alumni Association for 1976-77. He will succeed William C. Douce of Bartlesville, Okla.
Docking elected Alumni president
SUN TRAVEL
Docking was elected as the 38th governor of Kansas in 1966 and became the only person to hold four two-year terms as the state's governor, leaving office in 1974.
They will take office after the Alumni Association Board meeting, scheduled for May 22 in conjunction with KU commencement activities.
V
HAPPY B-DAY
KAREN O'K
Here's what you wanted
I didn't delay
They're not real but anyway
You and Coors
always make my day
AIRPORT
Travel Arrangements by SUA/MaupIntour Call 864-3477 For More Information
Departing June 16 to Paris Returning on August 12 from London PAN AM 707
$391.75 $
★ pro-rata share of charter including taxes and administrative fee; subject to change
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SUA Committee Chairperson Interviews 1976-77
April 21-26 at 6:30 PM
SPECIAL EVENTS
-publicity chairman
-local concerts chairman
-concerts coordinator chairman
(security, ushers)
PUBLIC RELATIONS
-summer orientation chairman
-publications chairman
-fall orientation week
-travel fair chairman
TRAVEL
-library chairman
-group flight chairman
-general trips chairman
-publicity chairman
... Spring Break ski trip
... Christmas ski break
... Padre Island
. . Orientation Shuttle
... Green River Trip
... Bahamas (Christmas)
... Mardi Gras
-poetry hour chairman
-Kansas Union Gallery chairman
-picture lending chairman
-library chairman
... K-State Football
FINE ARTS
FREE UNIVERSITY
-instructor coordinator
-publicity chairman
-catalogue chairman
OUTDOOR RECREATION
-wilderness discovery chairman
-mountaineering-backpacking chairman
-canoe club chairman
-travel and recreation chairman
-travel and recreation chairman
INDOOR RECREATION
-head coordinator "advertising"
-Quarterback Club
-air hockey
Sign up in the SUA office beginning April 12.
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
For Information contact the SUA office 864-3477
6
Wednesday. April 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Artist presents eccentrics' pa
By CAROL HOCHSCHEID
Staff Writer
Michael Brown has combined his comedy writing talents and intensive historical research to create a program of "history without tears."
Brown's "Great American Nut Show," a program of songs, stories and graphic displays about 12 eccentrics in American life, was presented last night in Woodruff Auditorium.
Brown said yesterday he hoped to share his "enthusiasm for these mice" with his
Each of the characterizations Brown presents in his show is the product of serious research. He said his detailed study of the person led to placing where the person had lived.
Brown said the show, which he wrote to
the film palatable "took two years to
put to toe."
His research interest in the notorious American characters included in the show grew into a fascination with their lives and personalities, he said.
John Dillinger was actually a very personable, witty man. Brown said.
Contrary to popular legend, "there is no evidence that Dilinger ever shot at anyone at the game."
Calvin Coolidge has been misrepresented by history as an unintelligent man, Brown said. But the truth is that Coolidge just saw the world through a window how smart he really was, Brown said.
He said Lizzie Borden was charged with the "most famous crime in American history," but possibly wasn't actually responsible for the murders of her family.
"It's that one per cent of chance that a may have been innocent that makes this a real problem."
Several years ago, Brown wrote the song "You Can't Chop Your Poppa up in Massachusetts" to commemorate Lizzie's horrible legend.
These and other 'misers, murderers,
frumps and frauds' are exposed in Brown's
show which, he said, presents "tragedy as
comedy and defeat as well as triumph."
Brown travels with all of the equipment necessary for his show. He said he was going to have to revise last night's performance slightly because of the limitations of the narrow stage in Woodruff Auditorium.
"I used to want things to go wrong on stage. Then the performance ceases to be so much enjoyable."
Brown was a nightclub performer for
the band's first album. He then
stole to write for other performers.
"I saw the light. I'm an early morning person, and I a performer's day doesn't end with that," she said.
He also said his style of performing was best suited to the theaters, "where people come strictly to perform a show," rather than socializing atmosphere found in nightclubs.
Violinist's 'intimate' music performed tonight at Hoch
"The nature of things I do demands attention," he said.
"Making music is, well, it's a very intimation. I like to share it and feel that the audience gets a communication that is described in words," says Eugene Fodor.
Fodor, internationally acclaimed violinist, will demonstrate his musical philosophy at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium. Fodor's performance will be the last performance in this season's KU Concert Series.
Fodor, 26, began his career when he was 15 and as a soloist with the Denver Symphony.
WHILE IN HIGH school, he studied with Harold Wippler, past concert master of the Denver Symphony, who described Fodor as an 'expert performer who didn't put on a show.'
In 1972, Fodor placed first in the Pagani
Competition in Genoa, Italy. He is the
second American to win this award named
took over on Pagani, a 19-cycle Italian
violinist.
In 1974, Fodor became the first Western
Sales high for SUA concert
SUA spokesman said yesterday that initial response to the April 29 concert featuring Bonnie Raitt and Mose Allison was very good.
Ticket sales indicate there should be a sizable crowd at the concert in Hoch Auditorium, Mike Miller, SUA adviser, said.
Reserved seat tickets are still available in the SUA店 and at area record stores.
Four ticket sales were responsible for the
event. Laura Nyro tour and her
appearance at KU
viliolist to receive a top honor in the Tatakovsky Competition in Moscow. No first place award was given, but Fodier tied with two Russian violiolists for second place.
BUBEED THE MIC "Mick Jagger of Classical Music" by people magazine, Fodor has appeared on the "Today" show and "The Mike Douglas Show," and has performed with orchestras throughout the United States. He also has performed in Europe.
Fodder said he liked to practice on his Colorado ranch because "it's like a large
KU students will be admitted free with ID cards and current registrations.
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University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
Qualifications
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
"The city has such energy. You wake up in the morning and the first thing you hear is a ringing bell."
Born in Mexin, Brown said he's
a New Yorker and enjoys living in
a big city.
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
But Brown said he had not found any derogatory rumors he had heard about Kansas to be true.
pasts
Brown said he has traveled 23,000 miles with his "Great American Nut Show," performing for a wide range of audiences besides college students.
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Wednesday, April 14, 1976
7
University Daily Kansan
Construction at KU follows plan
By MIKE THIESEN
Staff Writer
Although Mount Oread probably adds to the beauty and uniqueness of the University of Kansas, it also adds to the problems of distribution and production and the flow of traffic on campus.
R. Keith Lawton, director of facilities planning, said yesterday that a long-range physical development plan used by the University helped administrators decide to place new buildings, where parks are located, how much land should be left open for schools and recreation areas and how traffic could best be moved across the campus.
Lawton said that in 1973 the Kansas Legislature told all state colleges and
On Campus
**TONIGHT:** Students participate in the FRENCH SUMMER LANGUAGE INSTITUTE will meet at 7 in the International University of Kansas. **Kansas** Union, Vocalist EIGENE GOLENGE will perform at Auditorium. **ARTHUR C. TOWNSEND**, director of the Elizabeth M. Watkins Museum will speak on "Kansas at the Centennial" 8 in the Spencer Lecture Center. **ARTHUR C. STYLE SHOW** will be at 8 in the Wakksin College of the Union. announcements
Events...
A retraining program required of all persons with RED CROSS WATER taught in a nightlight at Robinson Natalatorium Apr. 20, 22, 27 Swimmers must attend all four sessions.
Men's and w.men's INTRAMURAL
MEMBERS may be pickup in 208 Robbinsy
Grants and Awards...
JIM PRENTICE, Turon senior, has been named the national conference speaker of the year by Delta Sigma Rho-Tau Kappa Alpha, the honorary forensic fraternity. This is the first time a KU debater has won the award.
The Kansas incorrectly reported yesterday that the University-wide grade point average during 1973 was 3.090. It was 2.920.
Correction . . .
universities to prepare coordinated development plans for the Board of Regents. Guidelines were made for all students in Kansas when reviewing their own plans.
KU already had a good long-range development plan, according to Lawton, so a Houston consulting firm was hired to evaluate, update and readjust the plan the University had before it was presented to the Regents.
Lawton said that long-range planning at KU was almost pe-cetational and that the 1973 plan was not based on data, but says that representatives from the entire University periodically review it to be sure.
The projected land-use plan that was presented to the Regents in 1973 set aside recreational and scenic open spaces where they could best harmonize with the areas of high activity, and still leave space for future construction.
Once the need for a new building is determined by the University, Lawton said, it could still be years before that building was ready to be occupied.
Each year University administrators meet to determine what priorities should be funded during the fiscal year, Lawton said. Once the priorities are determined, the university requests for financing the buildings to the Regents, the governor and the legislature.
Lawton said the University then had to justify its priorities to show that a need for new construction really existed. It can take a number of years for a building to be finished, even after it has reached the priority stage, he said.
As an example, Lawton won, the computer service facility was made a top priority about two years ago. Last year the legislature gave KU funds to plan the facility; this year funds were granted to the university. After summer before the plans would be approved and early fall before bids would be let and construction could begin.
*From the time a new building is made a priority to the time it is completed could be freed.*
Lawton said the plan presented to the Regents in 1973 accounted for the needs of the University through the 1980s. Land use and site planning at KU anticipated the possible locations for construction that coordinated with the development plan.
Construction sites are chosen by the discipline and the function of the facility as well as how close it should be to the central location. It is important that many students will use it, Lawton said.
The new visual arts center is being built near Marvin and Murphy halls so that the architecture department, the fine arts and art department, are in the new building, according to Lawn.
He said that the long-range development plan also included parking and traffic movement so that "students and faculty are not forced to enter the parking area or temptation of continuous traffic on the hill."
Lawton said he thought the campus would probably always have controlled parking to make the campus function efficiently. He said the parking lots off the central campus were very large, enough to campus for students to walk to their classes and near facilities designed for
--spectator events, such as football and basketball games and musical events.
FREE KURLY—"KU" Fries with each Sandwich Order at King Pretzel
Serving Hot Protzels and Sandwiches Coors on Tan
Planning also is done with consideration to building repairs, Lawton said, but these are done on a much shorter and faster cycle than cyclone or construction. Priorities on the repairs and the University has to justify their need to the legislature, he said.
Lawton said that they never forgot that education was their profession when planning a new building or setting long-range goals.
"We always have an eye to serve the student and faculty; that's our business," he said.
(40c value)
FREE KURLY—"KU" Fries with each Sandwich Order
(40° value)
COUPON
SPECIAL
Porsche 350
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
Tues.-Wed.-Thurs.
KING PRETZEL
900 Indiana
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
JAMES GANG
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
304 Locust 843-0808
M-F 8-5:30 Sat. 8-12
MISTER
GUY
spring '76 in clothes from Mister Guy . . . university of kansas contemporary traditionalist
whispears
WHISPEARS are a totally new concept in contem-
porary pierced earrings. Made of surgical steel, they
are non-allergenic and safer to wear than 14 kt. gold.
Designed with semi-precious stones of:
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BRIMAN'S
open thursday nights till 8:30
BANK AMERICARD
* MASTER CHARGE
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743 Massachusetts • 843-4366
OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS
leading jewelers
THE COTTON STORY
Goldnecker Optical
SAN MIGUEL DE LA CONCEPCIÓN, N.J. AUGUST 20TH, 1974
Sorry for the inconvenience. Our workmen were off schedule but,
finally we are done remodeling.
In appreciation, to all our old
and new friends who waited to
get their glasses until we re-
opened, we are having a big
GRAND OPENING SALE.
For one week everything in
the store is a full 20% off.
FRAMES - SUNGLASSES -
R-EYEGLASSES - LENSES -
FUNGLASSES.
EVERYTHING 20% OFF!
Sale ends Tuesday April 20
742 Mass. St.
Final Shoe Clearance Begins Today
Everything from Gum Sole Sport Shoes to Platforms. Choose from famous names like: Baretrap, Shoestring, Cortinas, Bort Carlton, Joan and David. Regularly $30.00
$9.99-$12.99
Use your Carousel charge, Master Charge, or BankAmericard
Mon.-Thurs. 10-8:30
Fri. and Sat. 10-6
711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center
carousel
8
Wednesdav. April 14, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Kansas takes two from Ichabods
In other years, Floyd Temple would have been concerned.
His University of Kansas baseball team was behind, 3-4, and there were only two
But Temple has confidence in his hitters this season. He knew his Jayhawks would come back, and they did. KU overcame a 3-0 deficit in both games of a doubleheader to crunch Washburn, 11-3 and 8-3, yesterday in Topeka.
Temple, whose Jayhawns now at 15-8 have equaled last year's victory total, said, "Nam, I know these guys, and they've come back before. But I guess I was a little concerned in that first game because we didn't score until the fifth innings."
The Jayhawks didn't just score in the fifth, they punched across seven runs, thanks to five walks by Washburn starter Larry Mikel.
Centerfielder Monty Holbs hitsted it off for the Jayhawks by drawing a walk. Third baseman Mark Hannan also walked, and then rightfielder Brian Moyer singled to
load the bases. Shortstop Lee Ice sent the merry-go-round spinning by doubling in on the back.
Rob MacDonald followed with a double to knock in Moyer and Ice. There were more fireworks in the inning, and when it was all over, Moyer put on his four hits. And they also had the ballgame.
Kevin Kerschen, normally a reliever, picked up the win for Kansas, hurling the first five innings. Rob Allender, tuning up before his start at K-State Saturday,
sports
it—that gave the Jayhawks their big boost. First baseman Carl Henrik began things reaching bases on an error. Hobbs returned the ball down a bunt and then Moyer blasted a two-run double. Ice decided to imitate Webster's act, and he too reached on a bunt. Mac's return was not a bounce.
finished up for the Jayhawks. Kerschen is now 40 this season.
The second game was much the same. KU
stopped and waited for the storm back
[or] KU went on the [the] beach
Again it was the Ichabods charity- or inepithe, depending on how one looks at
KU picked up two more runs in later innings, including Heinrich's two-run homer in the seventh, but it didn't matter. The game was over in the fourth.
Mike Love, in his first start of the year, got credit for the win for the Jayhawks. Love threw five innings and then was dismissed by a hit that shut theIchabods out the rest of the way.
"Our pitcheres need to throw some," Temple said. "Love and Kerschen just hadn't thrown much and we needed to get a good five innings from them and then have a couple of innings for Allister and Rhodes to open up. It all turned out like I hoped."
The Jayhawks cracked out 17 hits in the double-header. Ice had a big first game, picking up four RB's. MacDonald had three RBs and two hits in the first game.
Kirkland Gates, the Jayhawks' tennis coach, was equally disturbed.
"One or two foreigners is all right," Clarke said. "But almost their entire team was made up of foreigners and that doesn't mean they should have some American players."
Bill Clark, KU's No. 1 player, who boosted his undefeated mark to 16-0 yesterday, didn't like losing to a team mainly made up of foreign students.
"We just hit them pretty good," Temple said. "We didn't play particularly well, but they weren't too good. At least we can say we put something in the (W) win"
"I like all my team to be made up of American citizens and people who are playing as close to home as possible," Gates said. "This is Kansas University and we should be representing the state as much as we can."
KU will try to pick up three more "Ws" when they travel to K-State this weekend. The two teams play a single game Friday and a twin bill Saturday.
KANSAS 11.8 WASHBURN 2.3
"Considering we won the first three matches, Mark Hosking's loss was a surprise," Gates said. "We started off so well. Then everything fell apart."
KU still could've won the meet had they two of the three doubles matches, something they'd done most of the year. Clarke and Headke, Kansas' No. 1 doubles team, started things off right by winning, 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. But the No. 2 doubles team of Buller and Hank Colman, and the No. 3 doubles team of Hosking and Thomas.
KU's tennis team ran into the Foreign Legion-er, Northwest Missouri State—yesterday and the Americans—excuse me, the Jahayhaws—loot.
Despite the loss, Gates said he saw hope for the team.
"They're probably the best NCAA Division II team I know," he said. "From a tennis standpoint, there's not much difference between Division I and I II."
"And the fact that we lost to 7-2 in the fall shows we are improved. We play them there (at Northwest Missouri State) in a few weeks. We should be able to get them."
Tim Headlight and No. 4 man Jeff Thomas all win, before the other three singles matches
didn't fare as well. Cailman and Buller lost, 7,6, 8,3, 6,4, and Hocking and Thomas were on the ground.
Foreigners fluster KU netters
The Northwest Missouri State Bearcats, made up of your local Fins, Swedes, Turks, Nigerians, Brazilianis, Columbians, Canadians and one Iowan, nipped the Jayhawks, 5-4, before an overflow crowd at the Allen Field House courts.
Clarke easily whipped Jukka Narakasa from Finland, 6-3, 6-3. Headache, in imminent form, ensured that his Björn Pilgren of Sweden, 24-7, 6-4. And Thomas, despite losing a verbal battle over how many games had been played, came on to the court to stun Akinac Koikur. a Tackle, 34-4, 6-3-2.
BY STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
KANANS 009 971 0 H B E
WASHURRN 119 900 0 - 0 - 0 - 0
Kevi Kerschen, Rob Allinder (0) and Alex Gilmour (0)
Kelani and Randy Johnson, W. Rervenstein, L. Rervenstein
KANANS 119 900 0 H B E
WASHURRN 119 900 0 - 0 - 0 - 0
Garcert and Randy Johnson, L. Garcert
From there on, it was all downhill. Mark Hosking, who had lost only three of the singles matches he'd played, was upset by the Bearcats' lone American, Nork Riek, 7-6, 6-4. Greg Buller and Joe Rusyzer, KU's 0, 5 and 6 players, didn't do any better. But on Sunday, the Bullers lost to 6-3, 6-4, while Rusyzer lost to a Brazilian, Alex Silva, 6-3, 4-6, 7-5.
Alice Has Free Parking
from the squad last Thursday for
the KU sports information department.
Alice is easy. Alice is fun. Alice lends a new dimension to reproduction. But did you know Alice also has free parking? It's no longer just idle parking, and it's fun and inexpensive, and easy too with free parking.
Alice is the colossal Xerox 9200 Duplicating System located at the House of User/quick Copy Center. 838 Massachusetts. Alice will print will appear in an increment of 120 copies, timeslessly, hour after hour.
Relays loses long jumper
Alice makes things easy for you.
Alice works for your happiness. And Alice has free parking. To her rear.
Behind the House of Usher/uckle
Walking Parking off New Hampshire. Two hours parking. Free, For you.
Ehizuelen was suspended indefinitely
Charlton Ehizuenel, the outstanding performer at the 1975 Kansas Relays, has been suspended from the Illinois track to prevent expected to compete in this year's Relays.
Ehizulezu jumped 27-4 to win the collegiate long jump competition, an all-leaf year's meet.
PITCHERS
$1.00
with any pizza
all day
Wednesday
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
Kansas City wins home opener
KANSAS CITY (AP) - Hali McFae and Osmie Otto kissed in two runs each as the Kansas City Royals battled to a 7-4 victory. The Angels in their home opener last night.
Lake City City got four runs off starting and
losing pitcher, Andy Hassler in the third inning.
Gray, the Cardinals' first-round draft choice in 1975, played in all 14 Cardinals games last year as a member of the specialty team.
Fred Patek singled, stole second and scored on Dave Nelson's triple. Hassler
Sesabaugh, 27, is 5-11 and weighs 190 pounds. He played college football at Ohio
Chiefs trade 2
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St. Louis Cardinals announced the acquisition yesterday of defensive lineman Marvin Upshaw and safety Mike Sensbaugh from the Kansas City Chiefs in exchange for defensive back Tim Grav.
Upshaw, in his ninth year in the National Football League, is a 5-4, 260-pound from Tampa Bay. He played for the
Brett singled to score Nelson, and McRae's single center brought both Otis Bitts
We're coming back . . .
PEACE CORPS/VISTA
on campus Tues.-Thurs., April 20-22
Business Pl.202 Summerfield Tues. Educ.Pl.223 Carruth-O'Leary Tues. & Wed. Lib. Arts Pl.208 Strong Hall Thurs.
Your last chance this year to discuss specific overseas assignments with an on campus recruiter. Sign up for interview NOW or call collect 816-374-4556.
PETER WATKINS FILM FESTIVAL
APRIL 8 21 TWO WEEKS OF FANTASY/DOCUMENTARY AND PETER WATKINS
APRIL 8 PUNISHMENT PARK
WODDUPUFF AUDITORIUM 7:00 PM
APRIL 12 THE GLADIATORS & CULLODEN
WODDUPUFF AUDITORIUM 7:30 PM
THE SCHOOL FOR GREAT MUSIC
WODDUPUFF AUDITORIUM
APRIL 14 PRIVILEGE & THE WAR GAME
WODDUPUFF AUDITORIUM 7:30 PM
THE SCHOOL FOR GREAT MUSIC
WODDUPUFF AUDITORIUM
APRIL 20 FALLAN (THE TRAP)
FORUM ROOM
PM
APRIL 21 EDVARD MUNCH
FORUM ROOM
PM
THE 5th WAR MUSEUM 6:45 SERIES - BOOKMAN SERIES
FOR FINE ENTERTAINMENT
Bugsys
Tonight—Mystery Night
THE FANTASTIC BUGSY'S
BEER CHUGGING CONTEST
WITH OVER $50 IN PRIZES
25' BEER
Doors open at 6:00 Show starts at 8:00
Curious!!! Call 841-7100
Jornado Venezolana Opening at Hoch Friday, 8 p.m.
Four days of conferences, documentaries music,and exhibits from Venezuela
Fri., April 16-Mon., April 19 Opening conference Fri. April 16th
Opening conference Fri. April 16th
Dr. Maria Clemencia Lopez
CONFERENCES: "The Venezuelan Economy" by *Dr. Celestine Armas*
"La Fundación Maris García A Yacusho" and
"The Technological Transfer" by *Dr. Luis Metón Azocar*
"Historical Transactions" by Dr. Eduardo Gonzalez Reyes
or Dr. Eduardo Gonzalez Reyes
Celestine Concina y Carlos Delgado de Alfonsea
by Dr. Eduardo Gonzalez Reyes
Closing Conference Monday, April 19 - Prof. Lutherr de Almea
*Venezuelan Music Recital's* Hoch Auditorium
Fri., Saturd, 10:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m.
Sat., Saturd, 8:10 p.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Buffalo High School, 2734 Lounge
EXHIBITS Friday, Saturday, Monday Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Documentaries午 1:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. United (Woodruff Aud.)
For more information, call 864-3506
Everthing is FREE and open to the public
Henrys FLYING SAUCERS
CONFIRMED
VIEW V SWIM
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6th & Missouri 843-2139
Sell it through Kansan want ads. Call the classified department at 864-4358.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 14, 1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman was offered to all students who register for the course. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLLHALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
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
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
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 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 664-8538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
Lawrence Gay Liberation meets your in-person at
1200 W. 39th St., #715, Seattle, WA 98104.
Eric Welcome meet you at 6:30 p.m. April 26, Student Union,
2311 Eisenhower Dr., Seattle, WA 98104.
Employment Opportunities
A Job opening for full time research assistant at the Bureau of Child Development, in collection, preparation workshop materials, preparing forms, completing applications, scheduling a contact. Contact Mildred Joly 664-3446 for interview. Application discontinue and start date preparation. Qualified men and women of all races are applied. If
Summer employment: largest moving and storage company in Midwest is accepting applications for warehouse and van helpers for this summer. Volunteer needed: Moving Services 12909 W. 63d, Shawnee, Ks. 4-16
Summer employment for women: largest moving application for women packers to prepare food and serve at City and Leewardwest area must have own a car and Leewardwest area must have own a Moving Services, 1250 W. 63rd, Shawnee, Kan. 847-975-8777
ENTERTAINMENT.
Lawrence Gay Liberation invites you in a roller coaster ride to the L.A. County Bake Center 100% Equal, 8-10 p.m., April 29th 10:30am.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT BENEFITS: Drop in and meet with the teacher to sign up for two phone calls please* at WESTBRIDGE UNIVERSITY. Visit www.westbr.edu.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
entry or campus & up to $485 or $607-$907
2 bdm. all utl. paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Free parking. a/c, pool. 834-4935.
Free rental service. Up to the minute lattings of
Lawyers, in Lawns, in Lawsuits,
Rental Equipments 842-259.
www.lawyer.com
Sublubes efficiency effiMT may Juni 2019 July 6 a
and all electric kitchen B115 813-6120 620
8 p.m.
Sublease apartment for summer; utilities paid
close to campus and downtown 941-
6308
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate occupancy. money, leave from June 1, and a roommate to stay now before it's too late. Park 23. Apartments 2 block west of旺石 on 25th Street. Phone 842-1148.
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
A PRO
AM Part Stop
Insight INTO LIFE
RECORDED MESAGE (241s)
842·4441
Free Room for a responsible couple in the home
Room is home is quiet, comfortable,
and near campus. A room can be cooked
cooking in exchange for room. Available
to call Don Anderson 864-4485-4185
phone no.1).
2 bdm. april, all utilities paid $40 a month. Female. April and May 1603 Upaitea. upstarts.
Get your summer & Fall Rentals now. NO PETS.
843-1601 Lyman Real Estate 2237 East OH
4-16
Uptairstation for rent. 2 blocks from campus.
Shaire kitchen. quiet, reasonable.
Kitchen (841-3239)
Sublaze ~Meadowbrook studio apt. 14 August 15. Pa rent plus electricity. Call 844-236-0721.
For summer! 2 bdm+ A-C-Garage+w w-car
+ accessories-large-card-ware-col-
Call Boh. 841-6488
Large 1 bedroom AC apartment with fireplace,
1,500 sq ft. Large Master Suite with heart-
felt Harrington Apartments, pool privacy,
gymnasium and a large outdoor patio.
2 Bedroom apt. available IMMEDATEDLY (must
provide full bath, walk-in closet,
part. furn. utilities paid) Call 864-8255 anytime
Female undergirl, is wanted to share 2 bedroom
cabinets for $150,000 plus utilities. Call 942-783-4-21
cabinets $95,000 plus utilities. Call 942-783-4-21
Two bedroom apartment in fourplex, AC fur-
ried, kitchen, laundry, $130 monthly. Call 415-826-
9200. Available May 15.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment than factory dumps or close-out products, the company offers its customers at the GAMPHONE SHOP at KIEF.
Tremendous selection of guitar, sax, drums, woodwinds and percussion instruments for Shop "Hose Keyboard Studio, Choose from Ghibli, Fonix, Drummond, Vocal, Ampeg, Kudan, Greco, and many others." Available online. Hose Keyboard Studio, Choose from Ghibli, Fonix, Drummond, Vocal, Ampeg, Kudan, Greco, and many others." Available online.
CORE 8650 -- Serene equipment. All master control systems have built-in Hibernation. Heater for free. Winnipeg TV. A free Wi-Fi Internet connection. A free iPhone. A free iPad.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
Electrician,安装和维修 units. BELA AUTO
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Western Civilization Notes- On sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Make sense out of Western Civilization!
1) As study guide
2) For exam preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Ancient Civilization"
**Note:**
"new Analysis of Western Civilization"
available now at Town Crier Stores.
t
Excellent experience of New & Used Furniture &
Appliance Trade. The Furniture & Appliance Store, 70411
New York, NY 10026.
FINAL CLOSEOUT: MICHELIN XAS
RADIALS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
ROCKETS. RAY BASET. RAY STONE.
BACKKS. Come this time for free!
Woolworth for live service). 4-16
Dodge window val $700 Auto tran. 6 cyl. 65.
Dodge window val a good compa. nce
Call 842-797-7000
MUST SELL $250 Suzuki, Excellent condition
Call Rick Lumkin, 843-7922
4-14
1955 Chevy Norman Wagon beautiful restored,
with a black rear door not cheap, sections in
limousine call 843-653-2760. Call 843-653-2760.
Bass guitar, Custom Bass Amp: Plenty of power,
good shapo; Call Ned. 842-5868.
4-15
Pontine Firebird, 1969, excellent condition, auto-
保险蓝。Firebird with white vinyl (1) in
841-743-4500 or 841-743-4515.
Baldwin amp. with super sound $90 841-5544
2 BSS-AMT-1 speaker, excellent condition $500.
842-4785. 4-16
Savile Car Seat Cassette player, model number FT
Carry Case 100, asking $16 or best off-eight
Call 841-2347
1967 Cast 850 Coupe, new paint, needs thining
Ball 841 - 8088
4-15
Black lab puppies for sale $15. Call 841-3298. 4-15
Woman's arm is speed Schwain Suburban bicycle. The child's hand is resting on the reins, reluctantly huggle a Callia. Lyla 841-4771 anytime.
WE SELL FOR LES5-11 to 6:30. Good used furnaces and electric ranges; Refrigerators: (all appliances required) (all appliances required); Have Layovers* weekly free delivery 1228 East Hopkinson, Topeka, Kx. Phone 1-727-4825 or 1-531-8588.
CHINA
CHINESE
COASTAL
MUSEUM
armadillo bead co
MACRAME BEADS
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10-5:30
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details
large selection
Ball Park Baseball
GIRL LAND THE
WEST STREET
King
SWEETHEART OF COURT
CRESTLEY
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SHAZAAM
WE PRINT
ANYTHING!
1975 Flat XI-9. Good cond. still under warranty
1976 Flat XI-10. $4,000 or best offer
1978 Flat XI-12. 884-6278
People smile, when you're riding a "Bicycle Ride" through town. "I'm glad to be here," Dillimkirk likes. "Great condition. Call Dillimkirk."
70 OpeL-GT 29,000 miles, new paint, exhaust;
magic, radials, magnesia 843-518 vs 4-16
Cheap, new 200 m Lens 85-205 f 3.8 serr mount
Vivitar. 864-745, 1-267-073. Leave a message.
I'll check the image carefully to ensure that all text is clearly visible and legible. If any part of the text is unclear or illegible, please provide a clearer image.
- sString-Creator Bancio-$50, Sony TC125 Tape deck $60, Palat Pc42 8472-4
- 4-16
1961 Ford Galaxy 4D, AT, runs good. $260 or
best, call Carl Badwill 555-868-212, 6 p.m. on 1-800-735-3211.
Ventura 12-string guitar with case. Sanyo 4-
4-channel ear-bat. 7-843-6645.
if You don't see it, ASK! <<< KING GEORGE'S
MG 1100, looks and runs great, under 50,000
miles 841-206. 4-14
Box 3422-U Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Ovation 12 string guitar. Excellent condition.
Price reusable. 841-6134 after 6. A.16
Elinore CR, 258M Motoren, perfect condition.
B411-3775 and ask for Radiation.
4-10
64 VW BUG needs engine work, best offer. 842-4
8764
Yatissis T. Elec.-X, $135. Mamiya Baker, $65.
Scheffler K., $129. Mamiya Baker, $80.
Schwibert S., $129. Dennis, $433. 4-15
Schwibert S., $129. Dennis, $433. 4-15
Bicycle for bike. Aanki-10-speed. Like new. 495.
Akst Ask. No. 9. 1332 Tern.
4-15
1 Black leather backpack 24" x 9" - 36" insure ample space for documents. The leather backpack also music, art supplies (equestrian) inquire at www.northwind.com.
Bumper Stickers--buy an American car or
a Canadian working "buy a $1, BASE $2 ON-
HOLD" KC61 6001.
might be cool. Cray 700 auto, power strip store
and diamond style DM382 for Model 955, brand
freshness.
75c. Chev. Impala, 350cc, AC, PS, PB, AT, 21-500
mls.性能 condition, 500cc. Call 842-3466.
1970 Karmann Glia, looks and runs excellent.
rebuilt transmission, new battery, pauses Kansas
race.
NICE '68 MG MIDGET $295. Call 842-9067. 4-21
63 VW Bug, good condition, $250. Call #43-6122
at 5 am. Keep trying.
72 Kawasaki 750 new Engine, 2,000 miles. Ex-421 condition. B1-647-664.
1971 MGB-GT. Low mileage. Extended service warranty. Topeka, 862-2118
4-16
CHECK OUT USED THESE BIKE SPECIALS. 74
252, 178 Trumpet, 74 Honda TL243. WE ALSO
272, Triumph 74, Honda TL243. WE ALSO
COMPLETE LINE OF NEW MOTORCLASSES.
At Horizon's North, 1811 W. 6th, 843-3333
McGee Radio Speakers 4-3 way booklet systems,
1 year old. Call Kurt at 842-4079.
HELP WANTED
74 Honda 125, excellent condition, helmets $500.
Ovation 6-string acoustic $200, 841-5432. $400.
Honda 125, excellent condition, helmets $500.
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer/year-round, S. America, Australia, Asia. All fields, $500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free travel to New York, Philadelphia, KA, B40, Cadryton, CA, 97407. 4-23
Help was needed for custom harvesting combine and truck driver. Experiences preferred Call 485-811-3029
Part-time or full time bartender Contact Tom
J. H. Bessell 43-422-1890 43-422-1890
W Box 755, Lawrences Rd. 18/4
W Box 755, Lawrences Rd. 18/4
Community College Teaching Job Excellent job
2021-03-04, Oregon Application $1, Search
602, Oregon, Application
TRIANGLE
The triangular shape is a fundamental geometric shape that can be formed by connecting three points in such a way that the resulting figure has three sides. In this case, we have three points connected by straight lines, forming a triangle with three vertices and three sides.
Triangles are one of the most common shapes in geometry. They are polygons with three sides and three vertices. Triangles can be classified based on their side lengths and angles:
- **Equilateral Triangle**: All sides are equal in length.
- **Isosceles Triangle**: Two sides are equal in length.
- **Scalien Triangle**: One side is longer than the other.
Triangles are used extensively in various fields such as architecture, engineering, art, and mathematics. They are also found in nature, where they play a crucial role in many structures and natural phenomena.
HORIZONS HONDA Sales, Parts, Service
1811 W. 6th
Tues..Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank and Lawrence, Downsound Bank-901 & Mass. Lawrence, Downsound Bank-901, and First National South-1807 West 23rd.
LOST AND FOUND
Found a watch and keys near Union. Call and identify. 841-3264. 4-14
Lott; George, dark. brown and white Springer
Lspan; Reward. 842-4106.
4-14
HELP WANTED: Kansas Students Company
CERTIFICATION, etc. Job available now.
NECESSARY EQUIPMENT: etc. Job available now.
Lake Mattertier Mix! stubby legs, long body
brown; 84-89-119 & grey hair weight 4-10-
ward; 84-89-119
Found: 1 coin purse, outside Strong. April 8.
Kaiden 646-282 to claim.
4-14
Found: Set of keys on leather ring. South of Potters Fond. Call Dave. 864-2888. 4-16
Found: change purse in Wescow Tours.
morning. Call 843-7610 evenings.
4-14
Experienced Installation man to do car stereo and CB. Excellent call. Pay 841-3755. 4-16
Marketing majors - part-time until summer. Good pass and experience. Call for interview 843-906-946.
Steven J. Otto: Your bicycle has been found.
Describe and call. Call 842-7630. 4-14
Beward for item returned from stolen purse.
For additional pictures, glues. No. 4692 Lymn, 864-1039
**D**
Lynn, 864-1039
Lost: Women's gold Omega watch 4/7, 178/13
Reward: Women's black LF. If found please call 81-269-
Reward. 4-16
List 4.8 probably on 10th between Mauss-Town, Last Town and 2nd between Town, Townley or any Jewelry (silverwriting cards, silverfilled cards) at Mauss-Town.
Found on campus Female dog, part English
Dog. White with brown marking Call 815-
4772.
Reward - $23 for return of Vol. II Quantum Theory of Atomic Structure, by Slater. Missing from physics office. No questions asked. Return to Ragazai, at Nagalotla, A Mallot, or contact physical office.
Found Jeffrey La France's wallet. 1131 Ohio. 4-15
Nice new skiboarded found near Learned Hall and claim. Call Howard, B42-1600 after S-30.
Watch found south of O Zone. Call and identify.
841-723-756, Mike.
4-16
Brown wallet lost | 4.10.76 near Robinson Gym.
843-850 or 850-999. Can inventory Mark, #4
843-850 or 850-999. Can inventory Mark, #4
帝
Lost: silver glasses in light blue case between
Strong and Oliver. Calver 864-6771. 4-21
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Open 9 30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
P
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
Bengals
in the
Tim
Cassidh
Gifts and Jewelry
803 Merchants
209 W Bldg 442-4431
BankAmericard Mastercharge
842-8413
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th ed.
Race or Watch
Pat Read
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Indian Trader
-
THE LOUNGE
Planning a trip?
Let Maupintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
20 miles east of Topeka or
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U. S. 40 Highway
849.9445
a quiet corner
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1306
10-5 Tues. - Sat.
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
travel service
SUA / Maupintour
843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest--900 Mass.
Phone 843-1211
LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY
Now Open Every Sunday
Admission Only '2.00 each
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
RECREATION'S FINEST
12 NOON
"If we don't got it you didn't want
LAW
to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl
No one under 18 admitted.
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 848-0210. tf
9th & Iowa
NOTICE
The Catchall Cat's special Sunday dinner is a Full Day Occasion, with a Free Breakfast and a cash work. Call 610-293-8098 for our reservations.
Wash Shop, 620 Mass. Used, furniture, dishes,
clothes, clockes, televisions. Open daily 12-5.
848-335-2977
Reproduction is faster than over with Alice, a copy Center We can make 5 copies of your 128 MB disk in action for all of your quick copying and printing needs. A free quick copy Center, $88 Massachusetts. bits. 841-6900.
PERSONAL
Evolve now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation provider. Drive now, pay later,
transportation provider. Drive now, pay later,
transportation provider. Drive now, pay later,
Please. Must have missing bird. Turn in to K. LU.坠失 and Found. No questions asked. 4-16
The Second Annual Student Sculpture Competition
*Don't miss it-entries available*
BSA
After 20 years in business, if George doesn't
pay the rent, he'll be on Mondays. George's GPS Shop,飞
店 236, is at 5400 West 71st Street.
MADAME LENA, E.S.P.-PALM READER-ADVERSOR. Buy a dream or astronomy book and get information on telescopes and problems. For more information, call 862-1331 for S$830 South Tapee Blvd. Hopsack Ks.
INTERESTED IN NO-FIILLS LOW COST JET
WEL BELO to Europe, Africa the Middle East,
Far East and Asia. We are helping people travel on a budget with most expenses covered by our insurances. For more info call free toll free 800-225-569.
Come one—Come all, May Day Festival—a weekend of education, conversation, and celebration. Participate in workshops, Sea Women's Lot, Fun Club, and Women's Pot. Fill picnic and volleyball ball. Free women's events on Saturday and in the Coition and Commission on the Status of Women. Call 844-8494 for registration and info. www.women.org.
The Mattei Music Hall presents five fine good music
plays by Michael Barris, call me on 417-802-3521.
Barris plays call me on Charles Lattimore - 811-792-
2615.
Hot Hoot! Blushing Bull Bott Driver? Red Eye?
What happening down at QT155? Titan
Ride needed to Kansas City or KU Med Center mornings. Will charge gas expense. 842-384-6, 421
TRAVEL
SERVICES OFFERED
RIDES RIDERS
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT! Virtually any jewelry design possible. Professional (BFA degree) goldsilvermilky. Complete stone cutting, wide angle lens. Compliance with FAA safety guarantee. 841-3883 or 843-0970. Tf
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 901, 601, 402, 302, 202, 102, 702. Call (855) 764-7888, 142, 500, 558, 857, Regular lessons or one-time test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7881.
UnTravel Charters
TUTOR
TYPING
Tutor Matuor with M.A. in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 on 6 p.m.
4-15
Typist editor, IBM Picaitec. Quality work.
Typewriter editor, dissertations. 5-11
Mali-Bo, 842-917-3971. 5-11
EUROPE
less 1/2 ounce
than farc
INDIA
THISIS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is designed to help you manage your Service ours in fast and prices are reasonable.
Experienced typed-term papers, theses, mits.
Experienced typing, proofreading, spelling
correctness. 843-744. Ms. Wiley.
TACOS
Exp. typi. IBM Selectric, term paper, thesis.
Exp. typi. IBM Selectric, term paper, spending, speaking
reaction. Jann. 841-3495
842-3476-7
Need an interventional typhoon tape. If tapes and equipment cross-cutting tape, fabric tape, or other materials to fit inside the tape, please contact us.
Casa de Taco
$3.95 per Dozen
1105 Massachusetts
8439880
Expert typing /reasonable rates: Proofreading.
Experts typing /reasonable rates: Proofreading.
Call: C91285 - 8509 after 5 p.m. 4-20
Mail: c91285@aol.com
WANTED
Experienced typist. IBM Selectric all kinds of
typing. Call 843-6423 days. 845-9078 evening. Julie
Experienced tystist will type term papers, theses,
sheets and all general typestats in any my.
Bachelor's, 841-999.
Typing- Term papers, Book reports, Misc. Morning only- Ph. No. 842- 9289.
4-14
Someone to drive a car from Charleston, SC, to Lawrence son, 841-6219 eve. 4-15
Professional typing, reasonable, work guardian-
sitting, and safety. Send resume to:
staff@nct.edu, electric, B.A. Facel Science
Association.
Liberal minded female wanted to share two bedroom Joyayhaw Teenagers' apartments for 76-ft²
**% unifies** Call 643-870-8706 **4-14**
Saint Louis apartment, summer and autumn. Beautiful apartments, comfortable rooms and auto-friendly. Free Wi-Fi.
Roommate wanted immediately and summer, 2
rooms. Wanted on bus line $75 or
1. utilities. Call 842-798-7067.
Bominate in subarea fully furnished 2 bedroom
hotel, Call Chuck 841-365
Gondo, Andy 842-314
Cindy 843-370
Calculate Texas Instruments TI-5500. Will pay
toll dollar or trade TI-5502-Ill Call 8417-4218 - 1-8
Wanted: Young couple for late summer job night; housekeeping, awning moving, miscellaneous cleaning. Apply to Raymond Cerrt in Charmplain, NY. $Yury will $200 weekly. Time: Job may begin in September and you can work until Sept. 10. We provide: Travel-in cab, transportation, telephone calls, please. Apply in writing and give references. Raymond Cerrt, 1000 Sunset
Wanted: Young people for late summer job
lift housekeeping, awning moving, miscellaneous
job duties. Req's bachelor's degree or equivalent,
N.Y. Salary $100 weekly. Time: Job could be
can work till September 10, we provide you
pens and private living quarters. No telephone
works. Required: Bachelor's degree in Science,
Raymond Cornelius 1000 Sunrise, 4-21
NON smoking roommates wanted to share 2 bdrm.
West Hills Apt for summer; $7.50 per month.
North Shore Apt for summer; $8.50 per month.
Wanted part-time work for upholstery shop.
hard worker Willing to learn trade 8307
8307
Kaybardt wanted for grooming jazz-rock
band. Kaybardt had the band have good equipment. Contact John at 841-3123.
One or two female roommates needed to share
one or two bedrooms. To care for 10
plus 831 plus 1.5 unit month, please
call 831-729-4688.
Want to meet nursing student attending KUMC next year to share apartment 864-115. Keep
Liberal minded female to share 4 bedroom house next fall. 100 Missouri, $80 monthly. **836** **846**
People with a history of shuttering behavior call machines to reactivation. Machines take only 15 minutes. Call machines take only 15 minutes.
Bahai Faith
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a laddar for his ascent." Bahal' Club Meeting, April 5, 19: 3:00 p.m. Ourel Ballroom, Union
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion
Than Most Storee Components
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
GRAMOPHONE shop
YAMAHA
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD AND STEREO
MARSHAL PROGRAM CENTER LOS ANGELES 10240 MAY 18, 1964
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
5 Nights a Week No Cover NEW MODERN DECOR
Entertaining Night People, with cold heavens atawas, and a warm sunny day, are all part of an atmosphere designed for sweet treatment and gentile delight.
843-9404 CLUB
HIDEOUT
Sandwiches = Pizza
Pool = American Shuffleboard
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
New Members Available
Class 1 & Private Club
Class 2
— 7 DAYS —
Waven Point-owner
I
Wednesday, April 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
186 18,540 191273
1. 已知 $a = -2, b = 3, c = -5$,则方程 $3x^2 + 4xy + 6z^2 - 9y^2 - 10z^2 - x^2 - y^2 - z^2 = 0$ 的实根个数为 ___。
Farewell Green and hello space
By RITA RIDDER
More space, a larger library, more and better classrooms and faculty offices, a student commons area and a legal aid center are some of the main facilities where faculty members who they transfer from Green Hall to the new Law School complex.
The new complex, estimated to cost slightly less than $5 million, is expected to be used for classes in fall 1972. Total completion is scheduled for spring or early summer 1878.
The complex, located northwest of Allen Field house was originally planned to comprise six floors and accommodate a maximum enrollment of 600 students.
BUDGET REVISIONS caused an entire floor to be eliminated and dropped the maximum capacity of the building to 360 students. The revisions also called for a smaller library book stacks area, decreasing the number of books it will hold.
Martin Dickinson Jr., dean of the Law School, said Wednesday that even with the revisions the new complex would be a challenge to staff and campel and inadequate Green Hall facilities.
Green Hall has a maximum capacity of 436 students, 124 fewer than the new complex. Dickinson said the building was so small that it could not accommodate inconvenience of having to study elsewhere.
HE SAID the new complex's added space and facilities would probably benefit from a more centralised building.
"Those of us who have been here for a long time feel nostalgia and affection for the old building." Paul Wilson, professor of law, said. "It will provide for a better legal education."
also looking forward to transferring to the new complex.
He said he wasn't reluctant to leave the old building because it was impossible for it to be moved.
GREEN HALL, built in 1906, has been listed on the national register of historic sights since 1974. It will remain standing after the transfer to the new complex. The full-length status of James Green in front of the hall will be moved to the new complex.
Dickinson said the hall was named a historical sight because it was considered an excellent example of turn-of-the-century architecture.
said a space allocation committee was now studying possible uses for the building.
He said the committee would look at the greatest needs of the University and how the building could best fulfill these needs before making a definite decision.
Lucas said the stacks area of the building might be used to relieve the overcrowded floor.
Other possibilities being considered are using the building to house all the Continuing Education offices or using it to house all the student services, such as counseling, records and the offices of the dean of men and the dean of women.
Student wins scholarship for art
The decision on the building's use may or may not be a permanent one, he said. For example, the building could be used for the Conduiting Education offices until a new office for them is completed, then permanent use for the building could be an announced.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
Janice Kobe, a Kansas City Kan., junior and an advertising editorial arts major, yesterday won a $250 scholarship from McDonald's Restaurant.
After much deliberation, the Kansas
state commissioner when it will
have its annual spring game.
Spring game set
The game will be played at 7:30 Friday night at Haskell Stadium in conjunction with the team's spring training.
Several key players will not participate in the game. Quarterback back Nolan Cromwell, halfback Laverne Smith and split end Waddell Smith are participating in the game. The team then Defensive back Chris Golub and Tom Fitch are recovering from injuries.
McDonald's calls the scholarship "The Outstanding Junior Award," Lois Green, assistant professor of design, said. Works by different artists were judged in the main lobby of Strong Hall by Richard Branham; chairman of the department of design; Mackellock, assistant chairman; restaurant owners Jim and Bonnie Garrett; and Green.
Kobe's illustrations and cartoons will be displayed at McDonald's until May 13.
Mrs. Garrett said recently that the gallery had become a community project and had attracted the attention of McDonald's national offices. She said that the Lawrence gallery was the first of its kind among the restaurant's 3,900 outlets.
Only works by Lawrence artists are shown there.
Get your car ready for the Easter parade
paint any car
$119^95
every car hand sanded
Expert body and collision repairs. Free estimates.
John Haddock Ford Body Shop
23rd and Alabama
Call 843-3500 for appointment
MOVIES
See the first run movies right in our RecRoom. If movies aren't your thing, there are plenty of other social activities going on. The opportunity is available through the Hall Council to jump on the band wagon and help plan and organize an activity that you're interested in if we don't already offer it.
1800 Naismith Drive Phone 843-8559
At Naismith there's something for everyone!
FOR FALL OF '76!
NAISMITH HALL
VISIONS
RELAYS WEEK-END SUNGLASS SALE
Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.-Sat.
One select group of fashion sunglasses 331/3%-40% off! Men's and Women's Styles Included (Pray for Sunshine!)
VISIONS
806 Mass. St.
841-7421
Mass. St. Open Thursday 'til 8 p.m. Lawrence's most complete optical services
WIN
ONE YEAR'S SUPPLY OF
(365 • ONE A DAY ALL YEAR)
Peter Pan
F
New 1/3 Pound HAMBURGERS
GIVE THIS NEW-BIGGER AND BETTER HAMBURGER A NAME
ONE EXTRA LARGE (1/3LB) LEAN ALL BEEF PATTIE COOKED
TO ORDER WITH LETTUCE, PICKLE, ONION AND MUSTARD.
CATSUP OR MAYONAISNE ON A GIANT TOASTED SESAME
SEED BUEN
HERE'S HOW PETER PAN MAKES IT SO GOOD!
ITS SUPER SIZE AND SUPER DELICIOUS!
★★★★
Name of winner(s) will be posted in each store May 15. In case more contestants enter the winning name, duplicate prizes will be posted.
NAME IT NOW ... CONTEST WILL END APRIL 30
1015 W. 6th 521 W. 23rd
PETER PAN/1-3/8 HAMBURGER-NAME CONTEST
ENTRY BLANK - NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
REGISTER YOUR CHOICE NAME BY FILING IN THE PORM
BLOW UP OF MAP copies, and enter more than one) AND DEPOSIT
FOR THE PERSONNEL WITHIN THE MAP.
ADDRESS_
NAME
ZIP___
PHONE ___
The Mount Oread Bicycle Club invites you to an:
I WISH TO SUBMIT THE NAME SHOWN BELOW FOR PETER
PAN N AND NEW BETTER & BETTER 1/3 LEB HAMBURGER
PLEASE ONLY ONE NAME IN THE SPEAK ABOVE
CONTEST NIGHT - FRIDAY NIGHT -APRIL 30
Easter Monday Ride- April 19th Hop on your bike and meet at South Park by the bandstand at 11:00 a.m. Bring a friend and a picnic lunch. We'll travel to Lone Star Lake (35 miles) on the flattest roads in the county. For more information, stop by the SUA Office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477.
NOW!
APRIL FEATURE ATTRACTIONS
NOW!
MISS STREET DELI
ITALIAN BEEF GRINDER
$1.50
ITALIAN BEEF GRINDER
Choice beef, sliced thin. man-
rated in a special sauce to give
this beef a true Italian flavor,
served on a French dip hard voll.
GP
Reg. $1.90
Present Coupon Expires April 30
NEW YORKER
1071
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
$1.00 OFF with this Coupon
PIZZA
"The original thick crust pizza from New York."
Expires April 30
Bull & Boar
11 W. 99th
Open Face Hot Beef Sandwich
G $1.50 Reg.' 1.95
Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made
mushroom-mothered in dark brown gravy.
Relishes included.
Present Coupon
Expires April 30
NEW YORKER
1021
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Coors Pitchers $ 95^{\circ} $ 60 oz.
Limit 1 Pitcher
X
WITH
THIS COUPON
Limit 1 Pint per couple per day. Expires April 30, 1976
—Gene Chalet
"Truly the Most Wonderful Happening in Lawrence."
Showtime
11 a.m. till Closing Nightly
April 1 to April 30
A
7
A
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
RAIN
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.124
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, April 15. 1976
Tax Returns due tonight
Remember: Federal and State tax returns must be postmarked by midnight.
ALAN MAYER
MARLENE BLAKE
PATRICIO ALONSO
Photos by DAVE REGIER
Violinist Fodor
room, speaking to a group of 20 music students and faculty members before his concert last night, showed him the lyrics for the song "Burning Love."
informally in the faculty room of Murphy Hall and asked Fodor questions on topics ranging from his father's ranch in Colorado, where Fodor rides horses to relax, to the violin competition in Russia where he recently placed second.
Senate approves salary request for a full-time director of CAA
By BARBARA ROSEWICZ
The Consumer Affairs Association (CAA)
was allocated the salary for a full-time
director at last night's Student Senate
meeting.
The Student Services Committee had recommended that the Senate fund only a certain amount of money.
In other action, the Sports Committee's recommendations for women's intercollegiate athletics and recreation services were passed with little discussion.
However, John Broadbeer, cochairman of the Sports committee, said a bill would
probably be presented at the May Senate meeting to withhold funds from women's intercollegiate athletics until a women's athletic board was established. He said the establishment of that board had already been delayed for two years.
Broadie said the board would oversee women's athletics and assist Marian Washington, assistant athletic director of women's athletics.
A BILL TO ESTABLISH a paid auditor's position was taken off the agenda and referred to the Finance and Auditing Committee. The bill will be discussed at the May 5 meeting.
Ticket subsidy to be aired
There will be a special Student Senate meeting at 6:30 tonight in the cafeteria of the Kansas Union to discuss the proposed KUAC ticket subsidy.
It wasn't on the agenda of last night's regular Senate meeting, Teddy Tasheff, senator from Illinois.
The ticket subsidy bill will raise the student activity fee by $2.40.
A resolution for Senate approval of the Satellite Union Task Force report also will be discussed, along with a petition to the House and Senate to hold such Directors for a possible "users' fees" of
Union facilities for nonstudents and for more student input of ideas and plans.
Tasheef had the restatement of partial funding of the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC) couldn't be brought up because it was too large. "I had enough time to consider the bill."
She said the task force's report would be considered tonight so that it might reach the president.
Discussion of the change in the CAA budget recommendation was spread over
The Student Services Committee had decided in its budget recommendation to the Senate to recommend only a half-time allowance for the manage CAA to rely on more volunteer work.
The Student Services Committee will still hold its scheduled meeting on the Satellite Union Task Force report at 6:30 tonight in the Walnut Room of the Hotel.
CAA representatives stated at Tuesday's meeting that they would have to close if the Senate didn't fund the full-time salary they had requested.
The amendment to the student services' budget for CAA will take money from a student services contingency fund and more funding from the future use by Douglas County Legal Aid.
Juli Anderson, StudEx chairman, who introduced the amendment, said that Douglas County Legal Aid had other outlets for funding, but that CAA, funded almost entirely, Senate, had to know now whether it had the money to continue its operations.
THE FIGURE APPROVED last night was for $8,145 for an existing full-time position, with $280 from a committee and $190 from a Douglas County Local Aid rider.
She said that the Senate should give money to groups that needed it now, instead of waiting for a vote.
See CAA DIRECTOR page 3
Process for revoking aid to athletes faulted, studied
By JIM COBB and JERRY SEIB Staff Writers
Two members of the University Senate Committee on Financial Aid to Students (FASC) said yesterday that their group had been wrongly saddled with the job of voting
Controversy has arisen over how and why student athletes can be stripped of their scholarships.
whether to take scholarships away from athletes who quit their teams.
Committee members Anne Harlenke, Wichita senior, and Tom Donaldson, Wichita graduate student, maintained that a new graduate be made by a special grievance committee.
City's 20-year plan undergoes criticism
They said that kind of committee would "command more respect" from the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC).
By JANET SCHMIDT
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and other community groups appeared before the City Planning Commission last night to present their criticism of Plan 95. Plan 95 is a comprehensive plan for community development during the next 20 years.
In January, after two year's work, the Planning Commission published its 272-page tentative draft on community law. The book, *Guide for the Lawrence Area*, 1975-1985.
That tentative draft was made available to community groups for comment so changes could be incorporated in a final draft to be released in about six months.
CHARMAN MIKE DAVIS said last night that, so far, most of the comments had been somewhat negative and had called for changes in the guide.
Last night was the fourth public hearing on the plan, but it was the first time the commission received a written report from the entity group that criticized the entire guide.
That report was presented to the commission by Dick Zinn, cochairman of the Plan '95 Task Force of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce.
"Our statement (50 pages) reflects the Chamber's vision of the plan as totally unacceptable," Zinn said. "It is fundamentally in error."
HE SAID THAT one of the major problems with the plan was its length. It was far too detailed and contained too many specific facts and data, he said.
*Because it is so specific, there is no way for these projections to ever be completely accurate.*
However, another problem with the plan is its ambiguity and incomprehension, he said.
"The plan says as a basic premise that he be accepted, it must be understood," Zinn said. "I defy anyone to find an average presence citizen who truly can understand it."
He said it was filled with "planner's jargon" and contained too many broad terms that were open to many different interpretations.
THEE ARE ALSO SEVERAL
INCONSTANTITY such as,
such as, such as in population.
For example, he said, figures in the plan show that the nomination of Doulasau Countr
Allocation disappoints library staff
The announcement of library budget allocations has caused bitter disappointment among the library staff, according to Gene Carvalho, librarian for the East Asian collection.
Bv.JANE MACAULAY
Staff Writer
Carvahelo, who is also chairman of the Library Facilities Assembly Budget Committee, said yesterday that the libraries had been promised top priority by the Kansas Legislature to make up for neglect during the past five years. He said the library staff was faced with many issues that they had hoped next year's budget would help salve.
IN THE BUDGET allocations for fiscal year 1977, approved by the legislature last Friday and sent to Gov. Robert F. Bennett for signing, the library system received less than James Ranz, dean of libraries, had requested.
"After the various public pronouncements that the library was a top priority, we were led to believe better," he said. "This is a terrible disappointment to suffer as we have."
"We continually stressed new and improved programs," he said. "We didn't get anywhere near what we hoped for the library, but we may yet be able to give some additional funds."
Carvalho explained that Ranz, who became library dean in July 1975, had made a big effort to solve some of the library system's problems. The Library Faculty Assembly was formed so problems could be discussed among a representative group of staff. The Budget Committee had met with such all departments submit individual requests for funds.
SHE DESCRIBED a three-year program that Ranz had outlined. Technical services were to have been dealt with this year and reader services next year. The third year was to be devoted to a reassessment of the library system.
"I realize the general practice is when you need 15 to ask for 20," he said. "But the budget committee was so
"Rana captured the support of all the staff," Carvano said. "He formed us into a working band, then, because the library promised something, we thought we'd made our first step toward improvement."
CARVALHO STRESSED he thought the library budget demands hadn't been unreasonable.
conscientious about making the minimum conceivable requests."
Shankel said that out of the $115,000 made available by additional student enrollment, $80,000 went to the
Martha Kehde, art librarian and chairman of the Library Faculty Assembly, said that she thought problems had been building up for more than 10 years, and that the staff wasn't trying to do away with them all in
Thomas R. Smith, chairman of the Senate Libraries Committee, said he thought the libraries could have done better.
When the library budget has been announced last Friday, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said, "The Chancellor and I recognize the library has been underfunded in the past, but we can't undertake a backlog of problems that has accumulated in 10 years in one year."
Shankel said yesterday that the library was given priority on the kinds of allocations that allowed for in-
"I THINK THEY were given first treatment," he said,
"I just don't think it was first enough."
Smith said his involvement with the library went back to the 1950s. He said the libraries had been discriminated
will increase by 8,300 in 1995, for a total population of 72,300. For Lawrence show an increase of 6,555 by 1995, for a total population of 57,813.
Smith said the main problem was the lack of funds for books.
"We were promised priority because of this program," she said.
However, data from the Kansas Department of Ecological Development show a 25 per cent population increase by 1995 for Douglas County, for a total population of 80,028. And data from the Kansas State University Population Laboratory show that the Douglas County population will increase to 103,020 by 1995.
"That's what the library's all about, after all," he said. The total allocation for books, serials and binding is now $1,065,000 instead of a requested $1,581,000. This is an increase of 8.5 per cent over last year's increase of $990,500. But there will be a decrease in buying power because of inflation.
The price of books has risen an average of 15-20 per cent and the price of serials has gone up 30 per cent, according to estimates.
ROGER ANDERSON, book order librarian, said lower than expected funding would mean a decrease instead of an increase in the number of books ordered. He said a library should order more books each year to keep up with the increase in the number of books published and the lack of books would affect all programs at the University.
"The book budget undergirds the whole thing," he said.
"If that falls down, it affects everyone."
Kent Miller, serials librarian, said he had hoped to be able to replace some of the 1,000 serials cut in the 1974 budget. Even if they were reordered, he said, there would be large gaps in the collection.
"The strength of any research library is in having long runs of medicals." he said.
"I NIGHT OF THESE other studies, this plan becomes very questionable," Zinn said. "And particularly when the proposals are too complicated in an population projections that are wrong."
he said he hoped this wasn't a final allocation
"IF IT IS, WE'LL have to cut," he said. "That's just an economic fact."
—If aid for athletes is terminated upon an athlete's voluntary withdrawal from a program, a clause of explanation of that possibility should be part of the letters-of-entirement (a letter signed by prospective athletes, saying they will attend a particular school).
Such letters-of-intent signed by athletes shouldn't be considered binding, such as
Glinka said funds for equipment and supplies this year had been helped by an extra grant of $7,500 above last year's budget allocations. He said this money had been Glinka said funds for equipment and supplies this year had been helped by an extra grant of $7,500 above last year's budget allocations. He said this money had been used for steel shelving to extend storage space. He said he
The result of the Planning Commission's projections will be under planning and urban sprawl, he said, both of which the guide intends to avoid.
"The one of the main thrusts of the plan is to correct urban sprawl but not expanding beyond the existing corporate limits and to focus inward to undeveloped lands," Zinn figures. Our density by 1985—which figure doubled in the years it seems we will have overcrowding."
Harlenskie, vice chairman of FASC, and Donaldson objected to the present system, under which the FASC decides whether student athletes should have their scholarships revoked after quitting athletic programs.
HARLENSEK SAID that abh thought KUAC wrongly expected always corresponded to reconstitution.
See LIBRARY nage 10
HE SAID THAT ALTHOUGH he agreed with developing land inside city limits, the City did not want him to do so.
The two committee members said FASC had too many other duties, such as advising on financial aid policies, to devote time to the study of athletic scholarship grievances. They also lost the committee lacked the proper guidelines and expertise to make such judgments.
Harlenek said she planned to voice her injections in a report to Senx E next week.
—A definition of what constitutes
volume without from an athletic
volume.
-FASC hasn't been able to get copies of the NCAA manual that gives guidelines about when athletes' scholarships can be terminated.
Her report will be in response to a committee end-of-year summary filed yesterday by Louis Burmeister, professor of mechanical engineering and committee director at ACS. There were four pages of tentative guidelines for terminating student athletes' financial aid.
—a definition of what constitutes fraud,
as a basis for revoking financial aid, needs to
be defined.
However, Donaldson said the summary and the guidelines didn't reflect the feelings of all the committee members. Harlenske told me that the committee report on behalf of herself and Donaldson.
Harlenske and Donaldson also charge that:
See 20-YEAR page 10
See SCHOLARSHIPS page 6
THE RISING STATE
Planting season
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Mary Charles, Lawrence junior, took advantage of a comfortable Wednesday evening to water the vegetables in her garden. Her effort may have been unnecessary—the garden was not well maintained.
2
Thursday, April 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Tornado rips Jetmore
JETMORE - a tornado ripped through this southwest Kansas community last night, destroying a lumberyard and leaving debris spread over a wide area, near
Washington.
The twister struck the lumberyard on Jetmor's main street about 10:10 p.m. according to a dispatcher for the Hodgeman County sheriff's department.
About an hour before the tornado hit Jitmore, high winds caused minor damage to trees and roofs at Kesetm and Plains, about 50 miles southwest of Dodge City. In the day, a tornado touched down briefly on the eastern outskirts of Mankato, destroying an abandoned small plant and causing a half-hour power interruption.
Gas tax increase passed
TOPEKA- Legislation increasing the state's gasoline tax by one cent a gallon was signed in law yesterday by Gov. Robert F. Bennett. However, Bennett said
Brennett blamed the Kansas trucking industry for what he called pressure and obstruction activity in forcing the gasoline tax hike. The increase is part of an overall legislative package to raise $29.45 million in additional revenue by increasing motor vehicle registration fees and state gasoline and diesel fuel taxes.
Sakharov, militia scuffle
MOSCORO—Nobel Peace Prize winner André Sakharov and his wife argued and scuffed with the Soviet military yesterday at the trial of a dissident in the Siberian city of Vladivostok.
The account of the courtroom incident didn't say whether formal charges were being filed against the couple.
It said only that they were taken to a nearby police station and released after siming statements about the incident
In response to an admonition by officers on duty to keep quiet, Sakharov slapped a militan in the face and then struck a militia mullion, according to the news
Tass said Mrs. Sakharov then joined the fight.
Wage proposal criticized
TOPEKA-Kansas Association of Public Employees (KAPE) criticized yesterday a proposal under consideration by the Kansas legislature to grant five per cent merit pay increases next fiscal year to state employees now earning more than $1,000 a month.
Under the bill, state employees making less than $1,000 would get across-the-board five per cent pay increases effective July 1, but those making more than that would only get a modest increase.
KAPE said that one of its main concerns was that supervisors would be able to pick and choose the employees they felt should receive the increase.
Harrises cited for kidnaping
BERKELEY, Calif.—William and Emily Harris, the former underground companions of Patricia Hearst, were charged yesterday with kidnaping by authorities in Alameda County, where Hearst was abducted by the Symbionse Liberation Army on Feb. 4, 1974.
Heart had been scheduled to appear in Los Angeles today for arrangement with the Harries on state charges in connection with another incident, but her plea was denied.
She was listed in fair condition yesterday after emergency surgery to insert a tube in her chest.
New task force to study possible sorority changes
A task force to study the possibility of sorority extension or expansion at KU has been set up by the Panhellenic Presidents and the former, Panhellenic president, said yesterday.
The idea of extension was stimulated by a proposal received in March from the Interferaterythema Council (IFC), asking to reorganize and streamline the process, asking another sorter to come on campus.
The task force, headed by Kelley McCarthy, Northbrook, Ill., junior, will be subdivided to investigate extension--asking another sorter to establish a chapter here—and expansion-enlarging sororities that are here now.
Pfasteren the task force had been set up because of sorority members' confusion
"We had many women who didn't want to make a decision one way or the other on extension until they had received more information," Plasterer said. "This may seem like procrastination, but this is a big decision for sororites as a whole."
The task force will consist of interested members from all 12 sororities on campus, she said, and will report to regularly the Panhellenic President's Council.
Plasterer said she doubted that a decision would be made this semester.
Funding denied sex-grass study
WASHINGTON (AP)—The House has passed legislation that would block a sex and marijuana study at Southern Illinois University.
The study would have cost $121,000. Male college students would have been monitored for their reactions to erotic movies while they were smoking marijuana.
Rep. Bob Michel, R-III., sponsored the move to cut funds for the study at the Carbondale, III., school by amending a supplemental appropriations bill.
His efforts weren't opposed by either the subcommittee or the full appropriation committee. The item was approved and then the item passed the full supplemental measure.
Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., had announced in the Senate last summer that he was presenting his so-called "Golden Department of Welfare for the financing of a school intended to discover whether marijuana smoking had any effect on sexual arousal.
K.C. firm submits apparent low bid
TOPEKA (AP)-A Kansas City, Mo., firm submitted the apparent low bid yesterday for the "interior package" phase of construction of the $55-million clinical facility at the KU Medical Center.
The apparent low bid ~$28, 449, *was made by J. E. Dum Construction of Kansas*
Bids were opened at the state architect's office in Topeka. Max Lucas, assistant to
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, said three bids were received.
The interior package, which includes all walls and ceilings and most floor and wall coverings, is the final major package to be bid for the facility in Kansas City, Kan.
KU BAND MEMBERS 1975-76 Annual Spring Formal Banquet
Sunday, April 25, 6:00 p.m. Elks Club 3705 West 23rd
PROGRAM:
Mr. Russell L. Wiley, Guest Speaker
Showing of "Sunbowl 76" Films
Band Awards
Other Entertainment
Prepaid to those paying fall band fee $5.00 all others, including guests, family and friends.
Sign up for all reservations in the Band Office, Room 214 Murphy, no later than Wednesday, April 21.
Roy strongly criticizes rising medical costs
By DAN BOWERMAN
Staff Writer
Bill Roy criticized the rising costs of personality and speech last night after he called for the Eagle Air Force to fund them.
Roy spoke to 25 persons during the monthly meeting of the Pre-Med-Prem Dent
Roy, a former U.S. Congressman and of about 200 Americaners who have both law and medical degrees, said that the growth of the American society had been fantastic in the last 25 years.
He said that there had been a 300 per cent increase in health care costs during that period. He said that the consumer almost twice as much as the Consumer Index, which indicates the rate of inflation.
"WE HAVE REACHED a point where we can do more things for more people than we can afford to do," Roy said. "But, health care is a human right."
He said that the United States was exceeding resources, and that it had to establish priorities in health care services. He emphasized spending in the form of Medical Services.
"Some hospitals have said that Medicaid doesn't pay its costs. Some private physicians have refused to take Medicare patients because it doesn't pay enough," he
COST OF HEALTH care services was one
The unavailability of physicians, one deterent to proper health care, can be seen in western Kansas. "Hoy said, 'where there are doctors, physicians or sometimes no hospitals at all."
The increased number of specialists has caused the unavailability of general practitioners.
of three barriers to proper health care, he said.
"I THINK THAT surgeons may soon see that there are too many surgeons," he said. "It is not in the best interests of America to train more subspecialists."
He said that personal physicians were only one part of health care and that human biology, life style and environment were also important factors in health care.
Roy said his main concern was that America was burdening its resources in this way.
"IF WE CAN't DO everything for everyone everywhere, what are we going to do for whom where?" he said. "It's not a question for physicians—it's a question for everyone."
Roy emphasized that he wasn't pessimistic about health care or the future.
"I think that the quality of medicine in the United States is much greater in our other professions, but we must decide where the priorities of health care lie," he said.
Democratic candidates' speeches obstructed by television strikers
WASHINGTON (AP)—A picket line set up by striking television technicians and journalists from Democrat presidential candidates form the editors' convention yesterday. Instead, the candidates answered questions over a telephone hookup which broadcast to the
The candidates scheduled to appear were Jimmy Carter, Henry Jackson, Morris Israel, and Bill Clinton.
A temporary restraining order issued against the National Association of Bicyclists.
(NABET) moved the picketers away from the front of the hotel where the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) was holding its annual convention. The candidates had refused to enter the hotel anyway.
NABET employees have been on strike against the National Broadcasting Co. since April 1. Their pickupers, accusing NBC of a breach, have kept NBC crews from covering the event.
Warren H. Phillips, president of ASNE,
and its directors debated whether to ban all
encryption software.
The flower of the season
The life, Part of the
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841-4666
University Daily Kansen
Thursday, April 15, 1976
3
System to clear library backlog
Bv JANE MACAULAY
Staff Writer
Somewhere within the University of Kansas library system lies a backlog of 325,000 uncataloged books—a number that has grown by more than we have been building since at least the 1980s.
But a new computerized cataloging system to be introduced to the KU libraries by July 1 should begin to clear up the backlog. Even then, it will still take a while.
Bob Malinowsky, assistant library
director for reader services, said the new system, which was easily funded because the system was needed so badly, should be able to clear the backlog in eight years.
The new system will make KU a member of the Ohio College Library Center (OCLC), which makes use of index cards in the Library of Congress in Washington.
OCLC has 508 member libraries and is rapidly expanding westward. The Kansas community public library is already a member and is based in City, Kan, public library is about to join.
A direct telephone line will connect Watson Library with a data base in Ohio. A librarian cataloguing a book will feed its content to the library and already has its catalogue card, this will immediately show up on a screen. If the listing matches the book, the librarian will press a button and a copy of the card will be displayed. The card can also be made in the card by pressing another button.
If the book hasn't been cataloged before,
new card will be printed and will be
sold.
SUA drops Festival of the Arts for new comprehensive program
The SIA Board voted last night to accept a proposed plan that would replace the Festival of the Arts with a broader program of fine arts at the University of Kansas.
"This is not a survival of the festival of the Arts, but a new program to replace it. It will be a celebration of our history."
CAA director
and 1976-77 SUA Board fine arts member, said.
From page one
such as the Douglas County Legal Aid funds.
Collinson, who proposed the new plan, said he hoped to coordinate a program for next spring that would be a cooperative university groups interested in the fine arts.
He said planning for the program would
The $4,000 had been set aside for use by the legal aid group in case it did receive funds.
ANDERSON SAID a senator could sponsor a bill at a future meeting to guarantee funds for Douglas County Legal Aid if it didn't receive its revenue sharing funds. The funds would come from this or last year's unallocated Senate funds.
Carol Strobbelin, former CAA director, said they were not willing between the two teams.
Many senators said they recognized the need to fund both organizations.
The CAA has relied almost entirely on senate funding in the four years it has extended.
CAA representatives said they had requested money from the Fund in the past four years and had been denied each time. They also had tried to raise money by a benefit basketball game and a fund-raising newsletter.
JON JOSERSAND, student senator,
pointed out that the deadline for
applications to the United Fund was
Tuesday and that the CAA had not applied.
KU Republicans still have hopes for summer jobs
Their chances are slim, but College Republicans from KU still might do volunteer work at this summer's Republican National Convention in Kansas City, Mo., according to Don Simpson, the Republican College Republican National Committee.
At a convention of the Midwest Federation of College Republicans in Kansas City, Mo., Saturday, about 20 KU College Republicans expected to be interviewed for volunteer jobs. But a selection group from the Republican National Committee that was supposed to conduct interviews refused to talk to them, including many people without jobs for everyone. The KU College Republicans, who had been told there were about 300 jobs available, then submitted their applications in paper.
Stinson, who organized interviews at Saturday's convention, said Tuesday the College Republicans who had expected interviews for volunteer jobs weren't refused jobs but there would be a delay in selection.
"There will be 88 per cent more delegates at this Republican National Convention, and more delegate-support staff and more press," he said.
"With all these people and space difficulties we don't have any idea how much help we'll need. It could be one person or 3,000."
Stinson said the College Republicans' written applications were "the first stage of the multiphase process of involving people and setting them jobs."
He said he didn't know when the College Republicans would be notified about this decision.
--it seemed fruitless to go to the United Fund this year, Smiley said, although the company had not done so.
LOVE RECORDS HAS
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Sue Smiley, president of the CAA board of directors, said after the meeting that the CAA hadn't applied to the United Fund this year and with such a "hostile reaction" last year.
She said it seemed that United Fund representatives were against the CAA for reasons such as not being in existence long in time, or not self in the representatives' estimation.
All other allocations of the Services Committee were approved without changes.
soon begin and would include naming the program, setting the dates, scheduling
"CAMPUS COOPERATION is the only
anything like this will work," Collinson
said.
**STUDENT SERVICES**
Bishop's College 3,568,210 Regents'学院 3,568,210
Committee on Status of Women 3,940,730 Doug Lennard Center of Affiliated Organizations 4,940,730 Douglas College of Headquarters 7,607,070 RUY 1,022,070
RUY 1,022,070
Native American Alliance 1,550 1,320
National Association of Women's Centers 1,390 1,370
Women's Coalition-Women's Center 1,770 SPORTS 1,770
SPORTS 1,770
Recreation Services 31,450 31,450
Recreation Services 31,450
Soccer Club 36,320 36,320
Soccer Club 1,602,450 1,270
Cricket Club 1,602,450
Cricket Club 600,270 588
He said SUA hoped to schedule concerts, theater productions, films, guest performers and any university department event related to fine arts.
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
"Hopefully the program will promote fine arts within the University and the community."
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
JAMES GANG
There will be no 'ticket package' for next spring! Lime art meets the design all over, all with individuality.
Postma said the board also discussed budget proposals for next year and interviews for SUA committee chairmen at last night's meeting.
ROSALEA POSTMA, Lawrence junior and SUA president for 1976-77, said the new plan meant it wouldn't be necessary to fill positions that were already occupied, is now unoccupied, on the SUA Board.
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
304 Locust 843-8080
M-F 8-5:30 Sat. 8-12
Interviews will be April 21-26 by SUA for chairmen in the areas of special events, public relations, travel, the Free University, outdoor and indoor recreation and fine
SUA will make its final budget decisions next week.
Positions are filled in the spring so that committees are functioning actively by the start of the fall semester, she said.
POEMS WANTED
THE KANSAS SOCIETY OF POETS is compiling a book of poems. If you have written a poem and would like our selection committee to consider it for publication, send poem and a softcover dressed stamped envelope to:
Currently, the library receives microfilm from the Library of Congress. The librarian uses the microfilm through a computer and prints it in use since 1974, was described by Eilen Johnson, cataloging librarian, as "a very useful tool that kept up with the ever-increasing backlog."
The Kansas Society of Poets
104 So. Broadway Wichita, Kansas 67202
Johnson said that of the 60,000 volumes handled by the cataloging department this fiscal year, only 40,000 would be fully catalogued.
Malinowski said, "There's no way we could get caught up with that backlash unless we were going to be an outsider."
"This is due to lack of personnel," Johnson said, "not lack of skill."
He said the new system would cost $70,000 a year to use and maintain. This cost would be spread over a lifetime by typewriters, Xerox machines and blank cards made by the library makes its own copies.
Four computer terminals, costing $3,700 each, will be installed in the cataloguing room.
The goal is to have the system operating by July 1, the beginning of the fiscal year, but Malinowski said he thought it would be ready by June 1. He said an open house would be held so the public could see how the machinery worked.
OCLC will make a type of all the cards produced for KU which will be sent here and used as the basis for a system that would enable all users to find books by plugging into a computer. This will eventually replace catalogue cards.
The ultimate goal, Malnowsky said, is to have these tapes available at all libraries in the state for a more efficient interlibrary loan system.
Malinowski said he couldn't estimate how soon this would happen.
KANU-FM and Off the Wall Hall
present OREGON in concert
Two shows—7 & 10 p.m.
Thurs., April 22
Tickets at Kiefs,
McKinney-Mason
$5.00
Off the Wall Hall
737 New Hampshire 841-0817
Now there is a way to bridge the gap between an undergraduate education and a challenging, responsible career. The Lawyer's Assistant is able to do work traditionally done by lawyers.
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Contact the Office of the Vice-Chancellor for Student Affairs, St. John's University, 227 West 60th Street
If you are a senior of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, work with me.
Since 1970, the Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 1200 graduates in law firms, business schools and other institutions.
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Four days of conferences, documentaries, music, and exhibits from Venezuela
Jornada Venezolana Opening at Hoch Friday, 8 p.m.
For more information, call 864-3506
Everthing is FREE and open to the public
Fri., April 16-Mon., April 19
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Closing Conference Monday, April 19 - Prof. Ruth Lerner de Almea
CONFERENCES: "The Venezuelan Economy" by dr. Celestino Armas
"La Fundación Gran Maracas Ayahuá" and
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Opening conference Fri., April 16th-
Venezuelan Music Recitali** Hoch Auditorium
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Saturday, 7:00 a.m.-9:00 p.m.
Saturday, 8:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m.
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EXHIBITS Friday, Saturday, Monday Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
Documentaries Sat., 10:40 a.m- 5 p.m. Kansas Union (Woodrud Aud.)
MUSIC
University of Kansas Residence Halls Assistant Hall Directors
Must be Graduate Student or Fifth Year Status for 76-77 academic year.
Applications available in 220 Strong Hall Application deadline extended to April 20
An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer
University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday. April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
4
Thursday, April 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Oinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Colleges restricted
Government intervention in the educational process strikes at all true academicians. Nobody wants Big Brother telling him what to do. We don't have the power to be havens from the distractions of the outside world. They are supposed to be free from restrictions, free to discover the pure truths which rule the universe.
ACADEMIC FREEDOM is a wonderful concept, but to have true academic freedom one would have to be isolated in mind at the very least. In most cases physical isolation would probably be required, too. Yet there aren't many universities on Pacific islands. They are a part of the real world and they were established to serve the real world. Therefore, they suffer from the realities of the society they serve.
Too often we view the University as an island. It took me several years to realize that just because this was the University of Kansas, it didn't necessarily approve the attribution of Kansas. We at the University tend to take an elitist approach in views of our society. We are above the restrictions of the outside world.
SURE, AFFIRMATIVE Action is good for certain segments of our society, but not for some programs at KU. Sure, some say welfare recipients should be closely monitored to make sure they spend their money wisely, but why should scholarships have so many strings attached.
Red tape is obviously a bureaucratic evil that should be cut back whenever
possible. The federal government was established by the people to serve their needs, and that concept should not be reversed. However, state universities rely heavily on their government for service, just as many other segments of society do. The educational process is an unbelievably expensive one. And the dollar is the major factor in determining the level of government intervention.
PRIVATE COLLEGE and universities pay the price of freedom, but more and more of these institutions can no longer pay that price. Public schools rely heavily on the state, and therefore are accountable to its restrictions.
THE UNIVERSITIES have obviously been restricted by federal intervention in their affairs. But their complaints are not unique. They are only being held accountable to the same restrictions the rest of society struggles under.
The educational system has never really proved in the past that it is any more responsible in its actions than any other segment of society. A large proportion of the legal battles over racially discriminated schools and institutions of learning have always had their share of bond-dogges.
Unless they totally break their financial ties with the people who pay their way, the only alternative is to work within the system. Maybe some of the great economists and political scientists our universities produce can be granted sabbaticals until they can clean up the bureaucratic process.
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
During the past six months, the University of Kansas has been involved in an extensive self-evaluation of sex discrimination on campus. When the investigation reaches its conclusion, few facets of the university will be left unfeited.
THE STUDY CAME about
unity of the problem. The committee divided itself into three areas: admissions, employment and treatment of students. Within these areas, they examined the procedures and policies of the University in regard to discrimination.
KU wages battle of sexes
INCLUDED UNDER the divisions was a vast range of
When pausing to think of all the areas of the University that the committee had to deal with, one can begin to see the enor-
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
UNDER THE guidelines, each educational institution must complete a self-evaluation by July 21. At KU, the TITLE IX Self-Evaluation Committee began its study in October and then moved to the steering committee before spring break.
following the enactment of Title IX guidelines July 21, 1975. These guidelines were provided by the Department of Health, and are designed to means of bringing universities into compliance with the sex discrimination section of the Education Amendment of 1972. This law provides, with some exceptions, that students in the United States shall on the basis of sex . . . be subjected to discrimination under any educational program or activity within the federal financial assistance."
areas. Just to name a few, admissions investigated such as recruitment and testing procedures and the employment group studied hiring practices and pay scales.
The third division, the treatment of students, was broken down into two areas: athletics and academics. Athletics included such areas as recruitment, facilities and scholarships for incollegiate athletics. Non-athletics dealt with health planning, single-ease organizations and other organizations.
BUT AT KU, the existence of the self-evaluation committee isn't the only sign of the passage to a higher level of guidelines have brought about some changes. The two women's honor societies, CWENs for sophomores and Martboarder for seniors, have begun to receive feedback. On the other hand, the male societies, Owl Society for
juniors and Sachen Circle for seniors, have chosen to disassociate themselves from the University rather than accept women. Their adviser now serves the societies on his own time instead of as part of his work for the University.
THE AREA THAT has received the most publicity during the Title IX discussions in Congress, federal regulations recognize the disparities that exist between the men's and women's programs and the vast changes that must be made. Therefore, the new rules will be provided the area additional time, until July 21, 1978, to comply.
Although the plan to merge the men's and women's programs has been postponed, the issue is far from resolved. The two athletic offices, the student union and the senate are all seeking ways to relieve the inequalities between the programs. The issues, though, involve many complicated problems, especially
those of a financial nature, and they won't be easily solved.
THE OFFICE OF Student Financial Aid has also received close scrutiny but in all probability, it won't have to cover the cost of training. Although the scholarship funds marked specifically for men and women differ greatly ($75,000 for women, $14,750 for men) or more, it still allows use unrestricted funds to help create a better balance.
These are just three areas that have felt the inquisitive eye of Title IX peering at them. The university will work with and the self-evaluation committee finish their investigation before the July 21 deadline, the University will be feeling other aspects of the all-encompassing acts of the
ALREADY QUESTIONS have been raised concerning the inequities of the deans of men's and women's offices. Will they be able to meet the Dean of Students? Will the University have to build two
These questions and many more, which the members of the self-evaluation committee considered in their confidential discussions, and again in the near future, for the federal government is suing the withdrawal of federal government funds as an incentive for the University to come into rapid compliance of the law. These funds are too large to be ignored it to ignore anything that vaguely resembles sex discrimination.
new scholarship halls that will provide the same facilities for men that Miller and Watkins now offer only to women? And what will become of the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program with its teachings that some people consider sexist?
Government muscle flexed in research
The ways in which the federal government influences the University are many. Some of them—discrimination and privacy regulations for universities—have been widely published.
Red tape an invited guest
The discussion of Title IX is far from over. How many changes the University will be forced to undergo is impossible that the road to compliance won't be smooth.
Colleges and universities all over the country are screaming in what they say is exercituting the skills of their government intervention in
countless forms, complete the inconsequential reports and constantly suffer the consequences and activities outrageous government.
But other influences, some at least as strong as the regulations, have not.
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
more forgiving if not for the taintaining the actions of universities. They accepted, at first, the very intervention they now so strongly repudiate. That repudiation led to strings attached to money the universities desperately needed. Enrollment was increasing; they needed money for research, for new buildings and facilities. They took the money and the accepted the strings.
accomplish the goals of the Great Society.
That the government should involve itself in all sorts of previously unheard of ways and places wasn't something dreamed up by John Kennedy and even Mr. Bush idea that had been kicked around the universities for years.
THEY BEAR A responsibility less vicarious than is usually remembered. They originated and popularized the idea that the police can intervene in the private affairs of citizens and institutions to
INDEED, WHERE does the federal government turn for its personnel but to the academic ministry or members of presidential cabinets, heads of investigatory committees, advisers to governors and other federal bureaucracy itself are professors or their students.
Naturally, such a disheartening state of affairs requires an adjudication of responsibility, a basis for the one who throws one's one sympathy and compassion for the besieged professors and administrators suddenly declines. For one sees the dead tape, like blood, on their hands.
AND INDEED one could be
How the universities will be able to deal with the federal government isn't yet clear. But it won't be easy to tell the government to pack up, get out and go on home duty or number all who bid invited it here.
situationalized the reform movement and picked up the speed of an avalanche. The universities accepted federal money, giving the bureaucracy a foothold toward regulating them. From then on the inertia of the universities was sufficient to carry it into almost every part of the universities, in spite of their growing protests.
IT TOOK A long time to start the government rolling toward needed social reforms. But after it got started, it in-
Of course the massive bureaucratic apparatus later assembled and the fundamental ineffectiveness of most of its programs were never envisioned. Furthest from the minds of professors in the state of affairs in which their own sanctuaries are so ruthless and systematically invaded.
THUS THE BATTLE cry,
"Get the federal government off campus;
let the university run its own affairs," comes from the *American Institute* of government red tape—the faculty and administration
their affairs. Affirmative Action, Title IX, Occupational Health, Education and Welfare—the list of government agencies and regulations dealing with the intimidates and demoralizes.
It is they who must serve on the myriad committees, file the
important source) came from federal revenue sharing funds.
THE MOST IMPORTANT of these is the influence the government exerts through its research grants.
Research is the thing that separates a university from a glorified high school. Although research is so much more valuable, research is over-emphasized compared with teaching, the fact remains that if a school wants to attract well known faculty members and if it wants to have any sort of a decent program, it has to do research.
The federal government was directly responsible for 86 percent of KU's external funding
AND IF IT wants to do research, it has to have grants. And if it wants to get grants, the federal government is the place to go. Of the $2.6 million in awards KU and the Med Center received in fiscal 1975, $2.29 million came from federal
THE UNCERTANTY that is an integral part of federal research grant administration, it has also struggled with the President and the Congress.
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
ALEXANDER ROBERTS
and indirectly responsible for another 8.6 per cent.
THIS VIRTUAL monopoly of research grants by the federal government means that the nationwide research community is buffeted and tossed by every political wind.
When Sputnik shocked America's ego in the early 1950s, the physical sciences had a field day. Space-related research programs started in universities everywhere.
Special Focus:
Then, as suddenly as it began,
it was over. The winds had
changed and transportation was
the big concern. Then defense.
Then energy. Then cancer.
Then who knows what.
The government at the University
ACCORDING TO THE University's annual research report, "The erratic pattern of the college population and propionation has had a very disturbing and unsettling impact upon the educational and scientific community, leaving it uncertain, uncertain, and demoralized."
Who can blame the researchers?
The best they can do is watch the trends, hope they have strong departments in the right places, and apply whenever possible.
WESTPHAL
I'VE GOT YOU
DEAN THRAPP
1984
EAN CODGEK
agencies, not only that, but a large percentage of the $2.3 million received from state agencies (the second most
Early in Richard Nixon's first term, the White House campaigned for a cutback in research spending. Ford has picked up where Nixon left off, and lists "Big Education" right on his ballot and "Big Government" when it comes time to make a speech.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--684-4180
Business Office--684-4358
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
papers; second-class postage paid at Law-
ernment periods. Second-class postage paid at Law-
ernment periods or $1 a month in Deceased County and $1 a
month in Deadly County. Subscription subscriptions are $2.00 a semester and $1 a month in Deceased County and $1 a month in Deadly County. Subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through the University of Kansas.
Editor
Carl Young
Congress, however, has traditionally supported an extensive program of federal funding to bolster occasional flurries of outrage about so-called dooboldogies (grants for the study of love, for example) the Congress still supports the present grant system.
Associate Editor
Yasit Abdulhakil
Associate Campus Editor
Greg Hales
Assistant Campus Editors
Stewart Branwair
Photo Editor
Paul Gehrig
Photographers
David Creshwash,
Gerald Millerian, Jay Kroonier
Associate Sports Editors
Ken Stone,
Entertainment Editors
Eric Wear, Support
Copy Chiefs
Mary Ann Huddleston,
Jamie Maurice
Artist
Ken Westphal
News Editors
John Hickey, Brian Anderson,
Wire Editors
Kelly Scott, Charles Alexander,
Contributing Writers
John Johnston, Jim Bates
Business Manager
Dare Roville
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Classified Manager Debbie Service Manager
Promotion Director Cindy Stafford Assistant Classified Manager Cailan Stallard
Assistant Classified Manager Joanne McCannage
Publisher
News Advisor David Dary
Supplier Shaw Business Advisor
Adamaa
Member Associated Collegiate Press
AND UNIVERSITIES,
although they resent the fact
that the government grants
determine how much and what
research is done, are rooting for
Congress all the way. Sparadic
and undependable funding is
better than no funding at all.
Regardless of how many grants the government decides to give, every university in the country is after all of them. The competition among universities is enormous and frantic as among those universities' football teams.
STATISTICS SHOW that KU has pretty much held its own in the fund-gathering battle according to the research report. The number of grants it has received compared to other universities over the past decade has remained fairly constant.
But KU does have a weakness. To carry the football analogy a bit further, KU has the ability to play-player-behavior modulation.
More than 43 per cent of KU's grants go to the Behavioral and Social Sciences. More than 72 per cent of KU's federal funds come from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
OBVIOUSLY, KU would be in trouble if its behavior mod program slipped or if HEW had to cut back its funds.
The University is constantly trying to diversify itself more, but given the pattern of federal funding for research and possible job. Foundation grants are always a possibility, but never a good one. Foundations, which don't usually have the money to give away to begin with, have been further weakened by the recent economic slump.
SO IF KU wants to do research, it is going to have to continue to rely on the federal government research what the government wants it to research and it means it has to struggle with bureaucratic strings, but it really doesn't have any choice.
As far as research is concerned, it's the American way.
Thursday, April 15, 1976
50
Volunteer Week to review work
A look at volunteer work and how it fits into contemporary society will be presented during Douglas County Volunteer Week activities next week.
The volunteer week is sponsored by Volunteer Clearing House, Anne Moore, coordinator of the community office, said yesterday.
She said that with the increasing leisure time enjoyed by many Americans, particularly the elderly, volunteer work was an increasingly important role in society.
The program, she said, is designed to take care of the needs of students and has to offer in terms of building self-esteem.
Another purpose of the program is to bring to the county's attention work being done on the campus, in order to
A forum on "Volunteerism and Citizen-
ship" is held at the Library of
Monday in the Lawrence Public
Library.
Citizens will be asked to decide what are
Kay considers state senate bid
Morris Kay confirmed yesterday that he was considering running for the Kansas Senate sat now held by Arden Booth, R-Lawrence.
Kay, a prominent Douglas County Republican and 1972 Kansas gubernatorial candidate, said he had set no deadline for making the decision.
The decision must be made by June 20,
however, which is the final date for filling a
number of positions.
Kay said that between now and the time the decision was made, he would talk to people to get their opinions on his possible solutions. "What are they considered important issues?
the five major community problems in Douglas County. After the problems are determined, participants will be asked what is needed to solve the problems.
The responses to those questions will be forwarded to district and national forums. Please contact us at info@cqm.org.
At 7:30 p.m. next Thursday in the city library, Evelyn Hastings will review the book "Women, Work and Volunteering," by Herta Loeser. The book discusses the topics
A training program for volunteers in financial counseling will be from 9:30 a.m.
mentioned in the title and what they mean to American society. After the presentation, the audience will be encouraged to discuss those topics.
The program will train volunteers to work in conjunction with local social service agencies such as Penn House, Ballard Community Center and the Salvation Army.
She said they would also be trained to refer people to community resources that might be helpful to them in dealing with financial problems.
She said the Volunteer Clearing House was available to answer questions or give additional information about the week's planned activities.
The volunteers will provide a listening service for persons who want to change their lifestyle.
Return of $2 bill received quietly; several bills begin to circulate
The $2 bill is back. With some fanfare but into excitement, it came back into circulation.
Several of the new bills began to circulate around the campus Tuesday and yesterday, but they were neither pleniful nor in great demand. Instead, they sat tucked away in drawers, which contain registrars and money drawers once held by other denominations or mutilated hills.
Some were given out as change and went right back into circulation.
Richard Stephens, Topeka sophomore,
said he had received a $2 bill as change in
the Wesco Terrace Tuesday afternoon,
but went to the store later and spent it.
"I kind of regretted it," he said. "I would have liked to have kent for a while."
The new bill isn't expected to become the collector's item its predecessor was. The U.S. Treasury has had about 225 million of the bill printed during the past five months and another 175 million will be printed later to bring the total production of the bill to 400 million. The rest will be printed in future years will depend on how well the bill is received by the public.
Banks began distributing the bills Tuesday to coincide with Thomas
On Campus
TODAY: CHARLES HOUSTON, vice president for the Asia Export-Import Bank of the United States, will speak on the Export-Import Bank in Asia at 9:30 in 413 Summerfield. NOON-HOUR INTERNATIONAL will meet at 11:30 in Alcove F of the Kansas Union.
TONIGHT: SUE ANDREWS, Glen Ellly, III, senior, and DIANE DOGRASS, Clay Center student, will perform their senior recital at 8 in Swarthout Recital Hall. ALAN DORAN, professor of philosophy at the University of Chicago, will present *The Christianism and Free Thinking in Metaphysics*, at 8 in the Room of the Union.
TOMORROW: The two-day SPRING EXHIBITION of the School of Architecture and Urban Design will begin at 9 a.m. in Marvin Hall. An ENGINEERING EXPOSITION will be from 9 a.m. in Learned Hall. The School of Fine Arts will present an ORATORIO WORKSHOP at 8 in the University Lutheran Church, four days earlier. The RU Venezuela club will sponsor JORNADA VENEZOLANA, a four-day commemoration of Venezuela's independence, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Union.
Events...
Deadline for the SNYDER BOOK COLLECTING CONTENT is tomorrow. The contest is open to all KU students and is divided into graduate and undergraduate sections. Entries should submit a proposal and a bibliography of 25 to 50 books to the N.Y.C. Public Library or Ann Williams in special collections at Spencer Research Library.
Announcements...
RETRAINING SESSIONS for Water Safety Instructors needing 'New Red Cross Material' will begin at 6:30 p.m. April 20. Contact Bernie Taylor or Claire McEroy in the department of health, physical education and recreation. The sessions will be limited to 60 students.
Lawrence National distributed about 80,000 bills in the first day-and-a-half said.
KU secretaries planning to attend the NATIONAL SECRETARIES DAY
secretary, A. R. Mansfield, will make their reservations with Sharon Sifrill, 247
Redbud Hall, AGR, 3, by April 15.
The following part-time jobs are posted outside 26 Sirong Hall; typing, clerical,
housekeeping, graduate assistants, 15 sales; 1 child care, 4;
housekeeping, 1 general. 32
Jefferson's birthday, Jefferson's portrait is on the front of the new bill and a picture of the signing of the Declaration of Independence is on the back.
The First National Bank distributed about two-thirds of its supply of the new bills within the day-and-d-a-half, a teller said. The bank would take her awhile to get used to them.
There was a rush locally to get the new bills on the first day, but demand for them had dropped by yesterday, according to Vicki Cathey, a teller at the Lawrence Store. She said she thought people were hoarding the first batch of the new bills.
Judy Jarsulic, Kansas City, Kan., junior.
"People just aren't used to counting by two's," she said.
Jobs available...
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
We Write Motorcycle Insurance
and Gene Slais, Topeka sophomore, both cashiers at the Hawk's New, said they had a couple of the new bills, and the bank on the back made the bill look strange.
"Many people said it kind of reminded them of play money." Cathey said.
Steve Lloyd, Shawnee Mission graduate student, said, "I will get one as change, okay."
The government hopes to cut down the production and distribution of $1 bills, and replace at least half of them with $2 bills to reduce the cost of inflation. The government save from $4 million to $7 million a year.
This Week
Fred & Jan Pence
11th and Mass.
Off the Wall Holl
The Flower Shoppe
841-0800
Tonight The Dayhills
8:30 Irish Folk Songs,
*1.50 Jigs, Reels,
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*2.00 on Rye
Sat. City Limits
8:30 Bluegrass Band
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OZ in concert - friday - 8:30 Hawk's Nest - $1 cover
Easter Flowers
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We offer a wide variety of fresh spring flowers.
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6
Thursday, April 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Local lakes offer many activities
By CAROL LUMAN
Lakes within 20 miles of Lawrence offer water sportmen and camping enthusiasts many opportunities to participate in their favorite activities.
Pleasure boating and skiing is available at Perry Lake, only 18 miles northwest of the city. Perry offers 12,200 acres of lake for the enjoyment of the water athlete.
Everything that you can do on the lake,
says James Edmonds,
Perry Fork ranges.
And with the exception of camping during specified periods, all the activities at the park are open and available to the public at no charge.
THOSE ACTIVITIES include swimming,
camping, plianning and fishing.
Edmonds said last week there were picnic
baskets and grills, as well as modern abower
chairs and tables at the park.
Less developed camp areas, although complete with tables and grills, have only primitive restroom facilities, Edmonds said.
From May 15 until Labor Day a permit is required for overnight camping. This permit, however, isn't to be confused with workers required for entry to state lake areas.
Except for the Jefferson Point State Park area on Perry's west shoreline, the park is operated by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and a sticker isn't necessary.
At the Jefferson Point area, a sticker is renured for all activities.
A STATE FISHING license is required to fish at any of the lakes for people between ages 18 and 49.
Between 100,000 and 200,000 people come to Perry during most summer weekends, so "getting away from it all" at the lake isn't as easy as it might sound.
Fishing without the interruptions of speed boaters and skiers is provided by Douglas State Fishing Lake, 12 miles southwest of St. Joseph, Missouri. Lake James, 17 miles northeast of Lawrence.
Mike Bronseki, biologist with the Kansas Forestry, Fish and Game Commission, which owns and operates the Douglas and Kenyon Mountains, primarily for the hunting and fishing crowd.
POWER BOATING, joy-riding and water sailing are prohibited on the two lakes, beaked fish.
Boats are permitted on the lake only if there are there for fishing purposes, Bronx River.
"We're not there to please the skier," he said. "We're there to the pearlshiver and."
Camping, pinchinning and swimming are permitted at the two lakes, but the facilities aren't quite as sophisticated as those at Perry, Bronxkii said.
There are no electrical hookups for campers, and the camping areas have no power.
THE CAMPING AREAS are equipped with picnic tables and grills, Bronsoi said.
With the increased use of the lakes during the spring months comes a certain amount of vandalism, both Edmonds and Bromski said.
However, they said they didn't think KU students, as a group, were responsible for the theft.
"IT'S THAT OLD story about there being
From page one
formal contracts, because the letters are for amateur, not professional, athletes.
—The agreement of a letter-of-intent shouldn't be interpreted as strictly as agreements for other financial aid are interpreted because the consequences of terminated agreements aren't listed on the financial aid register, and are listed on financial aid agreements.
—The letters-of-intent shouldn't be interpreted as "play for play."
Scholarships
- Members of the board might be legally responsible for their actions if a board decision goes against them.
--deciding whether to revoke an athlete's aid
—Changes should be made in grievance procedures by the next school year.
Burnister said the FASC guidelines on terminating学商ers weren't meant as a substitute for the official standards.
He said the main question in the dispute was whether FASC should be making the decision. In the past, FASC has been chosen for lack of another group, he said.
Burmeister said SenEx haddn't requested the NSC compose the guidelines, but the group has not.
BURMEISTER SAID he had presented his committee report to each committee member for possible changes before submitting it to SenEx.
Donaldson said, however, that he had received his copy last Monday, and that Burmeister had been out of town all of last week.
Burmeister said SenEx had become concerned that FASC, a body charged with advising on policy decisions, was making "dollar decisions."
Rail pass sells well
Despite reports of planned reductions in European railroad passenger service, students are still buying the Eurailpass and Student Railpass.
The Eurailpass provides unlimited first-class travel on national and some private European railroads. It can be purchased for a 15 day, 21 day, one month, two month or three month period of travel. A two-month Eurailpass now costs $300.
The Student Railpass entitles full-time students under 26 years of age, to two
months of unlimited second-class European rail travel for $195.
According to a local travel agency, rail passes are selling as well as they have in the past and are still considered by European travelers to be wise investments.
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, and a FASC member, said that NCAA and Big Eight rules required that an athlete be discussed about revoking athletes' scholarships.
These passes can be purchased through a travel agent or European railroad representative in the United States. They are unavailable in Europe.
The Eurealpass and Student Railpass entitle the pass owner to unlimited rail travel in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, Holland, Italy, Luxembourg, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland.
"All we can do is make recommendations," Burmeister said. "When it comes to the student athlete, we seem our recommendations are binding."
Rogers said he thought FASC should review to review the scholarship cases. "I think all we need are some firm guidance," he explained, known to the student athletes," Rogers said.
DR. RONALD J. KOEHN Chiropractor
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JERRY WAUGH, assistant athletic director, said that the athletic department didn't like to ask that players' scholarships be revoked, and that it was only done in cases where the students had made no effort to play on teams.
Office Hours by Appointment
"It doesn't make any difference how we feel one way or the other," he said. "It's not important."
FLO KENNEDY
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THE ELDRIDGE HOUSE
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A new menu. A new night out.
a certain few who do this type of thing,"
Bronoski said.
For just that reason, the Eldridge House is offering a new menu specializing in food with an excellent combination of flavor and delicacy. We do not mean for these specialties to be for just any meal—which is why it is only offered Sunday nights. Our new selection includes a large variety of omelets, crepes, and "specialty" dishes, all prepared by our master chef.
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For a good meal,new flavors,and superb service—try the Eldridge House on Sundays.
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7th & Massachusetts 841-4666
Edmonds said, "We have very little problems with college-age students. They pretty well bead by anything we ask them to do."
The two men said that fishing at the three lakes so far this year seemed to favor crabs.
They also said that channel cat fishing would probably be good at all three lakes. The Lone Star Lake caretaker was unavailable to comment on facilities at that lake.
MAY FESTIVAL Workshops Women's Films FREE CHILD APRIL 30-MAY Women's Coffeehouse and MORE CARE
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Registration and Information: 864-4934
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Selling something? Call us
The River City Jazz Band saturday april 17th on the sundeck Kansas Union - level 6-2 to 5pm
Ater the Relays stop by Sandy's for a delicious hamburger and a refreshing drink or milk shake.
Sandy's
y's
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There's a lot to do this weekend.
And you can do it all at the Eldridge House.
- Enjoy your favorite beverages while dancing to current albums played by Spike Santee and Ted Oshirak in the Disco.
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Whatever you do this weekend, do it with us.
★ And don't forget our spectacular Sunday Buffet
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7th & Mass
THE ELLDRIDGE HOUSE CLUB AND DINING ROOM
Thursday, April 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
7
DANIELLE WEBB
Graves missed pitching a perfect game last week by giving up a single walk
Graves relies on 'total control'
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Sooth Writer
"It doesn't matter how good a pitcher you are, " Graves said. "I believe that pitching is more important."
What's the difference between a winning softball pitcher and a losing one? According to gloria Graves, pitcher for the University of Arizona, she pitches to a team, a big factor is the team's catcher.
"I FEEL LIKE A CATCHER has to have total control of the players on the field. You have to have confidence in the catcher, or you will miss pitches and pitchoments pitches," the Topeka sophomore said.
And it's not likely that anyone would argue the point—not after looking at her.
She said she had complete confidence in the catchers on the KU squad.
In 24 1/3 innings of work this season, Graves has allowed only one hit. As the result of control problems in one game, she's given up five runs, but she also has compiled 30 strikeouts on the year. Her season's record is 4-0.
IN HER MOST RECENT out-last—lifting a heavy rock from Graves plains five innings of no-hill ball before being lifted in the sash, KU went on to win by moving the batwavs; seak at 19 to 15.
A week ago, Graves pitched a no-hitter in a 13-0 walloping of Southwest Missouri State, missing a perfect game by only one walk.
KU coach Sharon Drysdale said Graves was pitching as well now as she'd ever seen her pitch, and credited off-season conditioning for her success.
"LAST YEAR, SHE was not in shape. I don't think psychologically as well as physically." Drysdale said. "But she's done a lot of work in the off-season. She's lost a lot of weight. She's done a lot of conditioning and a lot of preparation.
"I think she's extremely determined; she self-motivated, and I think the conditioning has helped her confidence as well as her performance."
Graves, who said she wasn't satisfied with her performance last season, agreed that the work she did in the off-season was a major factor in her success this year.
"I WAS VERY DISAPPOINTED in my performance last year," Graves admitted. "At that time I was overweight and was having trouble with my knees."
But she said she thought her preparation for this season was better than that pre-season.
"I started running and working out two weeks after the season ended last year," she said. "I ran two miles every day up until the opening of our training program."
SHE SAID SHE HAD tried to develop a pitching style that permitted her to use her entire body—instead of just her arm—to get power on the ball.
"There are times when my entire body lifts off the ground for just a second," the hard-throwing right-hander said. "That's when I feel good because I know I'm using my entire body, and I'm getting the muscles to work together and not against each other."
"That's one reason why I feel that I haven't had a sore arm at all this season, even after a game," she said. "Even the players have a sore. I don't even know that I've pitched."
GRAVES SAID THAT she liked to use psychology when she pitched, and that she loved the table. But if a batter comes up to the plate looking very eager, she makes her wait a little longer than normal, she said. She uses the table because they dig who in dogs and gets set at the plate.
"Sometimes I'll stand on the mound and look directly at the catcher," she explained. "And just before I believe the time allotted for the catch is over, I'll back off the mound back on the catcher bag."
"Some of them will literally kind of shake their heads like, 'I don'tanna get up there,' and I throw an inside pitch to some of them, "she said. "They'll swine just to get out of there," she said.
SHE ALSO NOTICES THE batter's row and how often the player steps out of his box.
Graves said her major goal for the season was for KU to win the College World Series. She said that if her teammates continued to play the way they've been playing, winning could be a realistic goal, but she added that there was still room for improvement.
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"We have some things that we still have to work out," she said. "We're by no means a perfect team. But I think, more than anything, our strongest point is that everyone appreciates the other person's abilities. It's a unit."
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Thursday, April 15, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Javelin throwers aim for the sky
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Sports Write
The words "Strive to be No. 1" are posted on a bulletin board in Mark Kostek's room.
a outetu board in Mark Kostek's room. "I just want to be No. 1," he said. "In any way, I don't want to be No. 1."
BOTH KOSTEK AND ROGER HAMMORD are javelin throwers on the University of Kansas track team. And it's been a tough year for the team, has had ruglew winners out of both of them.
At the Dallas Invitational track meet three weeks ago, Kostek threw the javelin 246-4 to set a personal record. It was also the sixth best throw in KU history.
Last Saturday, Kostek won the Arkansas State Invitational with a toss of 24-3. In that meet, in fact, Kansas placed 1-2-3 in the javelin. Hammond finished second with a throw of 22-3-2½, and freshman Brian Todd tread third with 209-7.
HAMMAD, A SENIOR FROM Atchison,
established his personal best last year when he
threw the spear 248-8 in the Big Eight
meet. Not only did that toss enable him to
win the event, but it also landed him fifth
place in the all-time KU rankings.
Hammond also got off a good throw of 233,
5 in the Texas Belles two weeks ago.
But success doesn't come easy. Keep in shape, a year-round training program is one of the things you can do.
"Weight lifting in the fall and in the winter is mandatory," Kostek said. "You have to do it, and you've got to be dedicated because it's boring."
Kostek said Timmons went to a javelin clinic this year and picked up some helpful tips.
But Kostek and Hammond also credit each other for aid and encouragement.
"We watch each other when we throw."
Hammond said. "We've thrown enough together that we know each other's strong and weak points, and we try to help each other."
ABOUT THE HELP THEY give each other Kostek said. "It may not seem like much, but just that little word of encouragement, or you're turning your heart just these little comments and criticisms help us to achieve what we want."
sports
KOSTEK, A JUNIOR FROM Rocky Hill,
Conn., said the usually warm weather
earlier this spring provided an opportunity
to do some extra work outside.
"I think that working outside is really super important, just for the mere fact that we do have a chance to throw the javelin," Kosteak said. "During the winter, we throw weighted balls indoors, but you kind of lose the feel of the javelin itself."
One of the main things that helped Kostek, he said, was the opportunity to go outside in February and work on the technique of lavelin throwing.
BOTH KOSTKE and HAMMONG said they trained on their own quite a bit, but credited KU coach Bob Timmons for giving them help and direction.
"Coach Timmons is very knowledgeable about the dynamics of throwing," Hammond said, "and he's had a lot of confidence in me."
Field hockey decision should come next week
The confusion over the future of the KU women's field hockey team should be over
THAT DECISION SHOULD be made within the next week, she said.
Jane Markert, field hockey coach, said yesterday after talking to D. Del Sankel, executive vice chancellor, that a final sport would be made as to whether the sport would be dropped.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, Marian Washington, assistant athletic director for women's athletics, and Shankel will meet with the team members, Markert said.
Markert she learned in her meeting with Shankel that Washington believed she couldn't run a competitive program on the $22,000 the Student Senate Sports Committee has recommended for a budget to subsidize women's sports at KU.
WASHINGTON SAID THAT dividing the money among the women's 10 sports would lessen the quality of each sport, Markert said.
Markert disagreed with Washington.
"The best solution would be to get more money, and the second choice would be to build a new bridge."
Shankel responded to the meeting by telling he would try to get all viewpoints and sides before he made a decision, Markert said.
Harmond said that when he first came to KU, he received a great deal of help and instruction from Sam Colson about the technique of throwing a javelin.
She again repeated her belief that KU could maintain a competitive program in 10 sports with the money available, adding, "If we can win all these games, we can still have a good program."
Colson holds the current KU javelin record. In a meet against Alabama in 1973, he won the national championship.
PARTICIPATING IN THE javelin event, which is held in the early morning during most meets, Kostek and Hammond don't always receive the amount of recognition that athletes in other events get. But they still lack of recognition didn't bother them.
"We don't get that much recognition," Kostek said. "Everybody likes the glory, but I don't really care. I do it because I like to do it. I have a good time."
"The javelin really isn't that much of a spectator event. It's something I take self-impact."
BUT KOSTEK SAID MUCH self-discipline was involved because a javelin thrower had to train for so long to compete in a season so short.
Hammond also said he wasn't concerned about the lack of recognition.
"There's not a great deal of recognition," Hammad said, "but it doesn't bother me. I get enough enjoyment out of it myself and that's all I require."
Kostek that the javelin was an important event because it was usually the first event of the track meet, and it was important to get the team off to a good start.
CONCERNING GOALS, Hammond said, "I'd like to win the Big Eight again, and I'd like to play more."
Kostek went a bit further, saying he
compete in the Olympics this summer.
"I think I've got a real good shot at
thewing the distance to qualify for the
Olympics."
That distance is about 260 feet.
His ultimate goal is even more ambitious.
"The career goal," he said, "is set the way I want it."
Let Freedom Ring Lessons by Charles Chumley
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Ron Ray won't run 400; Shorter might try 10,000
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Edit
Two days ago, the disappointing news was about Charlton Ehizenuel, the defending Kansas Relays long-jump champion, being named as a starter, not being able to make the trip to Lawrence.
Yesterday, it was learned that Ron Ray. the top entrant in a classy Riley 400-meter race.
RAY'S COACH AT NORTH Carolina Central University telephoned yesterday to report that Ray could run it the open d40-meter champion is injured, he said.
With Ray out of the race, the ninth fastest entrant — KU kprerent Jay Wagner — is in. A two-game sweep by the event, which features last year's champion, Maxie Parks; the world record holder in the 440-yard intermediate hurdles, Jim Bolding; and Ben Brown, the former NCAA
But on the day before the first event of the 51st Kansas Relays—the Billy Mills 10,000-meter run at 2:45 this afternoon—there was some good news, too.
OTHER GOOD WES WAS that Frank Shorter, the marathon champion in the 1972 Olympic Games, might try the 10,000-mile run, the 5,000 meters that he's already entered.
Shorter, a former Yale star, already holds the Relays record in the three mile run, of 13.06:6. He takes a crack at John Macy's 10.00-meter standard of 29.40 set in 1964.
Also in today's race will be KU runners John Roscoe and George Mason. Mason has a best in the six-mile plus event of 29:56.7, and Roscoe, now recovered from a
injury, injured the 25 laps in 30:30.8 last weekend in winning the event of the Wichita Tennis Championship.
IF SHORTER RUNS, HE'LL be challenged by Domingo Tibiuzu, the Pan American Games champion in the 10,000 meters; Colorado Track Club star Ted Castendana; and late entry Gary Bjorklund, formerly of the University of Minnesota
A former teammate of Olympic champion Dave Wottle at Bowling Green, Sid Sink, won the Big Eight McMullen who dominated the Big Eight middle-distance events in his years at
ONE PARTICIPANT IS expected to be served with entomology from North Carolina State University.
Bachelor, a friend and former Florida Track Club teammate of Frank Shorter, placed fourth in the Munich Olympic marathon.
Another competitive event should be the faculty invitation distance medley relay, which begins at 3:55 p.m. Teams representing Kansas State, Nebraska and North Carolina State, and, of course, the University of Kansas, are entered.
In addition to the faculty relay and the Billy Mills 10,000 meter run, there will be preliminaries and finals in men's and women's intramural 444-yard relays and finals in the junior college distance medley relay.
Here is this afternoon's schedule:
2:45- MILU-MILI 10,000 cars per
2-45 Billi Miller 1.000 meter run
2-45 400 yard relay men's intramural prelims
2-45 400 yard relay men's intramural prelims
2-45 Junior-volt distance distance relay finals
2-45 Junior-volt distance relay finals
2-45 Men's intramoral relay finals
2-45 Men's intramoral relay finals
NBA playoffs continue
The Seattle SuperSonics won after their 18th consecutive home court victory tonight in the second game of their NBA playoff series against Boston, while the Suns go after Fred Brown.
Rv The Associated Press
Brown, Seattle's 6-3 scoring leader who has been used by coach Bill Russell as his No. 1 substitute, scored 34 points in Tuesday night's 102-99 quarter-final victory.
"We'll just have to do a better job on him." Maclead said. "Brown hit some big hits."
Brown, who also had seven rebounds and
five staleks, said his plan has been to try "to get a good feel on how they play me, so I can change in later games." He admitted, "I would name would be tougher than last night's."
The. Sonics' victory extended a club record for consecutive home victories.
"There no doubt it's more difficult to win on the road, but you can't concede." MacLeod said. "It would be nice to win one game, but we're in a position where we have to win."
In today's other quarter-final matchup, Cleveland plays at Washington.
Wooe beat Headke, however, in singles competition. 6-7, 6-4, 6-4.
Clarke also teamed up with Tink Headkite in taking the No. 1 doubles match from NU's Joel Madden and Alex Johnson.
Netters defeat Nebraska, 6-3
KU's No. 1 tennis player, Bill Clarke, maintained his undefeated record yesterday by defeating Nebraska's Dan Slobath, 6-4, 6-3, and helping Kansas to a 6-3 team victory over the Cornhuskers in Lincoln, Neb.
KU's Joe Ruysser and Jeff Thomas both lost.
The Cornhusker player of Russ Willese and Dan Waen beat Ruyser and Thomas in singles competition, 6-1, 6-2 and 3-6, 7-5, 6-0, respectively.
The Nebraska doubles teams all lost.
It was Hasking and Ruyser over Schermann and Jackson, 7-5, 6-2, and Buller and McClure after a wiltse of Weaver, 9-6, 6-4, 6-2.
Angels edge Royals, 7-6
KANSAS CITY (AP)-Ed Herrmann homered twice to drive in four runs and power the California Angels to their first 1976 victory, a 7-4 conquest of the Kansas City Royals yesterday night.
With Kansas City leading 5-3 in the eighth inning, Dave Collins and Bruce Bochete walked, and a single by Bill Melton brought Collins home. Then Herrmann unloaded his second home run of the night, a shot over the field fence off reliever Marty Pattin.
The Angels had dropped their first four outings.
Kansas City jumped to a 3-0 lead with a second-inning outburst against starter Lance Stephens, who led the inning, then consecutive singles by George Brett, John Mayberry, Hal McRae and Al Cowens, plus an error by California fielder Lee Stanton put Tanaan in a hole.
The Royals scored their final run in the bottom of the eighth.
"The most important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part, just as the most important thing in life is not the triumph but the struggle."
文昌中医院
ROOMS FOR RENT
The words spoken some 80 years ago by Baron Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the modern Olympics, could well have meant for Montreal and Mavor Jean Drapoue.
Thursday, April 15, 1978
Drapeau and the Quebec capital lost their struggle for perfection. They were plagued by strikes, political scandal, inflation and inclement weather. But they have all but won their battle against time to stage the XXI Summer Olympics.
The cranes that rise from the stadium floor and the holes where concrete sections still are to be placed are sad reminders of the elaborate plans of Drapeau and French architect Roger Taillert that had to be scrapped for the sake of efficiency.
By The Associated Press
Competitors from 132 nations will jam into two new pyramid-shaped Olympic Village buildings. But already the projections are for overcrowding.
The 72,000 seats will be in place on opening day. The artificial track is being laid. But the envisioned sweeping white spire will not be the landmark of the Games. The revolutionary retractable roof won't be made; the wooden panels will have to use makeshift dressing rooms and press rooms for some 6,500 international journalists were moved three miles away.
The adjacent swimming pool is being tiled after passing the stringent test to hold a swimming pool and practice pool are virtually complete. Also, part of Olympic Park, is finished.
Sigma Nu House
—Air conditioned
—Tennis courts
—Close to campus
—Quiet study areas
Some 100,000 visitors a day will bunk in accommodations ranging from first-class hotels to youth hostels. They will pump some $2.2 billion into the Canadian economy, buying tickets, Olympic souvenirs, food and lodging.
Of the 21 Olympic sports, facilities for all but two are finished. Some are new. Others, such as the Forum and the Maurice Richard Arena, already existed and needed only to be built. All of the accomplishments have been overshadowed by one major mistake: Olympic Park.
Basketball courts
Some 11,000 athletes will compete in Quebec for 450 gold medals beginning July 11.
—Large sudeck
Two acres of grassy lawn
site of one of the most important Olympic
sports: track and field.
—Coed living; Girls top floor; Guys first floor
The Games will go
—Tennis courts
—Kitchen available
Huge living
Olympic Park is the site of the white futuristic stadium where Queen Elizabeth II is expected to open the Games. It is the site of the closing ceremonies on Aug. 1. It is the
Businesses will benefit, but the government will suffer. What Drapaeu once saw as an Olympics that would pay for itself has become a $1 billion albatross.
—Recreation area
—'75/month
-Plenty of parking space
It is far from finished
Weight room
—Charcoal grill
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Thursday, April 15, 1976
University Dally Kansan
20-year plan ...
From page one
couldn't be developed for specific reasons.
"The landowner may not want to sell."
Zim said, "and if we don't expand the city landlord, may produce a landowner monopoly."
Some of the guidelines presented by the planning Commission seemed to be taken from others.
"This is not a Los Angeles or San Francisco," Zinn said. "We don't have our urban sprawl in Lawrence and it's doubtful that we ever will - we have urban growth."
Several residents at the hearing supported the chamber's criticisms.
"If our population is going to double in the next 20 years, we're going to be in a lot of trouble."
Finally, he said, the plan appears to be an idealized concept of what ought to be.
"MANY OF THE COMMUNITY goals contained in the plan have no practicality whatsoever," Zinn said. "It's fine to dream—it's important to dream—but to dream at the expense of the community is ill-founded."
Chairman Davis said he agreed with many of the Chamber's criticisms and that they seemed to reflect the opinion of most Lawrence residents.
"Looking around the community, there is not a consensus of agreement that this is a
good plan." Weatherwax said. "It's an inconsistent document in my judgment."
HE SAID THAT A MAJOR problem with the plan was that groups both for and against city growth could find support for their arguments in it.
Saying there was a need to recognize that Lawrence would expand rapidly in the next 20 years, Weatherwax pointed to changes in the city since 1950.
City Manager Buford Watson said that although he agreed the plan should be changed, he thought that a guideline for community development was important.
"THE HAS BEEN GLARINGLY lacking in the past," Watson said. "Although I choked on some of the words occasionally, I have been in that, with some changes, can be used."
"Back then Iowa Street wasn't in, Lawrence High School wasn't built—there were wheatfields where it is now," Weatherwax said. "I wonder where all of this growth would have gone if we had had this plan 20 years ago."
Some of the goals presented in the Planning Commission's guideline are:
—Strive for managed growth to avoid the
difficulties of sustaining enterprise growth.
- Insure a pleasing community image through development.
—Encourage maximum social interaction of citizens.
Library budget . . .
From page one
Less than half the requested amount was allocated for equipment, $14,784 instead of $30,000. The libraries were, however, given the $80,140 needed for the new Ohio College Library Center (OCLC) automated data collection system to replace the present cataloging system.
hoped there would also be an extra allocation next year, but amounts added outside the official budget made it difficult to make long-term plans.
Glinka said regular equipment needs included new chairs, desks, book trucks, typewriters and file cabinets. In addition, he said, special demands have been made for areas of steel shelving, new microform equipment, music equipment and materials to furnish the new art library, which will be furnished by Forsman Spencer Art Museum.
RUTH MILLER, member of the executive board of the faculty assembly, said there was a lack of all kinds of equipment. She said the library staff put in requests for equipment each year but rarely got what it wanted.
"You get so little of what you ask for." for,
say, "you feel like making a photocopy of
your book."
Sherlen Hawkins, microforms librarian,
said some of the machines in her department
were 20 years old and most of them
needed to be replaced. Of the 27 machines,
four are out of order and, she said, these
now would never be repaired.
Another major problem is the lack of staff. The budget gave the library five of the 7.5 unclassified (faculty) staff requested but only four of the requested 13 classified.
Nancy Bengel, circulation librarian, said
the need for classified (clerical) staff was crucial.
SHE SAID SHE WAS also concerned about the number of student assistants. The library has requested $21,656 in student wages, but allocations haven't yet been
Bengel said the lack of staff in the circulation department meant that books weren't getting shelved quickly enough and the stocks weren't being kept in order.
Watson Library is now open 86 hours a week. Kehde said it should be open 100 hours and had been open 93 hours in 1968. Other libraries, such as Spencer, Marvin and the music library, and departments of Watson, are on government Documents, are open even less.
"When patrons criticize us for not shelving books, we get frustrated," she said, "because we know that we can't shelve books."
The number of student hours also decides the number of hours the libraries can stay one year.
SPENCER LIBRARY is open only 45 hours, Kehde said, which is very in convenient for many students, because it can't be checked out as easily from there.
Several of the library staff expressed fear that next year's budget would be harder on the libraries, since this year they had been promised priority.
"It makes you wonder if you missed the peak and an earl ever going to get it back,"
Shankel said this wouldn't be so.
"I believe the libraries will be kept as a palette," he said. "At least that's my position."
Buskens
LOOK FOR THE FLEX
Comfort . . . See our Latigo Leather Sandals.
Flexible Crepe Soles or Wood Bottoms.
A large selection to choose from.
Most styles $15 to $20.
mccoy
shoes
813 Moss. St.
VI 3-2091
-Base growth of residential and commercial areas on planned unit development.
- Provide an optimum living environment by equipment based on sonic or physical principles.
—Provide maximum employment opportunities.
-Provide adequate facilities and a high level of service in the areas of municipal services, transportation, education, and parks and recreation.
Preserve the historical buildings and structures of the community.
A public hearing on the final draft of the Planning Commission's guide for community development through 1995 will be in several months.
Great Combinations
STEAK & SHRIMP
FRANCISCAN
$3.99
Steak and Shrimp Franciscan. It's new from Mr. Steak and it's a great new restaurant. You serve you the finest U.S.D.A. Choice Beef, naturally aged for tenderness in a sirloin cut, seared on an open flame. Then we add Shrimp franciscan. Large beef with sweet snow crab meat and tiny pink bay shrimp. Seasoned with a hint of onion, garlic and cheese in Sri Lanka. Francisco sourdough breading, Salad, oven warm bread and a steam-cooked Shrimp and Shrimp franciscan. A great combination and a great dinner value, this restaurant is America's steak expert.
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-9 p.m.
Mr.
Steak
AMERICAS STEAK EXPERT
Final Shoe Clearance
Everything from Gum Sole Sport Shoes to Platforms. Choose from famous names like: Baretrap, Shoestring, Cortinas, Bort Carlton, Joan and David. Regularly $30.00
$9.99-$12.99
Use your Carousel charge, Master Charge, or BankAmericard
Mon.-Thurs. 10-8:30
Fri. and Sat. 10-6
711 West 23rd Malls Shopping Center
carousel
Rent it. Call the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
carousel
MICHAEL JACKSON AND ROBERT WOLFE
our own corsican soccer shirt designed by Mister Guy new for spring'76 reg. $15.00 now $11.95 for the kansas relays
open thursday nights till 8:30
MISTER
Guy
920 mass.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 15, 1976
11
Flight simulator to show laws of aerodynamics
Undergraduates in the aerospace engineering department will benefit next fall from a standard training airplane to be used for flight simulation, according to Jan Roskam, professor of aerospace engineering.
The flight simulator, the first in the Big 8 Conference to be used in undergraduate classwork, will be housed in the instrumentation lab in Learned Hall, Roksa said yesterday. It will be used as an educational, not a training, device. he said.
students have used a flight simulator in the Nichols Hall Space Technology Center, he said, undergraduate students have been given the opportunity to "it's been tough," Roakam said "the
Roskam said the courses that would use the new facility were Aerospace Engineering 560, 551 and 521, which are Dynamics of Flight I and II and Airplane Design.
The simulator will be an ideal tool to demonstrate the principles of demonstratives, he said.
and will be used by about 20 students each semester.
Although post-graduate flight research
"It's been tough," Rosakam said. "The new simulator will really help."
150 aircraft donated to the University of Kansas by Cessna Aircraft Co. of Wichita, has undergone changes to make it suitable for flight simulation.
Students have had to take for granted that an airplane will react a certain way to varying conditions, he said, but, in the real world, the experience the effects within the simulation.
The standard training airplane, a Model
The airplane has been stripped of its wings, tail and fuselage, so all that remains is the cabin with control systems and the landing gear, Roskam said.
Researchers at the University had built two analog computers that could be converted to digital.
One problem that students in Roskam's classes have, he said, is understanding what mathematical coefficients mean when used in airplane control. That conditions have on airplane control.
duplicate the systems of aircraft ranging from a Cessna 150 to a Lear jet, he said.
"If we can put them in a simulator," he said, "we can show them how the coefficients relate and how it really feels when the conditions exist."
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students who request it. Reqs include: or obtain HIRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 11FILT HALT
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word ... $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 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 UDX business office at 961-4538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK, if
Employment Opportunities
Lawrence Gay Liberation seeks your in-put as we re-organize to better meet your needs. Help us plan activities for the summer and need welcome emails, 9/29, April 10, Student lion. 4-20
Summer employment: largest moving and storage company in Midwest is accepting applications for warehouse and van helpers for this summer. 12905 W 63d, Shawne, Ks. 4-16
A job opening for full time research assistant at Bursary of Healthcare Achievement Workshops in Haworth, Dorset. Participate in workshops materials, preparing forms, completing evaluation forms. Good typing skills are essential to work effectively in the view. Application drills and starting date approximately April 1. Equally Opportunity Employees.
Summer employment for women: largest moving applications for women packers to prepare vehicles for long-distance travel in City and Leavenworth area, must have own equipment. Moving Services, 1250 W. 63rd, Leavenworth, Ks.
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
Lawrence Gay Library Invitation you to a roster
of students participating in the Kansas State Center 10.0 F. 28rd, 8-10, $10, April 19, 2015
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS *Drop in and
pick up materials* (the phone calls, please) at WESTERST
HILL HOTEL 486-527-3100.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CENTERED
15 East 81st, 844-2664
10.5 Monday, Saturday
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10.5 Tue..Sat
armadillo bead cc
1924
MACRAME BEADS
of sizes & prices
'10 Mass., 841-7946. Mon.-Sat. 10:5-30
large selection
Free rental services. Up to the minute listings of
rentals in Lawrence, Lawrence, Lawrence.
Rental Exchange. 842-250-3900.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
ate space and access to campus. $55 and up. bu-
lge or $83-$907.
**Recommendation:**
2 bdmr, all uffl, paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Park free. a/c, pool. b45-493. . . .
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate occupancy. Also, save money, leave June 1, 2017 for December 15 or before now if it's too late. Park 25 Avenue; 2 blocks west of Iowa on 25th St. Phone 842-1455.
Free Room for a responsible couple in the home of a retired prof. The house is quiet, comfort-
ful, and private. Cooking is encouraged in exchange for room. Available in May. Call Don Anderson 840-4848 (cherrie)
Get your summer & Fall Rentals now. NO PETS.
443-1601 Lynch Real Estate 2237, Ohio 4-16
Upsatz room for rent. 2 blocks from campus.
Staffed. Free. quiet, reasonable.
Available Jumbo. 841-3253.
Sublissace - Meadowbrook studio apt. June 1-August
6 pm, plus electric plus. Call 845-321-891
6 p.m.
For summer: 2 bdmh - A-C-Garage -w/c bag
- Larger-gard-ware -o-4dle
Call Boh. 841-6248
Large 1 bedroom AC apartment with fireplace,
basement, private laundry, gas furnace, home
to home starting Arundel Tennis, pool privacy
and full basement.
2 Bedroom apt not available INMEDIATELY (luxury)
3 Bedroom apt not available INMEDIATELY (form units utilities Call 864-6259 asylum)
Female undergirl, is wanted to share 2 bedroom
formmate with 1 female. Contact Caitlin 7840-7421
650 mg plus cream. Call Caitlin 7840-7421
Two bedroom apartment in fourplex, AC fur-
nishable; $130 monthly; Call 844-726-5555.
Available May 15.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close out products, the company has a number of equipment barned at the GRAMOHP NISHOP at KIERS.
Tremendous selection of guitar, arpa, drums,
bass, percussion, and more. Shop Kes Keyboard Studios, Choose from Grab-
Ball, Shop Kes Keyboard Studios, Choose from Grab-
Ball, Amper, Amper Kustom, Green, and many others.
Gift kit includes gig bag, drum set, gift kit,
g
CONTENT 106~Stereo equipment. All major
components. Equipment for recording and
playback on unabashed HIFI for Free Rise
Proof. A list of equipment to buy.
www.riseproof.com
Alternator, Starter, and generator Specialists,
BELL AUF-341
Electricity: 843-2800, 8300 W. 4th.
Electricity: 843-2800, 8300 W. 4th.
Western Civilization Note—Now on Sale
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Make sure you have:
1) 2 study guides
2) For class preparation
3) 3 textbooks
Available now at town Clerk Stores. tf
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
appliances at Bargain Prices. We buy-sell-
ly. New & Used Furniture & Appliance Center, 79th
Mall, 645-2731.
FINAL CLOSEOUT! MICHELIN STEEL XAS
RADIALLS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
AT 12 AM AT RAY STONE-BACKS.
922 Mass. Carrier for fire service.
4-16
Sanoyo Car Cassette player number FT-870
with 199 items; asking $7 or best of 15
Call 841-2587
Pontiac Firebird, 1960. excellent condition, auto-
mountable. With white vinyl skin tape.
481-7434
481-7440
Ball Park Baseball
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
Box 3422-U Lawrence, Kansas 66044
BALL PARK, INC.
Insight INTO LIFE
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent."
Bahai' Club Meeting, April 5, 19:30 p.m. Oval Ballroom, Union
Bahai Faith
842·4441
RECORDED MESSAGE (0411)
AM Part Stop
THE LOUNGE
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
841-2200
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
PRO
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Foosball
a quiet corner
Bass guitar, Custom Bass Amp; plenty of power,
good shape, Call Ned. 842-5686.
4-15
Black lab puppies for sale $15. Call 841-3298, 4-15
2 RSS-ANT-1 speaker, excellent condition $500.
842-4755 4-16
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
1967 Fiat 850 Coupe, new paint, needs timing.
Call 843-6088.
4-15
WE SELL FOR LESS—11 to 6:30. Good used fur-
trash bags; excellent refrigerators. Refrigera-
tors: all appliance manufacturers.
Have Layaway~weekly free delivery. 1222 East
Washington, Topeka, Ke Phone 1-727-825-312
+ 1-353-829-4180
Women's 5 speed Schwinn Suburban bicycle.
8-speed Schwinn Suburban bicycle;
refrigerant-handler cable. Lyla, Ligia, 4871-4379 using
equipment.
People Smoke, when you’re riding a “Bicycle”
People Like Smoke. Great condition.
DMI like Smoke. Great condition. Call
(800) 354-2791.
70 Opel-GT. 29,000 miles, new paint, exhaust;
man, radias, manuals 843-581-585 4.16
1.416
1961 Ford Galaxy 4D. AT, runs good $200 or
call Best Cell Hallway 6. after 4 m 6:48.
Ventura 12-string guitar with case. Sanyo 4-
channel carer 8-75, badas 645-663
New zoom lens 85-205 f.3.8 screw mount Viitarat 86-4745, 1-267-0734 Leave a message
5-string Computer Hardware: 8400, Sony TC25 Tape deck, $60, Call Pat: 842-7862
4,16
Ovation 12 string guitar. Excellent condition.
Price reasonable. 841-6184 after 6.
4-16
Yoshua TL Elc - X $135; Mamiya Sekor 565;
2 wide angle, wide镜头 200 zoom, zeom 70; 20 tele-
meter; 4x4 viewfinder
Elinore CR 250M Motocross, perfect condition.
841-737-351 and ask for Radley. 4-16
64 VW BUG needs engine work, best offer. 842-
8764
Bicycle): for sale. Azuk-10-speed like New $99.
Akip No. Ap. 9, 1323 Tenn.
NICE '68 MG MIDGET $295. Call 842-3067. 4-21
Mort test Crag 2790 auto repeat starre cassette
Carg2790 with two extra D1500/E model for Model 28 and Brand
Model 29. Use D1500/E
Bumper Stickers-- by American Cedar
contracts" machineworking "1, SASE, 325 ON-
KC KCK 608-210-7429
71 Chev, Impala, 350cc, AC, PS, PB, AT; 21,500
exception condition, Call 892, Call 892, Call 892,
1970 Karmann Gla, looks and runs excellent.
2018 transmittal news, new battery, passes Kansas
and Missouri.
1971 MGB-GT. Low mileage. Extended service warranty. Topeka, 862-2118.
4-16
72 Kawasaki 750 New engine, 1000 miles
excellent condition, M1-6674-01
4x21
63 VW Bug, good condition. $250. Call 843-6512
at 5 p.m. Keep trying.
Ovation 6-string acoustic $290, 841-5432, §-16
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS.
74 Yamaha V-Twin DH 200 Honda CL-30. 74 Yamaha DT-50 Honda CL-30. HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF NEW MOTORCARS AND HOME MOTORCARS, at Horton's Horizon.
CLOSE OUT! Entire stock of Michelin XAS
Sports car tires reduced to 20 % to 25% (at alarm 16m)
Broadway Theater Theatre, 718-397-4100,
Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. (Come thru city
park below Woolworth's for tire serv-
ice)
Marantz's 7 3-way speakers. Marantz 6
want amplify with cabinet, 4148-1287 for
6-422
Puppies for sale. 1/4 timber wolf. 3/4 malnutrition.
$200; $423 after 6 months
4-22
Used radial tires reduced. Use our basement for largest assortment anywhere—Many excellent matched pairs. Many Michelin in stock—Hayrins, Falken, Rohde, Lidl, Lotus lot behind Woolworths. 4-22
Radio radio. First tide ever. Sony Cube Radio. Blackstone radio. Second tide ever. Red Rock Stack (now reduced) Red Rock Stack (now reduced) Red Rock Stack (now reduced)
TRUCKLOAD SAMPLERS Baitwashables,
65 handtowels, $125. Battwashables on the
wall.
Baitwashables, $125.
XOIC TC-352D1 reel with eight 7" tapes
$160, Jeff. 864-6890. 4:22
99 Ford Van-E360 sell or trade for 69-70 Macam or Cameron, 841-5504. 4-16
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS JOBS - summer-year round Europe,
S. Africa, Monthly abroad.
S.A.M. Monthly abroad. Expands ability to
give information. Expands ability to
free inform.- International Job Center. Dept.
Ka. Box 409, Berkeley, CA 94704. 4-23
Help wanted for custom harvesting combine and drive drivers. Experience prefers Call 408-431-3925.
HELP WANTED: Kansas Students. Company seeks tutors to assist students, etc. who available now. Flexible time slots needed.
Experienced Installation man to do car stereo and CB. Excellent call. Pay 841-3752. 4-16
Marketing majors—part time until summer. Good way and experience. Call for interview 843-904-696.
Distinguished pass-passer-cutter used at Off-
Trib-Twall-Hall, 727 New Hampton, 8411-8184.
Avon can help you have the summer vacation of your dreams. Excellent earnings. Openterritory. Free meals. Free parking.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public
source for advertising. The Bank of America
Bank—houses & Towerses, and First National
LOST AND FOUND
Found. Set of keys on leather ring. South of Potsdent Pond. Call Dave. 864-268-4
4-16
Reward for items returned from solur pauce.
Reward for images in the pictures, glasses. No
lenses. Lynn, 861-1203 4-16
Found on campus, Female dog, part English
Spanish. White with brown marking. Call-
4-15
Lost: Women's gold Omega watch 4.7/7.16, 12th and Jayhawk blue. If found please call 841-395-2040.
Reward- $25 for return of Vol. II Quantum Theory of Atomic Structure, by Slater Misting from physic office. No questions asked. Return Agadele, 13 A Mallot, or contact Physic office.
Lost 4.8 probably on 120; between Mamm-Term
Silver and gold plate "plant like" pn, Contact
Chan Townley or any Jewelry (Silverlithm
instructor, Broadcasting Hall, 864-3074). 4-15
Found Jeffrey La France's wallet. 1131 Ohio. 4-15
Brown wallet lost 4.10.16 near Robinson Gym.
All my钱 is lost. If found, contact us.
(866) 273-5991.
Nice new skateboard found near Learned Hall. Describe and claim. Call Howard, 842-1600-1697.
Found watch source of O Zone Call and identity:
841-7872. Mike.
Lost: silver glasses in light blue case between
Loft: silver glasses, Oliver Call: 864-6771. 4-21
Lost Brown leather wallet in Strong Hall Call
Reqn. 843-5839 4-29
Founde by Körper kie on beschafft rig milte weik
for Dichte Buchskette rig milte weik
Found—Rd. hooded longueye zip up sweat
Call: 864-2161. 4-20
Found in Phraser: pack of index cards concerning nature. Call 864-3011, 8-5.
4-20
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at a speed of about 1/2 inch per second of your 128 page thumbnail in 5 minutes See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, 838 Manchester sts. 841-490.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used for furniture, dhabes, lamps, chaps, televisions. Open daily 12 p.m. to 7 p.m.
The Caucalb County specialised Sunday school in FUEL
The Caucalb County specialised Sunday school in FUEL
The Caucalb County specialised Sunday school in FUEL
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive training and certification for the transportation provided. Drive new, pay later. Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive training and certification for the transportation provided. Drive new, pay later.
After 26 years in business if George doesn't
adhere to his plan, he'll be based on Mondays' George's Golf Shop. Shop
with him or call (315) 497-3000.
PLEASE Must have missing binder. Turn in to KL. Lost and Found. No questions asked. 4-16
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages, at a place in the city that has an atmosphere designed for sweet delight and gentle
5 Nights a Week No Cover
NEW MODERN DECOR
HUMAN RIGHTS
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
HIDEOUT
843-9404 CLUB
Planning a trip?
New Memberships Available
Class B Private Club
Open 17 a.m.
(7) DAYS
Wavein Pool - winner
Let Mapintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
SUA / Maupintour
travel service
1 Black leather portraits 24 x 36 in. inside dimension
2 White leather portraits 24 x 36 in. inside dimension
3 Artistic arts; art supplies; dyeing, brayering,
waxing, and staining
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 843-0110. tf
The Second Annual Student Scripture Competi-
tion "Don't miss it -- entries available at
NUA."
PERSONAL
INTERESTED IN NO-PIEARS LOW COST JET TRAVEL TO Europe, Caribbean or Australia. JET FLIGHTS have been helping people travel on a busway with maxxer capacity for 10 years. For more info call toll free 800-225-5290.
Phone 843-1211
MADAME LENA, E.S.P -PALM READY-ADDR-VISION. Buy a dream or story book and get a chance to win prizes for solving problems. For more information, call 862-1231 to 3803 South Topeka Blvd. Topsik Ke
Come on—Come all may Day Festival—a week of education, conversation, and celebration. Meet us at Women's House. Women's Music at a Women's House. Kit a little picnic and volleyball. Free house. Join the coalition on their Coition and Commission on the Status of Women's registration and information. Funded by Student.
Hot Hose! Blushing Bull! Driver Breeze! Red Eye!
What's happening at Quantit? 715 Mass.
KU Union—The Malls-Hillcrest-900 Mass.
May your 20th birthday be as special as you are.
Happy Birthday Sharon, Love, Jahan
4-15
Berry Riley please call me. Chris Llywyn-841-7022
Harry, I can't wait much longer. 4-21
RIDES RIDERS
Without Zionists there would be no Zion! 4-21
Friends of the Kahana! Tbilit night with the
Kahana! The big Kahana! (1-20)
To be there, Alasha!
Dear Kahana!
Ride need to Kansas City or KU Med Center morning. Will save gas expense 8:42-438, 4-21
SERVICES OFFERED
10
MATH TUTORING—Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006. Courses 142, 500, 558, 627. Regular sessions or one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT! Virtually any jewelry design possible. Professional (IBA degree) goldsilverware. Complete stone cutting. wide video display. Fully stocked. Full-service warranty. 841-3838 or 843-0797. ftf
Trying to sell a musical instrument or sound
乐器 to McKenny-Mason, 81-937-611
MATH TUTOR WITH MA in mathematics. Call 841-3708 after 6 p.m. tf
TRAVEL
EUROPE
km 1/2
economy
fare
INMAT
Cust
charge 800-325-4867
UniTravel Charters
TUTOR
Math Tutor with M.A. in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 on 6 p.m.
4-15
TYPING
Goldpecker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
843-8908
*PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
AND LENDED
DURICATED WITH
FLAWLESS ACCURACY
*COMPLETE OFFICAL
SERVICES
THEIS BINDING - The Quick Center is located in the heart of the city. Our service is fast and prices are reasonable. Our services include a free consultation and an appointment.
Experienced lynxist- term papers, papers, mice, misc.
Experienced lynxist- term papers, papers, mice, misc.
843- 503, Mrs. Wright
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476, 5-11
Typist editor, IBM PPCitele. Quality work.
Typist editor. Theses. dissertations welcome.
Mail: 842-951-8295
Expt. typ; IBM Selectric, term paper, thesis,
manuscript, proof reading, spelling correction.
Jean, James
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectric II
titanium-based tape, carbon
tonnell (ronb) Call 843-7290 at
durham.ai.da.gov.uk
Experienced typist. IBM Selectric, all kinds of
typing. Call: 842-1423 days. 842-9978 evening. Julie.
Schaefer
Expertized绣师 will type term paper, theses.
Experienced stitcher will general type writing in my home:
Baird, 841-6994.
Export typing/reasonable rates. Proofreading.
Calling. Cell (865-8200) 4-300
4-300
Professional Lifting, reasonable, work枪警人员
Grounding, grounding, B.A. Social Scien-
tifics, electric, B.A. Social Scien-
tifics
TYPING—We have many return customer forms. We also provide a free phone number we appreciate your business. Call Linda or Herbert at (718) 452-0629.
WANTED
Someone to drive a car from Charleston, S.C. to Lawrence soon. 841-6213 eve. 4-15
One roommate wants to share beautiful one-
room apartment with $20 monthly utilities paid, pool on own
home.
Calculate Texas Instruments T1-2506. Will pay top dollar or trade T1-2502-IL Call B4817-4-16
Wanted. Young couple for late summer job (high school graduate) from August to September 10. Place: Lake Champlain, NY. Salary $200 weekly. Time: Job requires a cell phone and computer. You can workILL fall Sept. 10. We provide: Travel-inclusive accommodations; telephone calls, please. Apply in writing and see references. Raymond Cert. 100 Sunset Drive.
Someone to subluate fully furnished 2 bedroom
house in Calgary, Call Chad
4350; Andy 829-1814 4-16
Wanted: Young people for late summer job light housekeeping, lawn moving, miscellaneous cleaning. N.Y. Salary $100 weekly. Time. Job could begin earlier but not please unless you apply to the pension and private living quarters. No telephone. Mail resume to Raymond Cerf, 1600 Sunset Street, Raymond Cerf, 1600 Sunset Street.
Keyhaird wanted for position Jazz-rock-
have good equipment. Contact John at 841-312-3250.
Wanted part-time help for upholstery shop.
Hard work helps. Willing to learn trades
8297.
One or two female roommates need to share
huge three bedrooms. Custodians close to care
in the building will be required.
Want to meet nursing student attending KUMC next year to share apartment. 844-115-103.
Roommate *wanted* - for summer. Furnished.
c bedroom, 2-bedroom apartment near campus $720-
$840 per month. Applicants must be
graduate.
People with a history of stuttering behavior
are encouraged to take a short time each
microtransaction. Takes only 15 minutes. Call
800-324-7676.
Liberal-minded female wanted to share two bedrooms. Joywayhawker Towers apartment for 76-77
Female person to share two bedrooms furnished w. name w. $450 plus $\) elc above
One or two female roommates for summer-
fitted or upfitted—close to campus—pulloil 814-625-3042
2-14 Keystone mug wheels to fit Plymouth
Call 842-9657
4-22
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
Styling for men and women
9th and Illinois 843-3034
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.
Now Open Every Sunday
9th & Iowa
12 NOON
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets
Admission Only 12.00 each
Admission Only '12.00 ea
Race or Watch
---
LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY
20 miles east of Topeka or
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U.S. 40 Highway
921 8446
12
Thursday, April 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
4. ___
LEADING THE WAY... THE STABLES|THE SANCTUARY
Home of the KU Student & Budweiser for 25 Years.
Monday-Saturday, 12-12 p.m.
LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL
1784
$1.00 Pitchers EVERY AFTERNOON Mon.-Sat., Noon-6 p.m.
CUBA
$1.25 Pitchers>
THURSDAY
6 p.m.-Midnight
New Boiled Shrimp
( 1/4 lb.— $ 2.00 )
BUD
ALWAYS LOTS TO DO
- Pool
- Pinball
- Air Hockey
- Foosball
- TV Games
- Talk to the Bartenders (friendliest help in town)
The STABLES has all the latest tunes and a great sound system too.
The STABLES is available for beer'n' eggs breakfasts on Saturday mornings by reservation (scrambled eggs, beer, bacon or ham, rolls).
CATERING FACILITIES FOR UP TO 250 GUESTS
"The Most Unique of Private Clubs"
Open 7 days a week,2 p.m.-3 a.m.
- Memberships Available Now
- Friendly Waitresses & Bartenders
- Happy Hour 4-7 p.m., Everyday
- Boiled Shrimp
- Outside Deck Available for private parties. It's just the right atmosphere for those with spring fever.
Steak Dinners on Friday & Saturday evenings. 8-10 oz. Steaks (Top Sirloin, K.C. Strip), Shish Kebob, $ \frac{1}{4} $ lb. hamburgers & cheese. Baked potato, best salad bar in Lawrence. Luncheons beginning April 15th.
Check out the deck for father's weekend and mother's weekend celebrations, or sorority-fraternity functions, or alumni reunions, or just a regular spring fling. We have a smoke oven that handles up to 1,000 lbs. of meat. CATERING FACILITIES FOR UP TO 250
SANCTUARY
SANCTUARY
THE TEEPEE -
"The Place for Your Next Party"
- Completely Redecorated - Outdoor Patio Facilities to Handle up to 600
The all-new TeePee is the ideal spot for almost any kind of private party. Call Ace Johnson today for details.
- Wedding Receptions
- Wedding Reception
- Alumni Reunions
- Class Parties
- Formals
- Rehearsal Dinners
- Beer 'n' Eggs Breakfasts
- Dinner Dances
- Barn Parties
SANCTUARY
CATERING
Barn Parties
CATERING
Purveyors of Potables and Edibles
COCKTAIL PARTIES
At Home or Office with a trained experienced bartender. Blended drinks available, Hors d'oeuvres or Snacks
CALL ACE JOHNSON 843-0540
DINNERS & LUNCHEONS
At Home or Office, we can provide our own chafing servers & steam tables, plates & silverware, cocktail & dinner napkins.
[
STABLES
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"WE CAN DO ANYTHING"
SANCTUARY
"Entertainment at its Best"
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TEEPEE
DREARY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.125
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 16, 1976
Relays Edition Med Center and Sports
See Sections 2 and 3
THE CALL FOR HOMELAND IS FIRST TO BEGIN
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Races and rain
sony tannels, Wichita junior, nervously watched the finals of the mens intramural 44th day of the onsite opening day of the Kansas Relings. Lending both support and assistance to Wichita junior, they also received a generous tip.
City workers vote for Teamsters
By JANET SCHMIDT
After four weeks of negotiations,
Lara left her employee yesterday
affiliated with the HR department.
Workers belonging to four associations of the united Public Employees Association of Lawrence (UPEA) joined the Teamsters to resolve conflicts with city management.
"They didn't want to give us any of the rights of working people," Demis Smith, president of the UPEA, said last night. The UPEA was dissolved by the affiliation.
THE FOUR ASSOCIATIONS joining the Teamsm are composed of workers from the sanitation, street, water and parks and recreation departments. The other two units in the UPEA, the police and fire departments, didn't join the union.
Smith said the workers had joined the
Teamsters because the city's resolution to their charges of malamagement was
"The majority of the members in the association (UPEA) thought it was a pacifier," he said. "Buffed Watson (city councilman) said the dissension are bringing the Teens' notices, not us."
"If they had tried to keep it in the family and sit down and talk to us, we wouldn't have had to affiliate with a national organization."
THE UPEA BEGN negotiating with city administrators more than 10 months ago for improvements in the working conditions and wages of public employees.
They presented their grievances to the Lawrence City Commission in a list of 24 charges of mismanagement, including managerial harassment of employees, lack
IN FEBRUARY the commission adopted a 28-point resolution intended to answer the employees' grievances. Some of the measures included in the resolution were: vehicle safety inspections, revamped training program, equipment tester and revision of employee evaluations.
Smith said the workers joined the Teamsters about the city's resolution
Of the reports, Smith said. "We told it like they told it, they told it had—to they covered it."
A committee of three representatives from both the city commission and the employees spent two months investigating the charges. Two reports, one from the commission's representatives and one from the employees, were then presented to the city commission.
of safety, favoritism, confusion of work procedures and racial discrimination.
Increase in parking fees rejected
Rv.JERRY SEIR
By SELF PRESS Staff Writer
The University Council voted yesterday to keep this year's parking fees for next year, rejecting higher fees proposed by the parking and traffic board.
The council also voted to make students subject to the withdrawal policy of the school offering a course, brought the Affirmative Action Board under University Senate and refused to let the deans take any action in response to the Human Relations Committee.
The final decision on next year's parking fees will be made by the Chancellor's office.
D Denkhol, executive vice chancellor,
sad last night that he thought a decision on
the reauthorization would be possible.
"I think it's possible to go another year without increased fees." Shankel said.
SHANKEL SAID he would meet with representatives of the Office of Business Affairs to determine whether parking services could operate and make adequate parking lot improvements without higher costs. An ammunitionization to Chapelore Archi R, Dykes.
Parking Services, a division of KU Police and Parking, maintains and patrols campus parking areas. It is funded entirely by parking fees and fines.
The council was considering a proposed
2 schools to study GPA's
Following the vote, Hugh Cotton,
chairman of the parking and traffic board,
told the council he thought it had been a
mistake to defeat the higher fees.
COTTONSAID the O-zone paving project, along with parking services operating expenses for the summer months, would greatly deplete the fund.
Tedde Tasheff, student body president,
told Cotton the state had put a spending
limit of $167,000 on the parking services
fund for the remainder of the fiscal year,
$147,000.
He said a proposed re-paving of O-zone parking lot, near Allen Field House, would take $250,000 of a current $469,000 parking services fund.
See PARKING page 2
The Kansas board will interview candidates and select the editors and business
Applications are available in 105 Flint, the dean of women's office, the dean of men's office.
The two schools with the highest grade point averages (GPA) at the University will study their grading practices to see whether change is needed.
Applications for editor and business manager of the Kansan for the summer and fall semesters will be accepted until noon today. in 106 Flln Hall.
RALPH CHRISTOFFERSEN, assistant vice chancellor for academic affairs, said the schools' plans sounded "good for a start." The administration hopes schools will evaluate their grading on a regular basis. he said.
By JANICE EARLY and RITA RIDDER
An administration report on grade inflation over the past five years was released Monday. It showed that the School of Social Welfare led with a GPA of 3.437 on a 4.0 scale, and the School of Education was next with 3.369.
Kansan jobs open
"Now that we have our collecting system set up, we hope to be able to give schools data each year on their grades," he said. "It will be an interesting and different job to
"I don't think anyone can actually order a professor to lower his grades," he said.
Scannell said grading policies would be discussed by each department in his school and reports would be made. The reports will be referred to the Administration and Standards Committee for evaluation and recommendations, he said.
Theodore Ersten, dear of social welfare, said Monday that his school's faculty would meet to discuss the situation and see if they should be done to lower the average GPA.
didn't satisfactorily resolve the grievances and because the city had refused to recognize the UPEA as a collective barreaining unit.
Dale Scannell, dean of education, said yesterday that his school's administrative group had agreed to study the problem after the report was released.
His school is considering making changes independent of the departments, Scannell institute, which offers the degree.
He said the workers thought they would have greater strength as a bargaining unit with the support of a national labor organization like the Teamsters.
"I think some good can come out of careful reflection on this," he said.
Other factors contributing to the high GPA average could be attributed to the grading policies of individual professors, Ernst said.
"The Teamsters are a powerful backing," Smith said. "They've got attorneys, money and gerrymanders."
HE SAID it was difficult to determine how much an individual president's right to run was limited.
At its April 1 meeting, the council discussed the proposed fees for two hours. But when a motion was made to vote on the proposal, it wasn't present, forcing the meeting to restart.
UNIVERSAL, medical and handicapped,
brown, yellow, blue and red permits now
cost $30; green, $25; and residence hall and
Sorana Apartments. $15.
The School of Law, which is strictly a private institution, has the lowest average PA of any school or college.
fee schedule that would have set the prices of universal permits at $50; medical and handcapped permits at $46; blue and red permits at $36; brown and yellow permits at $32; green permits at $28; residence hall and Sprause Apartments at $17.
Smith said the workers had also come to Smith that the city administrators won't be able to monitor the situation.
Ermst said that the law school's average GPA, 2.685, was low because the school required a 2.0 average rather than the 3.0 average required by the School of Social
Yesterday, the council took up the proposal at this point, and the higher fees were added.
see what trends we haven't discussed before."
"WE WERE LOOKING for somebody that is concerned about us," he said. "They're (the city) asked for it, so why not give it to them?"
The report released Monday was just a summary, he said, to give the administration more insight.
"We will make available for individual schools detailed information about individual courses if they want to look at it," he said.
Scannell said there may be an attitude of taking formal grading less seriously in the School of Education because instructors tend to rely on written evaluations.
These letters examine a student's strengths and weaknesses, Scannell said. Ernst said Wednesday that the high GPA was basically a result of enrollment factors.
More than half the school's students, he said, are in the graduate division, and the other half consists primarily of juniors and seniors, with practically no freshmen and sophomores. The department offers only courses at the freshman-sophomore level.
SCANNELL AND Ernst speculated on why their schools' GPA's were so high.
ERNST SAID graduate students had to maintain a GPA of 3.0. In the undergraduate division, Ernst said, junior grades may make higher grades than underclassmen.
Scannell said that the GPA's of the University and his school were too high, and the difficulty stemmed from interpreting KU's grading system.
A C is given for average work, a B or
a superior work and an A for a superior
work.
He said students could take a course for any length of time, because of incomplete or withdrawing and re-taking the course, until a desired level of competency was achieved.
Scannell said there was a prevailing attitude here toward "competency-based
"What is the reference group for average?" Scannell asked.
Smith said that the employees had intended to take their complaints against the city to federal court before joining the Teamsters, but that a suit wasn't yet filed.
He said that a student in education usually has personal recommendation letters from three or four instructors and his cooperating teacher in his placement
Anyone who graduates from the School of Education receives a lot of personal attention from faculty members and cooperating teachers, he said.
Ticket subsidy killed
THIS KIND of attitude, he said, is bound on some influence from grading stance.
Bruce Woner, Hutchinson senior, then stood up and called for a quorum.
Last night's meeting lasted less than 30 minutes. Immediately after a short officer's report from Tedde Tasheff, student body president, Steve Owens, student body vice president, announced that there wasn't a guorum.
that his proposal has failed, next year's fee will be $6.60.
"Time is the variable and achievement is the constant," Scannell said.
A bill that would have reinstated $80,000 in Senate funds to KUAC could not be voted on at last night's meeting because only 52 senators attended.
"BEFORE WE JOINED, we had a meeting with all of the city employees at the Community Building," he said. "It was our responsibility, 95 per cent solid support in the shops."
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation won't be getting any money from the university.
Smith, when asked about city officials' reactions, said, "We have talked of affiliation with a national organization for the last 10 months, and the feeling I had from the city commission was that they didn't care."
Senate rules state that a quorum, which is six members, must be present for the Senate to act.
There is no possibility of reinstating funding for next year because the University's deadline for completion of the Senate budget was this morning.
than action is taken, if there isn't
See TICKET page 3
The bill, sponsored by John Broadie,
sports committee cochairman, was aimed at lowering student ticket prices by sub-
tituting all online purchases with addition of $2.40 to the student activity fee.
Assistant City Manager Mike Wilden said last night that he wasn't surprised by the news that the employee had affiliated with the Teamsmets.
The bill would have made ticket prices $15.50 for football and $10 for basketball. Now that KUAC won't receive the subsidy, it will be $20 for football and $10 for basketball.
This year the tickets were $10 each.
Smith said the majority of the public employees favored affiliating with the
Broadie's bill also would have made the student activity fee $12 next month. But now
"The four associations are pleased that the Teamsters are coming in and we've found that the people we've talked to have been very helpful."
"I don't think that me and my people are in a position right now to take the city to court," he said. "It takes a lot of money. But we haven't given us on it completely."
"We've known for some time that this would take place," Wildgen said. "They could join any organization they want. It doesn't change the fact that the city commission has voted not to collective bargain."
Commissioner Barkley Clark's reaction to the affiliation was similar to Wilden's.
"Their joining the Teamsters doesn't change the posture of the city at all." Clark wrote in a letter from that decision—who they join—but the city does have control over recognition.
"As far as I'm concerned, that has already been decided."
University of Kansas offices and classroom buildings will be open Monday, but most libraries and the Kansas Union library are closed. Visit the Kansas Relay, and Easter weekend.
Easter weekend changes hours for libraries, Union
The Union will be open its regular hours
THE LOVE OF HOT WATER
Clean-up
Sliding, baseball style, can be tough on dry ground. To ease the problem, for sliding practice the women's softball team wet the baseball gloves in the back yard.
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
few垫silden, Merethid Miller, Shawnee Mission sophomore, asked Lauret Faust, Mission Hills sophomore, to clean her off with the help of her friend, Rachel Kellogg.
tomorrow but will be closed Sunday and
open from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday, Both巩
un bookstore will be open tomorrow
and open from 8:30 a.m. to noon Monday,
and open from 8:30 a.m. to noon Monday.
Food services at the Union will be open regular hours today. Tomorrow, the Level 3 room will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m., and from 11 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. for lunch. The Hawk's nest will be open tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., the Prairie Room will be closed.
Monday the Deli will be open from 7:45 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. and Wescott Terrace will be open from 8:30 a.m.
Watson Library will be open from 9 a.m.
1 p.m. tomorrow, close Sunday and open
on Friday.
The Entomology Reading Room will be open 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Monday and closed tomorrow and Sunday. The Law Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. tomorrow, noon to midnight Sunday and 8 a.m. to midnight Monday. Marvin Library will be open from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. closed Sunday and open 8 a.m. to 11 a.m. Monday.
The Mathematics Library will be closed Sunday and open from 9 a.m. to noon tomorrow and 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday. The Music Library will be closed from noon tomorrow and Monday, but closed Sunday. The Music Library will also be closed Sunday but open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow and from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday. Both rooms will remain their regular hours.
Malott Hall's science library will be open tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., closed Sunday and open 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday. The Business and Economics Reading Room will be open from 9 a.m. to noon tomorrow, closed Sunday and open 7 p.m. to noon tomorrow. The Business and Economics Room will be closed tomorrow and Sunday but open from 8 to 11:30 a.m. Monday.
The computation center will be open its regular hours tomorrow, Sunday and
Saturday.
Robinson Gymnasium will be closed tomorrow and Sunday but will be open from 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday. Allen Field House will also be closed tomorrow and Sunday but open from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Monday.
2
Friday. April 16, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
India, China thaw possible
NEW DELHI-India took a first step yesterday toward a possible rapprochement with China, saying it will send an ambassador to Peking for the first time since the two countries fought a border war in 1962.
A top career diplomat, K. R. Narayanan, 55, was appointed as the new ambassador. He is expected to take up his post in about two months.
Indian sources said the two governments worked out the arrangement during three months of discussions held here and in Peking.
1. there was no immediate reaction from Peking, but the Chinese have said in the past that India must take the initiative in restoring relations because New Delhi has lost its connection with China.
Sakharov reported beaten
MOSCOW - Nobel Peace Prize winner Andrei D. Sakharov and wife received restitution belies yesterday for striking two police officers Wednesday, accusing him of assault.
Sakharov and his wife had been in the Siberian city of Orsk to attend the trial of Crimean Tatar national Mustafa Dilmeny.
Sakharov's wife Yelena said in a telephone call to friends in Moscow that the two had been taken back to a police station Thursday morning after Dijelmile's sentencing and beaten. Court officials claimed they created a disturbance when Dijelmile's sentence was announced, Yelena said.
It was not known how serious the reported beating was but the couple apparently did not seek medical treatment.
Birth control opinion filed
WASHINGTON—The Ford administration has asked the Supreme Court to rule that a state may not require maternal consent before allowing minors to receive vaccines. The Department of Public Health said.
The Ford administration's view on a UAah case raising the question was made known by a brief filed Wednesday by the Justice Department and the Department of Justice.
The three-judge court in Salt Lake City ruled that Utah's parental consent requirement violated a "constitutional right of free access to birth control information."
The government did not deal with the constitutional issue, but said that federal law, 'by requiring the furnishing of services to the individuals, rather than to families ... evinces a congressional intention that the services be furnished to the individuals' because request, without regard to the possibly conflicting conditions of a parent or spouse'.
Malpractice bills praised
TOPEKA-At it will be some time before the true effectiveness is known, but Gov. Robert F. Bennett said a package of medical malpractice bills he signed into law yesterday may have saved Kansas from a malpractice crisis that might have lost the state doctors.
Brennett says the legislation should represent a giant step ahead in the field of improving services to healthcare providers. At the same time, he said, it will ebb away from the idea of providing services to people with cancer.
One of the most important bills in the 12-piece package will guarantee professional liability coverage for qualified health care providers, and another reduces and clarifies the period for filing damage claims against health care providers.
The governor said these two bills would have a major impact on the availability and cost of insurance.
WSU appeal denied
TOPEKA—a Request for another rehearing in the lawsuit against Wichita State University, arising from the 1970 plan crash that killed several members of the team and caused a multi-vehicle accident.
The decision supports a ruling by the high court last month declaring that governmental immunity laws are constitutional.
Regents to discuss fee changes
The Kansas Board of Regents will discuss amendment of the University of Kansas activity fee schedule for the fall semester at its monthly meeting today in Topeka.
proposed satellite student union and to grant KU approval to raise number limitations on classified employee positions at the KU Medical Center.
The Regents are also expected to make decisions about student fee charges for the
Increasing the classified employee limitation number would allow 400 unclassified employees at the Med Center to become classified employees.
Parking . . .
Tasheff said that meant the parking services fund would have at least $302,000 for the summer. She said there would then be additional funds from permit sales this summer and next fall, even if prices weren't raised.
From page one
Council member Joel Gold, professor of English, said it was improper for Cotton to "scindling council members" for their motion in a motion that had already been defeated.
COTTON SAID, "I just want you to realize you're going to have to raise fees
The council then approved a motion by Edward Grier, professor of English, recommending that this year's parking fees stay in effect during the 1978/77 academic
Cotton cast the lone dissewing vote of the 29 council members present.
The change in withdrawal policy would clarify the University Senate Rules and Regulations, according to Arno Knapler, professor of finance at the business. The old policy didn't say whether a student was subject to the withdrawal policy or to the policy of the school offering a class.
CURRENTLY, University withdrawal policy says a student can withdraw from a class until the final day of classes. Some KU students are required to receive more restrictive withdrawal policies.
THE KANSAS SOCIETY OF POETS is compiling a book of poems. If you have written a poem and would like our selection committed to them for publication, send your poem and a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
POEMS WANTED
If 50 or more object, Knapper said, the
University Senate at its meeting April 28.
The Affirmative Action Board will now have representatives in the University Senate who will be nominated by SenEx and appointed by Shankel.
THE BOARD IS a group charged with ensuring that the University's Affirmative Action Plan is followed. It had been implemented of the University government system.
104 So. Broadway
The Kansas Society of Poets
Knapper said copies of the council's amendment to the withdrawal policy would be distributed to members of the University Senate. The amendment will become policy unless 50 or more University Senate members raise objections.
The council defeated an amendment to the University Senate Code that would have allowed the deans of men and women to serve on the Human Relations Committee, places on the Human Relations Committee.
Wichita, Kansas 67202
Country members opposing the amendment said that the influence of the committee would be decreased if the two administrators were allowed to stand send-
CHANCELLOR R. Dykes has requested reductions in student activity and transportation fee charges because of a lack of athletic opportunities to the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation. Teddie Tasheff, student body president, said last night another reason for the cut in the two fees was that the KU will be providing partial funding of the KU debate program.
The debate program had been fully funded by the Student Senate from activity
STUDENTS enrolled in seven hours or more would pay $8.00, instead of the present fee.
If approved by the Regents, the new schedule would reduce the student activity fee from $2 an hour to $1.60 an hour for students taking six or fewer credit hours.
The transportation fee, if approved,
would increase from 15 cents an hour to 30
cents an hour for students taking six or
fewer hours. For students in enrolled in
hours or more, the fee would increase from
$1.50 to $1.80.
According to Steve McMurry, chairman of the Student Senate Rights and Responsibilities Committee, the changes in these fees, which are part of eight incident fees charged to all students, are being made to ensure the entire fee structure more workable.
McMurry said the fee system now used to compute the two activity fees, which are assessed by the Senate, doesn't follow a standard pattern for students enrolled part-time.
THE CHANGES proposed in the schedule would require all students, regardless of the number of hours taken, to pay a proper proportion of the cost. A certain number of hours in which they are enrolled.
The Regents also have been requested to authorize collection of a $3 satellite union architectural fee for each full-time student enrolment this fall. A $6 construction fee be collected for the spring 1977 semester and subsequent fall and spring semesters.
A $2.50 fee would be collected for summer 1977 enrolments.
A request is also being made to increase the equivalent full-time limitation by 400 on the number of classified employees at KU so that qualified employed employees would become classified.
Richard Von Ende, executive secretary to the Chancellor's office, said employees, such as medical secretaries at the Med Center, could become classified if there were available classified positions open and if the job categories fell into civil service job categories.
If the positions don't fit into current civil service job categories, Von Ende said, new classifications for the employees might be sought.
A limit on the number of classified schools' schools is set by the state legislature.
Von Ende said the employees were doing jobs that could be considered classified.
APPROVAL OF promotions in rank, sabbatical leaves and emeritus appointments for KU faculty also are to be considered.
Cowboy
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BABY JANE
FLASHCUBES
BONNIE
With special guest
MOSE ALLISON
APRIL 29
8:00
HOCH AUDITORIUM
LAWRENCE, KS.
Reserved seat tickets $5 G $6
Available at:
Caper's Corner Kansas City
SUA, McKinney-Mason. Lawrence
Better Days, Kief's
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A FOOLS GOLD & SUA PRODUCTION
Friday, April 16, 1976
2
University Daily Kansan
Stanley Learned to visit for dedication of building
Exhibits, demonstrations and dedication of the Learned Hall addition will highlight the 50th engineering Exposition at the University of Kansas today and tomorrow.
The dedication ceremonies will be at 11 a.m. tomorrow in front of Learned Hall. Stanley Learned, for whom the building is named, will speak at the dedication and at an awards banquet 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Eldridge House.
Learned, a native of Lawrence now residing in Bartlesville, Okla., was a 1924 graduate of the School of Engineering and a past president of the University of Kansas Alumni Association. He also served as chairman of KU's Centennial Program for the College and effort that generated more than $20 million in private gifts for the University.
The original Learned Hall, completed in 1963, provided 100,000 square feet of space for the aerospace, civil and electrical engineering departments.
A retired vice chairman and president of the Phillips Petroleum Co., Learned received the University and Alumni Distinguished Service Citation in 1969.
Work on the addition, which is two more floors and a five-story tower on the east end of the original building, began October 1973 when it was completed at the end of last summer.
The addition provides classrooms, laboratories and offices for the departments of chemical, petroleum and mechanical engineering, and the environmental health section of the department of civil engineering, in nearly doubled the amount of space.
The theme of the Engineering Exposition is "America: 200 Years of Technology."
Among the exhibits are a history of "The Oil Industry: 1890-1976," in Room 1014, by the Society of Petroleum Engineers; a concrete cane in Room 1031E by the department of civil engineering; a display on "200 Years of Power" in the first-floor gallery; a demonstration of the building and a demonstration of "Why Airplane Tails Are In the Back, in Room 1022, by the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
KAN-U
Exhibits in Learned Hall can be seen from 9 to 10pm, today and from 9 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Float like a rock
Charlie Peterson, Topeka senior, wipes down the inside of a cement cane he helped build. The canoe will be on exhibit in conjunction with the 56th annual Engineering Exposition of the University of Kansas.
Ticket subsidy
From page one
a quorum, a meeting is automatically adnurred.
Owens told Wonner he was out of order. Wonner shot back, saying he wasn't out of order.
That sparked a short verbal duel between the two that ended when Owens shouted, "You're not right."
Woner immediately responded saying,
Pet Rabbit gets job with museum
The KU Musem of Natural History owns a rabbit that is unique to the state of Kansas. It's light blue Volkswagen Rabbit, the only foreign-made automobile owned by the
"You, sir, are out of order. You don't understand parliamentary procedure."
Cox ruled that Woner's call for a quorum was out of order because such a call can be made only when there is an existent event. Cox said there was no doubt over the matter because Owens had already attended at the beginning of the meeting that there wasn't a
The issue was then referred to Jim Cox,
Senate parliamentarian.
Following that ruling, Broadie, discussed his bill.
The only problems with the car came when the museum first bought it, Dwigans said. The Parking Services officials couldn't believe that a Rabbit could have state license tags, she said.
After Brocade had finished speaking, Woner moved to adjourn the meeting. The Senate passed his motion and the meeting ended.
OZ
in concert ~ friday ~ 8:30
Hawk's Nest ~ $1 cover
"The car has no luxury features, she said, and disc brakes for safety are the only option on the car.
Cathy Dwigans, museum assistant, said yesterday that the Rabbit served the museum better than the last car, a 1959 Ford Station Wagon.
"I feel guilty driving around on campus errands in a nine-passenger car all by myself," Dwigans said. "That eight-cylinder car also used a lot more gas than the four-cylinder Rabbit."
Dwigans uses the Rabbit more than anyone else at the museum. She said she was very pleased with its operation. It has a large interior for a small car, she said.
OZ in concert ~ friday ~ 8:30
Hawk's Nest ~ $1 cover
the GRAMOPHONE shop
842-1811...Ask for Station No. 6
CLASSICAL RECORD SALE
KARAJAN - Lazar Berman
Tchalkovsky Piano Concerto No. 1
Reg.
$7'95
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LAZAR BERMAN
Prokofiev: Sonata No. 8
Rachmaninoff: Moments Musicaux
SALE
$5'47
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It started with a group of Venezuelan emigrants to memorize the independence of their homeland.
the GRAMOPHONE shop
842-1811...Ask for Station No. 6
CLASSICAL RECORD SALE
KARAJAN - Lazar Berman
Echalkovsky Piano Concerto No.1
Reg. $795
LAZAR BERMAN
Prokoffiev Sonata No. 8
Rachmaninoff: Moments Musicaux
SALE $547
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS | 1-913-842-1544
The idea has blossomed into "Jornada Venezolana," a four-day celebration sponsored by the University of Kansas Club. It will help from the Venezuelan government.
Venezuelans fete independence
Nightly shows, exhibits and speeches will be included in the program, which is designed to explain Venezuelan culture. It will run today through Monday in the Kansas Union, with concerts and recitals in Hoch Auditorium.
"Jornada Venezolana," which means four days of work about Venezuela, was planned to display Venezuela cultural and music to KU students, Antonio Escalea, Barquismo, Venezuela, special student, said yesterday.
The activities begin tonight in Hoch Auditorium, where Maria Lopez, a physician and a representative of the Venezuelan ambassador to the United States, hosted a concert by Moro Munoz, a professional singer, will follow. A conference on Venezuelan economics, a
series movies and a musical show by KU
and area students are planned for Saturday.
Luis Matoz Azcarillo will student students on Venezuela technology from 9 a.m. to noon Sunday in 3138 Wescoke Hall. A concert scheduled for 6 p.m. is also scheduled at 8 p.m. in Hochst.
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OZ in concert ~ friday ~ 8:30
Hawk's Nest ~ $1 cover
the CRAMOPHONE shop
842-1811...Ask for Station No. 6
CLASSICAL RECORD SALE
KARAJAN - Lazar Berman
Rhalkovsky Piano Concerto No. 1
Reg. $795
LAZAR BERMAN
Prokofiev: Sonata No. 8
Rachmaninoff: Moments Musicaux
SALE
$547
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544
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4
Friday, April 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
心
Glassblowing delicate art
By BECCI BREINING
An old stone barn set against rolling green hills evokes the atmosphere of an old blacksmith's shop. Within, rugged walls hold in heat pressure by roaring, glowing龌龊.
But this isn't the worksite of burly, blackened men who wrestle with hot metal. It is the studio for twelve artists who coax molten blobs into delicate glass figures.
ABOUT FOUR YEARS ago Channey dairy barn, just west of the University of Kansas Printing Service on W. 18th, was converted into a glassblowing studio by J. Sheldon Carey, The earthy, open air quality makes it a unique museum.
"it's comfortable and homely," Goei, Geier, Overland Park senior, said yesterday. "It's a mellow place for glassblowing, a break from the classroom."
Geier said she was attracted to the art of glassblowing because it was exciting and dangerous. One has to work fast to contribute all the time to avoid burning him or others, she said.
"WHILE YOU'RE BLOWING glass you have to think
constantly and know exactly what your next move will be," she said. "You can't drop what you're doing and come back later. Now when he hear the goblet, and then bind-bobgobet, I know the sweet it took and how difficult it was to make it."
While she was talking, another student dropped and broke a partially blown ball of glass.
"Excuse me," Geier said. "It's my turn. She just blew it." Geier laughed at her unintentional humor and took her place by the furnace, ready to go to work.
Because of a shortage of space, the glassblinders have to take turns using three furnaces. Each can blow one, one blowing and one helping.
"Carey said, 'It's like a dance floor. There is a rhythm in them. People are moving around and are watchful of each other."
Carey said the small area of the studio might be an asset.
"SOMETIMES HAVING the most spacious and gracious doesn't make it any better," he said.
"To make beautiful things a person has to be creative and beautiful inside, regardless of the studio."
Cecil McKenzie, Independence, Kan., sophomore, said he thought the atmosphere and snow of the barn helped him to be creative.
McKenzie, who called himself a "glassaholic," said he was adducted to glassbling.
"GLASS IS A NICE material to work with," he said. "It's different because you can't handle art hands like other art media."
"IT'S AN IMMEDIATE activity. While you're working you have to be super conscious of your movements. You have to know exactly what you're going to able to do in a few minutes."
Carey, also an instructor of ceramics, was attracted to the unusual aspects of glassblowing six years ago. During a sabbatical leave in 1869 he installed glassblowing equipment with a $3,000 grant from the National Endowment for Science. He reduced the cost by building much of the equipment himself. He also developed his own process for mixing glass.
CAREY SAID he grew up with an interest in glass. As a teenager in New York, he regularly visited the Corning Glass Co., which was nearby his home. When glassblowing
become a resurgent art form in ... United States twelve years ago, his interest was aroused. During his career he had an institute in Toledo that pioneered the formal study of glassblowing, before glass-blowing training has been done in factories.
With his new-found knowledge he renovated the barn and started teaching. His classes are full; 12 students fill two courses which are taught three times a week.
Although there appears to be an increasing interest in his glassblowing class, Carey will step down from his teaching post and retire at the end of this semester.
There are a lot of things his busy teaching schedule has prevented him from doing, be it plans to do some catching up.
"I MAY NEVER blow any more glass or make another pot," Carey said. "Then again, I carey said from now will I be doing both."
Carey said he thinks the glassblowing department has potential to become very big. There are waiting lists to get in, he said, and he gives priority to senior and graduate fine arts students, most of whom are ceramic and sculpture majors.
TOMMY BELKINS
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Delicate tapping
separate it from the glass. Mettieer will then put the glass in a cool cabinet which will cool it to room temperature by the next.
Finished with the shaping of her glass creation, Donna Meteer, Phoenix, Ariz., senior, gently taps at the base of the blowpipe to
THE FRIENDS
Ferguson's album presents new style
Casual concentration
By STEVE FRAZIER
Peter Watkins, film director, has been meeting with students at KU during the past week to discuss the effects of media on contemporary life. At II a.m. Saturday in the Kansas Union, he was joined by the actors in *Wars: Games* and *Privilege*, shown Wednesday.
Marynard Ferguson's recently released "Primal Scream," the trumpet player's first album since September 1974, breaks
away from the approach that has brought him a wide following of loyal fans since his return to the United States in the late 1960s. On "Primal Scream," Ferguson abandons
Bob James, the CTI-Kudu house arranger-producer-
producer Teo Macero and one own road band in favor of Bob James and a group of studio musicians.
... and then there's rock
Staff Writer
By CONRAD BIBENS
One album, "Frampton Comes Alive," is responsible for turning a relatively obscure band into superstar. Peter Frampton, once best known as a former member of Humble Pie, has recorded a near perfect live concert from his concerts last year.
ALTHOUGH FRAMPTON is primarily an electric guitarist, his work plays mostly acoustic guitar, adding emphasis to his vocals. He songs in a pleasant, dramatic way and often uses the British accent show through.
The album's greatest strength is Frampton's guitar playing, which seems to soar over the audience. His style is strong and direct, but overbearing, even when he plays heavy metal material.
His backing musicians are drummer John Siomios, bassist Stanley Sheldon and keyboard player and second guitarist Bob
Mayo. They are quite capable, sounding well rehearsed as they provide steady rhythm while the band goes off on solo tangents.
A FIFTH MUSICAL presence is the audience, which claps and stumps loudly for anything he wants. For their four solo albums haven't sold more than 200,000 copies apiece, the audiences seem very familiar with his work, cheering for him as they recognize each song.
There isn't a weak moment on this album, a tribute to good recording facilities and Frampton's self-production. Some of the notable songs include "Slow Me Way," "Walk," "Soothing His Happening" and "Lines On My Faces."
A GOOD STUDY in contrasts is provided when Frampton leeds off side three with 'Penny For Your Thoughts, a nice song from the end ends, drummer Slomos kicks into an opening beat while
Frampet switches back to electric for "I'll Give You," Money," the hardest rocker of the album.
THE HIGHLIGHT of "Frampton Comes Alive" is the last track, "Do You feel Like Song? an anthelytic song that anthems the interaction between the guitarist and audience. The crowds joyously say "Yes!" whenever Frampton sings the song's title, even when he performs through an echo voice-box.
At 25, Frampton looks at least 10 years younger. His concert was engaging. He's a confident performer who's eager to please. He can get an audience when he's on stage the first time he steps on stage.
That nearly all his 1976 concerts have been sold out, including two shows in Kansas and this city. Radio air-play and word of mouth are making Peter Frampton big-time.
'I Will, I Will . . . For Now' is soulless porn
By CHUCK SACK
"I WILL. I WILL. For Now" is a traditional sex comedy. And, like the traditional marriage that it pokes fun at, its
trappings include something old, something new, something borrowed and something blue.
The "something old" is the plot. This is a straightforwardboy-meets-girl tale. The boy
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
*"published at the University of Kansas weekly
and other academic publications," second-class postage paid at Law-
erian postage, or $1 a year in Douglas County and $1 a
summer or $1 a year in Denver County." and $1 a
subscription are $2 a semester, pay through the
University.
Bety Hingleman Yasit Aboubakhlan
Associate Sports Editors Jim Bates
Assistant Campus Editors Jim Bates
Photo Editor Dan Riese
Staff Photographers Darya Greewshaw,
Sports Editor Allen Quakenbaum
Associate Sports Editors Allen Quakenbaum
Entertainment Editors Steve Sheffield
Copy Chiefs Mary Ackley Anne Huddleton,
Artist Ken Wetphal
News Editors John Hickey Ben Mendelshon
Wire Editors Kelly Shore Truck Alexander,
Raziel Carr John Johnson, Jim Bates,
"contributing Writers"
Editor
Curl Young
Carl Young
Associate Editor Campus Editor
Betty Hagglund Yael Aboulahat
Associate Campus Editor Greg
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
sary Burch
Linda Beckham
National Manager
Debbie Service
Management Director
Scott Bush
Assistant Manager
Cory McGraw
Assistant Client Manager
Jolien Marquart
John Martinez
THE "SOMETHING NEW" is a contract marriage, that contemporary practice of putting personal relationships on a legal basis. Les and Katie agree to try living together again after watching Katie's little sister married in a 'tenant and common' ceremony that they would say may now kiss the party of the first part," and which is catered by a fast-food chain.
and girl are Les Bingham (Elliot Gould) and Katie Bingham (Diane Keaton), a couple who were ten years divorced when they meet again at the film's beginning.
"The something blue" is the feeling you are left with when you leave the theater. "I Will, I Will . . . For Now." Is the most depressing experience I've had since last week's "Bad News Bag" campaign because it was essentially for kids. "I Will" is supposed to be sophisticated adult entertainment.
The "something borrowed" is every tired sex-face situation and dialogue of the past ten years. Katie accuses Les of making love like he's running for the 5th Avenue bus.
LETTING THE QUESTION of entertainment alone for the
"I'm not catching it very much lately." he responds.
moment, how sophisticated
*Will be* “bear” Apart from one
of the girls who played,
“The Joy of Sex” (never opened
before the camera), the movie
never moves above the level of
a classic joke in *Bad News Bears*.
THE ADMITTED THEORY behind Bob James' approach on "Primal Scream" is that it will make the album sell but the locator of the theory is seen questionable. Trump players interested in Ferguson's technique and jazz listeners, his traditional audience, will probably avoid a album, for it contains little jazz or exceptional trumpet work.
Even more depressing is the action. Several years ago, Elliot Gould appeared to be one of the most successful actors to come along in several decades. And despite a string of bombs, he still does some remarkable work in films like "A Blessed Mother" and "California Split." But his role in "I Will" shows no progress from the more ingenious and entertaining "Bob and Carol and Alice" role he began with.
Ditto for Diane Keaton. In addition to her appearances with Woody Allen, she's done some good dramatic work, and she's also known for What can she possibly hope to gain from a part like this?
IT'S DISCERNING to see two actors with great promise dressed up and locked into roles as middle-aged, upper-class characters that will be transformed into upper-aged, middle-class characters after 10 years of films just like this one.
It's just as bad behind camera. John Alonzo is the director of photography, but
Teo Macro respected what the band was doing and helped it to sound its best on record, which is far different than the producer leaving his fingerprints all over the album. It also produced a "stick" and sonically clean album is obvious, but he does so at quite a sacrifice.
there's not a hint of the interesting lighting he did in "Chinatown," or the marvelous scenes in "The Fortune." I hate to keep mentioning "Bad News Bears," but he did that, too, with slightly more care. Will Alonzo Diggle out this kind of glossy schlock?
While Ferguson's work of the past few years has never been as subtle or innovative as, say, that of the Thad Jones-Melville team, it has nearly always been at least viscerally exciting.
I DON'T FEEL disheartened about writer-director Norman Panama. He's been a veteran of Hollywood junk for over 30 years. What does worry me is the lack of development.
And the pop listeners are choosier than the formula-makers think. They are hesitant to accept a watered-down album, or to choose it when they can buy albums by true masters of the pop genre, and the money it takes to really expose the pop audience to a different music culture on even a "crossover" jazz product. So Ferguson is left with his hard-core fans, which is indeed a large and loyal bunch. But he does not an audience that any artist can appeal long.
A producer like Tee Macero is known for making the music of a cult band. Ferguson reach the public at its natural best, but James often fits the jazz musician into an natural and predictable format.
Panama and Melvin Frank together were the Bud Yorkin-Norman Lear combination of two of America's remote that the production system that made "I Will" will change any when Yorkin and Lear tie of endless Archie and graduate to feature films.
As Down Beat magazine quotes James, "Our goal is sales without compromising talent or intent."
keyboard man, has left his mark on albums by musicians such as Ron Carter, Paul Grover and Grover Washington Jr. The James-CTI approach used for Ferguson on the Columbia label is best exemplified by the charting album and non or disco rhythm tracks.
THE FACT IS that "I Will, I Will. For Now" is no different from television sitcoms, and that if by some blume it were hugely successful, there would be a sequel to prove it. That "somewhat blue" that "something blue" isn't just your feeling after seeing this film that isn't art, social statement, documentary or even entertainment. The "blue" is the shadow cast on the wire of an electric light of reason and discover that it is soulless pornography.
"Primal Scream" and albums like it strongly dispute James' assertions that talent is not compromised.
THE MUSICIANS ON "Primal Scream," among the finest in the studios, include Dave Sanborn, Varm Stmav, Bernie Glow, Jodfadds, Dave Taylor and Paul Faulse.
James also brought in a crew seen on several CTI records: Steve Gadd, Eric Gale and Joe Farrell; and Chick Corea is featured on one of his compositions. He is known for his Corea, however these players are given little chance to display their talents.
After the introduction and a typically Latin-influenced, Corean melody, he adds Corae and Corea embark on a joint improvised solo. The combination of tuxedo, as only one composer would synthesize proves to be an
THE IMPROVISATORY SKILLS of DAVE Sandanre are passed over in favor of a couple of brass sections. The potentially exciting brass section is given only token toks and blasts to play here and there, and even these are usually overshadowed by changing strings and seemingly the most important rhythm track.
"PAGLIACCI," an opera aria arranged by Jay Chattaway, is as embarrassing to listen to as the song "To Have Spoken with Ferguson playing the melody in a semiclassical style above a strictly orchestral string background, then breaks out of it and continues. To make matters worse, the tune "Pagliacci" itself is quickly recognized from its use on the commercial as "No more we have run out of Rice Krispies!"
"THE CHESHIRE CAT WALK," on Side I, written by and featuring Chick Corea on synthesizer, is the album's bright moment. Certainly not coincidentally, the cut contains no strings or voices, and bears insight of Corea rather than James.
Side II, consisting of "Invitation," "Pagliacci" and "Swamp," is pretty much a throwaway. On "Invitation," Ferguson is limited to playing through the melody a few times, backed by strings and the piano played by James. There are few characteristics that would distinguish the trumpet player as Maynard Ferguson. He is virtually buried by the formula. Mark Colby plays a short soprano sax which is the solo for the trumpet. That sola is punctured now and then by the brass section and string chords which fade in and out like a bad dream.
intersting exercise in tonal color and comparison of instrument capabilities.
Highlights
Exhibits
(Through May 25 at the Museum of Art)
BICENTENNIAL HISTORIC
textiles from the museum's own
collection, on display in con-
junction with the Surface
CONSIDER THE BEGINNING . . . : A four-artist show consisting of battik, jewelry and pottery, a pottery and porcelain pottery, Grace Carmody, Lawrence senior, is exhibiting jewelry and Mel Clark, Lamiot, Iowa senior, is showing his porcelain
(Through April 30 at 7E7)
Concerts
ORATORIO WORKSHOP:
A performance for Good Friday
by an ensemble of 14 solos
from the department of voice.
The group will perform "The Passion According to St. Mark." The group will play instruments, organ, harpsharp and strings. (8 tonight at the University)
RIVER CITY JAZZ BAND:
Easy-listening jazz from a
Lawrence group.
(7 p.m. and 10 p.m. Thursday at Off-the-Wall Hall)
CITY LIMITS BLUEGRASS
BAND; A trio from Denver
whose female banjo player has
competition in competition at
Winteld.
(8:30 tomorrow night at Off-
the-Wall Hall)
(2 p.m. tomorrow in the roof garden of the Kansas Union)
OREGON: This fine group of jazz musicians will perform in Off-the-Wall Hall's biggest concert this spring.
Films
THE FLESH AND THE DEVIL: Clarence Brown's
direction has its roots in German Expressionism, but the film is notable for its star, and its character. Garbo doesn't talk. Silent.
FALLAN (THE TRAP): A filmed play, dealing with the problems created by the theater company Directed by Peter Watkins.
EDVARD MUNCH; Peter Wakins' biography of the Norwegian painter in training in this country on his campus. 3-and-a-half hours long, it has been called the greatest made-for-TV painting.
ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN: A very polished and jewelled portrayal of Woodward and his search for journalistic truth. Redford and Hofman are both good, once you get past their characters, directed by Alan Pakula.
Friday, April 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
5
Problems studied in North Lawrence
Last fall, the North Lawrence Planning Council initiated a survey to determine certain factors.
Thomas Galloway, associate professor of architecture and urban design, is directing
Concerned residents of North Lawrence can take direct action to improve their community.
He said yesterday that the study, which was conducted by graduate students from two colleges in New York City, Design, had checked into land use and zoning, housing, the quality of public services and facilities, resident opinion of the community and strategic strategies to improve the community.
Gallaway said the bulk of the survey information was obtained through two sets of questionnaires, totaling 400, sent to North Carolina residents in December and January.
HEATHER REIS, a council member, said that preliminary findings of the December questionnaires indicated that the North Lawrence community needed more educational services and services for the financial business and increased flood protection.
But she said that the council had expected most of these findings and that they would wait until the study was complete before making any real decisions.
Gallows said the study actually served a double purpose.
"We hope that its findings will respond to the needs of the North Lawrence community," he said, "but it also serves as a work exercise for our students by building up their knowledge and skills in community development."
JERRY SLINGSBY, Lawrence graduate student who has been working closely with Galloway on the study, said that at first he was skeptical of the study because he wondered if the results would benefit the community.
"I feel better about the whole thing now," Slingsy said. "Although it's difficult to draw conclusions just yet, I think the study will be a fairly good assessment of com-
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Muriel Paul, organizer of the planning council, said her group would use the study's findings as a baseline for future community action.
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"WE WILL BE writing proposals, based on the findings, which we will then send to organizations the community in an effort to obtain money for our needs," she said.
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"We're not really an activist organization," she said, "but we are planning for the community, 10, 25, even 50 years from now. That's what makes us
Paul also said she hoped the study would more community improvement programs.
GALLOWAY SAID that although the study was being done primarily for the community, findings would be available to anyone who might be interested.
843-4678
He said an evaluation of the study being by one volunteer graduate students under his supervision.
Warren Booster, Kansas Union recreation manager, is circulating a petition to verify student interest in velociting Kansas Union facilities in the satellite union building.
By CAROL HOCHSHEID
Staff Writer
Bowling requested for new union
Relocation of the Jay Bowl, now located in the Union basement, would provide improved bowling facilities and accessibility for students. Boozer said yesterday.
The petition says: "It is requested and recommended that the new satellite building provide the basement space for the bowling lanes and other recreational equipment including billiards, a games room and restaurant facilities."
Boozer said he hoped to present his petition, with at least 1,000 student signatures, to the Facilities Advisory Committee of the satellite union at its April
The committee will evaluate the recommendations made by the Satellite Union Task Force and other University groups, and compile a final plan for the satellite union that will be presented to the Kansas Board of Resents.
Boozer said a move to the satellite union would increase the volume of recreational activities.
Satellite union report to Senate
The committee reviewed the report before presenting it to the Senate.
The Student Services Committee last night unanimously endorsed a Satellite Union Task Force report and sent it to the Student Senate for approval.
and areas for student meetings and services.
The Facilities Advisory Committee, composed of students and administrators, will evaluate the report and use it as a guideline for an official University plan for the satellite union, Rolls said. That plan will be reviewed by the Board of Beagons for approval, he said.
Ed Rolfs, task force chairman, explained
Pro-Ed firms six-page report, which included
specific recommendations.
Eight committee members were present last night.
facilities comparable to those at other Big Eight schools.
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the university of kansas commission on the status of women inoites you to attend the women's recognition program and reception
'a tradition of excellence'
This organization is funded from the Student Activity Fee
In relation to the student population increase in the southwest campus, "the present location is certainly not good," Boozer said.
Boozer, who has been Union recreation manager since 1965, said the present bowling facilities in the Union were becoming "antiquated."
He said there was also great potential for expanded food service in a bowling and fitness center.
He said many students were now indicating a desire to relocate and improve the quality of their schools.
"The survey didn't reflect the feelings of a large number of people," Boerzad said. But Mike Miller, CPLRD member at the time of the surveying, said the CUES survey
Boozer said the need for improved bowling and recreational facilities at the University wasn't properly evaluated in the 1975 survey prepared by the College Union Evaluation Systems (CUES) of Minnesota and administered to about 1,100 students from Kansas University. A Kansas Union Committee on Purpose and Long Range Development (CPLR.D)
had taken great care to insure that the response group was a representative group of workers.
Food service, a bookstore facility and student lounging and service areas have been determined by the Satellite Union Task Force to be the student needs that require high priority in allocating space in the satellite union.
"The task force has made a careful evaluation of the student needs that must be met by the satellite facility, and their process of gathering data has been careful
and reliable," Frank Burge, Union director said.
The present recreation facility in the Union includes about 12,300 square feet, Burge said. The satellite union is proposed to consist of 31,000 square feet of usable space and 10,000 square feet of unfinished space on the first level.
"The quantity of space required for the proposed relocation of the recreational facility would take a vast proportion of the satellite union building," Burge said.
NORRIS BROS. INC.
MECHANICAL & ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS
LAWRENCE KANSAS
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
Matthew 9:38-38 reads: "WHEN HE (JEUS) SAW THE MULTI-TUITES, HE WAS MOVED WITH COMPASSION ON THEM. JESUS HAD SHEEP AND CROSSING FOOD IN HE SHEEP HAVING NO SHEPHERD, THEN SAID HE UNTO his DISCIPLES, THE HARVEST TRUST IS PLENTENUE BUT THE LABORERS ARE Few: PRAY YE THEREFORE THE LORD OF THE HARMONY THAT HE WILL Send FOR LABORORS INTO his HARVEST."
THE HARVEST IS PLENTENEO BUT THE LABORATORS ARE FEW! When Jesus said that "the woods were full of LEVES, Priests, Scribes, Doctors, Teachers, DIVines, etc. but most of these doctors had become DRY VINES, and many of the doctors were DOCTORS OF MATTHEM." So the 23rd chapter of Matthew — they were so outraged that they managed to get Him crucified! The 23rd chapter of Jeremiah is somewhat like the 23rd of Matthew, where about 600 years before God had warned the spiritual leaders of their corrupted condition. Also, about 700 years before He had sent the Holy Spirit to save Jesus from death. CHRIEMEN ARE BLIND: THEY ARE ALL IGNORANT, THEY ARE ALL DUMB DOGS, THEY CANNOT BARK; SLEEPING, LYING DOWN, LOVING TO SLUMBER. YEA, THEY ARE GREEDY DOGS WHICH CAN NEVER have ENOUGH, AND THEY ARE SHEPHERDS THAT DON'T LIKE TO BE STRANGED BY HUMAN ENOUGH. EVERY ONE FOR HIS GAIN, FROM HIS QUARTER. — Note in this passage D.D. means "dumb dogs that cannot bark!"
We have heard of those who can so imitate the "cow" of the crow that they deceive the crows, cause them to believe a lie and think maybe their Bishop, Cardinal or Pope is a traitor to God. We have heard of the call and are slandered wholesale by the guns of probably "sons of gun" if they are doing it
just for sport. However, to try to philosopize on such a tragedy, maybe the citizens of some city can be overborne wicked in destroying the corn crops, and for that reason God permitted them to have a judgment upon men who reject His word and send such a judgment upon men who reject His Word of Truth and have pleasure in unrightheeusness? — 2nd Thesesalonians 2:11, 12. "Not one sparrow falls to the ground without your Heavenly Father," said Jesus. Surely this applies to the crow, and no doubt God causes it to be absent or to attend the tragic convocation, or revival
God ask us this question: "Who makes thee to differ from another, and what hast thou that thou did not receive? If we are true Christians hating wit, apostacy, and hypocrisy, we should remember that it is the Drying of the Worm. When the Lord has ungodly, and that his blessing has been received from God "BY HIS GRACE THROUGH FAITH." This should not make us proud, rather humble, and sir up to us work, feistily, and pray that the Dry Vines may not be restored to their graciousness might become Doctors of "The Light Of The World"; Blind Watchmen might have sight restored, cease to be ignorant, dogs not dumb but capable of barking and warning of the "thief climbing up some other way and not entering by the Door, Christian Jesus, and sult sleeping, lying."
True Protestantism believes in the "Priesthood of the Believer." If you consider yourself a "Priestly Believe," in view of the wickedness, evil, shame, crime, etc., on every hand, can you face the fact of these conditions without harm and sorrow when God says:
'BUT IF THEY HAD STOOD IN MY COUNSEL, AND HAD CAUSED MY PEOPLE TO HEAR MY WORDS, THEN THEY SHOULD HAVE TURNED FROM THEM FROM THE EVIL WAY, AND FROM THE EVIL OF THEIR DOINGS!" Jer. 23:22.
P. O. Box 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
KANSAS RELAYS
1976
90 JAYHAWKS
KU
JAYHAWKS
KU
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UNIVERSITY
Kansas Jayhawk Rug...$6.50
Jayhawk Pillow...$9.95
T-shirts...$3.00 and up
Jayhawk Frisbee...75¢
Stuffed Jayhawk...$6.65
Wooden Jayhawk Plaque ...$3.25
Jayhawk Pitcher & 4 Glass Set ...$3.75
NUMEROUS OTHER GIFTS AVAILABLE
Your Relays weekend won't be complete without a visit to the Kansas Union Bookstore.
We're located on level 2 of the Kansas Union, right across the parking lot from Memorial Stadium.
kansas union
BOOKSTORE
6
Fridav. April 16. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Rainfall signals arrival of Relays
Staff Writer
By GARY VICE
If you've been struggling to complete term papers or class projects, you may be unaware of the festivities running through tomorrow in her Hersberger Track in Bainbridge, Saddliu.
But yesterday's rainfall should make it obvious to everyone. The rains—arriving with their annual regularity—ushered in the 51st edition of the Kansas Relays.
The Relays, the second stop on the Texas-Kansas-Drake Midwest Lakes circuit, promises to be one of the top track and field meets of the year with numerous world-class athletes preparing for the Summer Olympics.
The star-studded field of competitors includes 10 athletes who rank in the world's top 10 for their event, and 14 other trackmen who rank in the United States' top 10.
BOB TIMMONS, KU'S head track coach and meet director, said. "Without a doubt, this is one of the finest all-around fields ever assembled for the Kansas Relays. In the years I've been associated with the meet, I am amazed at how well this game and this just could be the best ever."
The Relays will feature a triop of top performers in the Glenn Cunningham 1,500-meter run. Rick Wolhuter, defending open water champion, and Alessandro Belli challenged by Kenyoma Olympian Mike Bolt
and Wohlhunter's Chicago Track Club teammate, Ken Popeiol.
Boit, who attends Eastern New Mexico, won the bronze medal in the 80 at the 1972 Olympics in Munich and was voted 1975's collegiate athlete of the year by Track and Field News. Beit also was named the Relays' top performer in 1973.
THE THREESOME OF Boi, Wohlhuter and Popejoy rank fourth, seventh and ninth respectively in the world's ranking of milers, the equivalent to the 1,500-meters.
The collegiate long jump competition is led by 179 Olympic gold medalist Randy Williams. Williams should be strongly encouraged to join the former Jayhawks The Hamilton and Danny Seymour. Hamilton, a graduate assistant at KU, won the NCAA indoor title in 1975 sailing 201, while Seymour, a member of the Kansas varsity record with a 26 1/2 leg.
Also strong in the open 400 field of Maxie Parks, Benny Brown, Jumping and Eva Jennings. Timmons said he thought they were very good, and Jones' Relais record of 46.1 (for yards).
PARKS, LIKE BROWN, a former standout at UCLA, will be hard-pressed to successfully defend his 1975 Relays 440-yard championship. Brown is second-rated nationally and Jennings of Mississippi State is the NCAA indoor champion. Bolding, formerly of Oklahoma State, was the Relays' outstanding performer in 1972.
Timmons said that 1978, being an Olympic year, had a positive effect upon attracting the fine field of athletes for this year's Relays.
"All of these athletes are Olympic caliber," Timmons said, "and this being an Olympic year, they should be nearing top form. With the Olympics moved to July this year instead of late summer, meets like the World Championships will be the Olympics. The Olympic Trails aren't that far off, and these competitors will need to set qualifying marks earlier than normal."
FAMED OLYMPIAN FRANK Shorter will be competing in the 5,000-meter run, a short distance for the 1972 Olympic gold medalist in the marathon.
The women's division features top names, too. Competring in the 800-meters will be Madeline Manning Jackson, France or Chu Zhu Slae and Wendy Kndson.
Jackson is the American record holder in 1900. Later, the nation's top-ranked runner up.
Timmons said, "Francie, of course, is one of the best known names in women's track and field. She has to be rated right up there with the best women middle distance runners in the world and I think she's an addition to our women's division."
LEE, OF TAIWAN, was a three gold medal winner at the 1975 Asian Games in Seoul. He was also an All-Star.
won the 600-yard run at the Relays in both 1972 and 1973.
"This could very well be the best field we ever assembled for a women's event in the city."
THE RELAYS WILL spotlight eight returning champions as well as eight collegiate stars who won at the Texas game and helped to sweep the relays circuit in their event.
Overall, the field at the Relays remains power-packed despite the late withdrawals of long jumper Charlton Ehzulen, last year's most outstanding performer, and sprinters Romie Rose and Ivory Crockett. Crockett, the latest big-name star to scratch from the field, reportedly had troubles getting off work to compete.
Nolan Cromwell, Kansas' lone winner at the Texas Relays, will be batting New Mexico in an intermediate hurdles. Cromwell won the event in Austin, Tx., with a career best of 49.74. Powers won the Cliff Cushman 440-intermediate hurdle trophy last year in 51.0.
The 3,000-meter steeplechase will feature the nation's No. 1 and No. 2 ranked performers in Randy Smith and Kent McDonald. Smith, formerly of Wichita State, runs for the Shocker Riders and while even fewer runners were attached, Both have recorded better times than Don Timmis's 1975 Relays' record time at 8:40.6.
Castenada rallies for 10,000 win
MILANO
Castenada wins Relays' first event
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Tibidiza challenged on the final lap with a strong kick that has buried many challengers and dawned the straightway and held it through the final turn. But Castenada kept chase, released the gap and went ahead in决赛 to win in 29:17. Tibidiza insisted on 29:17.
By GARY VICE Sports Writer
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But, it wasn't an easy victory for Butler. He had to beat Springs. He had to set the pace for most the race with the always dangerous Tibiducca following in close tandem.
Sunflower
IT WAS SWOON APPARENT that the race had become a two-man race, pitting the Pan American Games' gold and silver medalists against the champion, three the silver medalist was victorious.
After nearly 30 minutes of battling his long-time track adversary, Castenada captured a one-bent-of-a-second victory in the Billy Mills 10,000-meter run yesterday to become the first champion of the 1976 Kansas Relays.
Castendra of the Colorado Track Club sprinted past Domenica Tibidoua in the final yards of the grueling race to provide the first finish and the Relays' perfect beginning.
As the race continued, they began putting distance between themselves and the rest of the field, which was thinning out with the pressure. "Who had been lapped stepping off the track."
"We're great friends off the field." Custenada said, "but on the field there are other guys."
Castenada and Tibuiza started their competitive rivalry early in the race, leading the field while running shoulder to shoulder.
"The only way I ran this well was because he was there with me, he's a great competitor."
Castenada said the timing of Tibiduiza's move surprised him.
"I was expecting it on one quarter-mile to go and he surprised me when he took off at the 220," he said. "That's when he started his all-out kick.
He said he wasn't sure if he could go on competing next year, because without it being an Olympic year, he wouldn't have any financial help enabling him to travel to
"I'm just lucky to get here," he said. My hometown paid for my way here. I'm getting close to about $1,200 from there (this year). That'll get me about everywhere I go to compete. I had no funds last year for track, so I missed many meetings."
"I had to start kicking hard then too because if you don't drive with him it's all wrong."
Castenada said his training in Colorado has him in his best condition ever.
"Amtime someone passes you, you are surprised. I was expecting it, you knew he'd try it, but I was still surprised. The difference is I wasn't defeated. I didn't feel defeated."
Castendada then explained his running strategy of choosing to set the pace for the runners.
"Sure, following someone is a heck of a lot easier than leading," Castenada said, "Lending is a real burden on you. The reason I took it is because the Olympic Trials is such a burden and just better just get used to it.
"I'm trying to lead because ultimately I'd like to break the world record. So, I've got to lead. To break the record I've got to race myself.
"I was prepared for Shorter to run, but he'll be tough come the Olympic Trials. I like to try the 5.000 and double if I make it. It takes me a lot longer than it is shorter, and I don't like the 10.000."
Castendand he was grateful to be able to compete at major meets this year, a award he received.
His goal then is the 27:30.30 mark set by David Bedford of Great Britain in 1973. Castenadia said his best time was 28:30.0 for 10,000 meters.
He said he was disappointed that Frank shorter, Olympic gold medalist in the 2014 Olympics, had been cut from the team.
"Being in shape, I'm there," he said.
"I'm just working through these meets,
everybody is. And I can run this good just
through them, hey, look out this summer!"
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Spring game at 7:30 tonight
The Kansas football team ends four weeks of practice with its annual spring game at Ole Miss.
Quarterback Nolan Cromwell, halfback Laverne Smith and split end waddell Smith are participating in the Kansas Relays and will miss the game. Injuries will keep
defensive backs Chris Golub and Tom Fitch from playing.
Bud Moore, starting his second season as head coach, said the teams would be divided equally, making the spring game an option. Moore said the results of some position changes.
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Friday, April 16, 1976
7
Slagle staging brilliant comeback
340
Roger Slagle to face K-State today
KU faces tough series
Kansas baseball coach Floyd Temple is seeking a measure of revenge this weekend.
The Jayhawks to Manhattan this weekend for a tough three-game series with cross-state rival Kansas State. And if history repeats itself, KU could have problems.
"In recent years, we've had a tough time with K-State." Temple admitted. "They've had some outstanding teams recently and we've been through some rough times. However, this year could be a challenge. I think both teams are comparable."
Both the Jayhawks and the Wildcats boast strong pitching staffs. Temple is expected to start Roger Slagle, who enters the contest with a 5-0 record and 0.38 earned run average. The Wildcats will counter with Ted Power, 4-1 and 1.43.
In Saturday's doubleheader, Temple will go with Rob Alludier, 1-4 and 3-34, and left-hander Danny Hines, 0-2.
5-4 and 2.44, and Scott Mach, 5-2 and 4.22, will pitch for K-State.
The KU pitching staff is giving up an average of only 2.21 runs a game, but it will be too much for the Rangers. No one in the K-State lineup was hitting less than 300 at the beginning of last week, and first baseman Steve Anson and third baseman Danny Johnson were both batting at more than a 400 clip.
KU will counter with its best hitting lineup in several years. Last week, KU came from behind with two out in the seventh and seven runs and defeat Missouri. 10-7
Temple is counting on leading hitter Randy Troutt (358), along with Carl Heinrich (333) and Monty Hobbs (303) to lead the KU attack. Other Jayshwin battings have scored in Career Low (269), Glimore (228), Brian Moyer (268) and Tom Kratti (268).
Softball team puts record on line
Only three teams have a chance of spoiling the KU football team's teamspetts 12-0 record. And all three will get their chance within a week, beginning at 1 p.m. today when KU faces Western Illinois University at Holcom Sports Cmpplex.
Western Illinois, which finished sixth in the College World Series last year, has the potential to give KU run for its money, KU coach Sharon Drydale said.
KU travels to Wichita State University tomorrow for a doubleheader that may well determine the conference champion. The Jayhawks conclude their league season at Kansas State College at Pittsburg next Tuesday.
But the big games will be with Wichita State tomorrow. The Jayhawks will enter with a 4-0 league record compared to the Ravens, who UUW sweep will wrap up the conference title.
The Shockers defeated KU last season,
"The key to winning will be our hitting," she said. "It will be the key for them, too, but I expect they won't be able to get through our pitchers."
Bv LEON UNRUH
The Pittsburgh State games should be interesting for both teams. In addition to the pressureuses, the women will also have problems telling whose coach is whom. that's how Drisdael's coach is none other than Karrer Drysdale, KU coach Sharon's twin sister.
but Drydale is confident in the Jayhawks' hitting and pitching.
"I hope it is a close game," Sharon said. They should be a good defensive team, but they hadn't been well prepared.
"I think KU represents a big-time school to Pittsburgh. They'll want to see how that works."
Minority Affairs Film Series
ports Writer
But the San Diego Padres are finding that their investment in Roger Slagle, a right-hander from Larned and the University of Arizona, is better each weekend the Javays play.
Title THE MAN
Few major league baseball clubs would risk a draft choice on a shore-armed pitcher from Kansas who threw less than one inning of college ball a season ago.
Tuesday, April 20
7:30 p.m.
Room 3, Bailey
Slagle, a senior last year, was granted another year of eligibility under the NCAA hardship rule. Last season he managed to throw only two-thirds of an inning.
A TENDON HAD LOST its grip on Stiegle's shoulder bone last year, and doctors tied the two back together. In doing so, Stiegle said, they damaged some muscles.
Slightest resisted his arm and went out for Jojaynk baseball again this spring. Now, when he makes it to the pitching windup off the pitchering bib and bears down on the batter, the results re im-
The Padres, perennial second division finishers in the National League's West Division, selected Slagle in the fourth round of last year's winter draft, but didn't sign him because they had doubts about his pitching strength.
Black President Pro-Tem of U.S. Senate becomes President of U.S.in the midst of a crisis
He leads the team in wins, 5-0; earned run
total .038; pitches hit, 46; and
number of hits was 72.
Floyd Temple, KU baseball coach, was enthusiastic about Slagle.
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"I think he can get better. Now he's back to the point where he doesn't have the pain to experience. He's rounding back into the Silugie Single we knew a couple of years ago."
"You just can't say enough about that man!" he said.
IN HIS JUNIOR year, Slagle pitched a
64 record and a 2.63 ERA, compiling a 64
record and a 2.63 ERA.
Slagle throws, by his own estimate,
between 105 and 125 pitches in nine innings.
More Information Call 864-4353
University Dally Kansan
His for-ball and fastball are his most effective pitches, but he admitted his curve needs more practice. Temple said Slagle also needed to develop a changeup.
But against Nebraska his best two pitches were enough to bring him within one strikeout of KU's single-game record of 18, in 1958 Miller against Kansas State in Larry Wiley.
LAST SATURDAY, SLAGLE agreed to play for the semi-pro Hutchinson Colts. His season with them begins as soon as the last game of college season and KU final exams are over.
Two weeks ago against Nebraska, he threw
in only 18%, which "just about a record."
He said he would enjoy working with the kids and playing. But if things go right, he will stay. "I've got to do everything."
Pitching it不physically tiring for him, Slagle said, but during the middle third of the game he often notices a little mental fatigue. The pressing thought on his mind, explained, is "how much longer is the game how much longer do I have to pitch?"
Slagle and several teammates have played for the Colts before, but this summer Slagle will also instruct young players in the Hutchinson youth leagues.
"I love to hit it. (the designated hitter rule) kind of takes the fun out of the game," Slagle said. "I may help the team, but I'd just as soon hit."
TEMPLE SAID SLAGLE rested for about three days after pitching. He said that he was happy if "we get one effective game a week out of him."
The Paddes, if they decide to sign him, must do so by May 24 or lose their rights to him. If they fail to get his signature he is a free agent, able to play with any team.
Single at times years for a trip to the plate and a chance at the opposing pitcher. But the NCAA designated hitter rule sets the plate against a teammate takes his place with a bat.
Slagle doesn't want to end his career playing ball for KU or Hutchinson.
"Since I've spent half my life trying," he said. "I might as well follow through and ask."
Jayhawk golf tourney cancelled
The KU golf team, originally scheduled to compete in a dual meet today against Nebraska, will now have to wait until next week for competition.
The meet, which was to have been played at Alvamar Golf Course here, had to be cancelled because Nebraska was unable to come.
The Jayhawks will travel to Des Moines next week to play in the Drake Relays Tournament on Thursday and Friday. The team will participate for Ames for a dual meet with Iowa State.
the great Plains Tournament in Wichita last week. Nebraska finished fourth with a team total of 914 and Kansas finished ninth in the nine-time field with a score of 931.
Both Kansas and Nebraska competed in
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8
Friday. April 16. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Muriel Paul defends oppressed
By BILL UYEKI
A.
Staff Writer
Who in the world is Muriel Paul?
That question is often asked by people who want to know more about the woman who has been so actively involved with the University of Kansas and the city of
Paul's most recent activities, on which her local reputation is based, include involvement in a dispute between the Coalition of Minority Students and the administration at Baker University, filing a complaint as a KU graduate student that accuses the University of discriminatory biring practices and being a memoirist. She has also investigated mismanagement charges against the Lawrence city government.
Muriel Paul says she's a defender of the oppressed
THESE ACTIVITIES seem to indicate that she is in a position for contenders and an eye for conflict.
out ww., "people ask, "is Muriel Paur: Paul is a black woman who lives in North Lawrence at 438 Elm. She graduated in 1943 with a B.A. in sociology and received her Ph.D. from Boston University in counseling. She has worked for more than 20 years in New York City in social work.
She has been a counselor, a professor of sociology and a probation officer, working at six different institutions in New York. She also serves as the County Rehabilitation Center in Ottawa.
HE IS A pleasant, rotund, middle-aged lady ("My age is none of my business"), with a personality sparked with vitality. She likes to sit quietly on her chair, clarity, closely observing her listener with gleaming, penetrating eyes. Possessing a lively sense of humor, she sometimes bursts out with carefree laughter, then just as quickly settles into a pensive, speculative
And, as her record indicates, she is a crusader for minorities and oppressed
"I'm people-centered, particularly when it "comes to oppressed people," she explains. "I don't want to sound self-righteous, but I am the only reason for Muriel Paul's cause."
SHE ADMITS that her family and her late husband played the biggest roles in influencing her to speak out and crusade for the rights of the oppressed.
She grew up in one of Lawrence's most affluent black families and attended the University. Both her parents influenced her somewhat, because they were both proud of their racial ancestry. But the biggest influence in her life was her late husband, an attorney who
NOT MANY women in Lawrence,
mostly black women, are outspoken
so Paul
"I married a man who was very active with trade unions," Paul said, "and I guess from him my values and perspectives evolved."
"I get this from my family. I am vocal, I have none. None of my family has ever been heard."
In batting she calls nation-wide discrimination, Paul firmly believes in working within her community for changes. This feeling is reflected in her teaching policies, such as those she applied while teaching social work at Baker.
THERE ARE some in Lawrence who now Paul, and their opinions of her reflect the view of our generation.
"I'd always told my students, 'Your community tells where you are, not across the tracks. It's where you live, and this is where you start first.'"
"I admire a person who is outspoken enough to say what they want to say without worrying about the repercussions," said Rehlio (Ray) Samuel, a black and executive director of the human relations commission at City Hall.
"She represents the lower class people, the people who don't have a chance. She's hard-working, honest and truthful," said Dennis Smith, president of the city government. He is also a member of the special committee to investigate city mismanagement charges.
"I find her to be a highly-motivated individual in neighborhood and community," said Thomas Galloway, director of the urban planning program in the School of Architecture and Urban Design who has worked with Paul in North America.
"SHE SPEAKS for herself. She has an
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abrasive personality, and she rubs people the wrong way. I think there are people who can represent a broader spectrum of the black community," said Donald Binsn, city commissioner and member of the special commission to investigate "city mismanagement charges.
Bins also said, "I certainly don't think she speaks for the black community as a
She is also quite critical of those who say women are among today's oppressed people. White women can't be grouped with Black women because they don't share common experiences.
Paul responds, "Oh really? Well, who
would we represent the whole white
community?"
"If you have any self-respect, are you fighting to be integrated with your own organization?"
"Why is it a black has to represent every black, when a white does not have to represent every white?" she asks, the tone of her voice higher and louder. "Not every black has to agree with me, but I have to do what I feel is right."
"You don't see any black women in the movement, and for good reason. They know that I am a white woman."
The women's movement is counterrevolutionary for blacks, she says, because it increases the number of people blacks must compete against for jobs.
PAUL HAS definite feelings about equal rights for blacks. She favors an unimpeded right to get an education and earn a living, through integration if necessary. But she believes that integration isn't an end in itself.
"THE WHITE women wants to get out of her kitchen these days," she says, "while the black woman wants to get out of the white women's kitchen, into her own."
"I would not fight for integration because I think it is a substitute for oppression. Where in history have you seen anybody fighting for integration with the oppressor?"
"How can you fight the man you sleep with every night?"
The desire to excel and the hard-work
ethic so prevalent in Paul seems to run in her father's family. She has two brothers—one a computer analyst in Washington, the other a retired legislator in Kentucky.
SHE HAS two daughters, one of whom lives in Tanzania. Like any proud mother, she is quick to display photographs of her daughters' families to any visitor. Her other daughter is the head of a new library in San Francisco. Paul also has six grandchildren.
"Certain things have drawn me to certain places," she said. After being in New York, she met Dr. Lawrence and was closer to Lawrence when her mother was afflicted with cancer in 1971. She became the director of the work-study program and served as the dean at the University of Missouri at Columbia.
She seems to be as much a nomad as she is a crusader. Aside from 12 years as a probation officer in New York, she hasn't stayed in one job for more than a year since she landed her first job in New York City in 1952.
But family responsibilities brought her west, and after he mother's death in 1972, she moved to Lawrence to manage the family's real estate interests. Because she was a widow, she was the logical choice to marry him, because both her brothers had families.
"I DIDN'T want to leave New York," she said. "I wanted to blend the beauty and the ugliness."
While managing the family's real estate in Lawrence, Paul worked for a doctorate in psychology and taught courses part-time at Baker. This work load became because she submitted her documentation to Baker.
It's interesting to note the circumstance surrounding some of her most recent controversies at Baker, KU and with the city commission.
HOWEVER, SHE WASn't leave Baker before she had become embriled in a controversy regarding the administration's failure to adopt an affirmative action plan.
One of her students, Jerry Williams, led the Coalition of Minority Students, which
In April 1974, Baker was interviewing possible replacements for her position on the faculty. Paul said the school had made no special effort to recruit blacks, so she and some students picketed the building where the interviews were being conducted.
protested the administration's lack of action.
"This was tremendously embarrassing for the administration," she said, "to have a new person on the campus it was interested in having come to Baker, and having all those kids picket. More embarrassing than not, a very likely member (hereself on the pikeet line.)"
THE ADMINISTRATION accused her of aggravating the problems of minority students by resigning from her position. Regardless of whether she was regarded by some as a troublemaker, she feels she made one positive contribution to Baker.
She originated the "Day of Dialogue," during which she said classes were canceled for one day, and students and faculty members met to resolve problems between blacks and whites, and also between Greek and nonGreek students.
It was in 1974 that she and Williams, also a KU student then, filed a complaint to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, accusing KU of discriminatory hiring practices. The complaint stemmed from the hiring of two white part-time teachers at the Times Rossier, a black who had a full-time position in the University administration.
NEITHER WILLIAMS nor Paul had applied for the position. An investigation of the complaints by the U.S. Office of Civil Justice resulted, but the findings haven't been released.
Paul is also quite critical of KU's OutreachProgram. Instead of offering more equivalent courses for students outside Lawrence, Outreach really should mean using the University's resources to help residents of East and North Lawrence, she said.
Thanks to Paul and others, the University is assisting residents in North Lawrence through the North Lawrence Planning Commission. This is an important step from the School of Architecture and Urban Design, who are analyzing the North Lawrence community's land use, housing
THE LAWRENCE City Commission meetings on city mismanagement gave Paul the opportunity to defend the "op-portunity" again, this time the city's workers.
She said she was happy with improvements made in the area of employee safety since the meetings. But she added that she was dissatisfied with the lack of attention paid to the city's management structure and its affirmative action plan.
It was Smith who recommended Paul for the special communication six-member investigating committee.
"She did a beautiful job," Smith said. "She dedicated a lot of time to it, and she feels bad because she thinks she didn't do enough. But she did all she could."
Doing all that she can is characteristic of Muriel Paul, regardless of where she goes. Whether she is a crusader or a nomad, there are two ways she must be most to her—the oppressed people.
“And wherever you find them,” she concludes, “I hope you'll find me.”
Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads Call 864-4358.
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Work exhibited in architecture
Students and faculty of the School of Architecture and Urban Design will have a chance to exhibit their projects at a spring exhibition today and tomorrow in Marvin
Don Lee, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, said he will be the project of first year design students.
be the only projects on exhibit, there will be
the artwork and photography, also. Lee said.
sculture and photography, also, Lee said. What Lee called an "implied tent" of fishnet and helium balloons will be constructed outside of Marvin to attract the
The exhibition will last until 5 p.m. today.
It can be seen from 8 p.m. until 5 p.m.
tomorrow.
The Mount Oread Bicycle Club
invites you to an:
Easter Monday Ride-April 19th Hop on your bike and meet at South Park by the bandstand at 11:00 a.m. Bring a friend and a picnic lunch. We'll travel to Lone Star Lake (35 miles) on the flattest roads in the county. For more information, stop by the SUA Office in the Kansas Union or call 864-3477.
Graduating Seniors
Don't let the media confuse you next year. Keep in touch with the campus via the only student oriented news service.
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Manager or stop by
The Kansan Office, Flint Hall
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Aztec Inn
The Astec calendar reminds you that memorable dining in centuries-old tradition awaits you at the Astec Inn. We invite you to share our proud heritage.
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Immediate Carryout Service
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Closed Monday
Lawrence
842-9455
---
Friday, April 16, 1976
---
Old exams available in libraries
Files of old exams, put on reserve by the University of Kansas libraries.
These are open to the public but they cover only a small number of courses. Most instructors inform students when files for their courses are available.
Mary Royer, reserve librarian in Watson library, said yesterday that the sheets we weren't being used much this year. She said the reserve room used to have files for French, Welsh and civilization courses. Now it has English, psychology, history and anthropology files.
"I suppose it's the way courses are set," she said. "Maybe instructors are in charge."
Royer said most of the tests on file were recent, as most instructors revised their tests more frequently.
"Tests more than two years old shouldn't be of much value to anyone," she said. She said she thought there might be some faulty members, who didn't know they
"If you want to put them over here, we're happy to be a depository," she said.
could use the library reserve room for test files.
The Law Library has the most extensive collection of test files. Cindy Triplet, library assistant, said most moderners and computer users had there immediately after the exams. She said there was a great demand for the tests, especially around exam times. She said she thought most students knew about them and heldings was circulated around the school.
Triplett said the Law Library also holds most of the Kansas bar exams as far back as 1970. These are put on reserve by insee. Students are held after review sessions are held each year.
Christine Leonard, School of Business librarian, said about 25 per cent of the business faculty put up exams on her classes. A number of undergraduate classes but there are a few
On Campus
TONIGHT: THE KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 7:30 in 173 Robinson Gymnasium. The Stand of Fine Arts will present an ORATORIO workshop at 8
SATURDAY: WILLIAM LAUGHLIN, chairman and professor of the laboratory of biological anthalogy at the University of Connecticut, will speak on "Soviet-American Researchers on Siberian-Alaskan Pre-History" at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Union.
TODAY: JORNADO VENEZOLANA, a four-day commemoration of Venezuela's independence begins today in the Jayhawk Room and Woodruff
Events ...
SUNDAY: The sixth annual KU EASTER SUNRISE SERVICE will begin at 6 a.m. on the east side of the campfire hill. The KU FOLK DANCE CLUB will meet at 2 p.m. at Potter's Pavilion. Albert Gerken, associate professor of music theory, will present a CARILLON RECTAL at 3 p.m. at the Memorial Campain.
**MONDAY:** THE CONFERENCE ON AGING will be all day in the Forum Room
of the Mount. THE ORGANIC Bicycle CLUB will sponsor 36-mile bike
riders.
University Daily Kansan
A page one story in Wednesday's Kansas incorrectly identified the Graduate Student Council as the Graduate School Council.
Correction . . .
A page one story in Tuesday's Kansan incorrectly calls a disc jockey as saying he could earn $115-174 for four hours of work at a bar. It should have read that a disc jockey could earn $120-180 for four hours of work at a bar.
Car on loan taken to Denver
Christopher Weber, Shawnee Mission sophomore, lent his car to three friends Monday for what he thought was a round trip to a local bar. He found out several hours later that his friends and the car ended up in Denver.
Weber today said he lent his car to Tom Dumortier, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; Richard Hubbard, Prairie Village, Missouri; Brad Prewitt, Prairie Village Mission senior, so that the three could go to
qualifying exams for doctorate and master's programs.
Grant hearings will seek out citizens' ideas
A schedule for public hearings on Dougles County's application for a 1976-77 community development grant was approved yesterday by county commissioners.
The application for the Non-Metro Discretionary Grant will be submitted to the Department of Housing and Urban County (federal funds consultant), said.
The purpose of the meetings is to get citizens' ideas about priorities for use of the money within those categories, Coleman said.
The meetings will be 7:30 p.m. April 29 in the Eudora municipal building, 7:30 p.m. April 30 in Baldwin City Hall, 7 m. May 3 in the Lecompton community building and 9 a.m. May 5 in the Douglas County Commission office.
He said categories for the use of the funds, if approved, had already been developed. They include housing rehabilitation, works on neighborhood facilities and the restoration and preservation of historic sites.
Information about the grant and tentative uses of the money also will be presented at the meeting.
a local bar. Weber and another friend joined the group later.
On the way home, however, Weber, riding in a second car, glanced back to see whether the trio was following in his car. They weren't.
When Weber didn't hear from them, he checked with law enforcement agencies to see whether his car had been involved in an accident. Police said it hadn't.
LOVE RECORDS HAS
Later that night, Weber received a call from Dumortier, who said the trio was in Denver and world return Thursday. Weber responded with the trio of the trio, Dumortier didn't come back.
He said he wouldn't press any charges if he was "paid for the wear and tear" on his shoes.
LPs 1.75 & 2.60 Pipes Papers Etc of all sorts
Marna Young, science librarian, has the science library in Malott Hall has files on chemistry, physics and biology tests. She saw few old tests are kept for more than a year or two and some instructors regularly update their files.
Young warned students not to rely too heavily on old exams.
15 WEST-9
842-3059
"Old test are sometimes useful," she said, "but they can hurt you too, especially if there's a change in the subject. That is why I recommend for a review to you if you're comprehending the subject."
Weber and the three who took his car all live on the same wing of McColm Hall.
Beef prices probably aren't included in the list of things most KU students write home about every week, but they will often have to do so. They jump upward in the next few weeks.
The reason for the jump, three meat distributors agree, is that retail prices haven't yet risen to compensate for the recent wholesale price increase.
Beef prices to increase in market
"Beef has jumped about $8 per hundred pounds within the last week to 10 days," Tom Pyle, owner of the Eudora Meat Market, said yesterday. He was referring to the wholesale price, which is what grocers pay for their supplies.
Jim Meyer, manager of Rusty's Hillcrest,
said that the cost of beef there was up 12
months.
"The price (wholesale) went up 4 cents in one day last week," he said. "There are supposed to be a lot of cattle on the market, but prices are high."
Soon, the retail customer will feel the increased costs.
Pyle said that retailers to keep prices as low as possible so that the public isn't scared away from buying beef. When a sudden increase in the price of beef comes on, people wait a long time, he said, but people start buying more beef again when the price stabilizes.
"Retail prices are going to catch up, within a week or two, to the wholesale market," Doug Kramer, meat manager of Wavirne's Butcher Block, said.
Before the retail price stabilizes at a lower price, the Meyer said, his store might be losing money.
"I would imagine that the beef we are selling today we're losing money on," he said. He explained that this was because wholesale beef costs more than they were when the meat he is selling now was purchased.
Since December 29, the Kansas Shopper's Guide reported that most of the cuts of beef had dropped in price. Kramer said farmers' beef and their beef until the market price increased.
"It's a wait and see attitude," he said. "Everyone wants to see what the other guy does. Everybody tries to do everybody else one better."
There is a hesitation to be the first store to change beef prices, Kramer said.
That increase has started now, partly because beef is becoming less available from the market.
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Formal?
It's time to start getting ready for Spring formalals. You may have the outfit that's still looking sharp, but maybe you don't fit in it like a dress. If it gets it altered at Nelson's, Nelson's also creates unique formal dresses.
Nelson's Tailor Shop
9-5 Mon.-Sat.
844 Illinois 9th Street Center
Selling something?
Place a want ad
Call 864-4358
Southern Comfort
tastes delicious right out of the bottle!
e bottle!
SOUTHERN COMFORT
The Sound of the Coast of the Indian Ocean
Hand poured in the United States of America
BRAND NAME COMPANY
123 WEST 4TH ST. N.Y.
NEW YORK, NY 10017
that's why it makes Mixed Drinks taste so much better!
SOTHERN COMFORT
The Inventor The Founder of the Brand
BROADWAY WASHINGTON, D.C.
Based on the Inventor's Desire to Find a Place Where His Savings Could Be Used
1380 S. Broadway, Washington, D.C.
415-692-7000
great with:
Cola • Bitter Lemon
Tonic • orange juice
Squirt • even milk
You know it's got to be good . . . when it's made with
Southern Comfort*
SOLIHERN COMFORT CORPORATION, 100 PROOF LOUDEUR ST. LOUIS, MO 63132
University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
We deliver EASTER in beautiful bouquets.
Celebrate the Easter holidays with a basket of fresh, fragrant flowers. Stop in or call.
CHAMPAIGN BRANDMORE MUSEUM OF CIVIL ENGINEERING
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Owens
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10
Friday, April 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Home builders endure high costs
By DAN BOWERMAN
Staff Writer
House construction and sales are up in Lawrence, but so are the prices.
According to two realtors, two house builders and a mobile home dealer, the local market is good. But some people are being excluded because of prices.
"The problem is that we have prized the consumer out of the market," Daryl Beene, treasurer of Harris Construction Co., Inc., said. "We don't want to trap them into a rental situation."
According to figures compiled by the Lawrence building inspection department, the housing market is booming despite prices.
THE DEPARTMENT'S figures show that 84 building permits for single family dwellings were issued in the first three months of 1976, including 43 issued in March alone. Last year at this time, only 32 single-family dwelling permits had been issued.
"This has been, and will be a good year," Robert L. Elder, co-owner of Western Home Builders, Inc., 3401 W. 24th, said, "Everbody is busy."
Steve Jones, sales coordinator for McGrew Real Estate, Inc., 901 Kentucky, said the market had been better for the first quarter of this year than in previous years.
"The market is very, very active, and it will probably remain so for awhile," he said.
HOUSE construction is up, but inflation has incensed homes to 10 to 12 per cent according to a report.
Bill Rutherford, realtor for Holmes Peck
and Brown Real Estate, Inc., 16800 E.
Nassau Ave. New York, NY 10027
sale this year came to about $39,000. He said he would have cost about $65,000 last year.
Rising prices for homes could be at tributed to rising costs in land, material and labor, he said, but inflation hasn't affected the Lawrence market.
"Business is comparable or better than last year." Rutherford said.
"Lawrence is an economic oasis—we've never dried up," he said.
He said Lawrence hadn't experienced a major drop in home sales during the recession last year. Jones expressed the same view.
JONES SAID Lawrence wasn't like the national scene because of the University influence, the size of the town and the stable agricultural influence. He also said the Midwest was more stable than other parts of the country.
However, Beene expressed concern that adequate housing wasn't being provided for couples just entering the job market and those on fixed incomes.
"We need to find a solution to the problem of creating adequate housing for the average family," he said. "We are decreasing the size of the population in the new home."
BILL WEBER, owner of Webster's
Holmes Bowers, 340W 6th, said he thought
that a new website was needed.
"Stick-built homes are beyond the means of most people," he said. "Mobile homes can provide safe, nice and cheap homes for these people."
Webster said sales had been good this year, but they were "terrible" last year.
He said that during the recession last year people stayed in the residence halls, with
their parents or in apartments. He said that we were leery of purchasing mobile homes.
BECAUSE of the upturn in the economy, he said, people are coming out of the city and going back to private than apartments, give access to easy parking and offer more security, he said. Also, because we are anchoring mobile applications available, we are as safe as regular homes, he said.
Webster said there hadn't been any major price increases in mobile homes in the last year and a half although there were considerable increases before that.
Elder said that his average house, which cost from $30,000 to $40,000, had about 1,500 square feet.
NEW MOBILE homes are priced from $6,500, he said. There are about 750 square feet of living space in cheaper models and larger ones. The homes of Webster's homes are furnished, he said.
Beech said he thought his firm's average house sold for about $70,000, with houses selling for under $40,000.
"We currently build custom homes," he said. "Consequently, it runs into a larger expense."
HE SAID Harris Construction Co. was working on a development for low-income families where homes might be available within the next 18 months.
Jones said that although new home construction was up, the largest component of the residential real estate market was existing homes.
He said the buyer of a new house started a chain reaction. One person would buy a new house, and someone would move into the old house.
Cancer researched in Lawrence
By CHRISTINE TYLER
It would probably come as little surprise to anyone that cancer research is done at the KU Medical Center, but there is also a place where you are being conducted on the Lawrence campus.
The research done here includes basic research by people with a variety of specialties. Faculty members and students in pharmacology, chemistry, physics, biochemistry and biology are all working on that could contribute to a cure for cancer.
Many KU researchers work with researchers from the Med Center, Kansas State University and the Midwest Research Institute in Kansas City, Mo., as participants in the Mid American Cancer Center Program (MACCP).
The MACCP functions primarily through two committees, one on research and one on engineering.
The research committee recommends small research grants and grants for the undergraduate community, and the committee offers stipends to students and works with cancer education, according to Paul Kitos, professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at the Lawrence and Med Center campuses.
Kitos said recently that his own studies dealt with cell growth and reproduction and revealed how cells develop.
Insight INTO LIFE
RECORDED MESSAGE (24H)
842·4441
cancer studies. He said he was mainly concerned with finding what controls inflammation.
Another researcher, Mathias Mertes, professor of medicinal chemistry, said his lab's research was concerned with designing and making new chemicals and with the basic mechanics of making better drugs.
Mertes said his lab worked with basic compounds. Compounds with high potential are sent to the National Cancer Research Center and used to be used by humans for three to five years.
Another approach to basic cancer research is virology, the study of viruses. Henry Stone, assistant professor of medicine at McGraw-Hill University and teaches a course in tumor virology.
He is researching how a virus controls its products, he said. His basic research is done with Newcastle's disease, a highly contagious virus, rather than with cancer.
Much of the cancer-related research on the KU campus is done by faculty members and graduate students although some is conducted by undergraduate students.
Ann Warner, Hutchinson sophomore, recently received a $1,200 grant from MACCP for a study on immunology- how microbes respond to environmental stimuli.
Warner said she was doing the study as
awkward not applied, research, "the just to find out
what it is"
Steve Hornung, Colby junior, was also given a $1,200 grant by the MACCP. His will try to determine what is needed to produce a biologically stable, low-molecular-weight polymer that could adhere to cell membranes or enhance control genetics, he said.
Hormung's research could be applied to cancer drug research, he said, because cancer is sometimes caused by altered gene activity.
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
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THE HIDEOUT 843-9404 CLUB
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Waime Pol-owner
Three buildings now being built for $15.3 million
Goldnecker Optical
A SIGHT FOR SORE EYES!
742 Massachusetts
Lawrence, Kansas
(913) 842-5208
Visitors to the campus this weekend may notice three major buildings under construction that will cost more than $15.3 million to build.
A new law center, about 50 per ceim completed is accessed from Learned Hall, McGraw-Hill. The total cost of the project is $4.94 million and the building is expected to be completed in September 1977, R. Keith Lawton, dept. of facilities planning, said yesterday.
The Helen Foresman Spencer Museum,
under construction west of the Kansas
and Off the Wall Hall
KANU-FM and Off the Wall Hall present OREGON in concert Two shows—7 & 10
841-0817
KANU-FM
and
Off the Wall
Hall
present
OREGON
in concert
Two shows—7 & 10 p.m.
Thurs., April 22
Tickets at Kiefs,
McKinney-Mason
$5.00
Off the Wall Hall
Off the Wall
Hall
737 New Hampshire 8/
Union, is also about 50 per cent completed,
Lawton said. Total cost of that project is
$4.62 million and the building is scheduled to
open in January 1978.
A visual arts building is also under construction at the corner of 15th and Naismith Drive between Marvin and Lindley Halls. Total cost of that project is $7.57 million and the building should be completed by the spring of 1978, Lawton said.
Plans are being made for the construction of a computation center and an addition to the building.
Relays Special
4 Pretzels for $1 (regular $1.45) Friday-Sunday
Regular Special:
Mon.-Thurs.
1-5 p.m.
3 pretzels & a pitcher of Coors for '2
KING PRETZEL 900 Indiana
The River City Jazz Band saturday april 17th on the sundeck Kansas Union - level 6-2 to 5pm
WELCOME TO THE KU RELAYS 1976.
It's all here this weekend! All the colors and crowds of a big collegiate event: open houses, a lot of fun, special exhibits, and of course-never enough room to park.
When the day is over and it's time for dinner and a night out-you'll be looking for a place to go that's away from all the crowds but still very exciting. Come to the International. Relax with our special beverages, enjoy a good meal, and then dance your way through the evening to the sounds of our D.J.
IT'S A FUN WEEKEND. MAKE IT A FUN NIGHT.
The International
12-2 p.m.-general public 2 p.m.-3 a.m.-members only 7 days a week
944 Massachusetts 842-2458
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 16, 1976
11
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to all students who would regard it as their responsibility. BIRLING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times time times
15 words or
fewer
Each additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
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.
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 simply by calling the UDK business office.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
Lawrence Gay Liberal Education meet week in August
at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Wendy Welcome will be 1209 April, Students Un-
come.
Want to learn more about your car? Then attend a club meeting. If you are sponsored by CWRSN, Saturday, April 24, 2-4 p.m., at Holliday Hall and Groom's Inn, worth Half Price. The club will be held April 28 in your living group. NO ADMISSION!
Employment Opportunities
A job opening for full time research assistant at the Center of Biomedical Research, Piece 13. HIWorth; Data collection, preparing workbook materials, preparing forms, completing evaluation forms. Good tying skills are essential for this role in a view. Application d outline and start date required. Work with men and women of all races apply. tf
Summer employment: largest moving and storage company in Midwest is accepting applications for warehouse and van helpers for this summer. Summer employment: Moving Services 12095 W. 34d, Shawnee, Ks 4-16
ENTERTAINMENT
Summer employment for women: largest moving applications for women packers to prepare their families to move. City and Leawworth area must have own a Mobile Services, 103 W. Orchard, Kawaii. Moving Services, 103 W. Orchard, Kawaii.
Lawrence Gay Liberation invites you to a roller skating party, where everyone welcome. Lawrence Gay Liberation will be there.
FOR RENT
Free rental service. Up to the minute littals of renting housing allowance in Lawrence. Lawrence 842-250-3933. 842-250-3934.
ATENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and
see our office. Call phone number at WESTERN
HOUSE (801) 456-7890.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
age 2- rooms to campus $5 and up 3- rooms or
$485 or $587
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate occupancy. Also, save money, leave from June 1, 1978 to advance your lease. Park 25 Apartments, 2 blocks west of onsite 25 on IPH 424-1552, block west of onsite 25 on IPH 424-1552.
get your summer & Fall Rentals now. NO PETS.
840-791-1408. Lunar Pool, Beach 2237, Abbott. 4-4-6
2. bdm. all utl. paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Free parking. a/j. pool. 843-1993.
Uptairs room for rent, 2 blocks from campus.
Share Kitchen, be clean, quiet, reasonable.
Room with private bathroom.
Sublime—Meadowbrook studio apl. 19 June 1-August
20, plus rent plus electricity. Call 844-353-6700
at 6 p.m.
Large 1 bedroom, AC apartment with fireplace,
large closet, freezer, dishwasher. Available to
host home starting August, Tentis, pool private.
For more details, call (708) 329-5656.
2 Bedroom, apt. available MIMEDATELY (must
pay $150/month) Room furnished. furn.
partitions. coll. Coil 864-8235 allison
Female undergirl, is wanted to share 2 bedroom
room with a male friend. Calls $650/mo, plus utilities. Call 844-7845.
Two bedroom apartment in fourplex. AC, furni-
tured. Prices $130/mo. Call 844-7845.
Available May
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS...Regardless of any fees you pay on pop-up tours, these half-hour and clean-out products, you will purchase and get the most benefit from our MONDAY MUSIC! Trendemonstration of guitar, aarp, drum, bass, drums, saxophone, percussion, keyboard, Rose Keyboard Studio, Choose from Gibson, Fender, Epiphone, Ovation, Tahanna, Pearl, Kingston All Music string sets half price Wednesday after 7:30 p.m. Rose Keyboards Studios
PICKENS AUTO PARTS
25% Off on
all Auto Parts
2601 Iowa 843-1353
Pat Read
Indian Trader
COST *10.* 360° stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single form or package. Register for free Kiss CD. Call Davie. Phone: 862-6589. Earnings 6 to 10.
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10.5 Sauf.-Saf.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists
BELIC ELECTRIC, 846-920-3900, W. 6th, Hickory,
ELECTRIC, 846-920-3900, W. 6th
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale! Make sense out of Western Civilization! Makes sense to use them*
3. For exam preparation
"New Anatomy Crash Course"
"Available now at Town Crest Stores;"
"http://www.towncrest.com/."
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Industry Trade. The Furniture & Appliance Catalog,
704, Henkel, 12345 Main Street, New York, NY 10008
2 BSS-AMT-1 speaker, excellent condition. $300.
842-4785. 4-16
FINAL CLOSEOUT MICHELIN STEAM XAS
RADIALS. LAST CHANCE TO SAVE BIG ON
EVERYTHING. HAY STATS ON BACKS.
292 Mass. (coe thus round lodget behind
Woolworth for life service).
WE SELL FOR LESS-11 to 6:30. Good used furniture; Gas and electric range; Refrigerators; Ice machines; Refrigerator units. Have Layaways weekly free delivery. 1228 Eat Street, Topeka, Ki. Phone 1-725-8258-543-8288
70 Opel-GT 29,000 miles, new paint; exhaust:
magic, radials. 843-5815 after 4. 4-16
Cheap. new zoom lens 85-206 f 3.8 view mount
864.744-8745.1 1-927-0343 Leave a message
1975 Flat XI-9. Good cond. still under warranty.
708 Flat XI-9. Good cond. still under warranty.
6 to 8, 664/7287. 4 to 16
AM-FM Fri. Must sell $4,000 or best offer
Call after 6, 864-6278.
People Smile when they get the Glance TAX-
DEN Bike for sale. Great condition.
Call
*
1961 Ford Galaxy 4D, AT, runs good. $200 or best, offer. Call Dodge 550-852-6306 6 p.m. on Fri.
5-string Telecom Baniq-800 - Sony TC254 Tissue deck $69, Call Pat. 842-7602
4-16
Ventura 12-string guitar with case Sanyco
4.00
alambar acor 78,95 $7,65.65
Ovation 12 string guitar. Excellent condition.
Ovation 20 string guitar. Excellent condition.
Elhare CR 320 MOLTEN. Perfect condition.
Price reimbursement: 841-601-0492 after 4-16
Elmhurst CR 250M Monoxene, perfect condition.
Elmhurst CR 300M Monoxene, perfect condition.
44 VW BUG needs engine work, best offer. 842-
874 WU6 4-20
NICE '68 MG MIDGET $295. Call 842-9067. 4-21
Must oil! Cradle 3700 also allow shiny chrome magnets. The two are available in standard and diamond style DS1DE8H for Model 95 branded Magnets. The DS1DE8H for Model 95 branded Magnets is a high-quality magnet.
72 Chev. Impala, 356cc, Age P, PS, PB; 12,1500
miles, excellent condition. $2900. Call 824-5426.
1970 Karmann Gila, looks and runs excellent.
1965 Karmann Gila, new history, passed Karmann
Gila. RB-3234.
1962 Karmann Gila. RB-3234.
1971 MGB-GT. Low mileage Extended service
Towne, Towne 805.9118 L.10
72 Kawasaki 750 New engine, 2,000 miles Excellent condition. 811-6647 4-21
G3 VW Bug. good condition, $250. Call $42-612
at 5 a.m. Keep trying.
*H4 Roada 125, excellent condition, helmets, $50.
Ovation 6-string acoustic $800; B41-5423, $46.
McGee Radio Speakers 4-3 way booklet systems, 1 year old. Call Kurt at 820-407-959.
CHECK OUT USED THESE BIKE SPECIALS. 74
160, 252. TRIUMPH 300, HORIZON 740, WE ALSO
HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF NEW MOTOR-
ER SCHEDULES FOR RCS at Horizon's Hot-
onhorizon. 1811 W. 84th; 433-333.
Maranzt Imperial 7 3-way speakers, Maranzt 60
Maranzt Imperial 7 3-way speakers, Maranzt 60
Puppies for sale 1, *tumber wolf* 3/4 malnutrition
$200, $439, after 6
4,22
TRUCKLOAD SAMPLES Bargain washcloths,
toys, and more! Burbank books on
color and prints. 841-5679
4-16
Radio sale! First time ever. Song: Clock Radio.
Radio sale! First time ever. Song: Clock Radio.
radio sale! Refresh Rockshack $MASS (AM)
radio sale! Refresh Rockshack $MASS (AM)
Used radial tree reduced. Check our basement for largest ascendment anywhere—Many excellent models. $480 Monel in stock—Ray Stonekeeper's 928 Marmor in stock—4-22 lots below Woolworths.
CLOSE OUT! Enlite out of Mickelhue XAS
FORD, 175-14, and 185-14. Burry, limited.
Ray Stonebank's 929 Ma. (Come thru
park lot behind Woolworth's for fire
service.)
STEREO AM-FM stereo receiver, w/ 28 frame rates
AM-FM stereo receiver, w/ 360 fps
he had cavitated receivers GBC1000 $99 Call 800-555-7777
Sony TC-332D1 reel to reel with eight tapes $160, Jef 844-6800 4:25
90 Ford Van-$280 sell or trade for 69-70 Mustang or Camera, 641-5504.
Gildgecker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
842 529-86
Compact interace, Fisher 28 with IBM record change, AMR-4M stereo, and two Flatzer XP-653 COMPUTER SPECIALIST.
Honda CL 35 CL 1988 run, need some work $160
BICYCLE 10 rd 19 run, bike Rewards
$249
44 Volvo with 98 engine $250 Call Mark 841-
6329.
HELP WANTED
Singer summer machine. 75 Cimale Italian motor
boat, 50 cm, 180 miles per gallon. Bright red,
bright green.
OVERSEAS JOURNALsummit year-round Europe,
Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain,
Portugal, Turkey, Sweden, Switzerland,
Wine, Dubai, Indonesia, Japan, Center, Dartmouth
university, New York University, Princeton,
LOST AND FOUND
Experienced Installation man to do car stereo and CS. Excellent call. Pay 841-3757. 4-16
PERSCRIPTIONS FILLED
AND LORENZ
DURICIED WITH
FLAWLESS ACCURACY
COMPLETE OPTICAL
SERVICES
HELP WANTED: Kissan Student Company
employee. Job duties: Job will be available now.
Flexible job location: city, state, zip code
job description: Job will be available now. Flexible
job location: city, state, zip code
Avon can help you have the summer vacation of your dreams. Excellent earnings. Opentertiary lease.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank—90th & Mass., and First National South—1867 West 23rd.
12X60 Trailer house, quiet, in-town location.
Call 841.4387. 4-23
PART TIME-FAIRN 75 PER WEEK, PORN
12:00 - 6:30 BETWEEN 8:00 - 10:00 PORN
12:00 - 6:30 BETWEEN 8:00 - 10:00 PORN
Distinguished post-passer outer catered under
The-Wall-Hall, 757 New Hampstead, 814-0817.
Hampshire.
Found: Set of keys on leather ring. South of Potted Pond. Call Dave. 864-2888. 4-16
Reward-$25 for return of Vol. II *Quantum Theory of Atomistic Structure*, by Slater. Missing from physics office. No questions asked. Return to Mr. Ragadale, 13 A Mollet, or contact Physica
Reward for items returned from stolen property.
Walter w. ID$, valued pictures, glasses. No questionable items.
Lost: Women's gold Omega watch 4.7/176, l780
Women's hwbiv BVD 'If found phone' call 4:41 - 8:49
Diamond ring $275,000
Nice new starboard foot near Learned Hall. Describe and claim. Call Howard, 842-1600-1603.
Brown wallet left. 4.10-76 near Robinson Gym.
It contains all my IDs. If found, please contact
us. No warranty. No return.
Watched south of O Zone Call and identify.
841-723, Mike.
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
Lost silver glasses in light blue case between
Found—Red hooded longleave up. zip up
Call 864-2161 4-20
Lost Brown leather wallet in Strong Hall. Call 843-589-6390
4:20
Found in Fraser: pack of index cards concerning
nature. Fault 864, 1031, 8, X
4.90
Found—Ring w 10 keys at Jahweh station
Office on 28th St. Call: Stall. 414-763-9120
Last-Lost Kodak Pocket Instantam 40 in green vinyl case at 1Mth and Connecticut. Also two (archaic) cases at 2Mth and New York.
Lost. A black wallet somewhere on campus Sat.
April 10. Reward. Call bd4 at 862-349. 4-21
Lost: $1,000 cash. If you can find it, you can
buy one of the Treasure Hunt cards on Sterio
Found. Four key on brass key ring last week in Dyce Lecture Hall. Exhibit at Museum Shop.
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion
Than Most Stereo Components
GRAMOPHONE
201 1977 AWK FOR VERSION +
YAMAHA
STATE OF THE ART
Found: one very pregnant calce cat at 18th and
Mnathdrive Drive. Call 842-6888. 4-21
NOTICE
Audio Components
Them Most Stereo Components
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at age 26. Her photos of your 124 page thesis in photos *See Alice* in action for all of your copying and printing Quick Copy Center, $85 Masachan $81-890.
Sway Shop. 620 Max. Used furniture, dishes,
pans, lamps, clocks, television. Open daily 12.
Mon-Fri 9am-7pm.
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
BOLLINGTON CENTRAL ACADEMY 800-267-3911
The Cambodian Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Full
Café with a large menu and free desserts on each week. Call 819-5200 for reservation.
After 28 years in business, If George doesn't
appear on Mondays George's George Shop,
he'll be gone.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive training and certification provided. Drive new, pay later. Send resumes to Lawrence Driving School.
1 Black leather backpack 24 x 3 XC adidas field jacket 50 x 38 XC adidas field jacket 50 x 38 Also mlt art supplies-cheap Inquiries to: info@mltartsupplies.com
Must I have missing blood? Turn in to K.U. Lost and Found. No questions asked. 4-16
PERSONAL
Alcohol is American's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 840-8210. tf
MADAME LENA, E.S.P - PALM READ-ADER-AS
buy a dream or astrology book and get
the answers you need to solve your
problems. For more information, call 823-1631
or come to 5303 South Tepera Blvd, Topera
The Second Annual Student Sculpture Competition
*Don’t miss it! entries available at
ATAA.*
Come one—Come all. May Day Festival—a week of education, conversation, and celebration. See programs at Women's Cinema, Women's Fiction, Music at a Women's Coffeehouse. Pots for picnics and volleyball. Free food, drinks, games, and activities in Women's Coitation and Commission on the Status of Women. Call 644-4894 for registration and informations.
INTERESTED IN NO-FRILLS LOW COST JET
CAPS? Consider EAST EARL EASY
The East Earl EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS,
be helping people travel on a budget with maximum flexibility and minimum hassle for six weeks.
Hat Hoot! Blushing Bull Belt Driver? Red Kye?
What's happening down at Quantitative? 715 Mass.
Ruby Riley please call me. Cry Llynn-841-7022
Hurry, I can't wait much longer.
Friends of the Kalamats! Tallight tibble with
the best of the beach huts! The Big Kahuna. # 4/20
Saturday. (5) 9:30AM - 12:30PM
Without Zionists there would be no Zion! 4-21
A new approach to problem solving that can help individuals or groups discover ways to get involved in solving real-world problems is to introduce the roles, skills and procedures for this process. Everyone working with groups will find themselves involved in a personal problem solving Facilitated by Cooperative Planning at United Ministries Center, 1204 Great Plains, University of Missouri.
CREATIVE PROBLEM SOLVING WORKSHOP—
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, NEIL.
RIDES RIDERS
Ride needed to Kansas City or KU Med Center morning. Wills share gas expense 4,425-4,31
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009, 142, 142, 500, 558, 627. Regular lessons or one-time test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681.
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
A
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
BankAmericard
图
Mastercharge
MATH TUTOR with MA in mathematics. Call 841-3708 after 6 p.m.
tt
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT! Virtually any jewelry design possible. Professional (IBFA degree) gold-washment. Complete stone cutting, wide waistband, neckline. Fashionable "in warrant" guarantee: 841-3838 or 843-0970. tf
TRAVEL
Trying to sell a musical instrument or sound equipment?叫At McKinney-Mason. 81-087-178
EUROPE
less 1/2愈emy
than fare
for the entire payment period
Call toll free 800-325-486
Unitravel Charters
TYPING
THRESIS BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is the easiest way to get our Thresis. Our service is fast and prices are reasonable. We can also include a free copy of your resume.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 5-11
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6 Sat. 10-4
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selectic II
anpa and elements, correcting tape, carbon
filings, and printing.
A
Experienced typet—term papers, these. mice. mice. spiders. spiders. spiders. spellings. 843-604, Mrs. Wright
Exp. typ. IBM SELECTic paper, term papers, thesis.
Comp. typ. IBM SELECTic reading, spelling compet. rea-
nement. Jean. 841-3690
Typist editor, IBM PCs clite. Quality work. Mail. Descriptions dissertations web. Mail. Maillot JM-9218.
Expert typing/reasonable rates; Proofreading
contributions; fast professional service with
a 24-hour availability.
Experienced typist IMr SELECT all kinds of
typing Call 681-143-725; 842-957-083. Eclipse.
Download http://www.imrselect.com/.
4-21
Professional typing, reasonable, work guaranteed, experiential training, mite papers, thrills, disinfectants, exercise for Electric, R.A. Social Services Carol, 842-0724
5-11
FYPNING- We have timey return customers who want to reopen and we appreciate your business. Call Linda or Herbert at (800) 555-1234.
Experienced typist will type term papers, theses, dissertations and all general typing in my home office.
WANTED
Someone to sublue fully furnished 2 bedroom
home to celebrate Call, Callie, Buzz,
Cando, Andy 842-814-184.
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Bengals IN THE
Gilas and Juarayo
BOS MARTIN
CATHEDRAL
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Wanted part-time work for upholstery shop.
Hired hard worker. Willing to learn trades 1-6
and 8+.
One roommate to share beautiful comfort
$20 monthly, utilities paid, even room
size $3
Keyboard wanted for prominent jazz-crook.
Wanted to have keyboard. Have
have good equipment. Contact John at 841-3123.
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedsideads • Fitted Sheets
Wanted: Young people for late summer job (light housekeeping, lawn mowing, miscellaneous tasks) in the office, school, or private n.V. Salary: $100 weekly. Time: Job could begin early; but please don't apply unless you have a position with a person and private living quarters. No telephone number required.雇员号码: 1000 Sunset Street - 4-21
Calculate Bank Instruments IT-2550. Will pay top dollar or trade TI-2551-II Call 8427-811. 476
if you don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGE'S
Styling for men and women
Roommate for KUMC, prefer last year, non-med. student; med. Call Ford 5181-438-4-23
Someone to share 2 BR apt. for summer. AC bus. nicely furnished. Rent negotiable.
Female person to share two bedrooms furnished and w. case $45.10 plus 1.ele. $19.80.
Wanted: Young couple for late summer job
season. Apply by September 10, week of
work: August 18 to Sept. 10. Place: Lake
Champlain, NY. Salary $100 weekly. Time: Job
in the summer season. Apply by September 10.
You can work you fall Sept. 10. We provide: Traveling
expenses and private living quarters. No
residency required. Please give references. Raymond Cater, 1000 Sunset
River.
Roommate - wanted - for summer. Furried.
clean, 2-bed apartment near campus. $770-$850
per week. No commuting.
People with a history of shuffling behavior have been called 'churchkid' and muscled. Takes only 15 minutes. Call 711.
Want to meet nursing student attending KUMC
meet week to share apartment. 841-1955
Keep in touch.
One or two female roommates need to share large three bedroom C/A home close to curb.
2-14" keystone mug wheels to fit Plymouth
Call 842-8067
4-22
Bahai Faith
"knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent," Baha'i Club Meeting, April 5, 19:70 p.m. Oral Ballroom, Union
one or two female roommates for summer-
furnished airtime—close to campus-pool. 841-6585.
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
Someone to share 2 BR apt. for AC, AC,
nicely furnished. Rent negotiated. Come by
weekend.
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy Styling for men and women
KING OF THE CROSS
Georgia
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SHAZAAM
We Print
ANYTHING!
Ball Park Baseball
RECREATION'S FINEST
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the
GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for
free details!
BALL PARK, INC.
Box 3422-U
Lawrence, Kansas 46044
TACOS
"If we don't got it you didn't want
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
FARMING EQUIPMENT
$3.95 per Dozen
9th & Iowa
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Casa de Taco
1105 Massachusetts 843.9880
No one under 18 admitted.
to play it no how!"
12 NOON
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Now Open Every Sunday
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets Admission Only *2.00 each*
Admission Only '2.00 eo
THE LOUNGE
a quiet corner
Race or Watch
LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY
-
20 miles east of Topeka or
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U. S. 40 Highway
842-9445
SE
Just Arrived! LADIES INDIAN GAUZE TOPS
AND MEN & WOMEN'S MEXICAN SHIRTS MANY ASSORTED SIZES
HALF AS MUCH 730mass. 12-5
I
and SUNDAY
OPEN EVERY SATURDAY
QUANTRILL'S THE MARKET
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
811 New Hampshire
ANYTHING YOU COULD POSSIBLY WANT
12
Friday, April 16, 1976
EAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM
University Daily Kansan
charging at home
TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM
SHOW OFF SALE at EAM ELECTRONICS
TEAM would like to show off the Newly Remodeled Stereo Room
Team is showing what 40% OFF on SPEAKERS can do for You. Speaker Systems by ESP, ULTRALINEAR and NAMCO.
ESP Reg. SALE
Design 8 $89^{95}$ $53^{97}
Design 10 $129^{95}$ $77^{97}
Design 12 $179^{95}$ $108^{00}
Rock Monitor $224^{95}$ $134^{97}
Studio Monitor $249^{95}$ $149^{97}
CITIZEN
MAYA MAYA MAYA
Reg. SALE
25 $4995 $2997
55 $8995 $5397
100B $11995 $7197
200 $16995 $10197
225 $19995 $11997
250 $24995 $15000
Deluxe Speaker Systems by NAMCO
NSW-250S Reg. $ 99^{95} Now Only $ 59^{97}
NSW-350 Reg. $ 129^{95} Now Only $ 77^{97}
NSW-550 Reg. $ 179^{79} Now Only $ 108^{00}
NSU-770 Reg. $ 229^{95} Now Only $ 134^{97}
(speakers priced each)
Buy a BoloC multiple play manual turntable system at 40% OFF. Also receive 40% OFF on Dual or a P.E. turntable system.
BIC
Multiple Play Manual Turntables
Model 940 complete Reg. $199 $119 $88
Model 960 complete Reg. $249 $149 $88
Model 980 complete Reg. $289 $173 $88
Dual Automatic Changers
1225 complete Reg. $^ {234} ^{60}$ SALE $^ {\$ 140} ^{88}$
1226 complete Reg. $^ {\$ 264} ^{60}$ SALE $^ {\$ 158} ^{88}$
1228 complete Reg. $^ {\$ 294} ^{60}$ SALE $^ {\$ 176} ^{88}$
1249 complete Reg. $^ {\$ 379} ^{60}$ SALE $^ {\$ 227} ^{88}$
Special Purchase of PIONEER'S BELT DRIVE
PLA-45D Regularly this table is $229^{95}$ complete TEAM is showing you $84^{95}$ OFF. SALE PRICE... $145^{00}
STEREO PLATINUM
U. S. Pioneer PL-A45D Turntable (d)
A fully automatic, two-motor, belt-drive turntable featuring cucing, anti-skate control, S-shaped tonearm and direct-readout stylus pressure scale. Its two motor design relates the vital platter drive system of performing any of the autofocus functions and repet. to ensure perfect playback accuracy. Walnut veneer on particle board base and hinged dust cover are included.
TEAM
TEAM
ELECTRONICS
TEAM Electronics
ELECTRONICS
TEAM
OPEN Mon.-Fri. 10-9 Sat. 10-5:30 Sun. 12-5 2319 Louisiana
ELECTRONICS
TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM TEAM
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Relays Edition Med Center
KANSAN
Results of use of acupuncture unsure, doctors say
Vol.86 No.125
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 16, 1976
See page 6
MT® EF
MAYHELD
1950
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Clinical welding
A welder puts some final touches on the steel superstructure of the new KU Medical Center clinical facilities building. The 700,000 square-foot building is scheduled to open in late spring.
Blue Cross, Med Center debate need of 'unnecessary' operations
Bv BILL SNIFFEN
Staff Writer
experiments by Blue Cross-Bleu Shield to some concerned some KU Medical, Gerp. physician
At issue are what are called "unnecessary operations"—operations that are costing patients $4 billion, according to a report by Representatives subcommittee report.
But definitions of "unnecessary" differ-
blered means one thing to Blue Cross
mother; another to
IN AN EFFORT to screen out unnecessary operations, Blue Cross-Blue Shield is expanding an experiment that was first tried in Albany, New York. The experiment successfully lowered hospital costs there.
Basically, the program recommends that a patient get a second opinion by another doctor.
patient. Second-opinion surgery plans have now been expanded by Blue Cross to New York City, Michigan and the New Hampshire-Vermont region.
Kansas City area Blue Cross officials are watching this experiment closely.
GARY HIDE, vice president or the institutional providers division of Blue Cross-Blue Shield in the Kansas City area said "I'm certain that we will study the feasibility of I and probably, within the context of the law, make a decision whether to implement a prescription."
In another experiment, Kansas City Blue Cross-Blue Shield has stopped paying its policy-holders for what it calls "unnecessary diademic admissions."
As a matter of convenience to the physician, or the patient, or both, a patient often admitted to a hospital for prehospitalizing. That, Blue Cross says, is unnecessary.
THE FIRST day in any hospital, including the Med Center, is usually the most expensive. Dan Duffin, director for accruals at Med Center, states that the patient is usually given all lab tests, x-rays and a complete physical. Duffin said. The average daily cost at the Med Center is $150; a figure that includes all costs, he but isn't representative of each day's cost.
The first day in the hospital is more expensive than the last day, when a patient is an out-patient, he said. The average stay at the Med Center is 7-4 days, he said.
Lou Savastane, public information
coordinator, said we "are denying the hospital-
room charges and a number of other things to
promote these kinds of things which
will be denied."
"IN MOST cases, we'll say 'Okay, you're"
Distinguished Med Center faculty made great medical contributions
in the hospital. We'll pay you for the tests
we've done, but we're not paying for the room and board.
Duffin said this experiment would have little effect on the Med Center. Most diagnostic procedures are handled on an on-camera monitor at the Med Center has a bad shortage, he said.
Loren J. Humphrey, chairman of the Med
Department, department, echod
Duffin S. nappilpheu
THAT SHORTAGE is often caused by special services offered by the Med Center, he said. Consequently, patients who are admitted to the Med Center usually need treatment—often surgery—and not just diagnosis, he said.
By JOHN FULLER
"in our type of environment," he said,
we don't see that because we always have
The history of the University of Kansas Medical Center can be divided into three time periods: the Dark Ages, the Renaissance and the Modern Era.
In his memoirs of his life at the Med Center, Dr. Ralph H. Mayer, former chairman of the department of medicine, used those categories to show how the center grew from a 50 bed hospital with primitive facilities and a $30,000 yearly budget 62 years ago to the modern facility it is today.
It was irreverently named "Gost Hill" because of the steep paths leading to the hospital. The rough terrain and the railroad tracks were too dangerous. "Gost Hill" wasn't the place for a growing medical center and legislators steadfastly opposed expansion until another site was chosen.
IT WILL soon have more than 800 beds and its budget year is almost 867 million dollars.
IT'S EASY to see why Major termed the early years of the center on "Goat Hill" the dark ages. When he arrived, the dean told him that he was glad that Major had ac
for the same reason, Humphrey said,
needless operations aren't performed at the Maternal Health Unit.
When KU welcomed its first class in 1866, there were no classes in medicine. It wasn't until 1880 that the University offered a two-year course in medicine. In 1892 who completed the course were admitted to the second year of a three year course in medicine at colleges in Chicago and Cin-
Inde said he thought the Med Center was conservative in its operation policies; that it performed operations with care. No intensive study has been made of the Med Center, he said.
See HISTORY page 5
City, Kan.) physician, Dr. Simeon Bishop Bell. Bell appointed $80,000 and five acres of land on a bluff overlooking Southwest Boulevard at Seventh St. to build and equip a hospital and medical school in memory of his wife.
OPERATIONS THAT HAVE been called unnecessary include tonillegemites, infant hernia operations, hysterectomies, knee infections, and reconstructive and plastic surgery.
A local paper called the site one of the most beautiful in the country but after the Eleanor Taylor Bell Memorial Hospital and a laboratory were built on it in 1906, the tube was it was inaccessible and hampered by smoke and noise from the nearby railroads.
In 1899, KU established its own two-year medical school and seven years later it merged with three privately owned medical colleges. City to offer a full four-year curriculum.
THE MERGER was made possible by a gift from a Rosedale (now part of Kansas
“不necessary” depends on one’s definition of the word. Humphrey said.
'In our country, where everybody's got a
tin and everybody has a car—that you've got an
wagon,' she said.
HUMPHEPRE CONTRASTED patient requests for surgery with the requests in England. Palliative or cosmetic surgery is said, and because the people can't afford it.
See OPERATION page 3
By MARION ABARE
KU studies need for physicians
Staff Writer
By BILL SNIFFEN
Abortion controversy continues but discussion of issue sensitive
It's tough to find a doctor in some parts of Kansas because the state lacks doctors if they are originally from the state, are sometimes reluctant to return because of the social and financial benefits of working abroad.
Three women will have abortions at the KU Medical Center today.
To meet the health care needs in the state,
The abortion will probably be their first. Two of the three probably won't be married.
See related story page 8
a University of Kansas Task Force for Health Related Programs is studying what
CHANCLELLOR ARCHIE R. Dykes appointed David Waxman, vice chancellor for students and coordinator of Medical Center and coordinated last month as chairman of the task force.
Waxman said recently that the immediate concern was to increase the number of family practice residency schools.
we teal an increase in these residency positions will help train more family practitioners for Kanaes," he said. "The program would give students a one-year residency at
The women will most likely be between 17-24 years old.
Total statistics on abortions performed in Kansas are public information, and are collected by the Board of Vital Statistics. The number of abortions performed in Kansas, Mental health was given by women as the reason for wanting an abortion in 4,683 of them.
See MED CENTER page 9
The two abortion methods most commonly used last year were the vacuum method, where a suction tube is inserted into the cervix and dilatation and curettage are performed. The womb scraped. A total of 4.946 abortions were done using these two methods.
THE AGE-GROUP which had the largest number of abortions was 20-24. A total of 3,534 women between the ages of 17 and 30 had abortions last year. A total of 4,885 women who had abortions last year had never had an abortion before.
The number of abortions performed at an individual hospital is virtually impossible to obtain. Officials at the State Board of Vital Statistics say the release of that in-
counties are Douglas, Sedgwick, Shawnee and Wyandotte. The source, who asked to remain anonymous, said the Med Center reported that 25 percent of abortions in 1975—slightly more than 1,000.
analysis
formation is against the law. Atty. Gen.
Curt Schnelder has agreed. Med Center
officials are reluctant to discuss the issue at
all
But a source who has access to information on abortions performed by information on the year's abortions in Kansas were performed in four counties. Alphabetically listed, the
RELUCTANCE on the part of state and Med Center offices to discuss the issue is understandable; abortion is a sensitive issue. Reasons cited for the reluctance to discuss abortion always include the protection of the women's right to privacy. That's a valid reason for a small hospital in a small Kansas county. But the Med Center about 320,000 patients a year, in a metropolitan area containing over a million people.
Perhaps not surprisingly, those most willing to discuss abortion are its opponents.
"The complete openness of abortion, as it is permitted today, tends to devalue and cheapean human life," says State Rep. Victor W. Kearns, Jr., R-Merriam.
"IT SHOULD not be another form of birth See ABORTION page 2.
Lives saved amid chaos
Bv BILL SNIFFEN
KANSAS CITY, Kan.--Emergency facilities at the KU Medical Center are a panorama of controlled chaos done in pictures and sound.
A teenage girl waits to vomit the 100 Excedrin she took to kill herself. Her face is blue; her father is a portrait of despair and resignation.
A 77-year-old woman, eyes fixed blankly on the ceiling, is wheeled in. She is the witch who had been taken.
"She can't breathe very long on her own.
No blood pressure. It doesn't sound like she's in too good a shape. Snatch her (blood) pressure in the hall . . ."
A young man screams with pain and demands that a doctor check his sprained ankle.
And the sounds:
Last year, the emergency facilities at the Med Center treated 32,461 patients—an average of 80 a day. Of that total, 17,508 were classified as 'true' emergencies—mostly in cases of severe measures. Non-emergencies tolled 12,582; and 2,001 patients were return visits.
"AND SHE'S how old? Have you been
before? Last name. First. Middle
name."
"Did your baby have a fever yesterday?
Did old is he? How much did you give him?"
THE LOG of patients treated from 7 a.m. Friday to 7 a.m. Saturday reads like a dictionary of medical problems. In included in that 24-hour period were four cases requiring psychiatric attention, three ear infections, one case of diarrhea, four infections, one patient who was dead on arrival, one case of acute asthma and one raps.
The only typical about an "average day" at the emergency facilities is that it's full of surprises, says Collette Foster, head nurse from 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. on weekends.
And there are less common problems as well. Foster said. One of the most unusual problems is that some children have
"There were some people who came up to the desk," she said. "With them was an elderly gentleman who was so well-dressed. He had on a vest; he even had on spats.
The man was referred to a psychiatrist, who also played along. Foster said. The patient was suffering from a lack of blood to sustain, a common problem of old age, she said.
"You think, 'This is really weird,' and you'll have a good laugh about it. But then you stop and think, and you can't laugh." Elizabeth Jobe, head nurse of the Med Center's emergency facilities, remembers two more serious cases.
"THEY HANDED me this note which read 'Please play along. He thinks he' be here."
Several years ago, she said, a chlorine tank at a swimming pool ruptured, she said. Six children were taken to the emergency facilities; all required oxygen.
Cases such as his are only half-funny, she said.
THE TOTAL number of children
requiring oxygen climbed to 47, she said, as more were rushed in.
More recently, a train deraliment sent 27 persons to KU's emergency facilities, she said. A lot of those victims were "cru-cunes" the nickname for persons suffering from three or more physiological manifestations; she said. A crunch could require aortoplasty (surgery) a neurosurgeon and a general surgeon, Jobe said.
"It all went like clockwork as far as getting everything organized," Jobe said. "That's the main thing in any disaster situation—organization."
In crisis situations, an emergency room nurse can't go to pieces, Jobe said, because she's not a doctor.
FOSTER SAID her reactions to crisis situations were automatic.
Because emergency room (E. E.) nurses have to be calm during crisis situations, many people think they are cold-hearted, Jobe said.
"It's just bing-bing-bing-bing. You don't even stop and think about it."
"that isn't the way it is all," she said. "They (E. R. nurses) like to take care of these patients—patients who need immediate and lots of care to live."
After a crisis, whether it involved one person or several, the doctors and nurses often fail to respond.
"THAT'S WHEN a nurse lets her hair down," she said. "Usually you'll get together with the doctors and nurses and bush over the case. Get your mind off it."
See EMERGENCY page 9
EMERGENCY SERVICE
PLEASE
DO NOT STAND IN HALL
MAKE A SEAT IN WAITING
ZOOM AFTER REGISTERING
Please
Emergency
An elderly woman with a fractured hip is given top priority at the
Staff photo by BILL SNIFFEN
KU Med Center Emergency Facilities. Medical problems brought here range from colds to heart attacks.
2
Friday, April 16, 1976
University Daily Kausan
Abortion controversy . . .
From page one
control. Yet that's exactly how it's being used."
Kearns recently asked the House Public Health and Welfare Committee to prohibit the use of state and federal funds to pay for abortions. In fiscal year 1975, $262,016.50 was spent on abortions by the State of Illinois. The estimate for the fiscal 1976 is $833,777.82.
"There are a number of people." Kearns said, "including myself, who feel that this might be undesirable and perhaps not a permissible use of public funds."
"THE HEADLONG attacks fail," he said. "It's a matter of loftiness."
But Kearns said he isn't as concerned with preventing federal and state-funded abortions as he is with stopping legalized abortion itself.
**earn's** data on state aid to abortions supplied by the Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services (SRS), include both induced (intentional) and spontaneous (accidental or unintentional) abortions. The record for each is provided for induced abortions. They say records on whether the abortion was induced or was spontanea aren't kept.
legalized abortion, would have the same difficulty determining the amount of time and money used by KU. The dean of women's office doesn't keep records of how many women (and men) in the office counsels about abortion, says Lerna Grunz, assistant director of financial aid, the amount of financial aid given to pregnant women aren't kent either, she said.
"WE TREAT this in as confidential a manner as is humanly good," Grunz said. "Many times we don't even know the student's name."
During the counseling process, Grunz said, counselor and client become emotionally attached. Reasons given for wanting abortions vary, depending on the individual, she said. Those reasons include difficulties, financial difficulties, she said.
Grunz said the dean of women's office makes available names of hospitals, the costs, types of abortions performed, plus emotional support. Counseling encompasses all areas of help she said—psychiatric, ethical, medical and legal.
(to have an abortion) be available to people who want to make it. A woman who has plenty of money can go to a physician and have this care. It has always been true that people with money could always purchase safe abortions," she said.
GRUNZ SAID the withdrawal of federal and state funding of abortions would pose a threat to abortion access.
PRICES AT the Med Center for abortions start at about $50 for a menstrual extraction (a type of abortion done in the very early days) and starts at about $100, depending on the age of the fetus and the method of abortion performed, Glenn Haswell, Med Center staff gynecologist and obstetrician, said. Abortions will be performed until the 22nd week of pregnancy, he
"So when we're talking about public money, we're talking about women who pay the bills."
Grunz said one reason often given for anwinging an abortion is the financial imimulation.
Hawell has been at the Med Center since 1980, when he was an intern. Then, abor-
ginally, he went to the University of Texas.
Hawell remembers cases of "girls roaring into the emergency rooms with rubber catheters stuck in their uteruses and clumsy being filled of cotton by some downtown...
"GIRLS WHO would put coat-hangers in their own activities to do it themselves.
"And the girl who had her abortion done did not pay any attention to sterilization procedures."
"That's the kind of situation we no longer see," he said.
BUT HASWELL says he is in an 'ambivalence situation.' Haswell delivers a sermon about ambivalence.
Hawass attribues the drop in the com-
fort of newborns and abortions to
the legalization of abortion
"I've done abortions," he said. "But it is difficult to deliver a child, and then I have to do everything else."
"It would be difficult for me in the position I'm in to deal very effectively with the abortion problem because my area of responsibility is the management of high-risk pregnancies.
"I'm killing myself to get babies here. And it seems rather ambivalent to kill myself to save a good baby for a mama who wants that child, and turn around and go
Kearns, in us sideways attack on it is entirely appropriate that the choice yahoo downtown.
Hawell, like Kearns, criticizes those women who, he says, use abortion as an option. (AP)
take care of someone who wants a pregnancy terminated."
to themselves," he said. "They simply use abortion or menstrual extraction as a means of meeting an immediate end—and then assume no further responsibility.
"SOME PEOPLE have no responsibility
"That's the thing that I think is the sadest part about a therapeutic abortion."
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Friday, April 16, 1976
ply use as a d—and ty. be sad-ion."
Museo Nazionale di Storia Civica
Basic science walkway
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENEF
The interior of the new Med Center basic science building includes a multi-level walkway between the new building and the old Hikari Laboratories building, which was partially
remodeled to conform to the style of the new, adjusting building facade. It is intended to cover an engranaged class of 200 medical students, as well as other student nurses.
Work doubles Med Center size
By JAY BEMIS
Staff Writer
The basic science building at the University of Kansas Medical Center is near completion with dedication memories planned for sometime next month.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said last week that partial occupancy was to begin in the building soon and some basic classes will be offered in those classes in the structure later this month.
"It should be complete within six weeks," he said.
The building went under construction last fall and is designed for basic science teaching for an enlarged class of 200 medical students and 2,000 other students enrolled in all educational programs at the Med Center.
Laboratories, classrooms, an auditorium and a learning resources area are included in the building. Faculty offices and research labs are not included.
The total cost of the structure is $6 million. A grant from National Institutes of Health of more than $4.5 million covers almost 80 per cent of the construction costs. Appropriations from the state of Kansas total $1.2 million.
Construction of the basic science facility is in conjunction with the 700,000 square-foot clinical facilities building, which has a completion date of late 1977.
together, the two projects will cover 900 square feet of building space, nearly all of it in a spacious
The project is the largest single building investment ever planned for a Kauai campus. The $85 million projected total cost includes $9 million for architectural fees,
Lucas said current contractors working on the clinical building site were progressing well.
A closure package contract, which involves work on exterior walls and windows, has recently been awarded. Lacas said, and he stressed that the package should be received later this month.
The $47 million project will increase the
mother's bedding capacity from 500 to
800 beds.
"A surgerist" is also planned that will allow patients to have surgery at the Med Center.
Included in the clinical building will be a new emergency room, clinical support laboratories, diagnostic and treatment areas, outpatient clinical facilities and neurosurgical and other intensive care units.
Lucas said an architectural contract was recently awarded for the Med Center's $8.5 million radiation therapy center, which was to be completed in an appropriations bill two weeks ago.
Meyn and Fennel Architects of Kansas City, Kan. were awarded the contract. Lucas said they should begin complete construction of a building would probably take six to nine months.
Ground-breaking for the center should begin this summer.
can't be determined until the architects are finished with their plans, Lucas said.
A completion date for the therapy center
The bill signed by Bennett appropriates $2 million toward the center's $3.5 million
total. The remaining $1.5 million, to be used for equipment purchases, will be paid for by the state.
Housing radiation sources for cancer treatment will be the main purpose of the
University Daily Kansan
OU
OUI
Fountain fixer
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Cliff Marks, Kansas City, Kan., prepares a KU Medical Center fountain for the dedication of a new building at the Med Center.
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"In my specialty, we do very few lifesaving operations," he said.
Operations ..
Fred Reckling, chairman of the ortopedic surgery section, said quality of life was a concern.
From page one
"MOST OF OUR surgery is done to improve the quality of life. We put in artificial bins, artificial knees and, certainly, we're more of that than we've ever done before.
"But I don't know that you want to deny people the right to good life and pain relief simply because somebody might call it unpleasant."
Opinions "given by the Med Center patientis contacted on second-opinion pagination."
HUMPREFY SAID, "I'm very much in favor of a patient getting another opinion," he said, "Most competent surgeons welcome that. They're not at all offended or afraid to have the patient get another opinion. For me, it can be an educational
But Frank Mantz, surgical pathologist, said second-opinion surgery plans would be "middlesome, troublesome and expensive."
MANTZ IS CHAIRMAN of the tissue committee, a group required by the American Medical Association in all hospitals. The tissue committee's responsibility is to examine tissue extracted from a patient, and evaluate the surgical procedure used on that patient, Mantz said. It's a way of policing surgery, he said.
The committee is required to meet six times a year, he said. Questionable cases are reviewed by the committee, he said. Out of the latest 3,000 consecutive surgeries, seven cases have been reviewed by the Med Center's tissue committee, Mantz said. Mantz cited that figure as evidence the Med Center's operations weren't needless.
"If there were a problem, (unnecessary he said, "this shouldn't be a medical abbreviation."
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Friday, April 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Medical Center chaplains discuss ministry
By MARION ABARE
KANNS CITY, Kan — In the chaplains' center, a play horse from the celli.
"That's to remind me as I go from tragedy to tragedy all day long, that it is very important for me to be sure I do a little playing, too." Chaplain George Mudinger
Father Jerry Spencer, Catholic chaplain,
who is crisis oriented" ministry at
Med Center
"PATIENTS COME HERE from all over the state," he said, "with illnesses requiring more sophisticated means for accurate diagnosis or treatment."
Mundinger has been a minister of the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod for 23 years and is survived by his wife, 15, Spencer was ordained in 1965 and was associate pastor of Holy Trinity Parish, Lenexa, before coming to the Med Center in 1967. He also coordinates health affairs for the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod.
The ministry of the Med Center chaplains covers the entire life cycle—from birth through death.
"We don't exist on Earth to see through people, but to see people through." Spencer
THE CHAPLAINS, WHO call themselves the "God SQUAD," pack a lot of ministry into a day. A typical day might include counseling patients, their families, staff members and students—members of their congregation or parish—and helping them survive life-threatening life-and-death issues of abortion, organ transplantes and death with dignity.
During separate interviews recently, the caplains talked about the life-and-death
In counseling persons on abortion, for example, Mundinger said his goal was to help them arrive at decisions they believed in and could live with. Whatever their decision, he said it has arisen out of their experience with these systems and reflect their own personality.
"IT MAY BE ABORTION and it may not be," he said. "I believe the fetus is human as soon as conception has occurred," he said, "and that is taking a human life, and it is serious business. But not every taking of a human life is murder."
He said he believed men were partners with God, and men had to take responsibility when making decisions about life. He said those decisions involve the taking of life.
TO BE CONSISTENT, Mundinger said, would mean never killing to defend this country in war. When exceptions are allowed, man can no longer talk in absolutes.
"I think we must pay attention to the concept of stewardship and the ability to make it happen," he said. "I think it should be entered into thoughtlessly," Mundinger said. "I think a man should pay more attention to where he puts his sperm, since he can produce life as a result."
Obviously, he said, teenagers in conflict with their parents don't think in these
"THE LAST THING I would allow as a way of trying to struggle with abortion with people is to develop a hierarchy of rights," he said.
He said the fetus had rights, the mother had rights and the child had a right to be well cared for.
Father Spencer, whose church has taken
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"I find it very difficult that a woman or a girl is facing a real period of crisis, and it's not all her fault." Spencer said. "Such a crisis often reveals a breakdown between parents and children at a time when both parties need to support each other."
SPENCER SAID life-threatening pregnancies were practically nonexistent. He told a woman with renal disease, a serious kidney illness, whose physician worked with her to help her to have a safe pregnancy and delivery.
A heart disease patient, he said, had been told she shouldn't carry her baby, and abortion was offered. She declined. And the baby was delivered. She carried and delivered her baby successfully.
Sometimes Med Center staff members
Spencer said he had talked with several doctors about dilemmas they had had about the new treatment. "I have to know," he said.
Mundinger
[Name]
ask for counsel about their conflicts with abortion.
"ANYONE WITH ANY sensitivity to life and human values eventually realizes that this type of activity (abortion) is counterproductive." Spencer said. "There is no way to deny what is really taking place, and is abortion is the termination of human life."
Mindinger said in that one or two instances someone had come to him and said,
"This is human life," and that they had asked to be transferred.
Spencer said, "It presented a peculiar crisis, but it could be resolved if the woman was treated immediately with compassion and concern."
BOTH CHAPLAINS ALSO said they had received abuses in dealing with rape accusers.
But, he said, many rape victims are afraid of what they consider potential degradation and don't report the rape right away.
Mundinger said he thought Med Center physicians had been sensitive, kind, compassionate and medically competent in belting women who had been raped.
ORGAN TRANSPLANTS = kidney,
cornea, nerve + have added years to human
liver.
Mundinger said, "I have seen another person literally get a new life. Again and again," he said.
He told about a young teenager boy who was living a narrow, constricted and limited life, trained to a dialysis machine because of kidney failure. On the day a compatible donor was available, the boy had a cold and was turned down.
Mundinger said he was reminded of the story of when the angels came to the pool of Bethesda. One crippled man could never get there fast enough. He would stand by and watch somebody else get into the pool first, then came and heated the cripped man.
The story of the boy on the dialysis machine also turned out well. Several months later another donor was available, he said.
"I remember agonizing with the boy when it matched up pretty well with a potential girlfriend."
"Today," Mundinger said, "the boy is no longer a withdrawn, acid person, but confidently strides down the hall and says, 'Hey, chaplain, I got married.'"
ANOTHER PATIENT, he said, was a man who had been blind for many years. He lived in rural Iowa and to get to the Med Center quickly, when a corneal transplant would be available, he had worked out three months earlier, car, public transportation or airplane.
"When he got the phone call at two in the morning, he was fortunate he had the third backup, he flew down in a private plane," Mundinger said.
really free to refuse?" were questions sometimes asked. He said there was no hard and fast rule; each person had to find his own solution.
Spencer said he had curedseed living donors. Often, he said, a sister-sister or brother-brother match is compatible, but it requires more pressure on the donor family member.
"Am I my brother's keeper?" or "Is he
MUNDERING CARRIES a card that says something like this: "In case of my accident death, you have my permission to use any of the orans in my body."
When he feels the timing is right, he said,
he shows his card to encourage others to donate their bodies to science for organ donors. He also promises to accept the decision of a loved one.
"My general approach with families is that here is one final act of Christian stewardship which they can carry on for themselves, and generally I think this would be consonant with the wishes of their loved ones who have died."
Spencer said that when a body was donated to science there usually was a
P. M. ROMANO
memorial service or a funeral mass without the casket. The remains are usually cremated, he said, and then buried in Lawrence, although sometimes the family requests the ashes. But he said the inscription had the right to refuse a donated body.
Spencer
One scientific development that raises
nervous questions, cryogenics, has not come
already.
Spencer said cryogenics promised more than it could produce, would be extremely expensive and didn't guarantee resurrection.
Mundinger said, "Who knows what's possible? I personally would respect anybody's right to try this if they want to. However, it would not be for me."
"IT'S A MODERN DAY Rip Van Winkle," Spencer said about cryogenics, a branch of science that explores the inside of freezing a body immediately after death.
Both Spencer and Mundinger said they thought extraordinary means had been used with Karen Quainn, comatose since April 2015. They treated alive by an artificial life-support system.
SPENCER SAID THERE was a big dream and using positive phrases on termite traps.
However, Chief Justice Richard J. Hughes ruled recently that Joseph Quinlan, father of the 22-year-old girl, could order his daughter's artificial respirator turned off, if it was determined by a hospital ethics committee that "no reasonable possibility" of recovering.
From his experience, he said, suffering patients had never asked for direct intervention.
Both chaplains said they had counseled patients with malnutrition or the failure of such patients.
Spencer said that it was very hard for a family to accept the death of a child by leukemia, a "dying by stages." The family doesn't want the child to suffer any longer, but it doesn't want to give up the child, either.
WITINH THE LIMITS of his knowledge, Mundinger said, he didn't think Med Center physicians kept patients alive at all costs, because he case as it arose, with sensitivity and caution.
He said about one-third of the patients he worked with were terminally ill. He works with a leukemia group, he said, to help them survive, which they can talk about their feelings.
"Most people show heroic courage," he said. "The majority know they are dying and risen."
SPENCER SAID THAT in Christian theology death was what mattered for, and that God had put them there.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 16, 1976
5
History
From page one
cepted his position as head of pathology before making a preliminary visit. When the dean showed Major his "new" lab he found out whv.
---
"It was really depressing," Major wrote. The lab floor was covered with test tubes, dried up specimens and just plain dirt, he wrote. The lab museum of pathology had been neglected and "many of the jars were either empty or half filled with fluid, out of which pheromone dying and disintegrating into the gel," professor, associate professor, assistant professor, technician, assistant and junior of the pathology department.
HOWEVER, ALL wasn't gloom in those early days. The center was blessed with a highly competent and enthusiastic staff that was anxious to put the center on the map. Some of the staff members made important contributions that enhanced the reputation of the center.
Dr. Marshall A. BARber, professor of bacteriology, devised an apparatus that made it possible to isolate single new strains of micro-organisms. With the strain became known, he proved that a similar was back and caused a fatal infection in an animal.
The number of students attending the center was much smaller than today. In 1986, there were 20 junior "Gosh Hill" and about the 40 freshman and sophomores at the Lawrence campus taking the pre-med courses. There were also 24 women in the nursing school at
TUTIITION FOR KANSA residents was $30 a year for the pre-med course and $105 a year for the final two years. It was a few dollars higher for non-residents.
to began in 1920 when Kansas Gov. Henry Allen did some fancy politicizing to get the center moved from "Goat Hill" to a site better suited for expansion. He had already told Associate Dean Mervin Sudder that he thought he could persuade the legislature to build a modern facility one building at a time. But now he realized there was an active grassroots campaign by Rosedale citizens to keep the center there on land adiacent to "Goat Hill."
MAJOR WROTE, "Governor Allen played his cards with great skill" when he found opposition to his plans. He announced that he would have to be inadequate for a modern medical center and that it would perhaps be best to abolish the medical school. The legislature apparently concurred and was of course forced to throw doctors, educators, students and citizens."
A whirlwind campaign was begun to save the center and within a few months a suitable location (the present one at 398th Street, between Rosedale and the Governor "relented"). The legislature appropriated funds for a new center and Bell Memorial Hospital opened its doors to patients and students in the hospital, which is as the main entrance to the Med Center.
Since then, the center's growth has been continuous, even during the Depression. New wings and additions have been added periodically and the newer facilities and equipment contrasted sharply with the comparatively primitive conditions at "Goat Hill." The "Goat Hill" campus was established for the center until 1972, first as part of the hospital complex and in recent years as research laboratories.
of students at the center increased about 75 juniors and seniors every year and a number of faculty members distinguished themselves.
Dr. Logan Clendening was one of the most colorful figures at the center. Known for his stimulating and entertaining lectures, he wrote a book called "Modern Methods of Treatment" filled with medical history, amusing anecdotes and common sense. H. L. Mencken saw it and congratulated Dr. Clendening to write a popular treatise on physiology. He did and his book, "The Human Body," was an instant best-seller in 1927.
Later, Clendening wrote a nationally syndicated column on health advice that was featured in daily newspapers having a total circulation of 25 million until his death.
THE CENTER was one of the first clinics to use insulin in the treatment of diabetics. Major obtained a limited supply of the new drug in 1923. In the first two months of that year, two patients were admitted in afternoon hopeless condition in diabetic comas.
The patients were treated with insulin and they became the first two patients in the intensive care unit.
"The news of the success spread like wildfire," Major wote, "and soon we had more patients than we could possibly admit to the hospital."
DESPITE ITS successes, the center was also subject to the social attitudes and prejudices of the time. When the move was made from "Goat Hill" to the new building, there were no provisions made for added capacity; as a result the problem, a temporary structure was built from wood and celotex board north of the main building. The building, which housed
the black patients in one wing and the outpatient department in another, was described as a "flimsy-make-shift, firetrap" by Major. It stood for 25 years.
After its move to the present site, the center underwent several name changes, including the Kearns Hospitals in 1936; University of Kansas Center, in 1947; and College of Health Sciences and Hospital, in 1974, when the center moved to the schools-medicine, nursing and allied health.
FINALLY THE MODERN Era of the center arrived. The center had became more established and respected as the Depression drew to a close. It was turning out larger families, nurses and staff members continued to make important contributions to medicine.
During this time, Dr. Earl C. Padgett revolutionized the techniques of skin grafting and made rubber rubber cement on his arm one day, leaned against a wall and found his skin stuck tightly to the wall. This accident suggested to him the way of solving the problem, that in 1937 he invented a device, along with a KU engineering professor, called the Padgett-Hood dermatome that is used in practically every surgical clinic in the world.
When World War II erupted, the 77th Evacuation Hospital Unit was formed at the center comprised of 35 alumni, local
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6
Friday, April 16, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Acupuncture research challenges Med Center doctors
By MARION ABARE
Although the use of acupuncture, ancient Chinese needle therapy, isn't widespread in Kansas, there has been some research of so-called "needling" at the KU Medical
Acupuncture consists of the insertion of needles into one or more of 365 spots on the human body. For centuries, it has been used to treat various diseases. China as a remedy for disease and pain.
United States-China detente opened the door for medical experts to travel to China to learn the techniques of acupuncture, and for Chinese acupuncture specialists to come to the United States to give demonstrations and training sessions.
Since then, acupuncture treatments have been used by many physicians in the United States. And, although not widely used in Kansas, there was even legislation presented that would legislate that guidelines for regulating the use of acupuncture in Kansas.
JAMES E. HILL, a physician from Arkansas City and secretary of the State Board of Healing Arts (SBHA), said that he was very impressed with the acupuncture in Kansas. In the past, he said, acupuncture courses in Kansas were conducted by Chinese.
But, limited research in acupuncture has gone on at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Asumi Arakawa, associate professor and vice chairman of the department of anesthesiology, said he had been doing human experimentation in the needle treatment for chronic pain since January, 1974.
A MED CENTER staff member since 1983. Awakened he studied arthropuncture in Tampa.
He said that before he would accept a patient, the patient must have undergone a thorough examination by his own physician, who must write a letter of recommendation and give a summary of all previous treatment for the chronic pain.
"My objective is to apply acupuncture to pain, mainly of unknown cause, after a vigorous physical and chemical examination by the candidate's physician. When a patient comes here, everything else he brings. He comes here as a last resort," Akrawa said.
He stressed that he wouldn't treat anyone who had a malignancy, where a patient's condition might worsen if left untreated, despite the pain which have been alleviated.
FOR EXAMPLE, he said, a person may feel he has tennis elbow, but actually have
bone cancer causing the pain. An acupuncture treatment might ease the pain, but the cancer could become worse and possibly be fatal.
Arakawa said that some people thought hypnotic suggestion was involved and the use of an exotic instrument alone could be suggestive to relieve pain.
"My question was, 'Is the hypnotizable patient showing better results than one who is awake?'"
Wait, the prompt says "Maintain a consistent font style throughout the document." The text is in a standard serif font.
Let's re-read the first line again.
"My question was, 'Is the hypnotizable patient showing better results than one who is awake?'"
ARAKAWA* patients ranged in age from 22 to 74. Their ailments included arthritis of the knee and back pain, causalgia (painful spasms of vessels), headache and shoulder pain, midback pain, multiple sclerosis, elbow and neuropathy (of the face).
BEFORE TREATMENT, he gave each person a hypnotizability test, which scales from zero—not hypnotizable to four—very hypnotizable.
Five to seven acupuncture treatments one week apart were given each patient, he said. Inquiry was made about two months after the last treatment.
He found no significant correlation between a person's hypnofontality and pain.
"A patient of high hypnotizability is not
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He noted that 44.5 per cent of those treated has been positive, while 45.5 per cent responded poorly.
"As a by-product what I found out was the great individual differences. One patient would respond very well and another would respond poorly in sort of indicated a behavior attitudinal."
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HE SAID the Chinese have "selected" patients for acupuncture and doctors were striving to find out how to choose people for whom acupuncture will work well.
"Everybody is curious why acupuncture works for pain. Scientists are arguing." Arakawa said. "One says acupuncture certainly has the mechanics to decrease pain, but scientists have ability to decrease pain, but their attitude makes the patient feel less pain."
ONE OF THE patients who responded
He said this behavior attitude could begin in infancy. His son broke a bone when he was a baby, he said, and today he doesn't like to go to the barber shop because he associates the white coat of the barber with the white coated doctors.
well after five or six acuturetreatments is still without pair, two years later, according to a note on *Christmas card received by Akawaka*. The patient was the same as the girl he said she had been previously treated surgically.
In his office in the anesthesiology department of the Med Center, Arakawa has an assortment of various needles mounted for display under glass. The needles range from about $ \frac{1}{4} $ inch to three inches in length. He said the needles, after insertion, could be twirled manually or electronically.
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7
KU program aids troubled youths
By RON COHN
Staff Writer
Juvenile offenders are being trained to accept more responsibility and to have a relationship of mutual trust with their families. The program of the KU Bureau of Child Research.
The youths in the program are juveniles that have committed an offense and been referred to a local juvenile court, Edward B. Sternberg, the family training program, said recently.
"Our job is to take the place of the probation officer." Christopbersen said.
"The youth and the parents can withdraw from school at any time," Christophson said.
He said that an officer from the court then met with the adolescent and his parents to discuss the case, where the crime in what is known as an intake interview. An official from the family training program is be present at that meeting and informs the child if the child is to be placed on probation.
"We work very closely with the court," he said. "All youths are assigned with the consent of the chief probation officer. At least they might meet with the probation officer."
James Barnard, associate director of the family training program, said that there are a lot of differences in the program at any one time. They are randomly selected from 50 families who have been given objective tests in an attempt to find out which the parents are doing that makes them more likely to learn.
He said that a form authorizing the family's participation had to be signed by
Christopherensen said the only qualifications a family entering the program, had to have were that the family must live within a 10-mile radius of the
University of Kansas Medical Center and that the child must be between 10 and 16 years old.
"Our philosophy is that you've got two parents and a child and you've got to work with both parties," he said. "You can't go on the assumption that it's the parents' child's fault. In most cases someone does something wrong. That's where we start."
He said the parents were sometimes ineffective. Grounding the youth for a month or yelling and screaming at him would be worse, and will probably only make life rougher.
Barnard said that the program therapy took place in the family's home except for occasional visits to schools when it is helpful to contact the child's school officials.
"And the youth may be doing things which are unnecessary," he said. "He might stay out late every night just because he feels like it and then some night when he wants to go to a concert or something his parents won't let him go."
"It's much more logical and ethical to work in the home," Barnard said. "There is no evidence that any programs outside the home exert a positive influence. The home level program makes sense because it directly addresses the problem."
Barnard said that the training program lasted from one to 14 months. He said the average program lasted from three to four and included 40 to 60 hours of training.
"We try to make them work together reasonably."
The family training program has two teams of therapists which circulate among the 25 participating families. The teams are members of the history therapist and a graduate therapist.
Barnard, the supervisory therapist for
Christopherhesen said that the program's work was analogous to that of a laborer in a factory.
one of the teams, said the program was triving to attain funds for a third team.
"We have no vested interests," he said. We just trying to get cooperation betw
"We've got to make sure the parents are willing to budge."
He said that the program was built on the idea that the parents were the most effective change agent for the child and the most effective change agent for the parents.
Most of the youths involved in the program were first-time offenders, he said.
Barnard said that the purpose of the family training program was to effectively reduce the rate of recitivism, which is the commission of a crime a second time.
"The federal government estimates that the majority of crime is committed by juveniles and that the national figure on the rate of recitivism is about 50 per cent." he said.
Christopherelsen and Barnard said that the program, which will begin its third year June 1, hadn't run long enough for an effective evaluation of it to be made.
Barnard said that none of the youths who completed the training had been sent to a jail.
Both men said the program seemed to be a better alternative for the adolescent than an out-of-home placement, which didn't permit participation in community placement training school.
Christophersen said that one of the main benefits of the program was that it reduced CO2 emissions.
"The program never requires out-of-home training," he said. "Thus, we can shoot for a cost of $3,000, which is half of the group community placement."
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Fridav. April 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Abortion: 3 women who have been through it speak
By BILL SNIFFEN
Staff Writer
Editor's note: The following are excerpts from interviews with three unmarried women who have had abortions. The three women volunteered to be interviewed. They don't constitute a representative sample of the women volunteered; volunteers tend to be more outspoken.
The names of the three women weren't obtained from the dean of women's office or the KU Medical Center. Their policies are to not leave patients alone, they have had abortions strictly confidential.
The names of the interiewees aren't their real names. Elaine had her abortion at Douglas Hospital in Kansas City, Kan., in 2012 and gave birth to three months pregnant. It cost $150.
Aneh had her abortion in December 1972, when she was 20-years-old at the Reproduction Clinic in New York. She was four-months pregnant. It cost $25.
Sara had a menstrual extraction (an abortion in early early stages of pregnancy) in October 1973. She was 21 years-old at the time and she had no child. She had her baby abortion at the Med Center.
Q. Why did you have an abortion?
Elaine: Because I was in such a horrible mental state, in a state of depression, that I knew it was something I simply could not go
through. I just could not see bringing a child into the world, that was, totally unwanted.
Anne: I wasn't married and had no desire, to have a child. The man had no desire to be a father. I had just dropped out of school. I went back to school two years later. If I had had that child, it would've presented unbelievable problems to me.
Sara: Because I was in school, because I had no money to support a child, because I wasn't sure the (man) was the one I wanted to marry.
Q. What would you have done if abortions had been illegal?
Sara: I can't imagine the situation.
Anne: I would've gone somewhere. I would've gone to Mexico, to Puerto Rico. I would've done something. I had no intention of carrying the child full-term. Despite the physical risks. The thought never crossed my mind that I would have the child.
Elaine: God, I don't know. I think in the state of mind I was in, I probably would've tried killing myself. I didn't feel I could go to my parents.
Q Do you ever have second thoughts about having your abortion?
make me feel bad at all. I am so thankful I was able to get one. It was only and because I was able to do it.
Sara: No, not at all.
Elaine: The only thing that made me feel bad about the whole thing was that my personal relationships were so bad. I felt totally alone. Having the abortion didn't
Anne: I imagine how old that child would be. Anne: I imagine every six months or so, it means no more than two years of reality, in any way, shape, or form; except as something to get rid of. It was an obstacle
9. Is abortion morally right?
Ame: Sure. I don't mean to sound harsh.
The child hadn't been planned. The child wasn't wanted. The child had no right to exist.
Sara: I don't think it's immoral. I have totally different feelings after the 12th week of pregnancy though. The woman should make up her mind by then.
Q. What was your partner's reaction?
Sara: We hadn't talked about / having an abortion before. We considered all options.
We reached a decision both of us were satisfied with.
Anne: 'The same as mine. He was sympathetic to my feelings and he was concerned about the way I was reacting, but he was also willing; an abortion was the only alternative.'
Q. What would you tell someone in the same situation you were in?
Anne: If she didn't want the child, I would
tell her to contact a place where she could have an abortion.
Sara: I think they ought to talk to the other person involved; to friends they are close to. I think they ought to talk to themselves and start getting into what their lives are like, so that opportunities are open to them; which possibilities are realistic and which ones aren't.
Q. Would you have another abortion?
Elaine: Yes, I would.
uncomfortable place to be. The majority of women who become pregnant who didn't want to—it's not because they were irresponsible.
Sara: I don't know. It's totally different speaking for the rights of others and facing it emotionally yourself. When it becomes a personal decision, it takes on new dimensions. I don't think for anyone it's an easy decision to make.
Q. Wouldn't it have been better never to have got pregnant in the first place?
Sara: I'm concerned that people feel that people who have abortions haven't taken the responsibility beforehand—i.e., contraceptives. I have taken all precautions.
that I can take. I can't take birth control pills and I can't have an I.U.D. (Intrauterine device) put in. That doesn't leave me very many options. And that's a real
History ...
From page 5
physicians, dentists and faculty and staff members.
STUDENTS CONTINUED taking their first two years of medical school on the Lawrence campus until 1952 when a new hall was finished and second year studies were moved to Kansas City. Ten years later, the addition of another hall all four years were consolidated at the center. Since then other medical education programs have evolved that train and certify medical assistants, technicians and therapists.
The center has compacted its medical school program to a three-year course to allow it to teach more students.
Another step taken to expand teaching facilities was in 1972 when a part of the School of Medicine was established at Wichita State University. Last year there were 40 medical students studying in Wichita.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 16, 1976
9
in the ing 546 students.
From page one
Med Center training
the Med Center and two years in a specified training center."
Another way of increasing the number of physicians, Waxman said, is by helping Kansas communities sponsor Vietnamese students to secure the services of these physicians.
KANSAS GRADUATES of foreign medical schools also are being helped to pursue their careers.
There are problems related to financing and developing new residency programs, Waxman said, but a proposal has been submitted by the family practice residencies by July 1. 1977.
Norton J. Greenberger, chairman or use department of medicine and a task force member in the county's rural areas as appealing to urban ones. Residency programs in other parts of the state would expose physicians to another lifestyle that than of the Med Center, be said.
"IF SOMEONE goes out to a Kansas community," Greenberger said, "and likes it there, that's an ideal way to find out whether the community is a good place to practice and whether that place would be receptive to him.
"It's good for them to get out in a community hospital away from the Med Center because there is a growing and appropriate emphasis on primary care."
Primary care is defined by three criteria: the initial contact with the patient, the supervision of the diagnostic tests of the patient and appropriate therapy and accepting responsibility for caring for the patient's problems.
"THE PROTOTYPE is the family physician," Greenberger said, "but I think most people don't understand that nurses also renderists also render at the primary of a lot of primary care."
Other programs provide residents, interns and medical students with contacts across Kansas.
"Starting July 1, we will have ten house officers who will be called Topeka affiliated with the University to obligate to spend at least four months during each of their first two years training in Topeka hospitals. At the beginning of this year, two house officers and one year and six will be in their second year."
State Rep. Keith Farrar, R-Huguenot, said most legislators agreed that for the amount of money spent on the Med Center, something was wrong when a large percentage of Med Center graduates didn't stay in Kansas.
But while the percentage of graduates leaving the state may be increasing, Greenberger said, the number of graduates is also increasing. That means there are about 50 to 60 more doctors in the state each year, he said.
The last study in 1960, Greenberger said, showed Kansas was retarded about 40 per cent of the physicians trained here, the same as Nebraska and Iowa.
Referring to the shortage of rural physicians, Farrar said 46 out of 120 students accepted in 1975 had come from Johnson county alone. Farrar questioned whether these students were missions panel, involving 13 from Johnson and Wondyote counties, 11 from other
SINCE 1950, the Med Center has had an internship program. During a medical student's senior year, he spends one month in another part of the state with a physician.
Waxman said the length of the interpart
be increased with an expanded curricul
ature.
HE SAID the majority of those who left had gone south or west.
"I think the number is higher now. I would guess in some areas it is higher than that."
In the past, many Kansas-trained teachers have left the state to practice elsewhere.
Bruce Brennholt from the office of community programs at the University of Iowa said he didn't have sufficient figures of his students employed in other states. But he said many graduates had taken residences elsewhere where 'wa's limited openings and rarely returned.'
Under Iowa's residency program, which he said was funded by local hospitals and Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) grants, 74 of 104 residents are in cities outside of Iowa City. He said residences are mainly in Davenport, Cedar Rapids and in July, Sioux City and Mason City. A program in Waterloo is under development, he said.
Greenberger said he anticipated that the number of trainees spending time outside of the Med Center would increase as the program developed.
"EVIDENCE INDICATES persons have a tendency to practice near where they took their residencies." Brenholdt said. "It's too hard for people to take notice in the majority will practice in illinois."
In Sept. 1974, the Med Center invited 75 internists from out in the state to attend an open meeting with the house staff to inform them of practice opportunities in their work. The Board appointed as Liberal, Greenberger said. A similar meeting was held last November.
counties east of U. 81 and one from west of U. 81. which runs through Salina and
"The legislature has to face the fact the state is suffering from a doctor shortage and the present method is not going to provide a solution to the problem." Farrar said.
WAXMANSAID the University task force would study the development of model health care ambulatory clinics in large area health education centers (AHEC).
THE UNIVERSITY of Iowa College of Medicine has played a coordinating role under a 1973 legislation to fill the state's need for primary care physicians.
"The hope is this will be an annual event and our house staff will become better informed about practice opportunities at the state of Kansas City." Greenberger said.
AHEC, originally conceived by the federal government, would involve maintaining community hospitals and assuring the quality of care in such hospitals. AHEC would develop applying appropriate referral patterns major care centers, evaluating health care, assisting community colleges and other training facilities in development of programs for health professionals; and training hospitals, community groups and government agencies in planning and developing more effective health care delivery systems.
Sally Powell, administrative assistant to
bis program director for North Carolina
AABI.
They cover the state from Asheville, in the foothills of the Great Smokies, to Wilmington, on the Atlantic coast, she said, and the AMEC was responsible to five counties.
WAXMANSAID the task force would visit North Carolina to look at the AHEC program coordinated by the University of North Carolina Medical School.
She said medical school residency programs were carried out in the community hospitals, although some hospitals offered own programs. The centers also serve the community colleges and continuing education for health care personnel, she said.
POWELL SAID the program had worked well. Three AHEC were funded for five years in 1972 by a federal grant, she said, and in 1974, the North Carolina legislature appropriated $23.5 million to fund the other six.
Early every other Friday morning, Hester Thurston, professor of nursing and director of continuing education in the School of Nursing, flies over to Garden City in a four-passenger charter plane. She teaches eight graduate students for three
hours Friday and for three hours Saturday
and flies back Saturday afternoon.
WHEN THE Kansas Legislature approved last spring a regulation of the State Board of Nursing, which requires Kansas nursing teachers to have a master's degree, or graduate students to have a state requested graduate courses be taught in their communities. Thurston said.
The plot program began January 30, in the department of nursing at Garden City Chevron.
Lack of library facilities in the community causes hard work, she said, and the lack of library services is a big problem.
she usually took the materials with her and left them for the students.
"They are very interested that this will be continued there, and one of the questions they ask is, 'Do you know when the next course will be?' " Thurston said.
"We ARE trying to develop a flexible program that allows students to enroll and meet the requirements using a variety of methods. Instance, this summer we expect to teach on campus, this campus and partly in the community from which the student comes." Thurston said.
Six of the Garden City nurses hope to enroll in this course, she said.
ON YOUR WAY TO THE K.U. RELAYS?
... STOP BY THE CRAZY TOP SHOP and PICK UP YOUR FREE '76 RELAYS TRANSFER
THE CRAZY TOP SHOP: 1/2 block west of Massachusetts on 9th St., Lawrence, Ks.
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Emergency...
The situation is somewhat different if a patient dies, Jobe said. The doctors and nurses talk about the case, and then they talk about something else.
From page one
"That's the way you have to do it. You cannot stand the pressure all the time. Talking about the case is getting it out of your system."
"Sports is a really popular subject, or
something completely different,
"he added.
And, as a self-protective measure, an E
Inward must remind herself that she can't
and not forget to check in.
theAnother self-protective measure is the camaraderie that exists among E. R. mankind.
JOKES ABOUT tranquilizers—"Valium T
and Vitamin T"
(Thoracid) are com-
presses.
Another nurse said the day-to-day work in the emergency facilities was "hard, but not impossible."
"It doesn't take long to blow the whole works," she said.
Jobe said the most difficult part of her job was dealing with parents who had lost a son or a brother.
"To most people, if you're here, it's
not important. You know how to move you
care. Usually, talk isn't necessary."
The rewards of the job make it worthwhile. We are a nurse head of nurse KU's emergency facilities for 45 years.
"WE'VE DELIVERED babies in the elevators and several in the emergency rooms," she said. "You can be under all these pressures, a baby born. All the pressures go away."
Even more rewarding, Jobe said, is saving someone's life. One patient had both a leg and an arm amputated when he was run over by a train.
'There were about four or five doctors here, and everyone was buy into his thing to me.'
Wait, the word 'buy' in line 1 is bold.
The word 'buy' in line 2 is italicized.
The word 'buy' in line 3 is underlined.
The word 'buy' in line 4 is in a different style.
Let's re-read line 1: 'There were about four or five doctors here, and everyone was buy into his thing to me.'
Line 2: 'Buy'
Line 3: 'buy'
Line 4: 'buy'
Okay, I'm ready to output it.
'There were about four or five doctors here, and everyone was buy into his thing to me.'
"I looked at the patient and saw that he wasn't breathing and tapped one of the doctors on the shoulder and said that we'd get more concerned about the breathing."
A month later, Jobe said, she saw the same patient walking down the hall with his foot on the floor.
"IT WAS SO rewarding to see this patient, who could not so easily be dead, walking alone."
Foster, who has worked as an E. R. nurse at the Med Center for three years, said, "Some lady walked up to me the other day and I don't think you remember me, but about a month ago my mother tried to kill her, and you were so very nice to me, and I appreciate it."
"That's why I do it," Foster said. "R's the whole thing."
One more picture of the emergency facilities at the KU Med Center is a desk, cluttered with half-finished Cokes, half-wrapped in plastic and a bottle of antacid and patient records.
But despite the chaos, she adds, "I might come to work for free."
"A person who likes to have everyone organized and perfect control would go nuts in an emergency room," Foster says. "You can get them down." I control how many come in at one time.
Take Home a Relays Souvenir
12
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3
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Welcome K.U. Alumni and Friends
600.56
Friday, April 16, 1976
---
University Daily Kansan
With an ear toward music
A circle of children sits in a classroom with three teachers. One teacher plays the guitar, another holds a book, and the third observes the group.
To close the therapy sessions the children usually sing a song, an activity that helps generate the idea of group togetherness. The sessions, which last half an hour, are filled with activities that stress involvement, which helps the children learn how to function.
3 4 5
One of the key points of the program is the use of normal children as models.
Photos by Jay Koelzer
By JENNY CARTER
Ever since man first beat two sticks together to attract the attention of his fellow cave dwellers, music has been bringing people together.
But it wasn't until this century that music was used to aid the handicapped.
A program of music therapy was developed at the University of Kansas in 1946 by E. Thayer Gaston, professor of music education.
The program was designed to use music as a tool through various orthopedic and psychological principles to help change socially unacceptable behavior.
GROUP SESSIONS are a major part of the music therapy program, according to Alicia Gibbons, music therapy clinic coordinator. The emphasis is on using a feeling of togetherness and on using a feeling of being needed to raise self-esteem.
One activity of the group involves giving each pre-school child a rhythm instrument such as drums, triangles or bells and the group brings them in a simple rhythmic set of beats.
ONE OF THE classroom combinations is non-handedied pre-school children and primary-aged children with emotional problems. This kind of mental retardation or physical disabilities
This teaches the group to play on cue and function as an ensemble. It also teachers such individual needs as motor control, self-esteem, social skills, and problem solving in help, more complex instruments.
Every effort is made to prevent isolation. Group members are deliberately chosen to compliment each other, and activities are planned to bring out individual involvement.
The University Affiliated Facilities, a program that combines professionals working in the fields of music therapy, speech pathology, uses this method.
Janet Gilbert, music therapy clinic supervisor, said, "The idea of mixing normal and special children is that the normal child acts as a social model and
Nancy Peterson, associate professor of special education, said that one of the ideas that had changed in the program was that students would achieve a certain child could reach.
learns to be receptive to all kinds of people."
WE'RE FINDING that with different teaching techniques and earlier training the handcapped child can accomplish far more than expected." she said.
Rod Hocott, Lawrence graduate student, said, "We always try to pick out the good points. There is a way to get the point across that something is not good without saying
The clinic also benefits about 180 people in three local nursing homes and Lawrence Memorial Hospital, where it aids esophiatric rehabilitation.
ACADEMIC EXPECTATIONS are set for each child according to his needs. The non-handcapped children are called on to answer the more difficult questions. This stimulates them and sets an example for the other children.
The clinic works with referrals from the community and has a Monday evening session for the Aging. Musical activities are designed to give senior citizens reasons to interact with each other. They play in the listen to music and have discussions.
The children are rewarded by the teachers for appropriate behavior.
MIKE CLARK, the KU Medical Center's only registered music therapist, is working in the psychology department with all ages of in-patients.
One of his activities is working on group relaxation. Soft music is used as a breathing exercise to help relax the breathing and muscle exercises to teach the members that they can control their own breathing.
"I'm having really good results with that group." be said.
Clark is now working with a minimum of equipment but he plans to bring in music therapy students for clinical training when the program is more established.
The young girl is playing a drum with her mother.
The close interaction between teacher and student breeds a familiarity that permits the exchange of private secrets.
Using simple games,
like Simon says, helps
the children enjoy as
well as learn from the
Music Therapy program.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Relays Edition Sports
KANSAN
Vol.88 No.125
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, April 16, 1976
Track ultimates for year 2000 predicted, told
See page 6
A
Staff photo by PAUL CHRISTIANO
Relays fans come prepared because good weather and the Relays don't necessarily go hand in hand
KU athletes eye Olympics
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Sports Editor
For the past four years, track and field athletes around the world have been training toward this summer. It's 1976. And the Summer Olympics in Montreal are quickly approaching.
All the work, the endless hours spent pounding on the track, working on technique, striving for self-improvement are on the line now. The ultimate, the peak for the track and field athlete is almost here.
Cliff Wiley, a sophomore sprinter at KU, has been thinking about the Olympics since high school. Making the U.S. a country of athletic excellence.
"It has to be the goal for any runner who feels he has any kind of potential," Wiley said. "I started thinking about it in high school. It was the epitome of the world to me."
WILEY IS JUST ONE of many KU athletes, both past and present, who have to be considered as prospects for the 1976 U.S. Olympic team. All know that it's not going to easy but, too, they all have a certain amount of confidence.
Keith Guinn, a junior high jumper here, was redshirted this year after undergoing knee surgery during Christmas break. He hasn't jumped competitively for several months. But he remains confident of his chances.
"I'm very confident as long as I can stay healthy," said Cuinn. "If I can train for an extended period of time, I will be healthy."
GUINN HAS SHOWN world-class potential, leaping 7-4 at the Pan American Trials last summer. With the Olympic Trials qualifying standard at 7-2, Guinn is virtually assured of at least having a chance to make the team. He said he thought it would take a jump of at least 7-4 or 7-5 to make the Olympics.
"Getting off that (7-4) jump last year really helped my confidence," Guinn said. "I had been healthy all summer, and I had been working hard on my technique. I knew I could get off a good jump. I just needed the right meet."
Guinn admitted he won't have any trouble getting up for the Olympics should he make the U.S. team.
"It's something that when you get there, there's no holding back at all," he said. "You have no excuses. It's all you can do."
KU SKPRINTER RANDY Benson is an unusual case for a track and field athlete. Although he has done very well in his two years at KU, he never really considered himself an Olympic prospect until this year.
"It's something that never entered my mind at first," Benson said. "I didn't run until my freshman year (at Fullerton Junior College) and I was just running for fun then.
'My sophomore year I was running for a scholarship and then last year I just wanted to see whether I could go. No, I didn't.'
'Now I've found that I can run with the top people so this year it's the Olympics I'm aiming for.'
Benson, who has run a 45 mile relay split, isn't exactly brimming with confidence about his chances, though.
"I FEEL THAT I will make it to the trials," he said, "but I might be too young to take the team. It might be new a game for me. I'm really pointing toward it and being to give it my all, but I can't make any predictions."
"I'm going to have to run in the low 45s to even have a chance. I'm trying not to think about the competition as much running well and getting a good time. You know everyone is going to be there. Everybody is going to be coming out of the woodwork because it's an Olympic year."
Wiley, the American indoor record holder in the 100 meters, has a great deal of confidence in his ability. The record-breaking 100 meters, which he set earlier this year, didn't hurt him any.
"I GIVES ME confidence in that I know I run better outdoors," Wiley said. "I didn't have a great indoor season. If I run 10.4 indors when I wasn't really right, I run 10.0 outdoors. I don't think that's out of my reach."
Wiley is also a prospect in the 200 meters. In fact, he thinks that's where his best chance lies.
"I usually do better in the longer races," he said. "I need to run in the low 30s, maybe 20s to make it. I dink on me."
There are thousands of other athletes in the United States who are probably saying almost the same thing.
The athletes realize this, and they realize the disappointment they will feel if they don't make the team. But still they can't look past the Olympics. There's no greater sport than basketball, and they don't want an Olympic gold medal around his neck.
As Guinna said, "To me, there's nothing else. A world record can be taken away from you a few seconds after."
"But to win the Olympic gold, or to just compete in the Olympics will never leave you. They can never take that away."
The following is a list of KU athletes and former KU athletes who are considered prospects for this year's season.
RANDY BENSON - 400 meters, qualifying time, 46.14- Benson has run a 46.36 open 440 and a 44.1 mile relay speed. He will likely need to equal the latter time to even have a shot at the Games. At this time, the Jayhawk senior isn't among the top ten men in the United States but a strong showing outdoors could chance that.
CLIFORD WILEY—100 meters, qualifying time,
10.44-Wiley, the American amateur record holder in the indoor 100 meters, thinks he can improve on the 10.4 he ran last January. The KU sophomore is also a threat in the 200 meters with a 20.8 clocking, among the top 20 in the world last year.
KEITH GUINN--high jump, qualifying height, 7-2.
Although coming off knee surgery, Guinn has proved he is a world-caller high jumper, leaping 7-4 in the U. Pan American Games Trials last summer. Tump tied the
See HOPEFULS page two
Relays assures rain for farmers
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
Kansas farmers can finally reface a sigh of relief—the Kansas Relays are here
No more drying wheat crops. Thank
goodness, this year's crop is dishewn an-
d crusty.
No more hours spent trying to convince Mother Nature it's time for a shower
RAIN IS ON THE WAY. It almost always rains—or smells or hails or something…dumb.
"We've had anything from snow to sleet to rain," said Ed Elbel, manager of the Relays since 1930. "I wouldn't try to guess how many times we've had rain."
Elbell doesn't have to guess. It's rained hard during at least 11 of the Rulens-in, 1923, 29, 32, 48, '51, 55, '59, 65, '70, 74. Some rain has fallen during most of the KU Rulens; these are just the years there were downpours worth noting.
FROM THE FIRST Relays in 1923, the weather worried about the weather during the liberation.
Forrest "Phog" Allen, long-time KU basketball coach and athletic director, was
the first to be concerned about the weather. Allen took out insurance on the Relays in
He insured the Relays for $5,000. The proposition was this: if one-tenth of one inch of rain fell between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m. on the ground meet, Kansas would receive the money.
ELBEL SAID AILN GOT away with in the 1923, 24 and 25 Labels, but after an intervening period he was
"The insurance companies found out they had a losing proposition," he said.
In 1947, the rains and winds were so bad that the Relays were a losing proposition, too. The weather during the '47 Relays had such an effect on the athletes that six men were able to beat at the not too towering height of 114, the lowest winning mark in Relays history.
Ehlel said the rain caused great problems during the Relais because of the cinder layer.
"THE CINDER TRACK was a good
tire label said the driver.
"You're on the tides on the drainage
Relavs schedule
See RELAYS WEATHER page five
TODAY
BILD WERTE
1. Long home - women's open - prelims and finals
2. Long home - men's open - prelims and finals
3. Pole swat team - college (Col.) j-math trials
4. Polo sweat team - college (Col.) j-math trials
5. Shot put - high school boys - prelims and finals
6. Darts - women's open - prelims and finals
7. Dice - women's open - prelims and finals
105 yard dach-bld. high school bays, premi-
nials
106 yard dach-bld. high school bays, premi-
nials
108 mater dark-bdk. Cal., Caj., *C* mmairns, premi-
nials
109 mater dark-bdk. Cal., Caj., *C* mmairns, premi-
nials
110 mater dark-bdk. Cal., Caj., *C* mmairns, premi-
nials
130 yard high bldgs -high school boy's-prem
130 yard high bldgs -high school girl's-prem
Sptist midday relay -likewayner men -prem
Sptist midday relay -likewayner men -prem
Sptist midday relay -likewayner men -prem
Sptist midday relay -likewayner men -prem
460 yard high bldgs -C. women's preml-
460 yard high bldgs -C. women's preml-
460 yard high bldgs -C. women's preml-
460 yard high bldgs -C. women's preml-
460 yard high bldgs -C. women's preml-
460 yard high bldgs -C. women's preml-
130 yard high bldgs -intermediate hurdles-
men -prem
:50 1300-meter run-women's open-nails
:800 840-ray relay-University men-prelims
Diccau~ high-school boys~ pre-grades and finals
Long jump~ high-school boys~ pre-grades and finals
Shot put~ high school~ Inv. Col., J. C. men~ pre-grades and finals
Track Vars. High School~ Inv. Col., J. C. men~ pre-grades and finals
V. Rice. High Hump~ Univ., Col., J. C. men~
than
3:30 Triple Jump—Univ., Col., J. C. men—finals
1. 25 110-meter high hurdles—Univ., Col., J. C. men-
100-meter hurdles - women's open-finals
250-meter hurdles - women's national championships
100-meter dash - Col. J. S. men's championships
100-meter dash - Col. J. S. men's championships
Four mile relay - Univ.-Col. J. C. men's champions
Sputter medley relay - University men's champions
Sputter medley relay - University men's champions
Mindbender relay - University boys' champions
Jim Ralston relay - University boys' champions
CLIU Cumbahmen 400-meter intermediate hurdles - University men's champions
1:150 120-yard high burries - high school boys
1:150 120-yard high burries - high school girls
3.30 Wet Sante 1,560 meter run-Univ., Col., J. Cmn-
final
340 440 year relay-Uuvv-Col. J. C. women-finals
340 440 year relay-Uuvv-Col. J. C. women-finals
340 440 year relay-Uuvv-Col. J. C. women-finals
680 480 year relay-University men-finals
680 480 year relay-University men-finals
680 480 year relay-University men-finals
Mix 410 year women's open-prelim
Mix 410 year women's open-prelim
4:41 Mile relay—uni college men–prelims
4:51 Mile relay—college men–prelims
5:11 Chuck Cramer mile relay—University men
TOMORROW
A.1 Triple jump--hump, high jump, open jump and finish
A.2 Triple jump--high school boys' jumps, high jump and finish
A.3 High jump--women's open jump and finish
A.4 High jump--men's open jump and finish
A.5 Al Oster discus throw--Univ., Col. J. C. man-
nuel
10:00 Long jump—Univ., Col., J. C. men—trials
A.M. Track Events
Track Events
Kansas Relay Medals games
40 yard relay - high school boys - finals
40 yard relay - high school boys - finals
40 yard relay - high school boys - finals
3,000 meter steeplechase - open-section one finals
1,000 meter steeplechase - open-section one finals
Two-mile relay - high school boys - finals
Mutter's mile run (40 and over) - finals
Mutter's mile run (40 and over) - finals
5,000 meter run - open-section two finals
5,000 meter run - open-section two finals
Pole vault - men's open international-finals
100 Vouw-Vant-lien's qoef inviqnsoalm-maals
100 Long jump-Univ. Col., J. C men-prellms and
them
1:30 Carl V. Rice Mgh jump—Univ., Col., J. C. men- finals
104 yard dash-high school boys-finals
106 meter dash-high school boys-finals
108 meter dash-high school boys-finals
Distance medley relay-college men-finals
Distance medley relay-college women-finals
Two mile relay-university men-finals
Two mile relay-university women-finals
440 yard relay-high school girls-finals
440 yard relay-high school boys-finals
440 yard relay-open
P.M. Trak Events
12:50 400 yard relay-lunar high jumps-finala
12:50 400 yard relay-lunar high jumps-finala
12:50 Opening ceremonies
12:50 Opening ceremonies
13:17 110 meter high hurdles-high school jumps-finala
13:17 110 meter high hurdles-Col. J, C, J. marmot
3:120 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:121 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:122 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:123 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:124 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:125 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:126 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:127 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:128 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:129 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:130 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:131 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:132 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:133 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:134 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:135 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:136 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:137 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:138 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:139 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:140 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:141 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:142 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:143 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:144 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:145 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:146 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:147 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:148 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:149 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:150 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:151 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:152 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:153 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:154 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:155 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:156 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:157 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:158 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:159 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:160 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:161 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:162 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:163 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:164 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:165 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:166 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:167 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:168 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:169 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:170 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:171 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:172 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
3:173 k400 radial lift-Lowerbrace Grade School--finish
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4:278 k400 radial lift
200 mother-dash men='open invitational-finals'
200 mother-dash women='open invitational-finals'
Mine relay - high school men=finals
Mine relay - junior college men=finals
Mine relay - college men=finals
Mine relay - college men=finals
Mine relay - college men=finals
Mine relay - college men=finals
Ryun finds peace within himself after retirement
By KEN STONE Associate Sports Editor
It was no one's funeral, but the mood surrounding Junkin Ryan's press conference was grim.
Ryn walked into the Trophy Room of the Allen Field House annex to announce his retirement from racing, and the hush that accompanied a group of reporters and motorpeters's wrestling.
Normally a noisy, talkative and buerous bunch, the sports writers were serious and somber as they listened to Ryun give his reasons for quitting: "God spoke to me some words." You've fought the good fight. You've run the good race. It's finished." ^24
THE QUESTIONS PUT TO Ryun, who acted like the only relaxed person in the room, got the answer.
"What do you consider the highlights of your career?" asked one.
Another writer asked, "Were you unhappy but not bringing your times to work?"
"IT'S NOT HOW MANY times you've scaled a mountain or how many times you've run 3-51." Ryan said, "but at some point in my life I did it."
An island of tranquility in a sea of anxious reporters, Ryun sounded as if his retirement, coming after he stepped off the track in a mile race at Salt Lake City on February 20, came at the appropriate moment.
Contrary to the expectations of some, Ryan expressed no bitterness, reclamation or disappointment about the way his career had ended.
RECENTLY, IN AN interview granted the Kansas, Ryan was the same calm but talkative person he was at the March 3 press conference. His reflections on his career, his achievements and his future emerged in a thoughtful manner.
"I's foolish to be a slob. I did that once, and it wasn't too much fun at all." Ryan said, referring to his 18-month layoff the 1969 AAIM male championships in Miami.
"I've fulfilled my aspirations in competition," he said. "But I have other things I'd like to do. I'd like to maintain a good level of fitness and health."
"It wasn't supposed to be a pressure race, to my understanding," he said of the race in which an Achilles tendon injury forced him to drop out. "But the announcements were: 'This is the big race in the mile. Ryun is going to special comeback. We expect great thurs.'"
"I don't want to get involved in the competitive aspect of it anymore because I know-purely from experience—that even the most inefficient people into shape, I was measured against past results."
WOULD HE BE TEMPTED to run on the Masters level when he touched the age of 30.
It was such unfair expectation that needed him in his last meet with the International Track Association at Salt Lake City.
For the same reasons, Ryan wouldn't
find seeing his children—he has four—trying
to take them to school.
Apparently not
"YOU KNOW, THERE'S just no way to escape it. I doubt I'll ever go into an age-group program because it'll be that same program that we evaluate of what I've done before."
"My little girl (Heather) likes to dance
She likes gymnastics, and my little boys (twins TED and Drew) like to mimic baseball players, and that great. If that's what you're going to do, then you can be able to help and encourage them."
BUT, RYUU STRESSED. "if they don't run, it'll probably be better for them."
Measuring the achievements of Ryun would take a book. In fact, Cordner Nelson attempted that in his biography, "The Jim Ryun Story." It was necessarily incomplete, however, because the book ended as Ryun was preparing for the 1988 Olympic Games in Mexico City, where some say his team beaked and then began going downhill.
"Actually, nobody knows for certain, what lies ahead in Jim Rim's future. The team will eventually run the mile, and a painter might say 'Only time will tell.'"
Nelson concluded his book with these words:
RYUAN NEVER RAN the mile faster than 3
baylands and set in 1867 before the book was published.
"I'd like to have gone under (3:50), Ryan said at his press conference, "I think we are going to go back and reflect on it is pure speculation. I think every athlete who's ever done anything in sports always has the power they think they're capable of attaining."
Most of Ryan's best marks were set when he won by 20, 30- and even 50-yard margins. He was really never pushed to his best time, say, but Ryan doesn't use that as an excuse.
"I WOULD HAVE been fun to have had a Kifler Rauf" of the Tanzanian runner who
See RYUN FINDS page three
I am sorry to be unable to provide a full transcription of the image. The provided text is too blurry and illegible to accurately transcribe any words or details. Therefore, I cannot accurately recognize or transcribe any content from this image.
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENE
Ryun explains his reasons for retiring from racing
2
Friday, April 16, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Trio responsible for KU Relays
By KEN STONE
There is no rational explanation for the existence of the Kansas Relays.
"Hold it right there," you say. "Run that by again."
"How's that?"
There is no rational explanation for the existence of the Kansas Relays.
Take yourself back to the Kansas of 1923, the year the Relays began. As now, the state was predominantly agrarian. The sport of track and field was known, but extravagant relay meets were isolated occurrences on the east and west coasts.
Photo courtesy of UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ARCHIVES
WHAT LITTLE WAS known about track was limited to the larger cities and to the homes of the university-bred. Farmers were as likely to waste a good day of spring planting to attend a Kansas Relays as chickens were to form unions.
Athletics
And the ability to plan, organize, stage and promote such an event was limited to
"It was only when Kansas students and alumni built the Memorial Stadium, in token of the sacrifice of the 120 students in this war, that the Relays became a possibility."
But that's all it took to get the Relays started; the idea of one man, the promotion activities of another and the organizational acumen of a third.
BUT POSSIBILITY wasn't the same as actuality.
While Outland has been given credit as "the father of the Relays," Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, KU's athletic director then and later a highly-successful basketball coach, did much of the work necessary to insure the success of the early meets.
"Returning to his native state, he began to insist that Kansas should have games similar to the Pennsylvania carnival, but lack of facilities impeded him.
For one thing, he knew the support of the state was crucial. The Relays needed spectators, and the only way to get them was to advertise.
A credit to Madison Avenue, Allen pulled some daring stunts to promote the Relays.
during stints to promote the Relays. Edwin "Doc" Elbel, who came to the University to teach in 1928 and who has been manager of the Relays since the middle of Herbert Hoover's term as President, recalled Allen's advertising glimmicks.
There may be no rational explanation for theounding the Kansas Relays, but there were to be two.
THE FOOTBALL PLAYER, who later was to become a well-known surgeon, was
The first Kansas Relays meet program said, "Being at Penn (where he did his graduate work), where the (Penn) reams were being developed into the biggest anthem of the history of the world (sic), Doctor Outland was filled with the spirit of the games.
The three men most responsible for giving life to the event we now take for granted were an All-America football player, a nationally recognized basketball coach and a track coach with a funny-sounding name.
"HE AND FOUR other men, members of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, bought an old airplane and traveled the state in white jumpsuits with 'Kansas Relays' on the back. That created a lot of interest.
"You can imagine what would happen if you were going by an airport and some lloyds landed and got out with suits on saying 'Kansas Relays'." And eventually became curious as to what it's going on here. What are the Relays?"
That question was answered on the radio.
A jumper employs the Eastern cutoff into a sawdust pit
of all places, another new-fangled phenomenon. Allen spoke over the KU radio station KFKU and spread the gospel of the church among listeners. Support from among the local listeners.
THE MOST RELIABLE means of bringing in the crowds, however, was to invite the "name" athletes, the superstars of the era.
Since the beginning of the event, foreign athletes were a staple diet for Relays spectators. In 1926, for example, Charles Hoff, the Norwegian pole vaulant champion, cleared the stratospheric height of 13.4 m in the meet. The world record today is 13.6.
Swedish spinner Adrien Paulaen was a popular visitor in 1928, too. He won the 440-yard dash in 48.9 seconds. The national high school record today is 45.8.
But regardless of the Outland's idea or Allen's accomplishments, the RELays would never have gotten off the ground without the support of Karl Schlaidemann, the RU track coach.
With more than 700 entrants in the first Relays, the ability to organize the event was, indeed, a crucial factor in making it a success.
SCHLADEMANN DEVISED the plan—still in effect—of getting the students involved in by appointing student Relays managers, the persons who made sure every athlete was assigned a number, a lane and a place to stay while in Lawrence.
The University encouraged students to attend and Haskell Indian Junior College called off all classes for the day to help KU "pull off her greatest athletic event."
Schladman made sure the awards were in order 85 seven-jewel Elgin watches and hundreds of medals—and that every high school, junior college, college and university relay team and entrant knew when to show up for their event.
Hopefuls . . .
And the rest, as they say, is history.
From page one
Kansas junior for ninth on the world list last year. He was ranked the sixth best jumper in the nation.
SAM COLSON—javelin, qualifying standard, 292-6. Colson, with a load of 290-8, scored 47 points for the favorite to have an excellent chance for making the team. He slumped last year after winning an NCAA title for KU in 1973 and the AU crown in 1974, but still threw a few out.
RANDY SMITH—high jump, qualifying height, 7.2—Smith was the 1974 NCAA outdoor champion while competing for KU. His best leap of 7.2 put him on the world list that year, but he'll need to make at least two inches higher to make the team.
KENT McDONALD—steeplechase, qualifying time, 8:32.0-McDonald, who won three straight Big Eight steeplechase championships, has quietly established himself as one of the top steelchasers in the nation. He was ranked second behind former Wichita State runner Randy Smith and also second in the nation. Smith in the AAU in 1975, makes him as a bonafide contender for a berth on the U.S. team.
TERRY PORTER—pole vault, qualifying height, 17-3. Porter has to be peaking in this Olympic year. After clearing 17-3/4 outdoors last year, Porter has already vaulted 17-6/2 indoors this season. Ranked ninth nationally last season, Porter faces stiff competition in his bid to make the team.
DANNY SEAY—long jump, qualifying distance, 25-7. Seaw was fifth on the world list last year after leaping a wind aided 26-11%. He was ranked second in America and ninth in the world last year. With a good score from service, he played June 18-27 at Eugene, Ore., Seaw stands a good chance of nailing down a spot on the team.
THEO HAMILTON-long jump, qualifying distance, 25-7- Seay's teammate at KU last year, Hamilton was ranked fourth in the U.S. and 11th in the world. His indoor leap of 26-7-4 last year was the seventh best jump in the world.
STAN WHITLEY—long jump, qualifying distance, 25-7. The third former KU athlete with a chance of making the team in the OL will play in his first game in the U.S. last year with a best of 26-2%.
WADDEL SMITH—400 meters,
qualifying time, 46.14–Smith has a 45.6
mile relay split and a 46.0 loop 440 to his
sides. He was able to hit the outside
chance at best of making the team.
MARK LUTZ-200 meters, qualifying time, 12.04 - Lutz owns a 20.52 meters track, which he annotated and enclosed track at the KU Relays age. But last season he slowed to 20.96.
AL OERTer-discus, qualifying standard, 196-10-Lest we forget Al Oertor. Rumor has it Oertor is contemplating a comeback on the national level. Oertor won four consecutive Olympic gold medals. Oertor reportedly has been throwing out 175-0 in practice.
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THE KANSAS UNION
Friday, April 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
3
Ryun finds ...
From page one
has run 3:51.0), but I had a Kip Keino,
"Ryan run
"In some respects, my career was a very unique one. From the very beginning it was predicted I would burn myself out. That was from the very beginning."
"I peaked earlier than most people. I was under a program that demanded—and I expected of myself—a lot, and I was able to accomplish."
Training under his high school and college coach, Bob Timmons, Ryan did accomplish many things. He was a *3:51.1*, 800-yard run (1:44.9) and 1,500-meter run (3:51.1), as well as in several relay and indoor events.
COULD RYUN HAVE done any better if he had trained in a warmer, more hospitable, climate, such as in southern California?
According to Ryun, probably not.
"There's a great deal of significance to having been here instead of in California in the sense that here you're in an isolated place, where there weren't as many distractions.
"I'm not saying the weather isn't a factor—it would have been nice to have been somewhere else—but I know that having worked under Timmy (coach Bob Timm) with the program—and having been in this part of the country—contributed to my career."
WHAT WAS WORTHHILE about training on lonely Kansas roads in temperatures ranging from below freezing to above steaming?
"It gave me the solitude that was necessary," Ryun said. "People have asked me, 'Don't you get weary of the loneliness of the long distance runner?' Heck, that's not loneliness. That's the only time a person can leave home to enjoy nature. Ryan has made his home in Santa Barbara, Calif. in recent years, but he still appreciates the Kansas of his youth.
"IN CALIFORNIA, YOU had to wade through city traffic. But here, you're almost immediately in the country. It's an altogether different situation."
Ryun left the impression he hasn't had any regrets. Despite his heartbreakfall in the Munich 1,500 meter preliminary, and the Munich 7,400 meter with Kuno and the 7,800 foot altitude of Moscow City, he sounded as if he had accepted even his greatest disappointments.
"A PERSON COULD look back at my career and make some valid criticisms, but I don't feel a bitterness at this point. I wouldn't change anything that happened to me in the past good times, the bad times—have given me the perspective I have now as a person.
To just take the good and never the bad,
that you give us a true impression of what life's all about.
Consequently, when you ask Ryun which
BAYSIDE
Photo courtesy of UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES
Ryun finishes in first as usual-in 1969 Relays
races and records he most fondly recalls you get an elusive answer. Each one has its own reasons.
**KNOW YOU FIND that hard to accept.** he said, as he leaned on a desk in the track of your vehicle, "I know people scratch their heads and say, 'Wow, he can't even pick it.'"
"Each one has a special significance and has a special place in my heart. There were several times when I wanted to be bold as others, but if I were to look back at each of them, each has a meaning."
Ryun gave an example.
"I CAN LOOK BACK AT at my first (Relays), when I was a high school
sophomore. I was given the anchor leg, and I ran a 1:55. But what was significant about that was that I went out in 52 seconds (for a car) over the very fast, and we won the two-mile relay.
"One of the races I enjoyed the most—not that it was any more significant than the others—was the (KU) freshman mule relay, which that surprized everyone, including myself.
"I just went out as fast as I could. I wasn't a quarter miler, but from that point on I was. And I started to catch them. I figured it must have been a good time, but not a great time. It was beyond my comfort prebination. So that was really fun. I really enjoyed that one."
HOWEVER, RYUN'S CAREER was marked by many unenjoyable races as well, especially late in his career. On the ITA first year to win a race after his first year, 1973.
Toward the end of his racing career, he even began to enjoy training more than racing, he said.
"At first I remailed dreaded training, but then I began to really like it because of the people who were involved. There was a very human element there, and I enjoyed working with the other fellows, the spirit of camaraderie," Ryan said.
And Ryun admitted his lack of success in recent years was more a result of his dying illness than of an inability to perform.
"THERE'S SUCH AN ELEMENT ON intense desire, concentration and putting your heart into it, that's needed to make racing successful," he said. "I could probably look back at some of the races in the past couple of years, and you could probably assume that they were a result of a poor performance.
"But, more than anything else, they were a result of not really having my heart in it." So when Ryun, a deeply religious man of 29, heard God speak to him in prayer soon after the Salt Lake City meet, he knew his career had come to an end.
WHEN RYUW WON Sports Illustrated's Sportsman of the Year Award in 1986—becoming the youngest athlete ever to receive the honor—the citation stated:
"For all his signal triumphs, Ryun, like (Roger) Bannister, recognizes that sport is only one aspect of life, that while the success one aims at and achieves in sport is not the only thing he acquires, the unlaugh, it not the be-all and all-of living. There are other things to do."
Said Ryan last month, "I don't want to spend the rest of my life looking back and thinking those were the best times of my life. As I ask my family grow, I see that the best times of my life—and the most productive times of my life—are in front of me."
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4
Friday, April 16, 1976
University Dally Kansan
PITCHING
Staff photo
Bob Timmons does hammer throw pantomime
KU Relays go metric
Don't attend the Kansas Relays this weekend with intentions of watching university athletes run a four-minute mile or set a record in the 100-yard dash, because they won't.
Nor will the athletes get the opportunity to break such records at the 51st annual edition of the relays which will employ the metric system in the running of all individual track events.
The switch to the metric measuring system is limited to the individual events and will not affect the relay events. Results of these events will be given in both standards.
Bob Timmons, KU coach and meet director, said the change was implemented in accordance with 1976 being an Olympic year.
"Primarily," Timmons said, "because the United States Olympic Committee has adopted the policy that all Olympic trials will be based on the metric system. We have attracted some of the nation's finest amateur athletes again this year and we
save to protect all potential Olympians by going to the metric system."
The only exception to the change will be the high school boy's division. Timmons and others would have to adopt the metric system for state meet qualifying. The high school girl's competition will be the metric system, he causes the boys to compete in the women's open division.
"All collegiate and open events have to use the metric system to protect Olympic hopefuls," he said. "The fact that high school girls are competing in the open competitions opposed to high school boys competing with their own division makes this necessary."
Virtually every major outdoor meet this season will employ the metric system this year because of the Olympic Committee's ruling. Timmons said he thought many would retain the metric system after the Olympic games this summer.
"I guess it's an educational process. I think some people were a little alarmed at the thought of it. But in reality I don't think there is any excuse for anyone, participants or fans."
You've Got It Maid at Naismith
In his 10 years of coaching at KU, Timmons has also produced seven conference indoor championships and two cross country titles.
But despite all the winning, Timmons is not entirely satisfied with the job he's done
University of Kansas track teams have won nine straight Big Eight Outdoor Championships under head coach Bob Timmons.
"I don't really feel that I've done so well,"
"I as a track coach." Timmons said. "I feel
more confident now."
Timmons prefers to look at other factors which have contributed to KU's domination of the industry.
"Many years ago, Bill Easten came to the U.S. and founded a fantasy studio and established a fantasiesellence", Timmons said about the man who coached Jayhawk track from 1948 to 2015.
"WEVE HAD A NUMBER of pluuses
poiner for us." he said.
"We've benefited by the tradition that we established. He achievements were an example of his work."
On a national level, Timmons's squads have captained the U.S. indoor crowns and championship games.
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Sport Writer
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Tinnitus said his main concern was for the athletes to achieve their maximum potency.
Timmons also pointed to other elements which have contributed to KU's success.
"This is a fine academic school," he said. "In the athletic end of it, we've got great facilities, and I've always been fortunate in baving fine assistant coaches."
"TIMES, HEIGHTS AND distances aren't necessarily the only scales by which we can compare. We don't need a way of life to athletes, no matter whether the team is a big winner or not, for me. I know we're losing because we're not achieving some of the things that are most important."
Private baths—Fully equipped darkroom—Comfortable, carpeted rooms—Heated swimming pool—Good food with unlimited seconds—Lighted parking—Color TV—Close to campus—Many other features
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"You strive to win, but if you don't win,
and you've done everything in your power to
win, I don't think you need to apologize for it."
He said he didn't consider winning the most important aspect of athletics.
"Stirring to win is terribly important, but there are times when you can't win," he said. "If everybody was a winner all the time, then all competition would be so sol."
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ON THE OTHER HAND, Timmons said that the athlete who wins, but without the maximum effort needed to achieve his fall potential, was a failure.
He compared this type of athlete to a student with a tremendously high IQ who goes through school never studying, but still makes B's.
"If you know in your heart that you're not really doing the things that are important for winning," he said, "then I don't think you're being smart enough to do win, that you're necessarily a success."
"An outlier, who didn't really know, might say that he's a success," Timmons said, "but he's not coming close to his potential. So he really isn't a success."
"BY THE SAME TOKEN, there could be someone without that intellectual or athletic ability who is coming very close to him. But he can't win. He isn't good enough."
"That's the guy coaches are most proud or because they're giving their level best to their team," said Jared.
"There have been great athletes that have come to Kansas that have not achieved," he said, "and I hold myself responsible for that."
But he said it's always satisfying to have the opportunity to coach a dedicated athlete.
"WHEN YOU FEEL THAT an athlete goes to practice every day, tries hard, competes to the ultimate of his ability, doesn't make excuses, and comes right back and continues to battle—and if that athlete has that same attitude in the game, then he coaches a coach terribly proud. It is a thrill to have that kind of an athlete on your team."
you know they've given everything they could to strive to achieve their goal."
Thimmons said that Bill Penney was one athlete who exemplified that type of behavior.
Timmons said that on occasion, he had been unable to instill this type of attitude in her.
Penney came to KU at the same time as the "big three" in the shot put—Karl Salb, Steve Wilhelm and Doug Knop—and he couldn't make the team.
So Penney decided he wanted to be a summer thrower, even though there were fewer.
FIRST. THERE WERE no meets in this area that had hammer throwing events. And not only was KU without a hammer or a hammer throwing cage, but there was no one around who knew how to coach that event.
"With that," Timmons said, "Bill determines that he wants to be an All-American hammer thrower. That's exactly what he became."
Penney threw the hammer 202-1
"The great goal was there, and it was an almost impossible thing." Timmons said. "The credit all goes to this young man and the team that put him in such an unusual, and remote event.
"BILL WAS A GOOD student. He had tremendously high morals. He was the kind of guy that anyone would be proud to have on a team."
Timmons said he enjoyed coaching the athletes in practice in a situation where he had the time to spend with them and help them learn how to deal with disappointment for a coach to know that an
Dees selected as honorary ref
While competing for KU, Dees swept every conference shot put title in his three years of varisty competition (1933-35). During the 1935 season, he set a Big Six Conference outdoor record, captured the Jayhawks' squad and won the NCAA shot
Elwin Dees, one of the nation's top shot
deens in the 1930s will serve as honorary
guard for the 1980s.
Before coming to KU, Dees won three straight Kansas high school championships while at Lorraine High School. He broke the state and world interscholastic record in 1929 with a throw of 58-1 and tipped that next year with a throw of 58-10. He also was a time champion of the University of Chicago interscholastic Track and Field meet
After graduating from Kansas, Dees served as head trainer at KU, Oklahoma State University.
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And the fact that Kansas is now operating without a sprint coach presents further challenges.
"WE'RE HAVING A HARD time," Timmons said. "At this moment, we're terribly frustrated with what's going on, and I think the athletes are too.
"They're disappointed that they don't have a sprint coach, and we frantically try to get them."
Timmons said he was faced with so many administrative duties that he didn't always
have the time he needed to spend with an athlete.
"At the college level," he said, "there are so many administrative responsibilities that it's more difficult to develop the kind of rapport that a coach would have with you."
But Titmuss stresses that the important things in sport are really the by-product.
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Friday, April 16, 1976
Relays traditional for longtime fan
Bv ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
Sports Editor
When Joseph Rapp went to his first Kansas Wesley way back in 1923, things were different.
Memorial Stadium was only two years old, the track was made of cinders, the pits were filled with sand and the country was supposed to be dry.
"I WENT TO THE first one when I was just a 14-year-old boy," the 67-year-old Lawrence resident said. "I was in junior high and my father took me."
Oh, how things have changed! But through it all, one thing has remained constant—Joseph Rapp is still going to the Kenesha Relays.
Now, 53 years later. Rap still hasn't missed a R Retails. And it up to him,
"I want to keep my record perfect," he said last month. "As long as I am able to go, I'm going to be there. There's no way they can ignore it." His tickets ordered for Friday and Saturday."
IN RAPP'S RELAYS collection are programs from all 50 previous meets except for the first one, when Rapp said of the missing programs, "no one had any money, and they didn't print very many. You got them on a first come, first serve basis, and I just got them too late."
Flipping through the pages of his old
programs is like taking a walk through the past for Rapp. Old memories, hidden in the deep recesses of his mind, spring to life as Rapp thinks of past Relays.
"In 1935, I remember, Emporia State had a very good distance medley relay team," Rapp said. "They had a guy named Archie San Romani, maybe you've heard of him, who beat Cunningham (KU Olympian) several times in the mile and 1,300 meters.
"WELL THEIR TEAM was so good that they moved out of the college division and let them run in the university class with all the big schools. And they won! They were so good they could have beaten anybody.
"Back in the 1920s, the Haskell Indians used to have great teams. They had a two-mile relay team that was strong and a mile relay team that was outstanding. They won here and then they went up at Drake. Boy, they were good."
"There were also some very good hurriers in the early years—Harrison Dillard from Baldwin-Wallace, Lee Sentman from Illinois and George Sealing from Iowa. They were running the hurries in 13.3 way back in the 1980s.
"IN THE 440, I remember Charles Brookins from Iowa. I saw him in my second Relays (1924), and he made the Olympic team that year.
"I guess I've seen thousands of very fine
clogged. The track was supposed to drain through the holes in the curves.
From page one
Relays weather . . .
"We had to continually dig those things out. If the track would have drained perfectly the conditions wouldn't have been so bad. But the way it was, in time, ruts would occur and the lines on the track would be obliterated."
"We used to drag the track and the runways," he said. "We used to roll them, do everything possible to get them ready. Many times we were supposed to start the meet at, say, 8:30 and we had to start a couple hours before the weather."
WHEN IT DID RAH, the Reliefs officials
had to work extra hard to get the track in
recovering.
Many of the Relays' problems with coping with the weather were solved in 1969 when Jim Hersbberger, Wichita oilman and former KU track athlete, contributed $125,000 toward the installation of a Tartan all-water track in Memorial Stadium.
"THE ALL-WEATHER Tartan track is one of a track's biggest successes," Elbel said. "We are really grateful to Jim Hersherborg for the track. A few years ago we never would have been able to run some of the tracks in our country with this track. Now we can go ahead and splash along and still have a credible race on this track."
Elon Torrence of the Associated Press even made the suggestion after the rain, "I will be outstanding and athletic of the meet award go to Herbert." "not because of his third place in the Masters mile, but because of his gift of the game that made an impossible meet possible."
THE RELAYS WEATHER has always injected a little humor into the meet. In the same 1970 meet, one Relays official reported the winner of the high school basketball game, saying, "A speckled trout, followed by a carp and a bluegill, dnawerehings."
"YOU CAN WORK on the meet the whole year," said Bob Timmons, KU track coach and meet director, "and have it wiped out by one rainstorm. Bad rain on Friday and the threat of rain on Saturday will cause us to lose a fortune."
But to those who plan the Relays, wet weather hurts the financial success of the team. But it doesn't.
"KU ALWAYS HAD good milers," he said, "and it seemed that most of them came from small towns. It doesn't seem to make any difference where they come from if they have the talent. Look at that Cornwell kid playing quarterback for the Rams. How is it from a very small town, and you can't make them much better than him."
athletes through the years. I don't know why I can remember all those guys. Some of the things today I seem to forget right away. I've been taught that if you stay with them and you never forget it."
Rapp's fondest memories seem to be of the earlier athletes, those lacking all the equipment and training procedures the modern athlete is blessed with.
Rapp has plenty of KU favorites as well. It seems he has a weakness for milers, listing Cummingham, Wes Santee and Jim Bray, the KU athletes who especially thrilled him.
"SOME OF THE YEAR people might not realize this, but some of those old-time athletes were very good," he said. "In the early 1980s, for instance, the Illinois and Iowa—dominated. Then the Texas teams took over, and later the Big Seven schools were good. Then they brought some teams in from the west coast. I think that we had to have some very fine relay teams."
But not if you're a Kansas farmer.
Even from the beginning, Rapp seemed to have a special feeling for the Relaxs.
"I kind of had an idea then that it was a pretty important thing," Rapp said of the inaugural 1923 meet. "Of course, I was just a kid, and I didn't really know what was going on. Track and field was a very popular sport in those days.
"Track is still holding its own. Any time a semanticail comes out and complements the existing one, it's an achievement."
Even the famed Relays weather can't damp Ramp's enthusiasm. In fact, it seems he's hardly noticed the wind and the heat that have come to characterize the Relay.
"NINETY PER CENT of the time the
weather has been good," Rapp insisted. "I can remember a lot of times when the sun was shining and a cool wind was blowing. It was perfect! In the last seven years, it's started to rain a little more, but it hasn't been bad."
And he's seen a lot. When he first started coming, a sub-four minute mile was simply insensitive. An 18-foot pole vault? A seven-foot pole vault? You've got to be kidding! And on, and on,
Rapp, though, can remember several times he'd had to run for cover in the midst of a downpour. But he's never missed an event he really wanted to see.
"Better equipment, that's why they are better now," Rapp said without a hint of question in his voice. "They also have to train. They can work out in the field team in the early days the Big Eight and Big Ten schools were always fighting the weather."
BUT THEY VE COME, and soon they too will be gone, replaced by marks now untouched.
"The track is better now, too. It used to be that they'd throw mud and cinders all over that they'd throw with those old time spikes, they used to cut up with those. Those things were nothing but heavy nuts."
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"I WEEEN GUYS whose legs were up so bad they had to drop out. Some still stayed on and finished the race if they weren't bleeding too bad. I've seen guys come across the finish line with their legs completely smeared with blood."
Today, the Relays are in a life and death race against inflation. The rain has taken its toll on attendance. And the rising costs have made it more difficult to break even.
Look out for yourself. Look into the Air Force ROTC programs on campus.
But as long as there are men like Joseph Rapp around, the meet will always be worth waiting for.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
University Daily Kansan
Herm Wilson, head track and cross country coach at Wichita State University, will serve as referee of the University Division of the KU Relays.
WSU's Wilson to be referee
Now in his ninth year at WSU, Wilson's track teams have won one Missouri Valley Conference crown and have been runner-up on three occasions. His cross-country squads have won five straight Missouri Valley titles. He also has coached three All-
Americans, including Olympic long jumper Preston Carrington and his athletes have been called the best in the country.
Wilson also served as a high altitude coach at the 1988 Olympic training camp in Lake Taboo, Nev. In 1972, Wilson coached an American ice team that traveled to Mexico and then to New York State, he was head track coach and athletic director at Wichita Heights High School.
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Friday, April 16, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Where will track and field be in year 2000?
By STEVE CLARK
Sports Writer
06 091 00
2
The world's fastest humans, Ivory Crockett and Houston McTear, have run the 10-yard dash in nine seconds flat. Translated into different terms, their average speed for the distance was 22.73 miles an hour.
Raised once again are the questions that have existed ever since John Watkins of Great Britian covered 100 yards in "even time." 10.0, more than 115 years ago.
JUST HOW MUCH faster, higher and farther is it possible for man to run, jump and throw? How close is man to reaching his physical limit? What for instance, might the track and field records be in the year 2000?
The foundation for answers to such questions rest in the past. Going backward, we start from the present.
IT WAS AN OLYMPIC YEAR, as in 1978 and as will be 2000. The following chart lists the Olympic track and field records, including those from the current national high school records:
Last year's 100 winner was world recordman Ivory Crockett
Event 185 Records National High School Record Surviving Marathon in Marks 73
100 M 10.3 10.0
100 M 10.3 10.0
600 M 45.8 49.8
600 M 45.8 49.8
1500 M 14.2 14.8
1500 M 14.960 13.440
1500 M 29.179 29.564
10,000 M 18.70 18.64
Marathon 12.323 10.235 2.124 47.4
Marathon 12.323 10.235 2.124 47.4
600 Harding 10.5 10.5
600 Harding 9.6 7.3
Long Jump 9.6 7.3
Long Jump 9.6 7.3
Peb Wall 53.1% 53.4% 50 100
Peb Wall 53.1% 53.4% 50 100
Diflex 180.4% 181.1% 78 100
Diflex 180.4% 181.1% 78 100
Javelin 184.1% 185.4% 71 100
Javelin 184.1% 185.4% 71 100
A trend toward not only improvement, but also improvement at a younger age is evident. Of the Olympic records held by athletes 1982 and even be national high school bests she
The final column shows the number of times athletes bettered the 1952 Olympic standards in 1975. Excluding the four top 10 athletes, the average of at least 70 athletes recorded marks during 1978 that were better than Olympic records 24 years earlier. How long
1952 THE WORLD record in the mile was 4:01.3. Had someone suggested then that in just 24 years the 3:50 barrier would be enforced, people would have thought it crazy.
Based on the percentage improvement of marks between 1952 and 1976, projections were made for the world records of the year 2000.
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Event 1952 World Records 1976 World Records Project for year
100 M M 10.3 9.9 9.6
90 M M 15.2 10.9 10.9
90 M M 40.8 43.0 41.9
90 M M 11.9 13.8 14.7
150 M M 3-13.0 3-12.2 3-12.8
150 M M 6-13.0 6-12.2 6-12.8
500 M M 13.3-8.2 13.1-13.0 12.3-10.0
500 M M 29.9-18.2 29.1-18.2 29.1-18.2
300 Steeple Jump 8.4-1.8 0.99-1.8 7.18-0.5
400 Hurdles 30.4 30.4 30.4
600 Hurdles 60.8 60.8 60.8
Hlub Jump 6-7.4 47.8 47.8
Triple Jump 68.3-29.1 29.1-29.1 32.0
Triple Jump 38.3-29.1 29.1-29.1 32.0
Scooter Pull 15-1.4 18-6.1 25-1.1
Scooter Pull 58-10.3 18-6.1 25-1.1
Hammer 18-6.1 226.4 275.1
Hammer 100-1.1 308.1-8.1 308.1-8.1
"How much faster can you make a bag?" Timmons asked. "How much can you impress me?"
Reaction to the projected marks brought varied reactions. Bob Timmons, University of Kansas track coach, said he doubted that much improvement would take place by the team.
The basis for his view, Timmons said, stemmed from the tremendous amount of changes that have occurred since World War II.
First women's official named
For the first time this year, there will be a women's division referee at the Kansas
Barry Anderson, the head women's track coach at Kansas State University, has been a member of the women's events added to the women's division this year and open competition between high school and college women. KU track coach Andy Nutt was the moment of a women's referee was essential.
New coaching methods, such as over-distance workouts for runners; improved facilities, such as synthetic track surfaces; advances in equipment, notably the fiberglass vaulting pole; and better training were examples mentioned by Timmons.
He went on to say that he doubled the next years would produce an equal amount of money.
THERE WILL CONTINUE to be world records set, in the longer distance events, he said, but the sprints and technique (field) events would progress rather slowly.
KU sprinters Randy Benson and Cliff Wiley agreed with Timmons on the dash question, saying there simply wasn't much room left for improvement.
"The body just isn't going to go that much faster," Wiley said. He said he thought a time of 8.8 or 9.2 for the 100-meter dash was too long, so he switched to 43.0 would be the limit in the 400 meters.
BENSON PLACED THE minimum at 8.7 for 100 yards, 19.5 for 200 meters and 42.5 for 400 meters. However, he said a clocking rule is the best record by the year, 2000.
The athletes expressed views just as varied in the area of field events.
KU vaulter Tad Cales said there were no reasons he forewax the world record for a speed of 430km/h.
FIRST, THE ATHLETE himself would be different he said, describing the vaulter of the future as much bigger, stronger and faster. able to run the 104-ward dash in 9.5.
Concerning middle distance running events. Wes Santee, the former KU great who came close to being the first miler under four minutes, held the opinion that he had to be moved up and recorded. He said a 3:46.0 mile within the next few years wasn't out of the question.
In addition, Scales said he thought the vaulting pole would continue to undergo changes. These changes would make the lighter lighter and easier to bend, and would result in giving the vaulter a "bigger snap" and access to lifters higher.
There will, however, come a time when the record will reach a plateau because of too many injuries.
"YOU CAN ONLY HOLD high on a pole," Scales said. "And once that point is reached, then improvements will come in smaller amounts."
Assuming each generation continues to get physically stronger, Suttee said that by 2038 he would be able to run 100 miles.
"I DON'T THINK that that's an unrealistic appraisal of what it could to go," said Mr. Browne.
Kansas weightmen Rudy Guevara and Roger Hammond predicted longer throws
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The current world best, but not world amateur record, is pro Brian Oldfield's heave of 75 feet, a distance that astounds Guevara.
"To me, 75 feet is almost unbelievable," he said.
He suggested 325 feet might be the limit, but instead someone would really pop on wouldn't
So what are man's limits? Nobody really knows for sure; there are too many variables involved. But perhaps Santee pinpointed the most crucial consideration.
"The javelin has already begun to level off." Harmond said.
ahead, but Guewu stressed they wouldn't continue at the rapid pace shot putters had
He said, "The most important intaginate ingredient is that burning desire."
FOR THE NEXT SEVERAL years the 75-foot range would remain out of the range of most putters, he said, but by the time 2000 rounds around the record should be near 80
Saunter over to the Kansas Union and bowl a few lines. Modern, air-conditioned facilities and 12 lanes Make the most of your weekend in Lawrence.
That, in spite of all that's been written, is the reason man will continue to run, jump and fly.
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--one of the most bizarre promotions ever seen at the Kansas Relays was the one "Phog" Allen literally cooked up in 1930—a rodeo and a buffalo barbecue.
Tired of Track?
--one of the most bizarre promotions ever seen at the Kansas Relays was the one "Phog" Allen literally cooked up in 1930—a rodeo and a buffalo barbecue.
Allen great Relays promoter
That famous year, a conventional rodeo was held on Friday night, after the high school track meet, on the football field. Later, a buffalo was slaughtered and barbecued as a meal for the coaches and students. The student contest to guess the buffalo's weight.
The student guessing his weight the closest was awarded four tickets to the
Allen and other Relays officials made a thousand mile airplane trip around Kansas promoting the Relays. The referent that year was Avery Brundage, who later became president of the International Olympic Committee.
rodees and relays. The second most accurate guess received three tickets.
Edwin Elibel, the longtime Relays manager, was present for the bizarre incident.
"Yes, I saw this," Eibel admitted. "It was quite an affair. And I'm sure it was a dwarf buffalo because it was the toughest thing I ever tasted."
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Friday, April 16. 1976
AMSAN
Wes Santee was America's mile hope in 1954
Past KU Olympians
1944 AT ST. LOUIS
60 meters Did not place
100 meters Third
200 meters Did not place
1920 AT ANTWERP
Pentathlon Second
1924 AT PARIS
Tom Poor High jump Fourth
Merwin Graham Triple jump Did not place
1932 AT LOS ANGELES
Jim Bausch Decathlon First
Glenn Cunningham 1,500 meters Fourth
Clyde Coffman Decathlon Seventh
1936 AT MERLIN
1,500 meters Second
1952 AT HELSINKI
Wes Santee 5,000 meters Did not qualify
1956 AT MELBOURNE
Al Oerter Discus First
Bill Neider Shot put Second
1960 AT ROME
Al Oerter Discus First
Bill Neider Shot put First
Cliff Cushman 400-meter hurdles Second
Bill Alley Javelin Did not qualify
Terry Becher Javelin Did not qualify
1964 AT TOKYO
Al Oerter Discus First
Billy Mills 10,000 meters First
Billy Mills Marathon Did not place
Kent Floerke Triple jump Did not place
1968 AT MEXICO CITY
Al Oerter Discus First
Jim Ryun 1,500 meters Second
1972 AT MUNICH
Jim Ryun 1,500 meters Did not qualify
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University Daily Kansan
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Improvement viewed in KU women's track
On the track, Pepin said he expected KU to succeed in his respective, particularly in the 440 relay team.
Gary Pepin, University of Kansas women's track coach, is optimistic about his squad's chances for success this spring. He has reason to be.
High jumps Connie Lane, Kathy Kittern,
V. C. Sanders and Meredith Neiimen
have all cleared 5-4 and given KU good
depth.
During the recently completed indoor season, the women completely rewrote the record book as they established school records in all 13 events.
Coupled with a solid performance at a 15-team meet in Missouri last month and a tie for third at the Big Eight Indoor, Pepin's optimism is understandable.
SIZZLER
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KU is led by shot putter Jesie Rickle, who the big Eight Indoor toilet with a
1518 W. 23rd
Carrie Weltmer, Celissa Russell and Nanette Lee. The indoor record for the 60-yard dash is shared by Calmese and Lee with clockings of 7.1.
Lane and Russell also team with Lane and Steel Lante to form KU's mile relay.
At this year's Kansas Relays the women will try to capture their first Relays championship. The best KU finish last year was Lane's tie for second in the high hump.
Distance running hurps with Nancy Bissell, indoor record holder in 51.3.0, and Robin Mathewson, record of records at 1,000 yards in 259.7 and two miles in 12.24.6
Sheri Lanter's 1:08.6 for the 440 intermedian hurdles—in the event's first time since 2012.
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The design of the church key hasn't changed because it was made with skill, ingenuity and simplicity. A great beer doesn't change for many of the same reasons. If it's done right going in, you'll have an unchanging standard of quality. Some things never change. Olympia never will.
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Friday, April 16, 1976
University Dally Kansan
PROTEST
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Despite her authority the rain continued falling
Jack Greenwood loves to run. He loves it so much, in fact, that he runs from three to five each day.
Greenwood a master in Masters
By CHRIS COTTRELL
sports writer
But what makes all this running so unusual is the fact that Jack Greenwood is a woodworker.
Greenwood, a former track star at the University of Kansas, graduated from KU in 1982. Now, almost 25 years later, he is still running in track meets across the country.
Greenwood competes in Masters track events. The Masters is a program designed for men 40 years of age and older and for women 30 years and older.
In 1972, Greenwood ran with a U.S. Masters Track Team on a tour of Europe. His accomplishments included being named national team captain at a meet in Gotenberg, Sweden.
IN THAT MEET, he won the 400-meter
dash, the 100-meter hard hurdles, and an
air-water race.
In a meet in London, he broke his own world record in the 400-meter hurdles for men 40 to 49 years old, winning in 55.7 seconds.
He currently holds world records for his age group not only in the 400-meter hurdles, but also in the 110-meter hurdles (15.0), the 80-meter dash (32.0), and the Open Decathlon.
But it's not competition for which Gael can win. Rather, he runs purely for the enjoyment.
Running is my way of unwinding at the
He wanted to participate in the 1982 Olympics, he said, but a pulled thigh muscle in his left leg prevented him from trying to qualify.
Greenwood starred for the KU track team under Bill Easton in 1958-52. He set school records in both the indoor and outdoor 120-vard high and 120-vard low hurdles.
He was then inactive, as far as running was concerned, for almost 12 years.
But in 1986, he read an article that said that if a person could not run a mile and a half, then they had to be staged.
end of the day," Greenwood said, "After being in the office all day and fighting the world's problems, I just go out and run for it, whatever it takes to get it out of my system."
GREENWOOD IS PRESIDENT of the
Association in Medicine Lodge
and Loan Association.
GREENWOOD SAID HE was watching a football game one day, and he said to himself: "Shoot. I'm getting tired of watting the ball. I just got just go out and see what I can do."
"I found out I wasn't in as good a shape as I thought I was," he said.
So he decided to do something about it. He started running around a local lake, which was about two and half miles. But he was in for some rough going at first.
"Those first couple weeks, I ached all over," he said. "But things started coming on."
But Greenwood was in for a surprise.
SO IN 1968, he entered the jogger's mule in Wichita. Later, he entered a meet in Kansas City and did well, so he decided to run in the Senior Olympics in Los Angeles. He responded by winning every event he entered
Since then, he's appeared in numerous movies and television programs. He European tour with the U.S. Masters Track Team, the National AAU Masters Track Meet, the World Masters Meet, the Kansas State Meet.
"The thing I enjoy about it," he said, "the fellowship with all the runners. There's no pressure on you and I'm my own coach. There's no one saying, 'You gotta.' It's fun."
"It's just like a shot in the arm—like new blood."
Greenwood says he won't quit running even after he quits winning.
"I FEEBEN AT BOTH ends —I've been at the top and I've been at the bottom, and I haven't quit," he said. "As long as the good health is good and good health, I'm gang in there."
Greenwood is the president and founder of the Mid-America Masters, which was held in New York.
---
"I sent out letters to everybody I knew who liked to run," he explained. "I called a meeting on a Sunday and 13 of us met and talked a lot about way. Now we've got almost 300 members."
"I hope to get some of these older fellows that used to run, back into the program and help me," she said.
"It will take true..It's growing."
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1976
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 16, 1976
9
Problems cloud Olympics' future
By GARY VICE
Sports Writer
The spirit of human achievement is the guiding light for the Olympics, but recent human failures have threatened the future of the games.
Darkening the outlook for future Olympics are the financial problems Montreal, the host city of this year's summer games, is having in staging the XXI Olympics.
Coordinating Montreal's efforts to get the Olympic nomination was Mayor Jean Drapeau, Canada's most successful and powerful urban political boss.
The Candian city was selected by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) as the site of the Olympiad over two other bidders. Los Angeles and Moscow.
He told the IOC that by selecting Montreal, the Olympics would be free from politics. The committee, in choosing Montreal, tried to avoid any East-West battle. He said they might have developed if either the United States or the Soviet Union had been selected.
But the Olympics, a festival of sport and an international gathering, has become a major problem for Montreal. The first Canadian city ever to host the games has fallen into a deep financial crisis with the weighty costs of the project.
In his early estimates, Drapa said the cost for all Olympic construction would be $250 million. He sought a budget of $310 million to handle the entire operation
From the start, the federal and provincial governments told Drapeau that Montreal would be on its own financially, and they would not subsidize the games.
Since the original estimates, the cost of constructing the Olympic site has skyrocketed to over $1 billion. Costly labor strikes coupled with high inflation were the main factor in the soaring prices. Some estimates place the final costs at more than $2 billion.
The labor disputes have delayed construction by 100 days and forced Montreal to scrap many of its elaborate plans to complete the project for the opening ceremony of the games.
Gone are the plans for the Olympic stadium's 10-acre retractable roof and 18-story tower with revolving restaurant. Olympic contractors have a daily payroll of $2 million for constructing the 70,000 seat stadium and surrounding facilities.
The decisions to make the cuts in the construction were made under Montreal Province, which took over control of the Olympic planning at Montreal's problems threatened to delay
Montreal's experience has become the biggest and most expensive sports extravaganza in history. The financial problems in staging the games may make it
impossible for another city to independently host the games. Munich, site of the 1972 Olympics, is still struggling beneath her carried from its $600 million expérience.
Such problems have led to suggestions that a permanent Olympic site be constructed. Most prefer that at Athens, Greece, not that at Olympia Games, be selected as this site.
There are other problems which face the future of the games. Some of these are political problems in the 1972 games in Iraq, where the teams and coaches were killed by Arab terrorists.
Many black athletes have used the highly publicized Olympics as a forum for black nationalist activism. The athletes joined with several African nations to ostund Rhodesia from participation in the games. The athletes had threatened to withdraw, but the anticleric" Rhodesia was allowed to compete.
U. sspirator Tommie Smith and John Carlos didn't honor the playing of the national anthem at their awards ceremony at the 1968 games in Mexico City. Both black athletes bowed their heads and raised a clenched-fist salute to the flag.
At the 1972 games two more black sprinters, Vince Matthews and Wayne Collette of the U.S., failed to show respect to the national anthem. Both were barred from future Olympic competition by the players, taking on around on the awards platform."
If the staging of the Olympics becomes
too much of a burden for the participating contrarian and is discontinued, it won't be its
The ancient version of the games was halted in A.D. 394 after nearly 1,000 years without interruption by the emperor of Rome, who called it a paan festival.
After 15 centuries, the games were resurrected by a French nobleman, Baron Pierre de Coubertin. That first edition of the Modern Olympic Games was in 1896 in Athens at a cost of $386,000 to a wealthy Greek merchant.
At the 1868 Olympic only 10 nations and 59 athletes competed. A fier cry from the 11,000 athletes from 135 nations who will crowd in Montreal's Olympic Village.
At the Olympic revival in 1886, Baron Coubertin said, "The important thing in the Olympic Games is not winning, but in taking part."
His words became the Olympic Creed. A creed that has suffered in the past several years.
Once again the Jayhawk track squid is being led by four cannails.
Kansas captains
The captains for the 1978 squad are Rudy Guevara, Newark, N.J., senior, weightman; Keith Guinn, Shawne Mission junior, jumpers; Randy Benson, Montebello, Calif., senior, sprinters; and Bill Landberg, Jackson, Mich., senior, distance runners.
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Friday, April 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Hershberger track prevents Relays downfall
TEXAS TEXAS
Photo courtesy of UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ARCHIVES
Texas sweeps muddy finish on a gooey track in 1949
81 schools at inaugural Relays
The Kansas Relays began way back in 1923. Competing at the first Relays were 23 universities, 19 colleges, four military academies and 35 high schools.
Eighty-five seven-eleven Elgin watches were given for first place at the first meet. Ten eighty-seven Elgin watches were fit for fern design on each one. They were put on display in a downtown jewelry store window. Silver medals were given for second place, and bronze medals were given for third place.
Daily Kansas日报 dated Jan. 18, 1923. According to the article, "a big track event to be held here April 20 and 21 made it necessary for Kansas State University and the athletic department back it."
The first mention of the Relays was in the
The article went on to say that the high school meet would be April 20 and the Kansas Relyals April 21. Coach Schladman教导manager should supervise the work of two junior managers, three sophomore managers and six freshman managers.
Pepin in 4th year at KU
Gary Pepin, beginning his fourth year as a full-time assistant track coach, joined the Kansas team in 1971 as a graduate assistant.
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
repin, 32, was a former track standout at Kansas State College of Pittsburg. A graduate of Pittsburg (Kan.) High School, he also attended Fort Scott Junior College and John Brown University before return to Kansas State for a degree in physical education. He was a four-year letterman in track and received a basketball letter while at John Brown.
He began his coaching career in 1966 as an assistant in all sports at Northwest High School outside of Sedalia, Mo. The next year he moved to California, Mo., where he was head track and cross country coach. In 1969, he moved to Sedalia for a two-year stint as back track and field coach at Smith-Cotton University, producing two nationally ranked athletes.
At KU, Pepin's main responsibilities are to train athletes, the women's team and the men's team.
If a poll had been taken of the participants in the 1970 Kansas Relays on the meet's most valuable athlete, the winner, going away, would have been James W. Hersberger, a 5-6, bowled runner from Wichita.
Hershberger, then 37, had placed third in the Masters mile with a time of 4:54. More significant, the rain-drenched track he ran on was an all-wearless 'Tartan' man.
Confused?
Don't be. The fact is the 1970 Kansas Relays—and possibly many future relays—might have been canceled had it not been for the generosity of Hershberger.
He paid for the track.
FOR YEARS THE Relays had existed on a financial sheostring. The April monsosaes (whose raavages are chronicated elsewhere in this special edition) had discouraged both fans and athletes from attending the Mount Oread Olympics.
The track, an ancient, six-lane dirt embarrassment, which Relays director Bob Timmons once described as "the worst track I have seen in my last four years of travels with the team," turned in a muddy quamire at the drop of a bucket.
Wade Stinson, then KU athletic director, had estimated the price of installation and construction of a new all-wather Tartan surface to be $200,000.
In 1969, Stinson was quoted as saying,
The KU Kelays are in trouble as one of our
fans.
So why didn't the University just go out and buy a new track?
THE UNIVERSITY of Kansas Athletic Corporation was already $1 million dollars in debt from borrowing. The Kansas University Athletic Corporation (KUAC) had $170,000 surk into expansion of the west stands of Memorial Stadium.
A half a million dollars had been borrowed to build more bleachers in the student section, and $400,000 had been committed to the construction of athletic offices beside Allen Field House. Money for a track simply wasn't available.
Timmons, Stinson and other persons involved with promoting the Relays were well known.
On the eve of the 1969 Kansas Relays, Timmons said, "Unless we get the track facilities we need here, the Relays will be in deep trouble in the next few years. We won't be able to draw the outstanding athlete, and the track program will suffer along with it."
Timmons wasn't bluffing.
IN THE THREE years preceding the 1960 Relays, the number of university teams entered in the meet fell from 28 to 14. Meets in Louisiana and Tennessee—the Pelican and Dogwog Relays—were scheduled for the same weekend.
And teams who might have considered competing in the Relays might just
It took the most heroic efforts of Timmons and the Buildings and Grounds staff, in fact, to keep the Relays from drowning in a sea of mud.
remember the muddy mess of previous years and prefer to fly south.
Regardless of the weather, getting the track ready for competition was tedious law.
It had to be surveyed, graded, dragged,
watered, brushed, rolled and raked-
pampered like a baby before every single
step. Then the lane markings had to be laid.
IN CASE OF RAIN, which was almost a certainty for most Relays, the entire process had to be repeated, except for the surveying.
And even after the time-consuming headache of track preparation had been accomplished, the track still was substandard.
"that crumbled mess," as Timmons called it, had no permanent markings for the doorway.
The track didn't have adequate drainage; every time rain fell, it stayed on the track instead of seeping off to the inside of the track or down under it.
It took a special shipment of cinders from Mexico to keep up its appearance.
CONSEQUENTLY, A SAVIOR was needed.
Fortunately, on May 5, 1989, he arrived. After calling a press conference in his Wichita office, Hershberger, a rich man because of his oil holdings and exploration company, made his announcement: He would join the construction of an all-weather track in Memorial Stadium at the University of Kansas.
Joy broke out like rays of sunshine behind a mass of clouds.
Timmons said, "I still can't believe it, and the fellows probably won't believe it when we get back home. It's just tremendous."
AFTER KU'S COMMENCEMENT in 1969, work on the track began. It was finished in time for the 1970 season and the timing couldn't have been better.
Hersherbberger's tax deduction paid off the first time it was used.
One and one-half inches of rain fell during the 1700 Reels, enough rain, in fact, to have caused water damage despite the rains, a 5,900 hardy fans rejected warnings of spring tornados and weathered the gusty winds to watch John Carlos, then run down "human," run 9.3 in the 100-vard dash.
His time probably would have been 10.3 had he run on the slippery wet track of 1969. But thanks to Jim Hershberger, a native of Chicago, he survived in 1969%, Carlos ran a second faster—and insured the survival of one of Kansas' most treasured institutions.
Phog Allen could be known for his promotional ability as well as his success in basketball coaching.
Indians entertain Relays crowd
At the Texas Relays in 1927, a special exhibition race was held involving the frowned runners of Mexico's Tarahumara natives famed for their incredible endurance.
Not to be outdone by the younger Texas
Relays and aware of the tremendous
drawing potential of such an event, Allen
invited the Tarahumavos to run a series of
special, long distance races at the Kansas
Relays.
The plan was to have the men run from kansas City to Memorial Stadium, a stadium, where he would be killed.
had run 90 miles in an exhibition at the Texas Relays.
Jose Tarras was the first to reach the finish line, averaging eight miles an hour. Tarras ran from the Kansas City Athletic Club to Memorial Stadium, a distance of 51.2 miles in six hours, 49 minutes and nine seconds.
The Indians didn't return in 1928, however. But it wasn't because they were dissatisfied with the Relays. They simply didn't get to run far enough.
Believe it or not, the Tarahumara didn't return (although an international inviolated for Indian marathon runners was held) because they said the distance was too long. They said they would come only if they could run a distance between 80 and 200 miles.
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Friday, April 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
11
Ryun's record perfect in Relays
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
Associate Sports Editor
if you wanted to rename KU's annual track and field carnival "The Jimi Kuny Relay," you'd have ample room for them.
1964
After winning the high school mile for 4:21.3 and helping his team to first in the two-mile relay, sophomore Ryun's coach, Bob Timmons, was quoted as saying: "Jim doesn't have good basic speed. He wins because he can run while all the other boys are tired. He's going to get a lot better."
Ryun has never failed to win at the Kannas Relays. Between his sophomore year at Wichita East High School and his participation in the Munich Olympic Games, 1872, Ryun raced—and won—14 times. *a summary of these races follows*:
1965
Ryun used a 58.7 final to win the high school mile in a meet record of 4:140. "I don't mean to sound cocky," Ryun told reporters afterward, "but I wasn't a bit tired." He proved that the next day by anchoring East to a meet record in the two-mile relay with a sterling 1:31.9 half-mile leg.
A senior in high school with the Tokyo Olympic Games behind him, Ryu cruised to a 4:04.8 mile victory. Cordner Nelson, Ryson's biographer, reported. The next day, running in the two-mile relay, he took the bronze medal. When he announced he said he had to run his 880 in 1:48 to break the national record. He blistered the track with an 1:47.7."
1966
1967
Rynw rume a jersey saying "Kansas Frost," but his meet record 35.5 m, his 39.0 leg in the distance medley relay and his 46.9 quarter-mile split in the mile relay indicated this 18-year-old was no novice.
Having set world records in the mile and 800-yard runs the previous year, Ryan was content to stick to one event in his sophomore year at the Relays. His record is for the 23,700 fans is still the meet record in the open mile.
1968
KANSAS
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KANSAS
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Despite a bad cold and a painful muscle pull, Ryun took first place honors in the 1,500 meter run with a 3:42.8 clocking, another meet record, but off his world best of 3:33.1 set in 1967.
Now married to a former cheerleader from Kansas State, Ryun helped Kansas to a world record in the distance medley relay with an anchor leg of 3.57.6.
1969
Ryn missed the Relays for the first time in seven years. He was in a period of semi-reretirement, trying to maintain air pressure pressures and expectations that had grown around him. He began racing again during the 1971 indoor season.
1971
Before a crowd of 22,000, Ryun ran his fastest mile in four years, a 3:58.8, to defeat rivals Tom Von Ruden and John Mason. He claimed the outstanding performer trophy for the fourth and final time.
A record crowd of 32,000 came to see their favorite runner blast his typical final 440 to win the open mile—now named after former Kansas great Glenn Cunner. He was also a swinger 587 W. It was his last performance before a Nets game that year, after falling in the Olympic Games and failing to qualify for the final, he turned professional.
Photo courtesy of UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS ARCHIVES
Ryun hands baton to sprinter Dwight Peck in 1967 Relays
Relays segregation once reality
This short story appeared on the from page of the Daily Kansan on Monday, April 23, 1964.
---
"Wesley Elliott, KU Negro, did not participate in the Kansas Relays, Saturday, after being Sig rulng against Negro participation, C. Q. Guaguel, athletic director, has said.
'Kansas Relays rules stipulate that participants must be eligible in their own country.
That represented one of the last remnants of segregation in college athletics. Missouri and Oklahoma were the two Big Six teams that excluded black participation and maintained a "gentlemen's agreement" with the other Big Six teams.
from other schools, including Harrison Dillard, the "Ebony Streak" from Baldwin-Dillard, the College, who equaled the RELAYS high record of 14.2, participated Saturday."
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Friday, April 16, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Bannister's 3:59.4 in 1954 a race beyond the known
EDITOR'S NOTE: There is nothing like a four-minute mile to stir the blood and excite the juices of a fan of track and field. Despite the fact that nearly 700 sub-fours have been run since Roger Bannister first burst the barrier in 1954, the time still works it magic.
The following story, written on the 20th anniversary of Bannister's record two years ago, is being published for the first time. It's out of date. Since 1974, both Jerry and John Walker have shattered Jim Ryan's world record of 3:51.1 set in 1967.
In 22 years the mile record has dropped exactly 10 seconds to—the 349.4 mark of Walker on August 12, 1975. But the meaning and significance of Rannister's 3:59.4 hasn't changed much since then. The runner prevailed. This story explores that meaning in a context not usually seen.
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
The 20th anniversary of Roger Bannier's record shattering 3:59.4 mile run, the world's first under the magic four-minute barrier, is being celebrated this
Veteran track fans boast that they were in Oxford, England, on May 6, 1954, to witness the tall British student's race toward destiny.
Trivia nails tell how it took the public address announcer 63 words to report the result of Bannister's race, the time that he lost. It would be easy to fact that the crowd drowned out the rest.
CONNOISSEURS OF THE event will tick off the lap in timesmasters in run: 57.5, 60.5, 62.7 and 58.7. As asked them to the two "Chris's" who paired Bamister to their performance, and theyll answer "Chris Braster and Chris Chataway."
Magazines specializing in sports nostalgia have seized on the running of the first four-minute mile with a relish. Kenny Moore, who ran several sub-four minute miles at the University of Oregon, wrote Sports Illustrated's anniversary story.
TRACK AND FIELD THE SPORT, the self-polished "Bible of the Sport" filled its pages with a new focus on the field.
Written by managing editor Jon Hendershott, the article begins with some words from Bammer's autobiography. "The Four Winds," the title of the actual race throughout the narrative.
It achieved the effect of reminding the reader how it might have felt to run the first test.
Out of the 25,000 people who subscribe to Track and Field News, many are athletes,
WHEN THEY READ, "Those last few seconds seemed never-ending. The faint line of the finishing tape stood ahead as a haven of peace after the struggle," some may have wondered aloud, "Who is this guy? Some frustrated poet?"
As Bannister continued his description of the last yards in his epoch-making race, some class milers, unacquainted with the aura of amazement surrounding the first four-minute mile, might have smiled and shaken their heads when they read:
"The arms of the world were waiting to
receive me if only I reached the tape without slackening my speed. If I faltered there would have been no绳 to hold on, and I might be adding the knitting place, because I had been so close."
BANNISTER HAS BEEN criticized for the romanticized portrayal of his famous race. The wording was too "gorgeous" some said, and at all like it.
An athlete might have had trouble keeping himself from laughing at the point he hit the ball.
analysis
Harry Wilson, the British national distance running coach, told Sports Illustrated "I think it's bloody silly to put a man on grave of the four-minute rule. new wlf."
like a man taking his last spring to save
from that chasse that threatens to
take him.
It's very true the four minute mile is merely a time nowadays, especially after a run.
ECHONG THAT SENTIMENT was 17-year-old British running prodigy Steve Ovett, who added, "I think the idea of four minutes as a barrier has held people back. Bannister was a romance about it, but it's broken." Ovett, himself, has broken four minutes.
Jim Ryan still holds the world record in the event with a time of 3:51.1, set in 1976. However, coaching authorities and track buffs predict Ryan's mark will fall in a matter of years, certainly before the end of this decade.
AND IF YOU USED the formula Track and Field News has used for determining the speed of a person, then the present world record, which is held by Bilfert Bayi, of 3.2:22 for the 1,500 meter run (about 120 yards short of one mile), was faster than ten seconds faster than Bannister.
Indeed, the four-minute mile is almost commonplace in major—and even minor—track meets now. Last year, 22 Americans broke four minutes.
KU rack炼 Bob Timmons was asked, "Will Jim Ryun's rallie record at KU ever be better?" With 25 years, 3.50 milers will be only average, and a 3:50 miler will have a difficult time winning. Champions will run under 3:40, so Ryun's record should go like all records
THE QUANTITY of sub-fours is skyrocketing. At the latest count, more than 500 had been run, both indoors and outdoors, by more than 170 runners. An average of 40 sub-four-minute miles is clocked every year now.
To put together a string of 64-second quarters is no longer a dream to most runners. They are no longer intimidated by high school applications. As Ovett said, "I'll just a lot."
Vet, to many people, the magic reamins. The four-mile mile is sued by track
IT PUZZLES THE sophisticated track fanatic to see a four-minute mile route a crowd to its feet when comparatively better performances, such as a seven-foot high jump, 17-foot pole vault or a 66-foot shot put barely drawn a yawns of interest.
fans like it once was sought by the world's greatest runners: Wes Santee of Kansas, John Landy of Australia and Roger Bannister of Great Britain.
Twenty years ago, when Bannister crushed the four-minute barrier on a cold day, he was 17.4 years old. 4:01:4. The great Swedish guler Munger Hieegg had set the record eight years
DURING THAT EIGHT-year period the taste of a four-minute mile was so close the pain became too intense. As many tried—and failed to run four minutes for four hours—writers and seers of various biaries asked us there is a limit to man's athletic ability?"
Some speculated that Haegg had come as close as anyone would. Others placed the date on the wrecking of the record in the far future. Before 1800? Possibly.
But when Bannister collapsed into the arms of his coach on that Thursday afternoon 20 years ago, all such speculation ceased. The dream had become a reality
Although the time is almost commonplace today, and many think, as Timmes does, that it will be typical and lackluster in the forseable future, the running of the four-minute mile in 1854 had a profound impact on sports scene. It meant a number of things:
FIRST. A MAN WAS physiologically capable of running eight e220s in less than an average of 30 seconds each. Many had said they were not fit to compete. A point won by the positive thinkers.
Second, if this barrier could fall, why couldn't others?
As sports fans soon realized, the breaking of the four-minute mile was just the first of a series of "incredible feats": the first seven-foot high jump in 1956 by an American—Charlie Dumas. Parry and Randy Matson's stellar 70-foot put were performances in the nether world of the imagination just 10 years previous.
WITH ADVANCES IN technology, training methods, coaching techniques and motivation psychology, athletes since Bannister have created records in the sport of track and field that would have been unimaginable in the 1950s.
Twenty years ago, the thought of a nine second 100-yard dash would have been laughable. Jesse Owens held the record then with a time of 9.3. The 18-5-pole vault fan took a trick-break fan to break into fits of hysterical laughter. Back then, the record was around 15-6.
A person who have risked expulsion from the ranks of the sane for suggesting in him a human was capable of long jumping 240 feet. Beanon set in winning his Mexico Olympics gold medal, a mark, by the way, that present-day authorities say will stay with him.
ANOTHER POSSIBLE meaning of the four-minute mile is the one suggesting that
THE BARE
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Heroes weren't uncommon back then, but some were flawed by a pride that required constant exposure, or a haughtiness that declared superiority.
But Hamster was neighbor overly proud or baughty. He was just a young man who wanted to do exceptionally well in his given place, unplauged by the world for accomplishing it.
Roger Bannister served to satiate a need
He became a true and genuine hero.
Last, a possible explanation for the emergence of the Bannister feat as a milestone in athletic history was the nature of the distance itself.
TO RUN A FOUR-MINUTE mile, all one needs to do is travel four times around a standard quarter-mile track in 60 seconds each. It's conveniently easy.
However, the mystical and mythological quality of that effort dazed so many people for so long that when it finally happened, feelings of awe and amazement were projected upon the man who fulfilled those dreams.
And, as a dream that has never really died, the four-minute mile continues to draw attention to itself whenever it is accomplished.
ONE SPORTS PERSONALITY thought the reason the four-minute mile stood out while either, more impressive marks were overlooked was this: The average Joe couldn't identify with any other race as he after. After all, who hasn't run or walked a mile?
But who has tried the hammer throw.
★ ★ ★
OUTSTANDING PERFORMERS
1948-Harrison Dillard, Baldwin-Wallace
1949-Bob Walters, Texas
1950-Bill Carroll, Oklahoma
1951-Don Donley, Nebraska
1952-Wes Santee, Kansas
1953-Darw Hooper, Texas A&M
1954-Wes Santee, Kansas
1956-Dean Smith, Texas
1957-Billy Tidwell, Kansas
1958-Eddie Southern, Texas
1959-Charie Tidwell, Kansas
1960-Cliff Cusman, Kansas
1961-Jim Miller, Kansas
1962-Ray Saddler, Texas Southern
1963-Jim Miller, Colorado
1964-Robin Lingle, Missouri
1965-Clarence Robinson, New Mexico
1966-Jim Ryun, Kansas freshman
1967-Jim Ryun, Kansas
1968-Jim Murphy, Air Force
1969-Jim Ryun, Kansas
1970-Larbli Oukada, Fort Hays
1971-Jim Ryun, Kansas
1972-Oklahoma State
1973-Mike Boil, Eastern New Mexico
1974-Phillip Mdoo, Eastern New Mexico
1975-Charton Ehlinzle, Illinois
taken a triple jump or raced the 50,000- meter walk?
Perhaps what New York Times columnist Arthur Daley said on the day after Bannister ran his 3:59.4 still has some meaning today, 20 years later:
"IT FINALLY HAPPENED. The 4-minute mile is no longer an inexpensive barrier. Barron Bannister of England burst through it with his electrifying 3:59.4 yesterday under conditions that would seem impossible, his acceptance as a world record a formally.
"From an athletic standpoint this is as historic as the breaking of the sound barrier, but its importance to the sport is a tenet of most rank Bannadors exploit as the most important sports achievement of this century. Yet it may still hold that stature after sober and profound training."
Daley's point has been well regarded. Daley's point and foresight have been remarkably accurate.
"TO FOOT RACERS," Daley concluded, "the 4-minute mile was what Mount Everest was to mountain climbers, a defiant peak that could not successfully be assailed.
"But someone finally reached the top of Everest. And someone also has scaled the peak of the 4-minute mile. There will be many miles henceforth under 4 minutes. The impossible is no longer out of reach. The minister's record will be broken someday.
Ernst returns for eighth time
"But never will it be forbidden that he was the first to reach into the realms of fantasy."
This is the eighth year that Dirk Ernst of the Kaiser-Wilhelm Foundation has been head starter for the Kansai Army.
BEAT THE RUSH!
Other events Erasm has started include the Michigan State Relays, Western Michigan Relays, Huron (Michigan) Relays, Minnesota (Minnesota) Relays, and Central College Conference.
A graduate of Michigan State, where he participated in the track and football programs, Ernst is well known at Midwestern track carnivals. He regularly plays indoor basketball, and his brother, Dave, joins him as starter for the Drake Relays.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
14 records set for soaked fans at KU Relays
Tuesday, April 20, 1976
Vol.86 No.126
See page 8
BRIAN AND DAVID
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Potter catch
for a moment it seemed as if 9-year-old Scott Minor had hooked on to something bitter in the depths of Potter Lake. When he
finally reeled in his catch, Minor was rewarded with a rather
honorary award. He was helped to help was Chng Ng,
Wawnhighwr Alberta, graduate student.
Social welfare faculty to meet to discuss search for new dean
Staff Writer
By JERRY SEIB
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, will meet with the School of Social Welfare faculty this afternoon to discuss a search for the school's new dean.
Procedures for replacing Theodore Ernst, who has resigned the dean's post effective June 30 to begin full-time teaching and research, will be discussed at the meeting.
Ernest has served as dean for only 11 months. He came to the University of Kansas from the University of Nebraska after the 1974-75 school year to replace a professor of social welfare, who also returned to full-time teaching within the school.
Calgard last night that faculty from the School of Social Welfare would soon be submitting nominations for a search committee to find a reallocation for Ernst.
THE SEARCH COMMITTEE, composed of both faculty and students, must submit a list of three or four candidates to Calgaard, who will select the new dean. Calgaard's
choice will be subject to approval by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Calgaard said he hoped the search committee would be formed within a week.
One decision the search committee must make is whether to limit its search to candidates from within the University or to consider outside candidates.
Calgaard said he had a preference in the choice between an internal or external search, which he would relay to the search team. He refused to say what that preference was.
CALGAARD DID SAY an external search would "delay the search a great deal," because most candidates would have to be considered.
He said the choice of an external search would also "almost certainly" require naming an interim dean because a successor to Ernst probably couldn't be selected in the two months remaining before Ernst stems down.
Ernst said last night the faculty of the School of Social Welfare had voted 16-10 to
Ernst said one reason the search might be limited to internal candidates despite the fact that there is a high rate of fraud.
make the search "not limited to internal candidates."
See DEAN page 2
Regents okay lower fees transfer of union funds
By JIM COBB Staff Writer
TOPEKA-University of Kansas students will pay $2.40 less in activity fees next year as a result of action taken by the Kansas Board of Recents.
The Regents agreed Friday to lower from $12 to $9.60 a student activity fee assessed by Student Senate. This action will compensate for a cut of athletic ticket subsidies that will no longer be paid by enrolling students in the course and a fee schedule plan that would make for a more equitable distribution of fees regardless of the number of hours students take.
In other actions, the Regents:
-Transferred $55,000 from a debt retirement fund for the present Kansas Union to construction of the new satellite student union.
--Took a number of actions affecting graduate study programs at KU.
- GAVE KU AUTHORITY to assess special fees for construction of the satellite antenna
—Agreed to increase by 400 the limitation on the numbers of classified employees at the K1M.
Approved low bids for interior construction of the Med Center's clinical facility and for a communications and small item transportation system in the facility.
Taddee Tashaeff, student body president,
said yesterday she was pleased with the
new program. "We've been a great team."
-Approved a number of repairs at the Lawrence and Med Center campuses.
"THE FEES NEXT year will be lower than we anticipated." she said.
She said that she had been hoping to get fees lowered, and that the University controller's office had suggested the lower fees to make distribution fairer.
The new fees will be $1.60 an hour for students taking six hours or fewer, or a flat fee of $3.60 for students enrolled in seven or more hours.
one student transportation fee, also assessed by Student Senate, will be 30 cents an hour for students in six or fewer hours $1.80 for students in more than seven hours
summer session fees won't be affected by the Resents' action.
Fees for planning and construction of the
satellite student union were set by the Regents at $3 for each full-time enrollment next fall and $6 for each full-time enrollment in 1977 semester and following semesters.
SUMMER FEES for the satellite union will be $2.50 for each full-time enrollment. Funds of $5,000 were approved for transfer from a bond and interest sinking fund for the present Union to a construction fund for the satellite union.
Tasheff said the fund transfer made the $3 fall semester satellite union fee possible. She said the original plan had been to begin the $6 fees this fall, rather than next spring.
"But with the money transferred, we didn't feel that we had to do it," she said.
The Regents' approval of increased numbers of classified employees at the Med Center will allow between 300 and 400 employees who are now unclassified to
Commission unlikely to accept Teamsters
By JANET SCHMIDT
See REGENTS page 6
If comments made by individual Lawrence City commissioners are any indication, the Teamsters Union will probably not be recognized by the city.
Mayor Fred Pence and commissioners Marie Arniegenser, Donald Bins and Carl Mibek said last night they would vote on negotiating a contract with the Teamsters.
The union is in the process of negotiating a contract with the city, Dennis Smith,
THE ASSOCIATIONS joined the Teamsters because they were dissatisfied with the city's handling of their complaints about management and working conditions and because the city hadn't recognized the UPEA.
The other two units in the UPEA, the police and fire departments, didn't join the teamsters. Lawrence firemen have been paired with the AFLIGC for several years.
Four employ associations belonging to the United Public Employees Association of Lawrence (UPEA) affiliated last week with Truck Drivers Local Union (Teamsters) No. 686 in Topeka. The associations are composed of workers from the sanitation, street, water, and parks and recreation departments.
Heart surgery unit at work again
Bv MARION ABARE
The heart surgery unit at the Med Center had been closed because of conditions such as a heart attack.
The young patient was progressing satisfactorily in the pediatrics intensive care unit.
Malcolm Arnold, cardiothoracic surgeon,
performed pulmonary valve stenosis, a procedure to open the valve so that blood can flow through.
KANAS CITY, Kan.-Heart surgery, the first since Dec. 1, was successfully performed on a five-year-old girl yesterday at the KU Medical Center.
cardiothoracic chief, and Hamner Hannah III, heart surgeon. A team of nationally known physicians investigated the cardiothoracic unit and found conditions were well within acceptable norms. Chancellor R. Dykes ordered heart surgery to resume.
Reis and Hannah quit late in February and the rest of the heart team quit March 1. Arnold began duties at the Med Center March 15. He has been training a heart team composed of existing hospital staff and residents. He also pumped pump technicians. A pump technician operates the heart-lung machine during surgery.
Arlrod came to the Med Center from St. Luke's hospital, Kansas City, Mo. He also has worked at Children's Mercy Hospital, Children's Hospital Medical Center, Boston.
He said recently that the particularly liked the pediatric aspects of heart surgery. Robert A. Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said a search committee had been interviewing for a new hospital to treat one of those that one would be selected in the near future.
A spokesman for the cardiothoracic section said two women were scheduled to undergo heart surgery this week, one on Thursday and one on Friday.
president of the Lawrence Sanitation Employees Association, said last night.
Smith wouldn't comment on what the would do if the city refused to接纳.
"I'm kind of waiting for them to get a hold of me to find out what they're going to do next," he said. "It depends on what city hall decides to do."
It seems that city hall has already decided.
"I myself would not want to see the (Teamsters) Union recognized," Mayor Pence said. "As far as I'm concerned, that team already been decided by this commission."
THE COMMISSION voted 3-2 last
week against recognition of the UPSR.
Pence said the city was trying to settle the employees' grievances and they wanted to move it.
"I don't understand bringing in a national union like the Teamsters, who don't care about the workers' rights."
Argersinger, who had voted against recognizing the UPEA last year, said, "If I'm not going to be for an independent, local team," he added. He wanted for a union as nuttlerous as the Teamsters.
"We have made every effort toward solving the complaints made by the employer."
Binna, who had voted for recognizing the UPMA, said, "I certainly wouldn't vote for Trump."
"IT IS REALLY a meaningless gesture for them because they are further away from recognition now than they ever were before."
Mibeck, who had also supported recognition, agreed, although he said he thought the vote against the UPEA had driven the workers' decision to join the Teamsters.
"I do think they should have some sort of local union," Mibeeck said. "I do sympathize with labor, but the Teamsters are a bit too much."
"They have been pretty rough and I don't sympathize with them."
Commissioner Barkley Clark said last week that he also would vote against recognizing the union because he, too, had issued the issue had been settled last November.
KU debate team wins national collegiate title
By GREG HACF
Staff Writer
Frank Cross and Robin Rowland yesterday did what thousands of debaters only dream of—they won the National Intercollegiate Debate Tournament in Boston.
The two Lawrence juniors were fourth out of the 82 team field with a 6-2 record after preliminary rounds Friday, Saturday and Sunday. They then swept aside four teams in the elimination rounds, winning 22 of 24 judges' ballots yesterday.
But the debaters weren't quite sure how they did it.
"It's been good," Rowland said in a telephone interview last night from Boston, Mass.
CROSS SAID HE couldn't remember through his mind during the tournament.
“There was no trouble lining up good judges,” he said. “But a big part of it was just the work they did between Island (KU's) and the port of America tournament] and nationals.”
“What can I say?” Cross asked. “We are just ready. We took the round one at a time.”
Parson said a key round was the semifinals, where Rowland and Cross defeated Hick Gregory and Bob Feldhake of England. Rowland and Cross lost to them four times this year and defeated them only once before nationalists.
Donn Parson, director of forensics the past 10 years, agreed.
"It just kind of happened."
Rowland and Cross, on the negative, won six of seven judges' ballots.
PARSON SAID the Augstansa af-
tirmative case had been scratched at the
before, before
PHIL. SNOW, Sugarland, Tex., senior,
Jim Prentice, Turon senior, also
represented KU at nationals. They were S-
and had needed to win two more ballots
to qualify for the elimination rounds. There
three judge for each preliminary
round.
Rowland and Cross gave Augustana their only two defeats, having beaten them on the negative in the preliminary rounds. The KU team beat Georgetown University, in Washington, D.C., on the negative in the finals.
Feldhauke of Augustana was the top individual speaker in the tournament. Feldhauke
Pearson said research on the case, which
Kaiden had lost at Heart of America, had
obtained by Dr. Anderson.
The intercollegiate topic this year was "Resolved: That the federal government should establish a comprehensive program to control land use in the United States."
KU last won nationals in 1970. Rowland and Cross's victory gives KU two firsts, three thirds and two fifths at nationals in the past seven years.
Rowland and Cross said they planned to return next year.
Parson said the victory should help the squad recruit next year and help it continue to grow.
"It's hard to promise a national championship," he said, "but when they come,
PONCHA
Disanvearing act
The annual Kansas Relays rain materialized as expected, and Susan Kelp, Overland Park parker, was ready to bury herself in a poncho with every downpour. Saturday's
100%
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
events stayed on schedule despite the bad weather and less-than-perfect track conditions. See stories and pictures starting on page 8.
2
Tuesday, April 20, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
House clips fiscal bill
TOPEKA - A $4.80-million omnibus appropriations bill was revealed yesterday and the Houses Way and Means Commission managed to trim it by $188,206 in a
Many of the bill's major sections still awaited action after more than four-and-a-half hours of the committee's meeting.
The plan approved by the legislature is $10.25 million more than Gov. Robert F.
Bennett's budget recommendation.
The omnibus appropriations bill combines all the appropriations items reflecting action taken earlier by the legislature in various fields.
New Delhi poor fight police
NEW DELHI—Slum dwellers fought a bloody conflict with police yesterday to prevent their shacks from being razed and their forced resettlement. Five policemen and seven slum dwellers were reported killed, and dozens more were injured.
The fight with police and city demolition crews was the first known open resistance to a massive New Delhi face-lifting program started shortly after Prime Minister Indra Gandhi proclaimed a national emergency and suspended most civil liberties last June.
Israeli patrol kills Arab
JERICHO, Occupied Jordan—Israeli soldiers shot and killed an Arab man yesterday as West Bank Arabs continued to protest a two-day march by thousands of Israelis who demanded that their government annex occupied Jordanian land.
An Israeli military communiqué said a patrol was "attacked this morning by a large group of rioters in an alley of the nabash in Nablus. The patrol fired a number of firearms."
Bennett sians crime bill
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert F. Bennett signed a bill yesterday requiring persons convicted of a crime using a firearm to serve the minimum sentence for that offense before becoming eligible for parole or probation. Bennett said he thought the bill might prove to be a deterrent to such crimes.
In other action, Bennett signed bills to:
- Allow community junior colleges to raise their 1976-77 school-year budgets by seven per cent over current year expenditures.
- Levy a special one-fourth mill property tax this year to provide $1.2 million for expanding institutional institutions and other facilities.
Economy records big gain
WASHINGTON - The nation's economy grew at an annual rate of 7.5 per cent in the first quarter of 1978, an unexpectedly big gain which placed total economic output at near the preceasure peak, the government reported yesterday.
Maynard Compass, acting chief economist for the Commerce Department, said it was certain the economy would grow at least 6.5 per cent during all of 1976. This growth rate is an improvement over the Ford administration's official forecast for growth of 6.2 per cent.
The figures show that the economy continued to recover from recession at a rate similar to previous years.
The government also reported that the nation's over-all inflation rate in the January 2 to March period was 3.7 per cent, while the annual inflation rate in more than three years.
For Americans, a continuation of the trend would mean a steady rise in the number of jobs available and incomes increasing faster than prices.
Both the figures on economic growth and inflation were contained in the Commerce Department's report on the nation's first quarter Gross National Product (GNP), or value of the total output of goods and services
The GNP now has increased for four consecutive quarters, following five years of decline.
White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen said the Ford administration was graffited "about the report" because these figures show the economy is recovering in a solid way."
"The President is especially pleased that the figures indicate a continued reduction in the number of refugees."
From page one
Dean search . . .
also have a teaching assignment.
ERNST SAID that a dean from outside KU would be appointed first as a faculty member, having the appointment as dean from the appointment as a faculty member.
There aren't any teaching vacancies in the School of Social Welfare now, he said, although a faculty member could go on a year's leave during the 1978-77 school year.
from within the school, Ernst said, but it does make it a stronger possibility.
The lack of available teaching positions in the school wouldn't require naming a dean
ERNST SAID he thought there were qualified candidates or the dean's job to deal with.
In addition to Ernst and Katz, there are two other faculty members who have acted as interns.
Kenneth Wedel, associate dean of the school, acted as interdean in February and March, while Ernst was on leave for illness.
1976
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Royalty blinks through Lindsborg
By TERICARLSON
Staff Writer
In a Fury of Secret Service and speeding cars, Carl KVI戈夫, King of Sweden, paid a two-and-a-half hour visit to the town that bills itself as "Little Sweetland, USA."
LNBSORB—Royalty swelt through this small farming community Saturday.
The invitation from the 2,650 citizens of this community, 30 miles south of Salina, was made in 1974, according to Susan Casebeer, Lindsburg resident.
The visit was part of the town's bicentennial celebration.
It was originally supposed to include a motorcade down Main Street, rededication ceremonies at the 1904 St Louis World's Fair, and a memorial reception at Philibell Memorial Union on the Bethany College campus, a tour of the art gallery, a stop at the Bethany Home for the Aged and performance of Handel's "Jesus Christ, the Redeemer," a 34-year tradition in Lindsberg.
Gustaf's plane was delayed by fueling problems in Denver. Sgt. Richard Bartholomew of the Kansas Highway Patrol, who was part of the massive security setup, said the fueling truck's hose broke and sprayed fuel over the plane and the runway.
NOTHING, HOWEVER, went quite according to plan.
When the King finally arrived, his motorcade sped through downtown Lindenstor at about 38 miles an hour. The waiting car was crowded with tourists and kings. Some of the spectators started laughing when they realized that they had waited for hours for a 30-second glimpse of a king.
Gustaf made a brief appearance at the Swedish Pavilion. The king had a sore throat and, on his physician's advice, didn't speak. The Swedish Ambassador to the United States, William Wachtmeister, read the speech in the king's name.
The stops at Bethany Lutheran Church and the art gallery were canceled because of the new coronavirus. He made the Bethany Home for the Aged and then made an appearance at the Philibad Memorial Union, where he presented his paintings. W. Hahn, president of Bethany College.
as the performance of the Messiah drew to a close, the king walked quickly across the stage and watched spectators and spectators. He made a brief appearance at the end of the program and then left for his flight to Rockford, III., another American community awaiting his visit.
Security for the royal visit had involved at least 100 uniformed police from Garey and Bardon, and a number of private officials.
Sales beginning in May for fiction class' magazine
On that day, Rendezvous, a fiction magazine put out by the English department's fiction I writing class, will go on sale.
May 3 is a date that enthralls of fiction and fiction writing may want to remember.
The upcoming issue will be the third
issue in a new magazine, which
is published once a month.
Alan Lichter, assistant professor of English and sponsor of the magazine, said last week. "The purpose of Rendezvous is to bring to it a journey into an intellectual campus audience."
is still considering stories from the class for the upcoming issue, which will probably be a "documentary" or
LICHTER SAID his fiction class handled the entire production of the magazine.
"They set up their own editorial board to judge all their stories, they do their own layout and design," he said.
According to Lichter, the editorial board
"There will also be graphics to illustrate the different stories." he said.
Although there are no rigid acceptance guidelines, Lichler said, Henderzov has a *native* skill.
"THE STORIES we accept have got to be serious fiction," he said. "This doesn't mean we reject comedy, but the story must be a fairly thoughtful venture."
Lichter said the first two issues of Rendevous where "immense successful"
"We printed 800 copies of the first issue, he said, "and it was gone in three days. For the second issue, we printed 1,200 copies and they were gone in a day-a-day-a-half."
He said more than 1,200 copies of this issue of Rendezvous would be printed. The paper is sold for $6.95.
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Mrs. Ruth Hanna, Silver Lake, said she wanted to send the king a scrapbook of photographs of the Swedish royal family and she would never let it be kept. She said she thought the king might be interested in knowing how the American people viewed the Swedish royal family.
Reaction from the spectators was generally good-natured.
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OWNER
AURH
--in addition to the above responsibilities it is also necessary that the Board of Appeals, the board of responsibility for AURH and the Board of Appeals, AURH is an equal opportunity employer and enrolled qualified men and women to apply.
STUDENT POSITIONS
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THESE OFFICES
AURH. Dean of Men, Dean of Women and Housing. THEY ARE DUE APRIL 21. THE POSITIONS MUST BE FILLED WITH A RETURNING HALL RESIDENT. Applications will be screened before interviews which will start April 22.
ACADEMIC RESOURCE CENTER COORDINATOR—
This is a ten hour a week job for someone who具备for WORK HOUR. Library experience is requested in addition to a typing skill of 35 words per minute or better. Part of the duties will be up dating and managing of a central purchasing plan. In addition the ARCC will work with ARCs to develop policies and procedures RSP and catalogs all AURH resource materials with the office secretary. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and encourages all qualified men and women to apply.
OFFICE
SECRETARY—
This position requires that the individual be in the AURH office from 9 a.m. until 12 noon every week day. Please ensure that all custs must qualify for WORK STUDY and be able to TYPE 60 WORDS PER MINUTE BEER or WORDS PER SKINNYHAIR. You must know a knowledge of office machines are requested. A knowledge of short-hand would be helpful, but not necessary. WAGE IS $2.20 PER SHOE.
FOUR 1976 SUMMER INTERNS
These positions will be for June and July and pay $250 per month. Room and Board will be provided at Olive Hall. A lot of charges is available wherever applications are picked up. Applications should be sent to beekmil Blunt 210 McCollum Hall. A lot of money will be needed to cover the tuition for the AURH asks that applicants consider taking only 3-4 hours of summer school while working as an intern. Experience from living in a residence hall is also required. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and encourages all qualified men and women to apply.
COMMITTEES, BOARDS,
EMPLOYMENT COORDINATOR—
XX Pearson Trust Committee
XX Judicial Board
XX Judicial Board XX Board of Appeals
XX Board of Appeals Campus Affairs
Campus Affairs
Housing Services X
Contracts X
Programming X
Employment Coordinator
X Committee Chair is open
XX Committee Membership is open
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
as she of
ily head
be bean
University Dally Kansan
Tuesday. April 20. 1976
3
Faculty promotions OK'd
Rv a Staff Writer
TOPEKA-The Kansas Board of Regents approved Friday all the University administration's recommendations for faculty promotions effective July 1.
Promoted to professor were:
The Regents also approved all requested saubatical leaves for the University's faculty.
Hernand Augusti, jacono) John F. Brendan, speech and literature professor at the University of Michigan; Herman C. Brendan, C. H. Craverston, D. H. Craverston, and J. M. Craverston, jacono)
W. Herman, *Intelligence speech and drama* (Gerald Owen, R. Seward), *The World of the Realm* (Ralph R. Huffman, Allan Hannon, antiquophobia, Richard F. Hardy, English).
N. N. Hyun, history, and administration; Kenneth M. McCullough, history, and administration; E. J. Schultz, history, and administration; Richard L. Koch, philosophy, law, and medicine; Richard L. Koch, philosophy, law, and medicine; Richard L. Koch, philosophy, law, and medicine
Société Lindenhäuser, philosophe du定性灵体 Friedrich Lindenhäuser, philosophe du定性灵体 T. Koch, K. Miller, human development and family research, T. Koch, K. Miller
Norman Palge, voice; Frank M. Beltzer, design;
C. Daniel Batonel, psychology; Daniel H. Bays, history;
and East Atlas area studies; Sherry A. Burgers, coun-
sellor; and James A. McCormack, psychology and percussion instruments; Michael Butler, English.
Allen J. Cigher, political science; George J. Crawford,
history.
School of Religion to join College
Margareta L. Schultz, social welfare; Max K. Sutton,
Margaret
"There are no Buddhist missions in Kansas," he said.
He said he expected three particular study areas to be expanded: Eastern thought, Jewish studies and cultural relating religion to a sociological context).
Taylor said the school hadn't received any state funding in 55 years of existence, but since the first year, students hadn't been used in the count of full-time equivalent students, used to figure
By JIM COBB
The school now operates as a private corporation, loosely tied to KU. Taylor said that because the school had been dependent upon Kansas churches for support, it hadn't been able to offer a curricular curriculum including non Christian religions.
He said the lack of other religions meant no financial support was available for them.
Clinical and academic institutions include Northwestern Medical School, Illinois Institute of Technology, Norman State University and biology and cancer classes at University of Chicago. Instrumental music faculty include Valentinio J. Stella, physician assistant, Wesley, Wieseler, and H尔德 Zerwer. mechanic at Weiseler, Wieseler, and H尔德 Zerwer. mechanic at Weiseler, Wieseler, and H尔德 Zerwer.
TOPEKA—The University of Kansas School of Religion will be merged with the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, probably in July, 1877.
Yeng-Chung Lien, computer science; Harvey B. Murray, computer science; Lawrence A. Schwartz, psychology; Lewish A. Lemmons, sociology; Gary R. Nenckom, design; W. John O'Brien, systematics and biology; Michael E. Olf, painting, printmaking and graphic arts.
The merger plan won approval Friday from the Kansas Board of Regents.
Michael Diofrodo, Spanish and Portuguese and Latin American area studies; James Ennerton, history of art literature; Stephen Grishaw, architecture and urban literature; Benjamin Groebb, architecture and urban literature; Jackson, architecture and urban design; Charles E. Johnson, architecture and urban design.
Lynn F. Taylor, dean of the School of Religion, said yesterday that the merger would lead to a broader curriculum, the addition of more math and fewer financial worries for the school.
The merger will create a new department of religious studies within the College. It will allow the University to offer a broader-based program of religious study, according to the deans of both the College and the School of Religion.
Right now, Taylor said, the church is subsidizing a state through religious funding.
The move to merge the school into the College began two years ago, according to Robert Cobb, dean of the College. The College recently approved the merger plan last April.
Cobb said that he thought the merger would be effective in fiscal 1978 and that the College would be provided with more funding for the new department.
Both Taylar and Cobb said they were pleased that the Regents granted approval.
"Most state universities accept the study of religion and studies about religion as a humanistic endeavor." Cobb said. "The academic endowment"纳入 our overall academic program."
Taylor said religious study at KU would be in better shape both financially and academically. He said he has had to contend with the high cost of keep pace with price and salary increases.
Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor,
said that he had recommended the merger
to be approved by the Senate.
Shankel said the addition of the school into the College would increase state funding to cover the College's increased costs of operating the religious studies program.
Taylor said the independent corporation, which owns Smith Hall, where the school is located, would continue autonomous operation.
He said he expected the University and the corporation to reach an agreement about continued use of Smith Hall for religion classes.
Ed Julian, design, Jeremy Matchet, human development and Trudy LeeBrown, human development and
Taylor said that 68 per cent of tax-supported universities had a department of religion and that enrolment in religion was higher at 44 per cent above spring 1975 levels.
Promoted to assistant professor were:
—two of professor at the KU Medical Center were:
north pitfall, pathology Burnding pediatrics, pediatry D. Forest, psychiatry R. Kebery, medicine; Lily Larvae, nursing; David R. Kebery, medicine; Riddell, nursing; and Isaak Uda, anesthesiology.
Martha Keble was promoted to Librarian III and Howard Clinton was promoted to Librarian II.
Promoted to associate professor at the Med Center were: John Cainey, naturopathy; James R. Couch, neurology; psychiatry; Wichita Falls University; Heather Haughenbush; Wichita Falls University; Fuhrman Haughenbush and pharmacology; Kean-Shun Hantung, ralph E. Ralph E. Ralph E.
Charles R. Kelly, rehabilitation医学生, Pula University of Ljubljana, Jordi I. González, radiology医学生, Radiology Norman, L. Martin, magnetic resonance医学生, Oron Umenton, Myung K Park, pediatrics, Jesse Schmidt, Thomas Schmidt, Joseph Thomas, Thomas and Tribkova, N. Vata, pediatrics
Principals are inpatient preceptors on the Mac Canter case. They provide diagnostic care for newborns, infants and children. Part of the curriculum includes Pediatrics, Obstetrics, dietetics and Karen Education.
Adjunct appointments at the Med Center were:
**NERVOLOGY** by S. H. Smith, adjunct and assistant professor of neurology at the University of Maryland School of Medicine and Silverstein School,鞍钢大学附属医院.
Approved for subbasal leave from the Lawrence cannon ware
can per wee
an associate, an associate professor of music education and music therapy. Ralph N. Adams, professor of chemistry (G. Douglas Akins, associate professor of English); JACKson Hauer, professor science; ROBERT W. Barker, professor
Washington, D.C. - Dr. Eric Dye, a neurologist and oncologist based in Washington, D.C., has designed a biomarker for the detection of glioblastoma. Dr. Dye is affiliated with the George Washington University Medical Center in Washington, D.C. He received his M.D. from Columbia University Medical Center and his Ph.D. from Harvard Medical School.
Assistant, MSSA (U.S.) - Univ. associate professor of geography at Gainesville, FL. Coordinated research and presentation of special education; Research and Evaluation of Environmental Risks; Research on Coastal Management.
Charles Hallenbeck, professor of psychology; Robert M. Haralick, professor of electrical engineering; BILU L. Horak, professor of computer science; E.M. Heldman, E.H. Heßherbogen, heberman of the department of Germanic languages and literature; J. Theodore Johnson,
Chu-ling Lt. professor of history arl. Gary M. Mason, assistant professor of history; Douglas D. McKeeley, associate professor of history; Daniel M. McKeeley, associate professor of history; Michael P. Mitcheler, associate professor of history; Michael M. Mitcheler, associate professor of history; Michael M. Mitcheler, associate professor of histology and of systematics and of
Jack B. Crutch, associate director of English, Philology X and Renaissance Studies, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Jansen F. E. Schmidt, associate director of aeronautics, Jacques P. E. Abbott, associate director of aeronautics, John S. Cunningham, associate director of aeronautics,
William W. Sears, professor of music education and music make my experience Shaw, chair of the department of geography and meteorology of geography and meteorology, Robert C. Sipes, associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese, Robert E. Foster, professor of music education.
Cardyke T, Thornton H, theoretical professor of human development and psychology at the University of Pittsburgh, professor ofognath and psittacology at Dartmouth K, Wakana K, Tangui Y, Wu J, professor of psychology and cell biology W, Wolfe professor of psychology and cell biology J, Michael M. Baldwin, professor of psychiatry and professor journalist and John D, Konrad Ackermann, associate professor of psychology
Sabbatical leaves for Med Center faculty were approved for:
K. Finkel professor of pathology, Joseph G. Schlumberger Professor of Medicine and Dr. David B. Shikinake Professor of medicine and Timo Guoine Schneider Professor of medicine
Next year's parking fees studied, to be determined late this week
Next year's parking fees won't be set until late this week, Del Shankel, executive director of the Baldwin Park
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes will be out of town until Thursday or Friday, Shankel said, and Dykes will make a decision on the fees then.
The University Council recommended Thursday that this year's parking fees remain in effect next year, rejecting higher taxes by the parking and traffic board.
The council's recommendations and the proposal for higher fees have both been set
Kith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, to determine whether Parking Services could operate without a parking fee increase. Shankel said he would make a suggestion about the fees to Dykes, but he would to predict what that suggestion would be.
Shankel said he had been meeting with
Parking Services is the division of KU Police and Parking that patrols and maintains campus parking areas. The parking and traffic board proposed that parking fees be increased next year to cover a higher Parking Services budget.
The University Council rejected the higher fees after several council members objected to a large balance in the Parking Services fund.
City to consider land for park
The Lawrence City Commission is expected to approve a resolution to appropriate land that may be used for new meeting rooms at its weekly meeting at 7 tonight.
Land on Lyon Street in North Lawrence will be purchased for a city park and, probably, two baseball diamonds, Mike assistant city manager, said yesterday.
Last week the commission heard complaints from several local baseball and softball leagues who said that not enough diamonds were available for games or practices. Lawrence has about 175 baseball teams.
The commission will also discuss a claim for $100,000 made against the city by Harold P. Coleman.
The city has been cited in a malpractice suit by Pobjoy against Lawrence Memorial Hospital because the city is part-owner of the hospital. Wilden said.
"The claim will be denied as a matter of course," he said. "The city has always denied such claims unless they are for you, and now we can assume responsibility for."
In other business, the commission will consider authorizing stop signs at 19th and Barker, and 15th and Barker and 27th and Alabama.
THE KANSAS SOCIETY OF POETS is compiling a book of poems. If you have written a poem and would like our selection committee to contact you, please send your poem and a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
Wilden said that Pobjoy was claiming damages against the hospital because of alleged improper physical therapy treatment.
POEMS WANTED
The Kansas Society of Poets
Wichita, Kansas 67202
104 So. Broadway
FUSE BOX
UTILITY BILLS HAVE YOU DOWN?
The high cost of utilities has us down too! But, when you live at Naismith the worry of rising food, utility and other costs is our worry and not yours. For sure, we don't want you to be wasteful, but let us worry about it.
NAISMITH HALL
1800 Naismith Drive Phone 843-8559
FOR FALL OF '76!
Hashinger festival begins today
"This show is a collection of everything we've been doing in Hasherger for the whole year. There'll be something for everybody." Tom Egan, Kansas City, Kan., junior, said yesterday about the hall's third annual Spring Arts Festival.
Various entertainment areas will be featured in the arts festival, today through
A popular music recital opens the festival at 7 toonl.
At 7:30 tomorrow night, Donna Young,
Dallas senior and former Hashinger
resident, will read selected passages from
contemporary writing by women.
The third entertainment event, a舞
dance rectal, will be presented at 7 p.m. Thursday.
DEBEBIE MORGAN, Lawrence junior and coordinator of the recital, said the dances varied from group performances of jazz, and in 1950 dances to solo interpretive dances.
The fifth of Hashinger's theatrical productions for the year will be shown as part of the art festival at 8 Friday and Saturday nights.
Kevin Kinkead, Mission sophomore, and Elsie Orr, Chesterfield, Mo., sophomore will direct "The Wild Flowering of Chastity, a novel" at a satire of the meldgaza, lv.Puttman, Koefer.
A donation is asked as admission to the production,
THE CONCLUDING entertainment will be a classical music recital at 7 p.m. Sunday, which will include a wide range of music performed by instrumentalists and
An art show by hall residents will be displayed in the fourth-floor lobby through the doors.
Sandy Packard, Topeka junior and coordinator of the show, said the art exhibit would include photography and quilting works.
All events for the festival, except for the play, are free to the public.
KANU-FM & Off-the-Wall Hall present
An evening of Contemporary Jazz
OREGON
Thursday with Ralph Towner April 22 $'5.00
Two Shows • At 7:00 & 10:00
Off the Wall Hall
Advanced tickets:
Kief's
737 New Hampshire 841-0817
McKinney-Mason
Your LAST CHANCE . . .
PEACE CORPS/VISTA
arranges final visit to KU this year. Tues.-Thurs., April 20-22 Business Pl.—202 Summerfield Tues. Educ. Pl. 223 Carruth-O'Leary Tues. & Wed. Lib. Arts Pl.—208 Strong Hall Thurs.
Let us show you some of the hundreds of specific job descriptions for summer and early fall programs. Sign up NOW for interview or call collect 816-374-4556.
PIZZA "as you like it"
PIZZA
Mushrooms
MUSHROOMS
SHAKESPEARES
FREE DELIVERY 841-1777
sun. 4:00-12:00 delivery until 11:30
open mon.-sat. 5:00-1:00 delivery until 12:30
Next Door to the University Shop
University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1979 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
4
Tuesday, April 20. 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Remove 'C' stigma
The Office of Academic Affairs released a study last week showing that from 1971 to 1975 the average GPA at the University of Kansas rose from 2.806 to 2.908. The study indicated that the KU average had risen more slowly than the average and that it actually had decreased slightly in the last two years.
The results of the study are difficult to evaluate. They may be good or they may be bad, depending on your outlook. The differences between KU's figures and the national figures are so small it may not try to determine what the trend is.
THE STUDY DOES indicate that the basic problem still remains—the vast majority of grades given at the University are A's and B's.
The "Horrors" of grade inflation have been a major topic of discussion in recent years. Many highly reputed schools in the country have come under attack. Eighty-two per cent of Harvard's class of '74 graduated cum laude or better. Yale once again is issuing F's next fall after its discovery that transcripts were less credible because F's weren't recorded and because many students failed classes rather than accepting a C or a D.
The subject of grading is difficult to grasp. George F. Will wrote in the Feb. 9 issue of Newsweek magazine that grade inflation results from and-elitism. He said anti-elitists couldn't accept the idea of education as equal." These romantics have emerged from the movement pursuing self-realization, according to Will.
"HENCE EDUCATION is less a lesson than a lesson of letting something out," he said.
The concept of self-realization is difficult to argue against, particularly for people of my generation who have used it as a crutch. Getting grade reports full of A's and B's is a real ego boost. And good grades for everyone are easy to justify when we all agree that the world is too competitive. Individuals should be allowed to develop to their own potential without the strain of feeling inferior. How can you argue against such liberal ideals?
It can be done. Amital Etzioni wrote very convincingly of the alternatives in the Oct. 10, 1975 issue of Science magazine. Grade inflation is unacceptable for both the progressive and the traditional views of education, he said.
UNDER THE PROGRESSIVE concept, the subject and audience interact in the subject or because of its interest.
value to them in the future. Etzioni, director of the Center for Policy Research at Columbia University, said that for progressives, "grading is a feedback. Feedback is what the student needs, he said, not reinforcement.
Etzioni said the traditional educator believes that to expect learning to be its own reward is to expect too much. The traditionalist says that working hard for a good grade is an important lesson to learn and one that can be applied to life. The traditionalist says that as long as personal evaluations are provided, evaluations should be based on grades, not personal evaluations, which are more subjective.
ETZIONI'S VIEW provides sound alternatives to grade inflation. The University can't look at results of the study and say there is no problem here. But you can know that we determine which of the alternatives Etzioni proposes is best for KU.
If the radical progressive approach were chosen, the whole structure of the University would be altered. The faculty would have to provide extensive feedback to students in place of evaluation by grades. This would take a great deal of pressure off the student and probably wouldn't create as many problems as might be imagined. Prospective employers would simply insist that they are stead of relying on grades. Many employers and post graduate programs conduct such testing now because grades just aren't too reliable.
IF THE TRADITIONAL approach were chosen and adhered to strictly, much of the stigma involved in a C grade would be removed because they would be much more common. Under the current system, if one has an average GPA of almost 3.00, a C has to be viewed as subbar.
Some professors at KU currently employ a strict, traditional grading system, but the enrollment in such classes often drops drastically as students discover that they'll really have to work to get above a C. There are students who don't view C's with horror, but for those who hope to gain admission to post graduate programs there is no choice. If a strifter grading standard became universal, a grade lower than a B wouldn't mean the end of the world.
The statistics do tell us something. They tell us there is a need for change, a challenge and a goal. The University needs to decide which route it will take. By John Johnston
Contributing Writer
Most people here at KU appreciate the great beauty of the campus. Another of the campuses is much darker, overlooked, however. That is its great spaciousness. Not only does spaciousness help to prevent crowding, it also gives students a sense of doing a great deal of walking.
Walking more than just a chore
Unfortunately, walking isn't appreciated as it should be. It is
I MIGHT never have realized walking had so much to offer if I hadn't been forced into doing so much of it this semester. I live on 14th at the very bottom of the hill and I need days I walk up the hill and over to the middle of campus for my 8:30 class in Flint. Then I
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
trinsically valuable but is always seen as a mode of transporting oneself.
for the most part subordinated to a secondary status such as going to class, going home or going to the Union. Thus, the activity of walking doesn't become manifest as in-
in Smith, across from the Union. Then I return hom down the hill for an afternoon break before I go back up the hill and clear across campus for my 4 m. class in Learned
By the time I get home at 5:30, I've walked several miles just going to class. At the first of the semester, I considered all that walking a burden. As long as it was just a part of going to class, then if could only have value if a particular class had more students to walk than separated the act of walking from the burdensome concept of going to class, walking became enjoyable in itself.
walk back down the hill on my way over to Summerfield for my 9:30 class, then up and down the hill again to get home for a two-hour lunch break. I then climb the hill again for my class
AFTER ALL, we do have a beautiful campus to walk across. But the secret lies in exploiting the several possible ways to walk to suit one's schedule and mood. First there is the enjoy-the scenery method. It involves spring days when the trees and flowers are in bloom. Besides the buildings and grounds of the
campus there are, of course,
other students to observe. One
can say hello to one's friends, or
they react to being spubbed.
...
For the athletically inclined,
there is vigorous walking. A brisk piece all the way up a steep
climb to sure to stretch the lag
muscle on each knee in breathy deeply. Going down
stairs in a kind of conditional fall
is also exciting and good for the
knees, but it requires practice
balance to avoid the embri-
nagement of falling on one's
face.
Another variation is the free floating walk. After walking over the same route for a few times, you can intention to direction, landmarks or scenery. Allowing the mind to drift onto any subject it chooses or no subject at all causes the walk to go by in a flash.
ONE OF MY favorite techniques consists of solving some problem or considering an
ideas as I walk along. When I start walking over to Learned, for example, I decide to see whether I can develop an idea for a column for the Kansan. That's the way the idea for this column was born. I was taught through a darmalent activities of college life when I suddenly hit upon the phenomenon of walking.
I'm not saying that walking can't be uncomfortable, inconvenient and tiring, expensive and time-consuming. But looking at my college career, I notice that some of my best and worst times have been walking across campus. I once went to a college where I walked down the hill on 14th.
I seemed for an instant to be able to stand outside of time and look at my possibilities. Since then that hill has had a special name. I remember how loud I could be sorry they built the campus on top of it or wish there was a ski lift on it, no matter what my friends may say.
Dykes details budget process
To the Editor:
After reading the articles in the April 12 edition of the Kansan about the Legislature's action on the University of Kansas' budget requests, I thought additional comment about the process by which the board is approved might be helpful.
WASHINGTON — Television news is a succession of deus ex machina bolts from the blue, and no news is more so than foreign news. The Peron family has come and gone in Argentina, and those handsome, authoritative voices on the tube
THE GOVERNOR'SBUDGET recommendations are then transmitted to the Legislature, where, as Jim Cobb pointed out in his article, the university's requests are addressed by the Means Committee, the full Senate, and then usually by a bicameral conference committee and the full membership
(1) As I'm sure you know, the University's budget requests must pass three levels of review after decisions about what to request have been made on campus First, the Board of Education sets salary and other operating expenditure increase recommendations, and considers proposals for new and improved programs. After the Regents have approved a certain level of funding, the University's budget is to be to the Governor and the Budget Division, where additional review takes place.
Foreign news is baffling
THE BEST STORY is China. Even what has come to be routine China coverage is hilariously mystifying, confusing and illogical pictures of touring American politicians with Mao Tse-
Lately, however, the names of one or two individuals have been added to the story. References are made to an old geezer. Soliman somebody or another, who is the president of the country, but who is in flight or hiding or under siege because some of those armed men whose pictures we see don't like him. Why? We know they are the armed men? What the hell is going on over there?
Night after night we have been told that "right-wing Phalangists" and "left-wing Moslems" are fighting terrible pitched battles for the Holiday Inn, the Sheraton, the Quality Court and the Marriott. We are shown pictures of skirmishes at
CURRENTLY THE longestrunning, most baffling foreign news story concerns Lebanon.
Published at the University of Kansas weekly newsletter. A second semester course is required periodically. Second-course postage paid at Lawrenceville, $15 for a summer or $18 in Dallas County and $40 in Pasadena. First-course postage $12 for a summer, $14 for a semester, paid through the student activity fees.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
From time to time, though, television news attempts to throw itself onto a continuing news story about some situation in another land that may last for weeks and months. into that exact event, and English pound sterling and the Portuguese revolution where, you may recall, the seldom-if ever-interviewed Communists were threatening to effect a Russian-backed coup d'état for months until one day they would be as if they had been vaporized.
By Nicholas von Hoffman
(C) King Features
haven't yet suggested how, how come or why. Election returns from Bangkok and Cuban expeditionary forces in the dark heart of Africa are reported to us rather like comets or cancer cures, something to be applied for the moment and forgotten.
CARL W. DAVIS
Business Manager
Roxy Parris
Readers Respond
Editor Carl Young
tung, who either doesn't have or don't wear his dentures. We are shown defrocked President Obama in a wheelchair chairman of the powerful joint congressional committee on poultry reform, shaking hands with the revered, if palied, old chairman who is slobbering about his wife and politician's wide lapels. The confident American correspondent informs us that Bilge-daddy was awakened at the meeting to go to this summer meeting. It is a hilarious honor.
Then we cut to the network's State Department expert who gives us the news that U.S. government Sinologists don't believe that the continuing battle between the defunct Chinese general and the dead American is serious effect on our relations with Peking. Stay turned to this channel for developments.
THE DEVELOPMENTS for next day are that 800,000 students have rioted in downtown Peking and that former
That's the routine news. Then there are the upheavals, Behind Chancellor or Cronkite they show a slide of the map of China—always in red but only once in blue—the sickle—and announce that the prime minister, veteran supreme party committee member Egg Foo Young, has been replaced and the acting prime minister, Eddie Park. It is explained that Egg Foo Young's fall is a slap in the face of the faction led by former prime minister and friend of the West, En-Chai Lel. Background information we are told Chou rose to power when the late Marshal Won Ton's plane was shot down while he was returning from Russia with a nuclear-armed atom bomb which he planned to use to seize Hankow.
The following day the news is even more exciting. Duck Teng (pronounced Dung on the air), former vice-president of Beirut, be made the new prime minister. The semi-official Peking newspaper, Red Gas, has said editorially that this will not interfere with participation in the forthcoming Montreal Olympics
prime minister Egg Foo Young has been demoted to be a trolley-car conductor, although he will retain his job as minister. He is also the State Department expert who explains that our government believes Egg Foo Young isn't out of it yet and could still stage a comeback as the head of the government. Mr. Obama's capital obstacle is the Chairman who, although he holds no position in the government, we are carefully informed, runs China and who, for reasons Marxist dialectic, has this power and revolutions against himself.
Throughout this long process, one that covers nearly a full year, the University's requests scrutiny, revision, and occasionally deletion. Such was the case for the budget requests for Fiscal Year 1977. Several requests that were forwarded to Regents and Regents for program improvements or additions were reduced in size or cut completely. Subsequently, the Governor revised or did not approve the program requests. The Legislature then reviewed the requests over nearly a three-month period, recommended increases in some areas, changed others, and funding at request levels in yet other categories.
THE NEXT NIGHT the news is that a heretofore unknown fact has staged an orderly rebellion of people in Shanghai, and wall posters have appeared in Peking demanding the death of Egg Foo Young. It being unclear whether this is Mao Tsetung overthrowing himself with Russia, all three networks interview China scholars from John Hopkins and Harvard. These savants make several important points, the first of which is that they expected it to be that viewers are that viewers would wise count Duck out even if they execute him. Posthumous political power is very important in China. Most of the major offices in the Chinese government are held by dead Some again, professor? His ancestor worship, Charlie Chan.
THE TABLE that compared requests with legislative approval showed in the left hand column the items the Regents recommended, not the items requested by the University. As university's original requests were not reported.
(2) It is important that recognition be given to the time and effort members of the College provide a workable budget for the College of Health Sciences and Hospital. Several key supplemental appropriations for the were authorized, including;
—An increase of $1,130,000 in the Hospital revenue expenditure ceiling.
—A $730,000 appropriation to offset the loss of Federal capitation grant funds.
—An increase of $125,000 in the student fee expenditure limitation.
FOR FY 77, appropriations and authorizations include:
—An additional 32.8 unclassified and 57 classified positions to meet enrollment demands on health care services.
-$600,000 to offset Federal capitation grant losses.
—$225,000 to pay overtime to nurses, as necessary.
—$88,578 to support the regional perinatal care program.
- Authorization for expenditure of up to $25,000 to retain private counsel in medical mall practice suits.
Additionally, the Legislature appropriated $850,000 for FY 77 and $1,650,000 for FY 78 to meet radiation therapy faculty needs.
IN SUMMARIZING this point, I want to emphasize that special attention was given this year to the fiscal needs of the College of Health Sciences and Medicine, which should enhance and facilitate our programs of health care education and service.
(3) I want to emphasize our appreciation for the thoughtful consideration our requests have received at all levels and our assistance we received and assistance we received from our alumni and friends.
Literally hundreds of letters were written and contacts made by alumni and friends of the University to persuade legislators of the University's wishes. Would such a support the University received would have been impossible.
But despite the strong, active support of many people, the University did not receive all the feedback mentioned in the first point of this letter, reductions were made at all levels of review. But the fact that the university in the University were kept fully informed. The result is a budget
which, although it does not contain everything that had been requested, is sufficient to enable the University to make use of our facilities for teaching, research, and service—and on all of its campuses. Over the past three years, we have received increases totaling 28 per cent in unclassified salaries and more than one per cent in other operating expense appropriations.
ADDITIONALLY, the largest construction program in the
history of the University is now under way, made possible by generous support by our Governor and the Legislature.
In closing, I want to express appreciation for the coverage the Kansan has provided as our team completed the approval process. I wanted to add this additional information so the University community would understand fully the impact which our budget is approved.
Archie R. Dykes Chancellor
To the Editor:
Only Senate record in absence column
I was personally opposed to the subsidy and expected it to be defeated anyway. But that's not the question. The only question that was answered was that a majority of the Student Senate wasn't even willing to put its opinion on the public record.
The question of an athletic ticket subsidy was decided in the worst of all possible ways by the Student Senate last Thursday. The student council showed up to discuss it. No quorum, no meeting, no action.
AFTER ALL, what might happen if constituents knew how their senators voted, that they remembered that information at the next election? As unlikely as that chain of events is, the Student Senate didn't even notice the possibility of its occurrence.
What's worse, it wasn't just any old issue that the Senate was to have considered. Old, yes; but still not just your
say-yay, run-of-the-mill question.) It was a bill that would have had an effect on every student and could have helped students who buy season football and basketball tickets.
THOSE OF us who represent Oliver Hall took a straw poll on the subsidy question after doing our best to give them both sides of the issue. Sixty-three per cent were for it, 37 per cent against. That doesn't prove that a majority of students on campus feel subsidy, but it does mean that a large number of students were totally ignored by an absent Student Senate.
These senators were elected to represent their constituents. Yet more than half of the senators represented only themselves that night, and the only record you'll ever be able to see are actions in the absence column of the Student Senate Record.
Steve Leben
Student Senator
LITTLE DAVID
© 1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES
SHEN DINAN
Tuesday. April 20. 1976
University Daily Kansan
5
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Two grants for Greeks offered by Panhellenic
Two scholarships for the 1979-1977 school year are being offered by KU's Panhellenic Association to any male or undergraduate in the Greek system.
The scholarships will be awarded for extracurricular activities and scholastic achievement, Linda Pfastener, Panhellenic president, said Friday.
She said they would be honorary scholarships awarded without consideration of financial need.
The recipients of the award, one male and one female, will each receive in-state tuition for one semester of their choice during the 1976-1977 school year.
The funds for the scholarship,
PhLasterear said, will be taken from interest drawn on money Panhellenic has inwarded to the University Endowment Association.
Scholarship recipients will be chosen by the Panellinic Executive Board and four other members of Panhellenic, who come from different houses, Pflaster said.
Applications are available from all fraternity and sorority house presidents and at the dean of women's office. They may also be sent to the dean of women's office tomorrow.
Two well-known pianists to be artists-in-residence
Gary Graffman and Byron Janis, internationally known pianists, will be artists-in-residence at the University of Kansas in August. He is a member of the School of Fine Arts, said Friday.
Graffman will teach and perform at KU during the fall semester, and Janis will be available.
"The artist-in-residence program at the University of Kansas has already brought national attention to the piano program here." Moeser said.
The program began last spring, financed in part by J. Hammond McNish, adjunct professor of business, to honor his former college graduate, 91-year-old J. W. Johnson, of Sidney, Neb.
Moeser one result of the program was an increase in piano students coming to
THE FIRST RESIDENT artist at KU was Malcolm Fringe, an internationally renowned sculptor.
Micha Dichter, an American pianist who has performed throughout Europe, Japan, Israel, South and Central America and the United Union, is the current KU resident artist.
"In Byron Janis and Gary Graffman, two pianists of international accompanion, the program will continue along the path of Moerer built in its initial year." Moerer said.
Graftman began his career at 18 with the Philadelphia Orchestra and soon afterwards performed in Carnegie Hall, as the national Rachmaninov winner. A year later, he won the Leventtin Competition. Sergei Rachmaninov was a Russian composer who spent the latter century. The Leventtin Competition for pianists and violinists began in 1939 and is named for Edgar M. Leventtin, New York lawyer and music patron.
GRAFFMAN MADE his first world tour in 1958 after a year's study abroad on a Fulbright Fellowship and study in the United States under Vladimir Horowitz, an internationally known Russian pianist, and Rudolf Serkin, a Bohemian pianist known primarily as an international recital performer.
Janis is considered in the music world to be an expert on Chopin. He gave his first violin recital at age 18.
He made his Carnegie Hall debut in 1948 and has had an active recording career.
Janis gave the first American performances in Russia of the Ghrison W piano Concerto and the Aaron Copland Piano Sonata. George Ghrison was an American composer, writer and stage and film music. Aaron Copland is an American composer and conductor.
Poet Michael McClure featured at SUA Poetry Series April 28
Michael McClure, poet and playwright,
will read from some of his works April 28 for
the last program in this semester's SUA
Poetry Series.
McCure is described by Karl Malkoff in "Crowell's Handbook of Contemporary American Poetry" as a member of the group of "Beat Generation" poets working in New York and San Francisco during the late '40s and early '50s.
"One characteristic usually associated with the Beat writers is the exploration of areas of experience—sexual and spiritual," she explained, "only remained untouched." Malkoff says.
McClure's poetry expresses his belief that man has a openness with the universe and
that the poet must write not only from his consciousness but also out of the entire world.
His poetry reflects the mood of strain and commitment prevalent in America during the period marked by "Beat Generation" poetry.
Mclure, who was born in Marysville in 1932, is also recognized as a playwright.
His play, "The Beard," ran in New York during 1967 and 1968. The plot deals with the acquaintanceship of a movie sex goddess and gets married into a relationship of hostile sexuality.
McClure will appear at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
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The University of Kansas uses a variety of programs to appeal to the interests of potential students. The Office of Admissions method of attracting students to the campus.
Admissions office seeks students
John Myers, director of admissions, said last week that students were attracted to KU by its academic programs, its special programs and its staffing staff, its students and its graduates.
The reputations of many of the schools and the departments at the University, Myers said, are what attract students to KU.
One program that draws students from Missouri is a Kansas-Missouri reciprocity agreement. Under this agreement, Missouri students may study such fields as forestry and mining at MU. The two state universities and other "accredited studies, Myers said.
SOME OF THE CAMPUS programs that attract high school students to KU are camps in music, art, journalism and basketball.
"The word recruiting carries negative connotations. It sounds as if students are being recruited."
"These camps were set up as academic programs not recruiting programs,"
Some efforts, though, are made by the
Myers estimated that in a year's time the staff would make more than 200 trips to areas offering potential students. Most of the trips, he said, are college day programs for students from several high schools and representatives from many colleges.
admissions office to draw students to the University. The office has a staff of about six, which does admissions counseling in office and at schools in and out of the state.
Most of the trips are made within the state but other areas that are visited include Kansas City, Mo. St. Louis, St. Joseph, Omaha and Chicago. Mvsers said.
ALL STAFF MEMBERS, he lives on campus and have office responsibilities in the area of orientation programs, ad-hoc events and other benefits, community colleges and records.
"We are not recruiters or salesmen," Mvers said.
The work at the admissions office tends to follow a pattern. In the fall the staff does most of its traveling and in the winter most of its appointments come to the University for assistance.
Vistors to the campus in the spring take a large part of the admission counselor's time. Martha Coffman-Gallagher, admissions office secretary, said about 150 to 200 people to the office for help. She said the counselor would talk to them and plan their visits.
"Knowing where to send them to get
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their questions answered is a part of our job," she said.
A TYPICAL SCHEDULE for a visitor to campus might include admissions counseling, visits to classrooms and with a student in the campus and a conference about housing.
During the summer the office is busy with
orientation programs for new students and the process continues the following fall.
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Current KU students also influence potential students to enroll at Myers, said. Students, he said, play an invaluable role in preparing our students for community and being hosts to people here.
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Tuesday, April 26. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Regents okay
From page one
become classified. The Regents said many of the employees were working in clerical positions and had been hired as unclassified employees, so the limitation didn't burn high enough.
THE NUMBER OF classified positions
the university and universities is set by
the state legal rule.
In actions affecting academic programs, the Regents approved merging the School of Bellion into KU's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The Regents also reviewed a number of graduate degree programs.
They voted to remove 10 KU programs from provisional status, allowing the programs to now be considered full graduate programs. They also voted to remove an provisional status for further study of the programs' demand, productivity and cost. The Regents voted to
discontinue two graduate programs by merging them with other programs.
The Regents approved removal of the M.A. in linguistics program from the university status because they said it met all requirements of regular graduate programs.
M. A. DEGREE programs in Slavic languages and literature, classics and classical archaeology and Latin American studies and M.S. programs in aerospace engineering. They were removed from provisional status because they were considered unique, high-quality programs, even though they didn't meet standards of the "institutional" Council of Chief Academic Officers.
Degree recommended for removal from provisional status with the stipulation that they be reviewed at the end of a year were: Ed.S. in elementary and secondary
education; Ed.S. in administration; Ed.S. in counseling and guidance; M.S. in physiology at the Med Center; and M.A. in pathology at the Med Center.
Each of these degrees is described as 'offered upon demand' because it represents degree options within a doctoral program.
The Regents said further improvement was needed in the following programs and recommended that they remain on provisional status: M.S. in architectural engineering; M.A. in religion; D.M.A. in music and Ph.D. in music.
THE M.A. IN musicology degree was recommended for discontinuance. It is to be merged with M.M. degrees in music. The M.A. degree in Oriental languages was recommended for merger with the East Asian studies program.
A contract for the interior package of the
Speech stresses state aid to aged
There is a sincere desire by the Governor's office to provide appropriate services to the elderly people of Kansas, John B. Fennell, said last night, Gov. Robert F. Bennett, said last night.
Conard delivered a postbanquet speech to about 85 people in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. The banquet ended the first week of Aging in Adult Kentucky. The annual Kansas Conference on Aging.
Bennett couldn't attend the banquet because of legislative duties.
Today's program, start at 9 a.m. in the Union, includes a speech by Will Con-
boy, professor of speech and drama, on poor changes in moral codes in the next century. In this book, professor of anthropology, will talk about the physiological aspects of aging.
The conference ends at noon.
"Kansas is tied with Missouri and Nebraska for fourth in the per cent of citizen over 65 years old," Conard said, and "the percent of citizen over 65 years old per cent of Kansas are senior citizens."
Because of this high percentage, he said, senior citizens need to express their ideas and make themselves known in state and local government.
Director Peter Watkins schedules film discussions
Visiting British film director Peter Watkins will host open discussions with faculty and students this week, starting with two sessions today.
Watkins will host discussions this morning from 10 to noon in the Council Room of the Kansas Union and this afternoon from 1 to 5 in the Forum Room of the Union.
conjunction with SUA showings of two of his films.
Watkins will host the discussions in
Tomorrow, willist will host discussions from 10 a.m., to noon and from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Forum Room; Thursday, from 1 to 5 p.m. in the Governor's Room of the Union; and Friday, from 10 a.m. to noon from 1 to 5 p.m. in the Governor's Room.
"Fallan (The Trap)," a film exploring problems arising from the peaceful use of nuclear power, will be shown at p.i.t.今天, discussion sessions in the Forum Room.
"Edward Munch," a biography of the Norwegian painter, will be shown at 7 p.m. today and at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room.
Watkins will discuss a variety of topics during the open discussions, including the film industry in America and abroad and the use of media in Western society. More of Watkins' films will be available for showing during the sessions.
All the activities will be free.
On Campus
Events ...
TODAY: THE KANASA CONFERENCE ON AGING will meet all day in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union. The KECOUGHTAIN HIGH SCHOOL BAND will perform at noon in the Kansas Room of the Union. JUDY MILLER, of the Kansas University, will lead a band performance in Kenya, Bolivia, Afghanistan, Taiwan and the China coat at a 10:38 in London.
TONIGHT: THE LAWRENCE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE will have its annual meeting at 7 in the Union Ballroom. The Seventh Annual WOMEN'S RECOGENTION DINNER, sponsored by the KU Commission on the Status of Women, will be at 7:30 in the Kansas Room of the Union. J. W. RUDD, of the University of Concinnati, will speak on "Frank Lloyd Wright and Louis Sullivan" at 7:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Union.
Announcements . . .
Information and Research Division is expanding to include the following positions which will be involved with a wide variety of applied research and systems activities as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
The Department of Planning and Development Kansas Citv. Kansas
Skills in written and verbal communication with both technical anon non-technical personnel are required. Graduate experience in social science research and understanding of computer utilization in re research environment is desirable.
Research/Systems Specialist
Programmer/Analyst
This position requires a thorough working knowledge of FORTRAN and/or COBOL. Programming experience in business applications or research projects is desirable.
Salaries are commensurate with education and experience. These positions offer a wide-range benefit package, flexible working atmsphere, and modern office facilities. We invite all interested applicants to write Information and Research Division, Department of Planning and Development, One Civic Plaza, Kansas City, Kansas 66101. An Equal Opportunity Employer, M-F.
Tish Coconcannon, administrative assistant for constituent services, spoke after Conard's speech, describing the for-mer's interest in attending the Conference on Acting May 17 and 18.
From the findings of that conference, Concannon said, senior citizens should formulate legislative proposals, and band together as a strong lobbying force.
Conard said, "The proceedings of the Governor's bicentennial Conference on Aging should be a blue print for future activities in the entire field of aging."
Earlier yesterday, Dr. Richard Greatulk, acting director of the National Institute on Aging in Washington, D.C., said he didn't know if he was going to need a computer could suddenly extend life expectancy.
The average life span would be extended 10 years if a cure was found for heart disease, Greulick said, and it would be prolonged two years if a cure was found for
In 1973 the average life span was 78 years for women, and 68 years for men, he said. In 1980 the average life span was 51 years for women and 48 years for men, Gerleuck said. The reasons for lengthened life spans are not known, because the factors involved are complex.
The goal of the National Institute on Aging is to make a person's latter years as good as possible and to help the elderly to be more independent, Greedik said.
Med Center's clinical facility was approved by the Regents for a low bid of $8,285,449,
submitted by J. E. Dunn Construction
Company of Kansas City, Mo.
The interior package consists of walls, doors, ceilings and floors for the facility. The bid includes several alternate bid proposals for better materials and finishing, according to Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor.
"This guarantees that the building will be constructed within the amount of dollars we need."
LUCAS SAIH THE interior package was the last major construction proposal for the facility. He said that preparations would be made to revenue bond sale to finance the building.
A completion date in the spring of 1978 has been set for the clinical facility, he said.
The Regents also approved awarding a contract for a Tele-Lift package at the Naval Aircraft Airtime Electronic Systems Division in Bismarck, Safe Company. Moser's bid was $599.83.
Lucas described the system as a two-track, mini-train system in which a container rides a track through the building. The system will be used to carry messages, records, drugs and small pieces of equipment through the clinical facility.
THE REGENTS APPROVED a number of repair projects for KU, including $8,000 to repair wind damage to Snow Hall; $11,450 for cleaning sandstone surfaces of McColium, Tormlin and Gertrude Sellards barn halls; $72,000 for repairing roofs of McColium buildings; and added $10,300 to clean, tuckpoint and waterproof Twente Hall.
The Twente Hall project will be in addition to plans already under contract to do the same work at Green Hall and Spooner Art Museum.
The Regents also approved the purchase of three underground fuel tanks that would be used in severe weather to supply heating fuel for University residence halls. The three tanks will be purchased at a cost not to exceed $40,000.
The purchase of one automobile for the Division of Continuing Education and two trucks for buildings and grounds also was approved.
The Regents deferred until May a proposal for a library planning fund allocation for University libraries. The fund would consist of $17,000 future building loans, and a plan for renovation of Watson Library or the construction of a new library building.
Pre-Nursing Association Meeting
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PINE ROOM KANSAS UNION
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 20, 1976
7
Not all KU out-of-staters can gain residency
Bv DEB MILLER
Staff Writer
It takes time and true desire by out-of-
state students attending the University of
Kansas.
For the 1975 fall semester, 4,739 of 23,941 KU students were out of the state; and this semester the number is 4,744 of 22,796. Most of the out-of-staters come from Missouri and other neighboring states. The smallest group comes from the East Coast.
William Kelly, associate dean of admissions and records, said recently he forewarn no trend toward an increasing number of out-of-state students at KU.
"Their number increases proportionately as KU's enrollment increases." he said.
Tuition is $638 a semester, compared with
$288 for in-state students. This amount
will increase as the semester advances.
"IT USUALLY depends on the area," Kelly said. "For instance, the University of
Colorado's out-of-state tuition is higher than KU's. A larger number of students apply
About 400 out-of-state students a semester apply for Kansas residency.
James Henry, assistant registrar of admissions and records, estimated that about 40 per cent of the applicants actually obtain residency.
"Most are turned down because they cannot prove complete financial investment."
IN ADDITION TO being financially independent, students must be able to prove that they've physically resided in Kansas and have completed their education immediately before enrollment or re-enrollment), have relied on in-state sources for financial support and have done so without obtaining student ID.
The last factor includes having a Kansas driver's license, voting and registering in
"It isn't easy to establish residency," he stressed. "It takes more than financial need. It takes a lot of dedication and a real desire to become a Kansas."
W. Henry said this was the most important factor.
Students should apply three weeks before enrollment to obtain a decision by May 1.
Kansas, paying taxes in Kansas—in short,
living here.
Students wishing to apply should pick up a copy of the regulations and an application in the Office of Admissions and Records. Their case will be reviewed by the University Residence Committee, headed by Mike Davis, University General Counsel.
FACTORS SUCH as a summer job at name or a loan from an out-of-state bank
International week-long festival at McCollum to celebrate Asia
Marie Faust, St. Louis senior, recently gained Kansas residency.
Indigo batiks, Asian fabrics, rugs and brasswork are just a few of the things that can be seen at the McColum Hall International Festival display set up to celebrate "Asia Week," beginning today in McColum.
"The program is really a cooperative effort between the foreign students at McCollim, and the other residents of the dorm," Deborah Francisco of the Office of the Dean of Foreign Students said yesterday.
Tonight, India and Pakistan will be celebrated, and a cooking school for Thailand.
THE PROGRAM for each week includes different countries' menus nightly in the city.
Gayle McBeth, McCollum social chairman, said the festival had been planned so that four different areas of the world could be recognized in a program every other week.
"We try to have a cooking school nightly," McBeth said. "They are designed to give the participants new recipes and bring in the good of the country that is being recognized."
The cafeteria also prepares a native meal each night, in which cooks are advised by foreign students on how to prepare the meals correctly, she said.
All the cooking schools are held during dinner so that the students can eat the meals they've prepared, McBeth said. She added that all the classes were informal and that the students could get a lot of individual help in preparing the meals.
TOMORROW, Hong Kong, Korea and Japan will be celebrated and a Thai slide show will be presented. A continuation of the Thai cultural presentation plus a Vietnamese celebration is planned for Thursday.
The week of festivities will end Friday when all of Asia will be recognized.
The program focuses on four main areas of the world: Latin America, the Middle
East, Asia and Africa, and it involves as many foreign countries and students as possible.
The festival was planned entirely by McCollum residents, McBeth said, and it has no connection with the KU International Club.
"The idea was proposed to the Pearson Trust Fund by the dorm residents and we were funded $3,080 for the activities," she said.
"ASIA WEEK!" is the third in the festival series, McBeth said, and both the Latin
American and Middle Eastern celebrations were successful.
"The other weeks were very well accepted by the dorm residents," she said. "Everybody seemed to enjoy participating in new things from the different countries."
The Latin American week included a
Latin party and Latin American music and
art.
"The most successful part of the Middle Eastern week was the belly dancing," McBeth said. "The main entertainment for the event was dancing and a disco for the dorm residents."
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"I disowned St. Louis," Faunt said. "I know I be here as a port graduate, student, and teacher."
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To obtain residency, Faust said she did everything in Kansas.
"I had no support from home. I bought my car here. I voted here. I got my insurance here. I live and worked here in the summer. I was even hospitalized here," he said.
"I decided just to see what would happen," she said. "But surprisingly it was the only place I applied to that didn't charge for application. I also liked the occupational therapy department, I wanted to travel and I was accepted into a scholarship hall."
Laura Lee Charlton Heights, W. Va,
sured, said she applied to KU at first as
a freshman.
MARK BLZJACK, Tulsa sophomore, also came for the occupational therapy department. And he got a partial scholarship.
Bigjack, however, doesn't plan to apply for Kansas residency.
"I really like it here and I'm definitely coming back next year," he said.
"I run a small business in Tulsa and I'll be there during the summers."
Sainan Trainer, Middletown, R.I., freshman, came to KU for both academic and
"I came here for the School of Journalism," he said. "The William Allen White School of Journalism has a good reputation on the East Coast."
"I'm glad I'm here. The pace is slower and it's worth the out-of-state bullets," she said.
DR. RONALD J. KOEHN Chiropractor
Dana Sullivan, Louisville, Ky., freshman,
originally came to KU for the School of
Business at the University of Illinois.
STILL, SOME OUT-OF-STATE students find their loyalty remains at home.
"Basically, I like it here," Sullivan said. "But I plan to transfer. I'm not really worried about that." He touches the social side is great. But the Middle West experience has been very pleasing."
Announces the Opening of His Office for the Practice of Chiropractic at:
Office Hours by Appointment
042 4478
SUITE 202
901 KENTUCKY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
843-4678
SALES POSITION Salary and Commission
*Car Furnished*
*Insurance Program*
*Paid Vacation*
*Other Benefits*
Apply in Person
No Experience Necessary
Bacon and Clark Dodge Santa Fe & Elm Salina, Kansas 67401 913-827-5522 Equal Opportunity Employer
TEXAS TOMS
ANT $1.00 SALE
TEXAS TOMS
4 REG. HAMB./'1 4 FRIES/'1
3 ONION RINGS/'1
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23rd & Ousdahl
ROUNDUP BASKET/'1 TENDER/
SUA Committee Chairperson Interviews 1976-77 April 21-26 at 6:30 PM
SPECIAL EVENTS
-publicity chairman
-local concerts chairman
-concerts coordinator chairman
(security, ushers)
842-3340
PUBLIC RELATIONS
-summer orientation chairman
-publications chairman
-fall orientation week
TRAVEL
-library chairman
-travel fair chairman
-group flight chairman
-publicity chairman
... Christmas ski break
-general trips chairman
... Spring Break ski trip
... Padre Island
... Bahamas (Christmas)
... Green River Trip
. . Orientation Shuttle service
... Mardi Gras
... K-State Football
FINE ARTS
-library chairman
-poetry hour chairman
-Kansas Union Gallery chairman
-picture lending chairman
-library chairman
-instructor coordinator
-publicity chairman
-catalogue chairman
FREE UNIVERSITY
OUTDOOR RECREATION
-wilderness discovery chairman
-mountaineering-backpacking
chairman
-canoe club chairman
-travel and recreation chairman
INDOOR RECREATION
-head coordinator "advertising"
-Quarterback Club
-air hockey
-air hockey
Sign up in the SUA office beginning April 12.
SUA
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
For Information contact the SUA office 864-3477
8
Tuesday, April 20, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Relays weather fails to water down efforts
KANSAS
By GARY VICE
Randy Benson signals the Jayhawks' only baton victory, a 3; 08.8 mile relay
Sports Writer
The List Kansas relays were supposed to take on a new look with several events added to promote interest, but that effort was limited by the appearance of an old adversary—rain.
BUT FANS WITH umbrellas and porchos still saw the outstanding performances they were promised. In all, 14 Relays records were broken.
The rain came with its annual regularity, keeping many fans away from the three-day festival and forcing the 7,000 in attendance Saturday to don rain gear.
It was also the second fastest time recorded in the world this year. The best is Cromwell's own 49.74, which he did at the Texas Relaxs two weeks ago.
KU's Nolan Cromwell reaffirmed his Olympic potential by churning to a 49.8, in winning the Cliff Cushman 400-meter intermediate hurdles. Cromwell's time broke the RELays record of 51.2 set in 1974 by Ehren Gisson.
Cromwell, who also ran a leg on the Jayhawk's victorious mile relay squad, was named the meet's outstanding performer in a close vote with Arkansas State's Ed Preston. Preston won both the open 100-and 200-meter dashes.
Cromwell, the first Jayhawk to win the奖 since Jim Rinon in 1969, said he didn't
"I really was surprised," Cromwell said. "I never gave any thought to it at all. I didn't come to my mind, but it's nice. The (mile) relay must have definitely helped."
His quarter-mile split of 47.0 on the Chuck Cameran mile relay, the final event of the day was a sprint to the hawk's swindle of Cromwell, Waddell Smith, Jay Wagner and Bandy Benson. They won
The mile relay victory, KU's fourth in the meet's history, gave the Jayhawks 132 total relay victories in the Texas-Kansas-Drake baton circuit. Texas, runner-up to Kansas in the midfield, beat him with 123 hits, kicks with the Jayhawks and grabbing a kick on the 800-ward relay.
FRESHMAN ANTHONY Coleman was the Jayhawks' third champion in winning the 110-meter high hurdles in 13.88 which qualifies him for the NCAA championships. Coleman, who has performed inconsistently year, said his victory helped his confidence.
"Yeah, I finally ran a good race," he said.
The rest of the Kansas track team, coming off an impressive victory at the Arkansas State Invitational, also performed well.
Cromwell wins, doing it his way
THE JAYHAWK THREESEOME OF Jim Podrebacre, Stone Steve and Rudy Guevara finished in 2-3-5 fashion in the Bill Nielder Shot Put, Podrebacre, a junior, again cleared the 60-foot barrier with a 60-best, half a inch off his personal record.
RICK WOHLHUTER, world-record-holder in the 800 and 1,000, successfully defended his title in the Glenn Cunningham 1,800 (mile), with a record-breaking clocking of 3.18:62 clocking and easily beat Kenyan 4.157 (mile) Bolt, who runs for Eastern New Mexico.
Many other Relays records fell. Phil Robins of Southern Illinois broke Cherton Ehizeleu's meet mark of $314 in 1974, but the jumps exceeded the record set last year by Charlton Ehizeleu, who was named the outstanding performer in 1975, but were not named until 1982.
Poderbarac said, "It didn't matter what I was doing right or wrong, they all went over 60 feet. I probably could've done that left-handed. I never got the big one."
"I'm pleased but I'll do a lot better if I can get those first five hurdles down."
Stone said he wasn't satisfied with his tiniest either, but his 567 toe earned him a gold medal.
FRESHMAN STEVE RAINBOLT, high school high jump champion in last year's Relays, finished in a tie for second with Missouri's Nat Page at 6-10. The event, moved into Allen Field House because of the rain, was won by Bill Knoeloid of Iowa at 7-1%, breaking former Jayhawk Barry Schur's Relays mark of 7-1.
By STEVE SCHOENFELD
Associate Sports Editor
CROWELL NOW HAS the two fastest times in the WORLD in the 400-meter race, but the fastest time is the fastest time this year.
Kansas Relays Results
Frank Shorter, 1972 Olympic gold
Narweal said he was sure Cromwell could learn to alternate his keys correctly. I haven’t met a more sincere man with that kind of wisdom.
Four-mile race
Four-mile race
Kansas (Kansas)
Kansas
Kingdon, Rick Ekins, Tom Koppe and Glen Harter),
Glen Harter)
Cromwell's record broke the old mark of 51.2 set when Gibson in 1974. And the amazing thing about it was that he had never sung on a guitar.
"With the blocks I put my right leg forward and my step is all wrong," Cromwell said. "In a football stance it's better. In my first two races this year I had to chop my step before the first hurdle."
800 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 2, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
600 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 3, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
450 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 4, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
400 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 5, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
350 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 6, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
300 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 7, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
250 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 8, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
200 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 9, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
150 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 10, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
100 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 11, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
90 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 12, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
80 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 13, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
70 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 14, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
60 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 15, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
50 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 16, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
40 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 17, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
30 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 18, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
20 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 19, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
10 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 20, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
8 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 21, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
6 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 22, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
4 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 23, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
2 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 24, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 25, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 26, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 27, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 28, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 29, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 30, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 31, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 32, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 33, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 34, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 35, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 36, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 37, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 38, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 39, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 40, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 41, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 42, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 43, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 44, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 45, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 46, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 47, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 48, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 49, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 50, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 51, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 52, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 53, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 54, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 55, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 56, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 57, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 58, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 59, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 60, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 61, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 62, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 63, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 64, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 65, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 66, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 67, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 68, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 69, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 70, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 71, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 72, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 73, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 74, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 75, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 76, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 77, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 78, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 79, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 80, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 81, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 82, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 83, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 84, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 85, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 86, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 87, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 88, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 89, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 90, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 91, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 92, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 93, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 94, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 95, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 96, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 97, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 98, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 99, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 100, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 101, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 102, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 103, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 104, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 105, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 106, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 107, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 108, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 109, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 110, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 111, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 112, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 113, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 114, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 115, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 116, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 117, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 118, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 119, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 120, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 121, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 122, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 123, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 124, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 125, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 126, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 127, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 128, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 129, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 130, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 131, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 132, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 133, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 134, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 135, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 136, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 137, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 138, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 139, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 140, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 141, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 142, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 143, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 144, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 145, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 146, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 147, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 148, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 149, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 150, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 151, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 152, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 153, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 154, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 155, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 156, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 157, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 158, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 159, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 160, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 161, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 162, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 163, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 164, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 165, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 166, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 167, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 168, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 169, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 170, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 171, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 172, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 173, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 174, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 175, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 176, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 177, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 178, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 179, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 180, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 181, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 182, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 183, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 184, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 185, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 186, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 187, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 188, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 189, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 190, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 191, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 192, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 193, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 194, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 195, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 196, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 197, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 198, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 199, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 200, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 201, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 202, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 203, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 204, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 205, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 206, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 207, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 208, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 209, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 210, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 211, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 212, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 213, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 214, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 215, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 216, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 217, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 218, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 219, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 220, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 221, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 222, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 223, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 224, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 225, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 226, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 227, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 228, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 229, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 230, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 231, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 232, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 233, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 234, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 235, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 236, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 237, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 238, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 239, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 240, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 241, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 242, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 243, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 244, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 245, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 246, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 247, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 248, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 249, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 250, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 251, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 252, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 253, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 254, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 255, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 256, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 257, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 258, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 259, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 260, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 261, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 262, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 263, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 264, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 265, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 266, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 267, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 268, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 269, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 270, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 271, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 272, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 273, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 274, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 275, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 276, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 277, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 278, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 279, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 280, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 281, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 282, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 283, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 284, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 285, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 286, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 287, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 288, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 289, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 290, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 291, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 292, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 293, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 294, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 295, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 296, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 297, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 298, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 299, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 300, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 301, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 302, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 303, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 304, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 305, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 306, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 307, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 308, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 309, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 310, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 311, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 312, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 313, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 314, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 315, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 316, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 317, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 318, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 319, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 320, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 321, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 322, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 323, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 324, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 325, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 326, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 327, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 328, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 329, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 330, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 331, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 332, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 333, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 334, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 335, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 336, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 337, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 338, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 339, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 340, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 341, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 342, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 343, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 344, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 345, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 346, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 347, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 348, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 349, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 350, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 351, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 352, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 353, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 LeDuCn, StkD. 354, 2 Jim Pindoehare, KXU.
1 ppi lt, 1 Le
You almost had to look twice to make sure you weren't seeing things.
Nolan Cromwell, the University of Kansas' quarterback and hurdler, was in a three-point stance. On the track? In the Cliff Cushman 400-meter hurdles at the Kansas Relays?
That's right. There weren't any snap counts, just the timing of the gun and Cromwell leaving the rest of the field. That's why we don't use them anymore.
Wet Santee 1,500-meter run. 1 Mover, Eastern Illinois.
3-2/2 miles. 2 Sanders. Sherard Terrace. 1-2/4 miles.
Foley vault — 1. Shepherd, Texas, 17-8 (Relay record).
Pearson vault — 2. Southern Illinois, 85-13 (wind)
balloff — 54-50 (relay).
Running without blocks was solely Cromwell's idea. KU assistant coach Stan Nawrei, who used once Cromwell run competitively for the first time Friday, didn't advocate the no-blocks start.
"HE HAS REALLY good speed and strength, but the one thing he hasn't learned is how to alternate his lead over the hurdles. That's something you can in practice, and it comes naturally it's hard to get it right in a race."
in so many things isn't willing to learn. But he's so willing to listen."
"We may go to the blocks," Narewaki said. "All we've done is work on strength and a little bit of speed work."
Nawesi said he didn't rule out the possibility that Cromwell would eventually use the blocks.
"That has to be up to the individual," Narewski said. "It depends how comfortable he feels as he gets up to the first step."
Ana-Maria Mendez is a 20-year-old from Mexico.
For his efforts, he was named the most outstanding performer at the Relays.
High jump = 1, Stlean, Kanaal State, 24-39%
Long jump = 1, Knodel, Tata, 7.1% (Rocky record). 2
The top race in the women's competition, the open 800, pitted Madeline Manning Jackson, American record holder in the 800 against Wendy Knudson, former Relays champion, and France Lairrie Lutz, Olympic gold medalist. Knudson, of Colorado State, won the event in 2:02.45. Manning finished second in 2:02.43 and Lutz was third in 2:02.88.
Cromwell finished a disappointing third place in the event at the Relaxs last year.
ay—1. Colorado, 3:20.3.
Distance medley relay -- A. Arkansas; 9.40.36.
Distance luge -- A. Arkansas; 9.51.28.
Harter, Alexander Akea, and Tommy McCauley; 7.3.04.
South Carolina, Waddell Smith, and Jackson; 40.85.
Mink rekyi -- A. Crounsel (Crounsel), W. Smith, Jay
Fraser, and Thomas Foster; 40.85.
Distance methyl relay . A. Arkansas; 9:40:26.
B. Oklahoma; 10:35:18.
Harris, Steve K, Arizona, Karen and Tom McCalla; 7:58:41.
Harris, Steve K, Arizona, Karen and Tom McCalla; 7:58:41.
Smith, Collenaean, Waddley and Jackson; 40:88.
Smith, Collenaean, Waddley and Jackson; 40:88.
Wagner and Randy Bennett; 3:08:38.
Spatial methyl relay . O. Open Division.
Masters 10 run . I. Howard, Colorado; TC 30,46.
Brunson 10 run . J. Howard, Colorado; TC 40,32.
Brunson 40 run . K. Wagner, Colorado; TC 20,22.
Jackson 10 run . K. Wagner, Colorado; TC 20,22.
Jackson 10 run . K. Wagner, Colorado; TC 20,22.
Wagner ex. kRU 171 (Relays record).
100-meter slowest pace . A. Arkansas; TC 18,30.
100-meter slowest pace . A. Arkansas; TC 18,30.
100-meter dash . P. Preston, Arkansas State; 103.3, 1.2.
100-meter run . W. Holbrook, Chicago TC; 20,32.
100-meter run . S. Florida TC; 16.7 (Relays record).
100-meter run . S. Florida TC; 16.7 (Relays record).
Dixcus - 1, McGedrick, Texas, 2684 (Relay record).
Decatur - 2, Nebraska, Nebraska, 2684 (Mark Kouke), KU-23.
MCGOLDRICK, HOPING TO sweep the midlands relays circuit this year, said, "Well, now I'm ready to get after those boys and their teammates so they'll get a chuckle out of hearing that."
"I last year I hadn't got my step down," Cromwell
said. "I had experience this year, I got my step
down, and made me happy."
In the disc, Jim McGoldrick of Texas captured his second consecutive Relays victory on the Texas-Kansas-Drake circuit with a record-shattering toss of 208-9. The former record in the Al Oster Disc Games was 194-1 by Marshall Smith of Colorado.
"I should have taken off faster," the Big Eight coach said dash champion said. "I eight to touch last."
Jayhawk sprinters Benson and Wagner battled the talented field for fourth-and-fifthplace finishes respectively. Benson equated his school record mark of 46.2, six hundredths of a second off the Olympic trials qualifying standard.
Masters 1080 ram - 1 Ibmwell, Colorado T.C. 9.4.20
Master's 1080 ram - 1 Ibmwell, Colorado T.C. 9.4.20
Master's 1080 ram - 1 Ibmwell, Colorado T.C. 9.4.20
300 driver hdr - Arsenal, Arkansas T.O. 20.2.5
116-mile high hurdle - 1, Anthony Coleman, KU, 13.84
KU, 16.19
1. Colorado, 3:20.3
Open Dialer
COMPETING IN PERHAPS the toughest field of any event, Evis Jennings of Mississippi State won the 400 in 45.33. The team was formerly of UCLA, was second in 45.77.
Cromwell, whose first place finish was two seconds better than second-place Gregg Byram of Oklahoma, is very interested in competing in the Olympic Trials in June at Eucene. Ore.
medalist in the marathon, tuned up for this summer's Games with a Relay record-breaking 14:17.2 in the 5,000-meter run. Finishing second was Pan American Games gold medalist Tibudana in 14:17.4. Former Ivanchie Theo Hamilton won
Natalie M. Porter, mkf, excl KKL (Marylou Records)
405-832-1777 918-765-1777
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"IT WOULD BE 'fantastic,'" he said, "and I wouldn't miss football. The Olympics are over by July 28 they so could have."
4. Michael Brock, HK, 10.12
5. Joshua Kew, New, Kansas Illinois, 10.17, 4. Larry
Houston, KU, 10.34
Former Jayhawk Them Hamilton won the exhibition long jump competition with a
Narewski said he thought Cornwell could make the Olympics. "With or without blocks he can go to the Olympics."
Cromwell was about ready to run off when one writer asked him what he felt football coaches would say about it.
"They would have said it was terrible," he said.
Whatever it was,it worked.
5,000-meter run - 1 Wollbacher Chicago TI. 38.55
5,000-meter run - 1 Wollbacher Chicago TI. 38.55
5,000-meter run - 1 Florida Florida TI. 14.17
results were the same. He won both the open
100- and 200-meter dashes.
Along with his success on the track has come a brasher, more confident Preston.
Preston lunges to 10.13 in open 100-meters ahead of KU's Smith and Lutz, ex-KU
Olympic hopes speed Ed Preston
dash in 9.4 and the open 220 in 20.8. People suddenly had to realize that the spinner from Arkansas State might be a legitimate Olympic prospect.
*Masters'* mile run—1. Howell, Colorado TC: 4.37.0.
*Marathon*—1. Bordell, Pikes Peak TC: 2.30.14.
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSI
PRESTON, NOW A SOPHOMORE,
returned to the ROLLING BAY day. This time,
she played softball at a local school.
Sports Editor
I don't consider this a very good one.
I had already beaten everybody in at Texas.
But Preston raised a few eyebrows while winning the university division 100-vard
When Ed Preston came to the Kansas car, he wasn't well-know enough to brace for it.
OKLAHOMA STATE
51.2
was looking for more competition than that.
Then, in the same breath, he said he wasn't concerned that world record-holder Ivory Crockett had to scratch at the last minute.
"I'd rather run electronic time than hand time anytime," Preston said. "It's about two-tenths of a second slower than clocking by hand. You have to consider you lose a tenth of a second punching the watch on hand time. That's two-tenths total."
In the 200, Presston had fewer problems. He easily ran away from the field, beating Ray Pryor of Colorado and former KU player James Shipley, than .5 of a second, with a 20.22 clocking.
Preston has already qualified for the Olympic Trials in the 100. He listed only Steve Williams as his tough competition, and he brought high school sensation Houston McEary.
"I feel very good about my chances," he said. "Right now, Williams is the only one who worries me, and I got second to him at my freshman year. I know I can get him."
Preston's biggest concern in the 100 was the start. First, the runners heard the click of a camera shutter and several jumped. Then Clive Sands of Iowa state, the runner-up to Crockett last year, was disqualified for a false start.
"There was too much politicizing." Preston said, and somebody didn't want to.
"I ONLY WORRY ABOUT what I have to do." Preston said.
PRESTON HAS ALREADY run what he calls "the fastest time that's accurate in the United States" in the 100-meters with a 10.07 clocking at Texas. The distinction was that Preston's time was recorded electronically rather than by hand.
"If you consider that and consider the fact that everybody's running 9.9 on hand time and I'm running almost 10.0 on electronic, I'm the fastest. Right?"
KANSAS
3 RELAYS
Cromwell seeks a relays circuit sweep this weekend
Pair declared ineligible
KU sprinters Cliff Wiley and Kevin Newell were declared ineligible for competition for the remainder of the season after the NCAA denied their appeals Friday.
Wiley and Newell, two mainstays of the Jayhawk's potent sprint corps, were found in violation of a regulation limiting the use of financial aid allowed to student athletes.
Both sprinters had received athletic scholarships and government grants that exceeded what NCAA calls the "commonly accepted educational expense"—$2,765. The government grants, called Basic Education Opportunity Grants (BEOG), are awarded not on the basis of athletic ability, but on a need, according to government policy.
"The BEGO is designed for college students who are in the name financial assistance."
"IFEEL REALLY BAD about the whole thing," coach Bob Timmons said. "I see the NCAA's point of view, the athletes' point of view and the government's point of view. I understand all those things, but I still feel the NCAA is wrong."
The two sprinkers had been ineligible for competition this season while awaiting the start of a new season.
Wiley, a sophomore All-American, said,
"We were still trying to get to run, but the door
opened. I realized that it was impossible."
"I'M NOT READY TO Hang up the spikes yet. I'll be running somehow next year, maybe here, may be somewhere else. At this moment, I'm still planning to come back here."
Newell, one of the nation's most sought-after high school sprinter's last year, said he
"I really haven't made up my mind yet but I'm leaning toward leaving." Newell said. "I don't want to say yet because I might change my mind. I've been rather confused."
Newell, who competed with a European touring team last year, said he might transfer to a school closer to his home in Chicago.
Tuesday, April 20.1976
S
Hamilton's jump defies training
By ALLEN QUAKENBUSH
[Image of a basketball player running with joy, surrounded by fans].
Sports Editor
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Theo Hammart has been busy this spring. So busy, in fact, that he hasn't had as much time as he would like to train for the Olympics.
Former KU long jumper Theo Hamilton reacts after 26-1/4 leap
But you never would have known that from watching Hamilton long jump Saturday at the Kansas RELays. In his first major competition of the year, Hamilton won the men's swimming exhibition. His mark was easily better than winner Kevin Lean's leap of 24 $^3/4$.
"I felt good on my jumps," Hamilton said. "The board was very sick and I just decided to stop rather than risk injury when I was pretty happy with what I had done."
HAMILTON MIGHT HAVE done better still, but he quit jumping after two tries. On his second try, he leaped 28-4, but scratchedouse his foot was barely beyond the edge.
Hamilton just hasn't had a chance to jump much in competition this year. Many meets, including the Drake Relays next winter, have having competition in the long jump.
"I'S ATTBOUT TIME I jumped in a meet," Hamilton said after the competition.
"I've been training pretty good lately, lifting weights and running."
"I don't feel like I need too many jumps to get going. All I need right now is some MMA."
Before Saturday, Hamilton's only other competition this year was at the Emporia Relays where he jumped exhibition. He had been told that admitted he wasn't giving 100 per cent.
"I WAS MAINLY CONCERNED with my technique and approach there," he said.
But there might have been other things on Hamilton's mind as well. He is a graduate assistant coach for this year's KU track team, and he'll be tracking time coaching the women on the team.
"You have to ask them," Hamilton said with a smile when asked whether he was a good coach. "I don't want to pat myself on the back.
"It has helped me a lot, though. It's given me good experience."
"Now, since we have a new coach, I'm starting to get it back together," Hamilton said.
gold medalist Randy Williams and former teammate Danny Seay, but neither won.
HAMILTON'S BIGGEST concern right now is his condition. He just isn't where he wants to be. But he's also convinced that it's only a matter of work before he will be.
Howell doubles in his 'world championships'
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
Through the mist and the dampness of the alstirraining of the Kansas Helps, you could see.
There was Rick Wohlhuber shattering Jim Ryan's Relays record in the 1,500-meter run. There was KU's Nolan Cromwell overcoming fatigue to notch his second intermediate hurdle victory on the Midwest Relays circuit.
There was Arkansas' intense, gritty Nail O'Shaughnessy, holding off Kansas State's Jeff Schenmel in two stirring stretch runs in the four-mile and distance medley relays.
AND THEN THERE WAS a balding, 41-year-old elementary school teacher named Jan Howell, sprinting to wins in the Masters 880 and mile runs.
But those two races—the Masters 880 and mile runs—were as important to Howell as the Summer Olympics are to the Cromwells and the O'Shaughnessy.
To most of the 7,000 hardy Relays fans, the races preceding the 5,000-meter run and the open 400-meter dash on Saturday were merely filler, two chances for the officials and timers to take a break from the heady competition.
"I CLOUDF GO TO WICHITA (where a Masters meet is run annually) or the National Masters Championship, but this is the race of the year for me," Howell said after defending his 880 title of last year. "This is the World Championships."
Howell, a former Kansas miler who now teaches grade school physical education in the small town of Idaho Springs, Colo., led from the start in both his races Saturday. He won with times of 2:04 in the half mile and 4:37 on the mile.
In doing so, he defended the double he won last year.
"LAST YEAR WAS THE first time I ran the 800. That (the victory) was a fantastic thrill," he said. "I feel I've gotten more than I deserved."
Jan Jerome Howell isn't used to such glory. When he ran for the Jayhawks between 1853 and 1957, he was the perennial runner-up.
"I was always an also-ran," he recalled, "i ran 4:10 (for the mile) in the Central Waltersians in 1956. I was second to Jerome Wolters, who later made the U.S. Olympic team.
"My big claim to fame was a seventh in the NCAA cross-country meet. In 1968 I finally got my All-America certificate. When they began to give All-Americans for finishing in the top 10, they gave them out retroactively."
THESE DAYS, HOWEVER, Howell is a champion. He first ran in Masters competition in 1970, when Jim Herbstherger challenged him. She lost by himself, 35 years of age and older.
"TIVE RUN IN GRECEE, Scotland, Spain and London," he said. "When I ran with a running club in Stuttgart (Germany) they called me 'Yau Hovell.'"
"I was 35 then," Howell said. "and I've run here ever since. Last year they charged it (minimum age) to 40, so I became eligible for that group then."
Howell didt'r resume running at 35 after a break from track. He said he'd been jogging ever since leaving KU, never missing a training session. He told an overseas dependents school in Germany,
When Howell and' his wife, Susan,
returned from Germany, they took up
residence in Colorado's Loveland basin,
where he began working in the ski industry.
He but left after two years, saying, "It was worse pau than school teaching,"
NOW HOWELL TEACHES youngsters how to stay in shape. He teaches them by our teacher.
"I love to run, and I love to get good times. But I love to meet my friends, too. I can enjoy my wins, but I wouldn't mind the others winning sometimes."
"I have double feelings," said Howell,
*who competes for the Colorado Club,*
Club.
University Daily Kansai
Then the tall father of three explained,
if you've been somewhere you liked, you
knew it.
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Tuesday, April 20, 1976
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843-9800 Memberships available
Leading the way were spinner Sheila Cainne and hurdler Sharl Lanter, both women.
Lee was held out because of a muscle cramp, and Russell is suffering from a mild knee injury, Pepin said. Both may return to eight championships May at Aiton. Iowa.
Pepin said, "Right now she's a better intermediate hurdler. I think she's going to be very, very good before she's done."
Calmese placed third in a tough 100-meter dash field Saturday, turning in a wind-aided 18.84. On Friday she anchored KU's run to 56.29 and set a record for a 49.81 clocking behind K-State's 47.58.
They didn't win any events, but a group of KU women track athletes, mostly freshman, turned in some impressive performances in the Kansas Relays this weekend.
Later, running hurdles for the first time, year, qualified for the AIAW national training course.
Adrian Mitchell, a basketball player just out for track, was picked fifth in the team to receive. He took 19th.
"It was a good performance for her," he said. "This is the first year she's been out for track. She's only jumped in one other meet. I think she can jump over 18 feet."
However, coach Gary Pepin noted the absence of sprinters Nannette Lee and Kirsten Larson and said that "of our fastest runners were the two." We would have won if they had run."
The next afternoon, Lanter took fifth with the time of 15.02.
KU women do well at Relays
Sputter patter Jiddle missed her best throw by a foot and a-half, but her 4-54 loss was forward for third on Saturday. Former KU splitter Mary Jacobson took with second with 49%
Connie Lane, a sophomore, set her personal record in the preliminaries of the 100-meter hurdles Friday by running a 15.6. She was also a member of the second-place 440-yard relay team and the mule relay squad, which failed to place in the finals.
Nowcut that out!
SIZZLER
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Campus Attractions for Campus Veterans
Picnic—April 25—1-5 p.m.
Cost $1.00 which includes food (hamburger, hot dogs, chips, etc.) and all the Miller Beer you can drink. Call 864-4478 for info.
Employment—Roy Cockerham of the Employment Security Division will be on campus every Wednesday afternoon from 1:30-5:00 to help insure that veterans receive the priority in Job Placement Assistance and that they are entitled to by law. He'll be in room 101, Kansas Union.
K.U.
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and so does our exciting selection of bright and fashionable spring sun dresses. Colorful spring stripes and prints and solids in cotton blends and gauze fabrics that you'll find to be really different and fun. Come in and brighten up your days.
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PETER WATKINS FILM FESTIVAL
APRIL 8-21 TWO WEEKS OF FANTASY/DOCUMENTARY AND PETER WATKINS
APRIL 8. PUNISHMENT BARK
WODHOLLUP ALSTONIUM 7:30 PM
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THIS A BAR MADE IN A CORNER STANDING
10
Tuesday, April 20, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU closes spring unimpressively
Since the first day of spring practice on March 21, the University of Kansas football team has been counting down the number of remaining practices.
Now there is one, and plans are already being made on how team members will spend the rest of their lazy spring afternoons.
"When this is over, I'm grabbing my fishing pole and my girl and I'm going to the lake to catch a few fish," defensive tackle Dillon Sweeney said. "Spring Game: nailed at Haskell Stadium."
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
76 17
"IT'S KIND OF really just a bunch of fun at the end of spring ball," quarterback Scott McMichael said. "We're trying to win, winning, of course, but it's pretty much fun."
That seemed to be the prevalent attitude among the players. Sure, the game was about skill and control, but the laughing and joking on the sidelines indicated indication of how the players felt about the game.
The game might have been fun, but the Jayhawks were hardly impressive. There were an incredible 15 lost luffets, two pass attempts and a whopping 186 yards in penalties.
The Blues took advantage of most of the night, defeating the Whites, 35-14, in the night.
Defensive tackle Mike Butler closes in as McMichael looks downfield
"We have two more practice" RU head coach Bud Moore said after the game. "And I'm glad we do. I hope we can correct some of the glaring mistakes."
After the Whites took a 6-10 lead in the first quarter on a 23-yard touchdown run by Bill Schoene. The Rangers won, 84-79.
IN ONE STRETCH OF the second quarter, the Whitens fumbled on five straight possessions. The Blues converted three of four touchdowns to take a 204 lead at the half.
"We've fumiled some in practice, but nothing like this." Moore said.
The score could've been worse, but the
pain was driven by blunted driving by
palestine—13Kyards worth of pain.
"They (the officials) called it a lot closer
said. With two teams they play against each other every time in practice, it's pretty unlikely anybody will win.
Both McMichael and running back Skip Sharp got of a lot attention this spring while Nolan Cromwell and Laverne Smith were commeting for KU's track team.
Sharp was impressive Friday, gaining 125
By Allen Quakenbusb Sports Editor
in the controlled scrimmages," Moore said. "It turns out game like that to get their teammates to score."
arcMichael attributed some of the problems to the fact that each team had a pretty good idea of what the other one was going to do.
"WE JUST HAVE to run basic things," he
WHITE
First downs 11
Running yardage 97-255
Footing 16
Return yardage 108
Pushes 13.0-0
Punches 3.32-5
Pumpees load 10
Vulcanized footings 10
Total 74
PUBLIC DIRECTOR
SCORE BY QUARTERS
WHITE 0 6 9 8 14
DYELE 10 30 15 20
SCORING SUMMARY
BLUE- Lishen 15 run (Ford kick)
WHITE- Shores 2 pass (Johnson run)
INVIDUAL
WITNESS: compiled 25 run apple failed
WITNESS: compiled 25 run bacon
INDIVIDUAL Rushing
WHITTLE-Competed 74. Vowels 27-75, Width 32-44,
Alice 22-28, John 6-15, Wright 41-22, G.Later 9-3.
G.Later
**WHITTET:** Cambridge 7, O'Brien 10, Wheeler 9, Wilkey 8,
Hill 6. **WHITTET:** Cambridge 7, O'Brien 10, Wheeter 9, Wilkey 8,
Hill 6. **WHITTET:** Wilkey 8, O'Brien 10, Wheeler 9, Wilkey 8,
Hill 6. **WHITTET:** Wilkey 8, O'Brien 10, Wilkey 8, Hill 6.
**ALLIANCE:** 11, Romney 14, Banks 16, Banks 6, Kjeldsen 6,
Kjeldsen 6. **ALLIANCE:** 11, Romney 14, Banks 16, Banks 6,
Kjeldsen 6.
WHITE - Vombat 1-50, 121-126, Lake 4-60, 2-5
WHITE - Vombat 1-50, 121-126, Lake 4-60, 2-5
WHITE - Forderer 7-69, Book 4-133, Wiley 1-112
WHITE - Forderer 7-69, Book 4-133, Wiley 1-112
Punting
WHITE—Sobek 2-40.0, Stewart 1-25.0
BLUE—Ford 1-27.0
yards on 11 carries, despite playing little in
the first half. The end of 18 yards by the
begin of the first half
"I had a lot of fun in the first half." Sharp said. "I think I did all right. I was pretty good."
McMichael was as pleased. He completed 5 of 10 passes for 42 yards, but had two picked off by Eric Franklin. He carried three of our lines - Net yardage: minus one yard.
"I CAME OUT OF the spring with a lot of playing time," McMichael said. "It gave me a lot of time to get the wishbone down and to get my timing down.
"But I wisted my knee and was out for a while. That threw my timing off, and I
Mark Vicendese quarterbacked the White team most of the game. He completed 9 of 15 passes for 121 yards, and added an ad-hoc 60-yard pass in his second beamed dropped for biros several times.
Quarterback Mark Lissak played for both teams. Totals for his performance on both teams were 5 of 10 passes completed for 61 vards and two touchdowns.
The secondary showed why Bud Moore is worried about it Friday. Morgan singled up junior college transfer Wayne Ricks for praise, but found no one else to brave about.
"I saw a lot of glaring errors in the secondary," Moore said.
Kansas reportedly has signed three high school basketball players to letters of invitation.
The three players are guards Hassan Houston of St. Louis and John Douglas of Caliburn Junior College, Decatur, Ala., and forward Mac Stallcup of Tulsa.
Douglas, the younger brother of Alabama All-America center Leon Douglas, averaged 18 points a game at Calhoun Junior College.
Houston was player of the year in the metropolitan St. Louis area. He averaged 31
Stallcup, 6-7, averaged 15.2 points while leading Tulsa Edison High School to a second-place finish in the Oklahoma state tournament.
points a game this season at University City High School.
CANADA CANOE TRIP
Athletic
SUA Wilderness Activities
SUA
8 Days
May 25-June 1
Cost: $134⁰⁰
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-Group leaders
Includes:
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Deadline for signups is May 7 at 5:00 p.m.
SIGN UP NOW-ONLY 10 SPACES
Stop by SUA Office or Phone 864-3477
BEAT THE RUSH!
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Admission: FREE
Minority Affairs Film Series
Black President Pro-Tem of U.S. Senate becomes President of U.S. in the midst of a crisis
Title THE MAN
Starring: James Earl Jones
Tuesday, April 20
7:30 p.m.
Room 3, Bailey
More Information Call 864-4353
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Kansas Jayhawk Radio
Partially Funded by Student Activity Fees
Tuesday, April 20, 1976
11
KU plays Washburn today
By KELLY SCOTT
Sports Writer
The University of Kansas baseball team got some good news this weekend when it learned that Randy Trout would return as desinated hitter by the end of next week.
Earlier reports had indicated that Trout would be lost for the remainder of the baseball season because of an inactivation of the sac surrounding his heart.
David Hiebert, the Lawrence physician who is treating Trout for what he called a "chest condition," said Trout would be released from Watkins Hospital later this month and would be back on the active raster in time for the April 30-May 1 Kansas State series.
"That sure is good news for us," Flory Tulek, KU baseball coach, said yesterday.
But the Jayhawks lost a doubleheader to the K-Site Wildcats in Manhattan last week, and they are back with a doubleheader, a third scheduled game was canceled because the field in Manhattan
was too wet for play either Saturday or Sunday.
Roger Stagle proved he was indeed vince-
loring, losing his first start (he's now 5-1) and
bringing his ERA to 1.00. Slager gave up
eight walks and eight hits in the first game.
Ron Allinder was the loser in the second
game.
The Jayhawks meet Washburn at 2 p.m. today in a doubleheader at Quailfield. Temple said Brian Rhodes, 3-2 on the season, and Mike Love, 2-4, would start the games, but he said he planned to use several pitchers in the two games.
KU beat Washburn twice last week, 11-3 and 8-3.
Temple has also made some line-up changes. He said he hadn't decided yet who to substitute for Trout at designated hitter. The two players were both used against K-State this week.
Kom Trittl will move from left field to third base; Monty Hobb will move from center to left; and Vincen Monson will break into the starting lineup in center.
BOSTON (AP)—Jack Fultz, a 27-year-old Georgetown University senior from Arlington, Va., overcame blistering heat and charged from behind for a hard-earned victory yesterday in the 80th Boston Marathon.
Fultz wins Boston race
Overlooked by many experts in the whopping field of 1,988 starters, Fultz took the lead with about eight miles to go and pulled away, covering the 26-mile, 385-yard course from Hopkinton to Boston with a 2:20.19 clocking.
Mario Cuevas of Mexico was second with 2:21.13, followed by Jose de Jesu of Puerto Rico with 2:22.10 and prerace favorite Jack Foster of New Zealand in 2:22.30.
The course record of 2:09.55, set by Boston's Bill Rodgers last year, was never threatened because of extreme heat at the noon start.
One unofficial thermometer in the sun
registered 116 degrees outside Hopkinton
State Park.
cubes-and an occasional housing-from spectators along the route, appeared to get stronger as the weather cooled nearing Boston.
Fultz, graciously accepting water and ice
The mustachioed distance runner, who won the North Carolina Track Club marathon, came off of the pace after Richard Mabuzu of Swaziland and Radames Vega of Mexico had dueled for the lead.
Fultz trailed Mabusa by just 18 seconds from the fourth checkpoint, 6 miles from the start.
University Daily Kansan
Suddenly Fultz bolted to the front as Mabuza tired. He heading into the first of four hills, Fultz gradually widened his lead. He took the hills in easy fashion, including famed Heartbreak which has doomed so many runners in the past.
Then he got a second wind and churned to the finish line.
"The heat affected me; it slowed me to walk, and I was being as much as I could without getting tired."
Norm Cook, the leading scorer and rebounder for KU's basketball team and a member of the All-Big Eight first team, has scored 134 points in Basketball Association hardship draft.
Cook, a 6-9, 210-pound junior who averaged 14.8 points and 7.9 rebounds a game, said he applied to help out his family's financial situation.
Cook applies for hardship
"My family needs it," Cook said. "I want to go home at home. My mother works all day and they care."
"We're not going to say a thing until it's all over," Miranda said. "I have no concern."
Mim Miranda, KU assistant basketball coach, didn't want to talk about the athlete.
Cook said he thought the coaches understood why he applied for the draft.
"They want me to do what's in my best interests," Cook said. "They told me they wanted me to work."
There is still the possibility that Cook might withdraw his name from the June 8 NBA draft. It he does withdraw his name, he'll have to do it by June 5.
"It's just like I'm putting it in (the list) to check things out," Cook said. "I don't know for sure what I'm going to do. I just want to see what happens."
Cook said he wanted to play in the Olympics this summer. Last summer he played for the United States International Gold Cup team.
Later in the fall he was a member of the UA team that won an NBA championship at the Pan Am Games in Antigua, Guatemala.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Cook, who played for KU assistant coach Duncan Real at Lincoln, III., High School, was voted the Big Eight's freshman of the year two years ago.
Last year, Cook, the Jayhawks' captain in the past season, slumped slightly off his rookie year in the year as the team's No. 3 score with 10 points. No. 1 rebounder with 8.2 boards a game.
Accommodations, food, services and employment
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SO HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF NEW MOTOR-
TORCHS. 1811 W. 6h, 4d3-3333
1811 W. 6h, 4d3-3333
Maranzit 3 W-3 way speakers, Maranzit 6
watt amps with cabinet, 814-257-288 6-422
Puppies for sale 1/4 timber wolf, 3/4 malnutric.
$200. $41-4339 after 6.
4-22
Radio asta Plock flida久者 Sona Cock Radio Basin
Radio asta Plock flida久者 Sona Cock Radio Basin
Radio asta Plock flida久者 Sona Cock Radio Basin
Portable asta Plock flida久者 Sona Cock Radio Basin
Used radial tires reduced. Check our basement for largest assortment anywhere! Many excellent matched pairs. Many Michein in stock- Stock Michein only. Great value! Look inside lot behind Woolworths. 4-22
STEREO - AM-FM stereo receiver, w 8 track tape
cables. AM/FM stereo car stereo. Has both
that copied stereo. GBC1500 $99. Call 612-345-1070.
B.C.
1978
armadillo bead co
MACRAME BEADS large selection of sizes & prices Mon.-Sat. 10:5-30
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Sat. 10:5:30
NOW YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the
GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for
it!
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
BULL PARK, INC.
Box 3422-U
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Ball Park Baseball
BALL PARK INC
CLOSE OUT! Entire stock of Michelin XAS
(15, 17-18, and 18-19). 175, 174-18, and 183-18. Murray, limited stock.
Ray Stoneback's 929 Mau. (Come brity city,
wear jacket inside Woolworth's for the
air. )
$100. TC-352D1 reel to reel with eight 't' tapes
$140, Jef. 864-6800.
4-22
Honda CL 30, CL 190 run, needs some work $160.
Audi R8 with rear-drive racing bike, Reynolds
90 frame, 45mm wheels.
Compuster console. Fiber 26 with BSR receipts or keypad. Fisher 26 with BSR receipts or keypad. Speakers 179 or 84-252-721. 4-21.
12X08 Trailer house, quiet, in-town location.
Call 841-4387 4:23
73 VW Super Beetle, 4-speed AM, radio rear,
driver fronter, excellent condition. Call 845-296-7100.
Super summer machine. 75 Cimatic Italian motor
car with engines miles per gallon. Bright red.
$300 or best offer
I have to leave town. Must sell. Tall 9 Trumph G76
have to spend $400 and make an offer! 842-8571
HELP WANTED
Boy best. 10-speed bicycle. Vista. Good condition.
Boy best. Call 842-8542 after 5.
Distinguished poster-passer-outened worker
The-Wall-Hall, 727 New Hampstead 814-0187
Courtesy of A. B. K.
OVERSEAS JOBS - summer-year round,
S. America, Australia, Aria, etc. Fields, $500-
m. Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free
information - Write. Job Number:
KA 400, Boxer 849, CA 97407
4-23
10-speed bike. Practically new. $50.
Sears. 842-3399. 4-22
Open, Unique Students Company
needs workers, open to all,
careers, etc. Jobs available now.
Flexible schedule, pay, benefits.
PART TIME-EARN $25 PER WEEK, FOR 3
WEEKS. Earn $100 per week.
1874-1877 BETWEEN 8 & 10 p.m. for PORTE
BELT CARE.
THE LOUNGE
Hole Wanted. Man to drive 2-ton local delivery truck and set up farm machinery for established local implement dealer. Summer employee required by Tractor Co., 1548 E. 12th, Lawrence, 8424-340-5. Tractor Co., 1548 E. 12th, Lawrence, 8424-340-5.
Eight dollars to participate in two one hour meetings or a six-hour meeting in making decisions on helping others. Call 212-468-7095 for details.
LOST AND FOUND
Jobs in concert production and record distribution part-time with new entertainment organization expanding to this area. No experience required. Mail resume to Box 249, Houston, Texas, 77001. M-2-0
Houston, Texas, 77001
Research/systems specialist and computer programmer for the City of Kansas, City, Ms. See chapter 42 in "The Research Process."
Reward~$25 for return of Vol. II. Quantum-
Theory of Atomic Structure, by Blater. Missing
physics office. No questions asked. Return
to Mr. Kasahara III. A Helicta, or contact.
4-20
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank—8th & Mass., and First National Bank—807 West 2nd.
Lost- Rodald Pocket Instantamate 40 in green video.
Connecticut. Also two AAB images.
library book.
Lost: silver glasses in light blue case between Strong and Oliver. Call 864-6771. 4-21
**Round- Ring w- 15 keys at Jayhawk Station**
Round- Ring w- 23 st. Call and Stall, 441-3503 evening
Found: Four key on brass key ring last week in Dyche Lecture Hall. Claim at Museum Shop.
Lot: $1,000 cash. If you can find it, you can
lift it. In literature Hunt class on Serene
803
Found- hooded longleave zip up sweat
Call: 864-2161
4-20
a quiet corner
Found in Fraiser: pack of index cards concerning nature. Call 864-3011, 8-5. 4-20
Lot Brown leather wallet in Strong Hall. Call
Reed at 853-859. 4-20
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Loot: A black wallet somewhere on campus Sat.
April 10: Return. CallEd at 864-2629 4-21
Found: one very pregnant calcea cat at 18 and 4-21
Natalmdr. Fish: Call 642-0388.
Someone dropped some money in the Dailies
Book Store Monday 4/12. Come and identify 4-22
Found one book in 4034 Weese. Identify and claim at English Office, 3113 Weese. 4-22
Tennis racket with cover, near Corbin Hall. Call
842-752-701 to claim
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at the Quick Copy Center. We can make 5 copies of a page in less than an hour in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, $88 Massachusetts. sbitl. 841-4900.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
clocks, television stores. Open daily 12pm.
843-357-377
The Cabinets Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Pullman
for $20. The Cabinets Cafe is located at 180 East
Oak Street, Caldwell, Delaware 19705. For reservation
contact Cadillac at 610-243-3300.
E-mail now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation information and/or transportation
providers. Drive now, pay later.
After 38 years in business, if George doesn't
reach the milestone of being on Mondays, George's Group Shop, 727-450-1262,
will be closed.
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymy. 842-901-100. IF
The Second Annual Student Sculpture Competition
*Don't miss it - entries available*
SUA
Come one…Come all! May Day Festival—a week of education, conversation, discussion and workouts in the Women's Flippers. Music at a Women's Coffeehouse. April 6 plant and pottery. Free Museum visit. May 3 its co-foundation and Commission on the Status of Women. Funded by Student Activity Funds.
INTERESTED IN NO-PRILLS LOW COST JET
INFLIGHTS FOR THE AIRLINES OF the
Pear East? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS have
helping people travel on a budget with maxi-
mum flexibility and minimum hassle for six
weeks. At Flight 146, you can join an
international flight.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1306
10.5-Tues.-Sat.
Insight INTO LIFE
842·4441
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL HALL
15 East 8th 841-7646
10.5 Monday, Saturday
Insight 10.1.1FB
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
FIELDS
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
HILLCREST BILLIARDS RECREATION'S FINEST
RECREATION'S FINEST
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
West of Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
Barry Riley please call me, Chris Lvchv- 441-7022
Harry, I can't wait much longer.
Without Zionists there would be no Zion! 4-21
Friends of the Kahuna's Tahiti night with the
Kahuna's Tahiti Night Club at Kahuna's
4:20. 76. Be among Aloha' Jumbo! The Kahuna's
4:20.
CREATIVE PROBLEM SOLVING WORKSHOP—approach to problem, solving that can help in application. Students will work with them where they want to go. The workshop will involve processes. Anyone working with groups will find personal problem solving. Facilitated by Anne M. Gleeson and Amy B. Plannery at United Institutes Center, 1204 Road
Hypnosis is a state of full relaxation and concentration you can experience it by signing up for the Hypnosis program offered at Fraser Hall. You will be paid five dollars for each session. Richard Rube, Dept. of Physiology, B42-7348.
Thanks Doug
In the morning. And it's the right color.
450
428
Lonely? Need a date for Ivy League? Call Tizieq.
Vivian at Vlad.814-3279. 4-22
RIDES ------ RIDERS
SERVICES OFFERED
Ride needed to Kansas City or KU Med Center. Winnings will charge gas expense. 4-851-421-391
TRAVEL
MATH TUTORING—Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 610, 612, 142, 500, 556, 577. Regular classes or one-time test preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681.
MATH TUTOR with MA in mathematics. Call 841-3708 after 6 p.m.
tt
**THE SKY'S THE LIMIT!** Virtuality any jewelry design possible. Professional (IFDA degree) goldsilverware. Complete stone cutting, wide satin fittings, gold-finish sapphire. Safety guaranteed: 841-3838 or 843-0790. *sf
Trying to sell a musical instrument or sound instrument? At McKinney-Mason, 814-817-6171.
EUROPE
1/2 yearly
least 12mths
all airfare payment required
PMT
free 800-325-4867
Uitlraf Charterers
SOUTH AMERICA - ISRAEL - AFRICA - ASIA
CORPORATE INSTITUTE
Agency Inc. 429 First Avenue, Traffic
Hall, 503-687-1880
TYPING
THEIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is a service that allows you to quickly copy our services in fast and prices are reasonable. We provide these services in multiple locations.
Experienced typetl -term paper Dresses, mules, skirts, pants. Send spelling correction to 843-265, Mrs. Wright.
Typhl editor, IBM Pcilla-cite. Quality work.
Callisty editor, disertations briefs.
Calliphor, 84-921-877.
$-11
Exp. typ: IBM Selectric, term paper, thesis,
textbook. Exp. typ: SPI, writing/spelling co-
pitation. Jean. 841-769-3000
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 5-11
Need an experienced Typos? IBM Selectric II (bibon). Call Maf at 649-273-8500 (bibon). Fax Maf at 649-273-8512.
Professional typing, reasonable, work ethic
professionals, good health
certifications, gaic electric, A.I. Social Science
Expert typing/reasonable rates: Proofreading:
corrections, fast professional services with 20+ years of experience.
Experiential typing HM Selective all kinds of
typing Call: 884-1423 days: 842-9978 eves. JULIE.
SERVICES
Experimented typet will type term papers, flues,heses, and general all typing term in my house. 841-693-9848. 841-693-9848.
Will do typing. Elite files. Term papers ma-
noise. No thesik Proofreading Mrs. Hays.
Give me some more time.
WANTED
**TYFPING**- We have many return customers who want to give us a call. We appreciate your business! Call Linda or Ms.
Wanted: Young couple for late summer job. Please apply, moving business, unmiscellaneous job, August. Champlain N.Y. Salary $100 weekly. Time: Job on Monday from 8 a.m., until 5 p.m. You can work you till Sept. 10. We provide: Travel; transportation; telephone calls, please. Apply in writing and telephone calls, please. Reynard Corf, 1000 Sunset Drive
Wanted: Young people for late summer job (light housekeeping, lawn mowing, miscellaneous work). You must have a Master's degree or plain B.A. N.Y. Salary: $100 weekly. Time: Job could earlier but pieses don't apply unless you own a tenancy and private living quarters. No telephone or internet access. Required are Raymond CEF, 1900 Sunset Drive, 4-21
Residence wanted - for summer. Furnished.
Kitchen apartment near cedar ridge, 872-411-
mile, Call 800-653-6991.
Campground
People with a history of outrining behavior have to be trained. Mechanisms Takes only 15 minutes. Catches up quickly.
Roommate for KUMC, prefer 1st year, non-
median, student. Call: Fulton 4-838.
4-23
2-14" keystone mag mags to fit Plymouth
Call 842-8957
4-22
or two or five roommates for summer-
furnished apt - close to campus-pool. 814-625-3900
Someone to share 2 BRT apt. for AC.AC Someone to share 2 BRT negotiable. Come by 2020 W. 27. Apt.
Two roommates summer and next year. Share dorm room, 14th floor. Math and AP courses. Students. Pooh, Laundry facility. Quire, close to campus. Available 15th must;培生/month, share utilities. Kail, 822-693-6. 4-23
Girl to clean house. 1 day a week, preferably through the summer. Call 843-1900. 4-22
Will pay you $25 if we sign lease on 150 apart-
ment. Will pay you $17 if we move your
Aug. 15, Call Jeff B34-1905
Studious female roommate to share two bedrooms and house work with male students $141
Information, as to fate *whereabouts of large* families from the 1830s and early 1840s in 1869 or 1870. This is not the model now in the U.S. It was constructed about 1875, primarily and primarily by Black Blyd. Please call Andrew Russell, 842-827-1000.
Roommate for summer in K.C. Two bedroom, utilities paid, furnished, pooled, Kill 6481-432-686 Need non-smoking, liberal-minded female roommate for fall and spring. Call 841-6688 after 5.30.
PICKENS AUTO PARTS
25% Off on
all Auto Parts
2601 Iowa 843-1353
Marry Olson and Teri VanGundy Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
Bahai Faith
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent."
Baha'i Club Meeting, April 5, 19
7:30 p.m. Oval Ballroom, Union
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
5 Nights a Week No Cove
NEW MODERN DECOR
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at an upscale restaurant. An atmospheric design for sweet feelings and gentle smiles.
43-9404
HIDEOUT
Sandwiches — Pizza
Tool — American Shuffleboard
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
1. The following figures show the gross profit and net income for three years.
New Memberships Available
Private & Class Club
- 9 DAYS
- -7 DAYS-
Waveen Pool-owner
12
Tuesday, April 20, 1976
University Daily Kansan
FALLEY'S
Falley's Beef of Tomorrow Fluff Pack Ground Beef 3 to 5 pound avg. 75c
图
FALLEY'S
2525 IOWA
NEXT DOOR TO GIBSON'S
OPEN 7 a.m.-MIDNIGHT—7 DAYS
PRICES GOOD TUESDAY THRU SUNDAY
APRIL 20-APRIL 25
We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities
Falley's Beef of Tomorrow Fluff Pack
Ground Beef 3 to 5 pound avg. 75¢
Rodeo Brand
All Meat Wieners 12 oz. 69¢
Fresh—Whole Fryers lb. 49¢
Falley’s Own Sausage lb. 89¢
Rodeo Sliced Bacon lb. $149
Six Varieties
Ohse Luncheon Meats 6 oz. 45¢
Van De Kamp Fish Fillets 24 oz. pkg. $199
Rodeo Brand All Meat Bologna lb. 99¢
Armour Columbia Bacon 12 oz. each 79¢
Food King Cut Green Beans ... 15½ oz. 5 for $1
Food King Peas ... 17 oz. 4 for $1
Food King Corn ... 16 oz. 4 for $1
Food King Plums ... 29 oz. 49¢
Food King Fruit Tidbits ... 29 oz. 59¢
Food King Irregular Sliced Peaches ... 29 oz. 39¢
Old Milwaukee Beer
6 pack 12 oz. bottles $109
Always Good Charcoal
10 pound bag 89¢
Musselman Apple Sauce
4 16 oz. cans $1
Food King Pears
29 oz. 49¢
Franco-American Spaghetti ... 15 oz. 4 for $1
Chef Boy-Ar-Dee Spaghetti & Meatballs 15 oz. 2 for 89¢
Aunt Jemima Pancake Mix ... 40 oz. 83¢
Aunt Jane’s Relishes ... 10 oz. 3 for $1
Contadina Whole Tomatoes ... 14½ oz. 4 for $1
Contadina Tomato Sauce ... 8 oz. 7 for $1
Dow Oven Cleaner ... 16 oz. 99¢
All-Detergent ... 49 oz. 99¢
Our Own Brand Ice Cream
½ gallon 85¢
Welch Grape Jelly
16 oz. 59¢
Jif Crunchy Peanut Butter
18 oz. 89¢
Falley Potato Chips
9 oz. bag 59¢
Northern Facial Tissue ... 200 ct. 39¢
Delsey Bathroom Tissue ... 4 roll pkg. 69¢
Hi-Dry Paper Towels ... jumbo roll 39¢
Bondware Paper Plates ... 100 ct. $109
Shurfine Pure Cane Sugar ... 5 pounds $109
Gold Medal Flour ... 5 pound bag 79¢
Betty Crocker Layer Cake Mix ... each 49¢
Food King Rice ... 4 pound bag 99¢
Family Size—171 Oz.
Tide $399
Banquet Frozen Pot Pies
4 for $1
Golden Ripe Bananas
2 pounds 39¢
Fresh—California Strawberries quart 89¢
Shurfine Frozen Orange Juice ... 5 cans $1
Frozen Pitcher Pride ... 4 ctns. $1
Lemon Joy Liquid Detergent ... 32 oz. $109
California Carrots ... 2 pound bag 39¢
California Pascal Celery ... 3 for $1
New Crop White Onions ... 4 for $1
Friskies Buffet Cat Food
7 6½ oz. cans $1
Friskies Dry Dog Food
25 pound bag $399
Fresh Romaine—Escarole or Endive
3 bunches $1
Home Grown Radishes or Onions
10¢ bunch
69c
49c
89c
$149
45c
$1.99
99c
4 for $1
79c
Always Good Charcoal
Old Milwaukee Beer 6 pack $1.09 12 oz. bottles Always Good Charcoal 10 pound bag 89c
10 pound bag 89c
Musselman Apple Sauce
Musselman Apple Sauce 4 16 oz. $1 cans
4 16 oz. $1 cans
Food King Pears
Food King
Pears
49c
29 oz.
29 oz. 49c
Our Own Brand
Ice Cream
½ gallon 85c
Welch
Grape Jelly
16 oz. 59c
Jif Crunchy Peanut Butter 18 oz. $89c
18 oz. 89c
Falley
Potato Chips
9 oz.
bag 59c
Banquet Frozen Pot Pies 4 for $1
Family Size—171 Oz.
Tide
$399
Golden Ripe
Bananas
2 pounds 39c
2 pounds 39c
Fresh-California
Strawberries
quart 89c
Friskies Buffet Cat Food 7 6½ oz. cans $1 Friskies Dry Dog Food 25 pound bag $399
Fresh Romaine—Escarole or Endive 3 hunches $1
3 bunches $1
Home Grown
Radishes
or Onions
10c
bunch
FALLEY'S
FALLEY'S
HEINZ 57 SAUCE
79c regular
10 oz. $1.03
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
FALLEY'S
RIGHT GUARD
Doodorant
$1.19
regular
7 oz.
$1.89
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Dixie
BATHROOM regular
REFILL CUPS $1.39
200 ct.
3 oz. $ 1.09
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
WESTBORO
HISTORY
MUSEUM
FALLEY'S
Wishbone
ITALIAN DRESSING
8 oz. 39¢ regular
57c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
Lawn & Garden BPg
regular
$1.15
FALLEY'S
Hefty
LAWN BAGS
5 count 79c
regular
$1.15
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
FALLEY'S
WOOLITE LIQUID
8 oz. 69c regular
97c
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
FALLEY'S regular 57c
Glad Xtra-wide FOOD WRAP 150 ft. 39¢
Limit 1 with coupon good thru April 25 COUPON
FALLEY'S
Instant NESTEA $1.19 regular 3 oz. $1.59
Limit 1 with coupon good thru April 25
COUPON
FALLEY'S
30 ct.
Johnson & Johnson
87 c
ALL WIDE
PLASTIC STRIPS
regular
$1.29
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
BAND-AID
plastic strips
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Nestle
NESTLE'S
SEMI-SWEET MORSELS
3 12 oz. $ 1.89 regular
pkgs.
Limit 3 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
FALLEY'S
Gulf-lite 32 oz.
CHARCOAL LIGHTER 49¢
regular
69¢
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
( )
FALLEY'S
Sweetheart
FABRIC SOFTENER
88¢ regular
$1.19
Limit 1 with coupon
good thru April 25
COUPON
Tree limbs, waste oil to supplement energy plant
By MIKE THIESEN
Forests could be springing up near Lawrence, tree trimming could save the University of Kansas hundreds of dollars and waste oil may soon be put to use in heat buildings at KU.
All of these are being considered as supplementary sources of energy for a proposed traspowered heating and cooling plant at KU. The University also is awaiting the attorney general's approval to begin a feasibility study of the plant in order to research building funds from the Board of Regents.
William P. Smith, dean of the KU School of Engineering, said yesterday that the various sources of energy were being studied to supplement electricity for the war effort during demand periods, usually in the winter months.
THE PROPOSED STEAM plant will be powered by solid wastes which will be burned in the steam turbine. Students will study University to heat its buildings. The proposal for a solid waste steam generating incinerator was made by Smith after he foresaw problems that could arise with shortages and high prices of fossil fuels now available.
Max Lucas, chairman of KU's energy study task force, said that at today's costs, the University could save about $1.2 million a year with Smith's proposal.
Smith said that future shortages and higher
After investigating options, including a coal burning plant, Smith concluded that the trash-filled basin would not be adequate.
prices of fossil fuels likely would force the University to abandon its present steam generating plant.
THE REGENTS HAVE approved a contract with an Omaha firm to begin a feasibility study of Smith's plan to see if it can supply the future heating needs of the University.
Lucas said that the attorney general's office was reviewing the contract to see if it was in the proper form and was meeting with the other parties.
Lucas said that he expected no problems in getting the contract approved and that the attorney general's approval should come soon because the study was supposed to start May 1.
The study, by the Omaha firm of Henningson, Durham and Richardson, should last about four months. In September, the University will submit the report to the Regents to be considered by the state before the University requests initial funding of the plant in the 1978 fiscal budget. Lucas said.
ALTHOUGH THE IDEA of producing energy from trash isn't new and definitely unstretched, Smith said, his proposal for the University is somewhat unique.
"Most of the landmills in operation have been built to relieve sanitary plants. Ours is to satisfy steam pressure."
However, Smith's proposal also would have the
About 90,000 persons live in the proposed collection areas of Douglas, Franklin and Jefferson Counties. The three counties generate an average of about 168 million people, enough to exact the amount needed to meet KU's needs.
advantage that most of the plants do. Smith said he thought the KU plant would help solve the solid waste management problem in the tri-county area that would send its trash to the plant.
BUT SMITH SAID the University had a variable steam demand that peaked in the winter, when the flow of solid waste wasn't as constant as in the summer.
Smith said the existing plant could possibly be used to meet the demand when there wasn't enough trash, but he was still trying to find other options, such as compost and waste oil in the new plant's incinerator.
Smith stressed that the trees and waste oil would only be used to supplement the burning of trash in the incinerator. He said that during the summer, when there was an excess of trash, the plant would begin to burn some of the steam into electricity, which could make up for the cost of tree farms or buying waste oil.
Waste oil is becoming an environmental problem, according to Smith. It is being dumped in sewers and on the ground, causing damage to the environmental system.
SMITT SAID THAT waste oil, removed from automobiles and other internal combustion engines.
could be burned and supply as many BTUs as regular oil. A British Thermal Unit (BTU) is the amount of heat need to raise the temperature of one water degree Fahrenheit.
Although a system of collection will have to be worked out, Smith said, the waste oil will be much cheaper than the fuels used by the present KU plant. At an average cost of five cents a gallon, waste oil costs about $3 per cent of the cents, compared to 70 cents per million BTUs for oil, and $1.75 per million BTUs for oil, he said.
Another supplemental fuel being studied is the burning of wood in the plant's incinerator.
THE UNIVERSITY has received an $89,000 grant from the Ozarks Regional Commission to experiment with the use of fast-growing trees as an alternate fuel supply.
Smith said that 500 acres of fast-growing trees probably could supply the fuel needed by the University during peak periods. Only part of the trees would be used each year so there would always be trees ready to use and new trees to take the place of those used.
Gary Naughton, assistant state forester, is supervising the experiment through Kansas State University's forestry department. KU doesn't have a forestry department.
Smith said KU would use three or four test plots to experiment with different kinds of trees, such as cottonwoods, Siberian elms and black locusts, to see which grew the fastest. Smith said research would
be done to find the optimum density and the best harvest cycle
"I THINK OUR cycle will be about three years," Smith said.
As an example, Smith said, if the University had 500 acres of trees it would cut about 170 acres each year so that it could have a whole new crop every three years.
South said he was looking at three possible sites for the University tree farm. One a 300-400 acre site is on land owned by the City of Lawrence along the river. Another a 120-150 acre downstream from the Clinton Dam on land owned by the Army Corps of Engineers and another site is on land owned by the University at the Sunflower Ordinance Works.
Smith also said the plant could use tree trimmings that were now taken to the landfill.
TREE TRIMMING IN LAWRENCE could supply fuel equivalent to 100,000 gallons of oil each year, he said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Smith said he thought Henningson, Durham and Richardson would find his proposal feasible for the
"The alternative is to build a coal plant," he said. Smith said the cost to construct a coal plant would be about the same as the $10-$12 million system he is proposing. But the savings would be greater with such-powered plant because of the high cost of coal, compared to the "free" garbage that could be burned.
AAAAAHHH
KANSAN
Cigarette tax could rise
By JIM COBB
Consideration is expected today in the Kansas House of Representatives on a bill that would raise the state cigarette tax by one cent a pack.
Funds raised by the increased tax, expected to total about $2.4 million a year, might be used to develop new cancer programs at the KU Medical Center.
The bill was added to the House's calendar by a motion of State Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence. It had previously been stricken from the calendar and had been expected to be sent to a summer interim study committee.
Wednesday, April 21, 1976
Historic buildings open Saturday for charity tour
BUZZI SAID YESTERDAY that today's concern, regardless of whether the House voted to pass or kill the bill, wouldn't change if passing such a tax either next or next.
That committee would have made an intensive study of the bill and would have presented recommendations to the 1977 legislature.
Buzzi, an advocate of the bill, has said in the past that there was considerable opposition to the increased tax, but that there was also a much tax now than earlier in the session.
Buzzi he planned to propose an amendment that would earmark most of the additional tax revenue for cancer research at the Med Center.
"Even if it loses tomorrow," Buzi said, "we won't lose our interim study. Its consideration might even enhance the chances for an interim study."
The bill had such provisions in its original form, but the Med Center sections were struck from the bill by the Senate Ways and Means Committee.
BUZZI SAID THAT the Senate was opposed to earmarking the funds' use and that he would be cautious in writing the amendment.
The bill hasn't been discussed in the full
Administrator at Med Center to new position
"It's a change-of-pace opportunity," Feldmann said. "I'm going to be a part of Med Center affairs on a departmental basis."
By MARION ABARE
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—J. Howard Fieldman has resigned as associate vice chancellor for finance at KU Medical Center to pursue a position in Med Center radiology.
In his new position, Feldmann said, he will be administrative officer for the department.
His resignation becomes effective June 1
when he will begin his new duties.
See page 3
Feldmann said he would leave the administrative arm of the College of Health, and leave his office.
Feldmann holds a masters degree in accounting from the University of Missouri at Columbia and is a certified public accountant.
He has worked in finances for 18 years, where he began as comptroller at the Med Center F.1, 1968. About 10 years ago, he said, he switched to the budgetary end of the company to become associate vice chancellor for finances about one and one-half years ago.
Keith L. Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, couldn't be reached for comment. No successor to Feldmann has been named.
House before today, Buzzi said. Although he
im not opposed to sending the proposal to
the study committee, he said, he preferred
immediate passage.
"We need to be getting the money, we need to be saving lives and building a great cancer research program here in Kansas," Buzi said.
Robert B. Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said he was in favor of labeling the funds for the Med Center's $27 million investment in sedication would be given to the bill today.
"THERE IS SO much that needs to be
done in cancer research and we have some very good people here to do that work," he said. "We're all ready to take advantage of this."
Buzzi said that if the bill passed, about 90 per cent of additional revenues might be given to the Med Center. The bill doesn't pass, Buzzi said, he hopes it will go to a summer study committee and pass next year in the legislature.
Commission debates Teamsters' contract
Kugel said he would be "delighted" if the measure passed.
"I sincerely hope we'll be able to crash it through," he said.
By JANET SCHMIDT Staff Writers
Paying fair wages and providing good working conditions for public employees without negotiating a labor union contract in the night by the Lawrence City Commission.
Solving grievances of city workers was included on a list of projects the commission said it intended to complete during the year. The commission also;
-Approved a resolution to appropriate land in a park and new baseball diamonds.
Signed the Bicentennial Wagon Train
Pirmature Scroll presented by the
[Bicentennial Wagon Train]
- Delayed action on the authorizing of stop signs at 15th and Barker-Connecticut highways.
Mayor Fred Pence said that he agreed and that the commission had made every effort to find solutions that were satisfactory to the workers.
CITY MANAGER Buford Watson formally announced to the commission that he had received a letter from Truck Driver Local Union (Teamsters) No. 968 in Topeka stating that Lawrence public employees had affiliated with the Teamsters Union. Emily Water, writer, water, parks and recreation departments affiliated last week with the union.
"There must be some middle ground between having the Teamsmasters and saying it is a bad thing."
About possible unionization, Commission Barkley Barkley said, "I would like to believe that our emphasis should remain on problem solving and not on recognition.
Commissioner Carl Mibke said he was in favor of recognizing a local union of employees but that he wouldn't support the Teamsters.
"They said recognition wasn't even an issue, Pence said. "It's all a bunge of stuff."
"I DON'T THINK that recognition of a local group is a bad thing or that negotiation is an expensive task."
"I think we've made a good start on it, we should continue our efforts for paying fair wages and providing good working conditions."
The city had appraised the land several years ago and made an offer to the owner of the property. He refused the offer because it cost more than what he wanted to sell it for. Walson said.
Commissioner Donald Binns said recognizing a local union was no longer an option.
THE COMMISSION also authorized condemnation of private property on Lyon St. in North Lawrence to appropriate the land for use as a city park.
Binns said he would approve condemnation only if an effort were made to
talk to the owner and make another offer on the property.
The commission voted 6-9 to accept the resolution of condemnation with Binsn
The city plans to build new baseball diamonds in the park.
THE COMMISSION agreed to Bimn's recommendation that a study be made of the need for stop signs at 15th and Barker, Connecticut, 19th and Barker, and a continuing enforcemental authorizing the installation of the stop signs was presented to the commission.
"Every other city in the country is making an effort to keep the traffic flowing and here we are erecting stop signs everywhere to stoll it." Bims said.
THE BICENTENNIAL Wagon Train Pilgrimage Scroll was presented to the commissioners for signing by Clence Hills of the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission.
New editors are selected
Jim Bates, Great Bend senior, will be editor of the summer Kansas. Carol Stallard, Onaga junior, will be summer business manager.
Debbie Gump, Oksaloa senior, was selected yesterday by the Kansas Board to be editor of the fall Kansan. She is also the vice president, was sctected fall business manager.
BANKS
Kala Mays Stroup's internship for Chancellor Archie R. Dykes ends June 1
By DEBIMORROW
Internship rewarding for Stroup
Staff Writer
Kala Mays Stroup is concluding her year as an intern for Cancellor Archie R. Dykes, a year that she says has been "unique and valuable."
At the same time, Stroup said yesterday,
she was looking forward to returning to her
duties as dean of women when the intern-
ship ends June 1.
"I think I'll do a better job in the dean of women's office," she said, "because now I understand the University administration process better."
Stroup, an American Council on Education (ACE) Fellow in Academic Administration, also has worked in the past [del] Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
SHE HAS WORKED under with Dyken and Shankel under the "mentor" system to develop the tech.
everywhere with them," attending
happening with decisions and
solving problems.
Throughout the year, Stroup said she had participated on many committees, met with the Board of Regents, chaired KU's Parent's Day, done research for Dykes and Shankel and followed the budget process through every stage.
"The budget is a year-long process," she said, and "you have to justify needs much earlier."
She said most people working with the budget were reasonable and tried to unedict it.
"I HAVEN'T BEEN a passive member of the administration." Stroup said. "Dykes and Shankel have made it possible for me to participate as a regular member."
"I really couldn't list all that I've done. They (Lyries and Shankle) allowed me to do it," she said.
Social Welfare seeks new dean
Rv.JERRY SEIR
Staff Writer
The search for a new dean for the School of Social Welfare will begin today, when the school's faculty nominates members for a search committee.
The search committee will screen possible replacements for Theodore Ernst, who has resigned the dean's post effective to begin full-time teaching and research.
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, met yesterday with the school's faculty to discuss the search procedure.
Calgaard said after the meeting that the search committee would make an intensive effort in its first weeks of existence to decide whether the search should be an internal one limited to candidates from KU, and whether candidates would be considered for the job.
The committee will spend a few weeks
discussing outside candidates. Calgaard said he would then consult with the committee to decide whether the remainder of the search would be internal or external.
"I think if we decide to conduct an internal search, we can make the appointment of a new dean by the end of the year," Calgaur said.
Calgaard said faculty members expressed a variety of views on the internal versus external search question during experiment.
"I do have preference to name a new dean as soon as possible." Calgard said. "I will do so."
To properly conduct an external search would take longer, he said, and an external search would make it necessary to name an employee to serve until all candidates are considered.
An acting dean will have full power, Calgaird said, and selection of an acting dean wouldn't interfere with the progress of any of the school's programs.
Ernst said last night the search committee would consist of five or six School of Law students, three students, one representative from outside the University and one representative from inside the University.
Ernst said he would meet soon with students in the School of Social Welfare to nominate students to serve on the committee.
Calgard will make final selection of a new dean after the search committee has narrowed the choice to three or four cannery firms. A letter of approval by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Faculty of the school will vote for nominees for the faculty seats on the search committee. The faculty's choices will then be submitted to Calgair, who selects the
ticipate in every part of the University I've had an interest in.
It has given me more confidence in my abilities and beliefs. The whole experience
And although Stroup has been the only coman in a predominately male area, she seems to be one of the few.
"I've had no problems here, but there are relatively few women in administrative positions," she said. "It's not that women have to see what they do, or that to seeing women in decision-making roles.
"WE HAVE MANY capable women administrators on this campus. They may not be visible but they are here. History simply has no models for women to follow."
She said that the dean of women's office and the University were coping with the problem by sponsoring women and other minorities in administrative programs.
"These people may not be able to get this experience anywhere else," she said, noting that this was one area she had looked into this nast year.
She said she now had a different view of the dean of women's office and was more comfortable there.
"I have a greater appreciation of the contact that office has with prospective, present and past students," she said. "The students tend to be remembered later on."
IN ADDITION TO her work with KU,
Stroup was the coordinator for federal
program Title III for St. Mary College in
Baltimore and Donnelley College in
Kansas City.
She said that was one of ACE's main purposes for the intern program. She said the program was also to develop leadership qualities.
STROUP WAS ALSO required by ACE to write position and analytical papers on important questions in university ad- ducations. We attend three one-week seminars, she said.
She will attend her last semester in May in Washington, D.C. She has attended graduate school and is a faculty member.
2
Wednesday, April 21.1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
McGill not running again
TOPEKA—House Speaker Duerne McCill, R-Winfield, announced yesterday he wouldn't be a candidate for re-election to the House.
The speaker didn't disclose any future plans but said he hadn't discussed plans with Gov. Robert F. Bennett.
McGill apparently was referring to rumors that Bennett plans to appoint him to some job in his administration.
McGill told the House his decision actually had been made prior to the convening of the 1976 legislature despite the fact he announced early in the session that he was ready.
McGill said he had announced for the third term because he felt it was necessary for relatively harmonious operation of the house this year.
"My friends advised me the division in the House would be didsstrous if it were known that I was a lame duck speaker," McGill said.
Death penalty voted on
TOPEKA- The Kansas Senate tentatively approved with two votes yesterday a new bill to reimpose the death penalty in Kansas.
The measure will come up for a final Senate vote today, when two senators absent yesterday are expected to be present.
Even if the measure passes the Senate, however, it is expected to face amendment or defeat in the House.
The new Senate bill, introduced just before the legislature took an 11-day rest April 9, would reinstate capital punishment in Kansas for all wilful, malicious or criminal offenders.
Amendments introduced
TOPEKA- Three proposed constitutional amendments, one to make the state board of Education appointive rather than elective, were introduced in the Kansas State Legislature last year.
A second proposed amendment would give the legislature more control over the board of Education, and the third would increase the size of the Kansas Board of Education.
McGill said he was proposing the increase in Board of Regents membership to use session to limit the party affiliation of members appointed from a certain position.
The Board of Regents is bipartisan, with a requirement that not more than five of its nine members can be from one political party.
McGill said that when a regent from his area of the state came up for reappointment, the bipartisan nature dictated that the appointee must always be a member.
He said that adding two members would give a better change of rotating party affiliations in relation to geography.
Public assistance fund cut
TOPEKA—A general fund apportionment of nearly $500,000 for public assistance programs was cut yesterday from the umbrius apportionments bill by the House Budget Committee.
But State Press, Wendell Lady, R-Overland Park, said the action would have no impact on programs because the committee replaced the general fund money with their fund.
Lady said receipts in Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services fee funds had exceeded estimates in the current year by $1 million.
"We're just taking half of this and substituting it for the general fund money," Lady said. "And there will still be a healthy carry over in the fee fund."
Cuban attack investigated
WASHINGTON-President Gerald R. Ford's spokesman said yesterday the United States was investigating reported attacks on Cuban vessels in the Caribbean Sea and that action would be taken against anyone under U.S. jurisdiction who was involved.
Presidential Press Secretary Ron Nessen said the investigation was demonstration of U.S. compliance with a 1973 anti-hacking agreement with Cuba, Prime Minister Fidel Castro has threatened to cancel the agreement if any more Cuban vessels are attacked.
The seventh annual Women's Recognition Program, sponsored by the KU Commission on the Status of Women, honored University women for their contributions to the University, the Lawrence community and to other women.
Caryl K. Smith, acting dean of women, delivered the opening address, "A Tradition of Excellence—Women at the University of Kansas."
HIGHLIGHTING the program was the announcement of four new members to the organization. All were honored for their outstanding contributions as models for courses in Chicago generals.
Outstanding student, faculty and staff women at the University of Kansas were honored last night with a program and in the Kansas Rorm of the Kansas Union.
The women honored were Evelyn Hitchcock Alden, Lawrence; Karen R. Keesling, Washington, D.C.; Kala Mays Washington on leave; and Mary Murkington, Topeka.
The outstanding woman teacher chosen for 1976 was Eleanor Duquinco, assistant professor of design, Vivian McCoy was cited as the outstanding woman staff member at the University.
TWO NONTRADITIONAL women students were honored for their outstanding achievements at the University. They were named student and Beth Dillon, Lawrence junior.
Lourdes Gouveia, a graduate student
at the University of Georgia, named the out-
standing woman student.
Women recognized
In separate areas of University activities the following women were awarded for their achievements: academics—Ann Warner, Hutchinson sophomore; athletics—Deborah Laudermilk, Wichita senior; community services—Marge Thompson, Kansas City, Mo., freshman; equal rights and-or equality—Paulina Prairie Village junior; student services—Rosala Postma, Lawrence junior; Denise White, Kan. Kan., junior.
Elaine Green, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student at KU Medical Center, was given a special award for her promotion of women's athletics.
AN OUTSTANDING woman for each child, who is helping the program and Award recipients were.
St. Louis Chi Omega—Stacey Morris, St.
Louis senior; Alpha Delta F-Stephean
Johnson; Gamma Delta—Jacques
Gamma Delta—Janis Jacks, Overland
Park junior; Alpha Phi-Beheera Lymn
Burt; Kirkwood, Mo., Junior—Delta
Cunningham—Patty Ann Mortison, Lawrence
junior;
Chi Omega-Clo Anne Rutter, Prairie Village senior; Corbin-Mary Sue Ruhman, Atchison freshman; Delta Delta-Dlainy Otto. Lawrence junior; Delta-Kris Balloun, Olathe junior; Gamma Phi-Becy-Boky Lee, Lawwood senior;
Student company tackles odd jobs
Hank Mulvihill, Wichita sophomore, David Crawley, Lawrence sophomore, William Collins, Emmapora sophomore, KU student, Charles Williams, Wichita, are
The Kansas Students Co. is an idea turned
action by four University of Kansas nano-
tech researchers.
Three-year-old tabbed chairman for charity walk
KANSAS CITY, Kan—Project Concern's Walk for Mankind, which will benefit the Gene and Barbara Burnt Burnt Center at KU Medical Center, has named a three-year-old burn patient honorary chairman. The walk is Saturday.
Tammy Lester, who lives with her grandmother in Topeka, suffered third-degree burns on her upper arms and the front and back of her trunk when her knee was broken. She had crawled on top of a stove June 2, 1976, according to a Project Concern release.
Jo Freeman, director of the walk in the Greater Kansas City area, said recently that he was designated the burn center as recipient of part of the money the radio station will raise through walking and sponsoring walkers. He said we were shooting for a contribution of $5,000.
Robinson said Tammy would grow and develop during the next 14 years and she would most likely need additional skin grafts and corrective surgery. Tammy returned to the burn center in February for initial corrective surgery and skin grafts.
A patient of Mani M. Mani, clinical director of the burn center, Tammy underwent six-hour surgery and was hospitalized for a month.
David W. Robinson, vice chancellor for clinical affairs and director of the burn center, said the amount received would be used to buy needed instruments, which don't fill in the state's funding, including a microscope, for keeping the lungs clean.
Joe Vaughan, public relations director for the Walk for Mankind, said that anyone who wanted to sponsor or walk a 20-mile route in Johnson County or Missouri April 24 could listen to KREQ-FM 104 or call him at 221-6800, ext. 349, for further details.
To keep the scarring and suffle, he said, Tammaywear a Jost stocking, a type of body stocking, which keeps the skin stretched and under tension. She said she would wear it when without it than with it, even though she her trunk and jeans around her neck and head.
the enterprising young men who have undertaken the business.
Mulvihill, who, along with Williams, originated the idea, said recently that the Kansas Students Co. would do odd jobs of any kind.
He said their work included remodeling Bugsy's and the 7th Spirit, and landscape maintenance for several Lawrence businesses.
"We've chauffered people; we've done the most ridiculous jobs," Mulvihill said.
"It's unbelievable what people can think of."
DONALD ALDERSON, dean of men, said he was familiar with the Kansas Students (c)
Judy Kroger, director of the Consumer Affairs Association, said the CAA hadn't received any complaints about the company.
Mulvihil said people called the company about any type of job they needed done. He said the company had 15 employees and the tools to handle many jobs.
"I heard something about a proposal to shovel snow, but because we never got any snow in the backyard," she said.
"I thought it was an interesting idea,"
Alicia said. "They were hoping to get a
treat."
THE WORK OF THE company is sub-
contracting, he said, and the company either bids on jobs that need workers or does not.
The company recently placed newspaper advertisements and distributed leaflets. According to Mulvihill, some owners need them to maintain their schoolwork conflicts with their jobs.
Mavihill said that because most of the company's owners and employees were students, more people were needed to work. A computer technician would be to be a student to work for the company.
"We'll do work for any person who wants workers." Mulhill said.
"We're running out of time; we're swamped." he said.
WORKERS DON'T HAVE to be skilled, he said, because the owners all have various skills and can show workers whatever they need to know to complete a job.
KAYAKS
Workers are paid a minimum of $2.30 an hour, Mullwill said. The company receives paychecks to the bank in the morning.
Mudvillah said the company could provide jobs for 50 workers, now and through the summer. He said that work had already been lined up for the summer months.
The company took out a $1,000 loan last fall through a local bank, Mulvihill said, using the loan to buy a truck and tools for various jobs.
CANADA CANOE TRIP
- Round trip van transportation
SUA Wilderness Activities
8 Days
May 25-June 1
Cost: $134⁴ᵀ
Includes:
-Meals
Lewis- Janice Harman, Mason City, Iowa sophomore and Vicki Blackburn, Raymond senior; McColum-Ann Loeback, Whitmore县, Iowa, graduate student Natalie-Debbie Gump, Oksaoka students Nelson Amy Uyeki, Overland pink freshman:
Equipment & fees
Deadline for signups is May 7 at 5:00 p.m.
SIGN UP NOW-ONLY 10 SPACES
Stop by SUA Office or Phone 864-3477
G. S.P. Kaina Rhoads, Leaeward freshman; Hashingite Gina Kennedy, Shawnee Mission senior; Kappa Alpha Theta- Rasalos Postal law, Lawrence junior; Kappa Kappa Gamma-Betse Gage, Eudora junior:
Oilmer—Jennie Dieathe, Overland Park,
o sophomore; Beta Phi Bi-Marl伯逊Bison,
Salina junior; SIGMA Kappa-Cheryl
Steelmach, Prairie Village junior; Sellard-
kas, Prairie Village sophomore;
Wakkins-Debra Nematriun junior;
and Pamela Olson, Colby senior.
senior honorary organization, were juniors:
Kris Ballum, Oalte; Wathey Bliss,
Overland Park; William Bradley,
Mary Ann Haugherty; Mary
Ann Daugherty, Pittsburgh; Bingham
Flanagan, Manhattan; Betse Gage, Bornea; Anne Halverhout, Perrill Village:
-Group leaders
Elected to Mortar Board, the University senior honor organization, were honors:
Bradford Max, Overland Park; Kelley McCarthy, Northbrook, III; Kelley Nelson, Pearson City, Mo.; Kathleen Lawrence, Lawrence, Missouri; River; Maribeth Olson, Salina; Karen Osmess, Lawrence; Maureen O'Sullivan, Hutchinson; Linda Pflasterer, Colby; Marya Postabacar, Lawrence; Rosalie Potapac, Sally Ramseyer, Prairie Village;
Nancy Rebey, Lawrence; Deborah Reid, Salina; Elaine Samuel, Emporia; Tracy Spellman, Salina; Annette Stanton, Osage City; Joyce Svoboda, Chapen; Karen Tarsheki; Tedde Tasheff, Wichita; and Harry Wigner, Ludell.
DR. RONALD J. KOEHN Chiropractor
Announces the Opening of His Office for the Practice of Chiropractic at:
SUITE 202
901 KENTUCKY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Office Hours by Appointment
843-4678
We BUY used cars.
John Haddock Used Cars
23rd and Alabama 843-3500
Kaleidoscope
Kites
KITES OF ALL NATIONS
Beautiful and Durable
Now Available at
UNIVERSITY TEXACO
2206 Iowa 842-8455
THE FLESH and the DEVIL
GRETA GARBO and JOHN GILBERT
Wednesday, April 21 at 7:30; 75°
Thursday, April 22 at 7:30; 75'
Thursday, April 22 at 7:30; 75° G-MEN with James Cagney, plus T-MEN with Dennis O'Keefe Friday and Saturday, April 23, 24 at 7:00 & 9:00; '1.00 Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein presented by SUA In Woodruff Auditorium
DAILY HIGHLIGHTS
the ELDRIDGE HOUSE DISCO
MONDAY — Weekend Recovery Night.
Mellow music until midnight followed by boogie.
Wine Specials.
TUESDAY — South of the Border Night
Latin flair and Jose' Quervo beverages at two for one.
Both until midnight.
WEDNESDAY — Ladies and Gents Night (alternating weeks).
$1 cover for your date includes free beer set up.
THURSDAY — Dance lessons, contests, and prizes.
$1 cover
FRIDAY — T.G.I.F.
Reduced beverage prices 4-7 p.m.
FRIDAY & Dance, Drink, and Date.
SATURDAY — Couples $3.00. Singles $2.00.
trance under awning
South side of building
7th & Mass. 8-2 a.m. Monday-Thursd
841-4666 8-3 a.m. Friday & Saturd
After Easter Sale
All Women's Merchandise will be 20% off Wednesday through Saturday
BankAmericard and Master Charge Welcome OPEN LATE THURSDAY NIGHT
HOTEL GARDEN
THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
1420 Crescent Road •Lawrence, Ks.• (913) 843-4633
Wednesday, April 21, 1976
3
New honor society gains ground
By MIKE BELT
Staff Writer
The University of Kansas chapter of the Phi Kappa phi honor society is just two years old, but it's wasting no time establishing itself nationally and locally.
Earlier this month, Kent Stallard, Lester of the University of California and two 20 members in the nation chosen to receive a $3,000 Phi Kappa Phi Graduate Fellowship Award. The money can be used for a variety of projects.
"We were so new and just getting started last year that we didn't even send in any names," Howard Smith, associate dean of engineering and president of the KU chapter, said recently. "I think this is a bellwaite blower in KU's can."
The 20 winners were selected on the basis
of grades and extra curricular activities by a national panel of Phi Kappa Phii members in Ann Arbor, Mich. There were 185 students that nominated students for scholarships.
Stallard said he was pleased and surprised at being chosen for the scholarship. He said, he planned to attend KU's School of Law.
Stallard also received a $100 scholarship from KU Phi Kappa Phi through the James Blackston Memorial Fund. The fund was awarded last year's death of a charter member.
Smith, who founded the local chapter with Nell Salkind, assistant professor of education, admitted that the two had some early attempts getting the chapter recognized.
Smith said only 114 of 299 invitations to last year's first initiation ceremony and 380 of 596 were accepted.
However, at this year's banquet, he said,
174 invitations were accepted. That was nearly all the invitations that were mailed,
he added.
"I think that shows people are finding out just what the Phi Kappaphi is." Smith said. He was a longtime Darwin, assistant professor of civil engineering and the chapter secretary. Darwin, a winner of the Phi Kappaphi Fellowship Award while attending Cornell in 1987, said the chief purpose of the society was to gain some recognition to the best students.
"At a university level," Darwin said, "what you're here for is studying, and an
Tour highlights Lawrence history
Staff Writer
By CHRISTINE TYLER
Many times the history of a time or place can only be experienced through the pages of a book. But area residents will have an opportunity Saturday to view the history of Lawrence through some of its historic buildings and houses.
The tour is a fund-raising project for the organizations.
The tour will be unstructured so persons with tickets may tour the buildings anytime between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tickets will be on sale through Saturday afternoon for $4 at Kahls Museum, 1047 Massachusetts, and Lawrence Arts Center, 8th and Vermont.
The Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum, the Lawrence branch of the American Association of University Women and the Altruza Club, a professional women's service club, are sponsorship buildings, law library buildings and five historic homes.
THE HOUSES ON the tour were selected because they offered a broad range and a cross-section of styles, according to Susan Alderson, coordinator for the tour.
A dispatcher and a secretary of the Lawrence Police Department have been suspended pending disposition of criminal charges that they illegally bought stolen property.
The few students who are selected each year to receive that recognition are subject to heavy scrutiny, according to Carol Rich, the chapter's public relations officer.
John Demby, 18, the dispatcher, and Debra Armann, 20, the secretary, were charged Monday against Court Contract proba-
gment Gene S. Planker, 19, was also charged with the offence. All three reportedly live at 1908
fourth, and all were released on $1,500
dollars.
Armann and Demby were suspended Friday by Police Chief Richard Stanwix who was charged with the crime, which were made after. Flanker . . . arrested for possession of stolen property.
Two employes are suspended by police chief
The person who had allegedly sold the property to John S. Lawrence freshman, turned himself in to the policy Monday. He was charged with felonious theft and released on his own account.
Police think Goff has sold several citizen's band radios that were taken from the Malls TG&Y store where he worked. Police said that they didn't know the exact date of the thefts that they had recovered four or five radios. Not all were stolen, but they were both another person who police think may have been involved no longer lives in the area.
Stanwick said that their jobs wouldn't be filed until further action was taken on the case.
County Attorney David Berkowitz said the cases of Armann and Demby were unrelated to his pending investigation of alleged criminal activity in the police department, but suspension was the result of an internal police department investigation, he said.
honor society gives you recognition for that.
I like to think of it as an extra bonus."
Neither Armarmn nor Demby were commissioned officers on the force. Armnm joined the department on Sept. 11, 1975. Demby joined on Nov. 3, 1975.
Preliminary hearings for Armann, Panker and Dembih have been set for May 5, 2016.
The buildings on the tour were constructed between the 1860s, immediately after Quantrill's Raid, and the 1920s. The tour is designed to stress the diversity of Lawrence architecture, Alderson said yesterday.
Arthur Townsend, director of Watkins Museum, said the tour was designed to make residents aware of the importance of historical preservation so they could help develop Lawrence as a "living historic community."
Worth said the organization's committee officers met two or three times a year to decide criteria and review names of nominees, she said membership was 10 percent and 10 per cent of graduate students and the top 5 per cent of undergraduates.
"Sometimes a museum has to go out beyond its walls," he said. "We can't bring something inside the museum so we must protect it where it stands. These buildings are examples of that kind of nonportable history."
One of the houses on the tour was built by Col. James Blood. He came to Lawrence to find a townite for settlers from the Massachusetts Emigrant Aid Society who came to Kansas to keep it from becoming a slave state.
Another house on the tour, the John Palmer Usher house, 1425 Tennessee, was built in 1872-73 in an Italianate villa style to resemble his former house in the East.
THE BLOOD HOUSE, 1015 Tennessee, was built in an italianate style with a shallow roof, tail and even spaced windows, and intricate arches along the house's front. Nachman Aronszag, professor of art at M.I.T., said which will be open only until 1 p.m. Saturday.
Uther was Secretary of the Interior under Abraham Lincoln. An item of particular interest in the house is the single-piece, a wooden chest given to him by other cabinet members.
The fifth house on the tour is built of stone in a style native to Kansas. There is no known builder, but the house was built simply to accommodate a family, according to Alderson. The house at 92% Indiana and is currently owned by Jim Owens.
The Tisidale house, 647 Tennessee, built in 1881 in a French barnicor style, has been converted into apartments. The house is rich with ornamental iron work, brick chimneys and French gothic bibles. It is currently owned by Mrs. M. N. Penney.
The house is currently owned by the Beta
Theta Pi Fraternity.
THE MOST RECENTLY built house on the tour, at 1135 W. Campus Road, was built by Harry M. Stucker in 1926. It was completed in the winter under a circus tent. The one-story house was quite unusual for the time because its asphalt shingles were lined with wood. And it had a swimming pool in the basement. The house is now owned by Mrs. Stucker.
The four other buildings on the tour are the Plymouth Congregational Church, 925 Vermont; the Douglas County Courthouse; the Old Lawrence City Library, 8th and 10th floors; and the currently the Elizabeth M. Watkins Community Museum, 1047 Massachusetts.
The Douglas County Courthouse, old Lawrence City Library, John P. Ushers office, national bank and the Col. 300th Station all located at the National register of Historic Places.
The buildings are regularly open to the public.
The nonmimes are received from every school in the University, Worth said, with the exception of the KU Medical Center, which has its own honor society.
For those students who join Phi Kappa Phi, Smith said, he thinks there is a possibility that ego plays a large part in getting them where they are.
"A lot of people go to college to get a job, and earn some money when they get out." Smith said. "Sill, there are others who want it," he added. "The material things. They just want to do well."
Smith said many people were surprised that a Phi Kappa Phi Honor Society hadn't been started sooner at KU, especially with the need to train faculty and administrators who were members.
One of them is Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, who was chosen by the society in 1958 while doing graduate work at the University of Tennesse.
Smith said that he and Salkind had to do the leg work to get a society chapter started at KU, including locating people and circulating a petition.
"It was a lot of hard work," Smith said. "It took two years to get it started."
The Phi Kappa Phil Honor Society was originally formed in 1887 at the University of Maine. The motto of the organization is "Let the love of learning rule mankind."
FOR FINE ENTERTAINMENT
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TONIGHT IS 10c BEER ALL NIGHT
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THE TURN OF THE SCREW
BENJAMIN BRITTEN
8:00 p.m.
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K. U. students admitted without charge with Certificate of Registration!!
Ticket Reservations: 864-3982
This program is partially funded by the Student activity fee
PETER WATKINS FILM FESTIVAL
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4
Wednesday, April 21, 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Union could help
The Lawrence United Public Employees Association (UPEA) decided to affiliate with the Teamstorms Union last month. The union, based in station, street, water and park employs.
THE AFFILIATION with the Teamsters is the latest development in a long and bitter struggle with Lawrence city government. UPEA has sought cognition as a collective bargaining organization, a city commission has refused to grant it.
UPEA has charged the city with mismanagement, discrimination and favoritism. It has consistently maintained that wages weren't the main point of dispute. City officials say they have implemented procedures to solve the employees' grievances. They say UPEA hasn't negotiated in good faith.
THIS IS PROBABLY a bad time for the city employees to announce affiliation with the Teamsters. The Teamsters have been in the news lately, threatening a strike that could have crippled the nation's transportation system. They are rightfully considered one of the most powerful unions around.
City employ unions aren't in good favor now either. Kansas City, Mo., Mayor Charles Wheeler announced his candidacy for the Senate Monday. He is running on an anti-union platform and is strongly against public employee unions.
PUBLIC SUPPORT for UPEA and the Teamsmasters probably will be minimal. Yet it is just as difficult to support the position and actions of the city. It is then necessary to live in Lawrence that the trash service isn't what it should be. In general, the complaints of UPEA have had the ring of truth to them.
One point in the union's favor is that better working conditions, not higher wages, have always been the main issue. Despite a great deal of talk by Buford Watson, city manager, there are few indications that anything positive has been done to improve those conditions.
WHEN CITY employees have unsatisfactory working conditions, when they are demoralized, frustrated and harassed, they are unable to do their jobs properly efficiently. It isn't the workers who suffer but all the citizens of Lawrence.
Affiliation with the Teamsters won't immediately solve all the problems of the workers or the city. Perhaps it is a step that should never have been taken. But with the impasse between UPEA and the city, it was inevitable that workers would turn to a powerful outside union for support.
WHETHER THE Teamsters can be effective in achieving the workers' objectives in Lawrence isn't yet clear. The city doesn't recognize any collective-bargaining unit. The city manager and the commission say they don't care what UPEA did affiliate with a national union
The uncompromising position of the city and the seeming desperation of the workers combine to make the present circumstances at best unfortunate.
Charles Wheeler no doubt thinks that nothing good could ever come from either the Teamsters or a public employees union. One would hope for a little cooperation from both sides so that Lawrence might prove him wrong.
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
I don't know why there should be more practical jokes played this year than in previous years. Maybe the increase was brought about by the coming of a new rule that allows you to turn toward water fights and other wicked activities. Maybe it was a cosmic effect brought on by the leap year. And, then again, maybe it has all been a presidential election and the Bretton Wood fall on the same year.
Pranks mark informality
WHATEVER THE reason,
pranks seem to be occurring
with marked frequency this
year. Large water fights started
as early as February. Shaving
homes and cars are the most
diseases have on occasions
other than April Fool's Day. In
my own room, the study area
was stripped of all furniture,
carpeting and posters during a
basketball game and the beds
been strongly of adhesive haze.
I can't say that our room has been attacked without reason. I have been known to be involved in some plots including the redecoration of other people's rooms, the perfuming of beds, the making of smashed peanut-butter crackers in mailboxes.
WHAT IT COMES down to is that I live in a scholarship hall. Several people on this campus seem to have a warped idea of what education means, that is, if they even know they exist at all. If some ideas of the halls were true, all the residents would have 4.0 GPA's and they would venture outside their classes or to go to the library.
The scholarship hall system is a group of eight halls containing approximately 50 people each.
happening only this year.
During the four years I've lived in a scholarship hall, I have seen numerous incidents. But because of this year but although it won, the practical jokes, could cause
The halls contain a diversified group of people. There are some hard-core studios but there are also jocks and television freaks.
ALTHOUGH EACH hall is separate and seems to have its
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
own personality, there is a large amount of interaction between halts. The parties and other actors create an informal atmosphere that has fostered strong friendships and a favorable conditions for pranks.
some re-evaluation of where the line is drawn on the allowance of pranks.
The pranks haven't been
THE INCIDENT, which began as an April Fool's joke, developed into a case of forcible entry into one of the women's halls and resulted in the recommendation that the two
pranksters not allowed to renew their hall contracts next year. The questions surrounding the judiciary process resulting in the recommendation are numerous and complicated, but they aren't really the issue here.
The issue is the reaction aroused by the incidents. It became an emotional issue causing residents of the halls to divide into two factions. The scholarship hall pranked people with cards and there was discussion about pranks getting out of control.
WHAT THE TWO residents did the WATER OF April 1 first an expectant wife, but it was a malicious act with illegal intent. Surely the security of the halls must be maintained, but it must not be threatened by scholarship halls have been sneaking into other halls for
years either by having inside contacts or by discovering some unlocked door.
It can only be hoped that the incident will be seen in the context of common activities within the scholarship hall system. In the past, the pranks have been carried out without the security of the halls becoming ineffective.
For me, the practical jokes have become a part of life. After I graduate, I'll then conform and act "grown-up". Until then, I'm glad I'm living in a system where overnight the sign at Grace Pearson can be changed to "ace rapers" without a故障 opening about the destruction of state property. Without the informal atmosphere, friendships and the practical jokes, a scholarship hall would just be another place to live.
Skies could be friendlier if fares weren't regulated
By DON SMITH
**WASHINGTON** - little-known government reform idea has attracted the support of two of America's most vehement political opponents, President Donald J. Trump and Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass.
The issue is the deregulation of the interstate airline industry. Currently this industry is regulated by the Civil
Aeronautics Board (CAB) whose duties include regulating interstate airline fares and routes.
FORD HAS introduced legislation to deregulate the airline industry, and Kennedy will soon offer his own proposal.
Supporters of deregulation say that it would eventually lead to more competition. And the more companies will decrease, the argue,
ETHNIC PURITY
ETHNIC PURITY
ETHNIC PURITY
ETHNIC PURITY
© 1976 NYT SPOTLIGHT
At present, there is little price competition among the nation's airlines. Carriers individually file for increase increases, and carriers increase an increase, the other carriers file and receive fare increases.
KENEDY, WHOSE administrative practices subcommittee made a detailed study of the airline industry, and its impact on Commerce Committee's Aviation Subcommittee last week that studies by his subcommittee and independent consulting groups showed airfares could be reduced by 30 to 15 if the government relaxed regulation of the airline industry.
To substantiate this, Kennedy cited intrastate carriers in California and Texas whose fares are much less than those of the CAB for similar distances over interstate routes.
**'PRICES ON flights regulated by the CAB are twice as high as prices for comp flights not regulated by the agency. Boston businessman or woman pays about $50 to fly to Washington, D.C. But a traveler in California pays only $20, and a similar distance on flights not regulated by the CAB. He pays only $20 to fly from Los Angeles to San Francisco. Southwest Airlines (PS)
In addition, Kennedy cited statistics that showed that interstate trunk carriers fly at 50 mph on average, whereas interstate carriers,
Humane bail laws need toughening
WASHINGTON—First it was postal reform. Now it's bail reform. I find myself in retreat these days, backing away from good ideas that somehow have gone wrong.
OF THESE TWO major reforms of the past decade, bail
secure his appearance for subsequent trial. Until recent years, the universal practice in both state and federal courts was for an accused to "post bond." Professional bondsmong hung around our courthouses, eager to ply their lucrative
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.
reform is by far the greater concern. A fouled-up mail service is a headache; a messed-up bail system is a heartbreak. Mail and bail might seem to have nothing in common but three shared letters, three shared failures share the same mechanism and human causes - failures of machinery, failures of man.
By James J.
Kilpatrick
(C) Washington Star Syndicate
As a part of our system of criminal jurisprudence, the posting of bail anteades Magna Carta. Ball is the sum of money (or goods or property) deposited by an accused to
THE SYSTEM operated with brutal unfairness. The rich defendant could always make bail; the poor defendant had to be beaten and humiliated. Thus the rich went free and the poor went to jail. The well-to-do defendant could return to his daily routine, consult with his lawyer, prepare his defense, and fight the accusation of stigma at the lockup. The poor devil had none of these advantages.
trade. It was like frog-gigging: Fun for the boys, but hell on the frogs.
WELL THE LAW hasn't worked. The very name of 'bail reform' has become a hate word but he isn't funny. In hundreds upon hundreds of cases, defendants released without bond have been re-arrested on new charges. The police are fuming in frustration; the law-abiding community is furious; the
Eight or ten years ago, in an effort to alleviate this patent injustice, a number of liberals and a few conservatives took up the challenge and culminated in the 1970 District of Columbia Court Reform and Criminal Procedures Act. This was seen as the "model law" which governs localities everywhere to adopt the same humane procedures. The law effectively requires that an accused be set free, without bail, or sent to jail. The kind of community ties that suggest he will show up for trial. Only if a prosecutor can show a strong likelihood of conviction, or if he fails, then the court presents a serious danger to the community, can a defendant be held on preventive detention.
newspapers and TV stations are raising Cai; and persons in law enforcement are passing the buck around.
One difficulty is mechanical. In other jurisdictions that are experimenting with bail reform, the same proposition is being used in many enough jail facilities to house defendants who ought to be held without bail. The District is plagued by hard-eyed juvenile inmates as young as 12 or 13, but there is almost no place to put them.
OTHER DIFFICULTIES are procedural. To demonstrate a strong likelihood of conviction, a prosecutor must virtually prepare and present his final case. In such a proceeding, the prosecutor must indicate in innocence" is stood on its head. Questions arise of double jeopardy. Overburdened prosecutors take the easy road. Still other problems are human. Judges with marshmallow spines and grits for brains too often regard a young defendant as an incompassion. The defendant gets the benefit of the doubt; the community gets the benefit of his switchblade knife.
LITTLE WILL be gained by outright repeal of the well-intended act. Its principles remain sound. But bail reform laws will have to be toughened everywhere if the cause is to survive. The key factor in this knotty equation is the prompt force, for instance, detention is not unduly prolonged, little harm is done by locking up the toughes pending trial. If judges also
would crack down on drug addicts, and if probation boards would instantly revoke the probation of an arrested probationer, our communities would be safer places.
Speaking as one who ardently supported the cause from the beginning, I have to confess disappointment. The old cruel boss had the new humane system is not demonstrably better.
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. For these purposes, the teacher must provide their name, year in school and hometown; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
such as PSA, fly at load factors of 60 per cent and more.
BUT THERE's much less than unanimous support for the Kennedy-Ford idea. Many would prefer the situation of the situation, and consumers can be sure the airline companies will do so with intense lobbying.
Some of the interstate trunks are against the idea. They cite the possibility that some of the big carriers may go bankrupt or become severely financial problems in a deregulated situation.
When asked by subcommittee chairman Sen. Howard Cannon, D-Dev., whether deregulation could result in diminished service for small communities, Borman answered that it might.
FRANK BORMAN, president of Eastern Airlines, is one of the opponents of deregulation. Borman told the aviation industry that he unrealistic to think that many of the bigger trunk carriers would survive in a deregulated market. He forecast a chaotic airline fare and service if deregulation was approved.
HOWEVER, BORMAN's answer to Cannon is contrary to the findings of a study commissioned by AB which lasted nearly a year, study the Pulific Report, says, "It is possible that some points receiving only limited service would not continue to be served by trunkline carriers in absence of absentee workers." However, practically none of these would be without scheduled service."
Both the Kennedy and Ford plans, though, envision that the federal government would grant subsidies for service to small and medium sized communities.
THERE DOES appear to be a
battle shaping up between those who would deregulate the airlines and those who would favor continuing current air travel because this session of Congress because of the lack of interest from members who will be campaigning for reelection. But soon, and possibly next year, some leaders will come under close scrutiny.
The passage of legislation to end regulation of airline fares and routes would be to the benefit of the American consumer. Americans would probably have to face poorer fares than they did before flubs as not many as movies and so forth—but surely the decrease in airline fares would help ease the pain.
In the long run, deregulation would be beneficial to all concerned. Consumers would have lower prices for travel. And the airline companies that operate them have more travelers and might begin to make a profit without constant governmental help. BESIDES, THE free enterprise system should be given greater priority in industry. To end protective regulation and other governmentally conferred privileges for special sectors of the economy, such as the airline industry, and to the top of Congress' priorities.
AS KENNEDY said in his testimony, some of the big airlines probably would fail, but what's so frightening about that? Haven't other big companies failed before without the country having to put up the out-to- lunch sign?
To continue the current outdated manner of dealing with the nation's air carriers disregards the rights and interests of the nation as a whole and surely would be a folly.
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Associate Editor Billy Hegerty
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Associate Campus Editors
Greg Hack
Assistant Campus Editors Jim Baker
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Business Manager
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_Publisher
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Member Associated Collegiate Press
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 21, 1978
5
Art scholarships awarded
Recipients of various art scholarships
by the University of Michigan,
associate professor of art.
The awards were made in conjunction with the annual Scholarship Art Show, which is sponsored by the KU department of art and located in the Union Gallery. The show will open today at 1:30 and continue until May 7.
Ot said that it was against University policy to release the financial values of the institution.
Recipients announced so far are David Helwer, Russell junior; Joel Knapp, Ian Gulley; Danny Schoenmeyer; sophomore; Tom Gulliffe, Overland Park senior; Mary Jernigan, Little Rock, Ariz.
On Campus
Events . . .
TODAY: LEAND BELL Hallmark visiting artist from New York City, will speak at 3 p.m. in woodcraft Auditorium in the Kansas City United Husburgh will be present at the GERMAN CLUB KAFFEIS AND KUCHEN meeting at 3:30 p.m. in 405 Wescoe.
TONIGHT: A SEMINAR FOR BLACK WOMEN will be at 7 in the Walmut Room of the Kansas Union. Dave McKeynolds, field secretary of the New York League will be on-site — NON-VIOLET AND NATIONAL DEFENSE' at 8 in Parlor A of the Union, FRANK TRAPP, professor Art atumnist College, with lecture on "Fine Arts," museum, the Museum of Spooner Art Museum. WILLIAM BALFOUR, vice chancellor for student affairs, will be on JKHK's "Administrative Training" with John Martin will give an ORGAN RECITAL at 7:30 in the First Methodist Church.
Announcements . . .
The Peter Watkins film "EDVARD The Peter Watkins film is shown only at 13:30 tonight rather than at 12:45."
freshman; Leroy Johnston, Lawrence senior; Margaret Marchand, LaFayette, ind. special student; Carolyn Cogswell, Lawrence senior; Cynthia Atwood, Lawrence senior; Jennifer Lawrence, Lawrence senior; Jarnie Jones, Village junior; and Randy Yule, Wichita state
Ott said that there was one reamining scholarship to be awarded, which would be divided among various students. The KU Endowment Association, which makes the final selection of recipients, will release the names of the winners later, he said.
Ott said that 39 students, whose works were judged Saturday by 15 faculty members of the department of art, participated in the show.
The faculty met Sunday to compile a list of recommended scholarship recipients to send to the Endowment Association, he said.
These techniques include paintings, drawings, printings and sculptures. Oft said that video tapes and films could not be shown in the gallery and had to be excluded from the show.
The exhibits show a diversity within the department, Ott said. "All different departments are used," he added.
Purchases may be made by contacting the artist.
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On every street in every city in this country there's a robbit who dreams of being somebody. He'd a lonely forgotten man desperate to prove that he's alive.
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents ROBERT DENIRO TAXI DRIVER
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Eu, 7-30
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sat-Sun 2:20
Granada
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On every street in every city in this country there's a nobody who dreams of being somebody. He's a lonely forgotten man desperate to prove that he's alive.
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents
ROBERT DE NIRO
TAXI DRIVER
A BILL PHILIPPHS production of a MARTIN SCORSESE film
Eve. 7:30
8 & 7:30
Sat. Sun. 2:30
Grandda
THE BIG FIVE
Ingmar Bergman's
The MAGIC FLUTE
Eve. 7:30 & 9:55 Sat.-Sun. 1:55
Hillcrest
The greatest Detective Story of the Decade!
REDFORD/NOFFMAN "ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN"
3rd Great Week
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3 DAYS OF THE CONDOR
The Best American Comedy of the Year
"THE BAD NEWS
Bears"
PG
Burt Reynolds
3rd Great Week
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Celebrate the birthday of Guido Columbus, discoverer of pepperoni.
While Christopher Columbus was proving that the world wasn't shaped like a pizza, his more serious brother, Guido, made an important discovery of his own. As he was seasoning the salami at the family sausage factory in New York, he put the pepper shaker. His crew used him to turn back, but Guido pressed on. The result, Pepperloud.
Incidentally, Christopher Columbus died poor, lonely, and neglected. Guido Columbus died with a terrible case of heartburn with a terrific case of heartburn.
Any large pepperoni pizza, $2.99 plus tax
- Copyright 1976,
Straw Hat Restaurant
Corporation.
In observance of the birthday of Guido Columbus, April 21,
Straw Hat Pizza declares this National Pepperoni Week. Present
this coupon at Straw Hat anytime before April 27, and well
give you any large pepperoni pizza for only $2.99. (Or, if you
prefer, $1.00 off any other large pizza.)
At these participating
2515 W. 6th
841-2547
STRAW HAT
Pizza Palace
WOLF HEAD
WOLFE'S...
Come to Wolfe's for the best of both worlds-a super sale and a super introduction of the most exciting new ideas in 35mm cameras and optics. weekend is the time to buy at big savings plus a time future.
INVITES YOU
SUPER LENS SALE
Vivitar.
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AUTOMATIC LENSES
Limited Quantities Subject to Prior Sale
VIVITAR PENTAX LENSES Orig. Retail SALE
20mm f 3.8 $224.50 $79.99
28mm f 2.5 $179.50 $79.99
35mm f 2.8 $110.00 $59.99
35mm f 1.9 $132.00 $69.99
135mm f 2.8 $149.50 $59.99
200mm f 3.5 $169.50 $79.99
85-205 mm f 3.8 $298.50 $149.99
VIVITAR NIKON LENSES Orig. Retail SALE
35mm f 2.8 $110.00 $'99.99
35mm f 1.9 $132.00 $'69.99
135mm f 3.5 $129.50 $'39.99
135mm f 2.8 $149.50 $'59.99
200mm f 3.5 $169.50 $'79.99
VIVITAR CANON LENSES Orig. Retail SALE
35mm f 2.8 $110.00 $59.99
35mm f 1.9 $132.00 $69.99
135mm f 2.8 $149.50 $59.99
VIVITAR MINOLTA LENSES Orig. Retail SALE
28mm f 2.5 $179.50 '79.99
35mm f 2.8 $110.00 '59.99
35mm f 1.9 $132.00 '69.99
135mm f 2.8 $149.50 '59.99
200mm f 3.5 $169.50 '79.99
VIVITAR KONICA LENSES
VIVITAR KONICA LENSES Orig. Retail SALE
28mm f 2.5 $179.50 '79.99
35mm f 2.8 $110.00 '59.99
35mm f 1.9 $132.00 '69.99
135mm f 3.5 $129.50 '39.99
135mm f 2.8 $149.50 '59.99
200mm f 3.5 $169.50 '79.99
85-205mm f 3.8 $298.50 '149.99
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SALE
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FIRST OLYMPUS SHOWING
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Limited Quantity for Immediate Delivery. Trades Welcomed
FACTORY SHOWING
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6
Wednesday, April 21, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Nurses meeting focuses on care
By MARION ABARE
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Tomorrow's opening of a National Student Nurses' Association (NSNA) convention in Kansas City. In addition to the opening of a University of Kansas nursing student.
Pat "Pinky" McAnany, Prairie Village senior in the school of Nursing at RU University, was elected president for convention and program planning. She said last week she had been planning the program since she was elected president of a convention in Philadelphia last April.
"Last year we talked about rights and responsibilities. This year the theme is Nursing: Person to Person," McAnamy said. "The focus is on people we care for, clients, other health people, legislators and each other."
"NURSES HAVE A great deal to learn from other nurses. We've tended to look to doctors and others outside our own profession. I've tried to focus (the program) on nursing professionals and how nurses interact with other people."
The convention is expected to draw more than 2,500 people from all over the country, she said. The four-day event will be tomorrow through Sunday at the Radisson Muelebach Hotel and Municipal Auditorium.
It will include programs, workshops and
exhibits, she said. Early registration will be at Municipal Auditorium, beginning today.
McAnany said the opening feature at 8 p.m. tomorrow would bring together a group of nursing professionals from the Association of American Nurses Association, National League for Nursing, American Medical Association and NSNA. As a panel, the presidents will discuss past and present issues.
AT 10 P.M., IMMEED'I TELY following the panel of presidents, richard Wright, director of KANU Radio, will speak during the "Jazz" party in the hotel's grand ballroom.
Panels about the fast paced world of emergency medicine will be conducted at 7:30 p.m. Friday by Norman McWain Jr., director of Emergency Medical Training; or by emergency medical intensive care nurse; and Linda Thompson, clinical care nurse.
A program entitled "From Bedpam to?" will look at the expanded role of the nurse. It includes a chapter on the nurse Martha U. Bardard, pediatric nurse clinician, will be on the panel, which will be moderated by Sister Rose Theresa Bahr, associate director and director of patient affairs.
LEE J. DUNN, LEGAL counsel for the Med Center, will speak at 4 p.m. Saturday
on "malpractice: Patient Right-
Professional Fright."
McAnany said that student nurses from Wichita, Salina, Pittsburg, Emporia and KU were cohosting the convention. About 400 nurses, 100 more than last year, belong to the Student Nursing Association of Kansas (SNAK), she said.
Last year at this time, the Med Center didn't have a SNAK chapter.
Reactivation of the Med Center group came when McAnany and Sherry Archer, Kansas City, Kan. senior in nursing, at a convention in Fort Hays in 1975.
Any student in a registered nursing program is eligible for membership,
PROGRAMS LEADING to licensing as a registered nurse include community college diploma programs, a three year diploma program, usually with or without college affiliation; and the baccalaureate program, usually leading to a bachelor of science in nursing.
The last of the five-year nursing programs at the Med Center will end with this ear's graduating class, McAany said. Many students who enter the School of Nursing have attended McAany, McAany said, and she encourages aspiring nurses to attend the convention.
Author to lead KU-Y workshop on nonviolence
Nonviolence as a means to radical change will be the subject of a workshop led by pacifist Joon Swlemley 1-5 p.m. Sunday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Swlemley is professor of Christian Ethics at City, Mo. He is a graduate of Dickinson College and has a Ph.D. in political science from the University of Colorado.
He has been a leader in peace and reform movements and was influential in leading Martin Luther King Jr. to become a pacifist.
He has written several books, including "The Peace Offensive and the Cold War," "America, Russia and the Bomb," "The Road to War" and "Press Agents of the Pentagon." Several of his magazine articles have appeared in The Nation, Christian Century, The National Catholic Reporter, The Progressive and New World Outlook. Following the workshop, there will be a series of conferences in Ministers in Higher Education building at 1204 Oread. The workshop is sponsored by KU-Y.
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SUA Committee Chairperson Interviews 1976-77 April 21-26 at 6:30 PM
23rd and Call 843-3500 Alabama for appointment
SPECIAL EVENTS
-publicity chairman
-local concerts chairman
-concerts coordinator chairman
(security, ushers)
TRAVEL
PUBLIC RELATIONS
-summer orientation chairman
-publications chairman
-fall orientation week
-library chairman
-travel fair chairman
-group flight chairman
-publicity chairman
-general trips chairman
... Christmas ski break
... Spring Break ski trip
... Padre Island
... Bahamas (Christmas
... Green River Trip
... Orientation Shuttle
service
... Mardi Gras
... K-State Football
She said that those who were active tended to be a little older.
THERE ARE 40 ACTIVE members in the chapter, she said, and membership has increased recently because of NSNA convention.
FINE ARTS
-poetry hour chairman
-Kansas Union Gallery chairman
-picture lending chairman
-library chairman
"If you're still concerned with getting a date on Friday night, you aren't particularly interested in a professional organization," McAnnay said.
-wilderness discovery chairman
-mountaineering-backpacking chairman
-canoe club chairman
-travel and recreation chairman
FREE UNIVERSITY
-instructor coordinator
-publicity chairman
-catalogue chairman
OUTDOOR RECREATION
INDOOR RECREATION
-head coordinator "advertising"
-Quarterback Club
-air hockey
Recruiting minorities—cultural, racial, male to nursing in a TA project called "The Evolving Woman."
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES
For Information contact the SUA office 864-3477
SUA
Sign up in the SUA office beginning April 12.
Three KU student nurses, all Kansas City, Kan., juniors, hold state offices: Jody Wads, Lois Wadd, newsletter editor; Martha Bannon, chairman for recruiting minorities.
She said part of the project was to educate high school counselors to encourage parents to seek help.
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Office Hours Till 8 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
5:30 Fri. 10-4 Sat. 2-5 Sun.
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We the staff of the K.U. Volunteer Clearinghouse would like to acknowledge all the men and women of the University who volunteered their time during the 1975-1976 school year. They Include:
Alpha Phi Omega
Alpha Tau Omega
Duane ALBERY
Jake LASCHER
Dorothy ANDERSON
Steve ANDERSON
Raffaelia ACLIA
Lance ARMER
Debra ARNETT
Theresa ATKINS
Mike BAIR
David BRIER
Kris BALLROW
Kathy BALLY
Patricia BARRAND
Nancy BUTTO
Stacy BASK
Susan BAUUMGARTNER
Debra BAXTER
Jacob BAXLER
Linda BASELL
Margaret BEBB
Lindy BECKMANN
Darrel BENNETT
Jill BEMAN
Mark BISEL
Gena BOXOM
Marilyn BECKMAN
John BOOK
Terri BOOKLESS
Terril BOOKLESS
Lori BRICK
Michael BRICKFORD
Limbie BRICKWELL
Suzi BRIDEWELL
Debbie BRIMAN
Kim BRUCE
Chelsea MCKLEY
Nancy BUMP
Liz BURBERY
Mike BURLAKFO
Shace BRYNE
Rose CARLTON
Thomas J. CARR
Karen CARSE
Terry CASE
Joan GATLAN
Cynthia CAVILLO
Lili CHAN
Leslie CHANDLER
Jame CHANDLER
Cheryl CHANDLER
Christian CHANDRIST
Tanya CHUNG
Bob CLARK
Kevin CLARK
Scott CLARK
Bobby COLBERT
Mary CONNLLY
Carel COOPER
Richard COOPER
Emily CURRIE
Susan DAM
Jelizabeth DAVIS
Javier DAVIS
André DONNEO
Katy DUTTON
Tom ECLES
Michelle EMMONDS
Ann EDMONDS
James ENAMES
Aviva ENOCH
David NEILENGING
Dee Elen ERVIN
John ESAU
罗兰 EXON
Nancy EJELDER
John FENwick
JILL FHIZSHALL
Hailey FINUCANE
Haley FINUCANE
Frank FLUTTER
Lynn FOGLEMAN
Houg FORBES
Kathy FULLENWIDER
James GANN
Curtis GASTON
Diane GLIIES
Diane GILLES
Ahmond GOLSHANI
Terry GOODY
Brent GORMAN
Pierick GOSS
Andy GOTTLIEB
Lee GREEN
Jana GRINNELL
Arlene GUMMY
Barton HAGEMAN
James HALL
Debbie HAMILTON
Behaney HKEY
Sieve HEIN
Sandra HERRING
Patti HICKOX
Cynthia HILL
Renee HO
Alan HORSEMAN
Marsha HOWELL
Rees HUGES
Reedy HUNTER
Karen JOHNSON
Tam-Lynn JOHNSON ANDREWS
Jill JONES
Patricia JUDY
Carrie KENT
Sue KILLIAN
Mark KEFFER
Jake KELLEGN
Julie KOVAC
Tam-Lynn CHALPHA Pledge Class
Kathy LAMB
Mark LANGE
Betty MARGENWALTER
Tom LAW
Rebecca LEON
Carl LEPR
Mike LIEBROW
Mike LIEBAUB
Denise LINDIG
Barbara LIPPERT
Daniel LOESER
Ann MARCHAND
Penny MARTIN
Missy MASON
Willie MASESY
Clarence MEIGS
Merrie MENDENHALL
Cathy MIKESELL
Cody MILLARAD
Jeff MILLikan
Carol MILLS
Jay MIRINGOFF
Eve MIRINGOFF
Eli MITCHELL
Vicki MOORE
Khyc McANARNEY
Kylia McCARNTY
Brian MCROSKEY
Pat McELLIOIT
Jennifer McGREERY
John McMILLION
Dean MELY
Mike NELY
Chiu NG
Gimmy NYKE
Kathy O'BRIAN
Erin O'GRADY
Marvin OLLER
3
Volunteerism . . .
thanks to you it's working
Janine O'SHEA
Elsie ORR
Cindy OTTO
Richard OWEN
Linda PAULE
Arthur PETERS
Marshall PETERSON
Pfeiffer PEFFER
Ann PHELAN
Deborah PITTS
Deborah PLUMMER
Sam POZNIK
James PRENTICE
Jessie RADER
John REARDON
Sherri REDO
Earl REINMAN
Denise RETTENMAIER
Earlene RICHARDSON
Arlie RINGER
Dottie ROBERTS
George ROBERTS
Diane ROBERTSON
John ROSE
Charles ROSS
Maureen ROULT
Roz ROUSH
Mike RUMP
Christy RUSHY
Joe RUYSSER
Geri SANDILOS
Luke SAVETI
Pat SCHAFFER
Eric SCHINDLING
Donna SCHLELM
Cecil SCHUMMER
Rexanne SEUFFUR
Barry SHALINSKI
Lynn SHAPIRO
Sally RUSHY
David SHEPHERD
Elliot SHERMAN
Mark SHRRELL
Josh WORMAN
William SIGTA
Peggy SMART
Nancy SMITH
Joan SPATH
Annette STANTON
Marina STEWART
Bibiana STEELE
Ruthman FRANKMARK
Midge STOCKARD
Sala SUER
Tom THOMPSON
Dan TOMLINSON
TомЛИНSON
TerrICK TORR
Sara Ellen TRAUGER
Lara TRAUCHE
TuleYULE
Amy UEYKI
Michelle VAILKAMP
Alisa VAN AUKEN
Hirsch HORN
T vom ROON
Ellen WAKASA
Susan WALKER
Mamaw WANNGONER
Mitha WALKER
Billy WEATHERHALL
Diane WELLS
Jay WEDENKELLER
Ebby WILDLE
Bob WILSON
Rich WILSON
Joe WINLOW
Russ WISMER
Wyatt WRIGHT
Brad YOST
Amey YOUGUN
Dale ZANDBERG
Mike ZAFFUTO
This organization funded by the Student Senate
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 21, 1976
7
Geological Survey research varied
Although it offers no classes or degrees, the Kansas Geological Survey at the University of Kansas is educating KU students.
More than 30 graduate students are employed by the Survey to conduct research in their fields, Rod Hardy, director of the education for the Survey, said recently.
Students in economics, computer science, geology, geography and other areas are
The Geological Survey is a nonacademic division of KU specializing in mineral science.
They are involved in practical research in which they can apply classroom knowledge and gain on-the-bone experience useful after graduation. Hardy said.
It is a Board of Regents agency which has been located at KU since its establishment in 1895. Since 1973, it has been located in Moore Hall on the West Campus.
Hardy said the Survey was funded as a line item in the University budget.
Art festival still taking entries
It isn't too late to enter original Arts in the Park Festival, Jane Bateman, publicity chairman for the festival, said yesterday.
Bateman said that entry blanks could be obtained from the Lawrence Art Center, 3rd and Vernont or from the South Park Theater, 2nd until noon on May 2, the day of the festival.
"In order for the artist's name to appear in the program, which helps him sell other art, he must enter before this Saturday," she said.
The entry fee is $2 for Lawrence Art Guild members, and $5 for non-members.
Bateman said that the purpose of the festival, sponsored by the Lawrence Arts Guide and the Lawrence Parks and Recreation, is to unite the Lawrence community.
All forms of art from about 150 participants will be shown, she said, including paintings, prints, ceramics, glass-blowings, weavings, quilts, silversmiths, jewelry, leathworks, sculptures, wood carvings and photography.
The only art that won't be accepted, she said, is paint-by-number sets.
There will be no admission charge and purchases may be made directly from the hospital.
In case of rain, the festival will be postponed until May 9.
Insurance policy decision delayed
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that liability insurance wasn't discussed at Friday's meeting of the governors' meeting and president of the Regents schools).
Kansas Board of Regents colleges and universities still haven't decided whether to provide liability insurance for their employees.
A proposed liability insurance policy, which would be purchased by the Regents schools, will now be considered at the Council of Presidents meeting May 21 in Detroit. The proposal could be further action on the insurance proposal pending a decision by the Council.
"A large percentage of industries in the state do not have facilities for basic research and development," Hardy said. "Survey takes over research for them."
Earlier this month, KU employees indicated a desire to purchase liability insurance.
The ceramic, gas, oil and quarrying industries are served by the Survey, Hardy said.
In response to a questionnaire circulated by Shankel, 519 of 637 employees who responded said they would buy the insurance. The insurance would protect employees against damage suits arising from their University duties.
He said results of the research were made available through periodical and special journals.
Students work with the Survey's full-time staff of 105 researchers, Hardy said. Students are usually involved in research that is included in their theses or dissertations.
Research topics fall within one of six Survey sections: environmental geology, mineral resources research, geochemistry, oceanic resources operations research and water resources.
Dykes would be out of town until Friday. Dykes is attending a meeting of the American Association of Universities in Wake Forest, Fla., and several East Coast meetings of KU alumni before returning, Shankel said.
Hardy said the students had full access to the facilities at the Survey, including more computer stations.
Full-time researchers assemble data on all aspects of mineral production in the state and assist producers in locating mineral fields.
The Survey has a complete in-house computer operation, he said, which is compatible with the University system in Summerfield Hall.
Hardy said students were involved in the development of a computer program named SURF ACE II, now used across the United States and in five foreign countries.
SURFACE II is a program that assembles data and reproduces it in map form. Hardy said the program was helpful in mining operations.
Students also will be involved in a similar computer program project named ARES,
This program will enable users to feed general data into a computer. The computer will then be able to answer specific questions about the mass of data, Hardy
"When I mapped the state for minerals in 1971, it took nine months," Hardy said. "The same data on tape with the ARES project can be done in ours."
Because of the international recognition gained through the computer programs, he said, the Survey is able to attract research residence from many foreign countries.
Hardy used researchers from Australia, England, Japan and Brazil had worked at the Survey. They have taught mini-courses in addition to their research, he said.
Members of the Survey's full-time staff are hired to work on Survey research, Hardy said, but seven members of the staff have been employed in various KU academic departments.
Names of prospective student employees are obtained through the Office of Student Financial Aid, he said. The Survey screens news articlesnews applicants before selecting employers
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- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
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University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
Applications
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Qualifications
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
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8
Wednesday, April 21. 1976
University Daily Kansan
Shorter shows Olympic form at KU Relays
Bv GARY VICE
Sports Writer
Frank Shorter ended 64 years of frustration for American distance runners when he won the gold medal in the marathon at the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich. The last American before Shorter was Jack Rowe, who tested was John Haves in 1908.
Shorter, who's pace just missed the Olympic record of 2:12.11.11 by 8.5 seconds, said, "I've never been good at setting records. I'm better at winning races."
But the Yale graduate did both at the Kansas Realys in the 5,000-meter run against a strong field that included the Pumphrey and Domenico Tadzuka and Castenada.
HISC RECORD TIME of 14:17.2 broke the Relays record of 14:19.0 set in 1967 by Oscar Moore of Southern Illinois, Tadhua, a native of Columbia, pressured Shorter with his characteristic strong finishing kick, but fell short to claim second in 14:17.4.
Shorter said he entered the race to strengthen his finishing kick, which he wants to develop for competition in two events at the XXI Olympiad. The Olympic champion hopes to compete in the marathon in Montreal this summer. He finished fourth in the 10,000 at the 1972 Olympics and is currently ranked the world's second best.
"I'm working on developing my speed," the 5-10, 135-pounder said. "If I want to run the 10,000 at Montreal I'm going to have to be a lot faster at the finish than I was today."
100
"T'S EASY TO RUN : 37 (in the final 440)
when the rest of the race was so slow. This
would have been worse."
Frank Shorter wins 5,000
anywhere in the Olympics you're going to
be able to finish it for 25 laps and still
be able to finish it.
Shorter said the time would have been faster if the winds hadn't been so strong. "It's too much wind," she said.
Western Illinois KU victim
By KRIS ECKEL
Sports Writer
KU's football team pulled one out of the fire and stretched its perfect record to 14-0 by beating Western Illinois University twice in a row. The Cyclones beat Holoform Sports Complex in Lawrence.
KU ended the first game with a tight 8-7 victory and had little trouble winning the
Kansas was plagued by errors in the field in the first few innings of the opener, and they were not scored. The Hawks weren't have trouble hitting, but Western down KU with the exception of Paula Frank, who slammed a home run over center field in the game.
Trailing 6-1 in the fifth innning, KU started its comebreak. A triple by Gloria Graves, singles by Debbie Kuhn and Nancy Stouf, doubles by Kelly Phipps and Frank enabled the Jayhawks to score seven runs to pull ahead of Western, 8-6.
What caused this sudden display of power by the Jayhawks?
"Drysdale, that's what happened," said KU assistant coach Karen Harris. "We had Drysdale told them that she thought part of the reason we weren't doing very well was that they (KU) were kind of in a hurry." KU assistant coach Shannon think when they walk out on the field that
they can beat somebody and that they're good enough to do it.
"They're good enough to play with
their country, and they went out
and showed us."
KU then shinned in the batter's box and infrequently as well, KU held Western to one side.
But it was tight. With two out and a runner on in the sixth, Western plowed one out to the field that could have turned the game back around. But KU right fielder Kuhn made a sterling catch saving KU's lead and the game.
Graves, pitching under pressure from the Western hitters, managed to strike out seven and walked only three during the windy game.
"I think we needed this kind of game," Harris said. "We've been playing and pretty well running over some people. Now not only do they (KU) know that they can play with the best, but they know that they have to play their best in order to beat them. What are we going to do? They've got to go out playing ball and playing well."
KU wasted no time scoring in the second game, leading in the first inning, 20. Kuh scored the third run, sent home on a single by Janet Brown. Western errors gave KU its fourth run, advancing Edna Isares around the bases to score KU's final run.
Winning pitcher in the second game was last, struck out eight batters and walked only.
FLO KENNEDY
said, "Whoever the leader is in a wind like this is not going to win the race. It's so much easier running if you're behind someone. One wanted to take the lead."
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"If we had gone much slower there would have been a danger of some miller in the race coming up and burning us at the finish. It looked like Castaneda finally said, 'This is ridiculous' and went out and took the lead," Shorter said.
"TED (CASTANDED) led the critical part of the race. You can't lead that far in the wind and win unless you're so much better than everyone else."
Information: 864-4934
Funded by Student Senate
Cataneda, winner of the Billy Mills 10,000 earlier in the screen, the screened other runners from the strong wind while in the lead. Shorter, running just behind the heels of his Colorado Track Club teammate, took the lead with the bell signaling the final lap.
"I wanted to start my kick with one lap to
"Shorter. Said "but the wind stopped
He stretched out his lead in the turn andought off a strong challenge by Rik Hojas (28).
"FOUR YEARS AGO I couldn't have won this race. Even though I went a marathon runner I wasn't a spinner. It just seems I'm getting stronger and faster. I think I'm just maturing as a runner. I'm 28 now, which is about the right age for a distance runner."
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He said he was just "running through" the Olympic meets, but still running at all. (BRENDAN MCKINLEY)
STARTSTODAY
"The races are good because you can never force yourself to put forth as much effort in practice as competition demands." You should run a race and run some races to round out your training.
"I train for three miles and the 10,000. I just run the marathon when it comes along and train for it once a week, maybe on Sundays.
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The team will crowd five games into three days.
Westerday's rain has made an already busy weekend schedule even burger for the week ahead.
KU rained out
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The rain forced postponement of the KU-Washburn doubleheader until 2 p.m. tomorrow at Quigley Field in Boca Raton. Neb for the three-game series against the Cornushkers.
Varsity
THEATRE ... Tonghua 8 Y1-3065
*TRAINING TOME IS a fine line. You're always pushing yourself to limit you can't do*.
Asked if the Olympics was the goal that motivated him in his training he replied, "That's what is in the back of your mind all the time you're training. You just keep working and working and your goals increase.
"My problem can be that I train too much. I really like running so much I've overworked myself before. Last year I finally forced myself to rest."
He said he wouldn't challenge the entire marathon course at Montreal prior to the race.
After winning his first 17 matches this season, Clarke was beaten by Tres Mitchell, Missouri's No. 1 singles player, 6-3, 6-4 with a straight-sets victory to the Jiayhawk win down with him.
"I'll run parts of it so I've at least seen the whole course, but not all at once."
Explaining his strategy for the marathon, which he considers his main event, he said, "You've got to get away early and just forget about everybody else."
KU was nipped, 5-4, by the Tigers. Still,
that's an improvement over the 8-3 loss
Missouri dealt the Jayhawks earlier this
year.
Clarke, netters fall to Tigers
Ballie Clarke was to the rest of the Big Eight tennis players yesterday that he was down.
The two teams played to a 3-13 tie in singles, with Mark Hosking, No. 3; Jeff Thomas, No. 5; and Greg Buller, No. 6, all winning.
But the Jayhawks lost two of the three doubles matches, which made the difference. The No. 2 team of Butler and Joe Ruysset lost to Brian Mitchell (Tres' brother) and Jon Powell, 6-1, 6-0. But the 4-3 team of Thomas and Hankey won, 6-4.
So it all came down to the 1. No doubles match of Clarke and Tim Headlack against Missouri's Tress Mitchell and Rick Flach. The pair fell for third, while jayhawks fell apart in the third, losing 6-2.
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*Paid Vacation*
*Other Benefits*
Salary and Commission
No Experience Necessary Apply in Person
Equal Opportunity Employer
913-827-5522
K.U. CAMPUS VETERANS
Coming Attractions for Campus Veterans
ELECTIONS-Week of May 3 Exact date to be announced. Stop by the office and post your name as a candidate or just vote for those already running.
PICNIC—April 25-1-5 p.m. Cost, $1.00, which includes food (hamburger hot dogs, chips, etc.) and all the Miller Beer you can drink.Call 864-4478 for info.
EMPLOYMENT—Roy Cockerham of the Employment Security Division will be on Campus every Wednesday afternoon from 1:30-5:30 to help insure that veterans receive the priority in Job Placement Assistance and that they are entitled to by law. He'll be in room 101, Kansas Union.
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION TM$ ^{ \textcircled{*} } $ Program INTRODUCTORY LECTURES
Wednesday, April 21
7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Regionalist Room
Transcellent Mediation and TM are service marks of
WPE-C. SIIMS, a nonprofit educational organization 842-1225
The Program of the Year isn't on TV. It's in the Air Force ROTC.
Look into the Air Force ROTC. And there are 4 year, 3 year, or 2 year programs to choose from. Whichever you select, you'll leave college with a commission as an Air Force officer. With opportunities for a position with responsibility...challenge...and, of course, financial rewards and security.
The courses themselves prepare you for leadership positions ahead. Positions as a member of an aircrew... or as a missile launch officer...positions using mathematics...sciences..engineering.
Look out for yourself. Look into the Air Force ROTC programs on campus.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
Belly Dancers
"Cassandra" and "Aliya"
TONIGHT at Yuk Down Hillcrest Shopping Center
---
Hillcrest Shopping Center
BOANIE
With special guest MOSE ALLISON
APRIL 29
800
HOCH AUDITORIUM
LAWRENCE KS
Reserved seat tickets 55 G $6
Available at:
Caper's Corner
Kansas City
SLA Mkj McKinney-Meson
Lawrence
Better Days, Kief's
Mother Earth
Topelka
A FOOLS GOLD G SUA PRODUCTION
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 21, 1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to their social status. Bring ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
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
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Thursday Monday 5 p.m.
Friday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
the UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These dates can be placed in person or online. Please call the UKB business office: 464-4358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
Want to learn more about your sex? Then attend an evening event sponsored by CWRSEN. Sat, April 24, 4-pm at the worth Hall. Pre-registration will be held April 10 for your living group ADMISSION CHARGE.
ENTERTAINMENT
**SHOWTOWBAT's a comin'** April 23, 7:30 p.m.
**SHOWWATBAT'S A COMIN'** April 24, 6:30 p.m.
1936 Rm $2 donation. Get on board.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in lessons on student phone (call phone) at WEBSITE or MORE INFORMATION:
Free rental service. To the minute listings of
renting housing. Up in Lawrence, Lawrence.
842-735-9100, 842-735-9200,
842-735-9300.
2 bdrm. all util paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Free parking, a/c, pool. 835-1993.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
erty or access to campus $25 and up, priv-
erty or access to campus $482 or $842-900
Sublease June 1-Aug. 1, Nice, large, furnished
room, campus, rep. office,
Call 846-6035 or 846-7676.
Female undergird is wanted to share 2 bedrooms
at $17,000/month. Room rates:
£650 mo plus. Utilities: Call £748.745 at
www.northstar.com
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate
lockout. Save money, leave June from June 1,
1976 and take your car out now before it’s too late. Park 253 Apartments, 2 blocks west of Iowa on 25th St. Phone 482-1455.
1 Bedroom apt. AC, Close to campus. $120 per
cell. call RICK 83269 or 841-6476.
Wanted - 4 good routers for a nice, old home
and shopping center. No pets. 845-
6670 1297
metropolis
SUMMER RATES at Univ. Terr. & Old Mill
Rates. Apt. 1-B, Apt. 2-C, CA balconies,
drapes, swimming pools, spa facilities,
utilities; 2 bedrooms; $140 plus utilities. Rates
for Apts. 1-B and 2-C approx. Aug. 15;
842-849-327 or 843-143-
$25 to student who升学 leaves apartment May 1;
$25 to student who leaves apartment May 1;
AC pos ($25) plus $15 plus deposit, $25.
Furnished room available immediately till May
firmly; charge $70, all utilities paid;
6440
6450
Sublease from May 19, to August 23. Air conditioning,
cleaning, and insurance. Brand new $100/mo. Call after 5.
808-744-6400.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
843-1306 10-5 Tues.-Sat.
Bahai Faith
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Bahal' Club Meeting, April 5, 19:30 p.m. Oral Ballroom, Union
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prices you see on popular hik equipment other than factory sets, close-on products are available and get a discount at the GRAFAMOON SHOP at KIEEFS.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amps, guitars,
basses, violins, cellos, basses and guitars. Shop
Hose Keyboard Studio, Choses from Gibbon
Ampes, Alpine Keyboard Studios, Greco, and many others.
Attend gigs at the Gibbon Ampes, Greco, and many other studios. Join the Keyboard Studios.
Attend gigs at the Gibbon Ampes, Greco, and many other studios.
COST * 10% - Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single-buy package. Register for free Kiss Box Kit. Best buy package. Drive. Phone #654-8985. Earnings 6 to 10.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialists.
BELL AUCTIONS.
ELECTRIC, 845-309-6989, W. 6th, W. 12th.
PARKING ATTACHMENTS.
Western Civilization Notes—On new State:
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
1) study the Bible
2) For class
3) For exam preparation "New Analysis of Western Civilization" Available now at Town Crier Stores.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Excellent S
WE SELL FOR LESS—11 to 6:30. Good used furniture; Gas and wood ranges; Refrigerators; Furniture; Display units; HVAC systems; Have Lawnays—weekly free delivery 1228 Eatlane N. Phone: N. Phone 1-742-3252 or 354-8288.
Cheap, new zoom lens 85-205 of 3 f.8 screw mount
Virtuall - 8474-4754, 1-267-0734. Leave a message.
NICE '95 MG MIDGET $295, Call 842-9067 4-21
Bumper Stickers "Buy an American car and
buy a Bumper Sticker working" $1, BASE $23 OLD
KC61 KC610
1970 Karmann Gila, looks and runs excellent.
1980 Karmann Gila, new battery, pumped Kansas
autos, 82-323.
72 Kawasaki 700. New engine, 2,000 miles. Ex-
cavilion condition. B41-6674. 4-21
CHECK OUT USED THESE BIKED SPECIALS. LA 149, 250, 272 Triumphe 569, Honda TL142. WE ALSO HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF NEW MOTOR-HYDRATION 889, at Horst's Hotton Hall, 1811 W. 6th, 843-3333
Maranziz Martin 7 3-way speakers, Maranziz 6
watt amp with cabinet,孟仁428-1278 6-42
4-228-1278
Puppies for sale. 4 timber wolf, 3/4 malamute.
$200. $843-439 after 6.
4:22
Radtle radio 'First time ever Bony Chelsea Radius
Radio' first time ever Bony Chelsea Reduced Radio 'Reduced Radio' Bony Stockshee 'Bony Mass (AM)' Bony Stockshee 'Bony Mass (AM)'
Used radial tires reduced. Check our basement for largest assortment anywhere—Many excellent matched pairs, many Michelin in stock—Ray-Brown, Ray-Brown and Ray-Brown let behind Woolworths. 4-22
STEREO AM-PM fm receiver with 8 w track架
STEREO AM-PM fm receiver with 8 w track架
had a hospital care, GHC$100 [69]. Call McCormick
(855) 743-3252.
CLOSE OUT! Entire stock of Michelin XAS
Sport cars let run for 20 to 25% (size, 165-
to 215), 40 to 45%, Jury limited, HIRE
Stoneback's, Rocky Mountain, turlr city
parking lot behind Woolworth's for tire ser-
very.
Sony TC-3232D reel to reel with eight "t" tapes
$160, Jeff. 844-6890
4-22
Compares test. Fisher 28 with BSR record changes, ANSI 1793 or ANSI 2024; XP-1495 or 1797 or 1827-282.
Honda SDI 50 CL. 1988 needs some work $160.
Honda SDI 200 Cl. 1989 needs a bilingual book. Feyrolds
SDI 34 frame quality. 835-144-7180.
SDI 43 frame quality. 835-144-7180.
12X69 Trailer store, quiet, in-town location.
Call 841-4387. 4-23
Super summer machine. 75 Culmati Italian motor
supercharger. 160 gallon palton. Biondor
$300 or best offer. 841-784-752.
6" x 4" X 2" covered trailer. Make an offer. Call
5 p.m. 841-308-100.
4-26
I have to leave town. Must sell 69 Triumph GT4.
I have to leave town. Must sell 69 Triumph GT4.
and make an offer: 825-697-1101
Super Beetle, 4-speed, AM radio, rear window defroster, excellent condition. Call 843-9247.
10-speed touring bike. Practically new. $50.
$20s. 843-339-300.
4-22
1973 Toyota Celica ST 4x. Excellent condition
offer over $25,000 full. Lease 864-7684 or 842-
8483.
2015
710 Mass. 841-7946 Mon.-Saf. 10-5:30
armadillo bead co
MACRAME BEADS
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & Mass.
large selection of sizes & prices
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun
BIRDIE BIKER
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS JOBS - summer/year-round, Europe,
S. A. America, Australia, Astia, etc. All fields, $600-
$800. Write and pay tightness. Free inform-
m., Writen, Expense, Repair. KA. Box 449, Berkley, CA 94708, 4-23
HELP WANTED: Kansas Students Company
available; etc. ebx available, now! Flexible
schedule; eax available, now!
PART TIME-EARN $75 PER WEEK, FOR 3
AUGUST. EARN $285 PER WEEK, FOR 1474,
between 8 a.m.-10 p.m. FOR INTERM.
PARENTS.
Help Wanted: Man to drive 2-ton local delivery truck and set up farm machinery for established local implement dear. Summer employee acceptance applies. Salary $40,000, Tractor Co., 1548 E. 38rd Lawrence, 8424-303-5
Avon can help you have the summer vacation of your dreams. Excellent earnings. Openterti-
mary. Free meals.
Eight dollar to participate in two one hour hour宴 meeting, and six dollar to mark decision of helping others. Call 1-800-555-6232.
LOST AND FOUND
1971 Chev Malibu, m/b, p/b, p/s, AM/FM, 501,
owner, one owner, excelent engine, $380. 642-
Boys 10-speed. Vista. Good condition.
Best call. Offer 842-884-4584 after 5
4.29
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence Downtown Bank—30th & Mass. and First National Bank of Lawrence West 21st.
Research/systems specialists and computer programs for the City of Kansas City, Na. See www.ncsu.edu/nsr.
Lost: stain glases in light blue case between Strong and Olive, Call 864-6771. 4-21
Found–Ring w 15 keys at Jawhaye Station
Found on 28rd. St. Call and Museum,
4-21-1
Lost- Kindle Pocket Internet 40 in green vinyl
Lost- Kindle Pocket Internet 40 in green vinyl
ARC library books on campus at amcguy.ARC
ARC library books on campus at amcguy.ARC
Found: one very pregnant calce cat at 18th and
Minadrine Drive. B42 648-0288
4-21
Someone dropped some money in the Dahlay Hall Book Store Monday 4-12. Come and identify 4-22.
Lost: A black wallet somewhere on campus Sat.
April 10, Return: Call碾 at 864-282-4
4-21
Found. gold ladies' watch in front of Wescoe.
Wed. evc. 864-681
Found one book in 4034 Wesco. Identify and
claim at English Office, 3113 Wesco.
4-22
Tennis racket with cover, near Corinth Hall Call 4-22
842-7570 to claim.
NOTICE
Reprintation is faster than ever with Alice, at the Quicken Loans office. In 102 pages thesis in 5 minutes! See action in for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, 835 Mannheim suite. 814-900-6.
Swip Shop, 520 Max. Used furniture, diaries,
dresses, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12pm.
843-2377
The Catah Batee special Sunday dinner is a Pull-in five or six course meal featuring different cuisine each week. Call 842-5000 for reservation and information. Catah Batee, 863 Massachusetts.
HALF AS MUCH
730 Mass.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive transportation provided. Drive now, pay later. Transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
Selected Secondhand Goods & Antiques
OPEN MONDAY-SATURDAY 12-5
Spring Special Blouses From India!
V
Planning a trip?
Let Mapintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
After 38 years in business, if George doesn't
appear on Monday's coverage, George'll flop, 727
on Mondays. George'll flop, 727
CREATIVE PROBLEM SOLVING WORKSHOP-
help individuals to problem solving that can help individuals with a particular problem where they want to go. The workshop will facilitate process. Anyone working with groups will find a personal problem solving. Facilitated by Anne M. Hicks, Manager of the Planned Planning at United Ministers Center, 1281 Gresham.
PERSONAL
Hypnosis is a state of full relaxation and concentration you can experience it by signing up for the Hypnosis Course at Power Hall. You will be paid five dollars for a visit to Richard Rupee, Dept. of Physiology, 842-7534.
INTERESTED IN NO-FIILHS LOW COST JET
TRANSFER TO EDUCATIONAL UNITES
In the Far East EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS be-
biding help people travel on a budget with maxi-
mal efficiency. Contact us for more info.
For more info call hot wire f002-825-5600.
MADAME LENA, E.S.P -PALM READY-AD-
R, or a dream or astrology book and get
your palm reading. You can also help
problem. For more information, 821-6331
to 2803 South Teapeka Boulevard, Topkea
Kz.
The Second Annual Student Sculpture Competition
*Don’t mute the i-entities*
4-23
SUA
Alcohol is Americas number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 842-910-1111. **ff**
Ride need to Kansas City or KU Med Center morning. Will make gas expense 6,842-4,321
Barry Riley please call me, Chris Lynch 841-702-621
Barry, I can't wait much longer. 4-21
Come one—Come all. May Day Day Festival—a weekend of conversation, conversation, and celebration. Meet women interested in workshops on Women's Films. Music at a Womens' Club. To be a look kind and volleyball. Free Children's Coaching and Commission on the Status of Women's Coaching, stimulation and information. Funded by Student Funds.
Without Zionists there would be no Zion! 4-21
Lonefly? Need a date for Juvie League? Call Tizaei, or, Vijian at 814-5279. 4-22
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 010, 142, 150, 558, 567. Regular sessions or one-time text preparation. Reasonable calls. Call 842-7681.
SERVICES OFFERED
none 843-1211 KU Union—The Mails—Hillcrest—900 Mass
MATH TURCH with MA in mathematics. Call 841-3708 after 6 p.m.
if
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT! Professional: virtually any jewelry design possible. Professional (BFA degree) goldsilvermilwaukee. Complete stone setting, wide availabity. Satin finish. 10% guaranteed. 841-3883 or 843-6070. *if*
RIDES --- RIDERS
X
a quiet corner
bengals TM
$3.95 per Dozen
Casa de Taco
TACOS
Phone 843-1211
SUA / Maupintour travel service
Gifts and Jewelry 803 Mass. Cusset
I
ANYTHING
1105 Massachusetts 843-9880
OPEN EVERY SATURDAY
811 New Hampshire
and SUNDAY
YOU COULD POSSIBLY WANT
THE LOUNGE
QUANTRILLS MARKET
TLEA MARKET
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
Now Open Every Sunday 12 NOON
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets Admission Only *2.00 each
O
Tractor
LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY
Race or Watch
20 miles east of Topeka or
3 miles west of Lawrence
on U. S. 40 Highway
842-9445
HAZZAAM
We Print
ANYTHING!
1035 Mass.
842-1521
Trying to sell a musical instrument or sound equipment? Call at McKinney-Mason. 814-817-6172
if You don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGES
TRAVEL
EUROPE
then 12€ economy
laire
for all the day long expensive response
WWW.EUROPE
phone 800-325-4867
unTravel Charters
SOUTH AMERICA - IRIAEL - AFRICA - ASIA
BROADCASTING INC. Inc. 415 First Avenue, Truckee, CA 93680
INC., Agency, Inc. 415 First Avenue, Truckee, CA 93680
TYPING
**TIERIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is**
a service that allows you to print copies of
our services in fast and price are reasonable.
Our prices vary by location.
Expt. typi, IBM Selectric, term paper, these.
Expt. typi, IBM Selectric, written spelling, copied
Jean, 841-3069
Jenny, 841-3069
Need an experienced Uptaist? IBM Selectric to
carbon (ibn). Call Pen at 688-521-4000.
Tupfer/editor, IBM Plica/vite. Quality work.
Vice President, dissertations耳海 Call John. 842-5197-511
P-11
Experimented typeist HM Selective all kinds of typing Call $n = 844-823$ days; 842-997 eclipse. Julie.
Experienced typist—term papers, mice, misc.
Materials needed: 843-8544, Mrs. Wright,
843-8544, Mr. Wright.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 5-11
Professional typing, reasonable, work guaranteed, experienced, law office, mic paper, thesis, dissertations, pica electric, B.A. Social Science. 5-11 Core, 842-0724.
Will do typing Elite electric Term papers and
no need no thesis Proofreading, Mrs Hays, 825-750-
6960.
**TYPHING:** We have many return customers, who want us to work with them. We appreciate your business. Call Linda on 855-456-7890.
In Kansas City—quick service, experienced, with correct spelling. IBM Selectric, reasonable. Nancy Donaldson, 913-649-4129 or 813-365-1855. 4-27
A
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
PRO
AM Part Stop
rls for Foreign & Domestic Cars
1209 East 23rd St
Styling for men and women
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
9th and Illinois 843-3034
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
Sales, Parts, Service
HORIZONS HONDA
WANTED
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-6
Sat. 10-4
Wanted: Young couple for late summer job
weekend. Apply by August 18 in the Sept. 20 job
weekend. August 18 in the Sept. 20 job
weekend. Lake Winnipesaukee can begin earlier but please don't apply unless you can work till September 10. We provide Travel
Assistance. Please apply to Raymond Co.
telephone calls, please. Apply in writing and
resume. Reymond Cairn, 100 Sun Drive
People with a history of stuttering behavior meet mechanics. Takes only 15 minutes. Call them.
Wanted: Young people for late summer job (light housekeeping, lawn mowing, miscellaneous tasks). Send resume to Lily Chau-Clainp, N.Y. Salary: $109 weekly. You should begin earlier but you don't apply unless you are interested in jobs with private living quarters. No telephone calls. Please. Apply in writing and give referral numbers.
Roommate wanted-for, married. Furnished.
Bachelor's degree. Call John David, evenings. 842-1338. 4-81
a month. Call David, evenings. 842-1338. 4-81
Girl to clean house. 1 day a week, preferably through the summer. Call 843-1500. 4-22
Will pay you $25 if we sign lease on 120 apart-
ment. Will pay you $25 if we move out if you're muni-
gated Aug. 1-15. Call Jeff B. 893-1805
Studious female roommate to share two bedroom
building and house work with male student. 841
109735.
One or two female roommates for summer-
fitted apt—close to campus-pool. 841-6558.
Information as to fate/whereabouts of large groups of inmates, including those in 1969 and 1970. This is not the nodes in that year but is one constructed about 1950 and imprisoned and privately hawked in 1981. Please call Andrew Kaui, 841-239-8611.
Roommate for summer in K.C. Two bedroom,
utilities paid, furnished, pooled. Kirk 864-631-4. 2-6
Need non-smoking, liberal-minded female room-
mate for fall and spring. Call 841-6681 after 5:30.
NEED TRUCK--Will rent truck or van in good
condition a day, a month 1178-178.
4-22
Two roommates summer and next year. Share large 3 bed, two bath apart. Agriculture friendly family.负担少。 Quire, close to campus. Available May 15th; must be 24 weeks old/20 month, share费用: 4-23. 842-696-008
RECORDED MESSAGE (241v)
2-14" keystone mag mweles to fit Plymouth
Call 812-8507.
4-22
Insight INTO LIFE
842·4441
Audio Components
Roommate for KUMC, prefer 1st year, non-med. student, med.-student. Call Fayl 841-438-4-23
Someone to share 2 BR apt. for summer. AC.
Someone to share 2 BR apt. for summer. AC.
2020 W. 7: Apt. 4
YAMAHA
the GRAMOPHONE shop
822-1813 ASK FOR STATION +
STATE OF THE ART
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS)
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion
Than Most Storero Components
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
WILLE SHOPPING CENTER LANEWAY 801-652-5434
RECREATION'S FINEST
West of Hillcrest Bowl
MUSEUM OF CHINESE HISTORY
THE PLAIN STREET
CHINA
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
No one under 18 admitted.
9th & Iowa
Just Arrived! LADIES INDIGEN GALLE TOPS
AND MEN & WOMENS MEXICAN SHIRTS MANY ASSORTED SIZES
HALF AS MUCH 730mass. 12-5
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
Entertaining Night People with cold beverages at a wine bar. An antique镜子 for sweet taste and gentle humor.
5 Nights a Week No Cover NEW MODERN DECOR
Sandwiches—Pizza Pool—American Shuffleboard
843-9404 CLUB
HIDEOUT
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
I'll wait. What are you drawing? It's a character in a forest with a bow and arrow.
New Memberhips Available
Class I Private Club
Class II Private Club
IN - 7 DAYS -
Wave Pool-owner
-
Wednesday, April 21. 1976
University Daily Kansan
...
Assembly rejects proposed withdrawal policy
The College Assembly yesterday rejected a recommendation by the Educational Press and Procedures Committee (EPPC) for more restrictive class withdrawal policy.
The policy, which would have limited course withdrawal to the first four weeks of the semester, was said to be too vague and was sent back to EPPC for re-assessment.
The major complaint was that the method
of policy implementation needed to be more clearly delided.
James Carothers, assistant professor of English and chairman of EPPC, said the policy recommendation, if accepted, could help prevent University's trend of unusually high grades.
"We can't prove that the present with- orway system adds to grade inflation," he said.
restricted withdrawal system will cause a grade deflation."
KU agency to control police training center
Carothers said that since implementation of the present system in 1973, annual course withdrawal after the fourth week of school was introduced. In addition to the Liberal Arts and Sciences programs.
A bill to give the University's Division of Continuing Education control over the Kansas Law Enforcement Training Center will be approved yesterday by Gov. Robert F. Bennett.
That cut probably won't affect KU.
The governor also exercised a line-item veto to cut $404,000 in computer program funds from a general appropriations bill for the Department of Education; control of the Kansas Board of Regents.
The training center has been controlled by State Institute of Social and Envyprogression.
Robert Senecal, associate dean of the Division of Continuing Education, said that the change was made to give responsibility for ensuring student experience in advanced training programs.
Senecal said he didn't yet know whether there would be major changes in the center of the city.
Senecal said the bill also expanded the police training program to who now would have authority to certify and approve separate police training programs operated by individual communities or organizations.
Attempts made in the legislature to increase the mandatory number of hours for basic police training from the current 160 to 240 hours were unsuccessful, Senecal said.
Bennett's line-item veto, a method of vetoting individual items in general appropriations measures without vetoring the entire bills, will cut computer facility funding for the five other state colleges and universities.
The veto, the governor's first cut in the Regents' fiscal 1977 funding, should not affect UK, according to Richard Von Ende, executive secretary.
Bennett blamed in his announcement of vetoes made yesterday the legislature for overspending. Among his other vetoes was a bill that would allow research center at Kansas State University.
Those cuts left open the possibility that Bennett might make further line-levet cuts.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
said last night that he hadn't expected
Bernett's veto and that he hoped there
were vetoes in KU's budget appropriations.
"I'm just glad we got our computer funds last year," he said.
Painter to lecture
Leland Bell, nationally known painter
from New York City, will lecture a p.m. in
the Library of Congress.
Bell will present a slide show which includes a wide range of works from past and present.
He has worked in New York City since 1940 and has an extensive record of painting exhibitions throughout the United States. As a faculty member of the New York Studio School, he also is known as a teacher and a lecturer.
Bell is a Hallmark Visiting Artist Lestor for the painting and sculpture department.
SUA TRAVEL "A Day at the Races"
May 1 at Omaha, Nebraska
$15.00
TRIP INCLUDES: Roundtrip Charter Bus
Beer & Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
No Driving or Parking Hassles
Optional Lunch at Falsraff Brewery
$2.50 (with all the beer you can drink
Two other recommendations by EPPC—a set of guidelines designed to “bring back credibility to the Special Majors program” and deletion of the ampersand policy from beginning foreign language courses—were unanimously approved by the assembly.
He said that students enrolled in these courses worked just as hard as any other student and therefore deserved actual course credit for their effort.
Sign-Up Deadline-Noon April 27-SUAR Office
Call 864-3477 For More Info.
PRATT & WHITNEY AIRCRAFT REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE
ON
ON CAMPUS
APRIL 28,1976 to interview for
ENGINEERING POSITIONS
in East Hartford, Connecticut
& West Palm Beach, Florida
Consult your Placement Office
for degree and field of study
requirements
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Carothers said the ampersand policy—a policy in which credit hours for certain courses aren't counted toward the student's grade point average to the student and needed to be abolished.
In other assembly business, J. Michael Young, associate professor of philosophy and chairman of the Committee for the Advancement of Instruction and Advising (CAIA), submitted a four-part report detailing the workings of the present Freshman-Sophomore Advising system within Nunemaker Center.
Carothers said that the Special Majors program had recently become an attractive academic loophole for many students who undercut the workload of traditional majors.
He said that the new guidelines would help to return the program to the innovative and creative aspects for which it was intended.
There is general satisfaction among advisers with the present system, he said, but the most persistent complaint from them was that too few students show up to be advised.
Other common complaints, Young said, which were lodged by both advisers and students were lack of preparation and clear course in course and degree requirements.
Assembly opinion was heard regarding the right for student voting privileges on the Faculty. Appointments, Promotions and Resumes. No formal decision was reached.
The Department of Planning and Development Kansas City, Kansas
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KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Vol.86 No.128
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, April 22.1976
SenEx creates scholarship panel
By JERRY SEIB
Staff Writer
SenEn voted yesterday to create a grievance panel to decide under what conditions student athletes should lose their scholarships.
The panel, which will comprise members of the University Judiciary Committee, will take over the duty from the Conference on Financial Aid to Students (FASC). FASC was instructed to limit its activities to advising on financial aid policy.
SenEx sent back a year-end FASC report filed last week and a two-page addition to that report filed yesterday by one FASC member. SenEx asked FASC to combine the two into a single report that would be acceptable to all FASC members.
THE TWO-PAGE addition was filed by FASC member Anne Harlsenske, Wichita senior, who told SenEx she was displeased with the decision that her report had been drafted at a special
meeting of FASC, which she couldn't attend.
Harlenske said she objected to the present system of revoking athletic scholarships. Now, FASC decides whether an athlete who quits his team should lose his athletic scholarship and has never given FASC specific authority to determine athletic scholarship cases.
Harlenske said she specifically objected to four pages of the report that give tentative guidelines for use in decisions involving the revocation of scholarships. Those guidelines equate withdrawal from an athletic team and fraud, she said. They also violate NCAA and Big Eight rules, she said.
NCAA AND Big Eight rules state that scholarships can be withdrawn only if the athlete is guilty of "fraudulent characterism" of his intent to participate in a sport.
Harlenske said the guidelines submitted
with the FASC year-end report would require a group that ruled on an athletic scholarship to consider an athlete who quit a team guilty of fraudulent behavior.
The burden of proof of fraud should lie with the athletic department that is seeking to revoke the scholarship, she said, and not with the athlete.
That would make an athlete "gully until proven innocent," she said. There are special cases when an athlete must quit his job, and no fraud is involved, she said.
ANOTHER COMMITTEE member, Tom Donaldson, Wichita graduate student, told SenXe he didn't think voluntary withdrawal would work for the reexecution of an athletic scholarship.
Donaldson said that NCAA and Big Eight guidelines require a school to continue to provide financial aid to an athlete who quits a team unless the athletic department can prove the athlete was attempting to commit fraud.
Shorter fiscal period creates revenue-sharing fund decrease
By JANET SCHMIDT
Staff Writer
Requests by community service groups for 1977 allocations from federal revenue-sharing funds should be harder to meet than they were this year.
Lawrence will receive about $330,000 in revenue-sharing funds for six months from the City of Wilmington. Wilden, assistant city manager, said last week the city received $678,078 for fiscal year.
Of the $30,000, Wildgen said, about $147,000 will be available for people programs and other projects. People programs refer to independent community service groups and associations, such as Penn House, the Consumer Affairs Commission on Aging, and the East and North Lawrence Improvement Associations.
The remaining $138,000, he said, has already been committed to two capital improvement projects: expansion of Lawrence Memorial Hospital ($100,000) and renovation of the building housing the police departments at 749 Vermont ($83,000).
APPLICATIONS FOR allocations of revenue-sharing funds will be accepted at the city manager's office until the end of April. The Lawrence City Commission will hold public hearings in May to decide distribution of the funds.
The reason for the decrease in revenue-saving funds, Wiltgen said, is the length of time that is necessary to recover from an
Kansan applications due noon Monday
Applications for staff positions on the summer and fall Kansans are now available in the Student Senate office, the dean of men's office, the dean of women's office or 108 Flint Law School. Job interviews will be Monday afternoon and all day Tuesday.
--the people's Republic of China in May, Lebanon, who invented an Asian language computer codec, would act as cultural adviser to the US government.
Revenue-sharing funds are distributed to state and local governments for entitlement periods of six or 12 months. The fiscal 1976 months, from July 1, 1975, to June 30, 1976.
However, the fiscal 1977 entitlement period is six months, from July 1 to Dec. 31, and it continues through June. The five-year revenue-sharing program began in December 1972 by former President Richard M. Nixon. The first month of that program began January 1, 1972.
A BILL TO continue revenue-sharing is in
us U. House of Representatives and is
not yet in effect.
Wildgen said he had talked to Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., in March about the bill.
"He said he thought there was support for it in Congress," Wilden said. "But what happens with that?"
The bill might change present policy for distributing revenue-sharing funds, he said.
The 1972 revenue-sharing legislation authorized $2.0 billion for payment over a period of time, and it requires institutions. Congress is apparently considering restricting that distribution so that funds
"It looks like annual appropriations," Wildgen said. "But the Ford administration has supported an increase in the total allocation."
He said the new program would probably require more citizen participation and priority in allocations for people programs. He said it was important to foster older civil rights requirements, he said.
Policies for spending revenue-sharing funds are decided by the local governments. The only federal restriction is that spending revenue-sharing funds be categorized into categories: public safety, environmental protection, public transportation, health, recreation, libraries, social services for the elderly.
THOSE CHANGES represent a contrast to present federal policy on revenue sharing.
The advantage for local governments of
virtually free federal control over spending
Revenue sharing was introduced by
Nixon to prevent increased taxes and improve public services by returning a portion of the federal tax dollar to local communities. State and local governments are required in proportion to their population receive the largest share of revenue-sharing funds.
When the program ends in December,
Lawrence will have received about $2.86
million in revenue-sharing funds for seven
entitlement periods.
OF THAT AMOUNT, about $2.26 million or 30 per cent, will have been allocated for the education program.
-$444,444 for the city-county judicial building of the east Douglas County Courthouse. The police department will move into the building in November 1976.
-$75,600 for renovation of the police and fire departments building on Vermont. The building will house the fire department and apartment moves to the new judicial building.
-$270,000 for renovation of the Community Building 115 W. 11th. The project was funded by a grant from the Library Foundation.
Harlenski said any group that hears athletic scholarship cases gets its authority from the NCAA, and is required to follow NCAA guidelines.
See REVENUE page 6
"The final (FASC) report goes blatantly against NCAA and Big Eight rules by equating fraud and voluntary withdrawal," she said.
AFTER THE meeting, FASC chairman Louis Burmester, professor of mechanical engineering, said he didn't anticipate any future problems with FASC report and Hurlenke's objections.
"I'm sure that we can sit down and resolve the matter," he said.
In other action, FacEx asked Barkley Clark, professor of law, to determine whether University of Kansas ad- dopts the purchase of a new faculty club building.
Clark said that he thought there would be administration support of a new faculty club, but that faculty members shouldn't be building purchased or built before two years.
The purchase or construction of a new faculty club would require financial support from the Endowment Association, Clark said. But because the endowment Association is now helping finance the Helen Foresman Memorial Scholarship, they undertake new building projects, he said.
WHEN THE NEW museum of art is completed next year, the Endowment Association may be more willing to give social support to a faculty club, Clark said.
"I think it'll come about in time if we keep pushing." he said.
Clark said there were two favorable locations for a new faculty club. One is on Oread near the Kansas Union. The other site is near the location of the future Schiller University. Clark said that Spooner Hall, which will be vacant upon completion of the new art museum couldn't be used because that building had been declared a fire hazard. FACEX CHAIRMAN Gerhard Zuther, professor of English, said that Clark should get a long-range commitment to support a faculty club from Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Zuther said that once a "commitment to the principle" of a faculty club was received from administrators, the project would be taken over by a small group of faculty who had kept the idea of a faculty club alive since the last faculty club closed in 1967.
PUBLIC SAFETY
RESTORATION
FREE ALL THE POLITICAL PRISONERS IRAN THE FUTURE VIETNAM
Iranian protest
Photo by CORKY TREWIN
In silent protest against what they call the Shah of Iran's "dictatorial regime," five KU students rode through campus yesterday. The Iranian Student Association is sponsoring a conference featuring Richard Eden of Amnesty International and the National Lawyers' Guild at 6 p.m. Sunday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
$50 million to help Med Center
By MARION ABARE
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—An appropriation of more than $50 million by the Kansas Legislature for the KU Medical Center in fiscal 1977 is expected to enhance and facilitate programs of health care and education service.
Robert B. Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said yesterday, "I think the state has been very good to us in providing high-quality international program, and we're very pleased."
A request by the Board of Regents for a 12 per cent increase in other operational expenses (OE) was reduced to 10 per cent, and the Board approved an additional 12 per cent approval, plus an additional
$500,000 to increase the Med Center's expenditure ceiling.
KUGEL SAID the inflationary spiral of plastics, paper and rubber goods, accompanied by sophisticated hospital procedures such as organ transplants and biotechnology research, operating costs. Charges to patients for these costs produce income for the hospital, he said, but the expenditure ceiling is fixed, regardless of the income produced by the
J. Howard Feldmann, associate vice chancellor for finance, said, "We're pleased with the 12 per cent increase plus the $500,000 for hospital operation. It shows that officials are recognizing the mounting hospital operating costs. Whether these changes can be made adequate to meet the service load and intensity of care remains to be seen."
China trip upcomina
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies and Oriental languages and literature, will be making his first trip to
BLAKE SMITH
Photo by CORKY TREWIN
KUGEL SAID he preferred that there be no expenditure ceiling. He said some things had skyrocketed in costs, particularly the cost of hospital care; the hospital is earning money and can't spend it, he said, and when there is no ceiling, the rate is raised as costs increase and the cost falls.
"I would hope that I could talk at a later time about removing the ceiling because that would allow us to adapt to the cost matters." Kueel said.
Salaries and wages
$17,112,674
Operating expenses for salaries
1,932,998
Operating expenses for utilities
1,932,998
Handlers training opportunities
3,088,221
Handlers travel outreach
5,281,682
Cyclic frictions cost
10,000
A total of $25,315,010 was appropriated
from state general revenue funds, broken down as follows:
THAT LEAVES six and a half per cent to be distributed, he said. The distribution is made up of 70 percent of the department chairmen and approved by the vice chancellor for faculties and academic affairs, he said. The increases, he said, can range from nothing to whatever is needed.
The increase in salaries for unclassified employees was granted at 8 per cent.
He explained that about one and a half percent was used to provide for promotions, correct any salary inequities and allow for transfers from departments, private gifts and federal money.
"This does not mean everyone gets an 8 per cent raise." Feldmann said.
The legislature also authorized **$23,818,062**
expenditures from hospital revenue.
fin.
An additional $600,000 was appropriated to offset the capitain grant loss for fiscal 1977. The legislature had appropriated a supplemental $320,000 for fiscal 1978.
Russell Mills, associate vice chancellor, said the federal grant money was based on the number of students, the number of graduates in four years and bonuses for a 5 per cent or more increase in the size of an entering class. Although much of this grant
**THIS IS the first year that utilities have been budgeted separately. Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said. He said this was an attempt to keep better records of the rapidly increasing costs of utilities. Feldman said there is little evidence that we are preparing for fiscal 78. The appropriation for fiscal 77 is $162,900 more than last year.
money has been lost, he said, the Med
Centre expects to fund $800,000 in
fuel costs (to be discussed).
Sixty-four new classified positions, 34
unclassified positions and 9 new residences
| New classified positions | Regents' requests | Allocated |
| :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Academic | 1 | 4 |
| Facility outreach | 1 | 1 |
| Fidelity branch | 9 | 4 |
| Hospital | 105 | 16 |
| Hospital | 14 | 7 |
| New unclassified positions (including nursing education) | 32 | 8 |
| Nursing education | 8 | 4 |
| Welfare branch | 16 | 10.3 |
| Hospital | 1 | 1 |
| Hospital | 6 | 2 |
| New residences | | |
| Family practice | 8 | 8 |
| Outreach | 7 | 0 |
| Hospital | 0 | 3 |
Twenty additional residencies had been requested for St. Francis Hospital. St. Joseph Hospital and Wesley Medical Center in Wichita but weren't authorized.
See MED page 10
Placement office director hired
A new University job placement office will open July 1 after yesterday's appointment of Vernon Geissler as its placement director.
Getsalier is now associate director of Kansas State University's Career Planning Center.
William Bailour, vice chancellor for student affairs, announced the appointment and said Geissler would direct central KU's program coordination of KU's placement programs.
Placement programs at KU are now divided among various schools. Some schools and departments have no placement programs. Balfour said.
HE SAID Geisler would help develop
programs to serve students now not
before.
"The other schools' programs will con-
time to run as they are now," Baifour said.
"He (Geissler) will help them. All placement officers have other duties in the University."
"We've done relatively little to help students get placed there," he said.
Balfour said the administration had planned to create an office in the past, but funding hadn't been available until this year.
"I would just say that we'll all be working
Gessler said his work at KU shouldn't offer much from the work he is now doing.
BALFOUR SAID that Geissler had a number of contacts and that he expected Geissler would be especially concerned with placing students in federal governments.
together at making it more effective for both recruiters and students." he said.
Geisler said he would work with the placement offices already on campus but would give special attention to the areas not now served. He said he would also supervise Work Force, a direct-mail placement operation funded by the Student Senate.
Work Force, in its third year at KU, is especially concerned with finding jobs for students in small businesses that don't send recruiters to campus. Balfour said.
GEISLISER HAS 10 years of experience in college placement. He received B.S. and M.S. degrees from K-State and was formerly a county agriculture agent.
He is now president of the Midwest College Placement Association and a member of the National College Placement Association.
2
April 22,1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
W.Va. trial testimony starts
CHARLESTON, W. Va. — The first witness in the federal extortion trial of Gov. A. Moore, Jr. in 1970 that businessman Theoredo Price bargaded with the DOJ in 1972 in 100s.
Edward Tley, a Charleston lawyer who represented the Diversified Mountaintown company of chain of loan companies based in Price, said Price said he had a $250 million claim against the company.
Moore and William Loy, a former aide, are charged with conspiring to extort £25,000 from Price.
U. S. Attorney John A. Field III said in his opening statement that Moore used the West Virginia governor's office to get the money from Price in connection with an estate fraud.
Court ruling favors IRS
WASHINGTON—Taxpayers seeking constitutional protection from Internal Revenue Service agents suffered two defeats in the Supreme Court yesterday.
The court ruled 7 to 1 that a taxpayer under investigation isn't entitled to the complete state of constitutional rights that must be given to a criminal suspect.
In a separate decision, the justices ruled 8 to 6 that a taxpayer or his lawyer may be required to surrender tax return papers prepared by the taxpayer's account. They said the provision didn't violate the constitutional privilege against self-incrimination.
Farmers file for relief
MANHATTAN—The state's wheat farmers have filed nearly seven times as many applications for federal disaster relief as they had by this time last year, Frank Mosier, state director of the federal Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, said yesterday. Mosier said his office had received applications from 11,868 wheat farms so far this year, an increase of 2,500 in the past two weeks. No figures were available on the expected dollar or acreage less, he said. The centralized applications received have come from counties in southwestern and south-central Kansas, traditionally the biggest producers of wheat in the state, he said.
There was no immediate word on when the princess would be able to ride again, nor on what effect the accident would have on her chances to be a member of the royal family.
BLANDFORD, England—Princess Anne was knocked temporarily unconscious and cracked one of her vertebrae yesterday when her horse fell and rolled on her
Princess Anne injured
As one of Britain's top horse-women, Princess Anne was considered a likely member of the show running team at Montreal.
The Board discussed the possibility of the Union's purchasing additional equipment for the Sailing Club and Wilderness Rentals and a tarp that would be used to protect the Allen Field House floor during concerts, Postma said.
budget, to purchase equipment for SUA,
Postma said.
The princess was unable to ride for Britain in the 1972 Munich Olympics when another of her horses, Double, injured a tandem.
TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas House amended a Senate-approved death penalty bill late yesterday and sent it back to the governor to consider. It was enacted of enacting that legislation in this session.
Death penalty bill amended
It was a continuation of the same differences that have existed between the Senate and the House throughout the 1976 over the question of capital punishment.
The Memorial Board has administrative control of SUA.
Rosales Postma, SUA president for 1976-77, said, "We looked at specific programs that we might want to change or consolidate into a larger program. We each program would need next year."
The SUA board last night finalized its proposed $2,000 budget for next year. SUA will present the proposal to the Kansas Union Memorial Corporation Board May 8.
Equipment purchased by the Union for SUA use remains Union property, she said.
death penalty only in specified instances of murder.
The Senate has repeatedly held out for a bill that would apply the death penalty to all malicious, willful, premeditated murder.
Board to get SUA budget
The House has held out for applying the
The House substituted its version, calling for the death penalty to be applied for:
—Murder by an inmate.
—Murder by contract.
Along with its requested budget, SUA will present recommendations for capital expenditures that would allow the Union to allocate funds, separate from the SUA
—Murder in the commission of an aggravated kidnapping.
—Murder in commission of aggravated robbery.
Tobbery. -Murder of a witness.
- Commission of a murder after having been previously convicted of murder.
FLO KENNEDY
In other business, the Board decided that the spring fine arts program replacing the Festival of the Arts would be called Accent Week. The program will begin from Feb. 13 to March 6, Postma said.
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Thursday, April 22.1976
University Daily Kansan
3
Local groups benefit aged
Bv ANITA SHELTON
Staff Writer
Elderly residents of Douglas County
leave more from local various local
organizations and去社区。
One of these services is filling out income tax forms, offered by the American Association of Retired People (AARP) Eliza Holmes, president, said recently.
The 225-member organization also offers defensive drills lessons, Holmes said, and offers a variety of training options.
As their driving abilities become impaired, the elderly begin to have transportation problems, Cal Broughton, director of the Council on Aging, said.
TO HELP these people, the Council on Aging has a small-scale bus service, he said. Door-to-door transportation is available for dentists or to an shopping Brompton said.
United Wheels is another bus service for the elderly, Ann Moore, coordinator of the community office of Volunteer Clearing House. said.
Other local services are concerned with giving the senior citizen contacts with other placements.
"Sitting at home, you get very lonely and
a defeatist attitude," Broughton said.
One was the Council on Aging tries to combat this, is by having "congestional agony."
Food, prepared by the Kansas Union, is on Monday's day a week at various locations, he says.
"THE PROGRAM is designed for people to get out of their homes and come to what
we call sight's, "Broughton said. "There are two purposes. The first is a nutritious meal, and the other is one we feel is very im-
Recreational programs are also offered by the Council on Aging, he said. Table crafts, card games, films or group discussions are available after meals.
The buses also take special trips in kansas, he said, so senior citizens may travel to the city.
The Pioneer Club at south Park Recreation Center offers a wide range of activities.
KATHY FODE, director of the center,
said that the organization has monthly
luncheon meetings. Afterward, card games
billboards are the usual activities, she said.
The South Park club travels quite a bit, visiting places such as Crown Center in Kansas City, Mo., and the Eisenhower Museum in Abilene, Forks said.
Elderly persons visit the center during the week to play cards, she said. Of the 150 members, usually 40 to 60 gather for the card games, she said.
The Ring-D Day program brings contacts to about 35 people in the Lawrence area, which is a key resource.
"It's a contact service for elderly people who are either shut in or deprived of a co-operative care, the said," he said.
The organization is community based and receives donations from organizations, she
DOLEZAL SAID there is little cost in
organization because it is totally
tuited.
"We call them (the senior citizens) to check on how they're doing," she said.
*occasionally we run errands or visit them, things like that, but it's mostly a telephone
Fode said that elderly persons also attend some of the classes that are offered at the South Park Recreation Center. These in-ground recreation in dance, crafts and exercise.
Holmes said that the AARP meetings were basically educational. Speakers, in a variety of fields are featured at their monthly meetings, he said.
The Council on Aging has an information and referral service to aid the elderly.
It also puts out a newsletter and has a geriatric screening clinic. The clinic detects diseases and illnesses, he said, and provides blood pressure checks. It is operated by the Douglas County Health Department and is professionally staffed, he said.
OF THE ESTIMATED 3,500 elderly brought upon the Council reaches about 1,200.
Broughton said that although the Council may not receive federal funds in the future for transportation and nutrition as it now did, she didn't anticipate any real problems.
U.S. defense cuts urged
More revenue-sharing money may be allotted for the recreation, information and referral services and for the screening clinic, he said.
The question of armament belongs to the past and the American government should focus on the civilian sector of society by sharply cutting military spending, Dave McReynolds, War Resisters League field secretary, said last night.
"I don't think that democracy is a spectator sport, nor does change begin in Washington, D.C.," he said. "I just hope that people won't treat it as a spectator sport and instead will take part in the walk."
McReynolds said he hoped people would
realize the urgency of the cause and participate in the walk.
McReynolds, who spoke on "Non-Violence and National Defense" in the Kansas Union, is visiting the University of Kansas to promote a nationwide walk that is scheduled to come through Lawrence en route to Washington, D.C., in mid-July.
The hike is supported at KU by "People in Support of the Continental Walk," an organization spawned by the United Mine Workers. Higher Education-Life Planning Center.
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Zing said he expected the walk's participants to arrive in Washington, D.C., in October. They left San Francisco, he said, on Jan. 31.
Otto Zingg, United Ministries campus minister, said the walk showed the need to review the issue of American armament in people to the danger involved in arms policy.
"There are so many social issues that could be dealt with more effectively if more of the money that is now going to defense agencies be allocated to these problems," Zing said.
He said central concerns in Kansas, a major wheat-producing state, are hunger and the energy crisis, problems that could beACHieved and acted upon with proper funding.
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4
Thursday, April 22, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Review drop policy
When the College Assembly of the College of Liberal Arts and Science voted to return the proposed withdrawal policy to the Undergraduate Policies and Procedures Committee, it provided a much needed delay.
IT KEPT THE issue from being pushed through before some very important factors could be discussed and re-evaluated. One factor is the question of what the proposal would have been asking of a student. Under it, a student wouldn't have been allowed to withdraw from a class after the first four weeks of school. Another reason the dean of the College or his designated representative. Permission would be granted only for exceptional, non-academic circumstances.
What this would have meant was that a student would have had to decide right after the first exam, or in several cases, before any grade evaluation was made at all, whether he thought he could successfully complete the course. This is often an extremely difficult decision to make, especially in classes where one test score may be dropped at the end of the course.
IT HAS BEEN AN argued that college students should be mature enough to accept the responsibility of deciding to drop early or seeing the class through to the end. What should be considered is that students aren't always given a fair chance to know what is expected of them. Instructors aren't required to set down an explicit set of guidelines before the end of the first four weeks. Some courses drift along for several weeks before a student is given any concrete idea of the amount of time that he must spend on the class.
Although some will try to refute it, grades are probably the No. 1 reason students withdraw from classes. And it isn't just to keep from getting a D or an
F. In some cases it's to keep a C off the transcript.
SOME PEOPLE have tried to minimize the value of grades. The truth is that graduate schools have little more than grades on which to evaluate an applicant. For a person whose future rests upon graduate school, it is difficult to believe that it is knowledge acquired that is important and not the grades.
Also, although it can't be proved that the present withdrawal system has inflated grades, the committee must consider what would occur if the system is changed. Would grades deflate while grades from other schools continued to inflate? There is some worry that grade inflation might make grades meaningless. KU's KU-100 will decrease while other schools' grades continue to inflate or remain the same, it could hinder some students' chances for acceptance into graduate schools.
THE PRESENT withdrawal system is very lenient and it has allowed an annual average of 11,000 drops within the College after the fourth week of classes. This large number of drops leads to a large amount of wasted instructors' time and other resources. But the committee must consider the overall effect of a stringent change. The problems that would be placed upon the student can't be completely overlooked in the name of expediency.
There has been a great amount of clamor for some changes in the present system and some tightening of the policy is probably needed. Maybe by sending the proposal back to the committee some other alternatives can be considered. And among them one that will satisfy the needs of students while meeting requirements of a high quality academic institution.
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
It was late April and the campus was bursting in beauty. Flowers bloomed, birds sang and huge dogs playfully chased students through hedges. Who knew was deliriously happy.
Dorm dweller's dilemma
Everyone, that is, except Malcolm Snyder. Malcolm had no right to be happy. It was late apartment-hunting. It was still apartment-hunting.
MALCOLM HAD vowed that he was but a freshman that he would not spend his entire college in the hall. Not that the residence hall was awful. After all, it did have fairly clean toilets and offered a wide variety of possible varieties, just that he hated it there.
He had only lived there four weeks when he swore he would leave. He lit a small candle and, as its ghostly light illuminated his roommate's collections of Wayne Newton albums and
hand-painted ties, he listened to the screaming of the water-fighters in the hallway and whispered to himself, "I can't take it anymore—I just can't take it anymore." 783 times.
wasn't able to find a summer job and thus wasn't able to earn any money and found himself in the junior year in the residence hall.
Now it was late in Malcolm's
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
BUT WHEN that spring rolled around, Malcolm's apartment-hunting comrades dropped out on him and he spent too much money on records. When everything was said and done he himself spending his sophomore year in the residence hall.
And when the spring of his sophomore year arrived he
junior year. It was his last chance and the apartment-hunting season was dying fast.
IT WAS A little after midnight on the last day of April. Malcolm was laying disconcertedly in his dormitory bed, wallowing in self-pity. He was just about ready to give up.
Suddenly, the room was filled with a blinding light and a
INFLATION
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numerous and passionate to let
Abortion question beyond laws
women helping us would take care of suffocating the child and burying it in the fields. From their eyes we can see our men on the tractors would
---
the matter die, and the candidates are too exposed to popular emotions to tell them that we must live with abortion, that nothing can be done about it.
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) King Features
MAKING IT illegal makes it expensive and dangerous; it won't stop it, probably won't even slow it down. Since abortion has become rather generally accessible, we're not asking for permission who want the right but live in a society that denies it to them.
"Gosh, goddess," Malcolm gasped, "This is beautiful!"
about how they tried to avoid it and what it did to their marriages to their good most husbands is indestructible.
Cautiously, Malcolm took her hand. As he did, the grey-green walls of the dome room seemed to drift away into mist. Soon he stood in a beautiful room of paneled walnut.
radiant figure in rather gaudy robes flattened down at him from the general vicinity of the ceiling. The figure, a woman who looked remarkably like an elephant,North, settled down at the foot of the bed, smiling softly at the astonished Malcolm.
"I would always tell my husband, 'Be careful,' or better, I would get hall-disease. ... I'm going to go to doctors. ... It means going up and down the hall for hours during the night, waiting for my child to fall asleep, to prevent from getting me pregnant."
WITHOUT ASSERTING that infanticide was or is a common practice among the farm women of northern Italy, without even asserting it even happened once, that such a story is even told at a meeting of a group of women tells how hard it can be. Not that these women courted pregnant. The testimony of the wives at the Emilia-Romagna meeting
find one of the small skeletons,
and then we would look astonished. "It must be
the bones." But no, it was our children. "It
was our children."
"TSK, TSK," she said. "Don't be afraid. I will not harm you. I'm Mildred, the goddess of wishing. I've come to help you."
EMILIA-ROMAGNA is a EMILIA-ROMAGNA is a section of Italy which has been heavily Communist for a long time, but from the quotes of the authors might be well have been practicing, bourgeois Catholics.
"Don't be afraid," she said gently. "Just take my hand and I shall show you the way."
A woman is recorded as saying, "I was a child and I would pretend to be a睡人, but I would hear those scenes and same because that beat my mother because she wouldn't make love and he would yell, 'What else did I marry you for? You're mine!' Another adds, 'You want what love is. To me marriage has meant nothing but terror.'
One more woman testifies,
"Intercourse has always been a nightmare to me. I got to the point where I would hate my husband." And finally, "It's a chance," she said, prepping a 10-day period, and then I would get pregnant anyway. At last, menopause!"
ALLOWANCES HAVE to be made for Italian historiics here. These women are Cicero's greatest praise and he read what the women say is to conclude the matter is beyond law and legislation. Any intervention by them will be unbelievable and ultimately unworkable.
The same must obtain in India, where the authorities are going to give any couple who were on the job or who are sterilization or prison. The
"But . . . But . . ."
predict mass sterilization won't work or that the women of Emilia-Romagna will just as surely refuse to have the children the women of India want. In the end the totalitarian state isn't that total, and most people don't opt out of opinions, would be wise to see that in certain areas of life public power must back off.
endeavor is so monstrous it's funny. What do you with young marrieds who have triplets the first time out? Or two? What do you with children and then you have twins? Is the fourth child taken away and given to a family who only has two children? If so, parents should be sterilized as the price for adopting a third? Public hanging is the least punishment that ought to be administered for the incarcerational crime of quintuplets.
THEUGH THE modern state and those who worship it may claim for it not only supreme power but all power, that does not allow it to be used. You don't have to know anything about Indian culture to
There was also air conditioning, a dishwasher, maid service and a built-in sound system.
"WE WOULDN'T even tell our husbands we were pregnant, nor our mothers-in-law who used to live in the city among us young wives. then, when the moment had come, we would leave the men in the fields for a while, we would give birth to the child with the help of a nurse, then we would go back to work so the men wouldn't know. We wouldn't even see the child. The
"INDEED IT is," the goddess said. "Let me show you more."
The goddess thereupon began to show him many wonders. There was wall-to-wall carpeting, a chandelier with a rheostat, a well-stocked bar, a window with a balcony, a plant house, mabogany cabinets and wrought iron wall fixtures.
"And all," the godess said,
"for a piddly $349 a month without utilities."
That's the situation in Italy which, Catholic country that it is, is going through the pain of a national debate on legalizing it. month of Conference of Commission Women. Romagna discussed the question. Perhaps because these are farm women of another culture the translation of their testimony of what the unwanted pregnancy means them is especially moving.
Malcolm blanched.
The following paragraph is, as they say in television, for a woman's own words it tells what they used to do when they became pregnant in their world before preception wasn't permitted.
"UHHHH." he said.
"Er," Malcolm said semicasually. "Could you show me something a little cheaper."
"How much cheaper?" th goddess asked suspiciously.
"Not only that," she said,
"but the campus is a mere 25-minute bus ride away."
"How does $60 a month sound?"
“$75 a month?”
The goddess sniggered.
ONE WOMAN, an aged lady from Anzola, is quoted as saying, "When we would get married we would solve the solution in a proverb from Bolgona that says, 'Create by night and hope for paradise by day'—that is, hope for nine months, the baby will be born dead."
"Be serious, Malcolm," she said.
"Well," said the goddess, "I do have a couple of things . . ."
"GOOD, GREAT. May I see them?"
"Well," said the goddess, "If you insist."
"Welcome to the student slums," said the goddess, sweeping her hand majestically across the room. Malcolm's eyes followed her hand, taking it all in.
The walnut paneling faded slowly away and was replaced once again by mist. Seconds later, the wall was covered by a wall of painted rock.
THE ROOM WAS more than vaguely reminiscent of Hitler's bunker in the last days of the Second World War. The ceiling was only five-and-a-half feet high at the most and was sagging dangerously. Three walls of the room were bumpy with red markings and a yellow. The fourth wall was made of wallboard covered with one-millimeter thick wood grain tape.
The goddess was about to explain about kitchen and toilet privileges when Malcolm interrupted her.
The floor of the room sloped dangerously toward a puddle in one corner. From the room's only window, high and small on one wall, Malcolm could see the feet of passers-by.
"YOU KNOW," he said, "I've always wanted to live in a house."
"Boy," said the goddess as the walls waded away again, "You really are asking for it, aren't you?"
Boy, was he. The house was above ground, it is true, but it also offered him the opportunity to enter the room furnishings that had escaped from a bus station and to share a kitchen and two bedrooms with four guys who lived behind parapolished doors on the floor above.
"It's not that," he said. "I've simply had enough of this. I'm giving up."
POOR MALCOLM. Not only was he getting nowhere, but a genuine goddess also was mad at him.
"What do you mean, you don't like this either?" she asked.
"You realize what that means?" she asked. "You realize this is your last chance for escape? If you don't leave the hall now you are doomed to be a lifer."
"I KNOW," he said, "But that's the way it goes."
"Sure you don't want to look at a mobile home?"
"Yes."
The goddess shrugged. Oh well, she thought, there are plenty more where this one was. She moved her arm and sent him home.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
An All-American college newspaper
Editor
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom-684-1410
Business Office-684-1258
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays
on Thursday, May 27th. Subscription period: Second-class postage paid at Law-
nson and Barnes post offices for a semester or $1 a year in Douglass County and $1 a
year in Franklin County. Subscriptions are $2 a semester paid through
subscriptions are $2 a semester paid through
Betty Hargan Yarif Aaburushahk
Associte Campus Editor Greg Jebras
Associte Campus Editors Greg Jebras Stewart Brennan
Photo Editor Steve Brennan
Shift Photographers David Creshwand.
Sports Editor George Miller Jay Koleer
Associte Sports Editors Alain Jones
Entertainment Editors Mary Earl Pope
Copy Chiefs Mary Ann Huddleston.
Artist Janet Majeue,Alice Gwen
News Editors John Huckey Brend Anderson.
Wire Editors Kelly Scott Cluxton Alexander.
Contributing Writers John Johnson,Jim Bates.
Business Manager
Letters Policy
Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Administrator Manager Database Server
Claimled Manager Dashboard Server Promotion Director Manager Scotch Bush Manager Assistant Claimled Manager Jim Marumman
Publisher
David Dary
News Advisor
Suanne Shaw
Mel Adams
Member Associated Collegiate Press
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.
WESTPHAL
ACMIE METAL DETECTOR
BINGO
Fingerprinting
ID Photos
'NOW JUST FILL THOSE OUT... CAN'T BE TOO CAREFUL; MAFIA INFILTRATION COULD TAKE ALL THE FUN OUT OF THE GAME.'
Thursday, April 22, 1970
5
Prof selected for trip to China
By DOMINIC D'ASCOLI
Staff Writer
Carl Leban, associate professor of East Asian studies and Oriental languages and literature, has been selected by the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to accompany an American delegation of nine american scholars to the People's Republic of China.
"This delegation of mathematicians is all associated with computers," he said. "I happen to be interested in computers and have done some work in this area, so I was
Leban said Monday that NAS made its selection largely on the basis of a mutual interest in computers between Leban and the visiting delegation.
Leban's work with computers includes his invention of an Asian language computer-
But Leban quickly pointed out that his connection with the church in no way supported his inviigation.
HE SAID that during the 25-day trip, from May 3-27, he would act mostly as a cultural adviser. He said the Chinese would provide their own intermitters.
"I'll be like a cultural shock absorber," Leban said. "Most people who visit China don't realize just how many of the country's customs are traditionally Chinese in nature. They think everything stems from Communistic doctrine. This simply isn't so."
Communist socialism, but essentially it's the Chinese way of making the most of their abundant manpower resource. They've always thought this way."
Besides acting as the group's cultural adviser, Leban said, he will also present books from the University Press of Kansas to various Chinese libraries.
LEBAN SAID he was looking forward to the trip and said it should be beneficial in his future.
"These exchanges are important to the people in the sciences, humanities and social sciences because of the long absence of contact between the two cultures," he said.
"There have been tremendous changes in attitudes about education in China," he said. "There is ideological conflict on who should educate and what kind they should get."
'Now, we can actually go to their universities, sit in a classroom and talk to them.'
Whatever excitement Leban has for his upcoming trip seems to run second to the excitement he generates about his invention.
He said that he hoped to have a model of the computer-typewriter ready by August for presentation to the convention of the International Congress of Humanistic Sciences in Asia and North Africa, to be held in Mexico City.
Clinics aid smokers in kicking the habit
LEBAN EXPLAINED that his invention reduced the complex Chinese writing
By DEBI TOMLINSON
Staff Writer
For people who are continually trying to quit smoking, two area clinics say they have been successful in methods of helping the smoker kick the habit.
The Johnson-Wyndote County chapter of the American Cancer Society holds four-week clinics consisting of eight sessions. session last an hour and a half to two hours.
Sandy McDonald, education director for the Kansas City chapter, said the clinic gives group support to the smoker and tries to prevent smoking of smoke with a more positive habit.
At the first session each person chooses a partner for support during the rest of the clinic. There are usually 10 to 18 persons in each group.
"We don't use fear tactics," she said. "At one session a doctor or inhalation therapist informs the group on the physical harm of smoking."
"WE TRY TO make the person feel that dropping the habit of smoking does not harm you."
The method used by the clinic was developed in California in 1970 and has been used elsewhere.
The Johnson-Wyandotte County chapter charges $10 for the clinic; $15 is refunded if the person attends all sessions. The county doesn't support any smoking clinic that charges more than $25, McDonald said, and many groups charge more than that.
McDonald said most of the people attending the clinic had tried to quit alone, but were unsuccessful. She said it to 50 per cent of the people admitted to the clinic smoking or cut down considerably.
"Of course, the method is always being improved," she said.
THE SHAWNEE Mission Hospital holds a different type of smoking clinic. The Rev.
Hugh Campbell, the hospital chaplain who helps run the clinic, said, "We use a five-day plan supported by the Seventh Day Adventists, pastors of various churches and doctors in the Kansas City area. Our plan has been in effect since before the surgeon general issued his warning. We anticipated the need for such a plan."
In each session a doctor gives a 15-minute talk on the physical aspects of smoking and a pastor gives a similar talk on the emotional and spiritual aspects of smoking.
Short films stressing smoking's adverse effects from the American Heart Association or the American Lung Association are shown to the group.
The clinic also has question and answer periods along with a social period to give the patient time to reflect.
"THE MAN thrust of our program is to build up will power. We urge people to I choose not to smoke. and not say 'I promise not to smoke.'' Rev, Campbell said.
"We encourage people to cool turkey and not just try to cut down," he said.
Fifty to 125 people attend the hospital's clinic. The money is used for buying medical literature, new films and orange juice.
"It is a popular clinic," he said. "People from all over the city attend and at almost every clinic we have some out of town people."
In the first few days of the clinic, persons attending are urged to drink large amounts of water and fruit juices to clean their systems of the physical desire to smoke.
CAMBELL said $10 is charged for the clinic. The money is sued for buying medical literature, new films and organe juice.
For those who feel the urge for a cigarette there is a smoker's Dial spongeboy phone number with a tape recording origin, person calling to keep up his will power.
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He said that these characters could be typed into a computer by aryata, regiar-ai. He said that the characters could be typed into a computer by aryata, regiar-ai.
MICHAEL GRUNKOFF MEL BROWS GENE WILDER MEL BROWS
MARK W. SHELLEY JOHN WOHRS
PG
system to a small set of 36 basic character elements, on which the entire language is
April 23-24
Woodruff Auditorium
7:00 & 9:30 Admission $1^{00}
Leban said he began work on the system in 1959 and received his first patent in 1967. Since then, he said, he has been working to refine the system.
then the information could be printed out in its normal form.
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K.U. CAMPUS VETERANS
Coming Attractions for
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PICNIC—April 25—1-5 p.m.
Cost $1.00 which includes food (hamburger, hot dogs,chips, etc.) and all the Miller Beer you can drink. Call 864-4478 for info.
EMPLOYMENT-Roy Cockerham of the Employment Security Division will be on campus every Wednesday afternoon from 1:30-5:00 to help insure that veterans receive the priority in Job Placement Assistance and that they are entitled to by law. He'll be in room 101, Kansas Union.
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WHAT: Freshman Class T.G.I.F.
WHEN: Friday, April 23rd; 3:30-6:30 p.m.
WHERE: Hawk's Nest
HOW MUCH: FREE for all Freshmen who have paid class dues. $2.50 for all other Freshmen
MUSIC: D.J.
FREE 16 OZ. GLASS MUG FOR THOSE WHO HAVE PAID THEIR DUES.
The Program of the Year isn't on TV. It's in the Air Force ROTC.
The courses themselves prepare you for leadership positions ahead. Positions as a member of an aircrew... or as a missile launch officer... positions using mathematics... sciences... engineering.
Look into the Air Force ROTC. And there are 4-year, 3-year, or 2-year programs to choose from. Whichever you select, you'll leave college with a commission as an Air Force officer. With opportunities for a position with responsibility...challenge...and, of course, financial rewards and security.
Look out for yourself. Look into the Air Force ROTC programs on campus.
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6
Thursday, April 22, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Revenue-sharing . . .
From page one
$-50,000 for construction of Haskell Loop. It will run through East Lawrence and connect the downtown area with the proposed U.S. 99-by-seast of Lawrence.
-$823,000 for construction of the city maintenance garage at 12th and Haskell Ave. The building will house offices and a library and be expected to be completed by October 1976.
-$10,000 for expansion of Lawrence
building; includes building major additions to new widen-
possibly tearing down old wings of the
hospital. It is expected to be completed by
OF THE REVENUE-sharing funds that Lawrence has already received for six entitlement periods, about $452,000, or 20 per cent, has gone to people programs.
Lawrence has limited the funding of people programs because they generally require yearly, on-going costs, Wildgen said.
"It was uncertain whether revenu-sharing would be continued after 1976, so most of the funds have gone to one-time donors. If you don't commit us for a long term," he said.
"There was also a great need for renovating some of the buildings," Wildgen said. "The Community Building was badly in need of renovation."
The city allots revenue-sharing funds to local groups that have shown they provide a valuable service to the community, either through an individual or by filling some other kind of need, he said.
MOST LOCAL service groups receive allocations from both Lawrence and Douglas County revenue-sharing funds, Wildign said.
Some of the groups that received fiscal 1976 revenue-sharing funds from the city were Legal Aid Society ($4,000); Conference Center ($2,500); Community Center ($2,500); Penn House ($2,500); Lawrence Public Library ($15,000); Lawrence-Dowglas County Health Department ($28,846); Council on Environment ($3,940); and Boy's Club of Lawrence ($3,000).
Most of those groups are applying for funds for 1977.
LEGAL AID provides services for people who can't afford lawyers.
Deanell Tacha, faculty adviser for the Legal aid Society, 846% Indiana, said the center would request about half of what it had for 176, or $1,500.
Legal Aid used revenue-sharing funds to pay for supplies, a secretary's salary and rent, she said. The center received $2,000 from United Fund for fiscal 1976, but that money can't be used for salaries or maintenance costs, she said.
Tacha said that although she thought Congress would renew the revenue sharing program, she was apprehensive about guidelines it might include.
"THE BILLS that are now pending put all kinds of strings on the money."
Judy Kroeger, director of the Consumer Affairs Association (CAA) in the Kansas Union, said she had been asked by the city manager's office to submit both a minimum- and maximum-need budget request.
"Everything is up in the air right now," she said, "but I'm considering asking for money to hire another person and for new equipment."
Most of the revenue-sharing funds CAA received for 1976 were used to give Carol Strobbel, former CAA director, a pay raise, Kroeger said.
CAA is also funded by the Student
CNA and through private fund drives, she
said.
"THE SENATE was hesitant about funding this year," Kroeger said. "We're trying to get the city to take a larger portion, so we're thinking of moving downtown and cutting back the University office of part-time."
Betty Dutton, outreach worker for Ballard Community Center, 708 Elm, said that although the center may not receive as much as it requests in revenue-sharing funds, it would continue to operate because of money given through donations.
Dutton said revenue-sharing funds were used only to provide emergency assistance to local residents. That aid includes utilities, gas and paying utility bills, she said.
Ballard received requests for emergency assistance from 471 families in 1973 Dutton
The funds are used only to buy emergency food and medicine for people who can't afford them otherwise, she said. Penn was one of the top 100 requests for medicine in 1975, she said.
OCOE MILLER, secretary of Penn House, 1035 Pennsylvania, said the center had requested $2,500 in revenue-sharing funds for 1977.
Penn House received $6,000 a year from United Fund, in addition to money from private donations that is used for general overhead costs, Miller said.
Wayne Mayo, director of Lorene Public Library, 707 Vermont, said he had requested $15,000 in revenue-sharing funds, to be used to buy books for the library.
Kay Kent, director of the Lawrence-Douglas County Health Department, 701 New Hampshire, said that she would apply for revenue-sharing allocations but that she didn't know how much the request would be. Funds are used to pay for two nurses' salaries, one program worker's salary and rent, she said.
KU-Y presents an
KILV presents an
Advocate Series with Roy Laird, Prof. of Political Science April 27 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room, Union The Issue: WORLD HUNGER Roy Laird's opinion:"American food aid to the developing countries may well have been a prime factor contributing to world hunger." Give him some feedback to make the evening a meaningful one for you
___ I agree
What I want to know from
___ I disagree
Prof. Laird is
Please mail/bring to KU-Y, Level 3, Room 110, Kansas Union KU-Y is partially funded by Student Activity Fees
KANU-FM & Off-the-Wall Hall present
An evening of Contemporary Jazz
OREGON
TONITE 5.00 with Ralph Towner
Two Shows • At 7:00 & 10:00
Off the Wall Hall
Advanced tickets:
Kief's
McKinney-Mason
/37 New Hampshire 841-0817
育児
Corsages, boutonnieres everything for formal night!
Make us your formal headquarters! We have everything to match or complement her formal dress, his formal wear. At prices to her student's budget. Stop in or phone today.
Owens Flower Shop
9th & Indiana
VTA
843-6111
the ELDRIDGE HOUSE
DISCO
MONDAY — Weekend Recovery Night.
Mellow music until midnight followed by boogie.
Wune, Special.
MONDAY -
Latin flair and Jose' Quervo beverages at two for one.
Both until midnight.
DAILY HIGHLIGHTS
WEDNESDAY — Ladies and Gents Night (alternating weeks).
Weekend Recovery Night.
THURSDAY Dance lessons, contests, and prizes.
TUESDAY — South of the Border Night
Reduced beverage prices 4-7 p.m.
SATURDAY — Couples $3.00. Singles $2.00.
FRIDAY — T.G.I.F.
Entrance under awning 7th & Mass. 8-2 a.m. Monday-Thursday on South side of building 841-4666 8-3 a.m. Friday & Saturday
WASHINGTON (AP) — The University of Kansas Alumni Association honored FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley with a dinner at a reception at a dinner last night.
Kelly gets KU citation
Kelley, a 1938 KU graduate, received the University and Alumni Association Citation for Distinguished Service from Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Kelley was selected last spring for the award, the highest honor given by KU for significant contributions to society. But, he was unable to attend the presentation ceremonies held on the Lawrence campus last May.
Kelley, a former FBI inspector, was cruned of police at Kansas City. Mo., when apprehended.
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842-3340
23rd & Ousdahl
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE
and
THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
present
THE TURN OF THE SCREW
by BENJAMIN BRITTEN
Friday, April 23 Saturday, April 24
Friday, April 30 Saturday, May 1
8:00 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: 864-3982
K. U. students admitted without charge with Certificate of Registration!!
This program is partially funded by the Student activity fee
PIZZA
SHAKESPEARES PIZZA "as you like it"
Wine
FREE DELIVERY 841-1777
open mon.-sat. 5:00-1:00 delivery until 12:30
sun. 4:00-12:00 delivery until 11:30
Next Door to the University Shop
University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Qualifications
- Regularly enrolled students at the University of Kansas at the time of application (spring term) and at the time of the receipt of the award (fall term).
- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
- Scholarship, financial need and references will be of minimal consideration in application reviews.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
Thursday. Auril 22,1976
7
Lawrence sanitation superintendent resigns
Lawrence Sanitation Supt. Don Purdy,
charged in November with
mismanagement by public employees,
and on Friday, His resignation will be
effective April 30.
In a memo sent to City Manager Buford Watson, Purdy said problems with staffing in the United Employees Association of Lawrence had led to his resignation.
"I have always tried to run a tight ship. This has been extremely hard as the employees have had a free rein to by-pass supervision clear up to the city commission.
The memo states:
"It is also difficult to get reprimands and terminations through, especially on association members. I have been bad-mouthed and put under close scrutiny but no actual charges have been filed. Only allegations and no end in sight."
Pardy couldn't be reached for comment. The city will appoint an acting supervisor and a new supervisor this week, Mike Wilder, assistant city manager, said last night.
Last November, public employees demanded an investigation of Purdy in a list of city mismanagement charges presented to the Lawrence City Commission.
A special committee appointed to investigate the charges presented two reports to the department and, upon report recommended that Purdy be fired as superintendent. The other report, which the commission adopted, suggested that he be fined to solve problems in the department.
Purdys has denied the allegation, which is under investigation by the Douglas County Courthouse.
Both reports charged Purdy with doing outside consulting work for another sanitation department on city time. Wilden said that charge led to an allegation by a city employee that Purdy had paid him with credits to help him with the consulting work.
Commenting last night on Purdy's resignation, Watson said. "Don has worked for us since 1969, and I think he has had more successes than setbacks.
On Campus
TODAY: CAMPUS VETERANS will have a table in the lobby of the Kansas Union to answer questions about their organization. NOON-HOUR IN-UNION: I will meet at 1:30 in Alceve F of the Union. E. BRADFORD BURNS, in front of me, will serve for the Study of Latin America*; at 3:30 in the International Room of the Union.
TONIGHT: The Center of Latin American Studies and the department of history will present the film "BACK GOD, WHITE DEVIL" at 7:30 in Dyche Auditorium. JOHN ANDREWS, of the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Resources, will speak on the "Rise and Fall of Continental Glaciers in North America" at 7:30 in 428 Lindley Hall. JOHN BRUST, Plainville senior, will present his senior recital at 8 in Swartout Recital Hall.
Events...
TOMORROW: JOHN ANDREWS, of the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Resources, will present two lectures, at noon and at 3:30. in 221 Lindley CARL LEBAN, associate professor of East Asian Studies, will speak on "Women in Chinese Revolutionary Literature, 1971-1980," at the Women's Studies Sandwich Seminar at noon in Alcove D of the Union. The first program in the LIBRARY COLLOQUI SERIES will be "Libraries in the U.S.S.R. and Poland" at 3:30 in Spencer Auditorium. THOMAS HILL, of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, will speak at noon in 2008 Learned Hall. The Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Program will provide a lecture by RUBY DEE and OSSE DIAV at 7:30 in Hoch Auditorium. JOHN MARALDO, core faculty member in Buddhist Studies at Narpa Institute in Boulder, Colo., will present a lecture on "Open Mind: Buddhist Practice and Everyday Life" at 7:30 in the Council Room of the Union.
University Daily Kansan
Even Ian Anderson would be hard pressed to better the Pied Piper's performance.*
*Hamelin Daily Observer . . . 1523
Partially Funded by Student Activity Fees
McCall's
"Put Yourself in our Shoes"
Downtown Lawrence
nature goes BANANAS!
Yes, we have bananas and good matured ones at that! Nature Sole bandals with husky straps and buckles in a jummy banana color. They come in years blue and mahogany leather uppers, too, so there's no top banana here - just a bunch of happy fashion!
Mayor Fred Pence also said he thought
mayor had done enough as superintendent
to allow deployment delay.
"He tried to give us economical service in a period of high inflation."
Of the recent dispute between Purdy and the employees, Pence said, "He's had problems with his rapport with the men, and it just keeps going on and on."
"I think Don Purdy has tried real hard to do a good job. Pence said." He took the case seriously. "I thought you had a great rapport."
vestigating charges of mismanagement and who recommended that Purdy stay, said, "I was really surprised—we had no inking.
Commissioner Marine Armerginger, who had served on the special committee in-
"Maybe he just didn't think he could get the department shaped up."
Argersinger said the public employees' affiliation last week with the Teamsters Union had probably contributed to his resignation.
Wildmen supported Argeringer's com-
mand, but the best job he could be under the chlamarae.
"He's had a pretty tough road to go the past few years," she said.
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841-0817
Off the Wall Hall
Saturday, April 24 "Arkansas Hoedown" Blue Rose Cafe
GIBSON'S
DISCOUNT CENTER
2525 IOWA • LAWRENCE, KANSAS
"ONE STOP SHOP"
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AT GIBSON'S
Our Beatles Contest
MAY Reflect on YOU!
CONGRATULATIONS TO ALAN HALL
First Mirror Winner
Three beautiful 3-D mirrors portraying the Beatles will be given away in separate drawings to be held Saturday, April 17th and 24th and Sunday, April 25th. Registration begins today in our camera and jewelry department. No purchase necessary! You need not be present to win.
master charge
FREE POSTERS WITH PURCHASE OF ANY BEATLES ALBUM
Abby Road
Gibson's
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Price $4.17
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Gibson's Special Our regular price $8.69
Beatles' 67-70
Beatles' 62-66
White Album '10.97
All Others '4.97
Magical
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All Others '4.97
SOMETHING NEW
RUBBER SOUL
SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND
SOMETHING NEW
REVOLVER
TODAY & YESTERDAY
BEATLES' SECOND ALBUM
JOHN LENNON—ROCK 'N' ROLL
BEATLES '65 EARLY BEATLES
EARLY BEATLES
YELLOW SUBMARINE
YELLOW SUBMARINE
BEATLEF VI
BEATLES VI
HEY JUDE
PAUL McCARTNEY—BAND ON THE RUN
ADULT MOVIES LIVE SHORT
On every street in every city in this country there's a nobody who dreams of being somebody. He's a lovely forgotten man desperate to prove that he's alive.
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents ROBERT DE NIRO TAXI DRIVER
A BILL PHILIPS Production & MARTIN SCORNESE Film
Eve. 7:30 8:15 Sat.Sun. 2:50
Grenada
MARTIN SCORNESE FILM
Ingmar Bergman's
The MAGIC FLUTE
Eve. 7:30 & 9:55 Sat.Sun. 1:55 Hillcrest
The greatest Decade
REDFORD/HOFFMAN "ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN"
3rd Great Week
Eve. 7:20, 9:55 Sat.Sun. 1:14 Hillcrest PG
The Best American Comedy of the Year "THE BAD NEWS Bears"
PG
3rd Great Week
Eve. 7:40, 9:35 Sat.Sun. 2:05 Hillcrest PG
Robert Redford
3 DAYS OF THE COND
Burt Reynolds
THE LONGEST YARD
The Department of Planning and Development Kansas City, Kansas
Information and Research Division is expanding to include the following positions which will be involved with a wide variety of applied research and systems activities as part of a multi-disciplinary team.
Research/Systems Specialist
Skills in written and verbal communication with both technical and non technical personnel are required. Graduate experience in social science research and understanding of computer utilization in research environment is desirable.
Programmer/Analyst
This position requires a thorough working knowledge of FORTRAN and/or COBOL. Programming experience in business applications or research projects is desirable.
Salaries are commensurate with education and experience. These positions offer a wide-range benefit package, flexible working atmosphere, and modern office facilities. We invite all interested applicants to write information and Research Division, Department of Planning and Development, One Civic Plaza, Kansas City, Kansas 66101. AnEqual Opportunity Employer, M-F.
THE CLEAN JEAN
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They're Levi's Jeans for sure, but done up in a different way: unique back patch pockets, neat in-set coin pockets up front; with lots of double stitching details to add the final touches, and a lean European fit that flares to a big 26" bell.
Levi's
Beautiful summer cords in light blue and light green
Your BANKAMERICARD welcome here
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8
Thursday, April 22, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Daksa dreams of tennis success
America, they say, is the Land of Opportunity. It's the one place on earth where you come true, because it provides potential and actualism is essential.
That's the storybook concept people like to promote during the nation's bicentennial. It's a silly concept, of course, a laughable idea. But for Astrid Datsk, the nation's best female dishin' women's tennis star, it's not far from the truth.
No, she didn't arrive on an immigrant bargain at the Ella Island, wearing tattered clothing, in 1937.
WESTERDAY, she was smartly dressed in the latest tennis attire, and her mastery of English was evident through her expressions.
"The thing is that we don't have athletics in our universities, high schools or elementary schools," said Daka, who goes into this morning's first rounds of the tournament's No. 1, played aerial.
If Daksa had wanted to study physical education in Sweden—something she now does at KU—she'd have a tough time just getting into a school. There's only one university in Sweden, and her mother, she said, and it accepts only 50 new students a year.
"THEERE ARE NO SCHOOLARSHIPS or athletics (in
swedish schools). 'Daleaon said, 'and what I wanted to
do was get the students in school."
an education. And I also wanted to see what America was like.
"I didn't think about staying all year when I came, but I really like the competition and everything that
For Daksa, what comes with competition is victory. In the past two years, her dual match singles and doubles record includes only two losses. Her record this year stands at 21-1.
"I THINK WE HAVE every chance to play very well," Dakas said about KU's prospects in the tournament. The tournament, which ends Saturday, will be played on the Robinson and Allen Field House courts.
"We're a well prepared team," she said. "Our coach, Tom Kiviste, has done everything possible to help us. We've put in a lot of hard practice, and there's really no room for mistakes." So I think we really have a chance to do very well."
Last year, the University of Oklahoma won the tournament. The Sooners edged out Central State of Oklahoma—Daksa's team–for first place honors. But Central State was at a disadvantage.
Daksa called that the start of a series of events that brought her to KU.
"AT THIS TIMES LAST YEAR, our team wasn't allowed to play. The staff and she also tipped Tey (the Central State athletics department)
didn't think we were good enough. So we just brought four people instead of six, and we still ended up second.
"That brought about the resignation of my coach,
and he is going to have a tennis team any more.
I need to leave."
What kind of tennis player did Kansas get? Would you believe a Swedish national champion?
"I looked around and thought KU was a very nice school, and I heard it was very good academically. And I found out that it really was, so I talked to the coach, John Sample, and he talked to Mr. (Bob) Billings."
"I won the Swedish open junior championship in 1972 when I was 17," Dakan said. "It was on a clay court and we played against Switzerland again and Sweden against France, Belgium and Germany. My last year, as a junior, I got third in the European junior championship."
BILLINGS, A LAWRENCE businessman with an interest in tennis, provided the money for Daksa to come to KU. His wife had died shortly before and the family would be benefited as a source of funds for KU tennis scholarships.
"I'm sure I'm going to go to Wimbledon one day," she said.
With a dream like that, the Missouri Valley tennis championships should be a breeze.
By KELLY SCOTT Sports Writer
What began as a fluttery fever in his chest last Wednesday afternoon has ended the baseball season for University of Kansas baseball player Randy Troust.
Doctors don't know what's causing the air to leak from Trautt's lung and to cause pressure in his chest, but it's a serious enough warrant at least a month of complete rest.
Randy Troutt feeling better, but can't play
"I feel 100 per cent fine now." Trout said yesterday in the patients lounge of
TROUT, THE TEAM'S designated hitter, said he would check out of Watkins Hospital tomorrow or Saturday, but the other any other KU basketball games this year.
Doubleheader today begins busy weekend
By JOHN HENDEL
Pitching can be a headache for any baseball coach. And in the next few days KU coach Floyd Temple may be suffering from one such headache.
The Jayhaws play five games in three days beginning with a 2 p.m. doubleheader today against Washburn University at Quigley Field and ending with a weekend series in Lincoln, Neb., against the Cornhuskers.
THE KU PITCHING staff, thin throughout the season with only six pitchers, will really get a workout. It's so thin, in fact, that Temple said he would start two pitchers against Washburn who haven't seen much action this season.
Sports Writer
Loren Taylor, the first game's starter,
has pitched only 4-2/3 innings this season.
That's coupled with his last season total of only 2:2/3 innings of work.
Starting the second game for the Jayhawks will be Stan Messner. Messner appeared in three games last season, pitched 143 innings and was used extensively as a pinch runner.
TEMPEL SAID HE hoped Taylor and Messner could go most of the way in the games today because he wanted to save some nitchers for the Nebraska series.
Randy Trout, batting .328 as this year's designated hitter, will be replaced by Bill Griffin. Trout has been lost for the season with a chest aliment. Griffin is returning to the team after finishing spring football practice
The Jayhawks, 15-10 on the season, beat Wainbran twice earlier in the Topper Kickoffs.
Sports Writer
SHURE
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Trouft said he was in his car when his chest first began to bother him. He hadn't been practicing with the team for four days because of a twisted knee.
Watkins. "And it's not something I'll have to worry about later. With four to five weeks' rest, the doctors say I will be totally recovered."
WHEN FIRST REPORTS of Trautt's illness came out, there was speculation that he had the same pneumonia and pericardium inflammation that kept Donie Von Moore, a center on the KU basketball team, from playing during the 1975-76 season.
But Trout doesn't have Moore's illness. Trout's doctor, David Hiebert, Lawrence Brinker, played with him in the jayhawk line-up by next week, but he shouldn't try to play immediately. He may be able to play in the Big Eight tournament, and there are 35 games for the jayhawks. May 8-12.
Trout, a senior in business, played down the effects of his absence from the team.
“IT'S A REAL GOOD club, and there are good bats.” he said.
But Trout said he was sorry that of his four years as a KU player, this year the was his first year in the KU.
This year, Treault said, the players on the team have eliminated a lack of competition and the players. As a result, the tension of previous years has evaporated.
"One reason is that eight of the players are secure in their positions," he said. They don't have to play with one eye on the bed before getting out of getting pulled for mistakes."
"I's really strange not to be playing," Trout said. "I've played all my life—Little
Trout, a Seattle native whose parents now live in Topeka, said the major effect of his abbreviated season was the possibility of taking a heavier load in summer school. Trout has an offer to play for a semi-professional baseball team in Topeka this summer, but hasn't decided whether he will play.
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Reserve the right equipment now! With the semester coming to an end, beat the rush and reserve U-Haul equipment to help cover your moving needs.
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Gleaning pillar of convenience in a changing world, the design of the schooner is last back in the dim post of Scandinavian glass craftsmanship Until 1895, it remained nameless, when Australian sailors adopted it as the regulation beer quantity for young scanners (A 1/2 pint mug) to touch a 1/2 pint glass too little. So the wasp-wait, bottom-heavy tapi-glass was christened with the name of a ship midway between a citter and a trigger.
The schooner hasn’t changed a lot. And neither has Olympia Beer. It’s still made with premium ingredients and harsher brewing experience over changes. A great beer doesn’t change. Olympia never will.
OLYMPIA
Beer doesn’t get any better.
Cleaning pillar of constancy in a changing world, the design of the schooner is lost back in the dim past of Scandinavian glass craftsmanship. It finds its true beauty when Australian sailors adopted it as the regulation beer quantity for young seamen (A ¼ pint pint mug was too much or too little). So she wasp-wast, bottom-heavy tasty glass was christened with the name of a ship midway between a cutter and a frigate. The schooner didn't change a lot. And neither Olympia Beer. It's still made with premium ingredients and a heritage of brewing experience that never changes. A great beer doesn't change. Olympia never will.
in concert ~ friday ~ 8:30 Hawk's Nest - $1 cover
randy mundy band
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PIZZA
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KU Backgammon Tournament
Sunday, April 25----1:00 Kansas Union Jayhawker Room
Sanctioned by the World Backgammon Club Prizes & Master Points will be awarded $5.00 entry fee
For reservations, call Rich Boyer, 842-3475 Deadline for reservations—Friday, April 23, midnight Hal Maganel, Pres. of K.C. Backgammon Club director of tournament
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843 Mass. St.
843 Mass. St.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 22, 1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to their financial status. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILLT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
01 02 03 04
AD DEADLINES
[...] .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UDK business office at 864-355-8200.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
Want to learn move about your Car rental. Then apply online for CWRNS (CWRNS, Saturday, April 24, 3-pm at: www.cwrsns.com sponsored by CWRSN. Saturday, April 24, 3-pm at: www.cwrsns.com sponsored by CWRSN. Pre-registration will be held April 15. Your living group NO ADMISSION CHARGE. ADR 4-22
The Friends of Mr. MIFFAT Thomas are astonished to hear the marriage to Karen MIFFAT. The authors of this book, Karen MIFFAT, will be there.
A bachelor party will be held at the Pierdorady on May 1. Be there as Max exploits from -485 to +600.
Couple's Workshop Sat, April 4, 10 am-10 pm
Love is what happens after a workshop.
82-912-383. In loving relationships there are hidden rules we follow—we avoids them
Through exercises and work exclusively within
their own lives. Through projects and find wave to deal with them with greater awareness. Led by Greg Institt and Mar-
Laura Barrick.
GARAGE SALLE, BAKE SALLE; multi-family: 8-3
SATURDAY, 129. Yellowwake; Take 2 wedges to
the next floor.
Employment Opportunities
Career related summer job must job to locate out-
side kernels. Earn $83 per month. Call 847-8779
ENTERTAINMENT
FOR RENT
**SHOWAOTES a 'comin'** April 23, 7:30 p.m.
1926 film $2 donation. Get on board. 4-22
1926 film $2 donation. Get on board. 4-22
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
Lawrence, Lawrence LawnCare,
Rental Exchange. 842-250-3900.
1 and 2 Bedroom apartments ready for immediate
also. Also, save money, less from June 1,
for September 1, and pay off the mortgage
now before it's too late. Park Apartments, 2
blocks west of onsite on 25th St. Phone 842-1455.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
nials or 2 bedrooms to campus $5 and up,
$604 or $852 or $904
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drap in and
over shirt, with cap, socks (of white or
pink), phone number (of home
phone number of student).
2. bdmr, all utl, paid, on campus, Furn. or
unfree. Free parking. a/c, pool. 833-4933.
Sublease June 1-Aug 1. Nice, large, furnished
room. Call 844-276-3060 or 844-767-6542.
Call 844-276-3060 or 844-767-6542.
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
IVAN'S 86 SERVICE
"Tires-Batteries-Accessories"
19th & Mass.
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Wanted: A good dervetter for a nice, older home
and shopping center. No pellets 4:26
6067 after 5.
SUMMER RATES at Univ Terr. & Old Mill Apt. 1258, Wesley Apt. 1-B, Apt. 1-CA balconies, bedrooms, bathrooms, kitchen utilities; 2 bedm. furnish; $140 plus utilities. Ratios good approx. May 15 may approx. Aug 15 only. Bedrooms must be furnished.
1 Bedroom cat. AC Close to campus. $120 per month, call Rd. 843-6269 or Rd. 841-6476.
Furnished room to campus available immediately till May
6440; room to campus, $79, all utilities paid
6440.
Sublease from May 19, to August 15. Air conditioned.
Air freshener brand new $100/mail Call after 5, 897-324-2620.
Sublease three-bedroom house, full basement, all
185 units/$180/month. Mid-Aug-12th.
Call 841-5913.
Sublease—apartment, late May until August,
located less than 1 acre from campus
4-28
atrium 19 - 1654
Sublease June 1 to Aug 10, 3 bdm, 1½ bath,
room pool, port pool and laundry room
8024-0821 or 8024-1121
Apt. to submit beginning May 24. 8 days free.
Indoor and Outdoor beds: 842-493-7285
6801 N. 15th St.
One room studio apartment. Clean, quiet. AC-
erated, kitchen available. May 5th. Call:
415-822-7300
Garden plots for rest. Four sizes already plowed, and discarded as fitted by well water.
Sublane 1. bedroom furnished for 1
room plus month addition at
8375 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.
4-28
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or dumps out products, the STEREO COMPONENTS are sold at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. `ff`
Trecondem selection of guitars, saws, drums, basses, keyboards, organ pipes. Hose & Keyboard Studio, chosen from Gibbons, Ampera, Kustom Green, and many others. Ampera
COST 185 - Sterio equipment. All major
companies, Mitsubishi Electric, Hewlett-Packard,
NVIDIA, Sony, IBM, Avid and others.
VIP/annual. Contact: Phone 842
340-7960 or fax 842-340-7960.
Alternator, Batter, and Generator Specialist.
BEL AUTO ELECTRIC, 840-969-3000, W. 4th, H-16.
ELECTRIC, 840-969-3000, W. 4th, H-16.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense use of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
1. A attitude guide
1) As situoy game
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at town Clerk Stores t
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
appliances at Bargain Prices. We buy-sell-
ment and Appliance Center, 704-714
Mass. 842-721.
WE SELL FOR LESS-11 to 6.30. Good used furniture; excellent storage and refrigerators (all appliances guaranteed). WTSA has Have Layavies—weekly free delivery. 1222 East Haven Weekly, Kxr. Phone 7-1-372-525 or 1-41-828-8388.
Marmantz 3 7 way speakers. Marmantz 6
att amp with cabinet, 8142-1297 6 422
Marmantz 5 way speakers. Marmantz 6
att amp with cabinet, 8142-1297 6 422
Puppies for sale. 1; tumbler wood 3; 4 malacite.
$300. $842-4339 after 6.
Radio sale! Flat time ever! Song Cock Radio
Sale! Low price! Low stock! 24/7 availability.
reduced buy! Rubber Backpack, $9.95 (AM*
AM* AM* AM*)
Used rental fire redhull. Check our baseboard
inventory for more details. 24/7 phone call.
914-536-8500, 528-854-8794, 528-854-8803,
528-854-8904, 528-854-9004. Come to thirty-three
fire redhull locations in New York and New Jersey.
STEREO AM-PM receiver receives .w lt leakage box HAM has cared executive care. GSC1500 $1,699 Call 800-742-4300
CLOSE OUT! Entire库存 of Michelin XAS
(15, 17-14, 18, and 15-14). Hurry, limited stock.
Rocky Stoneback's 929 Masp. (Come thru city
parking left behind Woolworth for fire ser-
vice.)
Sony TC-352D1 reel to reel with eight 7" tapes
$160, Jeff. 864-6800. 4-22
12X60 Trailer house, quiet, in-town location
814-4387 4-23
Super summer machine. 75 Cimati Italian motor
bikes. 30 cm, 80 miles per gallon. Bright red,
black and silver wheels.
Honda CL 30, 198 CL run, need some work $160
HCYCLC, Braligh 10 and 16 racing line. Reynolds
12, McCormick 12 and 16 racing lines.
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
6' x 4' 2" covered trailer. Make an offer. Call after
prior notice. 811-340-3088 4-26
I have to leave town. Must sell $9 Trumph GT6
and make an offer: 847-3210. I have to spend $4,500
and make an offer: 847-3210.
"Knowledge is as wings to man's
life, and a ladder for his ass."
1209 East 23rd St.
AM Part Stop
PRO
Bahai Faith
973 Tuition Colon Cell 10, *4*. Excellent condition.
974 Tuition Colon Cell 11, *864*. Wonderful condition.
943 or write Box 2201. **4-26**
945 or write Box 2201. **4-26**
10-speed touring bike. Practically new. $50.
Wheels. 824-3399. 4-22
75 VW Super Beetle, 4-quad, AM radio, rear door, defroster, excellent condition. **9247** 4-26 **9247** 4-26
Boys' 10-speed bike. Vita. Good condition.
Best offer. Bike #82-804 after 5. 4:22
1971 Chev. Malibu, a/c / b/p, p/b / AM/FM, 450
Chev. Malibu, excellent engine, $300-480
1971 Chev. Malibu, excellent engine, $300-480
GRADUATION SALE - Purchase sale this Saturday.
Grade 8+ appliances, furnishings and innest
startups! *Purniture and in-store items*
*For up to $20,000 per month.*
Radial Fire Tire Clearance? Your choice of any size is available from 14-15, 15-16, 16-17, 16-18, 16-19, 16-20, 16-21, ART8-13, CRT8-12, 16-14, BRH7-14, Ray Stonehack's, 929 Mana There con upriver parking behind Woolworths. Vale can get it for less than $20.
Final price cut! Magnavox console stereo. En-
hanced video card to sale to $100 more.
Bank Backspace 250GB.
Used Materialo color portable, only $149.68 at Rocky Shack's 925 Mass.
64 Corvette Roadster, 257, 800 hp, 4-speed, fully
customized, new price, $1,099.00
4x4, 500-1300cc, automatic
**Toyota Corolla.** 69, 35 mm in city, runs great,
no problems; must sell. **Call 841-444**, leave notes.
Sony say! Save now on Sony radio, chakra rack,
cable box, 925M WiFi. 925M Open Thursday night.
925M Open Friday.
SCUBA-exposure suit-tank-regulator with submer-
cator-dough gauge hull filled, equipped
with O2 sensor.
C.B. HADISON - attendant, receptionist, 2016 OFF
B.A. GIBSON - attendant, receptionist, 2017 OFF
Reynolds-Hay Bottle R. E. Rohh 820-467-2402, Auditech
Auditech Inc., 515 West 39th Street, New York, NY 10017
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer year-round, S.
S. America, Australia, Astra, etc. all fields, $300-
$120 monthly, Expenses paid, sightseeing. Free
fare from New York City to San Diego,
Ka Box 449, California, CA 94704, 4-23
Bargain used books, Texts, fiction, medical law,
3-4 May 18
May 5 to May 18
4-28
841-2200
BELF WANTED Kansas Students Company
job offered by Kansas Students Company
etc. Joe available now. Flexible
time, location and salary.
Avon can help you have the summer vacation of your dreams. Excellent earnings. Openterti-
ness. Fun for everyone.
Help Wanted
Reward:
Bana!' Club Meeting, April 5, 19
7:30 p.m. Oread Ballroom, Union
KANSAS UNION
Wanted:
Alive College Student
11, 3 & 7 p.m. today
$ ^{2} 5 2 3 $ per summer's work
Meetings are at
Eight dollars to participate in two one hour briefings on making decisions on helping others. Call 850-417-4000.
Help Wanted: Man to drive 2-ton local delivery truck and set up farm machinery for established local implement dealer. Summer employee required. Salary: $37,500. Tractor Co. 1548. E 343. Lawrence, 842-346-5-3
PARLOR C
PARY TIME-EARN $25 PER WORK FOR 4 HOURS
WEEKDAYS between 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for 30
DATES. BETWEEN 8 a.m. TO 10 p.m. FOR 30
DATES.
Research/systems specialists and computer programmers from Kansas City, KS. submitted in this paper for details. 4-23
Financial Representative. A leading financial institution has an immediate opening for a full-time position. Requires a Master's degree in Consumer lending and to maintain financial resources. Good starting salary, excellent employee benefits and successful experience in program activities. Associates Financial Services Co. of Kt. Inc. 982 Madison, Lawrence, Kt. 982-8192.
Young woman over 21 to work in our club area, and perform routine administrative tasks. Packs lunch and supplies for travelers.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank in Lawrence, Downtown Bank-9th & Mass. Lawrence, Downtown Bank-11th & First National South.-1807 West 22rd.
Lost-Kodak Pocket Intactamate 40 in green vinyl
Lost-Kodak Pocket Intactamate 40 in green vinyl
library books on campus at $85.00 - $250.
library books on campus at $85.00 - $250.
Found one book in 4034 Wesley. Identify and
claim at English Pub. 3113 Fleetwood.
4.99
LOST AND FOUND
Temuki racket with cover, near Corbin Hall. Call
782-750 to claim.
Found: lady golds* watch in front of Wescoe.
Wed. eve 864-880 (3)
***
***
***
Small brown and white part Terrier dog near
West Hills. 842-3285. 4-26
Bookshelf stoled $olive money in the Daisy Hall Book Store Monday 11/2. Come answer 4-22.
NOTICE
Wshop Shop, 620 Mass. used furniture, diaries,
books, masses, televised. Open daily 12pm.
843-357-371
The Catholic Cafe special Sunday dinner is Full
of food, drinks and crafts. Call 641-5290 for reservation.
cake call 641-5290 for reservation.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation provided. Drive now, pay late.
Transportation provided. Drive now, pay late.
After 20 years in business if George doesn't
serve on Mondays George's Geopipe Shop
729 815 3467 geopipe.com
CRAFT SHOW. BACK SALE, AND CAR WASH:
Pinetree Townhouse Community Building, 199
Pinecrest Drive, Saturday, April 24, 9:30 a.m.
to 11:30 p.m., for $50 in appels, and other handmade items, 4-23
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymy. 842-8101. If
MADAME LENA, E.S.P - PALM READER-ADJ-
VISOR. Buy a dream or astrology book and get
the information you need to solve your
problems. For more information, call 862-1331.
Come to S303 South Teapek Blvd., Tupelo,
OK.
The Second Annual Student Solitude Competition
"Don't miss it—it entries available at
GTA."
Come one—Come all. May Day Festival—a week of education, conversation, and celebration, with food, music, games, and Women's House. Pot dish, cake and a volloblary. Free wristband. Visit the Women's House in its Coatition and Commission on the Status of Women. Call 844-8534 for registration and inform.
INTERESTED IN NO-FRILLS LOW COST JET
SCHOOL? FOR EAST EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS have been helping people travel on a budget with maxi-
mum savings. For East Educational Flights we
have more info call toll free 800-223-5590.
Years. For more info call toll free 800-223-5590.
CREATIVE PROBLEM SOLVING WORKSHOP
A new approach to problem solving that can be applied in many ways is what we want to go. The workshop will help us create a new way of working with processes. Anyone working with groups will find personal problem solving. Facilitated by Anne Kirkland, the Creative Problems Workshop at Planetary University at United Ministries Center, 1204 Goddard.
Hymnops is a state of full relaxation and concentration as he experiences it by building up the sheet music he has recorded for the Framat Hall. You will be paid five dollars for each Ritcher Richard, Dept of Music, gv2-7534, 4-22
Insight INTO LIFE
RECORDED MESAGE (24h)
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
Ball Park Baseball
BALL PARK, INC.
Box 3422 U Lawrence, Kansas 46044
UGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUPROARD
一
10. 5 Monday Saturday
to play it no how!''
12~5
TRAVEL
QUANTRILL'S
LIFE MARKET
AND MEN & WOMEN'S MEXICAN SHIRTS MANY ASSORTED SIZES
SERVICES OFFERED
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
OPEN EVERY SATURDAY
811 New Hampshire
TYPING
ANYTHING YOU COULD POSSIBLY WANT
SOUTH AMERICA - $214.00 - AFRICA - ASIA
Airline, Inc. - 9215 First Avenue, Trucker
Agency, Inc. - 1010 First Avenue, Trucker
MATH TUTOR with MA in mathematics. Call 811-3708 after 6 p.m.
If
Earn up to $2 half-hour Psychology study=$1
Study on bulletin board level. Level 3. Kan
Study on bulletin board level. Level 3. Kan
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT! Professional virtually any jewelry design possible. Professional (IFA degree) gold-filled earrings, cutting, wide variety of stones. Requestable price. Tiffany assurance 841-3883 or 843-0797.
Lonely? Need a date for Ivy League? Call Tizira;
or, Jvian or Vijan 841-5279. 4-22
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 000, 001, 002, 003, 004, 005. Course 006: 142, 500, 558, Regular sessions or one-time test preparation, Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
No one under 18 admitted.
HALF AS MUCH
Trying to sell a musical instrument or
Equipment? Call us at McKenny-Mason, 814-0817.
"If we don't got it you didn't want
Planning a trip?
Do the LEGWORK For You!!
THISIS BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is located on 16th Avenue and provides our service to fast and accurate copies of our materials. Our service is required for all documents.
Experienced typist—term papers, theses, macaulay
letter, kraft proofer, spelling, spooning
corrected 483/95.
Do the LEGWORK for you
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
EUROPE
less 1/2 economy
plan
INVAY
Call us at 800-325-4867
UniTravel Charters
FASHION
730mass.
Typist editor. IBM PCaiceilla. Quality work.
Typesetter. Deserts dissertations. 8-11
Date: April 8, 1932 48-1937 5-11
Just Arrived! LADIES INDIAN GAUZE TOPS
SUA / Maupintour
Exp. typi, IBM Selectric, term paper, theses,
discourses, texts, proof reading, spelling cul-
pure.
just Arrived LADES INDAN GAUTE TOURS
RECREATION'S FINEST
West of Hillcrest Bowl
Need an, experienced tibiotym? IBIM Selective TAP correction. Call Correcting tap carbon ribbon). Call Puncture at correcting tap carbon ribbon.
travel service
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 5-11
Motorcycle Racing
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass
Experienced typist IBM Selectric all kinds of
typing. Call IBM-443-1443; 842-9078.朱. Julie.
Schaefer
Professional typing, reasonable, work guard-
urance, computer skills, electrical, IA. Scaled
science eptics electric. IA. Scaled Science
eptics electric.
PICKENS AUTO PARTS
25% Off on
all Auto Parts
2601 Iowa 843-1353
TYPING - We have many return customers who want to teach you about the business. We appreciate your business Call Linda or Hirsch.
Experienced typist will type term papers, theses,
manuscripts and general typing in my journal.
Burlington, 841-9084. 841-9084
Girl to clean house, 1 day a week, preferably
to clean the summer. Call 843-1909.
4-22
Will do typing. Elite electric. Term papers and mite no thesis. Proofreading Mrs. Hays $85.00
WANTED
Will pay you $25 if we sign lease on 150 apart
mansion. Will pay you $150 if you make muni-
gation Aug-15, Job #83-1905
Information as to fate/whereabouts of large buildings in New York City, 1119 and 1690 or 1750. This is not the model now in use for large buildings in New York and primarily contains the buildings along 14th Avenue. Please call Andrew Russell, 422-822-4222
Rommacher for KUMC, prefer 1st year, non-macker. med-student. Call Fayloy 8411 4387- 4-23
Two roommates summer and next year. Share large 3 bed, two bath apt, with liberal female amenities. Roommate reqs quiet, Close to campus. Available Mar 18th, must sign name, fees $25./month, share utilities. Call Skipper 609-472-1111.
Someone to share 2 BR for, summer. AC,
hitly needy. Rent negotiable. Comp.
not competitive.
Studious female roommate to share two bedroom duplex and house work with male student 6-50
Roommate for summer in K.C. Two bedroom;
utilities paid, furnished, pooled K84 661-438 4-26
One or two female roommates for summer-
furnished airtight—close to campus-pool. 841-6558.
Need non-mocking, liberal-minded female roommates for fall and spring. Call 841-6848 after 5:30.
Pat Read
NEED TRUCK—Will rent truck or van in goo
for$3 as $24. 842-1178.
4-22
2-14" keystone mag wheels to fit Pymtown.
Call 842-8957
4-22
Bloomfield needs for large 2 bedroom appli. May
be able to accept a 3 bedroom, a double,
student desired, call 841-7657. after 6 p.m.
Pat Reed
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
710 Mass.
843.1306
10-5 Tues.-Saf.
843-9404
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
HIDEOUT
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
DANCING LIVE MUSIC
Sandwiches — Pizza Pool — American Shuffleboard
Entertaining Night People with cold beers at a restaurant, a bar or a dance hall, an architect designed for sweet feelings and gentle laughter.
New Memberships Available
Class & Private Club
Opens 3 a.m.
—7 DAYS —
Wayne Park—owner
Grudge Racing & E. T. Brackets
12 NOON
Now Open Every Sunday
Admission Only '2.00 each
Race or Watch
Tractor
LAWRENCE-DRAGWAY
20 miles east of Topeka or 3 miles west of Lawrence
on U.S. 40 Highway
-
842-9445
a quiet corner
THE LOUNGE
Bud on Tap ★ Pool ★ Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
---
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
10
Thursday, April 22, 1976
1.3.2.4.2.3.2.2.2.2.2
distance
University Dally Kansan
Report finds fault with libraries
A University Senate Libraries Committee report issued this month indicates that some library users are critical of the cataloging system, the hours, the inadequate collections and the lack of space.
Richard Eversole, assistant professor of English, edited the report. He said yesterday that letters were sent last fall to the chairmen of all University departments, asked them to comment on library services and documents from other department members.
Eversole said questionnaires weren't used, because the committee wanted original responses. He said that, of the 50 replies received, only a few were from students. The others were from faculty members.
Eversole said that many respondents didn't know the libraries' problems and didn't want to go.
"The correspondents seemed to regard themselves as critics, distinct and separate from the library, rather than intimately bound up in their work." he said.
THE PURPOSE of the survey, Ewesole said, was to convey, to the library dean and the senate Libraries Committee, opinions that were generally unspoken.
The report criticizes the present cataloging system. Respondents said that new cataloging systems would be Eversole said the problem would be caused by the introduction of the Ohio College Library Center cataloging system. Funds for the system had been approved in the fiscal 1977 budget.
Respondents who are users of the science libraries criticized the separation of materials in Malott, Marvin, Snow and Laloux and suggested a centralized library.
Criticisms of the physical facilities in-
Cigarette tax pending
A proposal for increased Kansas cigarette taxes should be considered today in the Kansas house of Representatives. The state will allow time for discussion of the bill.
The proposal would raise the state cigarette tax by one cent a pack, with additional revenue possibly going to major programs at the KU Medical Center.
One of the bill's chief proponents, State Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence, conceded yesterday that the bill was "meeting a lot of opposition" in the House.
Buzzi said that the $1,000 level "might impose a hardship on some people," and that attempts were expected in the House to raise the $1,000 level to $1,200 or $1,500.
State Rep. John Vogel R-Lawrence, said he also expected attempts to raise the level of housing costs.
Regarding the cigarette tax proposal, Buzzzi said the tobacco industry was generating most of the behind-the-scenes opposition to the tax. He also said many legislators were opposed to any further tax increases in an election year.
Buzzi said the opposition wasn't because of the tax, but because legislators were hesitant to earmark the funds for the Med Center.
Buzzi has said he would propose an amendment to the bill that would stipulate that increased revenue be directed to cancer research at the Med Center.
If the bill fails in this session, he said,
he still has hopes that it would be sent to a
summer interim study and be considered in the 1977 legislature.
The legislature, although expected to final adjournment today, may not be ready until the next session.
Med...
From page one
Assistance is now given to 74 residency positions in these hospitals.
THREE ITEMS WERE deleted from the budget before the legislature recessed April
-A $46,574 allowance for four new outreach residency positions.
An increase to $11,000 from $10,500 in contributions for a total appropriation of $177.20
THE REPORT said it was "barbaric"
that the top floor of Maloti wasn't air-
conditioned.
cluded lack of air and poor air-conditioning in all libraries, poor lighting in Watson stacks and inadequate photocopy equipment in both Watson and the science
An allocation of $174,113 for the turnover in nursing salaries. This reduction would mean a per cent to 5 per cent. Feldmann said this means there will be a requirement that positions be left vacant for a longer period of time than would be necessary with a 3 per cent allocation.
It wasn't learned whether any of these items stricken from the budget would be considered in final omnibus appropriations this week.
Some respondents wanted more new collections to be established and existing
ADDITIONALLY, the legislature appropriated $2 million over the next two years to fund construction of a radiation therapy facility.
Eversole said that many users don't realize that gaps in collections were because of inadequate funding in the past. He said the principle objective of the library
budget requests for fiscal 1978 had been to improve these collections.
The staff in the reference department of the university received special praise from the request.
Most respondents complained about the library's hours. Feversole said that the number of hours could only be increased if received funds to employ a larger staff.
Some respondents criticized the lack of training of student assistants, but most writers accorded the professional and educational role as the major strength of the library system.
Introducing the most spirited Scout of all. New Scout ll for'76.
1976
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Scout takes to the trails with ease you won't believe. It's small enough on the outside to get you into places the others can't. But big on the inside to hold all the gear you need.
New International" Scout II for '76. Compare it with the others. There's no comparison.
Scout the America others pass by.
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Sunday 1-6
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819 VERMONT 843-9708
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spring '76 in clothes from Mister Guy . . . university of kansas contemporary traditionalist
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
CLOUDY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.129
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Move clocks ahead Sunday morning at 2 for daylight savings
Friday, April 23, 1976
Six KU alumni honored for distinguished service
Staff Writer
By JERRY SEIB
Six alumni will receive the University of Kansas' highest honor, the Distinguished Service Citation, at commencement exercises May 24.
Citations will be given to William C. Douce, president and chief executive officer of Phillips Petroleum Co.; Horner Hoyt, president of Horny Hoyt and Associates, LLC; Orrigan Moss, president of Washington, D.C.; Olin K. Petephil, Lawrence attorney; Edwin R. Phleps Jr., president and chief executive officer of Peabody Coal Co.; Robert B. Riss, founder and chairman of the board of Republic and Paul R. Wunsch, Kingman attorney.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and Dick Wintermote, director of the KU Alumni Association, announced the recipients yesterday.
The Distinguished Service Citation, established in 1941, honors outstanding professional accomplishment and significant service to mankind, Steve Clark, assistant director of the Alumni Association, said yesterday.
THE CTITATIONS are based on career
knowledge and not on a single year's activity.
Clarkasis
He said that this was the first year since 1968, when non-alumni became eligible to receive the citation, that the honorees were all alumni.
Nominations for the Distinguished Service Citation are solicited from alumni and faculty and final selections are made by a committee of nine alumni and three faculty members.
Petefish has practiced law in Lawrence since his graduation from the School of Law in 1953. He is a partner in the firm of Petefish. Curran and Immel.
He is a former president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the Lawrence University.
PETEFISH IS a trustee, vice president and chairman of the finance committee and counsel for the KU Endowment Association. Member of the Association of the Kansas Union Operating Board.
Petfish said last night, "I consider it the citation) a very high honor. Whether I am a good citizen or not, I will stick to that."
Wunsch graduated from the School of Law in 1925. In 1936, he began a long career as a Kansas legislator when he was elected to the Kansas House of Representatives.
He served in the House until 1945, when he was elected to the Kansas Senate. He served as president pro tempore of the Senate from 1949 to 1965.
WUNSCH HAS been a member of the Kansas Board of Regents since 1968. He is a trustee of the KU Endowment Association served on the KU Council for Progress.
"I was very happy to get the citation," Wunsch said. "I was overgusted."
Douce, a 1941 graduate of the School of Engineering, has been executive vice president of Phillips since 1794. He also has ownership of the company's subsidiaries.
Doce will conclude a one-year term as national president of the KU Alumni Association during the commencement weekend. He has served on the board of advisers of the School of Business and was the Greater University Fund Advisory Board.
HE HAS HELD directorships with the National Safety Council, the American Petroleum Institute and the Manufacturing Chemists Association.
Hoyt holds bachelor's and master's
economics from Ph. University of Chicago,
He originated the concept of regional, community and neighborhood shopping centers in 1948 and has made market analyses for 500 new centers.
Hoyt has also served on the KU Council for Progress, and he sponsors the Elizabeth Hoyt Scholarship in the School of Business in honor of his mother.
Phelps graduated from the School of
Engineering in 1936 and went on work for the
Southwest Airlines, Coca-Cola Co.
He later joined Pittsburg Midway Coal Mining Co. and, in 1960, joined Peabody Coal Co. He became president and chief
See ALUMNI page 3
Legislators expected to approve pay bill
Kansas legislators will be back at work today in Topeka and are expected to approve some form of an omnibus pay raise before ending the 1978 legislative session.
The legislature failed to finish its work yesterday as planned.
The bill contains fiscal 1977 pay raises for a variety of state employees, including classified employees at the University of Kansas.
Those employees are classified by the state's personnel office and perform specific task-oriented jobs. Classified employees at KU include clerical personnel, technicians, managers, and service personnel, such as workers in the department of buildings and grounds.
THE PAY-RAISE bill was heavily amended yesterday by the House of Representatives Ways and Means Committee, which considered this morning by the full House.
The bill, as approved by the Senate earlier this week, would give access-to-theboard five per cent pay increases to employees who pay $1.250 or more. Employees making more than $1,000 would
receive merit salary increases, based on supervisors' recommendations.
Several representatives said they expected the $1,000 level to be raised to as much as $200,000.
State Rep. Michael Glover, D-Lawrence, said he thought higher levels would be beneficial to the school system.
Merit salary increases for unclassified staff at KU, including faculty, administrators and research personnel, will be eight per cent for fiscal 1977.
A bill that would raise the Kansas cigarette tax, with additional funds possibly going to a proposed cancer treatment program, has been not been discussed by the full House.
IF THERE are extensive changes in the
ball, the Senate will discuss the bill again.
THAT BILL was returned to the House calendar by State Rep. Lloyd Buzzi, R-Lawrence, earlier this week. Buzzi had said the bill would be considered during "bully bills" in the House when no other important time were being debated.
The bill could go to a summer interim study committee for further consideration and then come back before the 1977 legislature.
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Penn House worker
Sifting through new shipments of old clothing for the needy proves one of the biggest choices for Oocee Miller and her staff at Pemu
House. Miller, who is now director of Penn House, was one of the original organizers when it was established in 1969.
Award winner dedicated to poor
By JAY BEMIS
Staff Writer
In the spring of 1844, the city of St. Louis was celebrated its bicentennial.
The city had redeveloped Mill Creek valley, in one-acre slum area in the heart of St. Louis.
This project included construction of commercial buildings, a retirement center, a new campus for St. Louis University and middle-income housing.
OOCEE MILLER, director of Lawrence's Penn House, which she describes as a "poverty-intervention and crisis center," said recently that St. Louis, in funding its
Walk-a-thon more than sore feet
After serving jail time in St. Louis for participation in a civil rights demonstration against the jail in services, Miller began her battle for the plight of the poor.
bicentennial projects, had gained extra money by "severely curtailing" city services in ghetto areas—litter bins were flopped down and public restrooms boarded up.
Checking the product Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
many people would participate in the walk until it began at a a.m. tomorrow.
This Cottrell offset press is one of three offset, five rotary, and two letter presses that is used at the Kansas Color Press. See story page 10.
If tomorrow's March of Dimes walk-a-
thon goes as usual, more than 100 people will have tired feet but smiling faces at the end of the 20-mile trek.
Raybert Thornton, publicity chairman,
said yesterday that he wouldn't know how
Twelve years later, she has gained recognition from Lawrence and Douglas County officials and was recently awarded the President of the Year award for her social work.
Thornton said he was sure at least one person would be there. Mayor Fred Pence is scheduled to walk from the starting point to radio station KLWN.
test yale abut 170 psons walker to
calefee yale abut 170 psons walker to
Thermont yale abut 170 psons walker to
THE MONEY from the event will be used to fight birth defects through research and education.
Two years ago, $3,000 was collected and $4,100 was raised last year. "Thornton said he was happy," she added.
JANUARY 1980
Pledges promise walkers a specific amount of money per mile. After the walk-a-thon, participants collect from their pledges.
Travelers Protective Association, hoped to raise $7,000-$8,000 this year.
"The number of persons walking isn't as important. It's the pledges that count, he said."
The civil rights demonstration in St. Louis was a peaceful one.
PARTICIPANTS WILL have route cards validated at checkpoints. American Red Cross volunteers will be on hand to treat minor injuries, city policemen will patrol the route and amateur radio operators will monitor the walk.
Thornton said the weather would have the biggest effect on the success of the event.
THE WALK-A-THON route begins at Broken Arrow Park, goes south on Louisiana to 31st, west on 31st and north on Kasalo. From there the walkers go east on Lake Huron, then east on Fourth, south on Maine and again to the municipal swimming pool.
The route continues south on Massachusetts, east on 19th, south on Harper, west on 23rd to Haskell, south on Hampton, 31st and back west to the starting point.
"We were taking a letter to the President (Lyndon Johnson, who was in St. Louis for the celebration) asking him not to be joyous on this occasion," she said.
"I didn't know what to expect in jail," said. "The jails were segregated and they said, 'You don't have to be a black woman.' A group of black ladies surrounded the jailers and said, 'She's staying with us,' and insisted that I be taken with them. I found out later that if I had been put in the white section, I would have been badly beaten. ... that was a common practice during the civil war."
WHEN THE CIVIL rights work was over, Miller was eventually assigned by the National Welfare Rights Organization in 1967 to crack down on racial discrimination in Illinois welfare programs, becoming increasingly familiar with the poverty problem."
"THE POLICE said there would be no singing or chanting, and to stay six feet away. When we got near the hotel (where the President was staying) we were alone in the room with guns, hered into troop-carrier trucks and taken to tail until the ceremonies were over.
"Actually, I was arrested, but never beaten. The could not charge me with盗贼罪."
Miller said it was some poor, black people who saved her life during her stay in jail.
Before leaving for Lawrence in the
before helped organize three
well organized organizations.
"We feel students shouldn't be ripped-off," Miller said. "Penn House is like a lab for students, but we don't want them doing something we can do ourselves. They do it without the supervision of a faculty member, which, in turn, sets a much higher quality job for us."
Miller was one of the original organizers of Pern House, 1035 Pennsylvania, when it was established in February 1969. The two-story house had been donated to the University of Kansas for the benefit of students involved in community interest.
Applications for staff positions on the summer and fall Kansans are now available in the Student Senate office, the dean of men's office, the dean of women's office or 106 Flint. Job interviews will be flinted. Flint by noon Monday. Job interviews will be Monday afternoon and all day Tuesday.
AN EXAMPLE of student work at Penn House is the organization's bookkeeping system, which was designed by the University's School of Business.
See PENN HOUSE page 9
Kansan jobs open
Watkins geared to student needs
Bv MIKE THIESEN
Watkins Hospital offers a myriad of services to the University of Kansas community, including services that offer high quality care that compares well with private hospitals. Watkins, Wolmann, director of health services, said yesterday.
Wolmann said he considered Watkins one of the best student health care facilities in the nation because of the quality of services it offered and the high accreditation the hospital received.
Although the hospital's staff has been short three doctors since spring break, Wollmann said, it is a very dedicated staff that works as many hours as necessary to meet students' needs.
An average of 400 to 500 students a day come to Wakkins, most of them being treated on an out-patient basis (not admitted to the hospital). Because of the large number of patients, it is hard to compare Wakkins with a regular hospital
A REGULAR city hospital is usually an in-patient facility, he explained, but Watkins also is a clinic. Wollmann said it had been projected that Watkins would have been admitted to the hospital this year—only 700 to 800 of them actually being admitted.
The hospital, which opened the spring of 1974 and cost $3.6 million, was a health care facility geared to meet the health needs of most students. Wollmann said it wasn't easy for students to get used to some very expensive equipment would be little use.
The old Watkins Hospital, now Twenthe Hall, was built for a student nomenation of 9.000 to 10.000 students.
Wollmann said the present facility was more efficient because it had more space, allowing a wider range of
Wollmann said the hospital was currently accredited by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitales, the U.S. Board of Internal Medicine and the American College of
FEW STUDENT HEALTH services have been accredited, according to Wolmann, with about 4,000 of the 7,000 hospitals in the United States receiving any accreditation.
Watkins usually is staffed by 13 doctors, 12 full time and one part time. Wollmann said the hospital was short three doctors because two doctors had left for more training and one doctor was currently ill.
Wollmann said the hospital was trying to fill the vacant positions, but it had been hard because of a doctor shortage. He said most doctors would prefer to go into a private practice, but there would still be some who wanted to go into student health, even though the pay wasn't as good as private practices.
"It is a rewarding and enjoyable experience to work with young, intelligent teenagers." Wolmman said.
Dennis Dahl. a doctor on the Watkins staff, said he
Tere are a number of reasons why a doctor might want to work longer hours for less money, he said.
"Our doctors work an average of 60 hours a week and their salary is lower than they'd make in a private job."
THE DOCTORS at Watkins Hospital are salaried; they don't get paid more if they work extra hours or see more
preferred working in a student health center to having his own practice.
"I like students and identify with them. This type of practice is very rewarding," he said.
THE SHORTAGE OF doctors at Watkins did cause some problems, Dahl said, but he doesn't think it had any effect.
Most doctors come in at 8 a.m. and work until all patients have been cared for, usually until 6 p.m. but you can also get them out early.
The staff is overworked, he said, and it probably affects the doctor-patient relationships and makes the doctors nervous.
"I'd like to spend more time with each student that comes in and I see at least 30 students a day." Dahl said.
Students can ask for any doctor when they come in, but the doctors try to work together so that any doctor could take a patient, Dahl said. The doctors conferred with each other and consulted specialists if they needed help making
GENERAL COMPREHENSIVE medical services, specialists in internal medicine, gynecological and mental health services, physical therapy and a pharmacy all are available to students, faculty and staff at KU.
For students who pay full fees at the time of enrollment, many services are offered at no additional charge to those
Wolmann said the reason the hospital charged for the services they did was that most students had some form of insurance that would pay for most of the in-patient services, including rooms, x-rays and in-patient lab fees
See WATKINS page 3
2.
Friday, April 23, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Colorado tightens agencies
DENVER-California Gov. Richard Lamm yesterday signed the nation's first law designed to end government bureaucracies unless they can prove they're
The citizens' lobby, Colorado Common Cause, proposed the law six months ago to control a system of regulatory agencies and programs that Common Cause felt needed.
The new law gives an agency or program a life of six years. Directors or supervisors must justify the agency's or program's continuance to the legislature.
If the legislators are satisfied, the program or agency will continue for another six years. If witnesses cannot justify themselves, they will be given a year to complete their work.
Beraman to leave Sweden
STOCKHOLM-Film director Ingmar Bergman announced yesterday he could no longer live in Sweden and would leave the country to continue his work.
Bergman, who almost single-handedly put Sweden on the map as a major movie center, said he'd been harassed and humiliated by the Socialist Swedish tax bureaucracy. He said they tried to blackmail him to save face in a highly publicized tax case.
He announced his decision to leave Sweden in a bitter open letter published by the newspaper Expressen. He had been a convinced Social Democrat, Bergman said, and had believed Socialist Sweden was the best country in the world. The tax case changed his mind.
"Anybody in this country, any time and in any way, can be attacked and humiliated by a special kind of bureaucracy that grows like a galloping cancer,"
CIA deputy director quits
WASHINGTON—Lt. Gen. Vernon Loon, the Central Intelligence Agency's investigator, is outgoing the White House announced yesterday in investigations, is quitting, the White House announced yesterday.
Press Secretary Ron Nessen said Walters was quitting because he believed himself overdue to leave the Army. The deputy director also recognized that George Bush, the recently confirmed CIA director, would want to pick his own top assistant. Nessen said.
Walters, 59, was appointed deputy director by President Nixon in 1972 and will stay on as deputy director until E. Henry Knope, a civilian nominated to replace Richard Rutledge.
MU senate asks for study
COLUMBIA, Mo.—The senate of the Missouri Student Association has asked the University of Missouri Board of Councilors to set up a committee to investigate the university's policies on race and gender.
The release of the university's state relation plan has dangerously injured the position of the university in the eyes of the governor and the General Assembly,
The resolution said the plan called for the university to use its resources "to involve itself improperly in the political process of the state."
Gov. Christopher S. Bond said last week that he had told MU President C. Brice Ratchford that it was improper for the university to promote a tax increase or to support legislative candidates on the basis of whether they would support a tax increase.
Some people solve the problem of rising spring temperatures by wading and swimming in the Kansas River, but they are inagers that aren't easily seen on the surface.
"The greatest hazards are the dangers of the river itself," Jerry Stoltenberg, chief of the water quality planning and surveillance units in the state's health and environment, said yesterday.
THE DANGERS, such as snags and strong currents, pose a threat than the tides. They occur in the water.
Obstacles, currents make Kansas River dangerous
"That water is very little more dangerous than that in one of the big lakes where recreational swimming is allowed," Stoltenberg said. "The only real difference is that the river water is more highly mineralized and has more silt irritant."
"We haven't had a case in many, many years—maybe decades—of these diseases. There hasn't been a connection between a virus and the disease of this type since the 50s," he said.
ANOTHER WATER-BORNE hazard is industrial discharge.
Stoltenberg said that he thought the industrial discharge from Topeka and Lawrence wasn't particularly harmful to aquatic life, because the materials that could be toxic to aquatic life.
The division checks the Kansas River every month for bacteria that indicate the presence of three major water-borne agents, *Cryptosporidium*, *Yellowi* and *Shigella* (a type of dysentery).
KUAC chooses new vell leaders
The major danger remains in the obstacles and unexpected currents.
Vell leaders for the 1976-77 year have been the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC).
Legislature's final day faces pay, death penalty, appropriation bills
They are Dave Arbuckle, Hutchinson freshman; Brent Bishop, Longview, Wash.; freshman; George Bruce, Wichita junior; Gustafsson, Davidson; Gaston, Topke senior; Trip Haismen; Leaward sophomore; Tom Laney, Topeka freshman; Randy O'Boyle, Topeka freshman; Reeves Wiedeman, Kansas City, Mo.; Kim Wrench, Lawrence sophomore.
TOPEKA (AP)—The Kansas legislature heads its into final day of this year's session today with important death penalty, statewide voting and other issues. an appropriation legislation still to decide.
HE OUTLINED these options for the Senate;
Senate President Ross Doyen, who said yesterday he considered reenactment of a death penalty a dead issue, changed later in his speech that the House should enact the hull Friday.
The Senate recessed late yesterday leaving undecided consideration of concurrence in House amendments to the death sentence. Wednesday and sent to the lower chamber.
—Move to nonconcure and have a conference committee appointed to make one last effort at effecting some compromise between both houses on the last day of the session.
- Concur in the house amendments and accept a bill outlining eight types of murders for which the penalty would be death by lethal gas in Kansas.
The bill, passed by the Senate for the second time this session, would restore capital punishment in Kansas for all willful, malicious and premeditated murders. The house changed that bill to list eight specific types of murder.
—Do nothing and let it die.
BENNETT SAID of the two versions, he preferred the House plan.
House Republicans caucused late yesterday to hear an explanation of a pay bill that was altered by the House Ways and Values committee after it passed the Senate by one vote.
Gov. Robert F. Bennett told a news conference yesterday he was resigned to getting no death penalty bill this session over differences between the two houses.
Some Republican members voiced concern in the caucus over an amendment
offered in the Way and Means Committee by the Democratic floor leader, Rep. John Koehler.
Carlin's proposal was defeated in committee along party lines.
He suggested that state employees be granted a flat $38 per month pay increase.
SOME OF THE other changes passed by the Ways and Meaning Council would be:
—Hold the salary of the chief justice of the Kansas Supreme Court to $35,000 a year while increasing the associate justices to $34,000. The Senate approved a salary of $38,500 for the chief justice and $37,000 for the associate justice.
-Give the chief justice of the new court of appeals a salary of $34,000 and the other judges on this court $33,000. The Senate had approved $33,000 and $35,500.
- Give associate district court judges a salary of $2,000 per year with provision that in no case shall such a judge receive less than 165 per cent of the salary he was receiving as a local judge immediately or to becoming an associate district judge.
—Give district court judges a base salary of $30,500 with supplemental pay of $1,500 in the largest four counties and $500 a month in three other counties.
The Senate whisked through a $37 million supplemental appropriation bill in less than 20 days.
Set a minimum of $13,500 for the election commissioners in the largest four county
OF THE TOTAL, some $2 million is for funding the state aid to local education bill which Bennett allowed to become law without his signature earlier this week.
The omnibus appropriations measure passed handily in the Senate after that body passed the budget. The Senate Democratic Leader Jack Steinberg to curb state spending next fiscal year.
Steineger said the legislature had authorized spending $4.75 million above what the state will take in next fiscal year in revenues. He proposed to reduce that deficit with an across-the-board reduction 10 per cent in all state agency budgets, encouraging and pension payments, building projects and state aid to local units of government.
In other action, the House completed a bill to authorize the Kansas Board of Regents to purchase Fairmount Towers, a privately owned development in the Wichita State University campus.
Steiniger said his proposal would have trimmed the overspending by about $30 million.
Harrall said drownings in the Kansas River near Lawrence had averaged between two and three a year for the past five years.
L. Vernon Harrell, of the Lawrence Police Department, said that they veer in certain areas at night.
"RIGHT BELOW the dam (on Massachusetts Street) is a very hazardous place. That's where most of the get drownings occur," he said. "People get too close to the dam and the undercurrent pulls them under."
Harrell said he knew of no ordinance that made it illegal to swim in the river.
Fabrics inspire program images
"Yet, Wee, Forever Wee," images inspired by fibers and fabrics, will be performed at 2 p.m. Sunday at the KU Museum of Art.
The program will feature folk dancers, musicians and readers in performances related to textiles. Robert Frost, Paul Simon, Edgar Lee Masters and Walt Whitman are a few of the people whose works will be performed.
The program is the second weekend performance of textile-related music, dance and writing. The first, "Spinning a Yarn," was concerned with narratives related to fibers and fabrics. It was performed April 11.
Dolo Brooking, curator of education at the Museum of Art, said last week that the program had been organized by students in a class on museum education problems.
Brooking said "Spinning a Yarn" had had an excellent turnout and she was expecting another large turnout for the "Yet Weave, Forever Weave" performance.
2 robbery suspects still sought by police
Police are still searching for two unidentified men who escaped with $120 Wednesday night, after robbing Yeakel's Liquor Store, 605 Vermont.
Dan Labovich, Sioux Falls, S.D. senior,
was working alone at the store when the
robbery occurred at 10 p.m. He told police that two white men about 20 years old entered the store and demanded all money from the cash register. One of the men had a pistol and he ordered Labvich to lie on the floor until the two had made their escape.
One was described as 5 feet 11, 140 pounds with a black muscade and a floppy, tan leather hat. The other is about 5 feet 9, 135 pounds with a blonde, scraggly beard.
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
JAMES GANG
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
304 Locust 843-8080
M-F 8-5:30 Sat, 8-12
--by BENJAMIN BRITTEN
Buffalo River Trip
SUA Canoe Club
April 30 through May 3
Organizational Meeting Tuesday, April 27, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union Broadway
Union, Oread Room
EVERYONE WELCOME
--by BENJAMIN BRITTEN
LPs 1.75 & 2.60 Pipes Papers Etc of all sorts
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE and THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS present
LONE RECORDS HAS
15 WEST 9
842-3059
THE TURN OF THE SCREW
Friday, April 23
Friday, April 30
Saturday, April 24
Saturday, May 1
8:00 p.m.
Ticket Reservations: 864-3982
We BUY used cars.
K. U. students admitted without charge with Certificate of Registration!!
This program is partially funded by the Student activity fee
23rd and Alabama 843-3500
John Haddock Used Cars
SUN TRAVEL
"A Day at the Races"
May 1 at Omaha, Nebraska
$15.00
TRIP INCLUDES: Roundtrip Charter Bus
Beer & Soft Drinks for Bus Ride
No Driving or Parking Hassles
Optional Lunch at Falstaff Brewery
$2.50 (with all the beer you can drink
Sign-Up Deadline-Noon April 27-SUMA Office Call 864-3477 For More Info.
Soda is poured into a glass. Sugar is dissolved in the soda, creating bubbles. The sugar dissolves quickly and forms a thick layer on the bottom of the glass. As the sugar dissolves, it cools down and forms tiny bubbles. These bubbles are attracted to water and cause it to swirl around the sugar layer. Eventually, the bubbles get trapped inside the glass and become ice cubes. The sugar is then removed from the glass.
T the right way to pour beer never changes Since the down of organized brewing back in 1803
When it comes to pouring beer, the batter is right from the beginning. When it comes to aging, the Owl is Old. Oil and ingenuity just can’t be improved upon. Some things never are.
Although blatantly defiant of sacred sectage tradition, the original method has the memorable effect of trapping the head and the drink itself, trapping the carbonation below. The beer doesn't float. The method
A. D. brewmasters have urged discriminating drinkers to pour straight into the head, and not into a tilted receptacle.
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Friday, Auril 23.1976
Students voice election indecision
By CHERYL HAWLEY
Staff Writer
Who to vote for as the nation's president is a decision that hasn't been made by 16 of 25 University of Kansas students interviewed Wednesday.
Earl Nehring, professor of political science, and Cynthia Flynn, assistant professor of sociology, both said the students' indecision was probably caused by the uncertainty of who will be nominated by the major parties.
Of the 16 students who were undecided, three said they were beginning to favor certain candidates. Of the nine students who had made up their minds, three said they would vote for President Gerald Ford, one for Ronald Reagan, former governor of Texas and former Morris Udall, D-Ariz, for two Edmund (Jerry) Brown, governor of California.
She said she would vote for Ford because his wife surely would have some influence over him.
"I wish Betty Ford were running. She
Ford can thank his wife, Betty, for at least one KU student's vote.
Another Ford supporter, Sherry Franklin,
Lawrence senior, said, "He's not an in-
tention to go," she said.
n't afraid to say what she thinks," Joye
staples, Great Bend freshman, said.
"The others are too ambiguous with their
Honeyse is the virtue that Kris Mogouks, Lawrence senior, said attracted to her.
Staff Writers
Views on inner-city woes varied
An influx of poor people to the inner city since WW II coupled with the exodus of industry and erosion of the tax base have many central cities in financial difficulty.
Bv FRED JOHNSON
Interviews with three University of Kansas professors indicate that there are different opinions about whether the deterioration of the country's central cities can be halted and how a reversal can be accomplished.
Russell Getter, assistant professor of political science, said recently that although the Federal government hadn't solved the problems of the central cities, it
THE MOVEMENT of commerce and industry to the suburbs moved jobs away from low-income people who needed them, Getter said. The subsequent loss of the tax base made it difficult for the city to provide housing for people who remained in the city, he said.
had learned to cope with them on a month-to-month basis. He said the government had learned to be flexible in its assistance to the cities. For example, Gettar said, in 1961 federal aid to municipal governments was $40 billion; today it is more than $40 billion.
"The cities have had to use federal revenue sharing funds and other federal sources for their operations."
said. "This means that they don't have much money left for capital expenditures. If the city raised its property tax to gain additional revenue, the remaining industry would be encouraged to move to the suburbs or to leave the region of the disadvantaged aren't being met."
The state governments could redraw the boundary lines of local governments so an agency could be able to meet the needs of the people living in that area, he said, or the federal government could require the suburbs to make a certain amount of low-cost housing available to low-income residents.
Watkins service . . .
From page one
Wollmann said students should never be afraid to see a doctor because they don't know.
For students who pay full fees there is no additional charge for almost all services of the physicians and for most diagnostic lab services. For these services their services are provided at reduced costs.
"There is never a condition of ability to pay before a student receives treatment," he said.
The daily room charge for students who paid full fees are only $23 a day, compared to $60 if no health fee was paid. Wolman said most hospitals charged more than $60
Payment can be made over a period of time if necessary, he said.
WHEN A STUDENT pays full fees at the time of enrollment, $38.50 is for the student health fee. That fee covers 75 per cent of the funding for Watkins, which is entirely self-supporting. Twenty-four per cent of the services are from the changes for some of the services and one per cent comes from an endowment from the estate of Elizabeth Watkins.
Students questioned in the waiting room yesterday said they expected to spend at least an hour at the hospital when they went to see a doctor. But all of them said they were satisfied with the care they had received on previous visits.
The speech is part of the Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Series sponsored by the University of Iowa.
Actors to speak in culture event
Davi Hodges, Shawnee Mission senior.
Davis, who has credits for playwriting and motion picture directing as well as acting, is best known for "Purile Victorious," a play he wrote in 1962. He has performed in 13 plays in the last 30 years, including "The Production of A Raisin in the Sun" in 1899. He appeared in eight motion pictures, the latest, "Let's Do It Again."
Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, a black husband-and-wife team who has appeared in more than 30 motion plays and plays, will appear at 7:30 tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
Dee has appeared in numerous plays and more than a dozen motion pictures including "Buck and the Preacher." She has edited an anthology of poems for children, and other Poems" as well as recorded and conducted recital tours of black poetry.
The last of the Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Series will be Tuesday with the showing of the movie "A Raisin in the Sun," starring Dear and Sidney Potier.
said she thought the doctors spent enough time with the patients but that getting in to the doctor was time consuming. Hodges said she would spend those classes when she wanted to see a doctor.
ALBERT WEAVER, Lawrence junior,
said that he was generally satisfied with the doctors and that they thought it did a good job. On previous visits to Watkins, Weaver said, he had to wait anywhere from 15 minutes to an hour and one-half.
Phil Dellasaga, Leawood junior, said that he had been waiting for 20 minutes but that he usually had to wait at least an hour. Dellasaga said he was satisfied with the treatment he had received in the past, but熟得 Watkins should hire more doctors.
GETTER SAID solutions such as this would never be tried because people living in the suburbs had enough political power to protect their lifestyle.
Elizabeth Henley, Lawrence sophomore, said that she had been waiting for an hour and that when she had to see a doctor she tried to go when she didn't have any classes.
"I try to come with two hours free," she said.
Henley said she thought the hospital needed either more doctors or a branch that would be able to treat her.
CLAIRE GLEASON, nursing receptionist, said she saw most students who came in and most of them understood why they had to wait so long.
Gleason said the wait for students was half an hour to two hours, depending on weather conditions.
"The wait is always longer during the cold and flu season," she said.
Gleason said she tries to explain to students why waiting occurs. One doctor is always on call for emergencies, each doctor has a day off, doctors have meetings which they must attend and some of the doctors teach. she said.
One of the services offered at Watkins and used by a number of students and faculty at the University.
Immunizations can be received for foreign travel, entrance to the KU Medical Center, tetanus, flu and many other purposes. Bee also said a number of special groups were immunized each year in students on geology field trips, museum classes and ROTC members. Boo polsters and typhoid shots also can be obtained.
ANNETTE BEE, allergy and immunization nurse, said she saw between 30 and 40 children.
Bee said there was no charge for any of the immunizations, except yellow fever, if the bee had been injected.
"These are given at any students' request," she said.
Faculty and staff may also get immunizations at a slight charge.
Herman Lujan, director of the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies, said the central cities might see a rebirth in their economic capacity under intensive transportation. He said that if the oil producing countries increased the price of gasoline by the early 1980s, people might move back to the central cities to take advantage of less expensive transportation and land.
Bee said any students wanting immunizations for foreign travel this summer should try to get them before final exams and get them ready "would always comfort after the shots."
University Daily Kansan
The cities probably will have to continue to cope with their problems from month to month.
"The poor in the central city will be hurt by rising prices and helped by the increase in the tax base, which will allow the city to do more for them," he said. "The poor may follow cheap housing to the suburbs when the middle class moves back to the central city." The poorest population with enough middle-class people to support the poor through taxes."
AS PEOPLE and industry move to the suburbs, the value of land in the central city will decrease, he said. At some point, however, it will be economical for industry to move to the city rather than pay for expensive suburban land, he said.
Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business, agreed that transportation would be an important factor in determining the future of the central cities.
Pichler said one solution would be to educate people in the central city and teach them the skills needed to handle white-collar jobs. Desegregation of housing also created new opportunities for colorblind workers could move freely to areas where they were needed, he said.
HE SAID that the skilled people needed for white-collar city jobs live in the suburbs. The workers needed by suburban industry live in the central city, he said.
statements and policies." she said
Henry Jackson, Lane said, is too emotional.
Reagan's fiscal policy to reduce the yearly percentage increase of the national defense budget, a senior senator, sidesthe liked about the former California governor. He said he would vote for Reagan if he were nominated, but if he did not nominate he would vote for any Democrat.
"I like (Jimmy) but, he hedges the heel. I like Udall, to, but I don't think he will. I like Dalton."
Chris Lane, Lawrence junior, said, "I wouldn't vote for Reagan for dog catcher. I wouldn't vote for Hunter."
"He reacts to things rather than thinking about them," she said.
She said if Reagan got the nomination she would voce for anyone else.
One student, who said she preferred to be unidentified, said she liked Jerry Brown because he didn't have the traditional students' favoritism toward certain groups.
In this campaign, Nehring said, there is a greater degree of uncertainty about who the candidates will be because of an increased number of primaries and a change in the Democratic party's rules on the selection of delegates.
Kent Eisler, Lawrence junior, said he didn't care to discuss politics and didn't believe in political parties. The emphasis in his speech, on is the Democrats and Republicans.
Mike Gillispie, Lawrence law student, said he was learning toward Udall as the legal judge.
winning said it is typical for students to feel no candidate represents youth.
"There is no serious contender I can really back, including Uttal." he said.
"I vote for the man. This party business is stupid," Eisler said. "Sometimes a good man loses in the primaries because he is applauded."
From page one
Alumni . . .
executive officer of Peabody in 1871.
Phelps was an all-conference football center at KU and was voted a member of Sport Illustrated's 1960 Silver Anniversary All-America football team.
A former member of the KU Alumni Association board of directors, Phelps also has served on the advisory committee of the KU School of Engineering.
Riss joined the Riss International Corp. in 1949 upon his graduation from the School of Business. He became president of the corporation in 1950.
He is founder and chairman of Republic Industries, Inc.; chairman and president of Grandview Bank and Trust Co.; and treasurer of Columbia Properties, Inc.
A former president and board member of the KU Alumni Association, Riss also has been chairman of the Greater University Fund Advisory Board. He is a member of UI Endowment Association and a member of the School of Business Advisory Board.
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Friday, April 23, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
😐 😐
I
Psuchic phenomenon
The housekeeper, Mrs. Grose, left, played by Janice Johnson,
Lawrence graduate student, and the Governance, played by
Frances Ginsberg, Dallas, Tex.,Jun.14, act out a touching moment in the opera "The Turnaround" the opera will be performed at The Metropolitan Opera, April 30 and May 19.
Summary Comments
A MONTH OF SUNDAYS, by John Udike (Crest, $1.95) . The Rev. Tom Marshfield is the hero of this latest big-seller by Updike. Marshfield being a man of intelligence secundal within his parish because of his dallying with too many of the ladies in the flock. As with most of Updike's novels, "A Month of Sundays" was an indiscreable praise when it appeared in the hard-back edition.
DAMON, by C. Terry Cline Jr. (Crest, $1.35) - A psychological thriller about a 4-year-old boy with the mind of a genius who has been taken hostage. The book is based on medical fact, and it is a horrifying little tale, with subject matter mainly for those who were not troubled by Tyron's "The Exorcist" or Blatty's "The Exorcist."
HEART OF GOLD, by Russell H. Greenan (Crest, $1.50)—A new book by the author of "It Happened in
Boston?' It's about Amos Cavaughan, rich man who wants to take his money with him into the next world, and about his attempts, with the help of a professor, to do so.
ONE WAY TO VENICE, by Jane Ahnet Hodge (Crest, $1.50) - A Gothic a bit classier than the rest, she receives evil, taunting letters about her missing son and about her own earlier days in South Carolina. The son, according to the book, returns to Mom goes Mama to look for him.
TOLL FOR THE BRAVE, by
Jack Higgins (Gold Medal,
$1.50)—A dandy adventure
in the White House, a
been prisoner in North
Vietnam, returns to England,
see two Vietcong soldiers there
in the English countryside, and
involved in terror and intrigue.
THE STONEWALL BRIGADE, by Frank G. Slaughter (Pocket, $1.95). The story of a young doctor with
Stonewall Jackson in the Civil War, about the carriage and the heroism and his encounters with such people as Lincoln, Lee, Jeb Stuart and the great Jackson himself.
MONISEUR, by Lawrence Durrell (Pocket, $1.59)—A new one by the author of the famed "Happy Turtle" with a "happy trinity of lovers" in the medieval walled city of Avignon, a pilgrimage to Durrell's beloved Alexandra, its gifted host in the Gnostic cult of suicide.
FREEDOM FROM BACKACHES, by Lawrence W. Friedman and Lawrence Galton will be back in 1953; they may be welcomed by a good many readers, whose problem is no laughing matter. Instructions, with illustrations, on get rid of backache "forever."
HOLLYWOOD'S GREATEST LOVE STORIES, by Dick Kleiner (Pocket, $1.95) - Breathless stories about Ingrid
and Roberta, Ava and Frank,
Rita and Aly. Hepburn and
Kristen. Danny and Clark
Clark and Carole, Sophia
Carlo, Marliny and Joe, Liz
Jay and Ingarman, June and
Pike and Fred? Have?
and MacMurray).
GROUCHO, HARPO, CHICO AND SIMETIMES ZEPPO, by M. K. BENNETT. An encyclopedia of the Markes. Anecdotes, trivia, information about the movies, anecdotes, anecdots, good biographical material.
WILD TURKEY, by Roger L. Simon (Pocket, $1.50) and DEUCES WILD by Dell Shannon (Pocket, $1.25) - Two detectives about a detective named Moses Wine, who pals around with the freaks of LA. and is a real swinger - no Jane Marple he. There are about the cups in LA. Are there police in any other cities?
Bibliophile
Opera re-creates novel
By PEGGI BASS Staff Writer
Taking ghosts, eerie shadows and nerve-grating sound effects will occupy the University for the next two weeks.
"The Turn of the Screw," an opera by Benjamin Britten based on the novel by Henry James, will be presented at 8 tonight, tomorrow night, April 30 and May 1.
The story centers on the experiences of a governess, portrayed by Frances Ginsberg, Dallas, Tex., junior, who is hired to care for two psychiatric Miles and Flora, playwrights. He helps Hedge and Chris Kahler, Lawrence graduate students,
THE STORY DEVELOPS from a description of life in 19th century England to a mysterious ghost story when the figures of the past valet and governess appear to the
The valet, Peter Quint, is played by Keith Buhl, Lawrence sophomore, and the former governess, Miss Jessel, is portrayed by Nancy Atkins, Lawrence graduate student.
children and their new governess.
Mrs. Grosse, the housekeeper of the Bly estate, which provides the setting for the operatic ghost story, tells the governess that the two ghosts were lovers while alive, and were killed when their relationship was broken. Janice Johnson, Lawrence graduate student, portrays the housekeeper.
The governess becomes the fighter of an evil she can't identify, except through instinct.
TOM REA, assistant director of the University Theatre and stage director for the opera, said Wednesday that the success of the production depended on the audience's reaction to it.
"There are two interpretations," he said. "Either it is a story which really occurred, or it's just a dream that happens in the governess' way." The reader wavies, and that's the real test.
Rhea described the production as faithful to the novel, the only thing being the presence of talking characters in the novel, there are only narrative accounts of their occasional appearances, he
He said that the tense atmosphere of the setting was supported by the music, written literally for the story by Bjtten.
BRITTEN'S COMPOSITION, which combines theatrical effect with metody, premiered in 1886. The novel first appeared in 1888.
George Lawner, professor of orchestra, is the musical director of the singers and the 15-piece orchestra.
Catherine Rogers, Lawrence graduate student and assistant stage director of the opera, said she is learning a learning experience for her.
She said that her participation partially fulfilled a departmental requirement for a master's degree in thetheat
"I had a choice of working on this opera or one of the Inge Theatre productions. This theme led like a novel," Rogers said.
"IT TOOK A LOT OF
research," she said. "And I had
never done anything like it
before."
Stage manager for the opera is Dennis Howell, Ormaha, Neb., special student.
Students will be admitted free by showing spring registration cards. *Tickets may be obtained from the box office.*
Raitt has uprooted South's blues
Public admission is $1.7a,
$2.50 and $3.25, depending on seat locations.
By BILL UYEKI
Bonnie Raitt
A fine blend of old country blues and refined rock will fill Hoch Auditorium next Thursday when blues artists Bonnie Raitt and Mose Allison come to KU.
Ratt, one of the most widely known, white female blues singers, has just completed a stint with the classy redhead who picks a mean bottleneck slide guitar. Ratt captured the hearts of many when she gave a gutty performance in Hoch two years ago.
ALLISON IS regarded as one of the finest white Southern blues artists, singing and recording many of his own works. He has reflected his Mississippi childhood, lean toward Southern country and western, but his piano playing falls in the jazz genre. Now 49 years old, he has released 15 albums.
Raitt is the daughter of Broadway music star John Raitt, who has appeared in "Oklahoma," "Carousel" and "Pajama Game." Raised in a family of developers, he developed love for music when her parents, both Quakers, sent her to a Quaker
summer camp in the East in the early 1960s.
SHE QUICKLY to took the Southern blues, the raunchy, bowling style that has its roots in the 1940s. After attending Radcliffe and having a brief career as a typist, Raitt began performing in 1989 after major performance was in 1984 the Philadelphia Folk Festival.
The blues of black artists such as Robert Johnson, Son House and Fred McDowell are
reflected in her music. While traveling with some of these musicians, she mastered the bottleneck slide guitar technique, used by many Southern blues singers, Sippie Wallace, a black woman blues player, is part in Part Raitis's career. Many of the songs on Raitt's five albums have been written by Wallace.
successive album, her music has broadened from basic blues to include forms of rock, rhythm and blues, and jazz. Her steadiest musical companion through all the albums has been The Rattlesnake platter. Raitt also has played with Lowell George and Bill Payne of Little Feat and John Hall or Orleans.
Allison hasn't confined his music to blues, either. Since the 1950s, he has played with such notable New York jazz players as Stan Getz, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims and Gerry Mulligan.
Ratt says one of his songs,
'Everybody's Cryin' Mercy'
on her album 'Taking My Time.'
RATTT, 26, has released two albums, "Streetlights" and "Home Plate," since her last KU performance. With each
BOTH RATTY AND ALLISON have benefitted blues musicians by making the music more accessible. Black bluesmen have been playing this form of music for over a century to small or limited audiences.
Now more and more young people are being exposed to the music of America, And Ratt and Allison haven't just hitched a ride on a popular music bandwagon—they're right down to its very roots.
'Edvard Munch'a work of art
Reviewer
By CHUCK SACK
In the simplest of terms, it comes down to this: I've seen the greatest film ever made, and it isn't enough. Peter Watkins 'Edward Munch' is through, I've been longing for, and I have three times this week. I've calmed down enough to realize that it's only the greatest film I've ever seen.
I'm not talking about the greatest historical re-creation, or the greatest documentary, or the best treatment of an artist and his life, although it's all of those things. "Edward Munch" was one of the most possible, and justifies all of Watkins' insistence that the cinema shouldn't be prostituted to pure entertainment.
THIS IS THE FIRST work of celluloid art to adequately convey the complexities of life and thought that have long formed the basic subject matter of the modern novel. This
biography of the neglected Norwegian painter is a psychic portrait of the artist as a young man.
A film like this has been possible for some time. The individual techniques aren't new, but the combination is revolutionary. However, it's almost easy to overlook this because some of the serious actors in the commercial movie are inching towards something like this for the last five years.
John Cassavaset has explored much of the same ground in improvisation. Robert Altman has delved into multi-track sound recording. Nicholas Roeg has used a complex scheme of editing flashbacks and flashforwards into the main Anthem and Animate Conrad Hall and Vilmos Zsigmond have experimented with impressionistic color control.
But while each of these men, and others like them, has mastered several of these
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Programmer
techniques, Peter Watkins has fused them into a psychological concent.
IN "EDVARD MUNCH") there are moments when the sudden expansion of scope and detail threatens to tear the
thousands of other ways in which this innovative combination of techniques can be used. There has never been a more satisfactorily utilized first person narrative on the sound-
"... Munch was a largely normal person whose social anxiety was so keen that he actually sensed the future. To refuse to recognize the parallels in contemporary life is to deny hope of positive change."
THE RESULT OF THESE individual currents is a density and insight that has been developed in many works. Finally, the film gives a composite picture of a character on many different levels, with an immediacy made in any other medium.
viewer apart. in one section, after one of Munch's love affairs breaks up, there's a flurry of editing; images from three separate phases of his life follow each other in rapid succession, from the society at large and the artist's work in particular.
Simultaneously, the soundtrack plays an interview with Munch's aunt, with an overlay of passages from Munch's diary or the commentator's description of contemporary events. An unnaturally this two sister, continuing tracks replaying cries, whispers and sounds from earlier sections of the film.
THESE TECHNIQUES are the visual andural equivalents of the structure of our memory, as we startlingly startling. Unlike any other experience I've had in dark theaters, this film breaks down the barriers that allow us to feel the stories from the follies of the past.
"Edward Munch" is such a complete breakthrough in film form that one instantly sees
track. Now, in "Edward Munch's" nonsynchronized images and multi-layered skins that has pointed the way.
Unfortunately, after seeing this work of art, there is a tendency to try to categorize it in some ways. To the film, one of Munch's contemporaries remarks that, "It was given to the mind of Edward Munch to discover panic and apparently social progress."
This, too, has been the thrust of Watkins' work. earlier films, particularly those set in the future, have been savagely criticized by the populative garbage." It should be overlooked that Watkins' social commitment hasn't been abandoned here.
MUNCH'S LIFELONG STRUGGLE to fight the suppression of his own personality is more than just the depiction of his plight. It is a metaphor for the individual's plight today.
"Edward Munch" details the life of one man, but it puts that person firmly in the framework of a repressive society. The society is no less repressive than the earlier one, and that it is frighteningly similar. The concerns about family, friends, lovers and laws, voiced by them, are intensely as those of our own day.
The film gives the distinct impression that Munch was a normal artist who had been so wrong that he actually sensed the future. To refuse to recognize the parallels between contemporary and to deny hope for change.
That's why "Edward Munch," the greatest film I've ever seen, isn't enough. Quite apart from the many other (and more urgent) areas the film engages with, "Edward Munch" points way toward the next stage of development in the film form.
REST ASSURED THAT it will be a long, slow process. But as other filmmakers adapt these devices and use them as integral, artistic tools, the face medium should be transformed.
For those few hundred who could see "Edward Munch" this week in its premiere film, the director can repeat a line from the film and place it in the context of my remarks. "Here and now a new phase begins in the history of cinema," he can say that you witnessed it.
Concerts
BONNIE RATI: One of the top female blues vocalists around today. Rati synthesizes her voice with her eary voice, straight from a 1920s honky-tonk bar. Appearing with her is Moe Brenner.
(8 p.m. Thursday in Hoch Auditorium)
VARSITY AND CONCERT both bands will feature soloist Raymond G. Young, director of the Varsity and University diversity. Two KU students will also solo, and two will conduct. (3:30 p.m. Sunday in Univ
PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE:
George Boberg, associate professor of wind and percussion, will conduct this group of students in three compositions for percussion. A work by Bruce Penner, Lawrence senior, enlisted Territories will be performed for the first time.
This Week's Highlights
(8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall)
BLUE ROSE CAFE: A group
business that mixes a
mixture of rock and
blues its music shows a blue-green
grain influence in the tradition
(8:30 tomorrow night at Off the Wall Hall)
Lectures
MANDOLIN AND GUITAR
ENSEMBLE; 11 musicians,
under the direction of Jeff
Dearinger, will perform Bach's
"Brandenburg Concerto" and
"Sonata" by Mauro Guillana
(8 p.m. Sunday at the Lawrence Arts Center)
GEORGE BUSH: The recently appointed director of
(8 p.m. Monday in the University Theatre)
the CIA will speak as part of the Vickers Lecture Series.
AN EVENING WITH RUBY
AND WINNER. Actress Ruby
been performs at theater and
television. Her husband,
Joseph, plays wright and director.
(7:30 tonight in Hoch Auditorium)
Theater
TURN OF THE SCREW:
A opera by Benjamin Britten,
based on Henry James's novel of
the same name, and
Tom Rea, associate director of
the University Theatre, and
George Lawner, professor of
orchestra, the play has a strong
involving ghosts and
governances.
(8 tonight, tomorrow night,
April 30 and May 1 in the
University Theatre)
THE WILD FLOWERING OF CHASITYT: Also entitled "Chase At the Stage," this book features melodramas by Dutton Foster.
Exhibits
(8 tonight and tomorrow night in Hashinger Theatre)
(Through May 7 at the Kansas Union Gallery)
(Through May 30 in the Museum of Art)
SCHOLARSHIP ART SHOW:
at the art gallery of painting,
an sculpture, judged by 15 faculty
members in the department.
15TH AND 16TH CENTURY
EARTHQUAKES,
gravitating, mostly from Gers-
man and Italy. Works by
Mantena and Durer are in-
Films
YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN:
Gene Wilder wrote, and Mel
Brooks directed this mirthful
malange.
A DOLL'S HOUSE: This production of Henrik Ibsen's play features a very sensitive atmosphere, Blair Bloom, and little else.
THE FRONT PAGE: Not the Billy Wilder bastardization of last year, but the 1931 version of his book. Charles Macr. Arthur stage play.
CLOSELY WATCHED TRAINS: Jirl Menzel's comit tragedy by a dispatcher in a dismal, tiny train station in Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia imaginative and funny, until
THE MAGIC FLUTE:
Ingmar Bergman's filmed opera is somewhat thin on the
sound, but it's brilliant in novative in its imagery.
ALL THE PRESIDENT'S 1976. Actually, this is much more accurate in its depiction of the newsroom. Unfortunately, it lacks a sense of identity for Ford and Hoffman's well-known features and into their
TAXI DRIVER: Paul Schrader wrote it. It Martin Scorsese directed it. Robert DeniRo wrote it in it. Convived?
Robert DeNiro stars in it. Convinced? In part of the 1932 movie, this is a chase to hear Paul Rohsen and Morgan at the peak of their stunts. The movie's central love story isn't much, but the secondary story of his injustice was brave for its time.
(7:30 tonight in the Lawrence Arts Center.)
Check ads for theaters and times.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 23,1976
5
Art history labeled bunk
By BECCI BREINING
A nationally known artist told a group of students and teachers Wednesday afternoon to totally disregard what art historians and art critics sav.
Bell reviewed KU student art in an in-
llection Wednesday night in the
Kansas City Galleria.
"Never believe what the art historians and writers tell you--that's bullshit—and it shouldn't concern you." Leland Bell of the Woold Auditorium about 89 people in Woodruff Auditorium.
HE CONTINUALLY asserted that art
has been called to not to what be
called 'sociolists of art.
Bell, a Hallmark Visiting Artist lecturer,
discussed a wide variety of paintings during his afternoon slide show. As he moved across the stage animatedly, he injected a French vocabulary and a humorous British accent, to the delight of his listeners.
Art critics are misguided, for example,
when they criticize work done by an artist in
his own style.
"They (critics and historians) learn to accept certain aspects of an artist," he said, and when that aspect doesn't appear in a work, it is matured in later years, they cochonm him.
"I hope the art historians in the audience won't get back at me, but they always do. In their words," she said.
Bell, whose reputation is established in both painting and teaching, said he didn't discuss his own paintings because he couldn't be objective about them.
"You can't teach painting," he said after the seminar, "but you can communicate enthusiasm to students and stick up for them. You feel and don't feel about art at the mugger."
Bell said he would be suspicious of a friend who could teach painting as a method to do it.
One of the few things a teacher can do is to turn students on to the sensitivity of painting.
Bell told students that when they painted, they must invent a "elastic reality."
"When you're doing a painting, you may be way out in the middle of nothing and inside your head you aren't sure where you are." "When you're talking about reality that's happening on the canvas."
BELL SAID confronting the complexity of reality and recreating violence and power was what made men such as Renoir and Rembrandt great.
"In the end those men could actually say something," he said, "but they had to go through a long process until they arrived at the fruition of their work in later years.
"They accepted the challenge of complexity."
While explaining a work by the French painter Juan Gris, one of his favorite works, said, "Gris commented on the world, a world in which we artists are faced with an existential challenge." He tried to realign reality, human endeavor, and all that had come before him.
BELL SAID one crime of art critics and
historians was that they tried to fit artists and their paintings into categories. Only a writer would try foolishly to transform a painting, he said, and it's boneless to do so.
In every painting, a portion of a painter's good points and bad points is displayed, he said. The object is to make the good points always outweigh the bad.
The time it takes to do a painting is unimportant, he said, as is the era in which it was created.
"Don't ever get the idea of a work depends on time," Bell said. "A call to tomorrow and a painting done in the second century could last forever."
BELL CRITICIZED the high regard for
perpetual element among many museum
keepers.
"Very few museum people are formally educated and trained in art." They're career people who are out to make it in a Hollywood sense," he said. "They're trendy guys. I'd like to get the art in museums back into the hands of people who are artists."
Bell said he disliked the work of such artists as Norman Rockwell because their paintings were
"They don't build dimensional relationships," he said. "They work in an additive sense by putting one detail on top of another without thinking of the final idea.
Faculty members honored for musical achievements
Seven University of Kansas faculty members have been honored this semester.
Stanley Shumway, director of graduate studies for the School of Fine Arts, was honored in January at the Dellus Festival in Jacksonville, Fla., where his first-place winning instrumental, "Spells," was performed.
Edward Mattila, director of the KU Electronics Studio, was elected cochairman of the Mid-western region of the American Society of University Composers in February.
One of his compositions, "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird," was recorded by
CHARLES HOAG, professor of music theory, recently was named the Kansas Composer of the Year by the Kansas Federated Clubs, and was honored at its meeting April 8 in Independence, Mo., among three of his compositions were placed.
The National Endowment of the Arts
recently awarded John Pozdro, chairman of the department of music theory and composition, a grant to compose a piano piece which will be performed at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, Washington, D.C., next year.
PODZRO HAS recently completed an opera commission in part by the Kansas Cultural Arts Commission, which will be shown in Lawrence next fall.
A composition for carillon by Albert Gerken, University carillonneur in charge of the Campanile, was played Jan 30 in New York City and then at Bok Singing Tower, Lake Wales, Fla.
JAMES C. BARNES, staff arranger for University Bands, was commissioned by the Flattmouth, Neb., High School music department to compose a piece for band and chorus, which will be performed there in May.
Richard Schutte, teaching assistant in music theory, recently placed first in the Kansas Music Theory Association composition contest.
Pianist places in contest
David Wewl placed second among seven pianists in the National Collegiate Artists Competition, sponsored by the Music Association, National Association on March 29 in Dallas.
"You have to play the same competition in each contest which gets old," he said.
Wehr, Richmond, Ky., junior, said yesterday that it was an honor to have placed second, but that he probably wouldn't compete next year.
State and regional contests eliminated a few would-be participants in the national competition, Wehr said, because no one can participate in event without placing in previous contests.
Wehr's 90-minute program included Peter I. Tchakovsky's "First Concerto;" a sonda by Samuel Bauer, a 20th century U.S. composer; selections from Johann
Wehr was the first place winner in the Kansas State Music Teachers competition in November at Emporia Kansas State College.
Besistan Bach and Sergel Rachmaninov, a
20th century composer and pianist.
He also placed first in the regional competition at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, where he competed with pianists from Kansas, Missouri, Iowa, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Colorado and Nebraska.
Weir placed first in last year's Chopin Competition in New York City.
He came to KU last fall on a full-tuition scholarship from the Cleveland Institute of Music. He has studied with Richard Angeloet, chairman of the piano department at Costa International known Portuguese pianists who is a visiting professor at KU.
Music and art camps expanded
Despite a shortened schedule, the Midwestern Music and Art Camp this summer will include more programs than in past years.
Divisions of astronomy and languages and linguistics will be offered this summer, Thomas Stidham, assistant director of the camp, said recently. The programs are based on music, art, journalism and speech and debate programs previously offered.
Stdiham said no programs had been discontinued.
The camp is for junior high and high school students from across the nation. The regular program for high school students is shortened from five to four weeks this year.
THE SHORTENED schedule for the 39th annual camp is due to increased operating costs, Stidham said. Campers will pay $595, the same as in 1975, he said.
That cost includes food, housing in University residence halls and fees. The cost may be reduced by as much as $300 for students who receive camp scholarships.
"It's a scary-looking price because it
figures out to $150 a week," Stildham said. "But 'it's low for a chance to work with some of the greatest (Musicians and artists) in the country."
Stidham said the camp's schedule also was cut because some parents of camp participants had said that five weeks was too long.
PRICES FOR FOOD, housing and other materials were increasing too fast for the economy.
Other costs that must be paid by the camp include salaries for 40 teachers and a full-time instructor. The cost of the camp and are paid a stipend of at least $75 for the duration of the camp. Their room
"Artistically and musically, we think we accomplish the same thing in a shorter time."
Students who supervise are on duty 24 hours a day, six days a week. he said.
"We're not trying to make money," he said. "We're just trolling to break even."
he said. The entire camp program also includes cheerleading and drill team programs. It may have as many as 2,500 participants, he said.
About 1,000 students participated last year in the music camp, and a slight increase has been reported.
STUDENTS FROM 40 states are expected to attend, Stidham said. He no priority was given to Kansas students over those from out of state.
The times for the various camp programs are overlapping, Stidham said, but the overall program runs from June 6 to July 24. The longest camp period is four weeks.
Recruiting brochures for the camp are sent to every high school in the nation, he said.
The annual camps were started by Russell Wiley, former University of Kansas band director. Wiley, who retired in 1974, return as a guest concert this summer.
SOME OTHER guest conductors for the music camp are Sir Vivian Dunn, a Briton who has been a guest conductor in previous years) Col. Arnold Gabriel, conductor of the orchestra of the San Antonio and Victor Alessandro, conductor of the San Antonio symphony orchestra.
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University-Community Service Scholarship/Award
As a result of the efforts of many students on the evening of April 20, 1970 in the saving of furniture, art objects and invaluable service to firefighters during the Kansas Union fire, some insurance carriers decided to present to the Kansas Union a gift in the amount of $5,000. After presentation of the gift, it was suggested that the Student Union Activities Board seek those students deserving of being awarded scholarship/awards from the gift.
Qualifications
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- Service to the University and/or the Lawrence community.
Applications
- Applications must be received by 5:00 p.m., Friday, April 23, 1976 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
- More information and applications available Monday, April 12 in the SUA office, Kansas Union.
Look in Kansan classified advertising
6
Friday, April 23.1975
University Daily Kansan
KU sweeps two from Washburn
By JOHN HENDEL
Sports Writer
Chaufa
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
KU's Bill Griffin scores in collision with Ichabod catcher Randy Johnson
The sun was shining, the temperature was in the 70s and the usually strong winds had died down. It was a great afternoon for baseball, and KU took advantage of it.
Behind strong pitching from Stan Messner and good team hitting, the Jayhawk baseball team also took advantage of the Washburn University Ichabds, sweeping a doubleheader yesterday at Quigley Field 9-3 and 6-0.
The first game was highlighted by a six-run third ming, which included a three-run
Bill Griffin, substituting for the alling Randy Trott, led off the third with a single. A walk, an error, a fielder's choice and an injury from a broken elbow, minnows in the irishs shot to the left-center-field fence.
THREE KANAS PITCHERS, Loren Taylor, Mike Love and Rob Allinder, limited the Ichabods to five hits in the contest.
KU raced three Washburn pitchers for ten hits in the game, a feat they were to match in the second half of the doubleheader.
While the Jayhawk hitters were shoving runs across the plate, Messner was keeping only two hits and walking only two in six innings of work, Messner, who previously hadn't pitched this season, didn't allow a Washburn base runner to get to third after two.
"We got a good job from Messner," coach Floyd Temple said after the game. "The umpire said his pitches were really moving."
TEMPEL SAID MUCH OF Messner's success was due to his keeping the ball over the plate and letting his fielders do it, which will take anything from Messner, though.
"Anytime you shut somebody out, you are doing a good job," Temple said.
The Jayhawks scored all six of their runs in the second and third innings.
In the second inning, singles by Heinrich
and Griffin and doubles by Monslow
Monslow.
Moyer's double, a screaming line drive through the box, hit Washburn pitcher John Mailer on the pitching hand, forcing him to leave the rame.
MAILER'S REPLACEMENT, John Edwards, got ice to ground out to end the second inning but ran into trouble in the third. Jerry Huffman and Washburn fielding combined for runs.
Andy Gilmore led off the third with a
single, Tom Krratti walked and reached second when the Ichabod second baseman muffed a double-play ball. The error allowed Heinrich to reach first. A wild pitch and a two-run single by Monty Hobbs were the forces that scored the runs.
The Jayhawk cracked out 20 hits in the doubleheader. Ice, hitting .301 before the games, had four hits. Heinrich and Griffin each had three and Krufti, Hobbs and Ron MacDonald contributed two hits to the KU cause.
THIS WAS THE SECOND meeting between KANSA and WASHINBUR KU, a woman who was born in the city.
KU's record is now 17-10; the Ichabod's are
9-10.
This weekend the Jayhawks travel to Lincoln to play the Nebraska Cornbushers in a three-game series. KU and Nebraska tied at 6-6, with Kansas winning two of three games.
Temple said he expected the Cornhuskers to be a better team than they were when they were there.
Roger Sagle is slated to start the first game of the series today. In the middle of Friday, the Reds beat Brian Rubes, who relieved Messner in the Seventh inning yesterday, would probably
start. The other starting pitcher hadn't been decided, Temple said.
On Tuesday the Jayhawks wind up a busy beach game in five days) with a defensive goalie, Mike Shields.
The next home games for KU will be on April 30 and May 1, when the K-State Wildcats come to Quigley for a three-game set.
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Softball team faces unknowns in tournament
By KRIS ECKEL
Sports Writer
The first Big Eight Tournament for women's softball opens today in Manhattan. KU enters the competition at six today when they play the University of Nebraska.
The strange thing about this tournament is that, unlike most Big Eight Tournaments, few of the members have competed against each other before.
Drysdale said she didn't know that to expect, but she didn't consider that a hin-
1"think sometimes a team plays better under those circumstances because all you need is a good team."
KU coach Shaaron Drysdale said that KU had never played Nebraska, nor has she ever seen them play. The same holds true for Missouri. In fact, Drysdale said, the only team she has reunited seen play is KState players. He also competed in course year as KU, and played each other every year.
"You're not expecting to wi-fi and you're not expected to wi-fi, but whatever you are."
With the qualifying tournament for the College World Series coming up next week, teams that have not yet given the KU team a chance to size itself up against teams that may very well be competing against them in the Series, including Iowa State, where Drysdale said was
But with a 14-0 record this season, and having placed the eighth past the past three games in the series, he is now one of the top five
"Iowa State will certainly have to respect us because of our showing in the World Series and because they've been there they played well of how well we've played," said Drydale.
The Big Eight Tournament is important,
the College World Series is what it's all
about.
"I'm really looking forward to this as a
Jenner captures Drake decathlon
DES MOINES, NJ (AP) --Confident Bruce Jennison of the San Jose Stars took command as expected yesterday and was able to delay decathlon with a record 8,250 points.
Trailing by five points starting the day, Jenner used a personal best 225-foot, 2-inch toss in the javelin, plus three other leading throws. For the Drake record of 8.138 set a year ago.
know we have the ability. But what we're trying for is the College World Series and that's more important. If we make mistakes in this tournament, this is our夺 it going to be worth it."
"I came here with a goal of 8,150, so this is a pleasant surprise," said Jenner, 26, the world record holder in the two-day, 10-event athletic test.
Rounding out the field were Jim Sobieszczyk of Club West, 7,550; Rex Harvey, U.S. Air Force, 7,331; Mark Lineweaver, Golota, Caltech, 7,219; Jill Ball (in Ball) (ind., State, 7,071) and John Gamble, Western Ontario University, 6,802.
First-day leader Bill Hancock of the University of Chicago Track Club was a distant second at 7.621, followed by John Warkentin at Alta Vista, Calif., at 7.567.
there will only be two more meets for me—the two big ones, the Olympic trials and the World Cup.
"I think I'm right on schedule now and
challenge and more just to get us involved in a tournament because we don't get that kind of opportunity all the time," said Drvsdale.
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"I would like to win it, I hope we do and I
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7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
KU hurdler Anthony Coleman (lane five) will try for another relays title at Drake
3 relay titles on line at Drake
By GARY VICE Sports Writer
The University of Kansas track team will to defend three relay titles as the Drake
The Jayhawks, ranking behind only Illinois in batton victories at Drake, won the 800-arm relay, the 440 relay and the mile race. The team strength of their strength of super spring corps.
All-America Larry Jackson, who will anchor both the 800 and 440 squads, said, "Those three relay victories are what got us on the map last year. We should be tough this year too. Auburn looks like the team to beat in the 440; they ran a 39.8 earlier."
THE JAYHAWK QUARTER-MILE SQUAD of Laverne Smith, Anthony Coleman, Waddell Smith and Jackson has a 40.1 best season this week and was third last weekend in the ALCS. Jeff Henshaw finished was slowed by a poor first hand-off between Laverne Smith and Coleman.
"We've had some pretty good exchanges in practice this week," Jackson said. "If we can get our sticks (batons) all the way around, we'll run a 39.0."
Jackson, the defending Big Eight champion in the 100, ran the first leg on the victorious mule relay squad last year. But from that foursome, which ran 3:06:3, the third fastest in school history, only sprinter Randy Benson remains. Benson, the conference's indoor champion in the 400, anchor the squadrone of Nolan Cromwell,
Waddell Smith and Jay Wagner, which won the Kansas Relays in 3:08.8.
"TTLL BE TOUGH TO defour our title," Benson said, "but we'll do it."
Friday, April 23, 1976
Cromwell, elected the most outstanding performer of the Kansas Relays, is the only winner of the Western Midlands relays circuit. The 400-meter intermediate hurdler has registered the world's two fastest times this year with his performance in Texas and his 49.8 clocking in Kansas.
"I'm not even going to go for it," he said. "I'm going to try for the open 400 LH. (intermediate hurdles) instead of the collegiate. There's going to be some good people up there in Jim Bolding and Ralph O'Neill on against. I'm ready to see what I can do."
But the junior All-America said he didn't intend to try to complete the Texas-Kansas-Dallas game.
BOLDING AND MANN are the nation's top two intermediate hurdlers and Mann is the nation's top hurdler.
Head coach Bob Timmons said that he was pleased with the team's improvement this season after its slow start and predicted that it would be ready to have its best meet of the year.
our hurdles, Nolan (Cromwell), A. C. Wenckoff, Jr. (Buckman) we'll all done real well."
"I've been very pleased with all three of
Coleman, a freshman from Lincoln High in Dallas, won the 110-meter high hurdles in the Kansas Relays last week in 13.88, and Brack, a junior, was third in 14.12.
BRACK, WHO SET HIS personal record of 14.04 in a preliminary heat, said, "I'm tried of these 14's. I want 13 something or other."
Timmons also had praise for his shot put trio of Jim Podobarella, Steve Stone and Rudy Guevara, which finished 2-3-5 at the Kansas Relays.
The shot putters, who have all thrown more than 60 feet, make KU the nation's only team with three shot putters to beat them. No one else never accomplished the feat together.
GUEVARA WHO HAS a best of 62%4,
said. "I think we all catch it together.
I don't know."
"I look forward to the meet when I spot shot putters throw over 60 feet together."
in the 3,000-meter steeplechase, Bill Lundberg will again try to lower his personal best time of 8:38.6 by six seconds to qualify for the Olympic Trials. Also competing for the Jayhawks will be George Washington to lower his fastest time only two-tenths of a second to reach the NCA championship qualifying mark of 8:55.0.
Soccer club seeks championship
By STEVE CLARK Sports Writer
All season long, the KU soccer club has been working toward one goal—the Big Eight.
This weekend, the Jayhawks will find out whether that effort will be rewarded when they travel to Boulder, Colo. for the Big Eight soccer championships.
"Naturally we're optimistic," player Bermie Mullin said yesterday. "We've got the best team we've had in years and we've got to do it." And he got to go out there and put it all together.
TEAM IN KU'S DIVISION are Nebraska, Oklahoma and Kansas State.
The eight conference schools have been divided into two divisions for the tournament. A roundrobin tournament will be played on Monday, and winners advancing to the finals on Sunday.
The 'Jayhawks' first game will be at 10 a.m. Saturday against Nebraska, a team from Iowa.
"If we play our game, we shouldn't have any problem with them," Mullin said, "but since the halves are shorter, anything could happen."
Because each team must play three games on Saturday, each half has been shortened to 25 minutes. On Sunday, regular games will be used for the championship game.
At 1 p.m. on team. Saturday, KU takes on an
this season it has队打 5-4 and 7-4
on this team.
"OBYOUSLY, OKLAHOMA isn't very good," Mullin said. "Our game with them should give us a chance to rest some of our players."
KU's final game of the day is at 4 aqaint Kansas State, the winner of the last two Big Eagles games.
Although KU and the Wildcats haven't played this spring, during the fall portion of the schedule they tailed twice. In the first game, KU cruised to a 8-2 victory, but after trailing the second contest 3-0, Kansas State battled back to salvage a 3-12 tie.
"Kansas State is strong and physical," Mullin said, "orm great than good, but you don't get that good than good."
"I DON'T KNOW WHAT it is. It seems like they can get really pumped up to play Snob Hill, but we can't get up for Silo Tech."
In the other division of the tournament
are Iowa State, Oklahoma State, Missouri,
and Arkansas.
"Oh, no doubt about it, we're in the easier bracket," he conceded. "But assuming we win our side, regardless who we'd play in the finals, they'd be a touch team."
Oklahoma State split two games with KU this spring, and Missouri has defeated KU twice in a row, but Mullin picked Colorado as the probable winner of that division.
"SINCE ALL OF THE TEAMs competing are clubs, and not varusity teams, they are all much weaker on the road, simply because of the financial situation." Mullin said. "Colorado could be powerful as hell, just because they don't have to travel."
KU's travel squad will be close to full strength for once. The lone exception is left midfielder Terry Willexsen, who will miss the season of the season with an ankle injury.
"We think we can win it all," Mullin said. If we just use our heads, we can avoid a roadblock or a crash.
Last season the Jayhawks went into the tournament with an unblemished 14-0 record. But after winning its first two games, KU fell apart.
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Kansas ruggers travel to Iowa
Thursday evening
KU, now 8-2 on the year, goes into the Des Moines game coming off of a 41-20 win over Iowa. KU was one of the top three in the NFC East.
KU's rugby team travels to Des Moines
kids tend to take on the Des Moines
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Des Moines is generally regarded as one of the stronger teams in the northern half of the country, Rugby Football Union, according to Joon Mellon, a two-year member of the KU squad.
University Daily Kansan
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University Dally Kansan
Friday, April 23, 1976
Marathon runners face struggle against themselves
(Editor's note: Steve Clark, who wrote the following story, competed in the Kansas Relays marathon Saturday in a time of $40, good for "about 130th place." Clark admits he walked the last 10 miles. By the time he finished, the course markers had already crossed the finish line.)
By STEVE CLARK
Spark Writer
BOOM!
The startier's gun sounded at 6:58 a.m.
last Saturday. After the annual
saturation, Marathon marched on.
Stampeding like a herd of turtles, the 170 runners of all shapes, sizes and ages made their way around the red tartt track in Memorial Stadium.
The pack thinned out rapidly as the runners completed the one-lap circuit, headed through the open gate and up the ashbath path that leads past the Campanile.
At race time the temperature was in the 60s and the wind, which would later gust up to 35 miles per hour during the race, was negligible.
THE GREY CLOUDS and wet green grass made the brightly colored uniforms of the contestants stand out more than usual. Several runners, thinking the pace was too slow, made an early move to gain better position. There really wasn't any hurry.
The marathon is a race of 26 miles, 385 yards and it takes even world-class runners 4 hours to complete.
World records aren't kept because courses vary, but the current world best is 2:08:34 by Derek Clayton of Australia. He wasn't here Saturday.
THE 1972 OLYMPIC marathon champion, Pete Schorer, was here, but he ran the race.
But less than 10 runners had a legitimate shot at winning the race and the Relays winner.
The remainder of the field was entered not with winning the race in mind, but winning against time, against themselves and against the marathon.
"THE DISTANCE IS the challenge," Kenny Moore, an Olympic marathoner, has said. "The competitive urges melt away long before the distance is completed."
Gene Burnett, director of the Relays marathon, said recently he was just glad that the season was over.
"Marthaoners are the greatest athletes in the world," Burnett said, "they don't crab and bitch about the weather and other things like some athletes do. They just go and run. And they're the most polite group of athletes there is. I really enjoy that."
Burnett has been in charge of the KU marathon since head track coach Bob Timmons added it to the Relays agenda seven years ago.
"I HELPED COACH Timmons mark out the first course they used," he said, "and when he asked if I'd take charge of the event. I was more than glad to help."
Under Burnett's direction, and thanks to the overall growth of distance running, the KU marathon has become one of the most successful events, best attended marathons in the midwest.
In 1970 just 19 runners were in the field, last year 114 and this year 170.
But, Burnett said, people weren't just starting, they were also finishing the race.
"Last year 82 runners came in under four years," he said, "and this year 110 made it." He said he was on a mission to have four and one-half hour cutoff time. So our field is growing in quantity and quality."
THE MARATHON, which some people
dare to call the nightmare to life,
dates to 480 B.C.
It was around them that some unknown, but long-winded, Greek soldier supposedly ran from Marathon to Athens, a distance of 22 miles, 147 yards to bring news of his
sports shorts
MGLOLTON SUSPENDED—St. Louis pitcher Lynn McGlothen, ejected earlier this week for his part in a beanball battle against the New York Metts, has been suspended for five days and financed $300 by the National League.
WOMEN'S TENNIS—The Missouri/ Valley Women's Collegiate tennis tournament, which opened yesterday, will continue through Saturday on the tennis courts behind Allen Field House and Robinson Gymnasium. Players from 17 teams compete in the most which has 64 singles and 30 doubles entries. KU's Astrid Dakas and Cecilia Lopez are seeded first and fourth respectively in singles competition.
countrymen's victory over the Persians in battle.
This monumental feat was in the minds of the promoters of the first modern Olympic games, which were held in 1866 in Athens. They thought it would be a good idea to run the marathon to commemorate what had taken place centuries earlier.
MEN'S GOLF—The Kansas golf team is in Des Moines today for the Drake Relays golf tournament. Tomorrow, they will go to Ames for a dual meet with Iowa State.
"We're getting to the point where we've played enough to be able to evaluate how we can play." Waugh said. "This will be the challenge for us, and that we have had our best golfers together."
The action by National League president Chub Feeeyen came 24 hours after New York filed an official protest against the 26-year-old McGlennon, who admitted that he intentionally hit new Jok outfielder Del Unser and pitcher Jon Matack.
WOMEN'S GOLF - six-member KU women's golf team left yesterday for the Big Eight Championships in Columbia. Coach Nancy Boozer took Beth Boozer, Michelle Williams and Kelly Webb to the meet, which will end tomorrow.
Turnery, a modest person, decided to seek the cover of the cover lush Kansas greenery. Off he headed toward this would-be facility, when his path was blocked by a fence.
MEN'S TENNIS-KU's tennis team will meet Eastern Kentucky today in the first round of the Southern Illinois. Carbondale and Tulsa will play at Northern Southern Illinois and Tennessee tomorrow.
TENNIS
sopomhore, who was probably on the way to a time of about 3:15:00 when, at the 18-mile mark, he felt the need to answer the call of nature.
KU coach Jerry Waugh is convinced his
Javahawk sound is improving. ..
ONE SUCH RUNNER was Tim Emel, an elementary school teacher. He was in the vicinity of Flint Hall, barely a mile from finishing when he collapsed and was rushed to hospital. A problem was diagnosed as heat prostration and he was released after a few hours.
At the 1896 Olympics the marathon distance was 24 miles, 1,500 yards. At following Olympics the distance varied and the distance established until the Paris games of 1924.
THERE THE CURRENT distance, 28 miles, 385 yards, was first run in London in the 1908 games. The yardage was added so that the race would begin in front of the royal residence at Windsor castle and finish at the royal box in the stadium at London.
And last, but certainly not least, there
was Sharon Kay Wagner, a 37-year-old
houseman.
HE GRABBED THE FENCE and started to leap over, but not before he felt a surge of electricity run through his hands. He'd made the mistake of choosing live electric fence and, after screaming an obscenity, managed to let go.
Royals, Bird dump Brewers, 2-1
in the eighth and stole second. After Amos Otis took a disputed third strike, Jerry Augustine relieved starter Jim Colburn, 0-1, to face the left-handed hitting George Brett.
MILWAUKEE (AP)—Jim Wohlford scored the decisive run on third baseman Don Money's error with two out in the eighth inning, lifting the Kansas City Royals to a 2-1 victory over the Milwaukee Brewers 'last night.
Unfortunately, the jolt of electricity and the fatigue that had built up over 18 miles convinced Turuney to walk the remaining distance, which he did in a rather dazed condition.
First, she ran the distance under four hours, something only 120 women had accomplished by last January. Second, she became only the third woman ever to finish the KU marathon. Third, she finished about 20 minutes behind her husband, Paul, making them the second married couple ever to complete the race at KU.
Wohlford bunted for a single with one out
Brett hit a chopper toward third and the ball hopped through Money's legs into left foot.
First, one of the runners missed the start. Arne Richards, a librarian from Manhattan who is well known among Kansas road runners, simply wasn't there. Richards was in the United States spinners at the Munich games in 1972. Richards wasn't through.
Turnover was lucky to him even finished.
There are 10 minutes or various reasons never
gone.
His late entrance didn't seem to affect him very much, because by the time he crossed the finish line, in a time of 3:11:00, he had moved up to 48th place.
But what's important are the occurrences
"WHICH WAY DID they go," he yelled as he ran onto the track looking for all the other runners that had disappeared from sight.
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April 23-24
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But her feat becomes even more unusual in that just seven and one-month ago he had been told by the doctor.
Then there was Dick Turney, Hays
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"Truly the Most Wonderful
Happening in Lawrence."
Gene Chalet
Showtime
11 a.m. till Closing Nightly
April 1 to April 30
Friday, April 23, 1976
University Daily Kansan
9
Penn House . . .
From page one
Most of Penn House's work is teaching people how to solve problems, Miller said. Sometimes certain cases make it necessary for people to be trained in food, clothing, medicine and transportation.
"Pen House helps people learn the system. Miller Somewhere there there's an answer," she says.
People in outlying areas are sometimes left out, not knowing what programs are available and how to apply for them. The main goal of the mobilization program is one such example.
The housing rehabilitation program was set up through community development funds by the Douglas County Commission last fall. The program enables low-income in the county to repair unsafe conditions that might be present in their homes.
Penn House also is doing more counseling of a limited kind. Miller said.
"Counseling to most implies something psychological," she said, "and we're not qualified to do that. Most people have a particular kind of fear and depression. The only thing I impaire a person's ability to function. We must learn a lot about and can counsel."
"HER NERVES WERE shot and she was frightened and confused. Now she's in a better position to make an intelligent decision," she said.
Miller explained resources and options such as the juvenile court, which could secure dependency and assure the children's safety.
TO REMEDY the problem of reaching families in outlying areas, Penn House workers travel to Baldwin, Eudora and was once a month to advertise the program.
She said a woman who had $3 in her pocket and four children came to Penn House recently for guidance after her husband had continually abused her.
Miller's Woman of the Year award has been a tremendous boost to morale at Penn House, she said. A half-dosen roses on her lap from staff member shows this appreciation.
"People here understand it takes a lot and that we're all working together. My name alone is on the award, but everybody is on of it. I don't know how to react . . .
people know me and know I can be effe-
cient. But very important people see me as ordi-
She gets furious, Miller said, when people say that the poor are unmotivated and uncivilized.
Miller said her childhood was wild, much of it spent in strange circumstances. Her father, a career Army officer who ran his family with military discipline, moved the family from Texas after World War II and served as a combatant an average of every six months.
"Working here has proved to me that the poor are not apathetic and unconcerned—you simply have to provide workable options for vehicles for problems as they see them."
SHE ALSO LEARNED street Greek,
high-class* Greek, and still remembers it.
MILLER ALSO IS the spokesman for Penn House, speaking on radio and television panels, in church groups and classes at Lawrence schools.
"I learned it from whores, beggars and flower mongers," she said. "We were in Greece almost three years. Greece was the only life we lived like a family for a while."
"That will continue as long as I don't start speaking about my values and conceptions," she said. "I ask everybody at Penn House what I should say. Sometimes there are two opinions. In that case, I'll tell both."
The family returned to the United States when Miller was a senior in high school. After graduation, she attended Reed College in Portland, Ore., for a year, until she had used all the money she had saved in high school.
While in Europe, Miller said, she learned excellent Italian and German but has since forgetten the languages because she didn't learn how to read or write them.
w at Ised College that she met her husband, Keith, who is an associate professor of human development at the University and head of the department at Washington University in St. Louis.
Miller says the marriage has been a nice mix.
"HE'S THE intellectual and academic of the family. We live in two different worlds,
which gives us a lot to talk about every night at dinner," she said.
Her husband agrees
"We're both independent professionals and we both have our own lives to live," he said. "This gives us a chance to come home and talk over things."
Miller said she didn't have total support from others while establishing Penn House.
The Milkers have two children: Marty, 17, and Kiera, 13. Oceo Carell said they helped with the cooking and housework and were also good at taking care of tossing the type of job for which she isn't paid.
"WHEN WE FIRST opened, there were a lot of hassles with the welfare department." He thought Penn House would be militant and thought Penn House would personnel was paranoid and uncooperative. That has entirely changed. They eventually do their work and doing are and are now extremely cooperative.
Officials interviewed had nothing but praise for Miller.
County commissioner I. J. Sstoneback said
county Miller was successful because the
commissioners felt it was in his interest.
"She's sincere in helping the poor," he said. "She really goes out and searches the poor and is very dedicated on behalf of them."
Ernest Coleman, county federal funds consultant, said Miller had the temperament to work with different kinds of people.
COLEMAN STRESSED that the county's housing rehabilitation program needed to get various kinds of information to various residents that Penn House was capable of doing that.
When Miller is on the schedule, he said,
she gets right in there and makes things
sound.
KU graduate students help with a Penn House training program that is designed to set up organizations similar to Penn House in other areas. Its goals are to teach office skills the operation of Penn House, welfare and housing police and tenant-landlord problems.
"If it turns out to be what we hope it will be, we'll mail it to grassroots areas," Miller said.
“It’s not to the point yet where it’s export-
able . . . but it’s going to be.”
Office wants to hear frets
Has one of your instructors changed the date for your final examination to a different one than was listed in the University calendar issued at the beginning of this semester?
If so, and the new date creats problems for you, Janie Hursh, Student Senate complaint service director, wants to hear about it.
The complaint service director, Hursh said Monday, is also available students who have missed class.
about the University. Students with complaints aren't required to disclose their information.
Hursh said she could refer complaints about rescheduled finals to the University Senate Calendar Committee, which is responsible for examination scheduling.
Hursh has an office within the Student Senate office in B-105 Kansas Union, but has no regular office hours. She said students can reach her by leaving a message with the Senate office. The phone number is 864-3710.
Magazine editor to read poetry
Alice Walker, contributing editor for Ms magazine, will read from her poetry and prose at 3:30 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
In addition to her magazine work, Walker is noted for her collection of short stories, In *Love and Trouble*, which last year won the prestigious Literary Awards from the Institute of Arts and Letters. Her short stories
Walker's 1973 book of poems,
"Revolutionary" Petunia was nominated for
the Literature Prize.
also have appeared in "The Best Short
American Short Story" of 1974.
Her appearance is sponsored by the KU department of English and is free to thePU student.
S
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A workshop Non-Violence as a means to Radical Change
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John Swomlev, Ph.D.
nationally known political scientist, pacifist author, leader of reform/peace movements national board member of American Civil Liberties Union, Professor of Christian Ethics St. Paul School of Theology, K.C.
Sunday, April 25 Big Eight Room, Union 1-5:00 p.m.
Basic Assumption: the need for Radical Change The Question: How?
- What does non-violence mean? •What is Radical Change about?
•How can non-violence be used effectively? •What does a commitment to non-violence mean as a personal life-style choice?
•Non-violence in politics, economics, national defense, human relations, physical and spiritual dimensions, etc.
•Your personal agenda with change, non-violence
After Session:
5:00-8:00 p.m.
Shared meal and informal gathering
UMHE Building, 1204 Oread
(bring some food to share, drink provided)
The KU-Y is partially funded by Student Activity Fees
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Friday, April 23, 1976
University Daily Kansan
19 magazines printed on Lawrence presses
Question: Where are National Lampoon and Family Health printed? Answer: Lampoon and Family Health printed.
That's right. Those and other nationally known magazines are printed in Lawrence by Kansas Color Press, Inc., 2201 Haskell Aye.
Kansas Color Press prints 19 different magazines from National Lampoon to TV magazine.
STEVE JACOB, director of personnel,
said Tuesday that the company moved from Liberal to Lawrence in 1953. It was a family-owned business until 1974, he said, when R.G. Zimmerman sold it to John Smith.
Work Basket, a women's magazine that orders about 1,885,000 copies monthly, is the largest account for Kansas Color Press, he said.
JACOBA SJOAI that National Lampoons run
about 1,200,000 copies monthly, and that TV
would be available for free.
Family Health prints about 1,500,000 and family Society Record about 700,000 copies may be purchased.
each week for the Kansas and Missouri region.
Other magazines and their printing orders are: VFW-1,750,000; Elks-1,671,000;
The Moose-1,171,000; The Lion-717,000; 1,001 Home Decorator-750,000; Bon Appetit-500,000; Abundant Life-1,222,000;
Flower and Garden-605,000; Work Bench-
458,000; Future Farmer of America—
516,000; Kansas Farmer—180,000; Missouri
Ruralist—200,000; Pack of Fun—245,000;
and VF AWLert—500,000.
Jacob said that all the magazines are monthly, except TV Guide, Kansas Farmer and Missouri Ruralist, which are weeklies.
Ambulance service seeks grant
More advanced care than is now possible may be available to Douglas County Ambulance Service patients in the near future, a senior director of the service, said Wednesday.
TV GUILD is the only magazine of the three that isn't printed solely in Lawrence, he said. Kansas Color Press prints only the program section of TV Guide.
He said a target date of one year had been set by the service to implement improvements necessary for advanced enroute care if federal funds are received.
The ambulance service has asked for $42,000 from the federal government to finance the purchase of cardiac care and equipment. A team of four trained vaccination for six attendants, he said.
The equipment would include a defibrillator and a mobile transmitter to send electrocardiograms to the hospital from the scene of an emergency.
A defibrillator is a device used to restore the pumping motion of the heart, especially after a heart attack, by using an electrical current.
The ambulance service would also be able to send six attendants to the KU Medical Center for emergency mobile intensive care (EMIC) training, McFarlane said.
EMIcs are what most people consider paramedics, he said. There is now only one EMI in town.
The other attendants are all emergency medical technicians (EMT) who have completed a 100-hour training course coordinated by the Med Center.
EMT training is, basically, advanced first aid training. McFarlane said.
Until more attendants have received EMIC training, a one-year course at the Med Center, it would be pointless to acquire the cardiac care and monitoring equipment, he said. EMTs aren't qualified to operate the equipment.
If the equipment is purchased, Lawrence Memorial Hospital will have to acquire receiving equipment. That would allow doctors to analyze the conditions of patients and to order proper care while patients are enroute to the hospital, he said.
The 14 attendants at the service are certified EMTs. McFarlane said.
The new ambulance, one of four, is a modular one, he said. Much like a camper, the modular or box-like unit on the back is removable from the truck chassis it rides
on. Because of this, when the chassis wears on, the modular unit can be placed on a new one, saving money in the long run, McFarlane explained.
These improvements have resulted in higher costs to the users of the ambulance service, McFarlane said, but they have meant better service.
The base rate for an emergency call is $35
and $1.50 a mile, he said. A convalescent
call (nonemergency) is $30 and 75 cents a
mile.
Why do these magazines come to Lawrence for printing?
"Let's hope it's the service," Jacob said. He also said location, quality of work and the labor market here could be factors in attracting magazines.
Jacob said that a central location, such as lawrence, allowed equal distribution to all
The labor market in Lawrence could be a reason for magazines coming here, he said, because labor is generally cheaper here than in other parts of the country.
KANAS COLOR Press can offer its
client felt and a choice of letterpress
of 5 x 7 inch.
Kansas Color Press has five rotary press—three offset and two letterpress.
CIA chief Bush will speak here
George Bush, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, will speak at 8 p.m. on Monday.
The lecture is part of the Vickers Lecture Series, established in 1970. The top of the table lists:
Ex-pitcher warns of drugs
Bush rephased William Colby as head of the CIA when President Ford resuffled his cabinet in November. At that time, Bush was appointed by S. liaison office in Peking for 13 months.
He served as ambassador to the United Nations from 1970 until he became chairman of the Republican National Committee in 1972.
Don Newcombe, former major league pitcher, will be the featured teacher today during an alcohol and drug abuse workshop at Haskell Indian Junior College.
While U.N. ambassador, Bush came to Lawrence to address the Chamber of Commerce in a speech entitled, "Don't Give Up on the U.N."
Bush served two terms as a Republican Congressman for Texas from 1968 to 1972.
Newcombe pitched in the majors for 10
years, with the Brooklyn Dodgers and the
Cincinnati Reds. He is scheduled to speak at
10:45 a.m. in the Haskell auditorium.
The workshop, which started yesterday,
begins today at 9:30 a.m. and ends at
1:30 p.m.
Because of his active Republican political career, Bush's nomination as CIA director became controversial. Some congressmen believed that he was antisemitism, nonpolitical replacement for Colby.
Three years ago Haskell established an alcohol education and prevention program with a grant from the National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse.
NEWCOMB PITCHED in three World Series with the Dodgers. In 1949 he was voted Rookie of the Year by the Baseball Writers Association and the Sports News. He was the first winner of the Cy Young Award for outstanding major league pitcher in 1956.
Bush became chairman of the Committee on Foreign Intelligence in March when Ford overhailed the structure of intelligence administration. Ford established the committee to intelligence activities of the CIA and the departments of defense, state and treasury.
NEWCOMBE IS a consultant and representative of the National Clearinghouse for Alcohol Information. He has traveled widely across the United States, speaking on his personal experience with alcoholism and his recovery from it.
Workshop activities yesterday included a speaker, a film and a professional singer.
In 1971 he won a Distinguished American Award. He is a member of the Advisory Board of the National Council on Alcoholism.
DON RICHARDSON, counselor of the ICA RECORE Home in Topela, talked about women and alcohol. He is also director of Education and Training at the Kansas Abuse Albus Unit. The film showed was about alternatives to alcohol and drugs. Bryon Jon, a professional Native American singer from Duluth, Minn., sang last night.
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APPLICATIONS Now Being Accepted for SUNFLOWER HOSTESSES
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is now accepting applications from students interested in assisting with the recruitment of prospective student-athletes for the Football Department. Membership requirements state that you must be a university enrolled KU student in good standing during the 1976-77 academic year.
9TH STREET
MASSACHUSETTS 1
For further information and applications contact the assistant athletic director, James P. Bickel 211, Allen Field Housen annex. Application deadline is 5 p.m., Tuesday, April 27
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The SKIRT has never looked prettier or more inviting . . . here, from Smart Set a series of styles that echo the excitement of Spring . . . the reversible wrap stitching solid to paint . . . the front wrap in chino vina . . . the silk wrap in chino vina . . . the militered awning stripes . . . and the triple-tiered style of floral print chinz. Washable. Misses sizes.
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I am not sure how to represent this in a sketch. It looks like two skirts with different patterns and colors, possibly from a fashion catalog or a clothing design board. I will try to capture the essence of the designs but may need more details to be accurate.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 23, 1976
11
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to their race, gender, national origin or background. BREING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 101 FILM HAULS.
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 word ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Each additional word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
to run:
Monday Thursday Friday 5 pm
Tuesday Thursday Friday 5 pm
Wednesday Monday Friday 5 pm
Thursday Tuesday Friday 5 pm
Friday Wednesday 5 pm
ERRORS
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 864-4358.
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
UDA BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall 864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
VL 21806
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK, tf.
The Friends of Mr. Thomas Flattery are antonio de la cruz, a friend of the author, married to Mara M. Schmidt. The author is the son of Mara and John Flattery.
A bachelor party will be held at the Paterodiac day 1. Be there as Max expires from the cake.
Couple's Workshop Sat. April 24, 10 am-1pm. p380. Dishon Couple Valentine, reservations available. Students will learn hidden rules when—areas we don't discuss through exercise and work exclusively within Through exercises and work exclusively within patents and find ways to deal with them with patents led by G教 Irgust and Marcin Sindel.
GARAGE SALE, BARE SALE, multi-family 2-3
LAWNSEY AVE. then south to WILLOWHILL,
4-10 LAWNSEY AVE. then south to YOUNGLEA
5-12 LAWNSEY AVE.
John Maraldo will give a public lecture April 23 in Palm Beach, Florida, on Buddhist Practice and Everyday Life on Buddhist Practice and Everyday Life.
Employment Opportunities
Career related summer job must be locate-out
certainly. Kissas $83 per month. Call 841-782-9600.
ENTERTAINMENT
*SHOWTOWBARS a's comin'* April 2, 7:30 p.m.
1936 km $2 donation. Get on board. 4-25
1936 km $2 donation. Get on board. 4-25
FOR RENT
ATTENTION *STUDENT RENTERS* Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home; invite in person (no phone calls please) at WEBSTER MOBILE HOMES, 3409 W. st. 11th, Lawrence, KS 66020
Free rental service. Up to the minute littings or
rentals required. Lawn care. Lawn
Rental Exchange. 842-2500.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen privacy
2- rooms to campus $5 and up, private
3- rooms or $85-$482
2 bdmr, all util paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Park free. a/c, pool. 843-4983.
and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate occuance. Also, save money, leave from June 1, 2015 until the end of August now before it’s too late. Park 25 Apartments, 2 blocks west of Town on 25th St. Phone 842-1455.
SUMMER RATES at Univ. Tews & Old Mill
Albany, 1829 W. 9th, Apt. 1-C
Sublease June 1-August 1. Nive. large, furnished room in campus, rated for campus, call: 864-8633 or 864-8644.
1 Bedroom kit. AC Close to campus. $120 per
month, call RG 863-2698 or RG 841-6746.
SUMMER RATES at University. Terr. & Old Mill
Rates: $150 for a 2-hour swimming, drapes,
draining pool, 1 bathr. $110 plus utilities;
2 bedr.床麻, $140 plus utilities. Rates
for additional amenities: Aug. 15 thru
842-497-839 or 843-493-833
Furnished room available immediately ill May
640. Goose $2,500; $1 all utilities paid
640. Goose $1,750
Sublease from May 15 to Aug. 25. Air conditioned.
Air conditioning. Brand new. $169/mo Call after 5. 495
phone. brand new. $169/mo Call after 5. 495
phone.
Sublease three-bedroom house, full harassment, all
payment $185/month, June-night-Aug-14.
Call 641-8031.
Sublease-apartment, late May may Aug. 1st.
Released from campus. ACS-28
agregate价: 841-1431
Subluece June 1 to Aug 10, 3 berm, 1½ bath,
brass tub, and pool and laundry room.
845-0241 or 841-2542.
Apt. to submit May 24 8 days free
Indoor and outdoor pools. 842-4936
4-28
One room studio apartment, Clean, quiet. AC,
kitchen, kitchen available May 5th Call 6148
428
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
ROOTS, HATS, JEANS
J
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Glencoe & Broomfield
BankAmericard
842-8413
charge
Garden plants for rect. Four sizes already plowed, fertilized and dipped irrigated by well water.
Sublease 1. bedroom furnished apartment for 1.
2 bedrooms plus month plus utilities. 6-488
9375 after 3 p.m.
4-288
1 berm furnished apartment for rent for summer $125 a month plus use Call 897-260-3850
SUMMER SUBLUEASE-large 4-5 bedroom house
841-6926 or 6926-6802
6802
Sublease from May 23 to Aug 23 2 b/d
trainer, trailed, AC. Call 843-5372 4-29
Subarea - for numbers, very since 2 bpm. alarms.
Subarea - for numbers, very since 2 bpm. alarms.
battery right next to campus; 841-299-8999;
battery left next to campus; 841-299-8999.
Large house. 3 to 4 bedrooms. Rural type setting.
2 car garage. Garage 843-957-62.
4-29
2 bdm. luxury bath plus 1, furnished fully
inside; 1 bedroom, 1 bath;
Mary, $250 per month. #431-7079 4-27
$250 per month. #431-7079 4-27
Large 1. bedroom AC apartment with fireplace.
Large 2. bedroom AC apartment to lease starting August, Tuition, pool价
Furnished apartments one bedroom, alr cond-
nancy at 19 W. 14th, $85. Avail May 1, 843-668-0
www.northwestairbnb.com
Sublease for summer Mid-May to August 15.
Carmel, 841-671. fully furnished Chair
building. 841-671.
To submit May 30-August 15. Clean, spacious 4-
room suite in downtown Alexandria. Close to campus and downtown. Call 862-297-4400.
Female graduate student wstudies wstudious, non-smoking female to share 2 bedroom apartment for summer and next year $40/mo and part of summer and next year Contact Mary Zeller 814-6792 or 864-4577 4-29
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hi-fi equipment, your speakers will not be as cheap as you will pay the least and get the most benefits at the GRAEMOPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. **tf**
Tremendous selection of guitars, ampas, drums,
basses, keyboards, Shop. Rose Keyboard Studio. Choose from Glob-
al brands or independent studios, and many others.
All guitar string sets have Rose Keyboards Studios
105 w. 234' 843-9007.
COST + 10%~Stereo equipment. All major brands Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single items or packages Register for free Kossi Compact Cable Call Dave. Phone 86-234-6885. Earnings 6 to 10.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
As study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Clerk Stores
Excellent selection of New & Used furniture &
furniture supplies. The Furnitures & Appliance Center, 705 W. 16th St., Chicago, IL 60614.
WE SELL FOR LESS--11 to 6:30. Used for dur-
ance and electric ranges; Refrigerators;
(all appliances); Air Conditioners; Hau-
vey Layavays weekly free delivery 1228 East
East, Tampa, Ky. Phone 1-727-322-950
+343-8288
STERKO, AM-FM stereo receiver. @ 9 track equipment. ABS-CBL receiver with eight headset can act as OSCREAM $150. $91 Call 614-323-8720.
12X60 Trailer house, quiet. in-town location.
Call 841-4387
4-23
Super summer machine. 75 Cincinnati Italian motor hire. 56, cc. for 800 per gallon. Bridget rd. Bright. $195.00. Rentals are available.
6' x 4' x 2' covered trailer. Make an offer. Call
811-548-3018 4-26
I have to leave town. Must sell $9 Triumph GT6
and make an order @ 82-793.
73 VV Super Bete, 4-speed, AM radio, rear发
dropper, excellent condition. Call 4-285
9247
1973 Toyota Colon Cell 2.8, 4 x Heavy Excellent condition
1964 Honda CBR 500R 1.8L-644-3071-4-426
4584 or write Box 2201
Radial Fire Clearance! Your choice of any size BF Goodman radial fire radios, each installed with an EMI-615A, 175-A3, 1614-1614, HBR-714, RAY Stonebokton, **929 Mass Service at our store** Woolworths. The service at rear of our store
GRADUATION SALE - Purchase sale this Saturday.
Graduation Furniture and Linen
starting apartments. Furniture and linen
are included in the sale.
1971 Chevrolet Malibu, a/b, p/b, p/a, AM/FM, $200,
one owner, excellent engine, $1300, 4.85MPG
www.chevy.com
Goldgecker Optical
JOB FILLED
AND LENSES
DURICATED WITH
FLAWLESS ACCURACY
COMPLETE OPTICAL
SERVICES
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
842-8096
60 Corvette Roadster, 327, 480 ft. 4-packs, fully
fuelled, equipped with 95-100MPG or best
116-313-464-283. Evenings at
6pm.
+ PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
Final price cuts! Magnaforce console stereo. En-
rive back reduced models to $100 each.
Sony back reduced models to $85 each.
CB. RADIOB-autotransmitter - accesories 20% OFF
CB. RADIOB-autotransmitter - accessories 30% OFF
6-Hay Audio I, K Wii, K Batery, 8497, Audible Sound
Used Moorlite or portable, only $149.90 at
Ray Stoneback's, 928 Mass. 4-28
Toyota Corolla, 60, 25 mpg in city, runs great.
no problems, must sell. 814-743-604, leave me
phone.
SCUBA-exposure suit-tank-regulator with sub-
unit A11357 and battery held. Excellent in
condition. Call 82-8275.
Bargain used books. Texts, fiction, medical law,
Marvel's Wonder Workshop shopping in Cent-
rary May 3 to May 8.
Round Corner can save Mothers day gift program.
Round Corner, Humboldt 411, Humboldt College,
Pathene, Humboldt 411, Humboldt College. Cox
690-857-2431, cox@humboldt.edu
Bonne Bell 10-0-6 lotion in a spray! Soothes
from sunburn to sunburn feet. Round
toes and lips. Works on everything.
1973 WB Wette, excellent condition, 39,000 miles,
35mm, radial tires. Call 842-965-4
4-29
Sony sale! save now on Sony radio, clock rake,
adapter, 25" TV, a $9.99 RV Bay Sony TV,
929 Max. Open Sale!
Stephen B. is here! Pure volume guitar at Round
Guitar. Guitar: 213-745-9000, GUITAR-PRODUCTS
GUARTPHONE ADDRESS amplifier: £155, $34
74 Honda 175, Must sell, 1,000 miles like new,
histories. 60 mg, best offer. 841-3791.
www.honda.com
Casa de Taco
1967 TIRA, high performance, top speed 1250
MHz. Get 80-34 mw, with overheat protection.
1969 TIRA, high performance, top speed
144-42 km/h. Get 14-28 mw. 14-42 km/h.
19.47 Mature Yanami or 30th Edition to the
19.47 Mature Yanami or 30th Edition to the
**19.47 Mature Yanami or 30th Edition to the**
**19.47 Mature Yanami or 30th Edition to the**
Pender Bauman Amplifier 12" 12" speakers w/
capacitor (B650) in front, condition w/
collector tubes, first condition w/
capacitor.
Loosing your taut? Get a sump lamp at Round Corner Store--806. 843-8200. 4-29
Wanna look like a bum? Beach Bum that is. Use
the right buttons to pop up the buttons.
at Round Room, 801 Mile
4-29
at Round Room, 801 Mile
UHU:PUBLIC ADDRESS amplifier. $125, 314
Ohio. Apt. 3. See Don Seunfert. 4-27
HELP WANTED
Panicinis FM-AM Cassette receiver. Panicinis
tablet, Pr. Allegro 1000 speakers. $125, $85
OVERSEAS JOBS—summer-year-round, Europe.
S. America, Australia, Asia, etc. All fields, $500-
$180 monthly. Expenses paid, sightseeing, Free
travel to New York, Los Angeles.
Ka Box 449, Abbey CA, 94797 4-23
**BELOW WANTED:** Kansas Student Company
recruiting position. Reqs: Bachelor's degree or
certificate; enterprise IT systems available; Flexible
time安排; travel required.
Avon can help you have the summer vacation
you dream of. Enjoy our open tentry,
room with air conditioning. Call Mk. Sellers.
(800) 725-1142. Avon.com.
PART TIME-EARN $75 PER WEEK. POR 2
SUNDAY-NEVER. MON-SAT 9 AM-10 PM.
1474-1774 8AM-10PM. IPN TO POR
1474-1774
Research/systems specialist and computer programmers for the City of Kansas City, KS. 4-23 6-28
Financial Representative. A leading financial management firm opening for a full-time position. Written to岗 position. Requires a Consumer lending and to maintain financial reelability. Supports the organization's Good starting salary, excellent employee benefits, good health insurance and retirement program. Assumes various health programs. At Kt, Inc. 892 Mase, Lawrence, N. 432-9152.
1105 Massachusetts
843-9880
College English (teachers) possible opening this week to students in the literature-literature course MA in English and to students in the teaching English at the University of Kansas. Teaching English at the University of Kansas should consider May 12 for information write james.davis@uak.edu Department, the University of Kansas, Lawrence, Action Runnerover. Qualified men and women of college age running can apply.
Young woman over 21 to work in our club area, and perform routine administration tasks. Passed the job. Sending resume to job agency.
Happy Hour 5-6 p.m.
"Deliciously Different"
Insight INTO LIFE
Just Arrived! LADIES INDIAN GAUZE TOPS
AND MEN G WOMEN'S MEXICAN SHIRTS MANY ASSORTED SIZES
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS Room 203 701 Mass.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HALF AS MUCH
RECORDED MESAGE (24hr)
842·4441
SUMMER FUN
THROUGH
HARD WORK
10
Eight dollars to participate in two one hour brief sessions on the use of making documents and helping others to create them.
HORIZONS HONDA
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10-5 Sats.Tat.
1811 W. 6th
Tues.-Fri. 10-4 Sat. 10-4
EARN—'2523 per summer
Kansas Union—Parlor C
MEETINGS ARE HELD
AT 10 a.m. & 2 p.m.
Saturday, April 24th
Sales, Parts, Service
LOST AND FOUND
The Robusty Club needs 2 attractive interns. The Robusty Club needs 2 attractive interns. Apply in person at the HannaIndia Internship Center.
Full summer employment for reliable young persons on custom harvest crew. Experience prerequisite is a Master's degree in Environmental Science or a related field.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank-9th & Mass., and First National Bank-1887 West 2rd.
Lost-Kodak Pocket 40 in green vinyl
intramural fabric. Also two image
architecture library books.
Small brown and white part Terrier dog near
West Hill. Wkls 642-3285.
4-26
Found: gold ladies' watch in front of Wescoe.
Wed. eve. 864-681 (1)
4-23
Lost: 2 rings in East Kutai Hotel at stadium
last saturday. Friay: 6 April. Call 684-1653. 4-29
Lost-large, black and white male, Siberian
482-807. Keep calm.
Rewarn
NOTICE
Loast: Pair of oil wire rim wired glasses near
Pottie. Call Mary Lous. 841-0895.
4-23
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at a cost of about $10. She can make 5 copies of your 120 page thesis in less than an action for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Chamber, 88 Massachusetts, wts. 811-8900.
Ship Shop 620. Mass Used furniture, dress-
ing room, clock televisions. Open daily 12: 18
843-3777
The Catfish Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Pull five or six course meal featuring different cuisine each week. Call 842-5030 for reservation and information. Catfish Cafe, 803 Massachusetts
B enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation insurance. Register for the
transportation provided. Drive new, pay baggage,
transfer.
After 28 years in business, if George doesn't
close on Mondays, George's Golf Shop 727
will be closed on Wednesdays.
PERSONAL
CRAFT SHOW, BARE SALE AND CAR WASH:
Pinetree Townhouses Community Building. 149 Pinetree Drive. Saturday, April 30. 9:30 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Large and large puppets, and other handmade items. 4-23
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous 842-810-11. If
MADAME LENA, E.S.P.-PALM READY-ADVERSOR. Buy a dream or an astronomy book and get a plan to explore the universe with problems. For more information, call 862-1331 for SCC's South Toupea Blvd., Toupea Ks.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
19th & Mass.
X
Gengals in Time
Gifts and Jewelry 803-825-4711
Cabin
I
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FIELDS
WATERBEDS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
712Mass.St.
INTERESTED IN NO-FIRELLS LOW COST JET
ALUMNI? EQUIPPED WITH THE Far East? EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS have helped people travel on a budget with maxi-annual airfare for 20+ years. For more info call bflo free bllr -222-535-8900.
SERVICES OFFERED
and SUNDAY
Earn up to $2 half-hour Psychology study=$14
Earn up to $3 half-hour Psychology study= $16
*Psychology Study* on a billboard level. 3 Kampus.
*Psychology Study* on a billboard level. 3 Kampus.
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
QUANTRILL'S MARKET
Came one—Come all, May Day Festival—a week and a celebration. Hire Florence Kennedy. Faculty florence. Women's Fashion. Music at a Women's Coffeehouse. Dance with a volleyball. Free Childcare. April 30-29 May 1. Women's Coalition and Commission on the Status of Women. Education mation. Funded by Student Activity Fee. 4-30
MATH TUTOR with MA in mathematics. Call 841-3708 after 6 p.m.
tf
Happy Belted, 19th Birthday Paul-Boy, and a happy 4 week! Your loving Cooker Gadget-4.23
MATH TUTORING - Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 004, 005, 116, 118, 119, 142, 140, 500, 558, 267. Resumes or one-time response rates. Call 843-7681.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
The Second Annual Student Sculpture Competition
Don't miss bin -II entries -4-23
SUA
OPEN EVERY SATURDAY
TRAVEL
ANYTHING YOU COULD POSSIBLY WANT
Trying to sell a musical instrument or sound equipment? Call at McKenney-Mason, 814-0817.
811 New Hampshire
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT! Professional just any jewelry design possible. Professional (RFA degree) goldsilverware. Complete stone cutting, wide white enamel finish. Fully insured. Gaurantee 841-3883 or 843-0479. ftf
EUROPE
15% INV 2.47
I am a 1/2 currency
no duty advance payment required
AMT
free 800-325-4867
Untravel Charters
SOUTH AMERICA - ISHAEL A. AFRICA - ARIA
AGENCY, Inc. First President, Trader
Agency, Inc. First President, Trader
TYPING
THEIS BINNING - The Quick Currency Center is located in the heart of the city. Our space is fast and price are reasonable. Our location is near all major highways and is easily accessible.
Bahai Faith
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Baha'i Club Meeting, April 5, 19:30 p.m. Ourel Ballroom, Union
Styling for men and women
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
Experienced typist—term papers, theses, mite.
Experienced typist—formal spelling, spelling
- 843-5054, Mrs. Wright
Typist editor. IBM PCaiceilla. Quality work. Desertations, dissertations. Mail: 821-942-9178. No. 9-11
843-3034
Ball Park Baseball
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
BALL PARK, INC
BALL PARK, INC.
Box 3422-U
Lawrence, Kansas 64044
Pun typetyp, IBM Selectic, term paper, theses.
Pun typetyp, IBM Selectic, spelling coping. joined Jean. 841-206-3900
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 5-11
Need an experienced typer? IBM Selective II rickens can repair the matching, carbon cannister and fixing a Caterpillar.
Experienced typist IBM Selectric, all kinds of
typing. Call 843-1424 times. 843-9978. Eyes. Jabber.
Email: test@ibm.com
Professional typing, reasonable, work guardian
insurance, medical plan, B.A. Social Schoo-
l education plus electric, BA. Social Sch
Will do typing. Elite electric Term papers and
noise not thei. Proofreading Mrs. Hays. §453.
§618. §720. §732. §733. §742. §752. §762. §772. §782. §792. §802. §812. §822. §832. §842. §852. §862. §872. §882. §892. §902. §912. §922. §932. §942. §952. §962. §972. §982. §992. §1002. §1012. §1022. §1032. §1042. §1052. §1062. §1072. §1082. §1092. §1102. §1112. §1122. §1132. §1142. §1152. §1162. §1172. §1182. §1192. §1202. §1212. §1222. §1232. §1242. §1252. §1262. §1272. §1282. §1292. §1302. §1312. §1322. §1332. §1342. §1352. §1362. §1372. §1382. §1392. §1402. §1412. §1422. §1432. §1442. §1452. §1462. §1472. §1482. §1492. §1502. §1512. §1522. §1532. §1542. §1552. §1562. §1572. §1582. §1592. §1602. §1612. §1622. §1632. §1642. §1652. §1662. §1672. §1682. §1692. §1702. §1712. §1722. §1732. §1742. §1752. §1762. §1772. §1782. §1792. §1802. §1812. §1822. §1832. §1842. §1852. §1862. §1872. §1882. §1892. §1902. §1912. §1922. §1932. §1942. §1952. §1962. §1972. §1982. §1992. §2002. §2012. §2022. §2032. §2042. §2052. §2062. §2072. §2082. §2092. §2102. §2112. §2122. §2132. §2142. §2152. §2162. §2172. §2182. §2192. §2202. §2212. §2222. §2232. §2242. §2252. §2262. §2272. §2282. §2292. §2302. §2312. §2322. §2332. §2342. §2352. §2362. §2372. §2382. §2392. §2402. §2412. §2422. §2432. §2442. §2452. §2462. §2472. §2482. §2492. §2502. §2512. §2522. §2532. §2542. §2552. §2562. §2572. §2582. §2592. §2602. §2612. §2622. §2632. §2642. §2652. §2662. §2672. §2682. §2692. §2702. §2712. §2722. §2732. §2742. §2752. §2762. §2772. §2782. §2792. §2802. §2812. §2822. §2832. §2842. §2852. §2862. §2872. §2882. §2892. §2902. §2912. §2922. §2932. §2942. §2952. §2962. §2972. §2982. §2992. §3002. §3012. §3022. §3032. §3042. §3052. §3062. §3072. §3082. §3092. §3102. §3112. §3122. §3132. §3142. §3152. §3162. §3172. §3182. §3192. §3202. §3212. §3222. §3232. §3242. §3252. §3262. §3272. §3282. §3292. §3302. §3312. §3322. §3332. §3342. §3352. §3362. §3372. §3382. §3392. §3402. §3412. §3422. §3432. §3442. §3452. §3462. §3472. §3482. §3492. §3502. §3512. §3522. §3532. §3542. §3552. §3562. §3572. §3582. §3592. §3602. §3612. §3622. §3632. §3642. §3652. §3662. §3672. §3682. §3692. §3702. §3712. §3722. §3732. §3742. §3752. §3762. §3772. §3782. §3792. §3802. §3812. §3822. §3832. §3842. §3852. §3862. §3872. §3882. §3892. §3902. §3912. §3922. §3932. §3942. §3952. §3962. §3972. §3982. §3992. §4002. §4012. §4022. §4032. §4042. §4052. §4062. §4072. §4082. §4092. §4102. §4112. §4122. §4132. §4142. §4152. §4162. §4172. §4182. §4192. §4202. §4212. §4222. §4232. §4242. §4252. §4262. §4272. §4282. §4292. §4302. §4312. §4322. §4332. §4342. §4352. §4362. §4372. §4382. §4392. §4402. §4412. §4422. §4432. §4442. §4452. §4462. §4472. §4482. §4492. §4502. §4512. §4522. §4532. §4542. §4552. §4562. §4572. §4582. §4592. §4602. §4612. §4622. §4632. §4642. §4652. §4662. §4672. §4682. §4692. §4702. §4712. §4722. §4732. §4742. §4752. §4762. §4772. §4782. §4792. §4802. §4812. §4822. §4832. §4842. §4852. §4862. §4872. §4882. §4892. §4902. §4912. §4922. §4932. §4942. §4952. §4962. §4972. §4982. §4992. §5002. §5012. §5022. §5032. §5042. §5052. §5062. §5072. §5082. §5092. §5102. §5112. §5122. §5132. §5142. §5152. §5162. §5172. §5182. §5192. §5202. §5212. §5222. §5232. §5242. §5252. §5262. §5272. §5282. §5292. §5302. §5312. §5322. §5332. §5342. §5352. §5362. §5372. §5382. §5392. §5402. §5412. §5422. §5432. §5442. §5452. §5462. §5472. §5482. §5492. §5502. §5512. §5522. §5532. §5542. §5552. §5562. §5572. §5582. §5592. §5602. §5612. §5622. §5632. §5642. §5652. §5662. §5672. §5682. §5692. §5702. §5712. §5722. §5732. §5742. §5752. §5762. §5772. §5782. §5792. §5802. §5812. §5822. §5832. §5842. §5852. §5862. §5872. §5882. §5892. §5902. §5912. §5922. §5932. §5942. §5952. §5962. §5972. §5982. §5992. §6002. §6012. §6022. §6032. §6042. §6052. §6062. §6072. §6082. §6092. §6102. §6112. §6122. §6132. §6142. §6152. §6162. §6172. §6182. §6192. §6202. §6212. §6222. §6232. §6242. §6252. §6262. §6272. §6282. §6292. §6302. §6312. §6322. §6332. §6342. §6352. §6362. §6372. §6382. §6392. §6402. §6412. §6422. §6432. §6442. §6452. §6462. §6472. §6482. §6492. §6502. §6512. §6522. §6532. §6542. §6552. §6562. §6572. §6582. §6592. §6602. §6612. §6622. §6632. §6642. §6652. §6662. §6672. §6682. §6692. §6702. §6712. §6722. §6732. §6742. §6752. §6762. §6772. §6782. §6792. §6802. §6812. §6822. §6832. §6842. §6852. §6862. §6872. §6882. §6892. §6902. §6912. §6922. §6932. §6942. §6952. §6962. §6972. §6982. §6992. §7002. §7012. §7022. §7032. §7042. §7052. §7062. §7072. §7082. §7092. §7102. §7112. §7122. §7132. §7142. §7152. §7162. §7172. §7182. §7192. §7202. §7212. §7222. §7232. §7242. §7252. §7262. §7272. §7282. §7292. §7302. §7312. §7322. §7332. §7342. §7352. §7362. §7372. §7382. §7392. §7402. §7412. §7422. §7432. §7442. §7452. §7462. §7472. §7482. §7492. §7502. §7512. §7522. §7532. §7542. §7552. §7562. §7572. §7582. §7592. §7602. §7612. §7622. §7632. §7642. §7652. §7662. §7672. §7682. §7692. §7702. §7712. §7722. §7732. §7742. §7752. §7762. §7772. §7782. §7792. §7802. §7812. §7822. §7832. §7842. §7852. §7862. §7872. §7882. §7892. §7902. §7912. §7922. §7932. §7942. §7952. §7962. §7972. §7982. §7992. §8002. §8012. §8022. §8032. §8042. §8052. §8062. §8072. §8082. §8092. §8102. §8112. §8122. §8132. §8142. §8152. §8162. §8172. §8182. §8192. §8202. §8212. §8222. §8232. §8242. §8252. §8262. §8272. §8282. §8292. §8302. §8312. §8322. §8332. §8342. §8352. §8362. §8372. §8382. §8392. §8402. §8412. §8422. §8432. §8442. §8452. §8462. §8472. §8482. §8492. §8502. §8512. §8522. §8532. §8542. §8552. §8562. §8572. §8582. §8592. §8602. §8612. §8622. §8632. §8642. §8652. §8662. §8672. §8682. §8692. §8702. §8712. §8722. §8732. §8742. §8752. §8762. §8772. §8782. §8792. §8802. §8812. §8822. §8832. §8842. §8852. §8862. §8872. §8882. §8892. §8902. §8912. §8922. §8932. §8942. §8952. §8962. §8972. §8982. §8992. §9002. §9012. §9022. §9032. §9042. §9052. §9062. §9072. §9082. §9092. §9102. §9112. §9122. §9132. §9142. §9152. §9162. §9172. §9182. §9192. §9202. §9212. §9222. §9232. §9242. §9252. §9262. §9272. §9282. §9292. §9302. §9312. §9322. §9332. §9342. §9352. §9362. §9372. §9382. §9392. §9402. §9412. §9422. §9432. §9442. §9452. §9462. §9472. §9482. §9492. §9502. §9512. §9522. §9532. §9542. §9552. §9562. §9572. §9582. §9592. §9602. §9612. §9622. §9632. §9642. §9652. §9662. §9672. §9682. §9692. §9702. §9712. §9722. §9732. §9742. §9752. §9762. §9772. §9782. §9792. §9802. §9812. §9822. §9832. §9842. §9852. §9862. §9872. §9882. §9892. §9902. §9912. §9922. §9932. §9942. §9952. §9962. §9972. §9982. §9992. §10002. §10012. §10022. §10032. §10042. §10052. §10062. §10072. §10082. §10092. §10102. §10112. §10122. §10132. §10142. §10152. §10162. §10172. §10182. §10192. §10202. §10212. §10222. §10232. §10242. §10252. §10262. §10272. §10282. §10292. §10302. §10312. §10322. §10332. §10342. §10352. §10362. §10372. §10382. §10392. §10402. §10412. §10422. §10432. §10442. §10452. §10462. §10472. §10482. §10492. §10502. §10512. §10522. §10532. §10542. §10552. §10562. §10572. §10582. §10592. §10602. §10612. §10622. §10632. §10642. §10652. §10662. §10672. §10682. §10692. §10702. §10712. §10722. §10732. §10742. §10752. §10762. §10772. §10782. §10792. §10802. §10812. §10822. §10832. §10842. §10852. §10862. §10872. §10882. §10892. §10902. §10912. §10922. §10932. §10942. §10952. §10962. §10972. §10982. §10992. §11002. §11012. §11022. §11032. §11042. §11052. §11062. §11072. §11082. §11092. §11102. §11112. §11122. §11132. §11142. §11152. §11162. §11172. §11182. §11192. §11202. §11212. §11222. §11232. §11242. §11252. §11262. §11272. §11282. §11292. §11302. §11312. §11322. §11332. §11342. §11352. §11362. §11372. §11382. §11392. §11402. §11412. §11422. §11432. §11442. §11452. §11462. §11472. §11482. §11492. §11502. §11512. §11522. §11532. §11542. §11552. §11562. §11572. §11582. §11592. §11602. §11612. §11622. §11632. §11642. §11652. §11662. §11672. §11682. §11692. §11702. §11712. §11722. §11732. §11742. §11752. §11762. §11772. §11782. §11792. §11802. §11812. §11822. §11832. §11842. §11852. §11862. §11872. §11882. §11892. §11902. §11912. §11922. §11932. §11942. §11952. §11962. §11972. §11982. §11992. §12002. §12012. §12022. §12032. §12042. §12052. §12062. §12072. §12082. §12092. §12102. §12112. §12122. §12132. §12142. §12152. §12162. §12172. §12182. §12192. §12202. §12212. §12222. §12232. §12242. §12252. §12262. §12272. §12282. §12292. §12302. §12312. §12322. §12332. §12342. §12352. §12362. §12372. §12382. §12392. §12402. §12412. §12422. §12432. §12442. §12452. §12462. §12472. §12482. §12492. §12502. §12512. §12522. §12532. §12542. §12552. §12562. §12572. §12582. §12592. §12602. §12612. §12622. §12632. §12642. §12652. §12662. §12672. §12682. §12692. §12702. §12712. §12722. §12732. §12742. §12752. §12762. §12772. §12782. §12792. §12802. §12812. §12822. §12832. §12842. §12852. §12862. §12872. §12882. §12892. §12902. §12912. §12922. §12932. §12942. §12952. §12962. §12972. §12982. §12992. §13002. §13012. §13022. §13032. §13042. §13052. §13062. §13072. §13082. §13092. §13102. §13112. §13122. §13132. §13142. §13152. §13162. §13172. §13182. §13192. §13202. §13212. §13222. §13232. §13242. §13252. §13262. §13272. §13282. §13292. §13302. §13312. §13322. §13332. §13342. §13352. §13362. §13372. §13382. §13392. §13402. §13412. §13422. §13432. §13442. §13452. §13462. §13472. §13482. §13492. §13502. §13512. §13522. §13532. §13542. §13552. §13562. §13572. §13582. §13592. §13602. §13612. §13622. §13632. §13642. §13652. §13662. §13672. §13682. §13692. §13702. §13712. §13722. §13732. §13742. §13752. §13762. §13772. §13782. §13792. §13802. §13812. §13822. §13832. §13842. §13852. §13862. §13872. §13882. §13892. §13902. §13912. §13922. §13932. §13942. §13952. §13962. §13972. §13982. §13992. §14002. §14012. §14022. §14032. §14042. §14052. §14062. §14072. §14082. §14092. §14102. §14112. §14122. §14132. §14142. §14152. §14162. §14172. §14182. §14192. §14202. §14212. §14222. §14232. §14242. §14252. §14262. §14272. §14282. §14292. §14302. §14312. §14322. §14332. §14342. §14352. §14362. §14372. §14382. §14392. §14402. §14412. §14422. §14432. §14442. §14452. §14462. §14472. §14482. §14492. §14502. §14512. §14522. §14532. §14542. §14552. §14562. §14572. §14582. §14592. §14602. §14612. §14622. §14632. §14642. §14652. §14662. §14672. §14682. §14692. §14702. §14712. §14722. §14732. §14742. §14752. §14762. §14772. §14782. §14792. §14802. §14812. §14822. §14832. §14842. §14852. §14862. §14872. §14882. §14892. §14902. §14912. §14922. §14932. §14942. §14952. §14962. §14972. §14982. §14992. §15002. §15012. §15022. §15032. §15042. §15052. §15062. §15072. §15082. §15092. §15102. §15112. §15122. §15132. §15142. §15152. §15162. §15172. §15182. §15192. §15202. §15212. §15222. §15232. §15242. §15252. §15262. §15272. §15282. §15292. §15302. §15312. §15322. §15332. §15342. §15352. §15362. §15372. §15382. §15392. §15402. §15412. §15422. §15432. §15442. §15452. §15462. §15472. §15482. §15492. §15502. §15512. §15522. §15532. §15542. §15552. §15562. §15572. §15582. §15592. §15602. §15612. §15622. §15632. §15642. §15652. §15662. §15672. §15682. §15692. §15702. §15712. §15722. §15732. §15742. §15752. §15762. §15772. §15782. §15792. §15802. §15812. §15822. §15832. §15842. §15852. §15862. §15872. §15882. §15892. §15902. §15912. §15922. §15932. §15942. §15952. §15962. §15972. §15982. §16002. §16012. §16022. §16032. §16042. §16052. §16062. §16072. §16082. §16092. §16102. §16112. §16122. §16132. §16142. §16152. §16162. §16172. §16182. §16192. §16202. §16212. §16222. §16232. §16242. §16252. §16262. §16272. §16282. §16292. §16302. §16312. §16322. §16332. §16342. §16352. §16362. §16372. §16382. §16392. §16402. §16412. §16422. §16432. §16442. §16452. ... 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Friday, April 23, 1976
University Dailly Kansan
Students design new utensils for handicapped
Uses a knife, spoon or fork to eat a meal presents no problem for most people. But for those with rheumatoid arthritis, it can be a painful or futile experience.
To aid arthropathic people in feeding themselves, students in an industrial and interior design class at the University of Kansas have developed self-help eating
The utensils are among several industrial and interior design projects developed and built by KU students to meet the needs of small, specific use cases. For example, a fiber glass packing case for wheelchairs and a kitchen accessible to persons in wheelchairs.
"WE ARE DESIGNING for people," William Bullock, assistant professor of design and the project's director, said Tuesday. "We try to look at people and them determine their needs, some of which are very different from those of the designer."
sullock said that when designing for a need, a designer must look at more than the technical and manufacturing requirements. A design that might function very well and is technically sound will be rejected by potential users because it is displacing or strange to him, he said.
Psychological aspects of a design are also very important, Bullock said. For this
Clas Amilson, deputy chief of the United Nations Office of Crime Prevention, will speak at 3 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union
Crime treatment discussed
Amilon will discuss the "Transnational Concerns in Prevention and Treatment of Offenders" and may also comment on his participation in the International Congress on Crime and Delinquency held last September in Geneva, Switzerland.
The speech, sponsored by the School of Social Welfare, will be followed by an open session.
Amilon was formerly the director of the Department of Treatment and Security in Sweden. He plans to return to that post in June.
Amilon toured Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary yesterday and compared it with Kumla Institute, the largest maximum security prison in Sweden.
reason, he has his students talk to several sources before beginning even preliminary essays.
"They look at existing designs and consult technical users, technical experts and personnel."
Amilon said the Swedish institute was considerably smaller and the inmates there had a shorter average sentence than offenders in prisons in the United States.
IN DESIGNING THE utensils, for example, the students talked with Jane and her students about the cupacultural therapy, who explained the nature of arthritic ailments to them. Her explanation of what movements arthritics used in demonstrating the utensils was basic in their design.
Bullock's students also consulted Underwood in designing a kitchen that could be used by persons confined to wheelchairs. Bullock was quick to point out, however, that kitchen's design also would facilitate patients who weren't physically disabled.
Students had to consider several factors, such as space for a wheelchair to pivot and room under the sink for the chair. Work surfaces and shelves had to be shallower and placed within an accessible range of the kitchen with adjacent or adjacent to cooking areas also was needed.
"WE LOOK AT existing kitchens for the physically disabled," he said. "Most of them were stark and looked like machine kitchen, but mostly easily disabled have aesthetic needs, too."
Another recent class project was the construction of a fiber glass packing case for a wheelchair. The case can be used to transport the wheelchair to protect it during airline travel.
Jim Long, Shawne Mission senior who worked on the project, said the kitchen's "brainchild" was a sink.
For this project, the students consulted several airline companies baggage and cargo fees and size requirements. Other factors considered were strength of the case, ease of loading and handling, locking and opening, and the sizes of existing collapsible wheelchairs.
EVEN THOUGH MOST of the articles developed in KU's industrial and interior design classes will never be manufactured on a large scale, Bullock said, they represent an extremely important part of each student's training.
"Most of the work industrial designers do is for other people," Bullock said. "Usually we work for people with needs different from our own. We must learn to be comfortable in our own opinions saddle and work from what those who will use the product tell us."
On Campus
TODAY: JOHN ANDREWES of the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Resources will present two lectures, at noon and at 3:30, in 322 LINLEAR. CARL BANZ, associate professor of East Asian Studies, will speak on "Women in Chinese Revolutionary Literature, 1971-1960," at the women's Studies Sandwich Seminar at noon in Alcove D of the Union. The first program in the LIBRARY COLLOQUIIM SERIES will be "Libraries in the U.S.S.R. and Poland" at 3:30 in Spencer ABDOMNEY THOMAS HILL, of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration Space Center, will speak on "The Space Shuttle" at 3:30 in 2002 Learned Hall.
Events...
TONIGHT: The Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment Program will present RUBY DEE and OSSI DAVIS at 7:30 in Houdini Auditorium. JOHN MARALDO, core faculty member in Buddhist Studies at Narsopa Institute in Boulder, Collo, will present *The Practice and Everyday Life*'s 7:30 in the Council Room of the Kansas Union.
SATURDAY: THE JAYHAWK JAMBOREE three-stage bicycle race is Saturday and Sunday, sponsored by the Mount Oread Bicycle Club and the Kaw Valley Bicycle Club. A BASIC AUTO MECHANICS WORKSHOP, sponsored by CWENS, will be at 2:1n.m. at the Building and Grounds garage.
SUNDAY: Albert Gerken, associate professor of music theory, will present a CARILLOON RECTAL at 3 p.m. at the Memorial Panicamile. The KU VARSITY AND CONCERT BANDS will present a concert at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre. GRECKY BLAACK, program associate at the KU Linwood Center, will speak on "The Hollywood Film Industry: Entertainment or Propaganda?" at 7:30 p.m. at the Linwood Center, 9900 Mission Rd., Overland Park.
Announcements . . .
The department of visual arts will sponsor a TEXTILE DESIGN INTERSESSION May 24 through June 4. The interesse will include three courses: Spinning Workshop, Problems in Printing and Dyeing and Introduction to Weaving. Reservation requests should be made before May 1.
Correction ...
The College Assembly sent back for re-assessment a recommendation by the Educational Policies and Procedures Committee for a more restrictive class withdrawal policy. The Assembly did not reject the recommendation, as reported in Wednesday's Kansas.
Jobs available ...
The following part-time jobs are posted outside 28 Strong Hall: food service worker, 10; typing, clerical, 4; research, laboratory, 3; teaching, graduate course teacher, 5; retail sales associate, 6; office manager, 7.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.130
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Monday, April 26, 1976
Dismissed citv worker seeks aid
(1)
Dennis Smith
More money, Feedback forms are discussed
The Student Senate Academic Affairs Committee voted last night to recommend no additional funding for Black 'teens' to the American Society of Civil Engineers.
The Senate will consider the requests for additional funding at its next meeting on May 5, regardless of the committee's recommendations.
In other action, the committee gave Mark Anthony, committee cochairman, approval to submit to the senate May 5 two papers documenting the University withdrawal policies.
The Black 'tects requested that an additional $92.65 be added to the $108 they were allocated during the Senate's budget bearings two weeks ago.
According to Anthony, *black tests* thought that the committee had allocated funds to the group on the basis of the behavior of the group's representative at the committee hearing two weeks ago, including those who have no requests. But Anthony said he thought the committee had made its allocation on the basis of the group's needs.
The American Society of Civil Engineers, which was well-supported by the committee, requested that an additional $115 be added to the $235 it was allocated during the budget hearings two weeks ago. The group wants extra funding to finance what John McCarthy has been given as the best dam concrete canoe around." The group has been competing for several years against groups from other universities in building and racing concrete canoes.
One of the resolutions that Anthony will submit to the May 5 Senate meeting urges University schools and departments not to make class withdrawal procedures stricter because of grade inflation. Anthony said a study completed about two weeks ago by the University's College of Education relationship between current lenient withdrawal policies and grade inflation.
The other resolution Anthony will submit advises University schools and departures to ensure that the drawal policies to carefully consider any changes before initiating them. He said he thought some departments had changed without adequate deliberation in the past.
By JANET SCHMIDT
Dennis Smith says he contacted his lawyers after being dismissed Friday from his job as a truck driver for what city officials called health problems.
Smith, president of the Lawrence Sanitation Workers Association, led the move two weeks ago by city employees that the Teamsters Union local in Tenkawa.
"I have contacted my lawyers, Norm
Fower) and the Teamsters," Smith said.
"So I know they're doing something."
Forer, associate professor of social welfare, acted as adviser to city employees in the case of the war.
"I'M VERY CONCERNED with the free speech issue," Foer said. "If there's a been demonstrated that Dennis has received unfair treatment and this is just another harassment of a city employee who has criticized city management, then I'll interview."
Smith has been outspoken on city treatment of workers. Forreer said.
Smith's dismissal, City Manager Bufur Watson said Saturday, occurred because Smith will be unable to work for an indefinite time because of lower back pains.
"HIS DOCTOR SENT a letter this week stating that Dennis Smith has a birth defect in the bone of his lower back." Watson said. "He said that being jostled up and down while riding in the truck caused back pains."
The doctor said Smith would be off work indefinitely, according to Watson.
"As you know, Dennis Smith has got a low back problem which started with sitting and kicking."
Smith's doctor, John Wertzberger, wasn't available for comment. However, the letter he sent on April 12 which Watson said prompted Smith's dismissal reads as
"He developed a back strain superimposed on a bone defect that he has
*THE TRIED TO work 12 April 1978 but in riding the truck gave him a recurrence of it.*
"I feel the only way you are going to get Mr. Smith back on the job is to try to get him into some type of activity which does not require prolonged sitting, or bouncing in a sitting position, or does not require heavy lifting.
"He may be able to resolve this situation over a period of time with some type of light
Smith, who has worked for the sanitation department two years, has not worked since 1973.
On Jan. 21, Smith said, he fell off the steps of the sanitation truck he was driving. The injury involved in two cracks in the bone of his lower spine, he said. He has been receiving workmen's compensation payments since.
Smith said he had requested light duty, or work that was less demanding physically, but more technically. Wertzberger was to verify that Smith needed to be assigned to light duty, Smith
When he returned to work April 12, he was able to work for only two hours, Smith said.
"MANY OF THE sanitation trucks don't have shocks or springs in the seats," he said. "It's just like somebody was beating you with a hammer eight hours a day.
According to Smith, some of the light duties he could have been assigned are weighing trucks at the city landfill weigh-in station, dispatching for the police or fire department or handling late pick-ups and special cases on the mistruck route.
Smith said the city had assigned other workers to light duty when they were incapable of handling the regular sanitation route.
"They do it all the time," he said. "They just say they don't have anything for me."
"There is nothing we have that he could do," Williams said. "On the mistruck route, the driver still does all the picking up and loading."
GEORGE WILLIAMS, director of public works, denied Smith's request for light duty because, he said, there were no positions available.
He would have to talk to personnel or the city manager. "
"As far as assigning him to another department, that decision is not up to me.
About assigning Smith as a dispatcher for the police or fire department Watson said, "The letter says he can't sit for a long time and should require his sitting for prolonged prizes."
"His health is quite a problem to him—he can't get started for prolonged periods or he won't."
Williams, who received the letter from Wetzerberg and notified Smith of the dismissal, said he made the final decision to send it to Watson and the personnel department.
"WE'RE REALLY short-handed right now because of a lot of the workers have been sick," Williams said. "Smith's being very happy, and they don't hire anyone to fill with him in it."
He said Smith could appeal the decision if he thought it was unfair.
"I told him he could come back to work if he got a clean bill of health from his doctor."
Phil Bohlander, secretary of the
Sanitation Workers Association,
said he was affected on election.
See CITY WORKER page 8
Graphic designs adorn KU signs
By JIM COBB
Staff Writer
Signs on and around campus will take on a new look in the next few months as implementation of a new University-wide graphics system begins.
The system will replace virtually all campus signs with signs done in a new, cool color.
The first signs have already arrived and should be erected within the next few weeks, according to Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor.
Lucas said Friday that a lack of funds could cause the system to be gradually unintelligible.
Some signs, such as those at traffic-control booths at campus entrances, will be shown.
Lucas said the signs' design was "very straightforward." Most of the signs will be rectangular, he said, with white letters on a "KU-blue" background.
Because of this, Lucas said, the University graphics committee that studied the graphics system decided that logos or icons would be used and would thus make the signs out-of-date.
He said the idea of putting Jayhawks on the signs was discarded because the figures would make the signs larger than acceptable.
Four large high-impact signs will be situated at major campus entrances—the intersections of 19th and Iowa, 15th and Iowa, 11th and Mississippi, and 19th and
Naismith Drive. Those signs should arrive early in June, Lucas said.
SMALLER BUT similar signs will be used to identify other campus entrances, routes to campus from other parts of Lawrence, parking lots, bus stations and buildings.
Luisa said the four large signs might cost as much as $1,000 a piece and the other signs would probably cost between $70 and $200, depending on their size. Some of the smaller signs are usually made to be made by the department of buildings and grounds at a lower cost, he said.
Part of the original graphics plan included erecting the same type of blue-and-white signs on highways near and in Lawrence, but permission for the project was denied by the state Department of Transportation, Lucas said.
STATE SIGN CODES blue-and-white signs for marking scenic and service areas. Lucas said he thought the signs were made to be more visually-geared, visiated by many Kangans each year.
The transportation department, however, said that the request wasn't valid and that all such signs located on highways must be placed in front of the state color for highway directional signs.
Signs on campus need no approval, and signs in Lawrence not located on state or federal highways need approval only from the city.
The city granted tentative approval for the graphics system in November.
CAS SAID THAT, after KU's request to the state was denied, the state erected green-and-white directional signs on 6th and 23rd streets, which are both highways.
"Naturally, wed prefer white-on-blue," Lucas said.
He said, however, that KU's signs might See SIGNS page 8
Four overcome by paint fumes
By DAVE REGIER
The drama started when William Dressler, Kansas City, Kan., senior, and Dean were painting the walls of the tank Friday afternoon. Dressler was overcome
Construction on a solar house being built in Pleasant Grove by Thomas Dean, professor of architecture, ran into a snag that sent four persons, suffering from inhalation of paint fumes, to a hospital Friday night.
All four were affected to varying degrees by fumes that were gen. aated as a six-foot square by six-foot high water storage tank or by six-foot high the unventilated basement of the house.
by the fumes but Dean got him out into fresh air to receive him
Dean said the painter, Richard Nightingale, went down into the tank to find one of the firefighters. Dean said, told Dressler the fumes were really bad and he would go into town to get his respirator. Dressler and his wife Regina were also in the truck into his truck and drove away he said.
WHEN THE PAINTER came, Dressler warned him about the intensity of the fire.
Dean said yesterday that he then told Dressler a professional painter was coming who would be accustomed to the fumes and know how to handle them.
Dunn calls for better health care
Rv MARION ABARE
Dunn said there had been an increase in personal injury litigation, although the malpractice crisis wasn't as critical as many thought.
KANSAS CITY, Mo—Lee J. Dunn, legal counsel for the KU Medical Center, challenged student nurses to provide health care in court that could lead to malpractice lawsuits.
Dunn spoke Saturday to nurses attending the National Student Nurses' Association (NSNA) convention at the Radisson Muelebach hotel in Kansas City, Mo.
"Organized medicine has pushed to enact legislation which will effectively eliminate or severely curtail the ability of an injured person to seek compensation for his injuries," Dunn said.
He called physicians' reactions to the increase in litigation a "poor public relations effort", rather than an effort to cut down the incidence of injuries.
Some of the malpractice legislation put a cap on liability, be said. This means a dollar
"EVERY SINGLE time these bills either collectively or singularly have been challenged in court they have been found unconstitutional."
limit is set on damages that can be collected.
A pretrial screening panel, not available for other types of cases, is another legislative move, he said. The Kansas pretrial screening panel, made up of physicians, is voluntary, he said, which requires it to stand under constitutional challenges.
Pretrial screening panels just for medical pretrain practice cases are another such device.
Dunn said limiting the time that a suit could be filed and the amount of damages were two types of legislation often backed by the medical profession.
"THESE IS ABSOLUTELY no reason in mind why doctors should be treated
Dunn faulted insurance carriers who "are doing an exquisitely poor job of running their businesses," saying the way they operate was by hiking premiums to doctors.
He added that the same was true for nurses.
"A patient has to trust you, that you are going to exercise your professional judgment and professional competence in the patient's interest," he said.
He said he hoped that antitrust litigation
During the four-day convention, which closed yesterday afternoon, the Student Nurses' Association of Kansas (SNAK) was awarded a certificate of achievement for member recruitment. Jody Gering, president of SNAK, accepted the award.
SNAK membership is 100 students higher than last year's, according to Pat McAnyan, Prairie Village school. McAnyan just completed a term as first vice president for convention and program planning of NSNA. He also programs for this year's convention.
"A BUSINESS problem is being turned into a legal and professional problem in that your relationship with your patients is being perilously damaged." Dunn said.
Four nursing students interviewed who are members of SNAK were excited and interested in the issues and programs of the convention.
would be brought against the insurance companies so their books would be opened.
SUSAN LANDER, Kansas City, Kan.
She was accused of a program, "Slit Victim," which dealt with the care of a victim of sexual assault. She said rape had happened to victims from six
"We were told not to be judgemental of
Film collector wants all that jazz
By BECCI BREINING
It's a midnight jam session. In a deserted nightclub five musicians unwind with a slow, lazy rhythm. A column of cigarette smoke trails into darkness above the players as piano notes trickle and mingle with soft, easy drum beats. A trumpet offers only a few phrases. The musicians smile. The music soothes.
Deflores is a 1969 graduate of the University of Kansas who has collected jazz records for 21 years and jazz film for five. He was in Lawrence during the weekend as a guest of KANU radio station.
In 1971, at the joking suggestion of a friend, he started searching for "St. Louis Blues," a classic 1940s jazz short starring Searles Smith, known as "empress of the blues." He found the film after a three-year hunt. Since then, DeFlores' love of jazz has kept him busy in his new role as a film archivist.
ON FRIDAY two rare films were shown to about 100
ON students in a history of jazz class taught by Richard
Henderson
Rob Deflores doesn't want jazz musicians of yesteryear to be forgotten, so he's working to preserve
This picture scene from a favorite black-and-white jazz
short, "After Hours":
Suddenly, the players shatter the relaxing atmosphere. A runaway tempo palpusates with a handside of wild melodies. The infections quality of the rhythm engulfs its player, and the crowd is so similar, clapping, laughing at the fun of it all.
Deflores works for an architectural firm in Minneapolis, Minn. where he paints murals of proposed
Janis Joplin worshiped希姆斯 Smith, star of the 1929 jazz classic "Jaminin the Blues," he said. It was Joplin who raised money to put a gravestone on the nearly forbidden stove's erave.
THE CHARISMA of jazz has been preserved on film. And Defofo wants to " bring it back to the people."
Dean said he later discovered that the painter didn't get the respirator, but turned around and came back to finish the tank because the area left to paint was so small.
"Jazz is coming back big," DeFlores said. "The students I talk to all over are really turning on to it."
"Collecting jazz film is a sideline for me," DeFlores said Saturday, "but it's getting to be an occupation."
On weekends he travels across the country showing films and talking with groups interested in igg.
THE DRESSLERS found the painter's van parked in front of the Dean house when they returned, but the house was locked, Larry Krupp, a neighbor of Dean's said.
Bob Dylan is another contemporary musician who deeply appreciates the jazz pioneers, DeFlores said.
"YOU CAN WALK away saying, 'Wow,' I saw Jelly Roll Morton as he appeared in 1928 or Billy Holiday as she really looked," I said. "And you can evaluate for yourself how great that star was after you see the film." But finding these films is difficult. Paramount, Vipstone and Columbia, the three producers of jazz films from deep records. Consequently, DeFlores has to explore studio vaults, attics and storefronts for forgiven jazz footage.
Today's musicians have usually just read about
listen to jazz musician of the '20s, '30s and '40s, he said.
When he finds films, they are usually decomposing. The
nitrate chemicals used before the invention of safety film cause extreme flammability and an offensive odor as it is.
"I HATE TO THINK of all the old films in attics across the country just sitting there rotting." he said.
The resurrection process undergone by these old films is available at only four institutions in the United States: the Library of Congress, the American Institute of Fine Arts, and the Academy of Motion Picture Art in New York. The process is expensive—$5,000 for a feature film—so the number of films restored each year is limited. The institutes have difficulty raising the money to buy these old films.
"The fumes had apparently spumed him out enough that he forgot about it (the warning from Dressler) and completely sealed up the house." Knup said.
Nevertheless, Defores continues his search in hope that a less expensive process can be developed.
And he hasn't limitled him to jazz. His library of 500 films includes newweded clips of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jake Dempsey-Tom Gibbs lounge in Shooter, Mont., and Nina Simone's "A Few More" with a tempor John M. Corncrack sinnue "Song of my heart."
Defores spent 10 years searching for the McCormack film, and found it, like many rare films, in an obscure, private film collection. He recently showed the film on the "Mike Douglas Show."
Deflores "sideline" demands a deep and steadfast interest in兴趣. Perseverance is helpful, too.
Reared in Hollywood, DeLorean cultivated his love of films early. His parent appeared in Gen Aury westerns and directed several movies.
Lois Mouster, Wintfield, Ill., junior, was the way to hear about "The Well Elderly."
"I practically grew up on a motion picture set," he said,
"and I just love the art."
the rape victims before, during or after the rape treatment," she said.
Kristine Guttu, Overland Park junior, said it was exciting to see how medical systems worked and how nurses could work with them.
Lisa Sullivan, Kansas City, Mo., senior, said she particularly liked a session about emergency medicine, which featured Norman McSwain Jr., director of emergency medical training at the Med Center.
"I'm excited to learn how to care for the elderly while they are well and before they are sick."
See FUMES page 2
William Dressler got in the house somehow, Knupp said, and found Nightingale on the tank floor overcome by fumes. Soon after William Dressler went into the tank to try to get Nightingale out, Regina Dressler realized that her husband was still inside from the fume. Knpp said, so she went outside and screamed for help.
Bob Carlson and his wife Linda, neighbors
Kansan jobs open
Applications for staff positions on the summer and fall Kansans are now available in the Student Senate office, the dean of men's office, the dean of women's office or 105 Flint. Job interviews will be this afternoon and all day Tuesday.
M
Speaking on entertainment
Speaking at a press conference before entertaining a Hoch Auditorium crowd of about 150 people Friday night, actress Ruby Ree commented on Davis' newest film, while Davis, Dee's husband, listened. Davis and Dee presented their program as part of the office of Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment series. See story, page 2.
Monday, April 28, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
Vietnamese go to the polls
BANGKOK, Thailand—Millions of North and South Vietnamese voted yesterday in the first major step toward the reunification of Vietnam, divided in 1954 and 1975.
Top leaders from the Lao Dao Communist party and from Saigon and Hanoi governments cast their ballots for a 492-member National Assembly shortly after the polls opened at 7 a.m., according to Saigon and Hanoi broadcasts monitored here.
The officials reportedly were followed by rows of citizens marching to vote.
Authorities reported almost a 100 per cent turnout.
The assembly will include farmers, workers, intellectuals, representatives of religious groups and most of the existing leadership. Real power, however, is
Socialists trail in Portugal
LISBON, Portugal - A conservative rural backlash against leftist leadership in Lisbon and conception of Socialist party support were apparent today in early returns to power.
The Socialists needed almost a landslide in urban centers uncounted after yesterday's vote to back their claim to be the nation's leading political force.
With the backing of the Roman Catholic church in the north, the conservative Social Democratic Center (CDS) was emerging as the leading vote-getter in that region with dramatic gains over its performance in constituent assembly elections a year ago.
Wherever the CDS was not leading in the countryside from Lisbon to the northern border, the Centrist Popular Democratic party (PPD) was ahead.
*Loss of Social support was even evident in the late debate around Opidal-*
*Preliminary projections were for a Communist vote of between 11 and 14 per*
*week.*
Early returns showed that none of the parties competing for the 283 seats in parliament would hold a commanding position.
Death blamed on KGB
MOSCOW-Eighteen Soviet citizens signed a bitter statement yesterday accusing the KGB security police of moral responsibility for the death of Jewish women in Ukraine.
Davidivich, a retired 54-year-old army colonel, died Saturday morning in Minsk after suffering his sixth heart attack.
"The murder was carried out without beattings, without needles under his nails, without punishment cells where the prisoner must remain standing or obey instructions."
Reagan gains support
Ronald Reagan's challenge to President Ford for the GOP presidential nomination was bolstered during the weekend as the process of selecting delegates to the Republican and Democratic national conventions advanced in six states and the Virginia Islands.
Reagan fared well in Oklahoma, South Carolina and Missouri.
On. The Democratic front, an informal primary in Arizona and congressional district conventions in Arizona showed support for Rep. Morris Urdall and Sen. John McCain.
Uncommitted delgates were chosen in Alaska and the Virgin Islands.
At county GOP caucuses in Missouri, Reagan supporters unofficially returns gave Reagan 229 of 234 delegates chosen to attend congressional district elections.
Ms. editor artful poet
An audience of about 50 people listened to Walker read from her poetry and her new novel, "Meridian," Friday afternoon in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The reaction to Alice Walker, a contributed character, angled toward the complaint "classy"
Walker began her reading with poetry from what she called "my African period." While a senior at Sarah Lawrence College, she went to Uganda to learn more about her people.
"It was a paradise when I was there. It has since become an abstation," she said.
The poetry she wrote while in Africa,
in the basilic town of Boneville*, is written in
the basilic form of Poetry.
Walker said, "Africa fits the haiku style because it is so visual."
Walker also read from her poetry book, "Revolutionary Petunias," which was nominated for a National Book Award in 1973.
Walker's poems follow her ideas on life.
"The ultimate trap to become
a free spirit" becomes your lesson.
Walker explained that both the main character of her new novel and the title, "Meridian," referred to the dictionary meaning off the word, "the highest apparent point reached by a celestial body in its course."
it," she said before reading her poem,
"Be Nobod's Darling."
"To me, we reached that in the '60s," she said.
Walker said she thought that the deaths of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X in the '0s were inevitable and that they exemplified the problems that the leader of a group to be Christ-like.
"When people have to die for you to believe in them, then there's something wrong with the culture," she said. There's a lot of violence and killings; they should stop giving short of death."
Walker said her writing, which she considers art, was her way of un-creating a sense.
"Once you understand people, then you can get futuristic with them. Art moves in a spiritual and emotional way that can change people," she said.
Davis said that the film was interracial and intertribal and that it dealt with the relationships between black and white Americans on the African continent.
The couple said the initial fund-raising for the film came from Delta Sigma Theta, a fraternity.
"The film belongs to Delta Sigma Theta," Dee said.
Davis said that this funding was a new and unique branch of financing for films, and that it was tough for an independent producer like Delta Sigma Theta to make a film.
At a press conference preceding the ceremony, she called the film a "romantic engagement" and asked if it was the first of her engagements.
tribes and recited poetry from writers
and scholars, Nikki Giovanni
and Gwaiyathe Brooks.
After the press conference, the couple
talked to a photographer with African folk
tales and modern poet.
Davis and Dice also read a folk tale, "The Peace-like Mongoose," written by James Thurber, a white author whom Davis called "an honorary colored man."
In a question-and-answer session after the program, Davis said current movies that exploit black people should be censored but films that depict the lives of films that exploited or exaggerated life.
They read folk tales from various African
ADULT MOVIES
LIVE SHORT
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ROBERT DENIRO
TAXI DRIVER
A BILLIE PHILLIPS production of MARTIN SCORCE'S FILM
Eve. 7:30 & 8:30
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Ingmar Bergman's
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On every starm in every city in this country, there's a nobody who dreams of being somebody. He is a lonely forgotten man desperate to prove that he's alive.
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LIVE BLUE GRASS
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$1.25 Pitchers
25c Draws
5:30-7:30
African movie previewed
The program was part of the Office of Minority Affairs Cultural Enrichment
Ossie Davis and Ruby Dey entertained a crowd of about 150 people Friday night in Hoe Auditorium as part of the promotion tour for their latest film, "Countdown at
The last part of the series, at 7:30 p.m.
tomorrow in 306 Blake, will be the showing
of "A Raisin in the Sun," starring Deen and Sidney Potter.
Ingmar Bergman's
The MAGIC FLUTE
Eve. 7:30 & 9:55 Sat.-Sun. 1:55 Hillcrest
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Burrito eater gets $100 in win
Fifteen contestants representing various campus and local organizations were given 30 minutes to eat as many burritos as possible.
Chilling winds and rain Saturday didn't damp the spires of about 150 spectators at the second Annual Burrito Eating Contest sponsored by Taco Tico, 2340 Iowa.
Dale Brecheisen, Osage City freshman representing Hashinger Hall, won first place by eating nine and a third burrito. Brecheisen received a $100 check for his
Brecheisen said afterward, "It's not capacity, it's keeping it down."
He said he was donating the $100 to help he Hall or to the hall's scholarship fund.
Tyrone Colen, Kansas City, Mo., freshman representing EWLorth Walls, placed second and won for consuming eight-and-a-half burritos. Sonny Fender, 1832 representing March of Dimes, Fender won $5 for eating eight burritos.
The youngest contestant was 18-year-old Rachel Burgett, Eudora, representing the Lawyers.
Rules for the contest stated that the contestant finish without losing his burritos. Two of the contestants, however, weren't able to do so.
Fumes . . .
From page one
down the street, and Linda Maggiora, who had just purchased a lot nearby and had driven in to look at it, heard the screams and came to help.
KNUPP SAID, Regina Dressler and Carlson went into the tank to try to get the two men out. Regina Dressler then passed, knuff, said so, Carlson shifted to Regina and lifted her over the six-foot wall and held the arms of Linda Carlson and Monica.
As Bob Carlson came out of the tank, Maggiora jumped in her car, Knup said, and drove around the neighborhood knocking on doors for more help.
This is where Knapp said he got involved. He said he talked to Maggiore, then told his wife to call the authorities and went with him to Pete Peterson, to the Dean house.
"The paint was wet we so kind of slid him up the side," he said. "We weren't too gentle. I think we cracked his head on the concrete ceiling as he went up."
Knupp aid he and Bob Carlson got back in the tank and lifted Wainner Dresser out.
The sheriff's patrol and the ambulance arrived then, Knupp said, and they used respirators to help the victims breathe and pouled Nightingale out.
"I'm sorry it happened and I'm really glad there were people around to help," she said.
"Bob Carlson did a yeoman's job," Dean said, but Carlson had spent so much time in the tank that he, too, was affected by the fumes.
APPLICATIONS Now Being Accepted for SUNFLOWER HOSTESSES
The University of Kansas Athletic Corporation is now accepting applications from students interested in assisting with the recruitment of prospective student-athletes for the Football Department. Membership requirements state that you must be a regularly enrolled KU student in good standing during the 1976-77 season.
For further information and applications contact the assistant athletic director's office, Room 211, Allen Field House annex. Application deadline is 5 p.m.,
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KU-Y ADVOCATE SERIES PRESENTS
Jayhawk Room,
Kansas Union
World Hunger:
What is the
real issue . . .
Tuesday, April 27
7:30 p.m.
An evening of dialogue with Roy Laird, KU
His opinion: "American food aid to the developing countries may well have been a prime factor contributing to world hunger." Partially funded by Student Senate
Professor of Political Science.
Audience Will Be Invited To Participate In Discussion
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Starring: Claire Bloom & Sir Ralph Richardson
"Not only a first-rate production, but also theater of amazing ferocity. Claire Bloom in as classic an interpretation as is possible within the limits of film."
—Vincent Canby, New York Times
Sunday, April 25 7:00 p.m. Woodruff Aud. 75c
Closely Watched Trains
Czechoslovakia,1976 Monday, April 26 Union Ballroom 75°
CANCELLED
4
Monday, April 26. 1976
Bush topic worldly scene today
George Bush, who became director of the Central Intelligence Agency in November's cabinet shakeup, will deliver the J. A. Marshall lecture at the University, Theatre of Murphy Hall.
Bush will speak on "The International Scene Today." His talk will be open to the public.
Bush was United States envoy to China when President Ford named him to succeed William Colby as CIA director last November.
At the same time, Ford fired Arthur schleinger as Secretary of Defense, and he was replaced by H.R. McDowell.
University Daily Kansan
12,000 sore feet to finance equipment for Med Center
By A Staff Writer
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—More than 6,000 people in the greater Kansas City area Saturday completed the 20-mile walk for the first time since a firewalk will go to the KU Medical Center.
Since naming Bush CIA director, Ford has also made him chairman of the Committee of Foreign Intelligence, a committee designed to oversee intelligence activities of the CIA and the departments of defense, state and treasury.
For each mile a person walked, someone pledged a donation to the Walk for Mankind. Vaughan said some walkers were sponsored by the walking average of $20 was pledged by each walker.
Voe Jaughan, public relations director for the walk, said yesterday, "That's pretty good considering the cold northwest winds, the current temperature and the misty overheated."
He said 4,393 persons had completed the walk in 1975.
ABOUT 20 PER CENT OF the Walk's fund is earmarked for use in the Kansas City area.
Mani M. Mani, clinical director of the burn center, said recently that the funds would be used to purchase a badly needed bronchoscope. A bronchoscope is a tube-like instrument with a light at one end. It is used to evaluate patients who the Mani M. mani said. He estimated the cost at $5,000.
The Gene and Barbara Burnett Burn
center at the Med Center will get the largest
number of donations.
Vaughan had be thought a good portion of the cost of a bronchoscope would come from the walk's proceeds. He said the walk's records would be sent to Project Concert headquarters in San Diego to be computed. The will be known in about 30 days, he said.
EIGHTY CENTS of each dandelion, he said, is used to fund hospital and medical and dental clinics in six developing countries and rural America.
Four Overland Park fifth-grade girls completed the walk about 2 p.m. at Shawnee Mission East High School, in Prairie Village. Ellen Stallbaumer, Frances Gregar, Christine Wolken and Elizabeth DeBauge said they were cold and hungry.
run as Ford's vice-presidential candidate in the 1976 election.
Mrs. Joan DeBauge, who accompanied
Maria to the airport, spent, totally, my
bands are mary from here.
five members of the Norman Deymar family, brothers and sisters, completed the project.
It was Bush's work as Republican national chairman that prompted some CIA officials and Congressmen to object to his appointment as CJA director.
Bush, a Yale University graduate, served two terms as a congressman from Texas from 1966 to 1970. He served as ambassador to the United Nations from 1970 until he became chairman of the Republican National Committee in 1973.
One Congressman, Democratic Senator Frank Church, said at the time that he was planning to write a book.
About 60 young people walked 20 miles on
wednesday to raise money for the
children of Haiti.
★ ★ ★
Thornton said the walkers, most of them teenage girls, had received pledges for about $3,000 from Lawrence residents. The school's research to prevent birth defects, he said.
By May 10, participants should collect the money pledged to them, he said. Prizes will be given to those who collect the most money.
The 20-mile walk began at Broken Arrow Park. The route through Lawrence was patrolled by police, and American Red Cross workers were available to treat minor injuries.
Walkers raise research funds
Thornton said only two walkers dropped out.
The number of walkers has decreased over the past two years, Thornton said. There were 300 walkers in 1974 and 140 in 1975.
He said other fund-raising marathons in Lawrence might have lessened the interest of the donors.
Ken said, "Td sure like to get a ride home."
Sharon, and I; Rita, and IA, said they lived
two-and-a-one-leaf miles from Shawnee
like Mr. Bush" would be able to stand up to the pressures from a Republican President
Bush will be the sixth Vickers lecturer since the series was begun in 1970.
FAST!
"... when it comes to pizza delivery"
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
--from $9^{00}$
The series was established to honor the late J. A. Vickers Sr., founder of the Vickers Petroleum Company, Inc. Vickers was a chemistry student at KU from 1914 to 1916.
AVATARA
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We hang our hats on cotton . . .
Shown is just one example of many popular fashions we offer in knit shirts.
BICYCLE RACE 1970'S
And, when made of cotton, not just good fashion but very practical as well.
Cool, absorbent, and easy care. Come in and pick some cotton for yourself.
THE Town Shop
THE Town Shop the men's shop downtown
If you've got more month left than money, we'll do it all for you.
CORNELIUS RUIZ
If the last week of the month feels a lot longer than the first week, come by McDonald's. For very little money you can get a lot of good food.
McDonald's 901 W.23rd
Lawrence, Kansas
We do it all for you
4
Monday, April 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
KU, religion merge
The recent approval by the Board of Regents of the merger of the University's School of Religion into the College of Nursing has been a pleasing overdue and is deserving of praise.
EVEN THOUGH the school had been serving the University for years, it had never received any financial support from the state. Even though KU students benefited from the schools throughout Kansas had paid the bills. The school was run as a private corporation.
The traditional requirement of separation of church and state was not an issue here. More than 68 per cent of the tax supported universities in the United States have departments of religion. Through the school the state is not supporting any particular religion or even promoting religion in general. Instead it is making the opportunity available to students to understand more fully the various religions of the world.
PROMOTING understanding should
be the primary goal of any educational institution. Religion plays such an enormous role in the workings of the world that to argue against its worth as an intellectual area worthy of study is foolish. And if KU students are to reap the benefits of this study, it's only right that they pay the bill.
Through its merger with the University, the School of Religion will also be able to broaden its program even more. Lynn F. Taylor, dean of the school, says the added security will allow the school to expand programs of Eastern thought, Jewish studies and cultural theology.
THE INCREASED diversity of the school's programs and its adoption by the University will serve to broaden even further the educational opportunities KU has available to students. The学校 would be welcomed and completed as quickly as possible. The School of Religion is an important addition to the University.
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
Time reveals theologian
Billy Graham and Paul Tillich. One a famous American religious leader; the other an obscure theologian. One the archetype of respectability and orthodoxy, and the other a scandal and barely a Christian. What is most important? Most Americans today would answer, Billy Graham.
BUT 50 YEARS from now
Billy Graham will surely have gone the way of Billy Sunday,
who isn't usually mentioned in
the book. He's Aquinas and Jonathan Edwards.
And Paul Tillich will be recognized for what he is—the
20th century has produced.
Tillich attracted more attention during his life than he has since his death in 1907. When he left his native Germany soon after the Nazi came to power, he had already established a reputation as an immigration attorney and immigration to America forced him to learn a new language and plunged him into obscurity to all but a few professors and students at Columbia and Union
CHEF I MAY HAVE BEEN PREMATURE IN MY CONSENT OVER SAFETY JOURNALS THE AGENCY HES HANDLING THIS JOB LIKE A PRO, HE JUST GAINED ENTRY TO THE EMBAUSY THROUGH A SECOND FLOOR WINDOW...
SLAW! CRASH! TINKLES!
THERE GOES ANOTHER RUBBER TREE PLANT!
1976 WYT SPECIAL FEATURES
Theological Seminary, where he taught.
BUT TILLICH's vast cultural scope,
his encyclopedic knowledge of history and philosophy, his captivating
predicted that he wouldn't be read after his death. His theology is too caught up in "kairores," he said. "Kairores" is his concept of time in the sense of the right time, the poten-
By John Hickey Contributing Writer
presence on the lecture podium and his voluminous writings were sure to attract attention. He accepted professorships at Harvard and later, toward the University of Chicago.
Tillich didn't present an imposing physical appearance. He was frail and hunched over, especially as he reached the end of his reach, and in the classic lines of a Greek god and it reflected a gamut of intense emotions, which he never tried to conceal. His personality had a magnetic, intrinsic quality that take hold of those around him. Women, in particular, were attracted to him; he embodied eros in its classical Greek sense. However, the love and respect of those who knew him made him the central characters of his historical importance.
IT IS HIS theology that will endure. Today it hends in limbo, awaiting the judgment of intellectual history. It is paradoxically outdated and before its time. Tillich himself
tiality of the present moment. It is contrasted with "chronos" or objective, historical time.
As an existentialist theologian, he was conscious of his historical limitations. He knew he wrote out of a limited number of books. Those parts of his theology tied to finite history events are becoming obsolete. But Tillikil also described transcendence—of the individual and of God. "Kairo's" transcends "chronon" through the New Being that is manifest in Jesus as the Christ.
TILLICK'S ONTOLOGY, his method of correlation and his working out of the problem of evil aren't outdated; they will be the basis for his enduring contribution to theology.
The starting point for Tillich's importance as a theologian is that he was a proponent of the theory of being. Before his time, ontological presuppositions were usually unstated. They were based on the arca of the theological system.
phenomenology of Martin Heidegger, the German existentialist who reopened the question of Being and radically interpreted the history of being, appropriating parts of Heidegger's explain Being and nonbeing. Nonbeing can take two forms; it is either absolute nonbeing, "uk on," or dialectical nonbeing, "me on." God is Being-enscends the polarity of Being and nonbelief and of the subject and the object.
THUS God doesn't exist. He is beyond questions of existence. Atheism is impossible, because to deny the existence of God is to affirm Being-like. That follows since nonbeing or "me on" is a part of Being. Thiil never says that God exists, but rather from strict logical necessity. He thought that it was logical but that it came about through revelation rather than logic.
Tillich makes use of the
Through his method of correlation, he ties theology to philosophy. It is the task of questioning questions concerning human existence. Theology answers those questions through revelation. The answers are derived from rigorous logical verification.
THE PHILOSOPHY that best addresses the fundamental questions for Tillich is existentialism. Its emphases on freedom and responsibility, the self as the central subject of existence, the subjunctive over essence provide the questions theology must answer through the method of correlation. Existentialism
can't stand on its own legs; it always postulates a theological or quasi-theological base, he said.
Also important in Tillich's theology is the definition of faith as ultimate concern. Faith isn't as ultimate as religion, spite of reason. It is the ultimate concern of each human being. The object of faith is, then, the thing with which one is concerned. One can be a god or an idol. Tillich says everyone has faith; Christian faith has as its ultimate concern, Jesus as the Christ. The Christian revelation is unique and so are ours. For ultimate concern is idolatrous and will ultimately fail.
TELLICH WAS anything but orthodox in the conduct of his personal life. Politically, he was incarved toward socialism, he was devoted to Christianity doctrine. In her autobiography, "From Time to Time," his wife Hanna tells how Tillich seduced her while she worked as a housekeeper and husband and he was married to his first wife. She goes on to describe the stream of affairs they both carried on during the war. But history has shown that great thinkers are remembered for their intellectual achievements. Those who reject Tillich's theology because he is more than a Christian "a Christian life" are blinded to the value of his theology by their own prejudices. Paul Tillich's infidelity will no more influence theological contributions than Billy Graham's orthodoxy will overcome his avoid of creativity.
Liberalism still thrives
Sodomy law restraint prudent
WASHINGTON—The Supreme Court still is catching some heavy flak from the letterer. He wrote in a letter action a couple of weeks ago in
I WAS IN a state of limbo. I wasn't ready to discard my proud Democratic liberal heritage, but I wasn't really
For those of us who consider ourselves liberals, the political atmosphere of the country has provided little encouragement in recent months. The electorate seemed to be enchanted with Jimmy Carter, an amphibious middle-of-the-road senator (Udall) had been forced to shun his liberal description in place of the more electrically acceptable term progressive.
By James J.
Kilpatrick
(C) Washington State Symphonic
the case of the Virginia sodomy statute. The case offers some useful insights into the rule of liability for sexual assault, and the matter merrits your thought.
UNTIL FARLY recently, all the states (and the federal government) had laws that made it difficult to be called "the detestable and abominable crime against nature." Such statutes are rooted in the Old Testament; they have an ancient history in the common Western law. The common Western law Act dates from 1792. It reads:
"If any person shall carnally
carnal knowledge, he or she shall be guilty of a felony and shall be confined in the penitentiary not less than one year nor more than three years."
TWO ACTIVE, practicing homosexuals, identified in court papers only as John Doe and William Fall in United States District Court in Richmond. They asked for a declaratory judgment holding the law unconstitutional as a violation of their rights to marry. Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments. They also threw in a
little Eighth Amendment makeweight, on the theory of cruel and unusual punishment.
The plaintiffs argued that what goes on in a bedroom among consenting adults in a shared room is a Commonwealth of Virginia. True, they never had been arrested or prosecuted for their private acts, but such a case would have dismissed the Supreme Court itself, they contended, had established a "right to privacy" in sexual matters. In a Concord court case, traptives, and in a Georgia case involving a home library of erotic books, the Court had prohibited state governments taking upon personal decisions.
LAST OCTOBER, the trial court split 3-1. Senior Circuit Judges Albert V. Bryan and Oren R. Lewis agreed that, on the basis of the constitutional, "No judgment is made upon the wisdom or policy of the statute. It is simply that we cannot say that the Court has decided to any other of the Amendments, and the wisdom or policy
preserved. This is the main point of Fairie's argument. He says that most liberals are guardians of tradition in their
DISTRICT JUDGE Robert R. Merigan, burgess, held that "private consensual sex acts between adults are matters," and that children are harmful, in which the State has no legitimate interest."
is a matter for the State's resolve."
The consenting sexual acts of husband and wife may be immune from state prescription, said Judge Bryan, but the Supreme Court never has unanimous approval from branding such intimacies as adultery, homosexuality and incest as criminal. "If a State determines that punishment therefor, even when committed in the home, is appropriate in the promotion of mortality and for the court to say that the State is not free to do so."
The Supreme Court two weeks ago, without hearing argument or writing an opinion, told the judge a view, this is precisely what the Court should have done. This is not to say that the Virginia law
sure just what it meant to be a liberal either. But in recent weeks I have been reassured and can now continue on my liberal
is right and should be enforced;
I think the act is wrong and
it should be repeal. It is more
important that my judgment
respect the principle of judicial
restraint than to win paper
victories against dead-letter
letters.
In their furious assault upon the Court, the letter-writers make some excellent points. But judicial restraint is a rare right which governs the rule of law; it ought to be encouraged, not condemned.
OVER THE PAST 15 years, 14 states have repeated their old laws against private, consenting acts among adult citizens who do not seem certain to continue, and this, it seems to me, is the proper way to proceed. We ought not to let judges substitute their will for ours in the case of compelling reason. It might have been a different matter, in the case at bar, if John Doe and Richard Roe actually had been tried and imprisoned, but their cases were much stronger than an academic exercise.
THE MARY'S THINGS
TEL
BERRIT'S FINEST CUSTOM
Dine
HELLO MOLEEMS
WHERE DREAMS
STAY FOR GROWN
WELCOME PALESTINIANS
ALLAH PERFECT
SRIANS
CHRISTIAN'S NICE
NOT BRANT
MORNING
SUPPLEMENT
TO READY
FOR WORK
IN JUNE 2015
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
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path, fighting for truth, justice and the American way.
My new-found security came from several sources. First, one of my professors provided me with a definition of liberalism in his history class. As then in an old book called "Dead" in the April 17 issue of the New Republic, Henry Fairlie showed me what it really means to be a liberal. Now that I know what I am and what I want, more honestly, my position seems to be much more secure.
THE DEFINITION my professor provided was that liberalism is an attitude and a set of ideas, a general movement that attempts to use the power of government to control abuses of industrialization and urbanization by protecting power harnessed by those abuses. It also attempts to strengthen the industrial and urban sectors in the name of the traditional values of individualism, competition and success.
The most important part of that definition, which many liberals fail to recognize, is that basic American traditions is
own lives, but that they believe they must be tolerant of a social environment which erodes those values. The liberal seeks in this environment the traditions of importance to the family, which is the root of all tradition.
HE SEEKS A thorough education for his children, while he allows others the right to any form of experimental education for him. He then them from the paternography that he defends as protected by the First Amendment. According to Fairlie, this is where the liberal is most often encountered when it appears to rout traditional values, he might be accepted, even under the liberal label.
The country has actually followed a liberal course in the 20th century. Fairlie points out that Mr. Obama has joined I the Republicans and Democrats have in office the same number of years, but he also has come in essence to liberals, who have gift their mark on the country.
WHATEVER THE mistakes that may in hind sight be seen to have been made, it was the Democratic party that endured
the pains and bears the scars," he writes.
Liberals do get sidetracked at times. Fairie says some dedicated, but misguided liberals have given up the fight for their right to resist their wars against petty wrongs such as improper labeling in supermarketkings. But even these troops who only skirmish with the system still demonstrate the power of democratic trademark. This energy is what has made Hubert Humphrey so popular through the years, according to Fairie. Hubert has a glow about him that can't be ignored, and he has many times a liberal may lose, he'll never give up the fight.
ACTION IS THE key. The liberal is restless. He's not looking for radical changes that so many Americans fear. He's generally just searching for the best mode of expressing the view he believes that he sees as the foundation of American society.
So take heart fellow liberals. If we just discover who we really are, there are actually a lot more of us around than there are in the Democratic movement of enlightened souls from the Democratic party to the independent ranks is no cause for alarm. Most independent women are who once again trying to show that they are open-minded. Most of these independent liberals will cast the lens on the Democratic Democrats. Like all good liberals they realize that it isn't a sin to vote for a Republican who has seen the light, but that they are usually more of the enlightened ticket.
Readers Respond
Frustration of abortion
To the editor:
Bill Sniffen's two articles concerning abortion in last week's conference of commendation. Discussing this topic is no quick way to win friends. Sniffen's objectivity has made his gloss over the uncomfortable.
BOTH ARTICLES appropriately end on the topic of responsibility. This is a crucial matter in this debate, as well as other current issues. Our teachers are motivated, even obsessed, by the idea that we, collectively and individually, are not responsible for our actions.
Offenders against society are not to be punished they are to be rehabilitation or correctional, as expected, be responsible; make them wear helmets. People who commit
Such irrationality smacks of the same mind-set that breeds racism. Racially prejudiced individuals have facts and have a hard time
crimes with guns are ruled by their passions; take away their guns. Don't blame me; I'm conditioned—the product of an unhappy home—poor rich—a minority—only human—all of the above. But who is to take the responsibility and the brunt of the solution for unwanted and unplanned children? The pseudonymous Anne concludes that the child is the culprit. It (shall we render it impersonal and call it the product of conception?) offended by her actions and being obstacle to leisure, happiness, success, etc. Such gross offenses!
following arguments that might dislodge their prejudice. The prejudice often springs from and reaps economic benefit. A need for military power is never consistent and is thus arbitrary boundaries. "Sara" saw some mystical difference between a two-week-old and a thirteen-week-old filoson. Hasswell of the KU Med Center has warned that killing himself to save a child in one case and rushing off to terminate an unwanted pregnancy in the next case. We submit that the unborn of this nation cannot be the most highly apprehended person having absolutely no measure of redress of grievances.
Ruth Goring
Merriam graduate student
J. D. Stewart
Plainville graduate
; it calcu-
he the h'sh
hisn't isn't
anghe the is
isaw he
he loxes
non-on-
the rue for ous
she rst is
she rst is
to its
geat need eael
elect need eael
will will
tty.
at mee
deegegegegeg
Monday, April 26.1976
5
Prison problems cited by Amilon
Staff Writer
BvRITARIDDER
Prisons would be more humane and probably more effective if different programs and modern facilities were used, Clas Amillon, deputy chief of the United Nations Office of Crime Prevention, said Friday.
Amilion suggested that prisons be used mainly for dangerous and persistent offenders, that treatment programs within them be used, and that modern living conditions be provided.
About 15 people attended Amilon's speech on crime prevention and treatment of offenders, which was sponsored by the School of Social Welfare.
The main function of prisons, he said, should be rehabilitation rather than punish criminals. He said the punishment philosophy originated in the Scandinavian countries but was used differently from the system in the United States.
"IT IS CLEAR that society needs prisons, but the use of prisons should be reduced so they would be used for people who impose a real danger to society." Amlon said.
comparing the Swedish institution with Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary, which is one of the largest and most
Amilion said that the death penalty was abolished in Scandinavian countries 50 to 60 years ago, and that most criminologists said capital punishment was insignificant as a deterrent to crime. Amilion added that in countries where capital punishment had been used, it has not been in capital cases and gave his reason for abolishing capital punishment.
IN SWEDEN, the maximum prison sentence is 12 years, and the average prison sentence is 8 years. In a sentence for crimes such as first degree murder and espionage. If life sentence are usually converted to a set term of 14 years, and prisoners are paroled, they may go back to the community.
If an offender committed a second serious crime, he would be imprisoned for a maximum 12-year period, Amilion said, but sentence would never be longer than that.
the difficulty people of different social and cultural backgrounds had adjusting to
He also said the attitude toward firearms here differed from Europe's. In Sweden, he said, it is extremely difficult to get a license for fire arms and practically nobody has a gun.
AMILON SAID that Scandinavian institutions used a large number of laymen as volunteer parole supervisors, a practice which provided for a better understanding of prisoners and the treatment of them in society.
"There is no universal recipe to make the public more understanding, but it's best to involve, as much as possible, the man outside," Amlon said.
Social assistance in providing jobs for offenders and help in support their well-being, said their
However, a more liberal and humane prison system wouldn't be easily accomplished, he said. A public sense of common responsibility for treating offenders with care, and community programs involving offenders within the society are necessary.
AMILON DISCUSSED international guidelines and standards set up by the United Nations that had influenced correctional insti'ts all over the world. He also spoke about the International On Crime and Delinquency which meets every national and is comprised of experts on criminology from about 100 different countries.
Amillon has been on leave for the past two years in New York City working with the government and will return to the Department of Treatment and Security in Sweden this June.
OZ
in concert - friday - 8:30
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A career in law—without law school.
What can you do with only a bachelor's degree?
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Since 1970, The Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 1200 graduates in law firms, banks and corporations in over 75 cities.
If you are a senior of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer's Assistant, we'd like to meet you.
Contact the Office of the Vice-Chancellor for Student Affairs,
227 Strong Hall,
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(215) 732-6600
FREE DENIM CUT-OFFS WITH ANY $10 PURCHASE OF CLOTHING
New Shipment of Men and Women's Blouses and Shirts Imported From India
AURH STUDENT POSITIONS
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THESE OFFICES—
AURH, Dean of Man, Dean of Women and Housing. THEY ARE DUE APRIL 29. THE POSITION MUST BE Filled WITH A RETURNING HALL RESIDENT. Applications will be screened before interviews which will start May 3.
ACADEMIC RESOURCE CENTER COORDINATOR—
This is a ten hour a week job for someone who qualifies for WORK STUDY. The wage is $2.20 PER HOUR. Library experience is requested in addition to a typing skill of 5 words per minute or better. Part of the duties will be up dating the AURH test file and organization of a central purchasing plan. In addition to the ARCC will work with ARC'C to develop policies and procedures. The ARCC works with RSP and catalogs all AURH resource materials with the office secretary. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and encourages all qualified men and women to apply.
OFFICE SECRETARY—
This position requires that the individual be in the AURH office from a.m. until 12 noon every week day. If it will be a 15 hour a week job, Applicants must qualify for WORK STUDY and be able to TYPE 40 WORDS PER MINUTE OR BETTER. In addition clerical skills and a knowledge of office machines are required. A knowledge of short hand would be helpful, but not necessary. WAGE IS $2.20 PER HOUR.
In addition to the above responsibilities it also necessary that the secretary handle office correspondence for AURH and the Board of Directors AURH can equal opportunity employer and encourage all qualified men and women to apply.
APRIL FEATURE ATTRACTIONS
MISS. STREET DELI
ITALIAN BEEF GRINDER
Choice beef sliced thin marinated in a special sauce to give this beef a true Italian flavor, served on a French dip hard roll.
$1.50 Reg. $1.90
GP
Present Coupon Expires April 30
NEW YORKER
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$1.00 OFF—with this Coupon
ANY LARGE PIZZA
"The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires April 30
Bull & Boar
11 W. 9th
Open Face Hot Beef Sandwich
$1.50 Reg. $1.95
Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included.
Present Coupon Expires April 30
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Coors Pitchers
95¢ 60 oz.
Limit 1 Pitcher per couple per day. Expires April 30, 1976
"Truly the Most Wonderful Happening in Lawrence."
Showtime
11 a.m. till Closing Nightly
April 1 to April 30
AURH STUDENT POSITIONS
APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THESE OFFICES—
AURH, Dean of Men, Dean of Women and Housing. THEY ARE DUE APRIL 29. THE POSITIONS MUST BE Filled WITH A RETURNING HALL RESIDENT. Applications will be screened before interviews which will start May 3.
ACADEMIC RESOURCE CENTER COORDINATOR—
This is a ten hour a week job for someone who qualifies for WORK STUDY. The wage is $2.20 PER HOUR. Library experience is requested in addition to a typing Hill of 35 words per minute or better. Part of the duties will be up dating the AURH test file and organization of a center purchasing plan with addition to the ARC will work with ARC's to develop policies and procedures. The ARCC works with RSSP and catalogs all the ARC resource, with the Office secretary. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and encourages all qualified men and women to apply.
OFFICE SECRETARY—
This position requires that the individual be in the AURH office from 9 a.m. until 12 noon every week day. It takes on a 15-hour job. Applicants must qualify for WORK STUDY and be able to TYPE 60 WORDS PER MINUTE OR BETTER. Additional clinical skills and a knowledge of office machines are requested. A knowledge of short-hand would be helpful, but not necessary. WAGE IS $2.20 PER HER.
In addition to the above responsibilities it is also necessary that the secretary handle office corresponsibility with the Board of Appeals. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and encourages all qualified men and women to apply.
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6
Monday, April 26, 1976
University Dafly Kansan
KU has only 1 winner at Drake
By GARY VICE Sports Writer
Victory eluded the Jayhawk track team this weekend at the Drake Relays until KU's mile relay squad edged Jackson State at the tinker 3:09 in 5 win the meet's final event.
The mile relay奏quet of Nolan Cromwell, Waddell Smith, Jay Wagner and Danny Lowe. They are the squid able to defend their championship won last season at the final stop of the Midlands relays circuit. KU also won the 400 mph last year at the 68th annual Drake Rails.
The mile relay, run at the conclusion of a cold rainy day in Des Moines, gave the Jayhawks their 133rd relays triumph ever, in the Texas-Kansas-Drake baton circuit.
sensor, anchor man on the mile relay squad, said, "Anytime you win the mile relay at the end it makes the whole meet worthwhile. It was a good mile relay."
KANSAS HEAD COACH Bob Timmons said the poor weather conditions hurt KU's performances, but he was pleased with KU's showing.
"They had an awful day up there Saturday," Timmons said. "It was terribly cold, which affected us I’m sure, but we had a lot of people coming in, event, but we had a lot of people placing."
"You have to realize there were a lot more teams at this meet than in Kansas or Texas and the intensity of the competition was greater. Considering the loss of our two teams, Willie Wiley and Kevin Newell for NCAA violation) we did really well on the relay circuit."
One of the major reasons for Kansas' success was their strength in the weight events. The shot put trio Jim Pobrebarac, Rudy Guevara and Steve Stone finished 2-3-4 and javelin throwers Mark Kostek and Roger Hamdan grabbed fourth and fifth.
GUEVARA, WHO WAS THAD with a 58-9% tos, said he felt he was nearly recovered from a sore ankle which has hampered him most of this season.
"It's coming around for me now," he said. "I was kind of surprised wed throw that well in the cold Saturday. Those were the meet, we met." We were throwing in pouring rain. "We were throwing in pouring rain."
Pobrebarac, a junior, threw 59-7 for second place and Stone, a senior, was fourth.
Hammond, whose 223-2-1 cost in the javelin
placements him into Neyland's 204-4-2 effort,
also scored a goal.
"The runway was pretty muddy when we had to throw which made it slippery. We ought to pick up in the future. I don't think we're throwing up to par yet."
IN THE 4000 intermediate hurdles, Cromwell passed up his opportunity to compete for a run at the team to run in the open competition. The Jayhawks' track and football star was outcured at the tape by American record holder Todd Mann. 50.99 to 50.11
benson, team cocapain, finished second in the 600 dash behind long-time rival Mark Collins of Baylor. Benson, timed in 46.33, hadn't expected to compete in the event until another runner dropped from the field, leaving the opportunity open for him.
Benson said that he had been out too fast with Collins, the winner in 6.01, and didn't bother to try the race again.
"WE BOTH RAN all out 330's," the defending Big Eight champion said, "when he went on by me and there was nothing I could do." He said of where I should have been at the end.
Freshman Anthony Coleman, champion in the 110 high hurdles last week at the Kansas Relays, was third in that event in 13.94.
Roommates lead KU to Mo Valley crown
Sweden's Astrid Dakas defeated Mexico's Cecilia Lopez for the championship of room 1031 of McColum Hall and the Missouri State University. He won in the Allen Field House courts yesterday.
Associate Sports Editor
Together and individually, the two University of Kansas roommates dominated the tournament, leading KU to an upset championship over Stephens College and the Big Eight champions, Oklahoma.
By KEN STONE
in what tournament director and KU
in women's tennis coach Tom Kivisto called
a "perfect draw," No. 1 seed Dakai beat
the winner of the Lopez for the
single title, 3-5, 6-0, 6-1.
KU TOPPED THE 19 schools entered with 32 points. Stephens was run-up with 22%. Oklahoma, the defending Missouri team, ousted Oklahoma State for third-22.
"I knew we could get to the finals," Lopez said. "It was fun, but it was a harder match. It was just a different game. I knew it could be way, but she (Daikai) played well."
ON SATURDAY, the No. 2 seeded doubles
team of Dakusa and Loper overcame a
first set to beat Oklahoma State's double
scores in Cunningham and Las Barry,
1-6, 4-6, 2-4.
But it wasn't just the play of his two ace athletes that excited Kivito. All six of KU's players won their first round matches, giving Kansas six easy points.
"The they played the best tennis of their life," Klivisto said. "Each player contributed. It was an amazing game, that final win she had four people. Marlaine Cook was defeated by Margaret Teague (of Drake) the No. 2 seed, and Tracy Spellman the No. 1 seed, both from Southwest Missouri State University."
THAT GAVE KU three of the top eight spots in the fifth round.
But the draw forced Lopez to play the No. 2 seed, while Dakale easily defeated the No. 3 seed Sylvia Noster of Stephens College in the other six round.
The single title was justicing on the cake Kansas couldn't lose.
Rain either washed away or halted Kansas' other two matches. The Eastern Kentucky match was canceled and the team tussled over the teams' required 3-all after singles.
The Jayhawks completed only one match during the tourney and lost it, 6-3, to Southern Illinois, whom they had beaten earlier this spring.
KU will try to bounce back against OT
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"Everything felt okay," he said, "except for a few hurdles. I hatt about three of them. When that happened, I let a couple guys go by me. It's no big deal, I'll get it together soon. I'm going to work real hard on my sten, all this week."
MEN'S TENNIS-KU's tennis team found little to cheer about and lots of rain during its trip to Southern Illinois-Carbondale for the SIU tournament this weekend.
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In an all-collegiate 3,000-meter steeplechape, distance runners Bill Lundberg and George Mason captured third and fourth. Lundberg, a junior college All-American, finished in 5:59.82 and Mason ran a 9:00.34.
Another third-place performance was
BASEALL—Larry Winn slammed a three-run homer in the fourth inning to pace Nebraska to a 4-2 victory over Kansas Frivad on the winner's field.
KU grabs an early 2-1 lead on the strength of RBI singles by first baseman Max Fultz and gets the wicket in the second. However, the Jayhaws were unable to maintain the lead for Roger Sigle.
A double-header between the two teams scheduled for Saturday was rained out.
In doubles, KU did much better when the No. 1 team of Bill Clarke and Tim Headkde and the No. 3 team of Mark Hosking and Jeff Thomas both won.
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"This was a sweet victory for us," said Bossier, who sixman team totaled 701 points. "Nebraska's coach were going around for six weeks saying they were great."
But her mother and coach, Nancy Boozer, sounded full of life in describing her team's runner-up performance in the conference meet at Columbia, Mo.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 26, 1976
7
Weekly space shuttles to check earth will begin by 1981, Hill says
The first flight of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) space shuttle program, whose mission will be to demonstrate the economic and practical advantages of near outer space missions. Thomas Hill, coordinator of the NASA Science and Education program, told about 100 engineering students Friday that the space shuttle program would consist of weekly manned space flights. The flights would include experiments with an astronaut weather conditions and conduct scientific experiments while in orbit, he said.
The uses of the space shuttle also include the launching, retrieving or repairing of equipment in the wake of a collision. Hill said the weekly space flights would begin sometime during 1980 or 1981 and would be based on data.
"It seems far out," Hill said, "but we have the technology to do that and more." He said steam turbines could be put into orbit which would use solar heat to generate
electricity that could be transmitted back to earth.
He said space colonies, each capable of sustaining 10,000 people, had been designed as an alternative for future generations to relieve the world's expanding population.
"We are definitely crawling out of the cradle." Hill said.
The space shuttle will consist of two stages, he said, a booster for launch from earth and an airplane-like, manned, rocket-like mission into orbit to conduct space missions.
Then the orbiter will flown to land at a conventionally sized airstrip.
Hill said that although the orbiter was designed for 100 flights, it would be capable of 50.
Hill, who is also a member of the faculty at California State University, offered four reasons for continuing space exploration: "I don't want to be gone; I can't be done any other place, to perform
missions such as monitoring pollution circulation which can be better done in space on earth and to provide a more economical alternative to operations such as global communication and weather forecasting, which have been founded by the earth's limitations.
Hill said another product of the space shuttle might be increased international cooperation through "mutual benefits from national and international payloads."
Although, the manned space program is currently in a "holding pattern," Hill said, he thinks space travel will "soon be as conventional as airplane travel."
He said he thought the next manned moon flight would be a joint effort between the NASA, ESRA (European Space Research Agency) and the Soviet Union.
"The future astronauts will be (like)
tuck drivers," Hill said, transporting
the spacecraft.
The Selenen Lincoln Whitbread Scholarship for the outstanding assistant instructor-Tinus Blue, Lawrence.
Awards totaling $2,340 were announced Friday at the English Department's Honors Banquet. The awards and their recipients were:
The Kenneth Rockwell Scholarship for excelsior in the study of literature at Johns Hopkins, Lawrence graduate school.
The William Herbert Carroll Memorial Poetry Composition Society, Pickett's Basketball, junior; third, Linda Levin, Heavierville.
The James R. Kennedy Scholarship for excellence in the
careers of women, men and children at Harwich,
Harwich, Essex. Eugene Rihwan, San
The Edwin M. Hopkins Scholarship for excellence in the study of Heritage - Wawny Points, Lawrence graduate student; Gloria Stevens, White Plain N.Y., graduate student and Bill Oliver, Independence, Mo, graduate student
The Nokia Golden Award Critical Writing Award—Mark
Kwong, New York, and Creative Writing Award—
Margaret Browne, Poway, California.
The Rosemary Hoppe House, Critical Writing Award-first-
class, Department of English, University of Delaware;
Demeritum sophomore, bachelor (the Anne Harakee
Hanemann Scholarship).
English awards received by 17
**TODAY:** Professor of English PAUL FUSSELL, Rutgers University, will lecture from 3 p.m. in the Walnut Room of the Kansas Union. ELISABETM MARKSTEIN, Vienna, will speak in Russian on "Sölschityns'yun" capella ilapago® at 3:30 p.m. in 4035 Wescoe Hall.
On Campus
Events...
TONIGHT: OPERATION FRIENDSHIP will meet at 7 in the Baptist Student Center, 1629 W. 19th. Professor of urban design W. 19th. GOMER of the University of California, Berkeley. Professor of Architecture Francisco Bay Area Architecture" at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. A GERMAN PLAY READING will be conducted at 8 at 820 Canterbury Lane, Roseen, Pennsylvania State University, Rosen, Pennsylvania State University, will speak on "Socrates' Dream" at 8 in the Forum Room of the Union. PAUL FUSSELL will lecture on "Art and Facial Testimony" at in the Big Eight Room of the University of California, Berkeley. Self-location on "Censorship and Self-Censorship in Soviet Literature" at 8 in the Council Room of the Union. RITA HAWLE, Independence, Mo., senior, will present a recital at 8 in Swartkout Re典礼 Hall
All Lawrence SLOW-PITCH SOFTBALL teams must have their entry fees rosters and players in the Community Building. There will be two women's divisions and five men's divisions. League
EARLY ENROLLMENT for community college transfers is being conducted today and tomorrow in the Forum Room of the University, information, call Gay Ann Kearney, 844-3911.
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Monday, April 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Alcoholism affects all former pitcher says
Bv MARLENE NORDMAN
Staff Writer
Don Newcombe, a former major league pitcher, told an audience of about 40 people Friday he wasn't against alcohol but against alcoholism.
Newcombe, a representative of the National Clearinghouse on Alcohol Information, spoke at Haskell Indian Junior High part of its alcohol and drug abuse workshop.
Newcombe said he had been traveling across the United States for the past four years speaking about his experiences with alcoholism.
One of the reasons he is devoting so much of his time to speaking on alcoholism, he said, is that he has seen far too many cases where people believe in a damn' about whether they drink or not.
"WELL, IT NOT going to stand back and let you be the one to lead," he said, responding to audibles, "he said."
Newcombe said he wanted to emphasize that he wasn't against alcohol itself. He said each person had to decide for himself whether he wanted to drink.
"I only ask that they find out what it can do to you," he said.
Newcombe said he began drinking when he was eight and his father gave him homebrew.
Newcombe said that Jackie Robinson, the first black to play major league baseball, made it possible for him to enter baseball. Some of the tings Newcombe and his black teammates had to withstand, he said, "would make a person's hair curl."
Newcombe said he remembered eating in hotel rooms rather than restaurants to avoid incident and staying in hotels where meals were served by white teammates staved in cooled rooms.
As a result of this and other stresses, he said, he began to drink heavily to release his
Newcombe said he he remembered Robinson having his leg cut and having dirt thrown at him by other players. But he didn't bother to play, bothered as much because he was a pitcher.
"I was known as being pretty wild at that time. It's not funny to have a baseball coming at you at 100 miles an hour," he said.
Newcombe said he also drank heavily while trying to find answers to life. He was worried, he said, because he was beginning to slip professionally despite being voted as the outstanding pitcher and rookie of the year early in his career.
Alcoholism destroyed his first marriage and almost destroyed his second, Newcombe said. At the age of 32, he was out of professional baseball.
NEWCOMBE SAID he has a happy marriage with his second wife. Billy. They have been married for 20 years.
"With all these things happening to me, I should have been a very happy man. But no, I was trying to find answers to everything—I wanted answers at the bottom of the bottle," he said.
One of the worst things about alcoholism is that it destroys the alcoholic's loved ones, he said. Even though Newcombe loved his wife, he said he started destroying her.
"She couldn't understand what was meant to the man she loved," Nuppee said. "I hadn't seen him."
He said he decided to stop drinking completely on the day he came back home drunk with lipstick on his collar and couldn't remember where he had slept the previous night. His wife had her bags leave him and take their children with her.
Newcomba said his wife threatened to divorce him because she hated him when he was drunk, but gave him another chance after he swore never to drink again.
He said too many people with a drinking problem didn't admit to themselves they had the problem. It is a mistaken notion that alcoholism causes death because most alcoholics lead normal lives.
Newcombe said more young people today drink alcohol than use other kinds of drugs, compared with a few years ago. He said he was upset to discover younger people telling him they take amphatetines and barbiturates in combination with the alcohol.
ONE OF THE REASONS he is concerned about alcoholism to speak out against it, he said, that he sees far too many young people who think that drinking
Newcombe said alcohol affects everybody, even those who don't drink.
"We can't afford the luxury of thinking because we don't drink it, it doesn't affect us."
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replacement for Smith as president of the association.
"Right now, the important thing is Dennis," Bohandler said. "It's a matter of deciding whether Dennis' civil rights have been violated."
City . . .
From page one
Bohlander, who along with Smith represented city workers during affiliation talks with the Teamsters, said Smith's dismissal wouldn't affect the employees' move for recognition as a collective bargaining unit.
ON APRIL 15, Watson received a letter from Teamsters Local No. 608 in Topka Street, near the intersection of street, water and parks and recreation departments had affiliated with the union. The letter requested that negotiations be closed and a contract between the employees and the city.
Last fall Smith and Bohlander led the movement by the United Public Employees Association of Lawrence (UPEA) for recognition under the Kansas Public Employee Regulations Law. Under the law, which outlines procedures for municipal employee negotiations, employees can appeal to a state board whose decisions are binding.
"The city's reply to the letter was a flat no." Brolander said.
The Lawrence City Commission voted in November against coming under the law and recognizing the employees association. The commission also to keep bargaining at the local level.
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From page one
Lucas said a final presentation was recently made to Chancellor Archie R.
Dykes and the first signs were ordered.
Alton Thomas, associate professor of architecture and urban design and a landscape architect for KU's architectural services, said coordination for interior signs in buildings would be sought from the directors of various departments.
Thomas also said the architects of new campuses buildings would be asked to use the new facilities.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 26. 1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to race or national origin. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL.
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15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional .01 .02 .03 .04
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 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
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UK business office at 604-1558.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
Employment Opportunities
Career related summer job must be locate-outside of Kansas. Earn $33 per month. Call 847-897-8158.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS! Drop in and ask for a phone number on the back of your phone (call phone #) at WEBSTUDIO.COM. Call 212-467-5030.
Free rental service. Up to the minute lounge s.
Lakefront Lawncare, Lawrence,
Horticultural Exchange, 842-250-3000
2 bdm. all utl. paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Park free. a/c, pool. 843-493-898.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen privacy
2- living room to campus $ and up, private
3- or 848-$ or 802-$
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate rent. A four-bedroom apartment in 1976 and take advantage of lower rates. See us now before it's to late. Park 35 Apartments, 2 blocks west of Iowa on 25th St. Phone 842-1455.
1. Bedroom apt, AC. Close to campus. $120 per
call; room Rick B 8369-2698 or 841-6476.
Sublease from, May 19, to Aug. 13, Air conditioned
room, $75/month; brand new, $100/mail;追存 5,
$25/month; brand new, $15
Apt. to subdue beginning May 24, 8 days free
Rent. Indoor and outdoor pools 40-52,
4-28
Sublease three-bedroom house, full basement, all utilized, paid $185/month. June-May-August.
Sublease-apartment, late May till August. 18-
months from camp on campus. 4-28
negotice price. 841-141-6.
Sublease June 1 to aug. 3, 10 d.bm; 1½ bath,
townhouse with carport, pool and laundry closet
with washroom.
1 bdm. furnished apartment for rent for sum-
mage $125 a month plus plan C
4-29
6-28
One room studio apartment. Clean, quiet. AC, catered, kitchen available. May 11 Call 626-740-3592.
SUMMER SUBLEASE - large 4-5 bedroom house
from campus to clinics, garage 6412,
6028 or 6037.
Sublease: from May 31 to Aug. 2 2 d bismar,
trailer, furnished, AC Call 843-5712 4-29
Sublime 1. bedroom furnished apartment for 1-
room, plus month plus utility insurance.
8375 at 5 p.m.
4-28
Garden plots for rent. Four sizes already plowed, textured, and drained. Irrigated with well water.
Large house, 3 to 4 bedrooms. Rural type setting. 2 car garage. Phone 843-9573. 4-29
Sublease—for summer new 2 baiters; apt.
location right next to campus; 841-929-8999,
841-929-9000.
2 bdrm. luxury bath plus 1½ furnished fully equipped bathroom with heated lavender. Care for $250 per month. $250 per month.
Large 1 bedroom AC apartment with fireplace,
large basement, free parking. Vacation
starting August. Tempe pool price.
$579/month.
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
AM Part Stop
Furnished apartments, one bedroom, air condition-
er, 14th Floor. W 14b, W 10b, Avail May 1,
after 5; B 12, B 9, B 6, B 4, B 2
Sublease for summer. Mid-May to August 15.
Minimum completely furnished. Closet to
841-697-8171.
To submit May 29 - August 15, Clean, spacious 4-8,
room. Clean to campus and downstairs Call 645-
320-1745
Female graduate student studyious, non-smoking female to share 2 bedroom apartment for summer and next year. $40/mo. and part of salary. Contact Mary C. Avery 4-298-6179 or 648-4577
For Rent-One bdm. apl .cle to campus,
$125 mcm. up. pd AVAL 841-208. 4-30
6-2021
Sublearning studio apartment over summer (Meadowbrook). Call John after 2 print. 814-645-1654.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-produce products, the price is based on the work of the GRAHMOPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. If it
Tremendous selection of guitars, ampis, drums,
soundboards. Shop Keswick Studio, choose from Gibbon
Shop, Keyboard Studio Studios, choose from Gibbon
Shop, Ampel Kustom, Green, and many others.
Give your music a fresh look with guitar or bass.
Shop Keswick Studio, choose from Gibbon
Shop, Ampel Kustom, Green, and many others.
COST **10%** - Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area Single-unit or package Register for free CD or DVD. Call Dave. Phone 882-658. Earnings 6 to 10.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialties.
BEL AIR ALUMINUM ELECTRIC, 845-3060, 3090, W. 4th, c/n
845-3060, 3090, W. 4th, c/n
Western Civilization Notes—On Sale
Make sure out of Western Civilization
Makes sense.
1) 6. Study guide
2) 8. Study guide
3) For exam preparation
"New Analyst"
preparation
for exam preparation
"New Analysis on the Condition"
Available now at Town Crier Stores
Excellent selection of New & Used家具 & Furniture
trades. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704
9th Street, New York, NY 10022.
WE SELL FOR LESS—11 to 6.30. Good used furniture: Gas and electric ranges; Refrigerators; Microwave ovens; Kitchen appliances; Have Layaways—weekly free delivery. 1228 East Dairy, Toeko, Phk. Toe 1-722-355 or 1-722-356.
6" x 4" covered trailer. Make an offer. Call after 5 p.m. 841-1008. 4-26
I have to leave town. Must sell 9 Triumph GTE.
I don't care how much you have to spend, call
811 or go to www.triumphgte.com
super summer伞裙 75 Cissiini Italian motor
brake pad balloon pailton亮红短裤 $300 or best offer $419.99
73 VV Super Beetle, 4-speed, AM radio, rear door defender, excellent condition 4-168 4-26
1973 Toyota Celleca LST 4x. Excellent condition.
Fully loaded. Lease, lot. 864-507-4266,
4265, or write box 2201.
4-266
4-265
1971 Chevrolet Malibu, a/b, c/p/b, p/ah, A/M FM, 5/8-
chr, own owner, excellent car, $1300, 4SHS
1972 Chevrolet Malibu, a/b, c/p/b, p/ah, A/M FM, 5/8-
chr, own owner, excellent car, $1300, 4SHS
Radial Tire Cleareason! Your choice of any size, 145-150, 145-152, 145-153, 145-157, 145-158, 147-159, 148-159, ARTB-158, CRT-159, 165-14, BRB-174, Ray Stonebuckle's 929 Mass. come thirteen miles behind Woolworths. Mass. come thirteen miles behind Woolworths.
Final price cut! Magnygour comic screen. Encore
price cut to $100 to cut to $100.
Rocksey Backyard, 59-428
4-28
Toyota Corolla, 69” mps in city. runs great.
no problems; must sell. Q411-816. leave me
in touch.
Used Motorola color portable, only $149.00 at
Rayback Stone's 929 Mass.
68 Corvette Roadster, 327, 400 ft. 4-apartment, fully furnished with living room, truck (no orest on feet - 316-345-294) or 316-345-293
Sony sale! Save! now on Sony radio, clock race,
18-9pm Tuesday, 9-12am Wednesday, 9-22am
292, Mast 04, Open Thursday nites. 6-7pm
Sunday.
C. BADS-TOOTH -automatics-securesion 20% OFF
C. BADS-TOOTH -automatics-securesion 82% OFF
Ray-Audio E. 16, 6th B. 824-357, Audio Specials
SCUBA-exposure suit-tart-rigger with sub-
mersion helmet filled, excellent fill.
K84-887-852.
Bonnie Bell 10-0-6 lotion in a spray! Soothes everything from sunburn to tired feet. Round tube with applicator.
Bargain used books. Texts, fiction, medical, law.
Bargain used Parkway shopping In Center
May 3 to June 17.
Round Concert can save Mothers Day gift program. Round Concert includes 49TH Hilton Head, Huddleup, 49TH Hiltonhead, Carly McGee, 49TH Hiltonhead. $250.00
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Pai Keau
Indian Trader
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
143-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
843-9891
19th & Mass.
843-1306 10-5 Tues.-Sat.
RUGS- CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUP BOARD
EXECUTIVE
104 SUMMIT AVE.
104 SUMMIT AVE.
10-5 Monday. Saturday
GUARP/CUT/PRAL ADDRESS amplifier, $125, 384
Ohio. Apt. 3, See D. Don Seffert.
4-27
Losing your tint? Get a sum lamp at Round Corner Drug Store 765-843. Mass. 842-200. 4-29
THE LOUNGE
194 Yushan 200 Endure w/hatch! Runs great!
Mats sell-only $490 or best offer $435. 6-27
1967 TRA, high performance, top speed 145
1968 TRA, high performance, top speed 148
Call or stop by call 1006 Haskell. 144-4-28
**cupressus** is here Pure cedar spray at Round Corn Drug Store, 801, Mass. 843-2000. 4-29
*Honda 74, Muskitt 175, Must sell, 3,000 miles, like new,
helmets, 60 mg, best offer, 841-3791*
*New
Warma to like a bum? Beach Bum that is Use Hawaiian Tornado Tanning Oil, and leave Avalanche gel on your face.
1971 Dodge Challenger, radial tires, p.s. auto,
carbon cam, amber radio, $1950 or better.
841-644-6488
Bassman Raspian Amplifier 12" Speakers w/
Bassman Raspian Amplifier 12" Speakers w/
Raspian Bass, Collectors tiers, finl condition w/jack-
less bass.
Pannasonic FM-AM Cassette Receiver, Pannasonic
turboable. Prf. Allegro 1500 tape. $125.00
Pannasonic FM-AM Cassette Receiver, Pannasonic
turboable. Prf. Allegro 1500 tape. $125.00
1973 WV Beetle, excellent condition, 30,000 miles,
35 mm. radial tires. Hat 842-605-498
4-29
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Gossen Luna-Pro light meter, Monitor stolle
rue and Kawasaki 100 motorcycle. Call Rob at
0866-345-2722. www.gossengloss.com
4. 14" Charger SB mount for 5-10 cell, Mirched, Matched
to 24" iPhone. Battery life is 97 days after 9 p.m. or com. by 12 p.m.
22 Hassinger
15. wood sailboat with 3fiberglass hull with
brown canvas.
COATPIEK cookeats three. Good condition. B29-701.
COATPIEK cookeats four. Good condition. B29-701.
Bargain univ books. Texts, fiction, medical law,
businesn real estate Parkway shopping Center, May
March
OVATION 12-string guitar, Price reasonable.
414-6184 after 6
4-30
General Electric Stereo Component System
Good condition W will discusr Call 642-
395-0100
9th & Iowa
a quiet corner
HELP WANTED
1895 Burge Sprite, excellent cond. Come see it.
you'll like it, 821-714 after 5:30. 4-30
4-30
75 Black and white 14 "Motorola" Excellent condition
88. Call 823-903-898, 864-601-41
4-27
Sears 10-speed bike.842-7114 after 5:30. 4-30
HELP WANTED: Kansas Students Company
has been offered employment, etc. jobs available now. Flexible
schedule.
Avon can help you have the summer vacation of your dreams. Excellent earnings. Open term. Free tuition.
PART TIME-KEEP $75 PER WEEK FOR 5 MONTHS
TIME-KEEP $125 PER WEEK FOR 6 MONTHS
441-1743. BETWEEN 8 P.M. AND 10 P.M. FOR INTERVIEW
Financial Representative. A leading financial institution has been named by Thomson Reuters to provide Well Mind to all aspects of Consumer lending and to maintain financial resources to support the company's Good starting salary, excellent employee benefits include life and health insurance and relocation benefits of $140,000 for KI, *99th Law*, Lawrence KI, *83-921* or KI, *905*. Mawers LA, *Ka-83-921*
Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence
Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence
Wait, the image has a '+' sign above the first one.
The second one is also an eigendilaffine matrix.
Let's re-read the text carefully.
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Yes, that's it.
Final check of the text:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Wait, looking at the image again, the first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Actually, looking at the image, the first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Okay, I will just output the text.
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Wait, let me look at the image again.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Actually, let's re-examine the image.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Wait, let me look at the image again.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Actually, let's re-examine the image again.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Wait, let me look at the image again.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Wait, let me look at the image again.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Actually, let's re-examine the image again.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Wait, let me look at the image again.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Wait, let me look at the image again.
The first one has a '+' sign above it. The second one has no signs above it. The third one has a '+' sign above it. So it's:
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
"Eigendilaffine matrix in two coeherent hence"
Actually, let's re-examine
Young woman over 21 to work in our club area, and perform routine administrative tasks. Parts of the program are designed for non-seniors.
Full summer employment for reliable young persons on custom harvest view. Experience must include:
The Robbya廷 Club needs 2 attractive ladies and a friend in person at the Hamadani Inn tenderness Apple in person at the Hamadani Inn.
College English teachers; possible openings this week for teaching literature, education literature, course MA in English and writing, teaching English at the University of Kansas, or teaching English at the University of Kansas. For information write James A. Gwen, English Department, University of Kansas, 60645. An Enail Opportunity. English Employee. Qualified men and women to teach English at the University of Kansas.
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Bahai' Club Meeting, April 5, 19 7:30 p.m. Oreball Ballroom, Union
Bahai Faith
Summer work, Johnson County area, Phil C.
4-30
864-6842
PROGRAMMER/ANALYST available June 18, two positions under direction of manager of management design, coding and other programming tasks. Prepares elements of program and system design; teaches school diploma required with three years in program position. Graduates with (COBEL degree) College degree preferred with prior experience at college or university on the job; must have a graduate resume to L. W. West University of Kansas. 3237 Broomfield Road. Application deadline: May 5. An equal opportunity employer. Women and minorities encourage to apply.
COMPUTER PROGRAMMER available June 18.
Two positions. Under direction of Systems and
Technology, develop computer software and other programming tasks. College degree deg-
ree required. Training course, course or one year in
L. W. West, University of Kansai 60449. Applica-
tion may be made to the employer. Women and minorities encouraged to
apply.
LOST AND FOUND
COLLEGE STUDENTS NOW HIRING FOR SUMMER WORK IN SUMMER CALL FOR INTERNS WEEKS IN SUMMER CALL FOR INTERNS RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT INTELLECTUAL CAPACITIES AND STATE STATE STATE KANSAS CITY, KANSAS
**STUDENTS:** SUMMER EMPLOYMENT, Pinkerts Incorporated is now laking applications for the Greater Kansas City area guards in the Greater Kansas City area guard record (traffic violations) have been recorded (track traffic violations) have been day through Friday. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Room 763. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Room 763. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Room 763. In spirit in person. An Equal Opportunity Employer.
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank-90th & Mass., and First National Bank-187 West 2rd.
Lott: 2. rings, in East Lakes; John at stadium
during relay, Friday; April 6. Call 864-1530 4-29
Lost-large, black and white male, Biberian
woman, 43-year-old with tag to wear
842-867. Keep听
Found: Gold rimmed glasses by Potter, April 16 Call: 842-5799 4-28
Bengals in
California and Jewelry
917-538-6200
Cashin
Found a silver bracelet in downtown parking lot. Foreign make. Call 842-3240 to claim. 4-28
Lost: on campus, red and white blue-eyed
cowboy, 4 mos. mired, misadjusted
849-5976
4-30
Found black lamborger puppy in Oread hall next to
numb 843-429. 4-29
Found a Schwinn owner's manual on campus.
Claim at 111 Flint. 4-28
Found necklace in Women's locker room in Robinson. Call 842-6750 and 4-28
NOTICE
UNDERGRADUATES
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at least when the pages of your 128 page thesis in 5 minutes! See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing needs. Click Copy Center, 684 Massachusetts St., 814-6900.
Publish in Esquire!
Describe your most unforgettable college teacher. 100 words or less. Send to Elizabeth Line May 10, Published authors receive $50. All entries become sole property of Esquire. Send to S. 1023 New Ave, New York, N.Y. 10022.
The Cabash Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Full
Meal for $25. The special includes a six-
cake sandwich, call 845-8361 for reservation.
Cabash Cafe is located at 902 Broadway,
New York, NY 10026.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dish
ware, magazines, televisions. Open daily
843-3577
843-3578
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
EVERY WEEK
RAASCH
Open 9.30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
BankAmericard Mastercharge
P
Planning a trip?
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
*PRESCRIPTIONS FILES AND LINKS DUMPLED WITH PLAYLERS ACCURACY
*COMPLETE OPTICAL
Gildnecker Optical
We offer free consulting and reservations services
SUA / Maupintour
Let Maupintour
642-8208
travel service
Do the LEGWORK For You!!
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest-900 Mess
CITY OF THE CROSS COUNTY
WEST SIDE
KING
CHAMPION OF CHICAGO
CORELLIU
SHAZAAM
WE PRINT
ALL THING!
1035 Mass.
841-1521
if You don't see it, ASK! »» KING GEORGES
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
professional training. Apply for job position
provided. Drive new, pay less.
After 38 years in business, if George doesn't come up on Mondays, George's GPS Shop 727-560-4192.
50% off our entire stock of jewelry. 50% off on
some giveaways. 10% off some giveaways.
Baskets: 12 & E. 18 (downsweep).
QUILTING. FRAMES and HOOPS' Mother's Day day camp, three may 2014 *Prairie Flower* 706, Moss 858
"Baba'ish and the New Era." The definitive
book on the Arabic language in paperback in the Tower Clock Rooftops
of Dubai. (Oxford University Press.)
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 842-910-1111. If
MADAME LENA, E.S.P.-PALM READY-ADVERSOR Buy dream or astronomy and get help from experts. Learn about problems. For more information, call 862-1331 or come to SCSI South Tepekla Blvd., Topkala.
INTERESTED IN NO-FRILLS LOW COST JET
PACKS? FOR EARLY SCHOOL YEARS, FARE
Far East EDUCATIONAL FLIGHTS have been
helping people travel on a budget with maxi-
mum savings. Prices start at $219 for 30
years. For more info call toll free 800-225-5590.
Earn up to $2 half-hour Psychology study —
1 hour of study at the University of New
Study on biology on board letter Level 3. Range
on course for 10 hours.
Come one—Come all, May Day Festival—a weekend of education, conversation, and celebration. Foe Kratzmann, Participate in workshops See House "Pot luck stunts" and football "Five for five." Pot luck stunts and football "Free kick" on their Coalition and Commission on the Status of Women for registration and information. Funded by Stakeholder Association.
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTORING-Competence, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 009, 010, 012, 014, 015, 016, 018, 019, 020, 020
MATH TUTOR with MA in mathematics. Call 841-3706 after 6 p.m.
tf
Trying to tell a musical instrument or sound equipment? Call me at McKinney-Mason. 814-269-3010.
THE SKYS THE LIMIT? Virtually any jewelry design possible. Professional (IBFA degree) gold-aluminum. Complete stone cutting, wide wearability. Certified jewelry manufacturer guaranteed. 841-3833 or 843-6979. **ff**
Passport and revise photo made at reasonable rates. For appointments call Dave's Davis, 842-675-3190.
TRAVEL
EUROPE
1 loan
12 economy
lan
INVAN
Call
Caj
Airline payment required
800-325-4867
Unittravel Charter
SOUTH AMERICA - ISHAREL - AFRICA - ASIA
AGENCY. Inc. 1970 First Avenue, Truckee, CA
Agency No. 524-036-7287. First Avenue, Truckee, CA
AGENCY NO. 524-036-7287. First Avenue, Truckee, CA
TYPING
THEISH BINDING—The Quick Copy Center is your headquarters for fast, fast and binding and Copy-Printing. Fast and binding and The Quick Copy Center, 835 Mass. 841-4000. tf Professional typing, reasonable, work guaranteed, experienced, mime paper, thesis, design, electric, A.R., Social Carol, 842-0724. 5-11
Ball Park Baseball
Now YOU can own YOUR OWN copy of the GREATEST SPORTS GAME. Write for free details!
Experienced typist—term papers,heets,misc.
Assoc. with BCS of Spelling, spellin.
address: 843-604, Mrs. Wrigley
1225 E. 47th St., Chicago, IL 60607
Box 3422-U Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Typhid editor, IBM PCite a/cle. Quality work.
Typist, IBM PCite. These dissertations welcome
11-23. Mail M2-8197.
Insight INTO LIFE
RECORDED MESAGE (24h)
842. 4441
Expert, IBM Selectric, term paper, thesis,
textbook. Req.: BS or equivalent with writing spelling corrected. Req. JAH 841-3069.
I do damned good typing. Peggy. 842-4476. 5-11
Need an experimented typist? IBM Solitaire 2
tablescan with tape card (titanium).
Rhomb. Pam A at Dau 678-91.
Experienced typist. IMR Selective, all kinds of typing. Call 843-842-335, 843-997-836. Eville. Call 843-842-335.
Do will typing. Eilee electric Term papers and
No thesis. Proofreading Mays, Hagy, 89-
0584
**TYPNG** We have many return customers who want to be represented by our business. Call Linda or Mimi and we appreciate your business. Call Linda or Mimi.
Experienced typtid—themes, term papers, paper
i.e. IBM Selectrix, call: Calli Linda 843-1168-511
WANTED
Experienced typist will type term papers, theses,
books, all general typing in my home office.
B411, 849-0148.
In Kansas City—quick service, experienced, will
deliver on time. Salary: $325-$425 per week.
Name: Daniel Donelson. 913-649-8199 or 913-838-1333.
Roommate for summer in K.C. Two bedrooms
utilize two furnished rooms 964-863-4580
4.5K
Two roommates summer and next year. Share large 3 bed, two bath apart. Have shared kitchen. Facilities Quire, close to campus. Available 10th May; must be on full-time/month, share afternoons. Calby, K42-8668
Studious female roommate to two bedroom
doubles and house work with male student. 841-
215. 841-307.
Responsible undergrad female wants apt. or
transfer to graduate school in environmental
exchanging housework, baby care,
bathroom cleaning, laundry.
Roommate, serious student, normally only
roommate, extra少女, 573. Accept A412-4287 at
5-4-28
Recommended for large 2 bedroom apt. May
be furnished with private bath, student
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BRIDGE- Two engineering sensors would like to be connected with a light fixture for conversation and a light game of bridge.
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Moaday, April 26,1976
University Daily Kansan
SUA and Cowtown Present
MICHAEL MURPHY AND EMMYLOU HARRIS
IN CONCERT
Tuesday, May 4th 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
General Admission Tickets On Sale NOW $5 Advance $6 Day of Show
UPCOMING COWTOWN CONCERTS
LYNYRD SKYNYRD - THE OUTLAWS May 11th 8 p.m. Municipal Auditorium K.C.-Mo. $6 Advance [Reserved]
FOGHAT-U.F.O.
May 12th 8 p.m. Municipal Auditorium K.C.-Mo. $6 Advance [Reserved]
THE TUBES May 16th 8 p.m. Memorial Hall K.C.-Ks. $5 Advance [Reserved]
WILLIE NELSON-POCO-FLYING BURRITO BROTHERS
May 30th 7:30 p.m. Municipal Auditorium K.C.-Mo. $6.50 [Reserved]
TICKETS FOR ALL SHOWS ON SALE NOW AT: Kief's in Lawrence & Capers Corner's Records in K.C. Mail Orders Send To: Cowtown Production, P.O. Box 10314, K.C.-Mo. 64111 [Money Orders Only - Enclose Stamped Self Addressed Envelope & 50c per order]
Therapy students gain experience teaching elderly
Rv.IENNY CARTER
Step into the future and imagine yourself in another 50 or 60 years. Your body moves more slowly and those old joints are a little too stiff for you to bend down and pick up the pencil that fell under the desk. Your mind doesn't always think as clearly and quickly as it once did, but you're still very much alive. At least you think you are; it just seems that people have forgotten you since you
In a growing awareness of the problems of aging, occupational therapy students are gaining teaching experience and a greater understanding of people by teaching crafts to the elderly at Babcock Place, the Ballard Community Center and the Eudora Nursing Home.
"They're letting us use them for teaching experience and we're giving them something to do with their time," Judy Beger, Lawrence sophomore, said Saturday.
Each student in therapeutic media classes goes to one of the centers four times a semester, twice as a guest.
ONCE A WEEK, groups of four students visit the
centers. The two scheduled as teachers select an activity and buy the needed materials for it.
Ray Orth, Sublette sophomore, said this was designed to teach them to use the least money possible to create activities that are satisfying to the necole.
He said he didn't mind the expense.
"go to me expense any day for the happiness those older people got from it," he said. "Each following week there were more waiting and the ones that had come before were back."
One week they made territories, Virginia Daewtier, Herrington senior, said. She and her partners set up the materials step-by-step with cards explaining each item. Colored charts showing how to make sand and pebbles were passed around so the people could feel the materials while they were explained.
**ORTH WAIT ONE of his activities was to cut cardboard backs for pictures. Different colors of burlap were glued to the cardboard and the elderly used them. The second layer was on the board. Macrame cord was used for borders.**
"They really turned out some beautiful things," Orth said.
Other activities included making papier-mache pots for plants, wooden wall hangings and tissue
Beger said, "Until you teach, you don't realize how much you have to think things through, even the simplest activities, to make sure you have the clearest possible way of explaining it."
All activities must be planned with the limitations of the elderly in mind. Sarah Getty, St. Francis sophomore, gave the example of working with arthritics. They can't use scissors, she said, so all materials must be pre-cut or a different way must be found to do the project.
Getty said that all the activities must be simple. "THEY REALLY afraid of doing things on the own; they always want you to help. They're afraid they'll ruin the project themselves," she said.
Terrie Caldwell, Windsor, Conn. junior, said there was one man in the beginning who was difficult to deal with because he would talk all the time but wouldn't participate in any of the activities. She said she day said to him. "We've talked enough. Do that for me, then we can talk about what you want to."
"I'd like to go back and see him," she said. "He knew a little about everything."
Although the projects are simple, said Leah Hoyt, Bartlesville, Okla. junior, the elderly love the project. "It was one of my favorite things," she
"Everything we've done works on the creativity of the elderly, which I think a lot of people ignore."
Orth said that at first he was "turned off" at the idea of working with the elderly.
"BUT THAT CHANGED when I saw the hearts and lives of these people brighten from the short time they were alone."
The teaching experience with the elderly brought new ideas for some and confirmed old ideas for others.
This was the first experience with the elderly for Beger.
"I was never in contact with the elderly; I was a friend and my grandparents. It really gave me a sense of comfort."
For Hoyt, the experience opened new possibilities.
She said she had originally planned to work with
children but her plans might change, depending on what jobs were available.
Getty, on the other hand, said she wanted to work with children so she could feel she would be impatient.
Her experience at Eudora with handicapped elderly was depressing, she said.
'It's sad. You know they're not going to get better and all your activities are going to have to get easier'
BUT CALDWELL, who has worked as a volunteer in cardiac intensive care, said she loved working with the elderly because of the wisdom they have to offer.
Though Katie Schonberg, Wichita sophomore, found the experience fun, she said. "It's not just for me. You have to be totally dedicated to it. I'm just not like that."
For Orth the experience brought "a stronger realization of how we often forget about older people like they don't exist, because they don't carry much force in our world.
"I thought it was one of the best activities as a student that I've had to do all year."
BEST SELLER
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
RAIN
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.131
Tuesday, April 27, 1976
Beth Boozer eyes opportunity to join golf pros
CIA still needed, Bush says
See story page 7
Staff Writer
By JERRY SEIB
George Bush, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, said here last night that Americans shouldn't dwell on the CIA's threats against past, but should view the agency as open to new strategies.
"I don't want to spend my time as director of this rather controversial agency logistic unit."
Lecture Series, addressed a crowd of about 1.000 in the University Theatre.
Bush, speaking in the Vickers Memorial
BUSH SPOKE JUST hours after the release of a 615-page report by the Senate and House, which showed the gun violence.
vestigators found "duplication, waste,
inertia and ineffectiveness in the in-
fusion" (McCarthy 2014).
He was greeted as he arrived at the theater by a group of about 50 protesters carrying signs that said "CIA Out Of Campus" and chanting anti-CIA slogans. The protest was sponsored by the Iranian Students Association.
Bush said he had presented the final testimony to the committee yesterday.
He said the report was "one, some of which I'll agree, some not," but he believed the report was on paper or digital.
★ ★ ★
Bush did say he be objected to release of the CIA budget, a matter that the Senate
CIA abuses are revealed
WASHINGTON (AP)—Billion of dollars are being spent on U.S. intelligence operations, including some that are self-defeating, have misled the public and have unintentionally killed universities and the press, the Senate Intelligence Committee said yesterday.
The committee, however, backed off from revealing the exact amount of intelligence that would have been collected from CIA Director George Bush saying that disclosure of the figure would damage national security. The panel voted 6 to 5 to let the full Senate decide whether to disclose it.
In a 651-page report culminating a 15-month investigation, the committee said it found "duplication, waste, inertia and ineffectiveness in the intelligence community," but also emphasized that "it found much that was good and proper."
THE REPORT also revealed that the CIA:
—Had conducted 900 major covert projects since 1961;
—Had planted stories in foreign publications that had unwittingly been picked up and circulated by American news organizations:
—Until recently used about 50 journalists and other employees of U.S. news organizations along with a handful of other activists and missionaries as secret agents abroad and
-Is using several hundred American university administrators, professors and graduate students for intelligence and propaganda purposes.
The committee recommended passing laws barring CIA use of American journalists and urged that no scholars be used as examiners. The committee knew of senior university officials.
ALTHOUGH the report didn't reveal the intelligence budget, it strongly indicated that spending for fiscal 1978 was about $4.2 billion for the CIA, Defense Intelligence Agency, National Security Agency and various reconnaissance programs.
Other findings contained in the report included:
The CIA has used philanthropic foundations to pass funds to "a seemingly limitless range of covert-action programs affecting youth groups, labor unions, universities, publishing houses and other private institutions in the United States and abroad." 700 grams of more than 184 grams from 1983 and 1966, more than 100 involved partial or complete CIA funding, according to the report.
IN 1987, covert funding of American organizations was banned following the disclosure by Ramparts magazine of CIA funding of the National Student Association. The new guidelines forced the CIA to withdraw its support from many domestically
based organizations, including Radio Liberty and Radio Europe, but not before the agency advanced them large sums of money that enabled them to continue their operations as much as two years, the committee said.
ACCORDING TO the committee, most of these contacts are "purely for the purpose of asking an academic about his travels abroad or open, informal consulting on subjects of a academic expertise" and of making "dangerous degrees" of American private institutions.
The report also noted that although new guidelines forced the CIA to sever many of its connections with domestic institutions the guidelines placed no restrictions on passing funds to persons associated with those same institutions, and these were in contact with "many thousands of United States academics at hundreds of U.S. academic institutions."
News stories planted by the CIA in foreign publications for propaganda purposes sometimes turn up in U.S. newspapers and websites. One former CIA official told the committee that "if you plant an article in Sunday's paper overseas . . . there is no way of guaranteeing that it not going to be published and published by the Associated Press in this country."
committee voted to let the entire Senate decide
STORIES PLANTED by the CIA in
See ABUSES page 5
LA OUT OF CAMPUS
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
A group of about 50 protesters from the Iranian Students Murphy Hall last night. The protesters continued marching and Association greeted those attending George Bush's speech at shouting slogans for the duration of Bush's speech.
Noisy arrival
CIA budgets are given to congressional committees, Bush said, but the budget shouldn't be made public because that would jeopardize CIA sources and would be in conflict with the 1947 law that established the CIA.
"THE CIA REPORTS every penny of its budget to congressional oversight committees," he said. "But I don't believe giving Congress something of that nature is incompatible with not giving them to the public."
Bush said he couldn't promise an end to covert operations by the CIA or to the CIA's practice of employing college students and faculty members to do some of its saving.
"I would not rule out all further covert activity," he said. "We need a covert strategy."
Bush said that the Senate committee hadn't prohibited the use of secret operations, and that the committee's chairman, Sen. Frank Church, D-Daho, voiced approval of some covert activity in his final report.
Covert operations are the only possible action in some cases. Bush said.
"SOMEWHERE BETWEEN sending in the Marines and sitting on your hands you must do something. We probably need some kind of such capability." he said.
Bush said he believed it was the right of college students and teachers to volunteer for CIA service without being reprimanded by academic institutions.
There is no Constitutional barrier preventing college instructors and students from sharing their experiences.
See CIA page 3
SILVERING
Defending the CIA
George Bush, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, spoke to a crowd at the University Theatre last night as part of the Vickers Memorial Lecture series. The series was established in 1970 in honor of J.A. Vickers, founder of the Vickers Petroleum Company and a former student at the University of Kansas.
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Classified employs get pay raise
By JIM COBB
About 3,700 classified employees at the University of Kansas will receive estimated pay increases for fiscal 1977 ranging from 3.7 per cent to 8 per cent as a result of closing action Friday by the Kansas Legislature.
The increases were part of a pay raise bill for state employees that was approved just before the 1976 legislative session adjourned.
Also approved in the session's final hours was an omnibus appropriations bill that included provisions affecting three KU programs.
Both bills must still be approved by Gov. Robert F. Bennett before becoming law.
The approved pay raise was a $15-a-month across-the-board increase plus 2.8 percent of the base pay. These increases are separate from annual merit "step" pay increases of about 5 per month.
THE STEP increases are granted to most classified employees each year to keep salaries ahead of cost-of-living increases.
Employees already receiving top-of-the-shelf pay in their job classifications.
Under the pay raise plan, an employee now making $500 a month would make $29, an increase of 5.8 per cent. An employee making $1,000 a month would get an additional $45 as pay rise.
- whose employees also received 5 per cent merit step increases, their total pay hikes would be 10.8 per cent if they made $600 a month, and 9.3 per cent if they made $1,000.
At lower salary levels, pay increases are proportionately higher than for employees.
WAYNE SPELLMAN, manager of personnel transactions and records, said yesterday that he thought the approved pay plan would help lower-income employees.
Spellman said about 1,500 employees at the Lawrence campus would receive the raises.
The KU Med Center has about 2,260 classified employees.
Classified positions at KU and the Med Center include office workers, service technicians, and staff.
B. E. "Pete" Smith, personnel director of the Med Center, said the Med Center had so many classified employees because of the many hospital, clerical and technical jobs
department of buildings and grounds and
University-intake nurses nurses and some
staff members
SUCH EMPLOYEES are hired to do specific jobs and are classified by Civil
Unclassified employees, including most administrators, instructors and research staff.
See CLASSIFIED page 3
Field hockey's fate and funding unsure
Although women's field hockey was cut from next year's athletic budget, the team's fate remains undecided until decisions are made on possible funding.
Marian Washington, director of women's athletics, said yesterday that the administration had promised about $2,000 in funding but that an additional $4,000 was needed.
Jill Grubaugh, Sports Committee co-chairman, said the committee was waiting for Washington's decision about filing a request for Senate funds.
Tasheff said that if additional funds were allocated to the team, they would come from the fiscal 1977 unallocated funds. She said that the money would be available July
Washington said there was a possibility that the money could be obtained through supplemental Student Senate funding. But she said she was waiting to hear from the Sports Committee before making any requests to the Senate.
GRUABUAH SAID she would meet today with Tedde Tashseff, student body president, after Tashseff discusses the sport's funding with Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
Grubbaugh said a bill to fund women's field hockey could be presented at the May 5
She said she thought the Senate would be sympathetic to women's athletics.
TASHEFF SAID she was kisplest of the funding because the state might not fund enough money for the team next year and the Senate would again be left with the same
"Is the Student Senate going to get itself in a position of picking up the loose ends of the party?"
Women's field hockey was cut from next year's budget when the total women's athletic budget request to the state and city budget was dropped from $13,980 to $153,105.
In the final budget request, nine sports were allocated $82.793.
The hockey team's original request for next year was for $7,728, which didn't inquire about other funding.
See FIELD HOCKEY page 3
2
Tuesday, April 27, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
Grants aid youth programs
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert F. Bennett announced yesterday that Kansas has received federal grants totaling $1.14 million for summer youth programs aimed at helping young people gain skills and develop interests.
The governor said the program would provide young people, 14 to 21, with part-time summer jobs with federal, state and local government agencies, or with other opportunities.
These enrolled in the program will work 30 hours a week for up to eight weeks. "This work experience program is designed to enable young Kansans to return to school and complete their education," the governor said. "It will also give them important work experience and help prepare them for full-time work."
Inmates release captives
LANSING—Two American Indians, apparently angered over restrictions on a weekend cultural event, seized six hostages at knifepoint yesterday.
The hostages were freed unarmed 90 minutes later when they were able to separate themselves from the two inmates when negotiations began with Prison Security.
The two inmates were placed in solitary confinement after being seized by guards, Maynard said.
State Corrections Secretary Robert R. Raines said the inmates were apparently upset over restrictions on a weekend powwow—one of a series of cultural events inmates are allowed to stage at the prison. He said the inmates asked to have 25 guests, but were allowed only 15.
Kissinger tours Zambia
LUSAKA, Zamia—Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger took his African tour to Zambia yesterday after hearing from Tanzanian President Julius Nyerere that "the war has started" for black-majority rule in Rhodesia and "can't be avoided." Kissinger told a news conference before leaving Tanzania that he had assured Nyerere "of U.S. commitment to pursue an active policy in southern Africa towards the objective of achieving majority rule." He said he would elaborate today at a luncheon here on the third leg of the seven-nation tour he began in Nairobi during the weekend.
Vietnams to be reunited
BANGKOK. Thailand-National Assembly members who were elected in Vietnam on Sunday will meet within 60 days to adopt a new constitution and ratify the reunionification of the North and South, according to Vietnamese officials.
The South fell to the Communists a year ago in a military collapse.
i.e. assembly is expected to be a powerless, rubber-stamp legislature like those in other Communist countries, with real power being retained by a small Com-
munist state.
No date for the reunification of the country has been set.
Soviet minister dies
MOSCOW-Defense Minister Andriel A. Grecchi, reputed to have first opposed and then organized the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968, died in Paris.
In 1838, as commander of Soviet forces in East Germany, he was believed to have personally engineered the suppression of the revolt of East Germans.
The death of the 72-year-old marshal, apparently due to a heart attack, left vacancies in both the Soviet military and political establishment. No successors
Authors under pressure Russian translator says
Writers of Soviet literature subject themselves to strict self-sensorship so that their stories can be published, according to the laws of Russian literature in and translator of Soviet literature.
"We don't and cannot really know Soviet literature because of censorship," she said.
Markstein, a native of Vienna, spoke to about 40 people in the Council Room of the Kansas Union last night on "Censorship and Self-Censorship in Soviet Literature." The lecture was sponsored by the Russian and European Center at the University of Kansas.
literature because of censorship," she said.
SOME STORIES BY Soviet authors aren't even published, she said, and others are not subjected to the "internal editor" to make them.
She said the internal editor was the writer editing his own stories so they could be published.
Not only does the internal editor censor stories being written now, she said, but he also has to deal with the fact that
she said a book by Veswolod Ivanov, "The Letter C," as in condescension, was changed after the revolution. In the original version, Markstein said, the main character was worried about helping his daughter, who was a prostitute. This was changed in the second version as the man became worried about being a good proletarian.
SHE SAID THE writers had to resort to shameless maneuvering to get their stories on the road.
"The writers are destroying themselves for the sake of ideas that they do not believe
"Criticism of Soviet realism is nonexistent," she said. "There is a big gap between them."
Now there is an internally recognized truce between the Soviet writers and censors, Markstein said. The authors can write their own books, but the censors will keep their hands off, she said.
MARKSTEK RECEIVED a doctorate in philosophy in 1954 from the University of Vienna. She majored in Slavic studies and East European history.
She has published several articles on Russian literature, contemporary Russian social thought and unofficial Russian literature.
She and her family lived in Russia from 1940 to 1946. They had fled the fascist rule of Austria but returned after World War II. She also spent a year and a half studying at the University of Moscow after her family's return to Austria.
LOOKING FOR A NEW NEST?
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2 bedroom apts - on KU campus - ufflies paid
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He said an attempt would be made to notify as many groups that would be affected by a city-wide public transit system as possible.
Steve McMurry, Student Senate Transportation Committee chairman, made the announcement at the committee's meeting last night.
Now Taking Applications for Summer and Fall
After these needs are determined, McCormick will be asked to establish a consultant who would begin study of the
MECURY, WHO has worked for several years to get funds for the study, said the Lawrence City Commission and the University had both agreed last fall to make the necessary changes. The Board allowed for the study. Also last fall, the Lawrence School Board board made 600 available.
Office Hours Till 8 p.m. Mon.-Thurs.
Till 5:30 Fri. 10-4 Sat. 2-5 Sun.
The United States Department of Transportation has made $18,000 available to the University of Kansas and the city of Omaha to assist students in the city and ways of fulfilling them.
Now that the funds are available, McMurry said, he will work with city officials to formulate an the scope of future public transit needs in Lawrence.
Money available to study city's mass transit needs
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McMURRY SAID he hoped the consultant could be hired around July 1, the date on which the funds become available. The results may be completed in December, he said.
nature and feasibility of a future city-wide transit system based on the city's needs. The study would include a wide variety of infrastructure including bicycle trails and buses.
"We want to be very careful about it," he said.
"If it needs to be expanded for other people in the city, then we need to find out," he said.
HE SAID ONE reason the city was interested in the study was to make sure that creating a city-wide bus system would be economically possible.
The only bus system in Lawrence,
Lawrence Bus Co., is operated by Duane
Ogle and funded by student transportation
fees, bus pass revenue and user fees.
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University Dally Kansan
Tuesday, April 27, 1976
3
Novel subjects in book collections
Winning entries in the Snyder Book Collecting Contest cover areas as varied as virtuoso piano music, the French novelist Claude Monet and novels by the creator of Fu Manchu.
The contest, sponsored annually by Elizabeth Snyder and the Oread bookstore, was judged Friday. Prizes were awarded at a luncheon in the Kansas Union.
First and second prize winners in both the undergraduate and graduate divisions received $100 and $50 gift certificates redeemable at the Union bookstore.
JOHN BARKETT, Wichita senior, won the undergraduate division and Joseph W. Algaer, Grandview, Mo., senior, was second. The graduate division won by job one, with Lawrence the graduate student, with John Chorn, Lawrence graduate student, placing second.
Barkett's winning collection was on virtuose piano music. He said Friday he had been collecting books since he became a teacher during a period during his senior year in high school.
He said piano music was his hobby and had been his major when he first came to KU. He is now majoring in political science. Barkett said he was surprised to win the
Barkett said he was surprised to win the
contest because he wasn't sure he'd even be allowed to enter.
Most of the books in Barkett's collection are music scores.
"WHEN YOU THINK of a book collection, you think of a book of words," he said.
The subject of Aiglear's collection was the works of Max Rohrer, the British novelist and editor.
Algaier said he became interested in Rohmer when he bought one of his books three years ago. He said he found Rohmer's work difficult to obtain in libraries.
Haug's winning collection was called "Interpretations of the French Revolution."
THE BOOKS WERE useful to his studies, he said, as he was working for a doctorate in French history. Haug said he bought many of his books in France, where he spent seven
The nucleus of Haug's collection is a book inscribed in France in the middle of a 39th century.
years. They would be difficult to obtain in this country, he said.
Chorn's collection of books on vertebrate paleontology was also useful to his studies, he said. He is working towards a master's degree in systematics and ecology.
His most important book, he said, is Gideon Mantell's "The Fossils of the South Downs," published in 1822 and often thought to contain the first reference to dinosaurs.
The contest was judged by Mary Michener of the Adventure bookstore in Lawrence; John A. Weir, professor of physiology and orat biology; William P. Jacobs, professor of sociology; Jocus, Lawrence graduate student; and Scott Jones, Denver junior.
Classified pay raise . . .
merit salary increases in fiscal 1977
From page one
All salary changes will be effective July 1,
1976.
Smith said that he wasn't sure what the increases actually would be in dollars.
"But any increase at all is very, very welcome," he said.
The other bill approved Friday includes money to raise resident trainees' salaries at the center and preliminary funding for a new integrated residency program at the Med Center.
$177,250 was included to raise resident's salaries to $11,000 a year. That is $500 above the salary already determined by KU's main 1977 appropriations bill.
THAT LEVEL was previously raised to
CIA needed . . .
From page one
practice doesn't "pollute the academic atmosphere."
The Senate Intelligence Committee
From page one
Field hockey
junior varsity squad of 24 members.
WASHINGTON SAID her minimum
include funds for only the
varsity team
Jane Markert, field hockey coach, said she thought that it was important to have a variety and a junior varsity team so the two could practice together.
--of 35 words per minute or ... Part of the duties will be up dating for all applicants to a central purchasing plan. In addition the ARCC will work with ARC's to develop policies and pro-activity. The ARCC will provide RSRSP and will provide ARH resource materials with the office secretary. AURH is an equal opportunity employer and encourages qualified men and women to join.
88 seniors join Phi Beta Kappa spring semester
A total of 88 seniors, who are either February 1976 graduates or May 1976 degree candidates, have been elected to the Phi Beta Kappa honorary society.
The newly elected members will be in attendance Day, May 24, in Woodruff Auditorium.
A total of 123 persons from this year's class have now been elected to the society. Thirty were chosen on the basis of their academic year and two others graduated earlier.
To be elected, the members had to have a 3.68 grade point average and had to meet the chapter's character requirements. The board would then make an interest in a liberal arts education.
Elected this spring were
Another group of students will be selected from the class after the spring semester to teach at a local college.
Sidney A. Linderk, Prairie Village, Patrick J. Akard, Kiersten L. Browning, Prairie Village, Anderson, Cluster, N.J., J. Reynolds Adams, Hays; Marilyn S. Atlas, Crewe County, M.I.; Kill K. Parker, Prairie Village, Ill.; Mark K. Fassler, Gwennberg, N.W.; Mark I. Ill., Mark K. Fassler, Gwennberg, N.W.; Overland Park, Duke; Dom尼, Overland Park; Marjorie E. Borby, Minden Hills, Kerry Green, Overland Park; Dana, Overland Park; Dallas, Tex.; Tendyly H. Bulkeley, Topsai Janet K. Davis, Texas; Owen Park, Michael Chamber, Garden City
Karl Correll, Partmon; Jeffrag A. Coghill; Thomas J. Huskey; Robert L. Meehan; Richard G. Nollet; Marc Karel Cornell; Partmon; Jeffrag A. Coghill; Thomas J. Huskey; Robert L. Meehan
John C. Hickey, St. Mary, Maryina Hill, Leawood,
Judge J. Howard, Sailain, Maryine Ahmad Hudson, Prairie
Richard Huaching Bred, Green Bred, Michael K. Ireland,
James Richard Hughes, Robert Terry, Kansas
Kansas City, Kan. J罗纳尔·R.凯林, Terry L.
Kansas City, Kan.
Teresa Dorn Frasel, Prairie Village, William Friend, Brantley J. Worthington, William Friend, beryckow, Paid, David G. Dachsel, Prairie Village, Daina Shuebner, Gharavt, Dwitzia S. Hanna, Brian M. Moore, Kaitlin S. Mullen, Harlene, Wikits, Kaitlin Anthony Karhoun, Wikits, Kaitlin Anthony Karhoun, Wikits
Gill, B. Kemsey, Lezeara, Susan H. Ketzer, Derby, Diane R. Kemsey, Susan H. Ketzer, Mary A. Lacob, Columbus, O. Kochman
Martha J. Muller, Mission Hills, Cagnee M. Oglum,
Garden City, Parkside S. Glen, Colby D. Douglale, S.
Parkside R., Northfield M. Wheeler, Marshall
Mahall, Mo.; Bruce David Ryder, Argentinean M.
Lawrence; L.D. Schurz, Geneva, Lawrence; D.
Schurz, L.D. Schurz, Geneva, Davidugh Shua,
Martha J. Muller, Mission Hills, Cagnee M. Oglum,
Garden City, Parkside S. Glen, Colby D. Douglale,
D. C. Smith, Dodge City, Kemmel City, Omaha, Neb.
Nathaniel Taylor, Dodge City, Daniel E. Wickcik, Wichita,
Thompsonville, Daniel E. Wickcik, Wichita,
Markert, who is leaving KU at the end of the semester to return to Central Missouri State University, said she was concerned that hockey was cut entirely from the budget.
"Field hockey is just a low priority sport as far as the athlete director is concerned,"
She said she hoped the Senate would support the field hockey team.
"THE MONEY shouldn't be for hockey," she said, "it should be for Women's Intercollegiate Athletics and should have been requested in the first place."
Tasheff said she thought Washington hadn't wanted to cut field hockey, but had to make a value judgment concerning competition and popular interest in the sport.
Grubbaud said if the Senate didn't fund women's field hockey as an intercollegiate sport, it might apply to the Senate for funds as a club. She said that as a club it would probably require less money and might be funded.
WASHINGTON, HOWEVER, said she was seeking funds for field hockey as an intercollegiate sport and wanted to keep it under the intercollegiate rogram.
Women's field hockey is a six-year program. Emporia Kansas State College is the only other state school with a field hockey team.
BIG GAME
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"I can't justify it," he said. "It shouldn't be done. It was done. When it was being done it was."
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Bush said the Senate investigations hadn't revealed any indication of CIA involvement.
Report said the CIA "is using several hundred American university administrators, professors and graduate students in intelligence and propaganda purposes."
BUSH CONCEDED THAT THE CIA's powers had been misused in the past, saying there were "a number of abuses that were just flat wrong."
But he denied that the CIA was currently conducting any domestic spying, although he admitted it had been involved in domestic affairs before he became director.
This position requires that the individual be in the AURH office from 9 a.m. until 12 noon every week day. The student must qualify for WORK STUDY and be able to TYPE 60 PER MINUTE OR BETTER. TERM ASSISTANT knowledge of machine machines is requested. A knowledge of short-hand would be helpful, but not necessary. WAGE IS $2.20 PER HOUR.
OFFICE
SECRETARY—
IN ASSESSING THE WORLD situation, Bush said that he thought terrorism would increase sharply in many countries soon, and that terrorism would become a major problem for countries such as the United States.
XXXXXXXXXX
"No matter how divergent our opinions are on the steps in the past, I think we can agree that our actions reflect what we know."
in addition to the above responsibilities it is also necessary that the Board of Appeals, the Board of Respondence for AURH and the Board of Appeals, AURH is an equal opportunity employer and enrollees are qualified men and women to apply.
He said there was a tendency to emphasize CLM failures in the past without recognizing the problem.
Nuclear proliferation has steadily increased the possibility that terrorist groups
"I couldn't help but notice the reception committee outside the door," he said. "Isn't it nice to be back from China, where that wouldn't be possible?"
He also said there were Cuban troops in some African countries serving as military
Bush was referent to the 14 months he spent as U.S. envoy to China, a post he left when named director of the CIA last November.
might eventually steal nuclear weapons, he said.
Bush said that 12,000 to 15,000 Cuban troops sent to aid the Communist faction recently in the Angolan civil war hadn't returned home.
that also said he thought Soviet military expansion over the past few years had emphasized modernization, not expansion. He said Soviet military installations were built to emphasize defense, but the Soviets basically a limited anti-ballistic missile system.
Bush spoke while the protesters marched outside the theater, chanting objections to Mr. Bush's plans.
THOSE TROOPS WILL probably remain in Angola for "some time to come," Bush said. He said some of those troops might be housed in Riodina in Rhodesia and other African countries.
Bush acknowledged the protesters at the opening of his speech.
DRINK AND DROWN TONIGHT
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The Student Senate Is Now Taking Applications For
University Senate Committees
- FINANCIAL AID TO STUDENTS
CALENDAR
-LECTURES & CONVENTIONS
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*FOREIGN STUDENTS
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These appointments will be for the 1976-77 school year.
Pick up applications at:
The Student Senate Office, Level 3,
Suite 105 B, The Kansas Union.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: MAY 7,1976
$11,000 by the legislature but was cut back to $10,500 in the main funding bill.
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee
residency program in the College of Health Sciences.
The salaries will be paid to student participating in residency programs at the Med Center and the center's Wichita branch.
An appropriation of $11,644 was given to KU to plan a new integrated family practice
Robert B. Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said plans would be made to develop 12 residency positions at Harvard and four at Wichita for the 1978 fiscal year.
Coming Attractions for
KU CAMPUS VETERANS
Campus Veterans PICNIC—April 25—1-5 p.m.
EMPLOYMENT- Roy Cockerham of the Employment Security Division will be on campus every Wednesday afternoon from 1:30-5:00 to help insure that veterans receive the priority in Job Placement Assistance and that they are entitled to by law. He'll be in room 101, Kansas Union.
Cost $1.00 which includes food (hamburger, hot dogs, chips, etc.) and all the Miller Beer you can drink. Call 864-4478 for info.
"Family Right"
"Family Night"
The Family enjoys a 16" Pizza with 2 Toppings
PLUS Dad gets a 15oz. Drink + Italian Salad
Mom gets a 15oz. Drink + Italian Salad
Kids get
all the soda
they want!
PIZZA
at for
$6.00
on TUESDAY
from
5-9 PM.
at
54+ W.23 st.
THE GREEN PEPPER
CHINESE CROSS STUDIO
The
The oldest and finest Bicycle shop in Lawrence.
Bicycles: Motobecane, Raleigh, Gitane, Masi
Service: We fit a bicycle to your size and adjust it after 30 days (with a followup at 60 days). We'll take care of your bike as long as you own it.
GRAN
SPORT
7th and Arkansas 843-3320
4
Tuesday, April 27, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Opinions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
Security force set
Now that Congress has approved $2.6 million for security for the Republican National Convention in Kansas City, Mo. this August, it's up to the combined metropolitan police forces to plan carefully and thoroughly to maintain order in the face of unfamiliar stresses and problems. They will need the cooperation of everyone to get the job done.
THE 1,213 KANSAS City, Mo., policemen will be joined by policemen from other metropolitan departments and by 300 Missouri State Highway patrolmen. Kansas policemen cannot cross the state line to help with security in Missouri, but they will be busy enough protecting convention-goers who stay in Kansas and the areas in Kansas near Kemper Arena.
Security has been planned carefully. For instance, special behavioral training for policemen will begin soon. Officers will attend a 40-hour workshop in their off-duty hours to learn how to deal with the special stresses and provocations of protesters and demonstrators.
DURING THE convention, there will be seven police command posts—one at Kemper Arena and six others in the city. Equipment for sophisticated communications and detection will be purchased or leased. About 100 additional policemen will be hired for the Kansas City, Mo., force.
The police plan is to make arrests whenever "non-negotiable" violations, as Police Chief Joseph McNamara calls them, occur. These are violations such as destroying property, blocking streets and harassing delegates.
THE COST OF all this police protection, not including secret service costs, fire protection or the cost of Coast Guard patrols on the Missouri River, will be more than $9,000 a day for the nine days (Aug. 11-19) the Platform Committee and the convention are in session.
The goal of the police in all this is to guard, equally, the rights of the community, the demonstrators, the press, the politicians and the convention guests.
Other conventions in recent years, notably the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago, have had problems in doing that. There, riots developed and police were physically pitted against demonstrators.
FOUR YEARS later, in Miami Beach, great care was taken to prevent violence, and the efforts were largely successful.
THE MOST controversial protesters planning to come to Kansas City are members of the Youth International Party, which has joined with some other protest groups to form the Kansas City Convention Coalition.
The coalition is negotiating with the city for camping space and sanitary and transportation facilities for non-delegates. Their goal is to plan sufficiently to prevent violence. The Clippies pummel one of their members, Clyde, one of their members has said, but that is not this group's goal in Kansas City.
IT IS THE Constitutional right of all who wish to come to be there. Kansas City has invited the Republicans and it can't very well tell interested Americans that they can't participate in their own election process.
The rights to assemble and to protest are fundamental. Patience will be needed to deal with bizarre behavior designed solely to attract attention. Those witnesses after all, are asking only these coverage and mass attention for their ideas.
THE CONVENTION guests, it is hoped, will choose to be nonviolent, but it would be well to remember, in any case, that a group has never been neat, silent or easy.
Fortunately for us, the mood of the country has changed since 1968 and 1972. Dissatisfied people are less inclined to choose violence as the best way to get what they want. In this easier atmosphere, community preparedness and involvement can go a long way toward ensuring that the noisy, messy process of democracy has a clear forum in Kansas City this summer.
By Diane Wilson Guest Writer
The big winner in today's Democratic primary in Pennsylvania courts very hard, and even on the ballot. That man is, of course, the extraordinarily well-educated candidate, Hubert Humphrey.
WHILE PRESIDENT Ford
Pennsylvania primary perilous
as the only "real" liberal and the support jackson is getting from the state political machine and organized labor have very nearly canceled other out. That's where good old Hubert
The pressure on Udall and Jackson, however, is nearly as intense. For both of them, every primary could be the last. All it would take is one really bad showing and that would be that. They, therefore, are campaigning just as hard as Carter
On the Primary Trail
CARTER ALREADY was under pressure to show his vote-getting power in industrial states such as Pennsylvania and to show he deserved his front-runner label. Since the release of the new press remark, this pressure has become even more intense.
Carter's so-called lead, which has never been very wide, has been jeopardized by his already infamous "ethnic purity" remark. This "bad choice of words" has been pounced upon by liberal liberals, who have been waiting for a such chance.
If Pennsylvania ends up in a dead heat (a very real
THE RESULT of all this intense pressure and campaling is a very light race. The runner's position, Udall's position
None of them really had much choice in the matter.
and Ronald Reagan have been verbally attacking each other in expectation of their May 1 Texas showdown, the three main announced Democratic candidates have been putting everything they have into preparation. Jimmy Carter and Morris Udall have all spent large amounts of money and time there.
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
possibility), Humphrey will be in fine shape. The Carter boon will have subsided, and Udall will have lost the ability to unable to take up the slack.
latest political scenario, that is when Humphrey will enter the race in an attempt to unite the party. He will offer himself as the candidate who can gain the support of both liberals and machine politicians. Jackson will step aside, and, presto, he will return to his rightful place as gatherer of the labor vote.
Although this scenario probably sounds good to Hubert Humphrey, it obviously isn't Jim Carter's idea of a好梦.
CARTER CAN'T afford to finish third in Pennsylvania. He can barely afford to finish second. He needs to keep up a semblance of momentum so he can do better. Does he enter the race, he can face him on even or better than ever terms.
In the strange world of the
primary trull, Carter is less concerned about how many of Pennsylvania's 134 delegate he wins and more concerned about how he compared with Udall and Jackson.
ESPECIALLY JACKSON.
For inside the three-man battle,
Carter and Jackson are also
two of the two main reasons
There are two main reasons for
this. One is that both of them
have, rightly or wrongly, been
labeled as conservatives. The
other was a militant against
anticampaign trials.
Jackson is playing old politics. He has the support of his machine and the smaller but more effective machine of Philadelphia Mayor Frank Sinatra, who supports it to pull him through.
Carter, on the other hand, is following more in the footsteps
of George McGovenn. His Pennsylvania campaign is being run by fresh blood. Most of his workers have never worked in a political campaign and Carter is counting on them.
SO TODAY IS the Pennsylvania primary. The Republicans will go to the polls. The substantial but comparatively meaningless victory. The Democrats will also go to the polls. Most of them will vote for Gov. Mittenwald, although a few stragglers will vote for Gov. Milton Shannon, who dropped out a couple of months ago but is after all, a Pennsylvania boy.
And all of them, regardless of their intentions, may end up in the long run to have voted for Hubert Humphrey.
1976 NWT SPECIAL FEATURES
WHITEWING
Intramurals offer top challenge
Intramurals at the University of Kansas are many things to many people. For some, they provide the thrill of victory; for others, they cause the agony of defeat. The chances are slim that KU intramurals will ever provide one of the great moments in sports we hear every year. They doubtedly given many participants memories they won't soon forget, even if they try.
After four years of participation, I think I've had more
not, the challenge involves coping with the system and not losing your cool.
IF NOTHING else, the intramural program presents each of the participants with a challenge. That challenge can come in many forms, but it generally originates with the shortages of time and space the program faces. More often than
one of these games can be very hazardous to your health. The fields overlap, so that outwatches you play in front of you. In other words
By John Johnston Contributing Writer
than my share of challenges. The softball season, which is now in progress, is always interesting. Playing outfield in
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words, you're closer to their infield than they are, but you have your back to it. Whenever you hear that glorious sound of bat meeting ball, you have to wonder whether the ball will soon meet your head. And when its your turn to chase down a ball, you have to other game's outfielders. It's a real challenge.
ANOTHER REAL challenge for me came in coed volleyball. First, I managed a team that was forfeit-prove. During our game, we played games by forfeit and won the other two by forfeit. We never played in an official game. Instead, we usually played practice games short-banded or long-tennis, the team that had won by forfeit.
It was probably just as well that we didn't play official games. The rules were so simple, the strict that it was impossible to hit the ball more than three or four times without a violation. Because of this sexual discrimination, we were handcuffed by sexist rules. For
example, the ball couldn't be hit by two consecutive males on one team. It was a real challenge.
TIME LIMITATIONS play have with intramural contests. The softball games are limited to five innings or some more than an hour. If the game is tied at the end of five, whoever is leading after four innings is the winner. Basketball is even worse. After playing an abrupt stop, the clock does not stop until the final two minutes, if the game is tied you go into sudden death overtime. What can you say about sudden death in either calling it insane? Oh, yeah it's a challenge.
These physical limitations on the intramural games are all challenges, but the greatest challenge is knowing your temper—and the primary source of this challenge is officiating. Now, it's always easy to criticize the officials, so they have, but I don't intend to consider the judgment calls they have to make. Let's just say consistency is not their specialty; they sometimes try your pervers.
AS A FRESHIMAN, my first contact with intramural referees came in football. In our first game the quarterback ran the ball and then跑 run. In the next game the official penalized us when our quarterback ran, told us the quarterback could carry the ball. And then died it between the time he received it from center and the
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. KU students should sign the letter and hometown; faculty must provide their name and position; others must provide their name and address.
time he crossed the scrimgime line. Well, in the next game we tried that, and after being penalized, we were told that the quarterback could never carry the ball.
**THEN THERE** was the guy who wouldn't let us into the gym last year for a basketball game until we used magic markers to put numbers on our shirts. I had seen him and his shirts that was illegal and so I had to turn the shirt inside out and put another number on it. Even that could have been justified—maybe—but in the next gym there was an intramural game being played between the traditional Shirts and Skins. Skins had no numbers at all.
Last year our softball team ran into trouble with an ampire. We were on the field. Our opponents had a man on second. We stopped him and our shortstop stabbed. The man on second was caught leaning toward third, so the shortstop tagged second for the double play. Or so we thought. It seems like he might have to tag the man for a double play. Now anyone who has ever played baseball knew he was wrong, but, in the true spirit of officiating, he didn't want to be tagged by the minutes and quite a few threats before he saw it our way.
And then this year we almost had to forfeit because we didn't have the money. We had plenty of substitutes to do the job, but it seems that the players get sweaty and amused so a nonplayer is essential.
IT'S AT TIMES such as those that you begin to wonder whether intramurals are really worth the trouble. For all the effort involved in getting a team together, you use a particular season. The leagues are divided into so many divisions that the playoffs drag on forever. Intramurals are supposed to be geared toward participation. Why couldn't there be more competition, a bigger season and fewer teams in the play-offs?
A major portion of the student body is involved in intramurals. There's no reason why the memories those students have shouldn't be good ones. It wouldn't take much.
Oily orb hypothesis begets sticky crisis
THE PART THAT Hughes
WASHINGTON-II -I was either Howard Hughes or the Albanians. Hughes used to be in charge of making him a suspect, and the Albanians are blamed for nothing, which is suspicious too.
of full professors of classical archaeology and Medieval Latin literature. Just as the editorials were telling us the energy crisis was over forever, it was noted that earthquakes were occurring with somewhat greater frequency, and the
By Nicholas von Hoffman (C) King Features
may have played in the matter has gone to the grave with him or is locked up in the CIA, which is much the same. What's this about? In 1978 the Albanians wrecked the international oil market when they sold a billion barrels of high-grade, sweet crude. The price dropped from $12 at a barrel first Communist country to join OPEC. The Shah of Iran still had reason to hope the cartel would keep prices high enough to keep his secret police in check. The nipples of people brought in for interrogation.
JOHN C. BROWNING
But when Switzerland, Bangladesh and Rhode Island brought in guskers, the Shah's minister of finance informed him that he would henceforth have to rely on the knot and the rack to bring political stability and to order ungrateful subordinates into the hands of executives of the major oil companies, whose stockholders were in rage and despair at this unlocked-for abundance.
THE GEOLOGISTS were none too happy either. Until it was discovered there is oil under the ground everywhere, they were important political leaders and even folks who simply drive to work and heat their homes listened to everything the geologists had to say and gave them all the research money they wanted. Overnight, their profession was getting cramped in 1980 full professors of geology were demoted to the nav-scale
geologists' pay was increased only moderately because no city like New York or Moscow had been disturbed.
THEN AT THE 1982 International Geological Conference held under U.N. auspices at Calcutta, Nobel Prize-winning geophysicist Olio Di oliva读本 his now famous book, even heads of state could understand it. Di Oliva contended that the center of the earth is not made of hot rocks but crude oil. The Olly Orb Hypothesis, as it came to be called, states that our planet is a huge drop of oil on the surface of a hard, dusted mud and water, which of course appear to us as our mountains, oceans and plains. Hence, according to Oliva's calculations, subsequently verified by scientists everywhere, we have enough data our present rate of usage, to last for a million trillion years.
That's the good news. The bad news is that as we withdraw the oil and burn it off the planet's skin, the earth on which we walk shrinks, shifts, compacts and quakes.
THE OILY ORB Hypothesis touched off a furious controversy. The president made one of his toughest, most compelling arguments, calling the whole idea of foreign "ism" and Di Oliva an impractical ideologue. He pointed out that if you had accepted this kind of doctrine, it would be tantamount to surrendering our
sovereignty because all oil pumping would have to be determined by international pressure; apparently there was great applause from Congress, particularly from Texas and Rhode Island, the two major oil companies, on went on for almost 10 minutes and would have continued longer except for the tremor in the wake of an explosion except for knocking the polis off the Washington Monument.
THE PRESIDENT in an act of courage that would have been fulsomely praised in the next day's newspapers had the presses not been cracked by the quake, drove immediately to the television cameramen following him. Picking up one of the stones which had fallen from the monument's crest, he was photographed saying that we would not be intimidated by this barbarous act and that we owed it, not only to ourOURS, but also to our NATO allies, to contribute to pump oil.
NATO responded by giving us 24 hours to pack up our tanks, planes and troops and get out. In Stockholm all the other members of NATO and the Warsaw pact gathered to sign the world's first mutual no-pump agreement.
THE PRESIDENT said it was a dark day for Western Civ and appointed a high-level committee to study the situation and develop plans. The announcement that oil could continue to be pumped with a high margin of safety. They pointed out that the chances were good that California would be highly populated areas except Los Angeles and Boston.
The committee explained that if a quake hit a city it would provide the present unemployees with housing. On the other hand, to stop pumping would cost jobs. The president agreed and told the people that you can kill yourself if you eat too much ceterail."
The next day the English sent an atomic ultimatum. The President blamed it on Castro.
Tuesday, April 27, 1976
5
Professionalism prevails in opera
Reviewer
BY ELIZABETH GREEN
A rare and exciting event took place on a University of Kansas stage Friday and Saturday nights when the University Theatre and School of Fine Arts presented Benjamin Britten's opera, "The Turn of the Screw." Seldom will one find music and drama so totally integrated and so professionally performed.
The undertaking of the Britten opera is, of itself, remarkable. The difficult modern music—from nursery rhymes and hymns to popular ballads—was complicated by the sinister story of demonic possession, demands a maturity of voice and acting ability usually beyond the grasp of young performers. Yet the strong performance action by George Lawner meet the challenge.
THE STORY IS based on the novel by Henry James. A storyteller narrates the tale from the diary of a young English governess who is sent to care for two children in London. She arrives at a seemingly idyllic country scene—charming children and kindly housekeeper, Mrs. Grose—and happily begins her work. However, she soon finds that all isn't in order. Ghostly visitations by the former governer, Miss Jesse, to Fla, and the former valet, Peter Prost, to Jane, and the grotesque games and change children's personalities into evil distortions. The governess discovers what is an attempt at
possession and actively struggles to redeem the souls of the children.
Dramatically, Britten's music supports the values of each scene and underlines the conflicts in the action. Nursery rhyms recur in increasingly sour musical phrases, insistent musical motifs recall the power of the dead and startlingly creep into the music of the governess, confounding the listener. The music is melodic and
review
dissonant, nonrhythmic and fluid—constantly changing—all of which supports the ambiguities inherent in the story. The small orchestra, under the commanding direction of Lawner, performs all the complexities of the music masterfully and expressively, exploring the full value of each piece.
ALL PERFORMANCES are praisaworthy. Frances Ginbels gives a poised performance as the governess, and supported by a strong, yet controlled, vibrant soprano voice that withstands admirably the rigors of her music, Ginbels adds another dimension to her already excellent talent and another success as a performer.
Lambriny Helen Hedge satisfyingly
proves that opera performers can sing and act at the same time. As Miles, she constantly amazes the audience with multiple shifts of emotion. One never has to guess at Miles' complex and seemingly conflicting motives: in the hands of Hedge, she is surprised by the sudden push against his will, afraid, self-assured, confused. Her is a rare performance, integrated vocally and physically, natural and frighteningly believable.
Christine Kahler's Flora changes gradually, before our eyes, progressing powerfully and believably from charming a child toationation to quiet catatonic with a chilling smile.
JANICE JOHNSON'S Mrs. Grose is a convincingly warm, animated and comfortable woman, Nancy Atkins, as Miss Married properly erie and pitiful, yet compelling,
Keith Buhl, as Quint, is somewhat less satisfying. Buhl's young tenor voice is pleasing and casts a breezy spell, though sometimes the music is beyond his control. Physically, Buhl seems uncomfortable on stage. Menacing gestures alone are inimitable to the music of his vocally imposing and as formidable an adversary for the governess as he must be.
Visually, the production suffers. Sets provide neither an adequate statement of the action nor background for it. Set pieces are fragmented and disjointed—one tower, one stair unit, one wall section, etc. Lighting is obvious and, though dimness establishes
Murphey merges rock with folk
Over the past five years Michael Murphy has become an important influence in progressive country music. As a guitarist he writes about 400 songs during those years.
"It's not everyone, after all, who can work within the classical tradition while merging the immediacy of rock music with a folk consciousness and a country sensibility," said Rolling Stone magazine of his playing.
MURPHY and Emmylo Harris will be appearing May 1 in concert at Hoch
Achern.
From page one
Abuses . . .
Chilean newspapers in 1970 were unwittingly carried by the New York Times and Washington Post, the report said. In another instance, two news services secretly run by the CIA in Europe were to be by more than 30 U.S. newspapers.
As recently as February, about 50 journalists and others working for American news organizations maintained a secret relationship with the media. The authors have paid relationships, ranging from salaried operators working under journalistic cover to U.S. journalists serving as 'independent contractors' for the CIA and being paid regularly for their contacts to those who receive only occasional gifts and reimbursement from the CIA."
Before he began his music career, Murphey, who grew up in Dallas, hoped to become a Southern Baptist minister. He attended North Texas State College.
But he said common sense changed his plans, and he moved to Los Angeles to study creative writing at UCLA. He performed in the evenings with country music groups and played on a wide range of instruments, including guitar, bass, piano, banjo and harmonica.
His first album, "Geronimo the Cadillac," was released in 1972, followed the next year by "Cosmic Oil Souvenir" Murphey's and "Blue Skiv-Night Thunder."
"The world is a songwriter, and I'm just a damn good stenographer," Murphy said.
Emmyluwah Harris began her career twice. As a teenager in 1967, she became part of the East Coast music scene, singing original songs. She recorded her first album in 1970.
Also in 1970, her first child was born and Harris retired from active performing.
BUT A YEAR later, she reappeared as a club singer in Washington, D.C.
In 1973 she accompanied country rock singer Gram Parsons on a performing tour and sang on his album "Grievous Angel."
Harris released her album "Pieces of the Shell" in 1975. It promptly became a top-selling album for 20 years.
Her next album, "Elite Hotel," was released this year.
Tickets for the concert can be purchased in the SUA office in the Kansas Union.
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mood, performers are often in darkness. Poor execution—with the follow spots, for instance, that make its visually pleasing and consistent with a period, although the governess' constant changes are unnecessary and perhaps too much attention must be concentrated elsewhere.
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STAGE DIRECTION by Tom Rae results in stylistically integrated performances, though stage pictures are often confusing or the movement and movement is often extraneous.
It is to the credit of Rea and his cast that this piece, which could easily fall into melodramatic emotionalism, is never read elsewhere thereby retaining its credibility throughout.
The opera continues its run in the University Theatre Friday and Saturday. Tickets may be purchased at the Murphy Hall box office.
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM $300.00 TO $11,000.00!
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Presented by SUA in Woodruff Auditorium
KU-Y ADVOCATE SERIES PRESENTS
World Hunger:
What is the
real issue...
Tuesday, April 27
7:30 p.m.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union
An evening of dialogue with Roy Laird, KU Professor of Political Science. His opinion: "American food aid to the developing countries may well have been a prime factor contributing to world hunger." Partially funded by Student Senate
Audience Will Be Invited To Participate In Discussion
Selling something? Call us.
The man in the image is wearing a striped polo shirt and jeans. He has his hand out of his pocket, suggesting he is emptying something. The background is plain black.
If you've got more month left than money, we'll do it all for you.
If the last week of the month feels a lot longer than the first week, come by McDonald's* For very little money you can get a lot of good food.
McDonald's 901 W.23rd
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6
Tuesday, April 27, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Haskell's Kiva Hall dedicated at conference
The American Indian Nurses Association (AINA) began its second annual conference yesterday with a dedication ceremony of Kiva Hall at Haskell Indian Junior College. The committee, numbered by AINA, student nurses, faculty and specialists, dedicated the education of the improvements of the educational facilities at Kiva Hall for practical nursing training.
IMPROVEMENTS, which were completed in January, include the remodeling of the building and installation of new lighting equipment and anatomical reproductions.
The improvements were funded by the Helene Fuld Health Trust. A gift of $110,000
was given to Haskell in July 1975 through Philippe, attorney for the Helene Puld Bluid Hall.
PHILLPS SAID he first became aware of the Haskell nursing program in April 1975, and he came to Lawrence in June to inspect it.
Phillips explained that to be funded by the Helene Fulld Trust, a school must be accredited by the state board of nursing, and have a record of academic excellence. Both of these qualifications were applicable to Haskell. Phillips said.
Philips, who was present for the diplom- ten ceremony said, "It's a great day for us," he added.
Bicentennial wagon train brings dances, programs
The Bicentennial Wagon Train Pilgrimage will pull into Lawrence Friday, on its six-month trip across the United States.
The 20-wagon train, sponsored by the Pennsylvania Bicentennial Commission, began its trip with one wagon in the Rose Bowl Parade Jan. 1 and will conclude the season with a victory in Pa., according to Joan Moffet of the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission.
A wagon has been added to the train in each state it has traveled through, Moffet state.
The train is scheduled to arrive at 3 p.m.
Friday and stay until next Monday morning.
The wagons will set up camp north of the hockey fields at 2rd and Iowa.
THE TRAIN'S stay in Lawrence is being sponsored by the Douglas County Bicentennial Commission, Lawrence Bicentennial Commission and University of Kansas Bicentennial Commission, all of which have scheduled meetings to coincide with the wagon train's visit.
On Friday night four balls have been scheduled in Lawrence. The Calico Ball at the Knights of Columbus Hall will feature the big band sound of Carl Johnson. There are two more ball games, the International Organization of Odd Fellows Hall. On Tap 78 will be at the Tee Pee, sponsored by the Association of University Residence Halls, the All Scholarship Hall Council, IPC and Panhellenic. The fourth day of the public is the Lawrence High School proam
A parade down downtown Lawrence has been planned for 3 p.m. Saturday. The deadline for entries into the parade is noon today.
ON SATURDAY NIGHT, a program featuring six entertainers from Penn State University who travel with the train, the winning Rock Chalk Revs kit, and the winning Rock Chalk Revs ski, performed by Alpha KappaLambda fraternity and Alpha Gamma Delta scorpio, will be presented at a location to be announced. Admission to the performances is free.
The final activity scheduled during the wagon's stay is a barbecue at 3 p.m. Sunday at the William Bradley farm, four miles and one-half mile east of 23rd and Iowa.
Park for cycles to be discussed by commission
A public hearing on the possibility of making a public park available to motorcyclists for trial riding is held by the board of commission at its weekly meeting at 7 tonight.
Local motorcyclists have requested that Perry Park, north of 15th and west of Kasold Drive, be made available for use as a public parking area, at assistant manager, said yesterday.
Motorcycles are now banned from public parks by city law, Wilden said. The hearing is being held so that local residents can learn about opening the park to motorcycles, he said.
"I have already received two letters and one petition against it." Wildgen said.
In other business, the commission will review bids on construction of tennis and basketball courts at Holcom Park on Lawrence Avenue.
At the present time, 110 schools and 19,000 student nurses from all over the world are being supported by the Fuld Trust, Philips and others. The students are in the Haskell nursing program.
The wagons will leave Lawrence about 8 a.m. Monday for Olathe and Independence,
The wagons have been following the Santa
east east and are making a detour to come
to turn north.
A PLAQUE WAS presented to Lizzie Chieks, practical nursing program department coordinator at Haskell, by Gary Tahmakera, vice president of the Haskell alumni association. The plaque is to be placed in Kiva Hall.
After the dedication ceremony, the AINA members met in Haskell's auditorium to receive an official welcome to the Haskell campus and to hear AINA guest speakers.
Several student nurses and faculty members from the practical nursing program were present. Chiesa said the students had been encouraged to attend and participate in the conference.
Martha Primeaux, president of AINA,
addressed about 150 people. She said AINA
was dedicated to providing instruments of
change which included changes in the
quality of health care and the status of
Indian nurses.
SHE STRESSED unity and action within the organization.
"Only in unity can we reach our goals," she said.
He said Haskell supported AINA 100 per cent and he wanted to encourage the beginning of more professional organizations similar to AINA.
Mary Jean Fate, president of the North American Indian Women's Association, spoke about her organization and its purposes.
On Campus
Wallace E. Galluzzi, Haskell president,
gave the official welcome.
TODAY: Forrest Berghorn, associate professor of American Studies, will conduct the FACULTY COLLOQUION ON AGING on "Life Satisfaction of the Urban Elderly!" at 12:30 in 760 Fraser Hall. The annual EMPLOYEE RECOGNITION PROGRAM will be at 1:30 in the Kansas Union Ballroom. RENE WINNER winning bacteriologist and professor emeritus at Rockefeller University, New York City, will speak on "The Mirage of Health" at 4 in 3140 Wescock Hall.
Events ...
TONIGHT: THE PRE-NURSING ASSOCIATION will meet at 7 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union. Panhellenic is sponsoring an open meeting on SORORITY EXTENSION AND EXPANSION at 7 in the Regionalist Room of the Union. KU-Y students the latest in their ADVOCATES SERIES at 7:30 in the Jayhawk Room of the Union.
The organization was founded in 1970 in Colorado, and it represents 43 tribes from across the country.
In yesterday's Kansas, the KU pair of Astrid Dakas and Cecilia Lopez were reported to have scored 16, 4-6, 4-2 in winning the doubles championship in the Missouri Valley women's tennis tournament. The correct score should have read 6-1, 4-6, 4-2.
Correction...
TRANSCENDENTAL
MEDITATION
A systematic approach
the full potential of the individual
Free Public Lectures
Tues., April 27 Wed., April 28
Campusbank Kansas Union
9th & Louisiana Regionalist Rm
7:30 p.m.
7:30 p.m.
Improvement of the home, health and education, intertribal communication, Indian culture, as well as the learning of languages, are the purposes of the organization.
12.1225
Transcendental Meditation and TM. are
SIMS nonprofessional educational organization
SUA Canoe Club
Buffalo River Trip
--sun. 4:00-12:00 delivery until 11:30
April 30 through May 3
Organizational Meeting Tuesday. April 27, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union, Oread Room
EVERYONE WELCOME
The winner of AINA's student nurse writing contest, Jo Ane Sack, read her paper on "AINA topic," "Cultural Nursing in the Nursery Education—From a Student's Point of View."
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The conference will continue today and tomorrow with more scheduled speakers.
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
G raised up Moses to deliver His people out of the slavery and oppression of the Egyptians. When Moses had finished his work and led the people to the borders of the Promised Land he turned his job and authority over to Joshua. God miraculously opened up the waters of the River Jordan and the people crossed over into the Promised Land. Nearby the walled city of Jericho stood in the way of their progress. One day as Joshua stood surveying the situation, suddenly he became afraid and asked for help. Then Joshua went to him and asked if he was a friend, or a foe. The reply was: "Nay, but as captain of the host of The Lord am I now come." Joshua S: 14.
(We are called upon to meditate upon God's Word: This man might have been the Arch Angel Michael: "And there was war in heaven: Michael and his Angels fought against the dragon — the great dragon — that old serpent called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world." . . . Rev. 12:7, or, Et. or, This man who appeared to Joahua might have been none other than Christ Himself: *1st Corinthians* 10:4, etc., tells us Christ was the "Spiritual Rock" with Israel, and He it was who sustained them, and it was Christ whom the tempter sought. Christ was the God of God, and for which cause God destroyed and killed many thousands of them—and these things are written for (our admonition)
Joshua fell on his face to the earth, and did worship, and said: "WHAT SAITH MY LORD UNTO MY SERVANT?" The first thing the Captain of the Lord's Lord told Joshua was to lose his shoe from his feet, for the ground on which he was, was holy — this same message Moses got when God appeared to him in the Burning Bush Next the destroyer Jericho. It would require seven days to carry out God's plan. When these orders were obeyed God would throw down the walls of the city (You unbelievers and those who count these things myths, you never hear of the havc wrought by earthquakes, and do you not know that earthquakes never occur without orders of permission from God's Throne? Why don't you act honest enough to get out of a building if you do not want it to be the infallible Word of God)? When the walls were thrown down then they were to go up and utterly destroy the city and all therein with arm and fire, and with two exceptions: "BYFAITH THE HARLOT RAHAB PERISHED NOT WITH THEM THAT BELEIVE NOT, WHEN SHE HAD RECEIVED THE SPIES WITH PEACE." Hebrew 11:31. The other exception was all the silver and gold that would endure fire, and this was brought into the Tavernacle and consecrated to the service of God.
In the foregoing we have told "Who broke down the walls of Jericho!" Maybe it will relieve some of the readers of this article of embarrassment in the following, which is copied from The Christian Beacon of April 8. 1965.
WHO TAUGHT WHOM? A big of humor usa along the way now and then. The following anecdote was clipped from the publication, "A Plea for Humanity."
A school inspector, in order to get a standard of teaching in a local community, visited a classroom, and decided to ask some questions.
Calling on one small lad, he asked, "Who broke down the walls of Jericho?" The boy answered, "Sir, I don't know; but it wasn't me."
Turning to the teacher, the inspector asked, "Is this the usual standard in this class?" The teacher replied, "Well, that boy is very honest, and I am proud of him."
Leaving the room in disguise, the inspector explained the incident to the principal, who apologetically replied, "I had had that teacher for many years, and I am sure that if she knew who broke down those walls, she would have told you."
By this time the questioner was furious, and sought the chairman of the Board of Education. After listening to the story he said, "Well, after all, aren't we making a mountain out of a mole hill?" I suggest we just wait for it to happen. Then, under the heading of repair:" Christian Cristian, August, 1984.
probably we should "weep" instead of laugh at this anecdote, or maybe a revelation of the truth about the ignorance of great numbers of the about seventy-five millions of this nation who call themselves Christian. We would "weep" and mourn and pray, and possibly 'proclaim a fast' if we really believed what God's Word reveals concerning those who "know not God!" The law of this greatly 'God' favors the most faithful and the Lord's Prayer to our school. Certainly this greatly promotes ignorance of God and His Mighty Works and Providences!
“AND THIS I ETERNAL, THAT THEY MIGHT KNOW THEE,
"THE ONLY TRUE GOD, AND JESUS CHRIST, WHO THAST HAST
BREWED."
"THUS SAITH THE LORD,LET NOT THE WISE MAN GLORY IN HIS WISDOM,NETHERLY LET THE MIGHTY
"THE WISE MEN — LO, THE HAVE REJECTED THE WORD OF
THE LORD; AND WHAT WISDOM IS IN THEM." Jeremiah 8:9. The prediction concerning the rejection of The Word of the bise men is that they will be ashamed, damned and taken! It appears to us that many of our "wife men" have already been "taken in" by our wives and may be ashamed, damned and not yet got our eyes open enough to be ashamed and damned!
"MY PEOPLE ARE DESTROYED FOR LACK OF KNOWLEDGE, I WILL ALSO REJECT THE EEE — SEEING THOU HAST FOREGOTTEN THE LAW OF GOD, I WILL ALSO FORGET THE CHILDREN." *Hosea 4.8*. From what we read in the papers about the conduct of many of the children of this nation at the sacred season of Easter on the beaches, they are not permitted to enter the church or our children." AND JESUS ANSWERING SAID UNTO THEM, DO WE NOTtherefore ERR, BECAUSE YE KNOW NOT THE SCRIPTURES, NEITHER THE POWER OF GOD?" *Mark* 12:24.
Let us cry to God with the Psalmist: "WILT NOT THOU REVIVE US
AGAIN! THY PEOPLE MAY BEJOYED IN THEE" 854:6.
P. O. BOX 405. DECATUR, GA. 30031
7
Tuesday, April 27, 1976
Pro contract tempts KU golf ace
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Boozer won state junior titles in 1971 and 1974
By KEN STONE
Beth Boozer checked her lie, tested the wind on the hilly Columbia, Mo., golf course, eyed the angles of her two-a-fand shot and settled into her putting stance.
She did everything she normally does for a crucial 18th hole stroke except one thing. She missed.
"IT WAS THAT I LAST Hate that it did to me," said Booster, who led the University of Kansas women's golf team to a second national title. "Eight championships last weekend."
After Friday's first round of 18 holes, Boozer had been tied with Lindsay Wetzel of Oklahoma and Patty Livingston of Oklahoma State with 81 each.
"I got on the green in three, and then three-putted. I knew I had to make that to win," she said.
BUT ON SATURDAY, the weather turned cold and sour, as did Boozer's luck. After jumping into a six stroke lead Metzel on the front nine, she fell apart.
"She *i Wetel*) came off a 39, a two over par, and I had a 45," said Boozer of last nine holes Saturday. "She was really hot. I wasn't playing well that day. I three-putted three greens, and you not supposed to do that."
So after 36 holes of golf, and after "climbing hill after hill," Boozer and Wetzel, tied at 146, went into a sudden death play. The coup de grace came when Boozer blew an approach shot on the second hole.
WETTEL, A GOLFER who booster had beaten earlier in the year at a dual match with Oklahoma at Norman, won the tournament.
"I'd say I played only six out of the whole 36 holes poorly," said Boozer yesterday. "I thought I was playing pretty well most of the time."
Since Saturday's defeat, Boozer hasn't spent her time moping about her loss. Yesterday—like almost every day this year—the was back on the course.
"The year I've put in more hours of practice than ever before," said Booster, a sophomore, whose mother, Nancy, is the KU women's golf coach. "Today I went out at 3:00 and hit 200 balls at the practice range at Alvamar."
SHE WANT'S OUT swatting golf balls for nothing, however. Her mind may have been fixed on something else—such as a chance to play in Tokyo next fall.
"It I play well this summer, I have a contract waiting for me with Uni Managers International," she said. "I called over Christmas. Their agents that if I did well this summer in the big championships we'll be talking to me."
Uni-Managers International, Boomer said, also manages PGA professional Johnny Miller, among others. She said she wasn't sure of what she'd be doing for play exhibitions at the annual capacity of playing exhibition matches in Japan and doing some public relations work.
Boozer also admitted it would mean something else.
"I DON'T KNOW the money involved, but I know I'd be going to Tokyo," she said.
"If I turned pro, she said my amateur standing," she said. "It would mean I would be coming back to school. It's a job I did in college." But if it was it, I took the part.
One reason Boomer might want to stay and finish school is that she's been offered a full scholarship to continue playing for KU. She even was offered the volleyball team - she was a starter for KU last year—but she turned it down.
ANOTHER REASON for staying in school is a chance to travel to another Pacific island, Hawaii. The 1977 women's tournament will be played there, she said.
But right now, the most important thing on her mind is to play well in the Kansas women's state championships in mid-June and in the AIW golf championships a week later at East Lansing, Mich.
"I'm looking forward to the state, and beyond that to the intercollegiate, where I hope to place in the top 10," said Boozer, twin a winner of the title juniors title.
"If I don't get the contract, I'll finish school and try for the LPGA (Ladies' Professional Golf Association) tour when I graduate," she said.
What happens if she doesn't burn up the greens and fairways this summer?
The KU men's golf team finished 18th in an 18-team field in the Drake Relays Golf Tournament last Thursday and Friday in Des Moines.
Golfers miss bottom by 3
It was the first tournament this spring in which Kansas avoided a last-place finish. The Jayhawks previously had placed last in both the Oklahoma Intercollegiate Tournament in Shawne, Okla, and the Great Plains Tournament in Wichita.
IOWA EDGED TULISA for the Drake Relays title by only one stroke. Iowa finished with a 90% total for the 54 holes of play and Tulsa had 906.
Southern Illinois finished third at 914 and New Mexico State was fourth at 915. KU's
K.U. CAMPUS VETERANS
CAMPUS VETERANS ELECTIONS
Ballots are available in the Campus Veterans Office, Room 118B Kansas Union on May 3,4,5. Come on in and vote. The following individuals are running:
President
Vice President
Bill Evans Mike Dixon
Secretary
Jim Bailey
Treasurer
Wilson Tyson John Welborn
Jeff McCune
Jeff McCum
Bill Burke
Ted Cloon
Mark Epstein
The Program of the Year isn't on TV. It's in the Air Force ROTC.
Look into the Air Force ROTC. And there are 4-year, 3-year, or 2-year programs to choose from. Whichever you select, you'll leave college with a commission as an Air Force officer. With opportunities for a position with responsibility...challenge...and, of course, financial rewards and security.
The courses themselves prepare you for leadership positions ahead. Positions as a member of an aircrew, or a missile launch officer...positions using mathematics...sciences...engineering.
Look out for yourself. Look into the Air Force ROTO programs on campus.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
A career in law without law school.
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Since 1970, the Institute for Paralegal Training has placed more than 1200 graduates in law firms, courts and other legal offices.
If you are a senior of high academic standing and are interested in a career as a Lawyer, Assistant.
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University Daily Kansan
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NL expansion voted down
CHICAGO (AP)—The National League rejected expansion to Toronto and Washington, D.C., yesterday, tossing the ball back to the American League, which already has voted to place a team in Toronto in 1977.
"Well, I guess it's back in my lap," a disappointed Commissioner Bowie Kuhn said in New York when told of the NL decision.
National League President Chuck Feeney said seven teams voted to expand to Toronto.
and Washington, D.C., and five voted against the idea. Because the NI, constitution requires a unanimous vote for expansion, the five votes vetoed the proposal.
When asked whether the negative vote meant the American League would be moving into Toronto, Feeney said, "There is nothing to stop them."
Kuhn had ordered the AL to include an acceptable formula for playing games in Washington along with its expansion to Toronto, a proposal the AL rejected.
Pre Nursing Association Meeting
APRIL 27
7:00 p.m.
Jayhawk Room
funded by student senate
---
Underground
THE FILM
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Mary Lampson
Haskell Wexler
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The Weather Underground. Terrorist? Fugitives? Bombers? Revolutionaries. allow the BF to for the past six years. Now they are attacking them. Then decide if you can ignore them.
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8
Tuesday, April 27, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU beats Ottawa with no sweat
FEDERICA'S TENNIS CLUB
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Mark Hosking defeated Mike White, 6-1, 6-2
Soccer club wins Big 8, outscores opposition,18-2
By STEVE CLAR
Sports Writer
The University of Kansas soccer club took almost an entire season to get its act together.
Last weekend in Boulder, Colo., KU put on a fine performance the 1976 Big Eight soccer championship.
It was almost too easy.
ON SATURDAY, KU waltzed on three preliminary games. The Jayhawks blanked Nebraska 6-4, Oklahoma 4-0 and Kansas State, the defending champions, 4-0.
Then in Sunday's title contest KU belt Missouri, 4-2, to bring the University its first men's conference championship of the 1975-76 school year.
The victory also helped erase some of the painful memories of the 1975 tournament, which KU had been expected to win. Sporting an unblemished 14-record KU breezed into last year's tourney only to finish a disappointing fourth.
THIS YEAR IT WAS different. So different, in fact, that the KU players were almost happy when they found themselves trailing Mauro-1, 0 in the title match.
“It’s superstition,” player-coach Bernie Mullin said yesterday. “It goes back to Britain, where in about 11 of the last 13 FA (Football Association) Cup finals, the team that’s scored first has lost. So, no, we weren’t too worried.”
They didn't need to be. Within five minutes of the Missouri score, KU's Felipe Santos, who scored four times during the tournament, knocked in a goal to tie the game.
THEN, A FEW MINUTES before intermission, Felipe's ciao-in-Crafael Santos—headed a ball into the back of the net to KUUP 2-1.
"Rafael's goal couldn't have been timed
any better, "Mullin said. "It was just before the half, and it really gave us a lift."
But Missouri had beaten KU twice during the season, and Mullin said he was ready for a challenge.
"I expected Mizuza to come at us in the second half," he said, "but they didn't have an answer."
KU did. Just 10 minutes into the half, Ratelin Santos scored one of his six touches. And he hit a long shot.
MISSURI NARROWED the gap to 3-2 with about 15 minutes left in the game, and that's when Mullin made a move that eventually secured the championship.
He took Mohsen Miri, the team's scorer, out of the game. Miri had scored six times Saturday, but his ankle, injured earlier in the week, had taken all it could.
"Kansas State clobbered on Saturday day," Mullin said. "And he really hadn't done that much with the ball against him." Kyle Rasmussen speed. He was double teamed all weekend."
SO INTO THE GAME came Juan Damasco, last year's leading soccer whorl, who didn't care at all.
He hadn't been in the game five minutes before he headed in a goal that扑了 the game.
"Juan was our kiss of life," Mulin said. "We'd been standing around and not getting much done before he inched in. But he played with it, and the minutes were actually our best of the game."
KU's tennis team didn't get much of a workout in its 9-0 victory over Ottawa University yesterday. The Jayhawks had the brisk weather—hardly probe a sweat.
Mullin's praise extended to all 17 of the squad members who made the trip.
"CERTAINLY, MOHSEN was Mohsen,
except for the last game," he said. "And the
team was very good."
"But you don't win a championship over a
weekend. It takes an entire year." Over a
weekend, it takes an entire year.
Kirkland Gates, Kansas head coach, wanted to make sure his team didn't leave the Allen Field House courts with too little room. The other end, which ended he ordered his team out for more.
BY STEVE SCHOENFLED
Associate Sports Editor
That was how difficult Ottawa was for KU.
Uncommon Sounds
On turntables throughout Lawrence you can hear excellent music. But turn on the radio and something is missing. Radio stations tend to play some songs that other stations are playing. And they ignore a lot of good music.
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"THEY WEREN'T too good," said Bill Clarke, the Jahawks no.1 player, "but the match didn't use any harm because we got to work on our game."
With a team like Ottawa, it was hard for the netters to work on their games during the season.
KU lost only one set the entire day. And that was in the No. 3 doubles match by two players—Jim Singleton and Tom McNeil—who rarely play for the Jayhawks.
Associate Sports Editor
FROM TOP TO bottom, it was a slaughter. Clarke, who had lost his last three matches after winning his first 17, got the winning track by crushing Mike Borke. 6-2, 6-1.
No. 2 man Tim Headkite followed suit in his single match and so did Mark Hosking, Joe Ruysser, Jeff Thomas and O. J. Thomas.
THE NEW COMBINATIONS were in doubles where KU rested its top three player, David Garrison, 6-4, 6-2. 1-6, 6-2, Lonnie Taylor teamed with Jeff Thomas at No. 2 and they whitewashed their opponents. 6-0, 6-0. Singleton and McNeil came back after dropping their first set, 3-6, 6-4.
"We got a chance to use a lot of people."
Clike said, "and try some new com-
bination."
But it won't be as easy for the Jayhawks tomorrow when they meet Big Eight
kjhk FM 91
"We have been talking about this match for a long time," Clark said. "If we play the same team, I'll be there."
Kansas Jayhawk Radio
Partially Funded by Student Activity Fees
The University of Kansas baseball team invades enemy territory today when it plays a doubleheader against Missouri in Columbia.
Missouri's lineup boasts seven players with a batting average over .300, ranking them fifth on the NCAA's hitting average list. Tiger second baseman Jack Kruse, who got those two hits off Sligue in the home game, leads Missouri battles with a .396 average.
MU hosts KU seeks revenge
By KELLY SCOTT
Earth Writer
The Jayhawks beat Missouri twice earlier this season during a wild but well-played three-game series at Quigley Field. KU won, 7-0, and 10-7, before losing, 64.
ROB ALLINDER OR Mike Love probably will start the nightcap of today's doubleheader. Temple said he'd rather use his right-handed pitchers against the predominantly left-handed Missouri lineup. lineup.
Pete Wood (7-4) and Rob Pietroburgo (5-
3) are today's startling MU pitches.
MISSURI WILL BE LOOKING for revenge over right-hander Roger Slaghe, who propelled the Jayhawks to their two-hit shutout over the Tigers. Slaghe, now 5-2 after a loss to Nebraska last weekend, will start the first game, but Flood Temple, head baseball coach, said yesterday Slaghe wouldn't pitch the entire game.
"We've got our big Eight tournament rotated work out now, and since Roger's got to pitch against K-State this weekend we want to have a more intimate with him the whole game," Temple said.
Missouri is 39-17 for the season. They took three of four games from Bradley University in Illinois this weekend, but last week heieder yesterday to Murray State, 1-0, 7-3.
FIRST BASEMAN CARL Heinrich, who had one of the two RBI's in the 4-2 loss to Nebraska last weekend, leads the Jayhawk lineup with a .396 average.
peace
ATTENTION VETERANS!!
You may be losing your Benefits on May 31st and NOT KNOW IT!
Mr. Charles C. Garefino
former Legislative Director and current Vice President of membership for National Association of Concerned Veterans (NACV) will conduct a
VETS FORUM
DEALING WITH CURRENT ISSUES (Legislative, Employment, VCIP, and other issues of your choice). All interested persons (VETS or otherwise) are welcome to attend.
DATE: May 6
TIME: 2:00 p.m. at Johnson County Community College in General Education Building (GEO) Room #217
DATE: May 6
TIME: 5:00 p.m. at Kansas University Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
DATE: May 8
DATE: MAY 5, 2019
TIME: 10:00 a.m. at Kansas State University Student Union Little Theater
Any questions call: Ted Clon, Legislative Liaison Campus Veterans, 864-4478
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On every street in every city in this country there's a nobody who dreams of being somebody. He's a lovely forgotten man desperate to prove that he's alive.
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HAPPINESS IS A KANSAN CLASSIFIED
Each additional word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
Copy must be in 2 days in advance
Find it in Kansan classified. Sell it, too.Call 864-4358.
University Daily Kansan
9
Iowa State and questionable call dump KU softball
By KRIS ECKEL
Scott Walker
The University of Kansas women's softball team goes into today's doubleheader against Wichita State University at Wichita it has 'all itsad season—its undefeated record.
Nationally ranked Iowa State defeated KU by a slim 3-2 margin in winning the first Big Eight softball tournament last weekend in Manhattan. Kansas took second.
KU COULD JUST as easily have been first. It was what KU coach Sharon Drysdale termed a "questionable call" by which that turned the game over to the Cyclones.
the first five innings, and led 2-0 going into the sixth.
With no outs and the bases loaded, Eddie Isles relieved Graves as pitcher.
Iowa State bunted the game the disputed calf, Iowa State bunted the plate. The ball was fielded by third baseman Nancy Stout, the tots to catch Paula Frank for the force-out at
Although the throw was slightly high and the right, according to Drysdale, Frank caught and held it. The ISU runner ran into Frank, knocking the ball from her hand, but
APPARENTLY, THERE was some question as to whether the umpire would kick to his call, so coach Drysdale and KU coach Jason Harris walked out to talk to him about it.
the umpire signaled the runner out, and
Frank w=t. after the ball.
Meanwhile, another runner crossed the plate.
"He called that runner safe," said Drysdale, "and then he said they were all safe." His decision was that Frank had dropped the ball when she was hit.
"My point was that it was a forced out and that she (Frank) had the forced out and then was hit, and that after he had called her out he had never changed his decision."
The umpire counted both runs and Iowa
won to win on both the game and the
tournament.
The Iowa State game was just one in a series of bad breaks in the tournament. The first for KU was an opening game loss Friday night to Nebraska, 4-3.
THE RAIN THAT poured down after the game almost ruined KU's chance to redeem
After waiting Saturday morning out, it was decided that it would be impossible to continue the tournament that day, so the women returned to Lawrence.
THE TOURNAMENT was to be continued Sunday on the astro-turf at KSU Stadium. Starting time was moved back to 9 a.m. so
the tournament could be played during the day on the unlighted field.
The rescheduled further hindered KU because daylight savings time took effect. The women not only lost an hour, but also lost a second hour in order to reach Manhattan by nine.
BUT KU CAME ON strong, defeating KST-State, 6.1, in the opening game of the day. Graves was KU's winning pitcher, giving up 9 runs and one hit and striking out seven Wildkittens.
KU faced Nebraska once again in its second game of the day, defeating the Cincinnati.
Missouri was KU's third victim. Missouri had just suffered a 1-0 defeat at the hands of
the Iowa State team in the last round of the winner's bracket. KU defeated the Tigers, 3-1, scoring all three runs in the seventh inning.
ALL THINGS considered, Drydaale said she was very pleased with KU's showing.
"A lot of people had us counted out after that first loss Friday because it's very hard to come back through a loser's bracket," she said, "particularly when it's that cold and you have to drive that distance at that time of the morning and play that long.
"We did have some problems in the infield that we're going to have to correct, but we came back when we had to, and I thought we played a pretty good tournament."
KANSAN WANT ADS
Arecommatations, goods, services and employment
are offered by Arecommatings, Inc. in the New York
Mid-Atlantic region. Prices are based on
nationally valid rates, except for foreign origin. Fax
310-865-4270 or email arecommatings@arecommatings.com.
CLASSIFIED RATES
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.
one two three four five
time one times time one times
15 words or
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
.01 .02 .03 .04
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 used by the UDK business office at 664-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Employment Opportunities
FOR RENT
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. If
1-4 bedroom apartments, room with kitchen private
and study room to campus $29 and up,
up to $645 or $843/month.
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate occupancy. Also, save money, lease from June 1, 2015 to December 31, 2016, now before it's too late. Park 25 Aintown blocks of west on 25th On St. Phone 842-1455.
Sublase three-bedroom suite, full basement, all
bathrooms. $185/month; June-August-August.
Call 841-3041.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in here
and fill out a form at WEBSTER
MORE INFORMATION: call daily, please! at WEBSTER
MORES INFORMATION:
Free rental service. Up to the minute latters or
bank transfer. Lawyers' Lawerence, Lawerence
Rental Exchange. 842-200-3900.
2 bdrm, all utl, allt on campus, Furn. or
unfurn. Free parking, a/c, pool, 843-6903.
Sublease—apartment; late May till August. Lose-
age of lease from campus at AC 428;
negotiate价钱: 841-1613
Sublease June 1 to Aug. 10, 3 bdm, 11 bsh;
June 16 to July 28, 4 bdm and laundry and
laundry room; 8421-9024 or 8421-2542.
SUMMER RATES at Univ. Terr. & Old Mill
Council, Apt. I-B, L.A. balconies,
drains, swimming pools,
utilities; 2 bedr., furnit; $140 plus utilities. Rates
$84; August 15. Aug. 15; Aug. 15;
842-4397 or 843-4333.
Apt. to submit beginning May 34, 8 days free
Indoor and outdoor buildings: 842-795, 4-28
**REMARK:**
One room studio apartment. Clean quiet. AC.
kitchen available. May Call 815-645-
8000.
Garden plots for rent. Four sizes already plowed,
and drained; irrigated by well water.
842-2502.
Sublease 1 bedroom. bedroom apartement for 1
room. $130 plus utility. Call 687-5255
8757 after 9 AM.
1 bdm furniture apartment for rent for sum-
mer house $125 a month plus usd 6,428
8487
SUMMER SURLEASE - large 4-5 bedroom house
blocks from campus. Hotels 4-27
and 4-28.
Sublease; from May 29 to Aug. 23 b/d
trailer, furnished. AC, Call 843-5372. 4:29
Substance for humans, very rare 2 bermuda,
aptitude required. Send to: aptitude
location right next to campus; 814-2890.
email: aptitude@univ.edu
2 dbm luxury bath plus 1.5 furnished fully
bedroom, 2 bathrooms and car care.
Mierly $2, 50 per month. #63-707-4970
Large house 3 to 4 bedrooms. Rural type setting.
2 car garage 849-9573. 4-29
Large 1 bedroom AC apartment with Wifi-
less TV and Wi-Fi. Located in the city's
first basement starting 'Aquila' Terminus, pool gr
athery. Free parking.
Furnished apartments, one bedroom, air cond-
trition. 19 W-14, 8th FB. Avail May. 1 852-66-04-7
25 W-14, 8th FB. Avail May. 1 852-66-04-7
Sublease for summer Mid-May to August 15.
Complete furniture furnished. Closet.
641-812-7411
To submit May 20-August 15. Clean, spacious 4-bedroom furnished house. Air-conditioned bedrooms. Close to campus and downtown. Call 842-6337.
Female graduate student w students studious, non-smoking female to share 2 bedroom apartment for summer and next year. $40/mo. and part of room fee. Contact Mary J. Masterson 816-6792 or 816-4577. 4-29
For Rent-1, bdm. ap, close to campus,
$125 mox. ip. avd. Pailm. 141-801. 4-30.
4-30
Sublease one bedroom apt. for summer, furnished, AC, all utilities paid—810-3104-842-1058
Subtlebing studio apartment over summer (Bowdell) Call John, after 2 hours. 81-445-6145; 4-20
Sublease apartment for summer-Jaywalker
2497.130 discount 1817.500 Discount on deposit. Bornui-841.
Santander 1841.980
Partially furnished older home near campus in
St. Louis, Missouri. Double living room, dining room, kitchen and double bedroom. 12 mo lease at $200 per month plus upgrades of students. Available May 16, 18, 2022 or 5 of students. Available May 16, 18, 2022 or 5 of students.
House for summer sublease. Furnished and
house near campus Call 841-6022 offense aft
edge.
HAPPINESS IS living in your own private study bedroom to its additional cooperative with 30 students. Room is equipped with exercise room, library, waftder-wafer, and other dorm rooms. We provide a thorough remodling this summer. Your share of the room allows you to campus. Rent $20 to $75 and 10 weeknights at meals. Call Dan or Alice on 212-896-1000.
STUDENTS-ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLE!! 30
work-making opportunities. Work management-making opportunities. improvement opportunities, optional académic credit. improvement courses. free Wi-Fi.免费饮水-dryer. recreation facilities. free swimming. Building to be thoroughly remodeled this semester. Alumni Building to be thoroughly remodeled this semester. Alumni Ofice or Alumnae Ofice or Alice D or T to 10 weeknights at 944 9738
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Regenerate any of prizes you see on popular gift equipment or in stores or come out of products, you will pay the lead fee at THE GRAMPIONE SHOP at KIFFS.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amp, drums, bass, keyboards, electric piano, synthesizer. Shop House Keyboard Studio, Choose from Gibbons, Ampere, Green, and many other instruments. Ample Chromatic, Green, and many other instruments. After 4 hours, pick up a n.i.m. House Keyboards Studio, choose your instrument. After 4 hours, house Keyboards Studio, choose your instrument.
COST **10%** - Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single unit or packages. Register for free Kissone. Call Dave. Call Phone 824-6588. Earnings 80 cents.
Alternator, Starter, and generator Specialists.
BEL AIR AUCTIONS.
Electric 843-706-2900. 2900 W. 6th.
Bell Aire Automotive.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
WE SELL FOR LESS—11 to 6:20. Good used furn-
ware and electric ranges. Refrigerators; for-
meries; appliances. Have Lawn-ways; weekly free delivery. 1322 East
Hawthorne, Topeka, Ks. Phone 7-822-3525 or
+1-554-8288.
Excellent service to New & Used Furniture &
Kitchen & Bathroom Installation. (408) 237-1598.
The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704, 784
St. Louis, Missouri.
**Experience in exam preparation**
"New Analysis Characterization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
tpcatnw.com
Radial Fire Clearance! Your choice of any size BH Softwood radial interior tile each installed. 161-34 AR, 161-35 AR, 161-34 HB78-14. Rock Stoneback® 929 Wax service at our store. Woodwoolf. Tire service at our store.
super summer伞衫 75 Ciniati Italian motor
haute taupe gallon. Bright red. Bright
$200 or best offer. $419-325.
Final price cut! Magnavox console stereo. Eureka console cut to $100 cart Ray Stockback RB 2000. Eureka console cut to $150 cart
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
Toyota Corolla, 90, 35 mm in city, runs great,
problems must, call 841-4641, leave neat,
address.
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
Styling for men and women
Used Motorola portable card, only $19.90 at
Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
64 Corvette Roadster, 327, 400 hp, 4-speed, fully
charged, everythree mpg, more or less 600
+116-345-283, +116-345-284
Sony sale! Save on now on Sony radia, clock radio, stereo, portable DVD player, 929 Mass. On Thursday thru 8pm, 929 Mass. On Friday through Saturday.
C.R. RADIOs - stereo-scanneres 29% OFF
C.R. RADIOs - stereo-scanneres 18% OFF
-6-Ray Audios, A size 13 E 89; 824-257, Audio Speaker
Bonne巾 10-1-6 lotion in a spray! Soothes everything from sunburn to tired feet. Requires no drying. $20.95
SCUBA-exposure suit-tank-regulator with sub-
tension of 10 mmHg filled, elapsed
时间. Contact 842-8375.
Round Counter can solve Mothers Day gift problem.
Round Counter can solve Mothers Day gift problem.
Hugheshügler, Hughshügler, 211. Hughshügler, Co.
Fahrenheit, Fahrenheit, 211. Fahrenheit, Co.
Bargain used books. Texts, fiction, medical law,
fiction, Parkway shopping in Center May 3 to May 8
GUTAR/PUFAR ADDRESS amplifier, $125, $348
Ohio. Apt. 3. See Don. Sentifer.
4-27
Losing your tan? Use a sunlamp at Round Corner Drill Store - 806 Mass. 843-0200. 4-29
1973 TRA. high performance, speed 145
tps. 1972 TRA. high performance, speed 144
Call or call by home. 1000 Haskell. No. 144-4-28
Honda 74. Honda 175. Must sell. 1000 miles. like
4-29.
helmets, 60 mm. best offer. 841-3791.
1947 Yamaha 250 Endure w/helmet. Runs great.
Must sell only $480 or best offer. 484-327. 4-272
1973 VW Bentle, excellent condition, 39,000 miles,
35 mm. radiant tires. Call 842-605-4
4-28
Stephen B. is here Pure colonge spray at Round Corner Drug Store, 801. Stuars, 843-0200. 4-29
Wanta looks like a bum! Beach Bum that is. Use Hawaiian Tropical Tanning Oil and Iolium. Avail $50-$70 at Wanda's Resort.
Finder Basacon Amplifier 2 12" speakers w/
Finder Basacon Amplifier 2 12" speakers w/
Basacon Collection item, fine condition w/ case
Basacon Collection item, fine condition w/ case
843-3034
1971 Dodge Challenger, radial tires, p.x.a. transmission, camgle, am radio, $185 or blower box, 814-1446-4430
Gossen Luna-Pro light meter. Monochrome strobe
Light meters 100 motors; Call Rote-
842-733-2952
Pamanasonic FM-AM Cassette Lever. Pamanasonic
Cassette Pro. Allegro 1000 speakers. $125.89.
6108
6108
10 wood sailboat with Alberged hull with
deck, 20' x 16' sail. Cookit carries three. Good condition. B42-7941.
Cookit carries two. Good condition. B42-7941.
9th and Illinois
Bargain used books. Texts, fiction, medical, law.
Daredevil Parkway Shopping Center. March 3 to May 8
General Electric Stereo Component System
Good condition 50. Will discuss price C84-824
Stocked in stock
4" Clarets SS maps for $8-ball Championship games. Available 2/19 at 8 p.m. or by come On 31st Haskell Banking Center, 650 N. 7th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104.
OVATION 12-string guitar. Price reasonable.
414-6184 after 6. 4-30
75 Black and white 14" Motorola. Excellent condition.
88, Call 631-9039, 864-6011. 4-27
1959 Bugye Sprite. excellent cond. Come see it.
4-30
1960 Bugye Sprite. 842-7114 after 5-30.
4-30
Ploner XS-8000, 120W, reverb,率 mix, 2 pair of 3-way Speakers. Reasonable Reary. Jerry
10-speed—very reasonable. Must sell quickly.
841-4790 4:30
Sears 10-speed bike. 842-7114 after 5:30. 4-30
HELP WANTED
35mm RICOH, F14.4 lens, 8X teleconverter,
electronic flash, $165, $460, 4-29
HELP WANTED: Kansas Student Company
engineering student, to "job available now." Flexible
employer, v. "job available now." Flexible
employer. Please visit job.com/jobs/kansas.
Please check for updates.
Avon can help you have the summer vacation with our special savings. Open territory in Lawrence. In Lawrence.
PART 1 TIME-EARN $25 PER WEEK, FOR
MAY, JUNE, AUGUST, SEP, OCTOBER,
DECEMBER 1978. BETWEEN 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. FOR INSTITUTE.
Summer work, Johnson County area, Phil C-4:
864-6842
Insight INTO LIFE
842·4441
RECORDED MESAGE (24 hs)
Financial Representative. A leading financial institution opening on an all-time position. Will be responsible for customer lending and to maintain financial relationships. Good starting salary, excellent employee benefits. Equally qualified to participate in financial program. Associates Financial Services Co. (FS) will accept any equal opportunity employers. M/F./P. 4-28
Young woman over 21 to work in our club area.
Participants will complete tasks. Park
time evening. Phone 883-4247.
www.womanover21.com
College English teachers; possible opening this fall with the requirement of research experience, literature literature, MA in English or education or experience teaching English at the University of Kansas. For full consideration May 12. For information, contact the University of Kansas, Lawrence, K-67095. The University of Kansas, Lawrence, K-67095. Army Employer. Qualified men and women of military service.
Full summer employment for young rel-
ependent and reliable. Experienced.
Call 913-587-2644
4-28
COLLEGE STUDENTS NOW HIRING FOR SUMMER WORK IN SUMMER. CALL FOR INTERVIEW WEEKS
**STUDENTS:** SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. Pinkerton incorporated is now taking applications for security guards in the Greater Kansas City area. Students in the Greater Kansas City area have recorded (traffic violations) exclusive hazardous police record (traffic violations) have deputies on Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Room 703. Students should attend Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Room 703, in person. An Equal Opportunity Employer
Lawrence Gay Counseling Services needs paraprofessional and rpa supervisor for next year. We are seeking a paraprofessional and direct callers to appropriate counseling programs and direct callers to appropriate counseling programs. More information call 841-431 or 528-537 - S-3
Stilton Stockade will be interviewing on campus at UC Davis and UC Sumpteran. An equal opportunity employer will accept any candidate.
LOST'AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank-9th & Mass., and First National Bank-187 West 2rd.
Lost: 2 rings in East Lade's jacket at stadium during relay, Friday. April 6. Call 864-1535 4-29
Lost-large, black and white male, Silberian
Huxley wearing chain collars with tags. Wear
a thick black leather jacket.
Found: Gold rimmed glasses by Potter's. April
16. Call 843-5799
Lost: on campus, red and white blue-eyed
bird;摸 4 mones, misnified body; 842-1100
845-5976
Found a silver bracelet in downtown parking lot.
foreign make Call 842-3204 to claim. 4-28
Found black labrador pup in Oread Hall next to stadium. 843-1289. 4-29
Found a Schwinn owner's manual on campus.
Claim at 111 Flint. 4-28
Found necklace in Women's locker room in Robinson. Call 842-6750 and identify 4-28
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at a cost of $50 per page and $40 for each of your 129 page thumbnails in 5-minute time. See action in for all of your copying and printing needs. Quick Copy Center, 85% Manushas setts. 841-4900.
Swap Shop. 620 Man. Used furniture, diaries,
dice, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12pm.
483-3277
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive transportation provided. Drive now, pay later. Transportation provided. Drive now, pay later.
The Cahabb Cat special Sunday dinner is a Pint five or six course meal featuring different cuisine each week. Call 842-5000 for reservation and information. Cahabb Cat, 893 Massachusetts
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1306
10.5 Sats. Tau.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL BADGE
15 East 81st 841-2666
10 S Monday-Saturday
HILLCREST BILLIARDS
PERSONAL
RECREATION'S FINEST
"If we don't got it you didn't want to play it no how!"
After 38 years in business, if George doesn't close on Mondays, George's George Shop closes.
West of Hillcrest Bowl
58% off our entire stock of jewelry. 50% off on
gifts from our own stores. 60% off on
gifts from other companies. Baskets, I.D.
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dress. One Size. May 1st. Prata Fashion
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Come one—Come all. May Day Festival—a week of education, conversation, and celebration. On Saturday, March 18, Women's Films Music at a Woman's Coffee Shop will have a volleyball and free Children's April Festival. Woman's Coffee Shop's coalition and Commission on the Status of Women, Association and information. Funded by Students.
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MATH TUTOR with MA in mathematics. Call 841-3708 after 6 p.m. If
MATH TUTORING-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 001, 002, 003, 004, 005, 006, 007, 008, 012, 142, 500, 558, 528. Regular lessons or one-time preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
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BRIDGE- Two engineering seniors would like to meet online, talk about conversation and a light game of bridge.
Reominate needed for large 2 bedroom apt. Mac
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student listed. call 841-6766 after 10am.
Musical: non-instructors grad student who keeps
on the band. Music department to share large 3-bedroom house near campus.
Female roommate to share 2-bedroom furniture at the Malls for Fall Call Carol at 841-861-1861.
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment with roommate of the same gender, midwife, diaphanous and close to campus. Guests may be encouraged to stay in room.
Missouri, non studious grad student who keeps
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Two mat rooms, to share two bed apart.
One room, to only use 36-50 kJ
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10
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Stokely Apple Sauce 4 16 oz. cans $1 Stokely Fruit Cocktail or Pear Halves 3 16 oz. cans $1 Stokely Green Beans 4 16 oz. cans $1 Stokely Golden Corn 3 16 oz. cans $1
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FRED
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Richard Stanwix, Lawrence chief of police, said yesterday that some of the recommendations by the county attorney's office for improving the police department had already been implemented. Stanwix is shown here at a Lawrence City Commission meeting in February.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Chief Richard Stanwix
Vol. 86 No.132
Wednesday, April 28,1976
By JOHN FULLER
Report evaluates police conduct
Staff Writer
There is no evidence of widespread corruption or criminal activity in Lawrence city government or the police department, city attorney Attorney David Berkowitz said yesterday.
He reached that conclusion in his report on a three-month investigation of alleged sex crimes.
However, Berkowitz announced that his office was seeking the ouster of police Detective Ted Crady on several grounds. Crady was suspended yesterday without pay for the duration of the ouster proceedings.
In the ouster petition filed in district court, Crady was accused of售卖 LSD in LSD to help fund his campaign, but earlier this month that he didn't furnish LSD to the person named in the 1974 incident; and deliberately disclosing the identity of the person filing the confidencial drug work.
CRADY ALSO is accused of buying a car in 1971 or 1927 from a man named joe Dennis, who was a nanny for the failing to properly swear the car. Crady also is accused of falsely swearing under oath that he obtained permission from his officers before securing release of the car.
Berkowitz explained that ouster proceedings were civil proceedings conducted before a judge. The prosecution is required to prove its case by a preponderance of evidence as opposed to criminal proof. Proof of wrongdoing may be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
Crady, a seven-year veteran of the force, said he didn't do any of the things he had been accused of and that he would respond to the accusations within a couple of days.
BERKOWITZ SAID no criminal charges were filed against Crady because the status of limitations had expired on some of the alleged actions. Crady could be tried for perjury after the ouster proceedings, Berkowitz said, but a decision on that won't
Lawrence officials offer praise for police studv, recommendations
He said there would be no further court action resulting from the investigation.
THE COMMITTEE members said in their report they had received testimony from several police officers alleging that the officers were ranging from the failure of supervisors to act on the existence of organized crime in the city, to sexual misconduct and theft of property.
The 15-page report that Berkowitz released was the product of an investigation undertaken by the county attorney's office Jan. 28, when three members of a special six-member committee established to investigate mismanagement in city hall made a grand jury investigation of alleged criminal activity in the police department.
"Everybody's got their faults but were trying our best to correct them," Lawrence Police Chief Richard Stanwix said yesterday in response to the county attorney's report on alleged criminal activity in the police department.
Berkowitz s said there was no concrete evidence to substantiate either claim. The only evidence uncovered was that a police officer overheard someone giving the owner of a business a list of numbers which could have been used to identify the report said it was more likely the numbers could have been from something as innocent as salesman's order.
Berkowitz's investigation cleared the department of most of the charges made against it but it also pointed out there were basic problems in the police department in the areas of discipline, communications and leadership. The report detailed the findings of a study by Berkowitz's suggestions on how the department's problems should be handled.
—That there is organized crime in Lawrence and that no action had been taken as soon as possible.
City Commissioners Barkley Clark and Marrie Angersinger said they thought the report was proof that city government can and should be handed locally, reflecting their desire to keep the national Teamsters Union out of city politics.
"We felt that the best thing to do was to get him off the police force without worrying whether he goes to jail or not," Berkowitz said.
Some of the allegations and the investigation's results are:
Stanwick's reaction was generally supported by city officials and commissioners who praised the report for clearing the air of the charges and accusations that have been levied against the department since 1970, on account of city mismanagement began last year.
David Berkowitz
By JOHN FULLER and JANET SCHMIDT
"WE MUST WORK for a fair wage, good
1975
“For a police department to go through such a thorough investigation is only a task,” he said. “I had to shape, shape, Mayor Fred Pierce said last night. ‘The chief has some faults but nobody’s perfect; there was only one person in the room who had been Jesus Jesus Christ and they crucified him.”
be made until the conclusion of the proceedings.
Argersinger said she liked the idea of having patrol officers on the board along with supervisors because it was the patrol officers who brought most of the alleged
—That an officer in the traffic division received a free car from a business that has a license.
working conditions and clean operations in all departments and continue working toward those goals in spite of pressure from both sides: those that investigating committees make nervous and those that feel equally wrong. All organizations allize unions. Both are equally wrong. Clark said, "What has been shown is that we have a good, clean, honest government."
BERKOWITZ SAID because no formal charges had been filed on the allegations, except where absolutely necessary, he required that all allegations or allegations or who allegations were against.
Berkowitz and his chief investigator, James Huskey, interviewed 68 persons during the investigation. Berkowitz said that with few exceptions everyone cooperated fully. Two police officers refused to cooperate until they were subpoenaed and there was one misunderstanding with Richard Wuest, chief of the police who would receive some personnel files on a temporary basis, the report said.
CITY MANAGER BUFORD Watson said he liked the idea of the board because it relieved the police chief of the duty of making investigations individually.
See CHARGES page 10
CLARK CONCURRED, saying, "The situation in the police department is parallel to the changes made in the sanitation department. There we have eliminated the incentive system," were new vehicles and building a city garage."
Stanwick said he and other high ranking officers were currently rewriting the police department's rule book and manual, partially in response to the investigation's recommendations to clarify regulations and policies.
Stanwick said he would be in favor of the disciplinary board recommended by the report and wouldn't be against having a city administrator on it. The board would handle investigations and pass its findings on to the county attorney and the city manager.
improporties to the attention of the investigating committees.
THE LAWRENCE Patrol Officers Association
can't hard yet to form an opinion on
the issues, but will try to provide
some input.
The officials also had similar feelings on the most negative aspect of the report. They stood behind Watson's decision to suspend Detective Ted Cradt for his alleged illegal activities but said they thought Cradt was innocent until proved guilty.
Watson said it was proper for the county attorney to file charges and that “it exonerates the other 99 people who work in that organization.”
Both Watson and Clark said they were relieved that no evidence of organized crime was found.
The report shows the charge of massive organized crime in Lawrence 'is almost a million' (I don't know exactly how many).
"If he's innocent, I'm behind him all the way." Pence said.
Carter wins Pennsylvania primary
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Jimmy Carter swept to victory in the Pennsylvania presidential primary election last night, stopping the Democrats who had tried to stop him, and gaining momentum in his campaign for White House nomination.
The former Georgia governor told
some people he would teach him the
"we're going to join with the war."
Carter was gaining 35 per cent of the popular vote in Pennsylvania's presidential preference election. Returns were tailed in favour of the separate competition for delegates.
The early delegate count showed Carter supporters leading in that phase of the primary, too. But the figures were inaccurate, and the outcome will not be clear for days.
While Carter said he had swept aside every possible obstacle in his path, there remained the looming figure of Sen. Hubert Kane, who has skipped the primaries so far.
Humphrey, in Washington, said "I want to see the Democratic party win. If Jimmy Carter can win, I'm not going to try to stop him at all."
Carter beat Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington, with Rep. Morris K. Udall of Arizona running third. TheGeorgian won by 15 points, but the lineup of Democratic leaders, who put together a stop-Carter movement in an effort to restore the race, ran out of time the race open for a late Humphrey entry.
Pennsylvania Gov. Millon J. Shapp, Sen. Birch Bayh of Indiana, and Fred R. Harris, former Oklahoma senator, all campaign chairs in the debate. McCormack divided the rest of the vote.
President Ford won without opposition in the Republican primary. Ronald Reagan
That hasn't been foreclosed. But Carter will be more difficult to head off now. He has won seven of the first nine primaries, and the only candidate entered in all the rest.
skipped Pennsylvania to make his stand in more promising conservative territory. He and Ford meet in the Texas primary on Saturday.
In the preference vote, Carter led virtually everywhere. He trained Jackson only in Philadelphia, where union and organization support counted most.
These were the figures with 36 per cent of the 9,638 preincts counted:
Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace 48,674
or 10 per cent.
Carter 170,868 or 35 per cent
Jackson 138,526 or 28 per cent
- Jackson 138,520 or 28 per cent.
- Udall 95,124 or 19 per cent.
In the separate delegate competition, which jackdon had said he would win, only 6 per cent of the precincts had reported. There were 31 Carter supporters leading for delegate seats, 25 uncommitted, 21 Shapp, 16 Jackson, 9 Idall and 1 Wallace.
Pennsylvania Democrats will have 178 votes at their national convention.
The state's 103 Republican delegates will be formally uncomitted, but all almost of them will be elected.
Petitions help in defeating motorcycle park request
The petitions were presented at a public hearing of the Lawrence City Commission.
Pettitions with the signatures of 96 local residents helped defeat a request last night by Lawrence High School motorcyclists and park be made available for trail riding.
The hearing was for residents to present their views on opening Perry Park, north of 18th and west of Kasol, to motorcycles, now banned from public parks by city law.
The commission voted 5-0 against changing the law. Mayor Fred Pence qualified his vote by saying that motor vehicle theft in the county compass with their request.
One of the petitions against opening the park to motorcyclists was presented by the local council.
Cohn,wholives near Perry Park,said the park was already being used illegally by
"It is incredibly noisy," he said. "So much so that you cannot sit on your patio and eat or drink."
"There is also a spill-over of riders on the
residential streets. This is very dangerous to children."
William T. Harris, 3418 W. 10th Terr. have quite little Kevlan in their have quite a bit of *Evel Kuvel in their*.
Steve Glass, Route 4 and a Lawrence High School student, presented a petition with 42 signatures in support of making the park available to motorcyleclubs.
"What the people of Lawrence High School are trying to do is have a place where cyclists will get run out by the police or because of complaints." Glass said.
Brad Grob, Route 4, agreed with Glass and said trail bikers weren't licensed for riding in the streets, yet there was no place available in Lawrence for the riders.
Freed DeVictor, director of parks and recreation, presented the view that was
"An evident need has been shown, but I don't feel that anything we have in the city would be compatible with motorcycles," DeVictor said.
In other business, the commission accepted an ordinance authorizing the installation of stop signs at 15th and Barker, 19th and Barker, and 27th and Alabama.
House, senate endeavors assessed by legislators
By JOHN MUELLER
Finances, highways and education dominated the 767 session of the Kansas Legislature, area leaders said.
They disagreed, however, on nearly everything else about the session.
State representatives said the Kansas House had acted more responsibly than the Kansas Senate
"The Senate's a bunch of turkeys," said State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence.
"The House is closer to the grass roots and the people than the Senate is," said State Rep. John.
STATE REP. LLOYD Buzzi, R-Lawrence, was unavailable for comment
Glover and Vogel said that State Sen. Roy Doyen, who served his first term as president of the Senate this year, had given Senate Republicans more freedom than they'd had in the past.
State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, had a different opinion of the House.
"I don't have time," Booth said. "I couldn't begin to list all the mistakes the House has made."
"They need to keep the troops in line more over there (the Senate)," said Vowel.
He also said that senators served on too many committees and couldn't devote enough time to them.
Glover said that the legislature had "a country cup atmosphere each year" and that Democrats were not likely to be elected.
Booth said that "Democrats offer amendments that sound great, but won't work."
"THE MAJORITY PARTY is the party of responsibility," he said.
VOGEL AGREED that legislators should have exempted prescription drugs from the sales tax and said that such an exemption would eventually become law.
Exempting food and drugs, he said, could have been done on a sliding scale based on income that would not be required.
"We're assuming certain things," Vogel said, "that from 1768 to 1980 we'll have a 7.5 per cent increase in revenues and a 5 per cent increase in operating costs."
Glover said that the state's financial surpluses hurt poor persons, and that the legislature should have exempted food and prescription drugs from sales taxation.
He said, however, that exempting food might cost the state too much money without giving many to those who need it.
Booth said he wouldn't support any plan that would denote the state's balances.
"Let's take care of what we've got," he said. "I'd test comfortable with a balance of no less than $70."
"We don't have a surplus," Vogel said, "since the cost of living will catch up with the state's balancer."
LEGISLATORS DENIED Gov. Robert F. Bennett's charges that the trucking industry lobby had been responsible for changes made by the legislature in Bennett's highway improvements proposal.
"I've never been approached improperly by lobbists." Rooth said.
Booth said that people were "sick of super-four highways in large metropolitan areas" and that Bennett's plan, as amended, would call for "vast improvement" in the state's highway system.
Legislators authorized $29.4 million a year in highway funds, and they got the money by increasing the state's fuel taxes and vehicle registration fees.
Glover said that the highway legislation was regressive in that paying for it would affect the poor and elderly proportionally than it would the wealth.
"I DON'T WANT to sound like a bleeding-heart literal." Glover said, "but the working poor are often the ones who don't know."
Glover said that the highway legislation would be an important issue in fall election campaigns.
Vogel said Douglas County would benefit from the highway legislation's so-called '34U' program of expanding motorway capacity.
The Kansas Department of Transportation has announced that the U.S. 56 repairs in Douglas City are up to date.
Higher education, legislators said, had received adequate funding for the coming fiscal year.
"APPROPRIATIONS are not pretty good," Vosel said, "and we've been liberal in the past.
18 per cent OOE (other operating expenditures) will do the job this year."
soon said that although University of Kansas professors had received $ p per cent salary increases from this year's legislature, they might not receive further increases next year.
"Watch out next year," Booth said. "We may have a hell of a bacl over salaries."
Glover said legislators appreciated students' lobbying efforts for higher education, which he said is crucial to the future of Michigan.
Booth said that if Kansas wheat production was down this year, the resulting drop in state revenue would be significant.
MANY LEGISLATORS, he said, often wrongly equate higher education with public elementary and high school.
Booth said public education had grown much faster than higher education, and attempts to fund public education involved the problem of power neutralization.
THE PROBLEM WITH FTE funding formulas, Booth said, was that a densely populated wealthy area could raise money with less effort than a sparsely populated wealthy area could.
Power equalization, he said, resulted from federal court decisions that said children in poor school districts had a right to the same education as that enjoyed by children in wealthy districts.
Booth said the state would allow districts to increase their budgets by 107 per cent over the coming fiscal year, based on their FTEs (full-time equivalent students enrolled in the districts).
Booth said that Johnson County, for example, could raise more money with less effort than the state.
"In Hugleton," Booth said, "they've got oil wells and gold knobs on the school doors, but they just don't know."
Booth said that state aid to education was preferable to local support because of the unrestricted availability.
Vogel said that Lawrence schools were already power equalized and received 40 per cent of their funding.
BOOTH SAID THAT the legislature had made progress in eliminating per pupil expenditure
"When we started to equalize, the (disparity) rate was $1.00 to $500 from richest to poorest," he wrote in a 2003 letter.
Vogel said that a reason for disparity reduction had been that the "smaller districts have pooled water."
Legislators said that issues other than finances, highways and education had been important during the session, but they disagreed on which other issues had been important and why.
Glover said he'd concentrated on marijuana
criminalization, but the House and Senate
held him in contempt.
"THE SPEAKER (Danne S. "Pete" McGill, R-Winfield) just hemmed and hawed around and what happened was that the Senate leadership didn't want to bring it up this year." Clover said.
Sce STATE page 8
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Staff photo
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Vol. 86 No.132
Richard Stanwix, Lawrence chief of police, said yesterday that some of the recommendations by the county attorney's office for improving the police department had already been implemented. Stanwix is shown here at a Lawrence City Commission meeting in February.
Chief Richard Stanwix
Report evaluates police conduct
By JOHN FULLER
There is no evidence of widespread corruption or criminal activity in Lawrence city government or the police department, attorney David Berkowitz said yesterday.
He reached that conclusion in his report on a three-month investigation of alleged human rights abuses.
However, Berkowitz announced that his office was seeking the officer of police Detective Ted Crady on several grounds. Crady was suspended yesterday without pay for the duration of the ouster proceedings.
CRADY ALSO is accused of buying a car in 1971 or early 1972 from a man named Joe Hickey. The police failed to properly register the car. Crady also is accused of falsely swearing under oath that he obtained permission from the police officers before securing release of the car.
In the ouster petition filed in district court, Craddy was accused of selling LSD in his home. He also charged that earlier this month that he didn't furnish LSD to the person named in the 1974 incident; and deliberately disclosing the facts. He has been convicted who was doing confidential drug work.
Crady, a seven-year veteran of the force, said he didn't do any of the things he had been accused of and that he would respond to the accusations in a couple of days.
Berkowitz explained that ouster proceedings were civil proceedings conducted before a judge. The prosecution is required to prove its case by a preproposal and then must be criminal cases where the case must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
BERKOWITZ SAID no criminal charges were filed against Crady because the status of limitations had expired on some of the alleged actions. Crady could be tried for perjury after the ouster proceedings, Berkowitz said, but a decision on that won't
be made until the conclusion of the proceedings.
"We felt that the best thing to do was to get him off the police force without worrying whether he goes to jail or not," Berkowitz said.
He said there would be no further court action resulting from the investigation.
The 15-page report that Berkowitz released was the product of an investigation undertaken by the county attorney's office Jan. 28, when three members of a special six-member committee established to inquire into mismanagement in city hall recommending and award investigations of alleged criminal activity in the police department.
THE COMMITTEE members said in their report they had received testimony from several police officers alleging that they were failing to range from the failure of supervisors to act on the existence of organized crime in the city, to sexual misconduct and theft of property.
Berkowitz's investigation cleared the department of most of the charges made against it but it also pointed out there were basic problems in the police department in the areas of discipline, communications and leadership. The report detailed the findings on how Berkowitz's suggestions on how the department's problems should be handled.
Some of the allegations and the investigation's results are:
-That there is organized crime in Laurel and that to action had been taken again.
Berkowitz and his chief investigator, James Huskey, interviewed 68 persons during the investigation. Berkowitz said that with few exceptions everyone cooperated fully. Two police officers refused to cooperate until they were subpoenaed and there was one misunderstanding with Richard Stanley, chief of files who would receive some personnel files on a temporary basis, the report said.
Berkowitz said there was no concrete evidence to substantiate either claim. The only evidence uncovered was that a police officer overheard someone giving the owner of a business a list of numbers which could be used to make more information. The report said it was more information could have been from something as innocent as salesman's order.
BERKOWITZ SAID because no formal charges had been filed on the allegations, except where absolutely necessary, he bailed them out of their allegations or who allegations were against.
--That an officer in the traffic division received a free car from a business that has
Lawrence officials offer praise for police studv, recommendations
David Berkowitz
RICHARD W. SMITH
See CHARGES page 10
"WE MUST WORK for a fair wage,good
"Everybody's got their faults but were trying our best to correct them," Lawrence Police Chief Richard Stanwix said yesterday in response to the county attorney's report on alleged criminal activity in the police department.
and JANET SCHMIDT
By JOHN FULLER and JANET SCHMIDT
"For a police department to go through such a thorough investigation is only a choice," he said. "We were shaped, shape, Manager Fred Pence last night. The chief has some faults but nobody's perfect; there was only one person in the room who was Jesus Christ and they crucified him."
City Commissioners Barkley Clark and Marieine Ang ersinger they said the report was proof that city government can and should be handled locally, reflecting their desire to keep the national Teamsters Union out of city politics.
Stanwick's reaction was generally supported by city officials and commissioners who praised the report for clearing the air of the charges and accusations that have been raised against the department since the investigations on city management began last year.
Carter wins Pennsylvania primary
Arngersinger said she liked the idea of having patrol officers on the board along with supervisors because it was the patrol officers who brought most of the alleged
CITY MANAGER BUFORD Watson said he liked the idea of the board because it relieved the police chief of the duty of making investigations individually.
working conditions and clean operations in all departments and continue working toward those goals in spite of pressure from both sides: those that investigating committees make nervous and those that feel equally wrong. "Clark said, 'What has been shown is that we have a good, clean, honest government.'"
Stanwick said he and other high ranking officers were currently rewriting the police department's rule book and manual, partially in response to the investigation's recommendations to clarify regulations and policies.
Stanwick said he would be in favor of the disciplinary board recommended by the report and wouldn't be against having a city administrator on it. The board would handle the investigations and pass its findings to the county attorney and the city manager.
improporties to the attention of the investigating committees.
The report shows the charge of massive organized crime in Lawrence "is almost a catastrophe."
Both Watson and Clark said they were relieved that no evidence of organized crime was found.
CLARK CONCURRED, saying, "The situation in the police department is parallel to the changes made in the sanitation department. There we have had a lot of new vehicles were enforcing packaging, purchasing new vehicles and building a city garage."
THE LAWRENCE Patrol Officers Assoc.
hasn't had time yet to form an opinion on
the proposed change.
The officials also had similar feelings on the most negative aspect of the report. They stood behind Ted Crady's decision to suspend Detective Ted Crady for his alleged illegal activities but said they thought Crady was innocent until proved guilty.
Watson said it was proper for the county attorney to file charges and that "it exonerates the other 99 people who work in that organization."
"If he's innocent, I'm behind him all the way." Pence said.
PHILADELPHIA (AP) - Jimmy Carter swept to victory in the Pennsylvania presidential primary election last night, stopping the Democrats who had tried to stop him, and gaining momentum in his campaign for White House nomination.
The former Georgia governor told
supporters the triumph means
"Wear a tie."
Carter was gaining 35 per cent of the popular vote in Pennsylvania's presidential preference election. Returns were tallied over the separate competition for delegates.
The early delegate count showed Carter supporters leading in that phase of the primary, too. But the figures were in agreement, the outcome will not be clear for days.
While Carter said he had swept aside every possible obstacle in his path, there remained the looming figure of Sen. Hubert who has skipped the primaries so far.
Humphrey, in Washington, said "I want to see the Democratic party win. If Jimmy Carter can win, I'm not going to try to stop him at all."
skipped Pennsylvania to make his stand in more promising conservative territory. He and Ford meet in the Texas primary on Saturday.
That hasn't been foreclosed. But Carter will be more difficult to head off now. He has won seven of the first nine primaries, but the only candidate entered in all the rest.
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton J. Shad, Snapp, Birch Bayh of Indiana, and Fred R. Harris, former Oklahoma senator, all campaign for governor. McCormack divided the vote. McCormack divided the vote.
Carter beat sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington, with Rep. Morris K. Udall of rose-river city in the opposition of organized labor and a lineup of Democratic leaders, who put together a stop-Carter movement in an effort to get the race open for a late Humphrey entry.
in the preference vote, Carter led virtually everywhere. He trailed Jackson only in Philadelphia, where union and organization support counted most.
President Ford won without opposition in the Republican primary. Ronald Reagan
—Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace 48,674 or 10 per cent.
These were the figures with 36 per cent of the 9,638 preprints counted:
Carter 170,888 or $3 per cent
Jackson 138,526 or 28 per cent
In the separate delegate competition, which Jackson had said he would win, only 6 per cent of the precincts had reported. There were 31 Carter supporters leading for delegate seats, 25 uncommitted, 21 Shapp, 16 Jackson, 9 Tidall and 1 Wallace.
Pennsylvania Democrats will have 178 votes at their national convention.
The state's 103 Republican delegates will be formally uncommitted, but all almost of them have at least one vote.
-Udall 95,124 or 19 per cent.
Petitions help in defeating motorcycle park request
Petitions with the signatures of 96 local residents helped defeat a request last night by Lawrence High School motorcyclists and made a park be made available for trail riding.
The petitioners were presented at a public hearing of the Lawrence City Commission district board.
The hearing was for residents to present their views on opening Perry Park, north of 18th and west of Kasol, to motorcycles, and now banned from public parks by city law.
The commission voted 5-0 against changing the law. Mayor Fred Pence qualified his vote by saying that motorists should not be required by the county commission with their request.
One of the petitions against opening the park to motorcycleclubs was presented by a group of activists.
Cohn, who lives near Perry Park, said the park was already being used illegally by a group of people.
"It is incredibly noisy," he said. "So much so that you cannot sit on your patio chair."
"There is also a spill-over of riders on the
residential streets. This is very dangerous to children."
William T. Harris, 3418 W. 10th Terry, "I'll have quite a bit of biflue Kvelken in you." a bit of biflue Kvelken in you.
Steve Glass, Route 4 and a Lawrence High School student, presented a petition with 42 signatures in support of making the park available to motorcwclubs.
"What the people of Lawrence High School are trying to do is have a place where cyclists will get run out by the police or because of complaints." Glass said.
Brad Grob, Route 4, agreed with Glass and said trail bikers weren't licensed for riding in the streets, yet there was no place available in Lawrence for the riders.
Fred DeVictor, director of parks and recreation, presented the view that was in question.
"An evident need has been shown, but I don't feel that anything we have in the city would be compatible with motorcycles," DeVictor said.
In other business, the commission accepted an ordinance authorizing the installation of stop signs at 15th and Barker, 19th and Barker, and 27th and Alabama.
House, senate endeavors assessed by legislators
By JOHN MUELLER
Finances, highways and education dominated the session of the Kansas Legislature, area 176.
They disagreed, however, on nearly everything else about the session.
State representatives said the Kansas House had acted more responsibly than the Kansas Senate
"The House is closer to the grass roots and the people than the Senate is," said State Rep. John
"The Senate's a bunch of turkeys," said State Rep. Mike Glover, D-Lawrence.
STATE REP. LLOYD Buzzi, R-Lawrence, was unavailable for comment.
Glover and Vogel said that State Sen. Ross Doyen, who served his first term as president of the Senate this year, had given Senate Republicans more freedom than they'd had in the past.
State Sen. Arden Booth, R-Lawrence, had a different opinion of the House.
"I don't have time," Booth said. "I couldn't begin to list all the mistakes the House has made."
"they need to keep the troops in line more over there (the Senate)," said Vogel.
He also said that senators served on too many committees and couldn't devote enough time to them.
Glover said that the legislature had "a country climate atmosphere each year" and that Democrats are "more aggressive than Republicans."
Booth said that "Democrats offer amendments that sound great but not work."
"THE MAJORITY PARTY is the party of responsibility," he said.
Legislators also disagreed over finances, which Vogel said weren't perfectly predictable.
VOGEL AGREED that legislators should have exempted prescription drugs from the sales tax and said that such an exemption would eventually become law.
"We're assuming certain things," Vogel said, "that from 1768 to 1980 we'll have a 7.5 per cent increase in revenues and a 5 per cent increase in operating costs."
Glover said that the state's financial surpluses hurt poor persons, and that the legislature should have exempted food and prescription drugs from sales taxation.
Exempting food and drugs, he said, could have been done on a sliding scale based on income that would not have allowed him to do so.
He said, however, that exemplifying food might cost the state too much money without giving many dole.
"We don't have a surplus," Vogel said, "since the cost of living will catch up with the state's balance."
Booth said he wouldn't support any plan that would deplete the state's balances.
"Let's take care of what we've got," he said. "I'd feel comfortable with a balance of no less than 70%."
LEGISLATORS DENIED Gov. Robert F. Bennett's charges that the trucking industry lobby had been responsible for changes made by the legislature in Bennett's highway improvements proposal.
"I've never been approached improperly by lobbists." Booth said.
Booth said that people were "sick of super-four highways in large metropolitan areas" and that Bennett's plan, as amended, would call for "vast improvement" in the state's highway system.
Glover said that the highway legislation was regressive in that paying for it would affect the poor and elderly proportionally more than it would the wealth.
Legislators authorized $29.4 million a year in highway funds, and they got the money by increasing the state's fuel taxes and vehicle registration fees.
"I DON'T WANT to sound like a bleeding-heart
inflation," Glover said, "but the working poor are
not suffering."
Glover said that the highway legislation would be an important issue in fall election campaigns.
Vogel said Douglas County would benefit from the highway legislation's so-called '3R' program of funding.
The Kansas Department of Transportation has announced that the U.S. 56 repairs in Douglas have been completed.
Higher education, legislators said, had received adequate funding for the coming fiscal year.
"APPROPRIATIONS now are pretty good," Vogel said, "and we've been liberal in the past.
10 per cent OOE (other operating expenditures) will do the job this year."
Booth said that although University of Kansas professors had received 8 per cent salary increases from this year's legislature, they might not receive further increases next year.
"Watch out next year," Booth said. "We may have a hell of a battle over salaries."
Booth said that if Kansas wheat production was down this year, the resulting drop in state revenue would be worthless.
Glover said legislators appreciated student's lobbying efforts for higher education, which he said was not "a part of the job."
MANY LEGISLATORS, he said, often wrongly equate higher education with public elementary and high school.
Booth said the state would allow districts to increase their budgets by 107 per cent over the coming fiscal year, based on their FTEs (full-time equivalent students enrolled in the districts).
Power equalization, he said, resulted from federal court decisions that said children in poor schools had a right to the same education as that enjoyed by children in wealthy districts.
THE PROBLEM WITH FTE funding formulas, Booth said, was that a densely populated wealthy area could raise money with less effort than a sparsely populated wealthy area could.
Booth said public education had grown much faster than higher education, and attempts to fund public education involved the problem of power equalization.
Both said that Johnson County, for example,
could raise more money with less effort than the
company.
"In Hugaton," Booth said, "they've got oil wells and gold knocks on the school doors, but they just aren't there."
Booth said that state aid to education was preferable to local support because of the unpredictability of funding.
Vogel said that Lawrence schools were already power equalized and received 40 per cent of their resources.
BOOTH SAID THAT the legislature had made progress in eliminating per pupil expenditure
"When we started to equalize, the disparity rate was $1000 to $500 from richest to poorest," he said. "The disparities have doubled."
Vogel said that a reason for disparity reduction had been that the "smaller districts have pooled resources."
Legislators said that issues other than finances, highways and education had been important during the session, but they disagreed on which other issues had been important and why.
Glover said he'd concentrated on marijuana decriminalization, but the House and Senate voted to ban it.
"THE SPEAKER (Duane S. "Pete" McGill, R-Winfield) just hemmed and hawed around and what happened was that the Senate leadership didn't want to bring it up this year." Clover said.
See STATE page 8
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Several die in jet crash
CHARLOTTE AMALIE, Virgin Islands-An American Airlines jet with 88 persons aboard crashed into embankment on the end of the St. Thomas airport on Sunday.
Hospital authorities said 33 passengers and crew members were treated for injuries, leaving 35 persons killed or unaccounted for.
The survivors were taken to Knud Hansen Hospital, the only hospital on St. Thomas island. A hospital annuity was distributed to the survivors. The others were treated and released.
Three persons on the ground who were hit by debris also were treated at the hospital.
The plane struck at least seven automobiles and smashed into a *n* service station and a tavern, a fire official said. Two cars were crushed under the annealing chamber.
2 Rhodesian plans outlined
SALISBURY, Rhodesia—Prime Minister Ian Smith yesterday announced his plan to bring four traditional chiefs into the government as cabinet ministers.
Earlier in the day in Lusaka, Zambia, Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger outlined a 10-point plan for a Rhesian political solution within two years.
Smith suggested that if the United States wanted to play a role in the constitutional dispute, a federal government envoy should be sent to the United States.
Smith also accused Kissinger of "judging and condemning us from a preconceived stance and without considering all of the evidence or giving Rhodosis the benefit."
Hampton conviction upheld
WASHINGTON—A divided Supreme Court ruled yesterday that a defendant may be convicted of selling drugs illegally even though undercover government agents did not stop him.
The court split three ways, but five justices voted to uphold the conviction of Charles Hampton, who testified that a government informer supplied him with information that was incorrect.
Hampton claimed that the government violated his constitutional right to due process of law by illegally trapping him into committing a crime.
The five justices agreed that Hampton's conviction must stand because he was "predisposed" to commit the crime and because the government agents' conduct was wrong.
Soliah cleared of robbery
SACRAMENTO. Calif.-Steven Solih, Patricia Hears' underground lover, was acquitted yesterday on bank robbery charges in the holdup of a former N.Y.C. mayor.
The eight women and four men deliberated for 6½ hours before delivering the verdict in U.S. District Court.
Soliah was arrested in San Francisco last September on the same day as Hearst and was originally charged with harboring the then-fugitive newspaper heirs. That charge was dropped after Soliah was indicted in the robbery of the Crocker National Bank branch in the Sacramento suburb of Carmichael.
Beatle reunion a 'definite maybe'
LONDON (AP) — The rumors persist. The Beatles may perform together again, a spokesman for Paul McCartney said yesterday.
It is likely that John Lennon, Ringo Star and George Harrison may be in the audiences when McCarthy's group, Wings, begins its delayed tour of the United States
"If the former Beatles do meet up with another one again, it would be no surprise. They tend to turn up at one another's concerts," the spokesman said. "And Paul would be delighted to see them. They are all friends despite their old disputes."
McCarthy was not available for comment, but the spokesman indicated that if the Bedies do meet again during Wings' appearance, they should discuss the possibility of a reunion on stage.
"Paul McCarthy's answer to the question: 'Will there be a reunion' reunion?"
on stage? is a definite maybe," the spokesman said.
In New York, however, McCartney's American lawyer and father-in-law, Lee Eastman, cautioned Beatles fans against counting too heavily on seeing the four.
Chancellor to address full University Senate
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes is scheduled to deliver a brief "State of the University" address at a University Senate meeting at 3:30 tomorrow afternoon in Woodruff
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1105 Massachusetts
843-9880
The remainder of the meeting's agenda will be routine.
The University Senate is composed of all members of the Faculty and Student senates. This will be the year's only meeting of the full University Senate.
Dykes will answer questions from senators following his address.
The Senate will hear year-end reports from the University Council and SEMEx and other stakeholders.
AMENDMENTS TO be voted on include
measures to bring the Affirmative Action Board under University Senate control; make the presiding officer of the University Council a non-voting member of SenEx; make the SenEx chairman responsible for preparing University Council meeting agenda; make the Executive Secretary of the University a non-voting member of the council; and allow SenEx to appoint an assistant University Council secretary.
Both the University Council and SenEx have already approved the code amendments.
The Faculty Senate will meet after the University Senate to vote on the amendments and hear year-end FacEx and Faculty Council reports.
Douglas County Attorney David Berkowitz investigated several charges concerning the sanitation department. He found no evidence of criminal acts.
One non-criminal incident investigated showed that sanitation supervisors and city officials had ignored employees' complaints that a certain type of solvent was damaging their hands and causing nausea and headaches. Officials said they preferred that type of solvent because it was less flammable than other types.
Don Purdy, former Lawrence sanitation superintendent, has been cleared of most of the charges brought against him in recent months of alleged city mismanagement.
Ex-sanitation chief Purdy cleared of most charges
The charge that Purdy had bought a lantern with city funds for private use was dropped when the lantern was found at the city landfill.
The charge that Purdy assaulted an employee who is no longer with the sanitation department has been dropped because the employee won't press charges.
Results of a lab test here at the University
now that the solvent did indeed do what
the test was designed to detect.
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
北
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
test were shown to city officials they did take steps to make the use of the solvent serbic. Berkowitz said. Berkowitz criticized the employees for complaining to the employees 'complains in the first place.'
An accusation that Purdy had used Lawrence time and employees without authorization to reroute another city's bus dropped last week when Purdy resigned.
Other allegations against Purdy weren't pursued further, Barkowitz said, again. (AP)
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SUA Fine Arts
Accent
the
Arts
Publicity Chairman
Interviews May 3
Inquire at SUA Office
SUA Fine Arts
Accent the Arts
Publicity Chairman
Interviews May 3
Inquire at SUA Office
COUPON
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Satisfy your pizza craving with this special Straw Hat dinner for one. A small pizza with any or all of our 11 tasty toppings, a soft drink and an individual salad. All for just $1.99 with this coupon. (That's a saving of up to $1.60 from the regular alt cater price). Coupon expires May 4, 1976.
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COCKS
Bottles $ 40^{\circ} $ (Coors, Oly, Miller Lite)
Also enjoy:
2 bedroom apts on KU campus & utilities paid for furnished or unfurnished & laundry facilities swimming pool air-conditioned & covered parking on bus line & seating & locked system room service
DEPOT'S WEDNESDAY MADNESS
Now Taking Applications for Summer and Fall
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Only Two Days Left to get your entries in for the STUDENT SCULPTURE COMPETITION
for more information contact the SUA Office
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THE ROLLING STONES
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ATLANTIC
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
3
There will be no changes in the structure of rush this fall. Phyllis Robertson, Penhellenic membership program chairman, said yesterday.
Sorority rush registration slow
The membership program, rush, will be
Aug. 12-15 and registration forms are in the dean of women's office until July 23.
"Registration has been rather slow so far," Robertson said.
1976 employs-of-year honored at ceremony
Bernice Tripp, custodial worker for physical plant operations in Blake Hall, and Verdi Gibson, assistant dean of the College of Engineering, was awarded a $100 check from the Endowment Association and an engraved and mounted University Seal for their outstanding serif you don't see it, ASK! >>> KING GEORGES
Winners of the 1976 Employee of the Year Awards were announced yesterday at the second annual Employee Recognition Ceremony in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The two winners were selected by a 13-member Employee Recognition Committee on the basis of nominations from fellow employees.
FINALISTS FOR the awards were members of the classified staff, in which persons are hired for specific jobs and are classified by the Civil Service, and the unclassified non-teaching staff, which are hired for less defined jobs.
Finalists for the classified Employee of the Year were Mildred Cloferdile, assistant secretary-treasurer of the KU Alumni Association; Joseph T. Collins, vertebrate zoologist with the Museum of Natural History; and Jennifer D. department of physiology and cell biology and Helen Taylor, custodial worker for the Museum of Art.
UNCLASSIFIED NON-TEACHING category finalists were Agnes Barmhill, assistant registrar with the Office of Admissions and Records; Charles Bayne, research associate with the Kansas University archivist at Spencer Library; and Jack Rose, director of laboratories for the chemistry of chemistry.
EMPLOYEES WHO received pins for 25 years of service were Nmanchon Asmazin, Martin Chapman, Frank B. Cross, Francis Cuipor, Ann Evans, E. W. Fenstemaker, Edward F. Grier, Madeline Grinder, William W. Hambleton, Muriel H. Johnson, Joseph P. Fowler, P. Fenkel, Nickel, Darek Petrost, Calder Pickett, Kevin A. Remick, Mary Rusca, Robert Sheard, George R. Waggoner and M. Erik Wright.
ALICE DOES NOT FOOL AROUND
We don't want to give the wrong impression, however. Alice does not fool around.
Alice is the sensational Xerox 9200 Duplicating System located at the House of Usher/Quick Copy Center, which is located in Santa Ana. Alice is the Print Shop of the Future—she will print you waft, do both sides, almost any paper, make reductions. Her copy quality is—the she is fast and inexpensive too.
Reproduction can be fun with Alice! Easy and inexpensive, Alice is almost always available.
Alice doesn't fool around—she does her work quickly and well.
Alice does, however, make your work easier—giving you more time to fool around.
COOKING TIME TO MEET YOU
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Indoor Recreation
Last Meeting of Spring
Backgammon Club
"beginners welcome"
Thursday, April 29
Oread Room,
Kansas Union
7:00 p.m.
CAMPUS VETERANS ELECTIONS
K.I.U. CAMPUS VETERANS
Ballots are available in the Campus Veterans Office, Room 118B Kansas Union on May 3,4,5. Come on in and vote. The following individuals are running:
President
Vice President
Bill Evans Mike Diener
Secretary
Treasurer
But, she said, that was no indication there would be fewer than usual women participating.
Jim Bailey
Wilson Tyson
John Welborn
She said many women waited until summer to register, when the pressure of a new job would come.
Jeff McCune
"To participate, a woman must have a 2.2 grade point average and 14 credit hours from the previous semester." Robertson or the grade point can be accumulative.
Ted Cloon
SOME WOMEN MAY want to see what their grades are for the spring semester, but you won't.
This is the second semester that higher grade points and hours have been required by Panhellenic. The requirements had been a 2.0 grade point and 12 credit hours.
Bill Burke
Mark Epstein
"We've been real pleased with the results of the new requirements," Robertson said. "It really wouldn't be fair to lower them now."
SHE SAID THE new requirements not only cut back the number of women going to school, but they also increased the in the sorely rush last January, 250 of the 423 women who participated pledged sororities. Another 107 were allowed to complete because of the grade and hours requirement.
An $8 registration fee pays for
registration materials, summer
correspondence and a Panhellenic booklet
distributed during rush.
Robertson said petitions would be accepted on the hours requirement for mansions.
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With Special Guest
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Thursday April 29
8:00 Hoch Aud.
TICKETS ON SALE TODAY
Advance Tickets are $5 and $6
At: SUA
Klefs
McKinney-Mason
Better Days
Mother Earth–Topeka
Capers Corner–K.C.
BONNIE RAITT
4
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Oninions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
HOUSING
CONGRESS
Housing ruling fair
The Supreme Court opened the door to open housing a crack last week. It decided to allow federal courts to order action of public housing in suburbs.
THE COURT AFFIRMED a lower court ruling that the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the Chicago Housing Authority violated the rights of minorities by selecting public housing sites and assigning tenants on the basis of race.
It is interesting to note that HUD, which is supposed to enforce the 1968 Fair Housing Act, argued against the decision. Thus one would not be too idealistic in assuming that HUD will quickly exploit this new found lever to solve some of the acute housing problems facing large cities.
THERE ARE FACTORS other than a lack of zeal from HUD that will prevent any immediate achievement of a comprehensive open housing program. The housing industry has been and is continuing to be the area now available for the construction of public housing. And the decision itself is narrow.
Only when there is a civil rights violation can the courts intervene. Local
governments will still have the power to enforce building and zoning regulations. Local communities will still make the decisions about public housing, but if those decisions are proved to have unintended discrimination, the courts can intervene.
THIS DECISION comes at a time when the issues of fair housing and judicial restraint are being vigorously debated. Former Georgia Gov. Jimmy Carter's comment about "ethnic purity" was addressed to this issue. Mr. Carter also said that Democratic candidates have said they don't favor extensive federal government intervention to provide open housing.
The federal courts have recently been under attack for excessive use of judicial power. Resentment over court-ordered busing has caused antagonism toward any intervention into the affairs of local communities.
In light of these developments, the Supreme Court decision should be commended. The court didn't back down from its civil rights responsibilities but it used discretion and tact in moving into the area of open housing.
By John Hickey
by John Henry
Contributing Writer
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.
By DON SMITH Kansas Correspondent
Congress stalls campaign
Letters Policy
WASHINGTON - Ten Secret Service men huddled outside the Longworth House Office before here one day last week.
"What are they doing around here?" one congressional staff worker asked another staff worker.
"I GUESS Udall's back in town," the second worker said. "You know, he's already out of campaign money and I suppose he's up in his office calling people and asking for money."
Indeed, Rep. Morris Udall, D-Arkansas, we probably solicited money by phone. Most of the presidential candidates have been in or around Washington and couple of weeks seeking funds.
THE MATCHING funds provision that was written into the Federal Elections Commission application since March 22, the deadline set by the Supreme Court for the Congress to reconstitute the commission and instead of congressional appointees. The court ruled unconstitutional the congressional appointments, saying that the funding until Congress acted.
No presidential candidate has received federal matching funds for a month and the toll is beginning to tell. Just as in too many campaigns, campaigning has again taken a back, seat to raising money.
And though Congress has been fully aware for a month of the court's decision, it has acted with patience and insisted the finger directly at Congress for the financial consequences of the presidential candidates.
THE TWO MOST important provisions that Congress wrote into the FEC law are the limiting of campaign contributions to $1,000 a person and the mandating that candidates who met certain qualifications receive federal matching funds.
The candidates have conscientiously kept contributions and donations to Congress has fooled around for more than a month with a new PEC bill while the candidates treasures run driv.
committee reached agreement on a bill to revamp the FEC as the court had directed, but not allowed the gov't to act before it be recalled.
JUST BEFORE Congress recessed for Easter on April 14 a House-Senate conference
Now, the earliest date that federal matching funds could get back into campaign spending was last May. And that doesn't provide much help to the candidates who are critically short of money and includes every candidate except President Gerald Ford.
IN THE MEANTIME.
everyday saturates. The youth don't get to hear a frank discussion of the issues, the FEC bill just adds another timber to the congressional log jam that is developing on the Hill. And the candidates are spending most of their time seeking money while their campaigns linguish.
Many here thought that when Congress passed and the President signed into law the $700 billion imposed forced to forego money raising
efforts and concentrate instead on campaigning. The idea was that the candidates couldn't afford to court the fat cat donors because $1,000 was the amount buildup they one person yet they would still be able to count on the federal matching funds.
And that's what discourages people here. By its lack of action, Congress has forced the state to do what it doesn't do when what it does that makes it less necessary, raising campaign funds.
OH RAPTURE!
I THINK WE'VE
FOUND Δ
WINNER!
YES, IT'S THE
ESSENCE OF
IT ALL!
Fine Arts
Scholarship
Exhibit
OH RAPTURE!
I THINK 'WE'VE
FOUND A
WINNER!
YES, IT'S THE
ESSENCE OF
IT ALL!
Fine Arts
Scholarship
Exhibit
LAWRENCE
DANITATION
DEPT.
WESTPHAL
LAWRENCE
SANITATION
DEPT.
Who's calling the kettle black?
By JAMES J. KILPATRICK
THIS WAS THE substance of the report—that the military services maintain several
WASHINGTON- The General Accounting Office (GAO), suffering from acid indigestion, burped up a sour little report the other day on military "resorts." The report was prepared at the behest of Sen. John D. Rockefeller who released it to the press with a billious little statement of his own.
"elaborate resort-style centers," including a large center in Germany, one in the Philippines, and two in Hawaii; that these resorts benefit from an annual $12.6 million subsidy from the taxpayers; that charges should be increased to reduce the bureaucracy personnel now assigned to the centers should be reassigned to military duties.
The GAO reminded Sen. Proxmire that it "has questioned the funding of
Malpractice suits scare doctors
military recreation programs several times." The authors of the report ventured the suggestion that a review of the delay of the Department of Defense in updating its policies, the Congress may wish to impose specific guidelines on the use of these programs. "How do these programs" Holty-tolty, holty-toly;
Doctors have enough on their minds the way it is without having to worry about being sued, but malpractice is a hard problem and remains prominent in the minds of most physicians in recent years.
THE REASON IS that the number of lawsuits for malpractice in the United States has doubled in the past five years. At present, the average number of doctors sued by malpractice during their careers is about one out of every 10.
By BILL CALVERT
IN A NATIONAL survey three years ago, the Federal Commission on Malpractice found that a fear of being sued afflicts the entire health-care system. As a result of commission, many doctors were refusing to perform high-risk operations for fear of being sued if something went wrong. Some doctors were even afraid to publish reports of adverse effects of various experimental drugs and because lawyers could use such reports against them,
Along with the rise in the number of malpractice suits, there has been a corresponding increase in the amounts awarded by the courts to patients claiming medical negligence. The size of these cases is increasing and in that period of time there have been 30 to 35 awards of $1 million or more.
Because of the increase in lawsuits, insurance companies are raising the premiums on malpractice policies. In New York, for example, doctors and nurses are charged areas are charged as much as $14,500 annually for malpractice insurance coverage.
BECAUSE OF THE jump in insurance premiums,
Various explanations have been offered to account for the increased tendency of patients to take their doctors to court. David S. Rubsamen, a physician-attorney who gives legal advice to the court as a major factor is the greater availability of doctors to serve as expert witnesses at malpractice trials.
AND THE COMMISSION'S survey said that medical education had suffered because of the malpractice problem as a result of the 2003 law and resigning. At the Wayne State University medical school in Michigan, for example, 77 faculty members were unable to get adequate malpractice coverage, 22 members were dismissed and six members had resigned as a consequence of lawsuits.
physicians are continuing their practices, moving to states where insurance rates are cheaper or merely raising their fees and passing the cost increases on to patients.
The commission also found that, aside from the rise in doctor's fees, the cost of health care was being increased by 20 percent. The doctors are ordering extra diagnostic tests and X-rays for their patients, not because they are necessary, but because they will make good evidence in the event of a lawsuit. Doctors are being hired to hospitals for minor surgery that could be done more easily and cheaply in the doctor's office. The commission estimated that "defensive medicine was becoming less important billion a year in hospital bills."
THE FINGER OF blame has also been pointed at contingency fee arrangements, which have made malpractice such a lucrative area for lawyers to pursue. Under these
arrangements, lawyers receive large percentages of whatever their clients are awarded by the court. Cases sometimes last five to six years and cost both parties up to $100,000.
Many solutions have been proposed to help alleviate the crisis posed by malpractice. The only major solution that has been made into state law is the strong control of the contingency fee arrangements in the states of New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts courts in these states strictly control how much money a lawyer may receive from a case.
THE INCREASING complication of medical techniques also has caused a change in măраpease laws, holding a doctor as the judge and judgment as well as for the obvious mistakes, such as amputating the wrong leg. Now a doctor can be found guilty of mărapease for errors such as causing cancer in its earliest stages.
As one bitter Michigan urologist put it, "Lawyers have quit chasing ambulances and are chasing surgeons."
RUBSAMEN HAS recommended that malpractice cases be taken into consideration specializing in malpractice law instead of a jury. He believes that the judge would be more willing to take action if he would be fairer and more
consistent, Gerald J. Lustig, a thoracic surgeon and president of the New York State College of Dentists, advocates taking malpractice out of the courts altogether. He believes that a patient should be compensated by a doctor, a physician by a set-up similar to workmen's compensation insurance. The American Medical Association recently endorsed a law that one Lustig has proposed.
ARBITRATION IS one method of settling malpractice cases out of court and is being used by various hospitals and the criminal justice system. The method, the plaintiff and the defendant hire their own arbitrators plus a third neutral arbitrator. The arbitrators question both parties at bearings lasting about three months to resolve within a few months. Arbitration has met with relative success since it was first tried as an alternative to court trials in 1929, but it still has met with opposition. One reason for that claim is that arbitration would not meet the needs of the public. BUSH SAID that physicians were probably safer in a court trial because 90 per cent of court trials are decided in favor of the plaintiff. That would make more of an effort to determine what was right than
the professionals on an arbitration board.
IT TAKES A monumental gall—a kind of awesome chutzpach—for any member of the military armamenties. In the whole of our government, no group is more petted, pampered, coddied, cuddled and richly sub- served in the House and Senate.
is the "watchdog of Congress". It would be a pure pleasure, one of these days, to see the watch-dog report on his master's perquisites. No such study has ever been made.
Published at the University of Kansas weekly during the academic year except holidays and examinations. Kam, Kan. Subscriptions by mail are $9 a week. Subscription to the student section is $20 a semester or $30 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through the university. **Editor** Business Manager
It is hoped that the solution to the malpractice mess will be found soon. In the meantime, health care costs will continue rising. The medical attention will continue to decline as more doctors quit, move away or refuse to take necessary risks for fear of losing clients or efforts. It is important that the public be informed as to the seriousness of the situation, because if nothing is done, the doctor will have a bigger loser than a doctor having a million dollar lawsuit.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
THE "CLAIMED mission" of these facilities, said the GAO, sneering ever so faintly, is to provide opportunities for servicemen to rest and relax. The GAO interns in Germany offer skiing, tennis, ice skating, fishing, golfing, bowling, sailing, and the like. A center in Hawaii walleys in such luxuries as a cafeteria, spa, gym, recreation lodge, bar shop theater, and library. The Hale Koa hotel on Wakiki Beach has "restaurants, cocktail lounges and banquet facilities," as well as swimming pools, flower gardens. The whole tone of the report was that all of heavy disapproval.
Business Manager
Rosy Parris
A senator or congressman parks in the morning in a magnificent heated garage. He ascends to a "members only" elevator to a posh office. His flowers are provided free from the building, but the pictures on his walls have been framed, free, by a special service. He works on his mail, which goes out free. He saunters to the barber shop for a haircut, free, and a shoeship, free. He goes to the gym for a fitness class, free. He goes to the congressional pool. He eats a subsidized lunch in a luxurious dining room. Then he goes to the floor to vote himself a sneaky pay in pay.
The GAO has prepared many useful studies of government spending, and Sen. Proxmine has done a constructive job of helping GAO to understand but this particular report starts a slow burn. In theory, the GAO
and free prescriptions. He gets a $3,000 tax deduction for living expenses. He can look forward to a lush pension. He gets a free thousand-dollar set of law books and a free custom-made trunk to pack them in. He ordinarily arrives on Thursday. Exhausted by his labors, he votes himself three months of recesses and vacations, a part of which he devotes to a European junkt. The day seldom passes that season and the floor to denounce the military for extravagance. These pampered darlings of the Congress steadily have whitted away at the benefits promised to servicemen as inducements to military retirement, Military misseries, military health benefits, military educational benefits—all these come under incessant attack.
SEEN. BARRY Goldwater, God bless him, laid all this on the line in a blistering speech to the National Space Club on Feb. 4. He put the speech in the Congressional Record, and urged his colleagues to "stop being hypotensive, damages the body," and others about the defense establishment." A few other members share Goldwater's indignation. Mighty few.
IF A MEMBER gets ill, he gets a subsidized room at Walter Reed or Bethesda. He gets free medical examinations
(c) 1975 Washington Star Syndicate Inc
U.S. MAIL
NO PICKUP OR DELIVERY DURING SNOW, RAIN, HEAT OR GLOOM OF NIGHT.
1976 WTT SPECIAL FEATURES
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Wednesday, April 28, 1976
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KU's research called distinctive
The University of Kansas is different from many other universities because of the extensive research and community and state service programs here, says James Hitt, associate director of institutional planning.
Hitt said KU, as a newly appointed member of the major research universities in the US, should take on the Education Management Systems (NCHEMS), would help develop guidelines so research universities could compare individual programs, costs and charac-
KU's appointment on the task force was announced Monday by the national director of the KU research institute.
NCHES develops standard information- gathering and reporting processes about colleges and universities called Information Exchange Procedures (IEP).
Hitt said IEP listed various types of information about universities including costs, financial aid, enrollment, personnel, programs and characteristics of students.
University Daily Kansan
The Board of Regents has asked all colleges and universities under its control to
Hitt said IEP included complete information for most schools, but that gaps existed in information on larger universities with complex research programs.
The task force, Hitt said, is to study areas that need more complete information and to help determine the need for additional training.
"It will add new dimensions to IEP to look at research areas," Hitt said.
making because KU could observe similar schools' programs and keep pace with them.
One of the greatest problems in managing a university, Hitt said, is deciding how money should be distributed among various programs. He said IEP would aid decision-
"It will help us know how to best allocate our limited resources to get the best overall
Because all information will be in a common form after it is compiled, Hitt said, comparisons with other schools will be simple.
The new reporting procedures, Dykes said, will permit more accurate comparisons of programs and funding among the universities.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes said an example of how the comparisons were useful was in the area of faculty salary levels. He said KU compared itself to Midwestern members of the Association of American Universities.
institutional planning, would be KU's representative to the task force.
Dykes said James Appleberry, director of
Hitt said KU was invited to join the task force, which was formed last year, after the University of Cincinnati dropped out of the program.
Among the other universities on the task force are Purdue University, Duke University, the University of Illinois, the University of California at Los Angeles, the Stanford University, the University of Colorado and the University of Washington.
Use Kansan Classifieds
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530 West 23rd
Students assume corporate roles
"THE TASTE IS IN THE SAUCE"
The chance to run a large corporation is the dream of many business majors at the University of Kansas, and two business courses are giving 72 students this chance.
Students in Business 488 and 990, taught by Charles Saunier, professor of business, are playing a strategy simulation game using actual business cases.
The students are divided into teams of two or three persons and placed in the position of managing a corporation. Each team attempts to outwit its competitors.
The object of the strategy game is to see whether the students can develop a successful strategy and run the corporation successfully. The best way to good planning and penalizes bad planning.
Students react favorably to the game and think playing it will be to their advantage when trying to win.
Each team is given $50,000 to manage its corporation. The money can be used for market research, advertising, the hiring of new staff, or renting attorneys or starting an additional corporation.
The students receive computer printouts during the semester that evaluate the corporation and give information on competing corporations.
Steve Horne, Lawrence graduate student, said, "I think the game is a very good tool. It gives the student a chance to see how things work together."
Bob Levy, Lawrence graduate student,
said yesterday, "Basically the student is
told, 'Here's your corporation. You run it
and see what you can do.'"
Curt Scoville, Colony graduate student who worked in management for several
Saunders, who has taught at KU for 20 years, said the students had to work together as a team and they had to be organized. He said the game gave students a chance to work together, but they wouldn't be able to see in any position other than manager of the corporation.
years before returning to KU, said, "The game is a laboratory of the business school. In the business school you don't have any experience in getting involved in business conditions. So you study the theories in the classes and this is the opportunity to see if you can apply the theories to your work."
Levy said, "This is the only time in the master's program that we have the chance to see how our team works."
been doing in the classroom with what we hope to be doing outside the classroom;
Strategy games have been played in the business school at KU for 15 years. The game being used now is from Dartmouth and is played on a computer. A game from Harvard University was used.
Horne, who has played both versions of the strategy game, said the Dartmouth game is less involved and takes less time to play.
ATTENTION VETERANS!!
You may be losing your Benefits on May 31st and NOT KNOW IT!
Mr. Charles C. Garefino
normer Legislative Director and current Vice President of membership for National Association of Concerned Veterans (NACV) will conduct a
VETS FORUM
DEALING WITH CURRENT ISSUES (Legislative, Employment, VCIP, and other issues of your choice). All interested persons (VETS or otherwise) are welcome to attend.
DATE: May 6
TIME: 12:00 p.m. at Johnson County Community College in General Education
Building (GEB) Room #217
DATE: May 6
TIME: 7:00 p.m. at Kansas University Big Eight Room, Kansas Union
DATE: May 8
DATE: May 8
TIME: 10:00 a.m. at Kansas State University Student Union Little Theater
any questions call: Ted Clon, Legislative Liaison Campus Veterans, 844-478
in honor of
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6
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
C
Tim Headtke considers his lack of consistency his biggest problem Stuff phone
Headtke seeks more than tennis
By CHRIS COTTRELL
Search Writer
For Tm Headkke, the No. 2 singles player on the University of Kansas tennis team, tennis has been a stepping stone toward other things.
"I've been exposed to a lot of different people," she said. "I've been exposed to if I'd have taken my tenure different viewpoint," Headkite said yesteryear. But then, they back to what he was going to say.
Headtke, a senior from Long Beach, Calif., said that it took a tremendous amount of dedication to become an outstanding tennis player, and that he'd gained more by developing well-rounded interests by than by revolving his life around tennis.
"MOST OF THE major pros are total tennis fanatics. They don't do anything else," he said. "These guys give up quite a bit of their lives. They really have not had a very well-rounded experience in growing up; they've never done a lot of things."
Heatke, who didn't take up tennis until the ninth grade, didn't start playing computer games.
He said it normally took about five years for a tennis player to become good at the game, and a player usually didn't reach the top. He told me he had with a lot of hard work for about 10 years.
"GIVEN THAT ratio," he said, "I'm really just approaching the peak of my game—even now or maybe in the next year or two.
"In a way, it's kind of disappointing to me because the potential I should have reached at this time of my life. Since I have not reached my potential now, I really don't know how good it is."
One problem that has plagued Heckle ada-
tion is he's played tennis has been in-
gest.
He said playing tennis always involves a series of ups and downs, and the object was to maximize the ups and minimize the downs. He has fewer inconsistent days now than he used to have, he said, but he still has them.
"I've never really been able to find a pattern," he said. "I don't know how you control it. Some of my best wins were when I was in the worst physical condition."
He said he could never tell when he was going to go into a bad streak.
"I could be feeling great or playing with my game," said my girl's game gone—and believe me, for four or five games, I just'll play awful. And then all sudden—bingo! I'm on a hot back.
He said the reason was probably related to mental concentration.
"ALMOST EVERYONE will say that mental attitude is over 50 per cent of your game," he said. "I think it's very individual. In some players, mental capacity could take you up to 75 per cent of their games."
And Headklead said it was this aspect of the game which had given him a lot of trouble.
He said that before a match he could never tell how well he's going to play. when preparing for a match, he tried to put his hands on the frame of mind and tried to stay very loose.
When evaluating his own game, Headtie sees both strengths and weaknesses.
"T'M A VERY good player," he said, "because quickness is one of my assets, which helps you at the net. And I've got a good backhand, and generally, they play your backhand in every respect of the same because it's supposed to be weaker.
"But those who know me know that my forehand is awful. One of the only things that's as bad as my forehand is my serve, and in singles, a serve is very essential."
He said that in doubles matches, a good serve was 'n't as important because a player only served one time out of four. He said that the more important than power in doubles.
AND AS ONE might expect, Headkite would rather compete in doubles than in triples.
Haddie and Bill Clarke, **U.S. No. 1**
angles player, combine form the squad's **U.S. No. 2**
"I can keep with anybody in doubles." Headtea said, "because my weaknesses are not as exploited and my strengths are exaggerated, you might say.
"So I can get away with a lot of things. A lot of deficiencies in my game are hidden, but they really do affect my different style of game, so a good singles player will not necessarily be a good player."
Heatke said he thought that he and Clarke made an excellent team.
"WEHAVE contrasting styles which help quite a bit," Headke said.
player who didn't go for a lot of flashy shirts. "But he's got a very big service and a very big overhead which I don't have," Headtke explained.
"I operate well at the net and I have a lot of touch and finesse. Consequently, we mix very well as a team," he said. "We have about every sort possible if you put both of us together. It works out to be a good combination."
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KU rained out
KIEF'S
KU baseball team's scheduled
doubt address at Missouri yesterday was
rained out.
This is the second straight twin bill the Jayhawks had had washed out. KU was supposed to meet Nebraska in a doubleheader last Saturday in Lincoln, Neb.
The Jayhawks next action is Friday against Kansas State.
K-State aide named
MHANATTHA (AP) - A highly successful New York City high school coach was named assistant basketball coach at Kansas State University yesterday.
K-State coach Jack Hartman announced the selection of Mark Reiner, coach of Canarse High School in Brooklyn, to replace Martin Adams, who was named head coach for most months. Hartman said Reiner's appointment becomes effective Saturday.
John Haddock Used Cars
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COUpon
THE SATISFIER
SPECIAL. $1.99_
Satisfy your pizza craving with this special Straw Hat dinner for one. A small pizza with any—or all—of our 11 tastiestppings, a soft drink, an am individual salad. All for just $1.99 with this coupon. That's a saving of up to $1.60 from the regular alla carte price.) Coupon expires May 4, 1976.
Offer good only at partici-pating stores
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Lawrence
841-2547
STRAW HAT.
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FANFARES.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
7
---
Committee selected to run routine review of Balfour
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
has appointed a nine-member committee of
students, faculty and administrators to
meet with the Board. In Ballour, Balfour,
bounce chair for student affairs.
All University department chairmen, deans and vice chancellors are evaluated every five years before they are reapplied for promotion. The university will conduct that review of Balfour.
Committee members are Clark Bricker, professor of chemistry; Don Metzler, professor of civil engineering; Beatrice Wright, professor of psychology; Tedde Tasheff, student body president; Greggie Robinson, Salina freshman; Mode Johnson, Lawrence graduate student; Martin Rudnick, assistant director; Kathy Hoggard, director of the Information Center; and Clark Coan, dean of foreign students.
Metzler is the chairman.
SENEX NOMINATED the three faculty members on the committee, the Student Senate nominated the students and Shankel selected the final three members from departments and offices under his supervision.
Shankel told yesterday that he had asked the committee to file a preliminary report in a few weeks and to complete its evaluation in a month.
Metzler said it was too early to predict how the evaluation would be conducted.
The committee held an organizational meeting yesterday. Metzler said, it would be "very important."
Prof discusses diseases' future
Rene Dubus, professor emeritus from Rockefeller University in New York, discussed The Future of Infectious Diseases in about 150 KU students years ago in West Hall.
Dubos, a pioneer in the development of antibiotics, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1969 for his book, "So Human an Animal." He written various other books about biology.
Dubai said most concern over the control of infectious diseases occurred at the turn of the century.
"Great advances to control infectious diseases came from sanitation and from a healthier diet."
Dubos said there was the alarming increase of venereal disease throughout the world.
"Last year in this country there were 120,000 cases of gonorrhea reported," said Dade.
Dubes encouraged future biologists and said social factors would be important to the development of their field.
Dubus will speak at the University of
Kansas Medical Center today, tomorrow,
and Friday.
Metzler said he wasn't sure the committee could complete its work by the end of the semester.
"We're not sure we can meet the vell chancelor's deadline, but we'll cry," he said.
Enrollment is now open for the first annual Astronomy Camp of the Midwestern Music and Art Camp for high school students June 20 to July 3 at the University of Kansas.
The camp will give students interested in the sciences an opportunity to broaden their knowledge and experience in observational and theoretical agronomy.
Stargazers'enrollment begins
Students will be housed in University
On Campus
Events ...
TODAY: The CITY MANAGERS SEMINAR will meet all day in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. Marinne Argersinger will speak on issues confronting the city of Lawrence at the FACULTY FORUM at noon at the United Ministries building, 1204 Oread.
TONIGHT: MICHAEL McLURE will read selections of his poetry at 8 in the Forum Room of the Union. THE KU PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE will present a recital at 8 in Swainton Recital Hall. Elizabeth G. Brown will speak on "American Art after the Centennial" at 8 in Spooner Lecture Hall.
Grants and Awards . . .
GINA KENNEDY, Shawnee Mission senior, and MOLLY WOOD, Wichita senior, received honorable mention in the James B. Kennedy Scholarships for Excellence in the Study of Literature. JOSEPH NAAS, Lawrence graduate student, and Robert E. Schroeder received honorable mention in the William Herbert Carruth Memorial Poetry Contest.
JAMES R. NEFF, assistant professor of orthopedic surgery, and JAMES H. JAMES F. BREWER, assistant professor of emergency medicine, first year clinical faculty following the American Cancer Society.
PAUL THAYER, a university of Kansas alumnus, has been selected chairman of the Boy Scouts of America 1977 National Explorer Presidents' Congress next spring.
KANU-FM has won an award from the Aviation Space Writers Association for its program, "The Edge of the Universal." The station received the South Central Council's Choice Award.
COUPON
THE SATISFIER
SPECIAL. $1.99
Satisfy your pizza craving with this special Straw hat dinner for one. A small pizza with any—or all—of our 11 tasty toppings, a soft drink, an individual salad. All for just $1.99 with this coupon. That's a saving of up to $3.80 from the regular ala carte price. Coupon expires May 4, 1976.
Offers good only at partici-pating stores:
2515 W. 6th
Lawrence
841-2547
STRAW HAT.
Pizza Palace
Copyright 1976
Straw Hat
Pizza Palace
Restaurant City
10
STKAW HAT
Pizza Palace
Have We Got A Sandal For You
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residence halls and meals will be provided. Health and recreational services will be available, as well as supervision by a highly trained staff.
Cost of the camp is $25 for two weeks, but Lawrence high school students living at the camp receive a free camp.
Arensberg's = Shoes
Information can be obtained from J. P.
Davidson, Astronomy Camp, 143 Mahlot Hall
No text will be required, but students
and dependents from $5 to $25 for supplies that
they need.
UNIVERSITY OF PARIS—SORBONNE SUNY/New Palis Program 6th Year
6th Year
Undergraduates in philosophy and related majors earn 30-32 credits in regular Sorbonne (Paris IV) or French courses. We insure students avoid cumbersome pre-inscription and attend Paris IV, not provincial universities.
Parts IV, V, and provinicial universities. Director assists with housing, programs, studies.
Orientation, language review.
Sept. 15- June 15. Estimated living,
airfare, tuition, fees. $2500 N.Y.
residents. $3700 others.
PROF. D. BLANKENSHIP
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Philosophy Dept., S.U.C.
New Palzt, N.Y. 12561
(914) 257-2696
Foresight BY 500 YEARS!
MIRACULOUS FORESIGHT OF LEONARDO da VINCI,
IN HOB, SUGGESTED THE USE OF LENS FITTED DIRECTLY ON EYE CLEAR MATERIALS UNTIL WEFT THAT A CONTACT LENS was MADE IN GERMANY OF BLOWN GLASS FOR A PATTERN IT DESIGNES IT FOR 2 WAIPERS.
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843-2139
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SUA Presents
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EMMYLOU HARRIS
IN CONCERT
Tuesday, May 4th 8 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
General Admission Tickets On Sale NOW
$5 Advance $6 Day of Show
Available at SUA Office (Kansas Union) & KIEF'S RECORDS
A COWTOWN PRODUCTION
8
Wednesday, April 28, 1976
University Dally Kansan
State legislature . . .
From page one
MgCill, said Glover, had apparently substitutes. Senate bill for Glover's bill to be filed with the SEC.
Glover said that his staff hadn't been able to locate his legislation, and that McGill was trying to find him.
"We started out with a real pure bill," he said, "that put possession of two ounces or less of marjuna as something not strictly regulated by the government per se."
Committee amendments in the House, he said, had made possession of small amounts of marijuana a civil offense and possession of over four ounces a Class E felony.
A CLASE E FELONY is punishable by a minimum of one to three years in prison and a maximum of five years in prison and a $5000 fine.
Glover said that the advantage of making possession of small amounts a civil offense would have been that "your name wouldn't go into the big crime computer."
Glover said his bill had "languished in committee in the House, so we tried the Senate—where it got to the floor but was never brought up for consideration.
"The white society says it's the land of the free and the home of the brave in the Bicentennial, but anyone smoking marijuana is still a criminal.
"IT'S RIDICULOUS, a violation of due process."
Glover predicted that marjuna would be in our backpacks to smoke in a couple of ways. One way is to try to have her stop.
Glover said the legislature had discussed marijuana in interim committee hearings, and his views had been supported by a group of activists for the Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws), prosecutors, doctors, lawyers, judges and law school professors.
Vogel said that marijuana would eventually be decriminalized, but that experts disagreed on whether the drug was harmful.
"Some say marijana is harmless"
"Some say, while others it leads to the
invasion."
Booth said that Glover's bill had wasted the Senate's time.
"That's not the way to legislate," Booth said. "Mike couldn't get the bill through the Senate."
BOOOT SAID HE hadn't supported the Glover legislation, which had taken "two to three" of the law.
Booth also agreed that marjiana would "eventually" be decriminalized.
Glover said that the Senate had wasted time because he had considered death penalty legislation.
"It's real interesting," said Glover, "that the House wanted a (death penalty) bill, and the Senate wanted a bill—but the Senate eventually lost the chance to have a bill at all."
"You can either blame the Senate or give the House credit."
VOGEL, CHAIRMAN of the House Agriculture Committee, said his committee had successfully sponsored several pieces of constructive legislation.
Vogel said that the House had passed a pesticide use bill that would toughen state licensing procedures determining who could sell what types of pesticides.
"It's not just a farm problem," he said, since pesticides "have been washed from city rose gardens into sewers into drinking water."
The House had also passed legislation, Vogel said, that would compel soil amendments salesmen to register with the state's Board of Agriculture.
Soil amendments change the chemical composition of farmland.
VOGEL SAID THAT past salesmen of soil amendments had taken advantage of far greater growth potential.
"I'ts consumer legislation," vogu sayi. He said the House had also voted to regulate water, an alkaline calcium compound used for soil improvement.
Glover said that farmers had been hurt by the legislature's decision not to include them under House Bill 2135, a new law that would expand the expansion that creates jobs for Kansans.
Glover said the business expansion law had been designed under "the Republican trickle-down theory, which puts wealth at the top and then lets it drip down to the rest."
Glover criticized the legislature for having failed during the past session to reform the juvenile code and to change the state's gun control laws.
GLOVER SAID THAT the legislature hadn't established a 24-hour waiting period between buying and receiving guns, which has been called the National Rifle Association) says is O.K.
"It's dishardering," he said. "The House is reactionary on law and order. The folks back home are scared of crime, and rightly so."
Accompilations of the legislature,
Cooper said, were in the area of women's rights.
Women's rights had been strengthened, he said, by new laws on rape, limiting use of a woman's past sexual history in rape trials, and on consortium, giving married men the same sexual responsibilities in marriage as women.
Glover said that the legislature fortunately had not rescinded the Equal Rights Amendment, and that it had authorized an affirmative action program at the bureaus practiced sexual discrimination.
FUTURE CPA'S
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Career Opportunities with SIRLOIN STOCKADE
Because of our accelerated growth, we need the best management people possible. We are looking for opportunity minded individuals who are ambitious and have the desire to advance a career.
THE HORSE
Excellent incentive and benefit package. A representative will be on campus Friday, April 30.
Sign up for interview at 202 Summerfield or call 843-1096. An equal opportunity employer.
The Student Senate Is Now Taking Applications For
★ University Senate Committees
-LECTURES & CONVENTIONS
★ Parking and Traffic Board
- FOREIGN STUDENTS
University Events Committee (9 Student Members)
- LIBRARIES
- FINANCIAL AID TO STUDENTS
- CALENDAR
HUMAN RELATIONS
These appointments will be for the 1976-77 school year.
Pick up applications at:
The Student Senate Office, Level 3.
Suite 105 B, The Kansas Union.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: MAY 7,1976
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee
A group of laymen, doctors, clergymen and lawyers, will look at the malpractice problem and report back to the Senate in a year.
Booth also said he was pleased with the senator's decision to monitor its medical treatment.
"We got the best damn bills in committee," he said, "since legislators do less playing to the galleries there than they do on the floor."
BOOTH IS A MEMBER OF the Senate Public Health and Welfare Committee, which has approved a plan.
Booth said that closed Republican caucuses, whose constitutionality has been challenged in the past by journalists, were "not really relevant" and paying to the galleries (trying for publicity).
SUA Travel
Now Is Your Last Chance to Take Advantage of the Cheapest Air Fare to Europe from Kansas City
Departing June 16 to Paris Returning on August 12 from London
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THE PARK CITY SCHOOL
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HOLIDAY
SEASON
for mother on her day
What a nice way to show Mom you care . . . with soft lingerie, pretty blouses and shells, pantsuits and dresses, summer bags and decorative scarfs.
BANKAMERICARD
welcome here
SATURDAY is our BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION one day only
$2.00 off on everything in the store at $4.98 and over. Sale articles not included.
master charge
THE INTERBANK CARD
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LITWIN'S for LEVI'S
Downtown-831 Massachusetts
LEVI'S
ADULT MOVIES LIVE SHORT
On every street in every city in this country there is a noob who dreams of being something. He is a lovely forgotten man desperate to prove that he's alive.
Held Over!
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents ROBERT DE NIRO TAXI DRIVER BY BILL PHILIPS Production of a MARTIN SCORSESS FAM.
Eat up 7:30
9 & 10
Sat. $until 1:30
Granada
ADULT MOVIES
LIVE SHORT
On every street in every city in this country there is nobody who dreams of being somebody. He has a long forgotten man desperate to prove that he salves.
Heald Over!
COLUMBIA PRINTS presents
ROBERT DE NIRO
TAXI DRIVER
A BILL-PHILIPS production of a MARTIN SCORCE film
Eve 7:30
8 & 10
Grandada
Saturday 7:30
Charles Bronson James Colburn
"HARD TIMES"
PLUS-Jon Michael Vincent "WHITE LINE FEVER"
PG
"Times" 8:30
"Fever" 10:15
Sunset
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Ingmar Bergman's Film of Mozart's
"The MAGIC FLUTE"
Tonight 7:30 & 9:15
Hillcrest
The Greatest Detective Story of the Decade
REDFORD/HOFFMAN "ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN"
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Sat-Sun 7:15, 9:15
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"The BAD NEWS Bears"
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A TOM PARKER PICTURE JOHN M. CALVIN LEY FILM
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Show Time - 7:30-9:00
Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
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TONIGHT IS 10c BEER NITE regular draw ($2 cover charge)
ALSO, BUGSY'S BANANA EATING CONTEST WITH OVER $50 IN PRIZES
Show starts at 8:00 Curious!!! Call 841-7100
72
Room service when you need it!
Cleo can't make it to breakfast . . . or lunch . . . or dinner. She's sick, but she's still hungry. So, what does she do? Have a friend or roommate bring her a tray of food. It's that simple. Making life pleasant for Cleo, even when she's sick, is only one of the many reasons why you should stay at our place. So . . . make the right move.
Come to where the living is easy.
Naismith Hall
1800 Naismith Drive, Lawrence, Kansas 66044 Phone (913) 842-8989
EQUAL RIGHTS NIGHT
Thursday "Yuk Down" Guys and Gals FREE
$1.00 Pitchers
Live Music
University Dally Kansan
Wednesday, April 28.1976
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannon are offered to all students without regard to their enrollment status. 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
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
...
ERRORS
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 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 UDK business office at 644-5358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. 82-
PART PART-MALAMUH PUPILS CALL 82-507-4195.
READ ONLINE AT MALAMUH.COM
Employment Opportunities
Career related summer job must be locate-outside Kansas. Earn $38 per month. Call 837-8792
FOR RENT
Free rental service. Up to the minute listings of
rentals. Lawrence, Lawrence
Rental Exchange. 842-250-3900.
2 bdrm, all until paid, on campus. Furn. or
unfree. Park free. a/c, pool. 834-995-100.
1-4 bedroom apartments, room with kitchen privile-
ment and storage to ramp up $39 and up. 8425
or 8432-F or 8435-F
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate lease. Lease from June 1, 1976 and take advantage of the new offers now before it's too late. Park 253 Apartments, 2 blocks west of Iowa on 23rd St. Phone 812-415-8500.
SUMMER RATES at Uni Turr. & Old Mill
Ratings, swimming pool 1, berm. furn.
drains, swimming pool 1, berm. furn.
utilities; 2 bedm. furn.; $140 plus utilities. Rates
utilities; 3 bedm. furn.; Aug. 15 to Sept.
842. 842-247 or 833-1433.
Sublease three-bedroom house, full basement, all
bedrooms $185/month. June-mid-August.
Call 841-50132
Sublease June 1 to Aug. 10, 3 kdm 1½ bath.
Sublease June 1 to Aug. 10, 3 kdm 1½ bath.
84521 - 021 or 8412-242
84521 - 021 or 8412-242
Sublease—department, late May till August.
Bookings from campus at 841-1035, 4-28
negotiate price. 841-1035
Apt. to sublet beginning May 24, 8 days free.
Indoor and outdoor pools: 804-355-428-
4-28
One room studio apartment. Clean quiet. AC compartment, kitchen available. May St. Calhoun. 402-761-9350.
Sublease: from May 23 to Aug. 2 2 d bbm,
trailer, furnished, AC, Call 843-3572.
4-29
Sublaze 1 bedroom furniture apartment for 1
3 years Aarg $130 plus utility call 4-258
Aarg Aarg Aarg
Garden plants for rent. Four sizes already plowed,
and discarded irrigated by well water.
842-202-9000
Substance - for summer very nice 2 berm 48-inch
location right next to campus. 841-709-8500. 841-
709-8600. 841-709-8600.
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & 8th
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon..Sun.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203
701 Mass.
843-1360
10-5 Tues.-Sat.
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
Styling for men and women
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
9th and Illinois 843-3034
Insight INTO LIFE
842·4441
RECORDED MESAGE (24 h)
1 bbm furnished apartment for rent for sum-
mage $125 a month plus unit Call 849-3547
849-3547
Large house. 2 x 4 bedrooms. Rural type setting.
2 car garage. Phone 843-9573. 4-29
Furnished apartments, one bedroom, air conditioned at 19 W. 14th. 858 Avail May 1 848-6070
Sublease for summer Mid-May to August 13.
One bedroom, completely furnished. Close to
the beach.
To submit May 28 - August 15, Clean space 406
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Female graduate student wants studious, non-smoking female to share three bedroom apartment for summer and next year $40/month and part of study room. Contact Mary C. Aplin 816-7520 or
For Rent—One dbm, apd. apt close to campus,
*$25 mn*, pd. Avail. 841-284-10, 4-30
Sublime one bedroom apt for summer, furnished,
AC, all utilities paid - 814, 422/1028
Sublasing studio apartment over summertime (Meadowbrook). Join after 2 p.m. 841-645-6445.
**downbook:** Call John after 2 p.m. 814-645-4300
**sublease apartment:** for summer - Jasawhery
Towers 2 bedroom for 1 person, utilities paid
music, discount on deposit. Banking:
8629 4-29
Partially furnished older home near campus in the Heart of Chicago, with double living room, dining room, kitchen and screened-in-backyard. 12 mo lease at $90 per month. 25% discount on room fee. Group of students. Available May 16, 1822 at http://www.harvard.edu/studios/
Location for summer sublease. Furnished and
location for new campus. Call 811-6022 anytime after
5:30AM.
HAPPINESS IS living in your own private study bedroom in an interior encapulation with 30 rooms. There is also a fully exercisec room, library, washer-dryer, and other furniture. You can relax remodling this summer. Your share of choices about an hour per day pee. Walking distance to the school campus and to Call Dan or Alice to 10 weeknights at calldan.com/adam.
STUDENTS-ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLE!! 30 camp-making. Opportunities for campers to create a camp-making. Opportunities for campers to create a camp-making. Credit, credit, credit. Private rooms $28-$37! In-person classes and camps $25-$35! Recreation activities evening meals $25-$35! Emergency building to be thoroughly remodeled at dusk. Camp hours 10 weeknight at $25! Alice or Dian T to 10 weeknight at $25!
SUMMER SUBLUEASE-LARGE-4-5 bedroom house
blocks, from canopy to doorway,
gardens & balconies
642-863-8422
642-863-8422
Subrata: late May-Aug. Beautiful well kept 8-bedroom. Close to Campus Call 641-6770
Sublease 3 bdmr. house for summer. Summer
house. Floor. Ridge. Fear. Nearly完
房. 861, 471-319. 4-50
Spacesuit 2 brom. townhouse fully equipped
with tv and toilet. Monthly $149.
May 3rd to October 3rd. S 894-7000.
Sublease 1 bedroom apartment for summer. Completely furnished, near campus and downtown. Free parking.
Sub for summer: nice furnished 2 bedroom,
npc. AAC location $15,841-$16,841 after 5,
weeks of rent.
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prices you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or out-crewed products, we offer the best product offered by the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIEFS.
Tremendous selection of guitars, saxes, drums,
bass, keyboards, cellos, organ and more.
Shop. Hire Keyboard Studios. Choose from GUIBUR
Ampera Kustom, Greek and many other
keyboards. Hire Keyboard Studios. Choose from
169 W 23rd St. Hose. Keyboard Studios.
169 W 23rd St. Hose.
COST * 10% —Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single unit or package. Register for free Kiss Music or package. Call Dave. Phone # 68258. 6283ens 6 to 10.
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialties.
BELL AUFER,
ELECTRIC, 845-906, 3009. W. 6th.
WE SELL FOR LESS-11 to 6:30. Good used furniture and appliances, up to $750 (some all appliances are taxed); TWs; some Have Lawways-, weekly free delivery, 1228 East Lake Topanga, Topika, Xx Phone 1-272-355 or www.welivery.com
Excellent solution of New & Used furniture &
appliances. The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704 N. 12th St., Brooklyn, NY 11203.
**Western Civilization Notes - New on sale**
**Makes sense to use here.**
Makes sense to use here.
20 For class preparation
21 For class preparation
**New Analysis of Western Civilization**
22 For class preparation
Toyota Corolla 60, 35 mm in city, runs great,
no problem. Must sell. Call 414-1414, leave me
much time.
Buber summer machine 75 Ciattini Italian motor
builder 68 Giuliano Gallucci Bright
900 or best offer 841-973-761 4-20
899 or best offer 841-973-761 4-20
Final price cut! MagnaVison console store. En-
hanced drive/cable cut to $100 each. Ray Stoneback, 929 Masc
Sony sale! Save on now on Sony radio, clock radio,
phone charger, headphones, 3D glasses, 929 Max. Open Thursday nights.
929 Max.
Radial Tire Clearance! Your choice of any size BP Goodrich radial listed $85 each installed with an optional rear tire kit 16J-14 BR78-14, RY Stonebak® 829. Max Service at your store, Woolworths, B-5 service at our store.
C.R. RADIOOS – incarceration – 20% OFF
RADIOOS - incarceration – 20% OFF
Bass Audio, E 16 W, 800-8427, Audit Sound
www.radiosports.com
Used Motorola color portable. only $149.90 at
Ray Stoneback's 329 Mass. 4-28
SCUBA—exposure suit–tank-regulator with rubber glove; filler tank filled with oxygen. Call 897-2122. Phone 897-2123. 4-38
68 Corvette Roadster, 327, 400hp, 4-speed, fully customized, new everything, $199.95
Bonne Hill 10-8-4 lotion in a spray? Soothen
and calm skin. $12.95. Corrort Drug Store, 801 Mass.
4-25
Bargain used books, Texts, fiction, medical, law,
Kids' Shop, Parkway shopping in Central,
May 3 to May 8
Round Convert can save Mothers Day day off, pro-
fessional day off. Foldable. Handwritten. Folded.
Foilback. Holderbuck. 511. Bubenham. Cotty.
Duncan. Washcloth.
74 Honda 175. Must sell 1,000 rules, like new.
helmets, 60 mpg, best offer, 841-3791.
--and SUNDAY
Losing your tint? Get a sunslam at Round Corner Drug Store-806. Mass. 843-0200. 4-29
1967 TTRA, high performance, speed 140
1967 Gts-38 vs. 38 mps with overtive Mgt. grid
1967 Gts-38 vs. 38 mps with overtive Mgt.
grid
1973 WV Benthe, excellent condition, 30,900 miles,
2.50 cm, radial tires. Mail 842-905-4-29
Stephen B. is here! Pure colore spray at Round Corner Drug Store, 801 Mall. Mass: 642-0500 4-29
Forder Bamian Amplifier 2 12S speakers w/
Bamian speaker cable, fabric case,
Collector's kit, fine condition /w/a
Refrigerator.
Wanna lift a *bum* Beach Hum that is. Use
a stand, 80" tall, 21" wide and lattice-
able at back Corner, 60" wide.
Adequate for handheld.
Gossen Luna-Pro light meter. Monochrome strobe light. 180-motor lotre. Call Rohd at 723-695-7233.
1971 Dodge Challenger, radial tree, p.s.a., compact, bucket, cone, amm. radio, 8100 or less base price
Bargain used books, Texts, fiction, medical, law, buturgus, Ward Park Shopping Center, May 14.
15. wood catfish with fliberglass hull with
18. bone catfish with fliberglass hull
Cookinat carrier three. Good condition. 862-7911
Cookinat carrier four. Good condition. 862-7911
4'14" Crane SS swag for 5-lb chevy. Matched
with Bombardier 8000. Holds up to 75 lb.
after 9 p.m. or on com. by 23 Haskell
Hatchback.
General Electric Stereo Component System
Good condition $50. Will discuss price Call 842-
312-8266.
10-speed—very reasonable Must snap quickly.
841-4079 4-30
OVATION 12-string. guitar. Price reasonable.
841-0148 after 6. 4-30
1959 Burgeo Sprite. excellent cond. Come见 it.
4-30
1960 Burgeo Sprite. 82-714. after 5.20.
4-30
Pioneer XS-9000, LBW, revol. mile m2, 2 patrs
Pioneer XS-9000, 1'5-way Speaker, Beamanean. Buzzle
842
Sears 10-speed bike. 842-7114 after 5:30 4-30
I have to leave town. Must sell $9 Trump Trophy 4-30
and make an offer 841-721-6500 to have spend
4-30
85mm RICOH F14 lens 4 flashes, 3X teleconverter,
case, electronic flash. $165, $183, 4-29
Ten speed bike. Like new. Ridden only three
times $100 or best offer 841-6453. 4-30
Baby's white wicker changing table, Ironing board, 842-7483 4-29
1974 Kawasaki 500, green, good condition,
8725-hsre - bid 842, 9336 or 4138 - 4-30
King-size waterbed-frame, headboard, mattress
and pad. $60. 82-883-8834
4-30
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKED SPECIALS.
Honda XL 45, 72 Built by Honda 250 Sherpa T, 72 Horns
Honda CT 70, 72 Triumph T, 74 Yamaha
Honda CT 70, 72 Triumph T, 74 Yamaha
Horizons Honda 181 W, 65 H, 84-3333
5-4
Acoustic PCA columnums $350. Mitch B453-845-644.
guitar guitar $105 Honda 125 inches, low mileage
guitar guitar $105 Honda 125 inches, low mileage
Samuel $900 Receiver. Less than two months old, mint condition, $600. Mint gift for financial request.
Home mobile. 2 bdm., furn. unfurnished.
Mobile home. 2 bdm., fitted. 2 AC's under $580,
843-782-760.
1971. Flat 124 Boyer conv. 30 plus miles per gallon. Keep in excellent condition. Will consider as a collector. (1)
Rain gear light weight and high quality. Trail-
wear jacket, shorts, pants. Only at Sunflower Surplus. 804 Mass. Rentals.
Me help me clean my garage - two cane bottom cabinets, two small white cabinets (painted), silverware, small tables, old radio, chest of drawers, wicker baby buggy, girl's bed, black leather armchair, May 1 only 2022 Westchester, 4-30
170 Karmann Ghb. excellent condition, rebuilt
scription, $560. 862-3234
scription, $560. 862-3234
90 van, long wheel base A/T, radio, new tires,
low mileage (rebound motor), Call 481-8453 - 118
CASSETTE TAPE NECRIDOR Supercspe C
280 Stereo, ADC, portable--doubles as home or
tai cup deck--compact enough for classroom or
rooming. Runt's Silvianan, 841-290-360
4123
1859 Make mobile home. 10 x 10 one bedroom.
Make offer. Call 341-3258 after 6 p.m.
5-4
HELP WANTED
70 Suzuki 250. 250 speed. Six speed. beetle will take best offer, call Rich Killman 813-792-6-32
King size waterbed: 8' 2-way speakers (pair);
Lawndra x track AM FM TUNE 64, 662-245.
www.lawndra.com
HELP WANTED: Kansas Students Company
supplier of student workbooks, etc.
available in accessible
electronic format.
PAYE TIME-EARN $ PER WEEK. FOR 3
PAYE TIME-EARN $ PER WEEK.
BETWEEN 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. for MONDAYS,
BETWEEN 8 p.m. to 10 p.m. for SATURDAYS.
Avon can help you have the summer vacation
of your dreams. Call Ms. Berry at 424-862-0424 or
in Lawrence, Call Mr. Sells, 424-862-0426.
Summer work, Johnson County area, Phil C.
864-6842
4-35
College English teachers; possible opening this week in various locations, including compass college literature courses. MA in English Language and Experience teaching English at the University of California, May 12 to June 9. For information write James A. Gowan on College Writing, Kaiser Lawrence, 60045. An Emotional Kaiser, 60045. An Emotional Kaiser, 60045. An Emotional Kaiser, 60045.
COLLEGE STUDENTS NOW HIRING FOR SUMMER WORK IN SUMMER. CALL FOR INTERVIEW WEEKS IN SUMMER. CALL FOR INTERVIEW RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CORP. HIRED AND STATE STATE KANARAB CITY, KANARAB
Full summer employment for reliable young per-
sident. Experience: 4 years. Call: 931-857-4246
**STUDENTS** SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. Pinker-Forrester will be making applications for students who desire summer employment. To qualify, you must be 21 or over, have a clean, clean car, transportation available and phone Apollo Management Transportation available and phone Apollo Management Transportation available and phone Apollo Management Building 1018 Grade, Kauai City, Maui in person. An Equally Opportunity Employer.
Stoklue Stockle will be interviewing on campus
Friday, April 31 sign up at 202 Summerfest An-
nouncement Center.
Lawrence Gay Counseling Services needs professional and sup coceptor for next year. We offer programs that include job openings and direct callers to appropriate counsellors with more information call 644-131 or 642-587 - 3087.
Secretary-Receptionist, half-time, for fast paced office situation in load form. Requires a pleasant, cheerful demeanor and ability to work the work out. 7:30 a.m - 12:30 p.m M-F Book 4000 or Office Book 4-3000 e Lawrence Journal World.
Hoots-Catster, fine area restaurant must be located in a sunny and fall part-time, time zone 833-210-6900.
Elliott dollars to participate in two on-hour mission in making sure students are making progress in meeting decisions on helping call. Call will be available from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Top Paying Job It is open to experienced sales
administrators. Call Radley Caldwell
841-372-5711. Full time only.
Summer employment for women: larger moving companies are hiring new applicants for women packers to prepare diaper, clean bedding, etc. for装货。Kenya is a country where women work in transportation. Apply to Kenyan American Motor Carriage Inc.
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisement are sponsored as a public service announcement. "Flood Watch" is the name of Master Bank's b&b & Farm Savings First National Bank.
Lost: 2 rings in East Lakes john at stadium
on Friday; Friday, April 6, 1998 at 4:39
Lost-large, black and white male, Silberian
dagger with color tags with letters. Receive
a d867. Kew calling.
Found. Gold rimmed glasses by Potters, April
16. Call 842-5739
4-28
Lost: on campus, red and white blue-eyed hen
rides 4, missed, missed 828-415-396
- 5976
Found a silver bracelet in downtown parking lot, foreign make. Call 842-3024 to claim. 4-28
Found black labrador puppy in Gread Hall next to stadium 842-4289 4-29
Found a Sewlon owner's manual on campa-
claim at 11. Flint 4-28
Found necklace in Women's locker room in Ro-
imson, Call 842-6750 and identify
4-28
Long-bearied yellow male cat. Very affectionate,
needs loving home. 843-5900. 4-30
NOTICE
Reproduction is faster than ever with Alice, at the rate of your 120 page thesis in 5 minutes See Alice in action for all of your copying and printing Quick Copy Center, B&B Manuscript stud. 841-6900.
The Caibabo Cafe special Sunday dinner in a Puffin
cake. Call 613-295-8178 for reservations.
Seahawk each week. Call BM 613-295-8178 for reservations.
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Mass. used furniture, dishes,
lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12 p.m.
to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays.
After 28 years (business if George doesn't)
get the job offered on Mondays. George's GPS show, TV77
and Radio show, TBS.
E enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation provided. Drive new, pay $350,
transportation provided. Drive new, pay $350,
50% off our entire collection of jewelry, 50% off on
their new limited edition designs.
Bake, Bail, E. 8th (downtown), 4-30
Mary Koehler, E. 9th (downtown).
"Bahawah'ish and the New Era." The definitive
book on Bahawah'ish in the Town Crier Rockefeller
UNDERGRADUATES
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Describe your most unforgettable college teacher. 100 words or less.
Must be University name names.
Must be Public School name names.
Receive $50. All entries become sole property of Esquire. Send to S. Wheeler, Esquire, New York, New York. N.Y. 10022.
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number one drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous, 842-0110. **tt**
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Toll: 5-11
Without Zionist there would be no Zion 4-29
President Mullen and Vice-president Hore are in Lawrence this week. Call Weldon. 4-30
Come one—come all May Day, May Festival—a week away. Visit the Kennedy Participate in workshops; See Women's Music at a Women's Coffeehouse; Learn about the Children's Children's Childcare, April 30-May 2. Spend with Women's Coalition and Commission on the Status of Women, Funded by Student Activity Fee: 4-30
Abbie Hughes 52th birthday. I love you, Pit
Hirt. How could we forget your Happy Birthday?
I wish I could be with you.
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THE SKY'S THE LIMIT! Virtually any jewelry design possible. Professional (BFA degree) goldsilverware. Complete stone cutting, wide surface stitching. Certified warranty guaranteed. 841-3883 or 843-0970. tf
MATH TUTOR with MA in mathematics. Call 841-3708 at 6 p.m.
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Trying to sell a musical instrument or sound
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Passport and resume photon made at reasonable rates. For appointments call Dave's Guide, 642-875-1330.
GAY SOCIAL ACTIVITIES-Find out about gay
meetings and activities where to go to meet
meetings meetings, where to go to meet
LAWRENCE GAY COUNSELING SERVICE--Do you have feelings you can't understand? Do you want to learn about it or talk about? We have professionals, para-professionals and rap counselors to talk with. Let us help 842-
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[Portrait of a man holding a book].
"Knowledge is as wings in his life, and a ladder for his ascent." Baha'i Club Meeting, April 5, 17:30 p.m. Oral Bailhand, Union
QUANTRILLS
THE MARKET
TLEA MARKET
OPEN EVERY SATURDAY
THERES BINDING - The Quick Copy Center is designed to provide our service in fast and price are reasonable. We offer 24/7 access to the library's services.
TYPING
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
811 New Hampshire
YOU COULD POSSIBLY WANT
Professional typing, reasonable work. wwu.edu.
sertations on electrical, B.A., Social Sciences,
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I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 5-11
Experienced typist—term papers, messe, mike.
Experienced typist—term papers, messe, mike.
Signed spelling, correction. 843-5036, Mrs. Wright.
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ANYTHING
**TYPING**-We have many return customers who are pleased with our low rates and good work.
We appreciate your business. Call Linda or Harvey 842-910-90.
Will do typing. Elite electric. Term paper and
mice no thesis. Proofreading Mrs. Hays. $75.00
Expert typing /reasonable rates; Proofreading;
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Experienced typist—themes, term paper, manual
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Experienced typist will need term papers, thesis-
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Borland, 841-0984
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WANTED
Recommenset for large 2 bedroom apt. May be furnished. Student desired, b411-765-068 after 6 p.m.
Roommate, serious, senior, summer only, own
room, extra nice, $7. Ace 8142-4587 4 - 29
3000-3666-0000
Responsible - undergird female wants apt or more of each task (e.g. maintaining, exchanging housework, homework, help with kids, cleaning up, etc.)
Mustal, non-instituition grad student who keeps
contact with faculty to share large 3-bedroom house near campus.
Female roommate to share 2 bedroom apartment
rental in a large town near college.
Ridged dweller and close to campus. Call
800-555-4123.
Manual; non student grad student who keeps track of students enrolled in the school to share large 3-bedroom house near campus.
Female roommate to share 2-bedroom furnished at the Mall for Fall Call Carol or 841-1601.
need at least 2 (maybe 3) roommates for large, comfortable 4 bdrm. on west edge of town. Plenty of room for critics and artists. Call Chl. 814-459-4600.
Keep trying
Two room matrons, to share two bedroom appli-
cations. 4-8/17/2015
1/7 months monthly. 841-3164. 4-29
1/7 months monthly. 841-3164. 4-29
Roommate to share 2 bbm. apt. close to campus.
$32/month Must be a non-smoking serious
relaxer or have chronic asthma.
**ONLY TWO MEMBERS WILL BE**
**INVITED**
Nice roommates wanted to share apt. for fall and spring semester. Cindy 843-208-2698.
Want to buy good prints from Genesis concert.
Call local 542-2557. Niek. 5-4
Two intelligent men would like to meet
with the lord and President Ford. Call 844-
752-6300 or visit www.ruralford.com.
Liberal roommate to share 2 bedroom apt. of nite fox plex, central air close to campus.
Male roommate wanted to share two bedroom unit through the summer-immune occupancy
Desperately Need Tickets for "Wings" concert May 29, Please mail 841-3827 5-4
Dengatsu IN
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Viking on motorbike
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No one under 18 admitted.
9th & Iowa
10
Wednesday. April 28.1976
University Daily Kansan
---
Charges aired in report
From page one
The officer was found to have paid a fair price for the car.
-That certain officers were ordered not to make a gambling rally at a local private
sterkwitz said that some officers had planned to enter a club in civilian clothes to determine there was gambling going on there. Their plan was stopped by two high ranking supervisors who said there wasn't enough evidence to warrant the time and resources of the club's investigators and said it was their prerogative to set priorities in law enforcement.
—That an officer, now a corporal,
were crowned. was promoted. the corwall was promoted.
The report said that both Stanwix and the officer admitted to a meeting about a year prior to the officer's promotion in which they discussed why he hadn't been promoted. Both denied, however, that any blackmailman had ever into consideration was that the officer in question had placed sixth out of nine in his oral board test for promotion and tied for last in the written test. It was explained that the officer was promoted because he had seniority and the job wasn't a supervisory one. The report pointed out that the officer was promoted to corporal at the time placed fifth and sixth in the combined test scores.
—That the same corporeal involved in the bailmilk allegation had offered to split some of the assets.
The officer reported the corporal's offer to his superiors and the corporal was questioned at the time of the incident (last year) about why he had left the evidence in his patrol car instead of turning it in to the evidence room as he should have. The corporal denied any wrongdoing and was asked if there was anything advising an officer under his command of the wrong procedure in handling found evidence.
Berkowitz said although there was no conclusive evidence to prove the charge, there was strong evidence that at some point, the corporal did intend to keep the property if it wasn't claimed. He criticized the department for not bringing the matter to his attention when it occurred and noted the discrepancy between the department's rank of corporal was a supervisory one in one case and not in another.
-That a high ranking officer entered a private club and tried to order a beer and when he was refused because neither he nor his friends were members, he ordered two on-duty officers to the club to check it for serving minors.
No violations were found by the reporting officers and the bartender told them what their superior had done. One of the officers entered that into his report.
Berkowitz said that although there was no evidence of criminal intent on the part of the superior officer, he again chastised the department and the chief of police for not
undertaking a thorough investigation of the matter when it occurred.
this is a glaring example of the department's failure to investigate compli-
gations.
Stanwick said he had talked only briefly at a coffee shop to the bartender who had complained. Stanwick also stated he had talked to the officer who said he didn't make the call for the raid. However, the report from the office that was sent to the attorney's office that he made the call and IBM records in the department's files show that he did make the call.
Berkwitz recommended that the city administration investigate the matter further and decide if some disciplinary action is needed.
Stanwix said yesterday that he was satisfied with the handling of the matter. —In the fall of 1972, $492 and a large amount of equipment were on the evidence room at the police station.
The report said that several detectives had access to the evidence room and access to the room by other officers and even civilians was relatively easy.
The investigation of this matter also was incomplete, the report said. Stanxiw said he left it up to the detectives to find out what happened to the evidence. Berkowitz compared that to "placing the fox in among the cats," and argued that he be considered as suspects, too. No lie detector tests were given even though one officer offered in writing to take one. Because it isn't possible to ascertain now whether the evidence was misplaced, accidentally destroyed or stolen by an officer, they could not have been left over many fine detectives. Stanxiw repaid the money with a personal loan because he said
the merry he was his responsibility. The incident 'remains unsolved, but Berkowitz said he thought that none of the detectives were implicated.
BERKOWITZ TEMPERED his criticism of the department by saying he believed the department's personnel were no worse and less important than the personnel of similar departments in cities the size of Lawrence. He said some of the detectives on the force were equal to or better than those of 25 other agencies he had seen. He also expressed his faith in Stanwick.
"While our investigation has indicated certain weaknesses, especially in the area of inner-departmental communication and discipline," the report said, "we believe that he (Stanwick) is an honest and sincere person."
The report concluded with Berkwitz's recommendations on how to improve the department. Berkwitz said he didn't have the authority to demand the department to adopt his recommendations but he thought most of them would be implemented.
We Write Automobile Insurance
—THAT A FIRM departmental rule is forbidden foridding any police officer from buying or selling property or accepting gifts in jail, prison or under criminal charges.
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
-That a disciplinary board be established within the department consisting of both supervisory personnel and line officers and possibly a city administrator. The board would handle investigation of noncriminal matters.
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—That a tactical officer, preferably a detective, be at the scene of every crime to assign the duties and jobs of the various officers there.
- Rules and regulations should be set out carefully and enforced firmly.
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—That a strategic officer also be present to tell the tactical commander what needs to be done, preferable the county attorney, or assistant, or the chief of police or his assistant.
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---
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
BEAUTIFUL!
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.133
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Thursday, April 29, 1976
Santee to seek 46th dist. seat in state House
See page 9
FIL
Staff photo by DON PIERCE
Brisk review
Caught without coat at the Naval ROT review yesterday, Tom Pflhl, Overland Park freshman, shivers in the cold, breezy
weather. The ROTC unit has been practicing for its Spring Review on Friday.
Bv JERRY SEIR
Staff Writer
Parking fee freeze advised
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
recommended that this year's parking fees remain in effect next year, but Chancellor Ruth Reilly hasn't accepted that recommendation.
Hankel said last night that Dykes hadn't made a final decision. Dykes was out of work and the staff
The board proposed higher parking fees for all campus parking lots for next school year. But the University Council voted against the higher fees after several council members objected to a parking services fund balance of $469,000.
In a letter to Dykes yesterday, Shankel suggested that Dykes follow a University Council recommendation to reject higher housing imposed by the parking and traffic board.
PARKING SERVICES is the division of police and parking responsible for maintaining and patrolling campus parking areas.
Shankel's letter said he reviewed the parking services fund and budget, and then wrote to him.
Teddie Tassoff, student body president, flew with Dykes to a high school honors banquet in Concordia night. Before Dykes arrived, she and the Dykes to keep this year's parking fees.
"I would just hope he would take vice chancellor Shankel's and the University Council's recommendations that the fees should be paid." Those should carry the most weight.
Although he advised against raising the prices of parking permits, Shankel
suggested that a $5 price tag be put on campus passes, which are currently issued free. He said the physically handcapped pass is to receive the passes without charge.
CAMPUS PASSES give vehicles access to inner campus streets at 7 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. on school days, when the streets are closed to vehicles without the passes.
the proposed higher fees, it had been silent about campus passes.
In its proposed fee schedule, the parking and traffic board had requested that
Shankel said in his letter that, although the University Council had soundly defeated
But Frances Ingemann, University Council presiding officer, said at yesterday's SenEx meeting that she thought the council had rejected the fee for campus passes along with the remainder of the proposed fees.
She said that the price for the campus passes was part of the proposed fee schedule, and that the council had voted down the entire schedule.
HANKEL SAID last night he would
PARKING FEES page 19
Orderly bar crowds expected after games
Staff Writer
By MIKE THIESEN
See PARKING FEES page 12
City officials and bar owners don't expect any major problems when crowds return to the bars near the University of Kansas campus after home football games this fall.
Last fall the city threatened to close three bars near campus on days of home schooling, but Ohio complained the bars were allowing customers to take beer outside. There were also complaints of beer cans being dumped in trash bins, and reports of cars being vandalized.
Report on withheld records OK'd
REZONING OF the area around the bars and the development of a small business district near the campus were discussed as action was taken on either project.
THE LAWRENCE CITY Commission closed 14th, from Tennessee to the campus, and put extra police in the area of 14th and Ohio, on the days of home football games.
By HARRIS RAYL
that the bars could be forced to close on game daws if problems continued.
Maryor Fred Pence said Tuesday that he didn't think everything went well in the area around the bars last year but that he didn't expect any problems this fall.
If the petition is approved by the Senate, it will be sent to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor. It would urge the administration to adopt the following policy:
The Senate will review the report and vote on the petition at its meeting Wednesday.
A report and a petition dealing with administrative documents withdrawn from the public was approved last night by the Student Senate Communications' Com-
The petition, which the report recommends for approval by the Senate, urges the University administration to adopt a definite policy for determining which documents should be made public and which shouldn't.
"Anytime you get 4,000 people together there will be two or three who want to cause trouble. But it is such a small percentage," he said.
The report, which was the result of a Communications subcommittee investigation into the issuance of secret University documents, states that the University currently has no policy dealing with the release of documents.
"ALL FINAL documents or reports that deal with issues having direct impact on
the student body, except those dealing with personnel and disciplinary matters, shall be made available to the student body and to the news media."
The communications subcommittee investigation and subsequent petition was prompted by one recent refusal and another by a complaint against officials to release documents to the public.
Currently a preliminary version of the report is being circulated to various schools and departments, but hasn't been made available with possible sex discrimination at KU.
In March, the dean of women's office refused to release a copy of the office's brief.
Also in March, Shankel told the Title IX subcommittee report might not be released.
ALTHOUGH THE petition urges the administration to adopt a fairly open policy on the release of documents, it allows an exception for preliminary or "working"
The budget was requested because of alleged spending disparities between that one and the other.
documents. the petition urges their release only if "their availability will not seriously jeopardize the final report of an administration or administrative committee."
But, the report adds, if a preliminary report is withheld, a summary of its content may be obtained.
In reference to the petition, Shankel said yesterday, "I wouldn't want to say if we'll adopt it until we see it and have a chance to study it. But from what I've seen of it, I don't think it's something we couldn't accept."
Shankel said he didn't think adoption of the proposed policy would change the status of either the Title IX report or the release of the dean of women's office's budget.
The bars involved last year were the Bierstube, 1344 Tennessee; the Wagon Wheel Cafe, 507 W. 14th; and the Jayhawk Cafe, 1340 Ohio.
After several meetings with the bar owners, the city allowed the bars to stay open. However, the bars were required to be closed on game days to keep beer drinkers inside.
The bars were also required to put an advertisement in the Karsan requesting students to obey laws concerning the taking of alcoholic beverages outside and to respect the property rights of people living in the area.
STEVE LEBEN, communications chairman, explained that the exception for preliminary reports resulted from certain subcommittee members and subcommittee by several administrators.
For example, Leben said, "If the preliminary report said the University should do something, and the University should do something else, come along later and quote the report and
Pence said the KU football games brought a lot of money into the city and were temporary.
The bar owners informed their customers
can tolerate some difficulties," he said. Last fall, John Wooden, owner of the Wolverine Cafe, told me that the Jayhawk Cafe, said they were interested in having their land rezoned to allow them to expand. But Pence said no needs for rezoning in the area had been made.
say the University didn't do what the report said it should do."
The subcommittee's report was compiled during the past three weeks from information found through interviews with the Lawrence campus vice chancellors, the acting dean of women, the dean of men and local news agencies.
Barkley Clark, Lawrence city commissioner, said there were a number of objections to rezoning by people in that area. He was currently a solution to the problem.
See RECORDS page 3
ITS INDINGS WERE:
—Although the University has no written
The area in which the two caffes are located is currently zoned "residential-dormitory." The businesses were already in operation before the area was reenforced in
See POSTGAME CROWDS page 2
ITS FINDINGS WERE:
Minority recruiters meet varying levels of success
Efforts to increase minority student enrollment at the University of Kansas appear to have with varying degrees of success. Students enrolled on one hand to be added on the other.
The Office of Admissions and Records has designed programs geared toward recruiting minority students, but these programs are limited to 20 percent of significant increase in minority enrollment.
(Editor's note: This is the first of two articles examining recruitment of minority teachers.
By JULIE WILLIAMS
Marshall Jackson, assistant director of admissions and records, said yesterday that
"There have been slight increases of incoming minority freshmen, but in terms of the outflow (dropouts plus graduates) of minority students, there has been no increase in the overall number," Jackson said.
minority student enrollment had stayed constant in the past several years.
Through the admissions office, basic information about application procedures, financial aid and academic catalogs is given to minority students in high schools and community groups throughout Kansas, he said.
"I don't think there are enough different kinds of financial aid. There's federal money available."
JACKSON SAID he encouraged minority students to apply to the University and often
send reminder letters to the interested students following a recruitment visit.
Jackson noted two main reasons for the small percentage of minority students at KU. (Out of about 21,000 students, around 3 per cent, are minority students.)
"I don't think there are enough different kinds of financial aid," he said. "There's federal money available but not enough scholarships. In terms of the pool of minority students we should try to reach more students."
He said that all the possibilities of attending the University were explained and that he tried to give students all the information they needed.
He said one problem was financial aid, which he said played a great role in getting the budget right.
In addition to administrative efforts to increase minority student enrollment, student organizations have designed individual recruiting programs.
JACKSON ALSO attributed the lack of minority students to the University's image, and said an impersonal overlying competitive image often inhibited students
Deborah Pitts, treasurer of the Black Business Student Council (BBSC), said one of the organization's major goals was recruitment.
Pitts said the organization tried to make information about the school available to children.
"One of our major objectives is to recruit minority students because we have less than 10 in the School of Business right now," she said.
SHE SAID ALL the BSCS display and information tried to enrol in
organization's goals and show what the school offered.
The BBRC recruitment methods include writing letters to high school seniors on campus, and sending resumes.
She said she hoped more minority students could be recruited to deal with the problems students currently face in the school.
"the problems we're facing include alteration of each other, misinformation about job opportunities and a lack of interaction between minorities within the school."
Pitts said the group also planned tours of the business school in conjunction with the university.
"Black students are often misled about curriculum requirements and the length of the program."
Pitts said that because the school claimed to have been unaware of the minority students in business, many career opportunities had been eliminated.
"IN THE PAST, employers have come to the school in search of minorities and they have been turned away because there were none available." she said.
She said that with the re-establishment of the BBC, the school could be aware of the problems and concerns of the black port of the faculty the future looked bright.
"I think it's going to be very beneficial to the students in the future," Pits said.
n competent tutoring and counseling See MINORITY page 12
County Volunteer
Motorcycle mishap Staff photo by
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Bruce Cohen, Prairie Village freshman, was injured yesterday when he lost control of his motorcycle while driving up Irving Hill Drive below Lewis Hall. The motorcycle left the road and struck several trees along the sidewalk. Cohen suffered a fractured leg and a broken arm. He is in satisfactory condition at Watkins Hospital.
SenEx pair to prepare report reply
SenEx$ will officially comment on the Student Senate Report on the Quality of Classroom Instruction after two SenEx$ writes a statement for the entire group.
At its regular meeting yesterday, SenEx gave his chairman and vice chairman the duties of combining reports of three committees and composing the final statement.
Chairman Gerhard Zuther, professor of English, and vice chairman Adrienne Hyle, Manhattan graduate student, will prepare a research paper on the effects of Student Senate after SenEx approves them.
Zuther said he and Hyle planned to present the statement at next Wednesday's SenEx meeting, where it might be approved or drafted once again by Hyle and Zuther.
The Report on the Quality of Classroom Instruction, compiled earlier this year by a special Student Senate commission, conducted on how to improve classroom teaching.
THE STUDENT Senate submitted the report to SenEx for comments, and SenEx in turn submitted it to three University standing committees for consideration.
Zuther and Hyle will combine the recommendations of the three committees, which are titled Academic Procedures and Management, Administration, and Planning and Resources.
In part, the committee reports say that: "The Senate report assumes there can be valid statistical evaluation on the quality of materials to give an effective means of doing so.
—the methods used in compiling the report weren't "empirically sound."
'A proposed University ambassador, who would be hired to communicate faculty and student grievances to administrators, and student grievance counsel for student grievances about teaching.
-Graduate instructors are best trained and evaluated at the departmental level.
- Students should be allowed to take more than one credit course each year.
and evaluated at the departmental level.
There is a shortage of classrooms
where it is necessary.
In other action, Arno Knapper, associate professor of business, reported that the chairman of the Committee on Financial Aid to Students (FASC) said the committee could file a single report on its year's activities.
2
Thursday, April 29, 1976
University Dally Kansan
associated press digest
Kein on CIA. FBI asked
WASHINGTON - The Senate Intelligence Committee yesterday called for tight control on the CIA and FBL particularly by Congress.
In a 1986 paper report, the committee detailed previously disclosed abuses such as CIA domestic spying the PBIS's COIN-TLIPRO program and electronic surveillance of their employees.
The committee said intelligence agencies used illegal burglary, bugging and blackmail to spy on private American citizens.
blackman to spy on private American citizen.
It made 96 recommendations to sharply curate FBI activities and to prohibit
them from conducting investigations.
Sen. Richard Schwicker, R-Pa., said "Congress bears a heavy responsibility for ignoring its constitutional oversight role."
two Republican members of the committee, vice chairman John Tower of Texas and Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona, refused to sign the report, saying the Senate should not approve it.
The recommendations included a new congressional panel to oversee intelligence activities, a requirement for the FBI to obtain warrants for wiretaps or surveillance cameras.
Senate tables abortion ban
WASHINGTON—The Senate yesterday rejected an effort to amend the Constitution by barring abortions.
The 47 to 40 vote tabled a move by Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C., and others opposed to legalized abortion to include a "right-to-life" provision in the Constitution.
and we use vote "will be viewed by millions of Americans as a vote against the protection of the life of the unborn."
landmark 1975 Supreme Court decision that invalidated state law regarding landmarch 1975 Supreme Court decision that invalidated state law. Birch. Birch D.-Ind., led the battle to table the measure, saying Helms was.
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., led the battle to the measure, saying Helms was trying to bypass a Senate subcommittee that rejected the measure last September.
Bayah said that under Helms' proposal all abortions would be banned including those deemed necessary to safeguard a mother's life.
Meat cutters'strike ends
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-Shooping was expected to be normal today in 160 supermarkets in the metropolitan area after a settlement of a 17-day lockout and wrappers.
Many members of Local 576 of the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Association have requested that a yesterday to ratify a two-year contract that will raise their wages for $13.8 an hour.
A 65-cent increase now, a 50 cent increase a year from now and a 20 cents increase Oct. 9, 1977, will increase a journeyman meat cutter $wage from the current $38 per hour.
The workers will get some added holiday and vacation benefits and some restriction on the hours they can be required to work.
The strike started April 11 at four United Super stores in the suburbs and spread to stores operated by Milgram, A&P, Kroger and Safeway.
Meat counter's were sometimes empty at stores where supervisors couldn't keep in with demand, but no real food shortages developed.
Crash liability left open
WICHTHA—A federal judge at Wichta ruled yesterday that the federal government WICHTHA did not damage resulting from the 1970 crash of an airplane by Wikhta Stats. State laws
U. S. District Court Judge Frank Theisen denied a motion to dismiss the government from lawsuits filed by survivors and heirs of the 31 persons killed in the attack.
Thesis made the ruling during pretrial actions on 11 suits asking $17 million in damages. The suits allege the government was negligent in Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) approval of the airplane that crashed into a mountain near Silver Plume, Colo.
Political funds denied
In A BRIEF ORDER, the appeals court judges said: "The court is of the view that the judgments issued by the Supreme Court this court without power to grant the release."
WASHINGTON (AP)—The U.S. Court of Appeals turned down seven presidential candidates yesterday who had asked for matching funds for their campaigns.
Candidates have requested more than $2.3 million in matching funds that are pending approval.
SINCE MARCH 22, the FEC has been prevented from dispensing the subsidies because of a Supreme Court ruling saying the makeup of the commission is unconstitutional because of the lack of congressional action on changes to comply with the ruling.
The only way the funds can reach the
candidates is for Congress to pass and President Ford to sign a bill reconstructing the commission. That is unlikely to occur in the remaining presidential primaries.
JIMMY CARTER'S chief fund-raiser told the appeals court the outcome of Pennsylvania's Democratic presidential primary might have been much closer if federal funds had been available to the candidates.
Attorney Morris Dees, said that if the Federal Election Commission had been free to dispense funds to candidates in Penn. state, "have had another Wisconsin situation."
Carter won the Wisconsin primary, but only narrowly, against Rep. Morris Udall of Iowa.
Kansan staffs selected
Staff positions for the summer and fall Kansas were approved yesterday by the board.
The news staff for the fall semester, recommended by Debbie Gump, Oakakona senior and editor of the fall Kansan, will be on Wednesday. The management editor; Stewart Brunn, Great Bend senior, campus editor; Steve Schofield, Overland Park junior, sports editor; Dave Regier, Overland Park junior, Great Bend senior, editorial page editor
assistant advertising manager; Sarah McAnany, Mission junior, classified manager; Thomas McAnany, classified manager; and Timothy O'Shea, Lawrence junior, national advertising manager, in addition to Terry Jenkins, a graduate pre-vacuum chosen to be business manager.
The fall business staff will be Carole Roenkoetter, St. Louis junior, assistant business manager; Janice Clements, associate sales manager; Julie Jauci, Kansas City, Kan., junior; Judy Jauci, Kansas City, Kan., junior.
The summer business staff will be Jim Marquart, Shawnee Mission senior, assistant business manager; Jim Fawl, Merriam senior, promotion manager; Sarah McAnany, advertising manager; and Jolene McCleaghan, Lawrence senior. Another addition to Carol Stallard, Omagna junior, previously chosen to be business manager.
The summer news staff will be announced later.
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Sitt Robinson, professor of history and chairman of the KU Bicentennial Committee on the bicentennial and approximately 139 possible topics had been sent to chambers of commerce and bicentennial organizations throughout the state of Kansas, plus local student and faculty members.
Several members of the University of Kansas faculty and staff have volunteered to speak and serve as discussion or panel speakers on a variety of biomedical-related topics.
The brochure lists speech titles according to 20 general topics, including political science, religion, women, journalism, blacks, music and history.
EXAMPLES OF TITLES concerning America's early years include "200 Years of American Music," by Jack Wineocre, assistant professor of piano, and "Was the First 200 Years of Engineering in the United States?" by Joe DeVoe, an associate dean of the School of Engineering.
Faculty members to lead bicentennial panels
Speech and speaker listings under the general topics cover nearly every facet of American society-past, present and future.
Some titles listed refer to the topics of current importance, such as, "The Bicentennial: History's Greatest Promotion," by James H. Sternberg; "The Secretary and director of the Office of University Relations, and "Freedom of the Press," presented by two speakers, Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, and professor of law and political science.
A topic concerning America's future is "Toward 2076: American Values in the Future," by William A. Conboy, professor of speech and drama.
Postgame crowds . . .
From nave one
1966. Prior to that time the area had been zones for "limited commercial" use.
Because the businesses were in the area before it was rezoned, they can't be shut down unless they are declared a public nuisance. Also, if either bar is destroyed it can't be rebuilt. The bars are also installed from expansion unless the area is rezoned.
Pence said it was suggested last year that: the city and University work together to create a small business district within a county. He also called to Argeville at Kansas State University,
REZONING WOULD be needed for this idea, Pence said, but he didn't know whether anyone was now working on the idea.
He said the crowds would probably be controlled the same way they were last
Wooden said he didn't expect any problems at the Wagon Wheel this fall.
"The students helped a lot; most of the problems were with alumni." he said.
Skip Coops, Jayhawk Cafe manager, said expect large crowds this fall but few expected.
"If we do our part, the students cooperate, and if the city does their part, everyone will have a good time and there won't be any problems," Coons said.
COONS ALSO SAID he thought many of the problems last year were caused by returning alumni and the unseasonably hot weather. He told me home games which created large crowds.
Coons said there would be no problems if the city would agree to block off the street again, add five or six policemen on game days; and have the bars keep beer inside and agree to clean up litter after each game.
Rezoning would allow expansion, Coons said, but there would still be no way to do it.
Marnie Argersinger, Lawrence city commissioner, said she expected to have crowds in the bars after the games this fall but thought the actions taken by the city and the bars last year would reduce the problems.
The problems were solved by 6 p.m. or 7 p.m., when the alumni had gone back to school.
Arginger also said she didn't think students had caused the problems.
"IT WAS THE alumn last year who were causing the trouble," she said.
Judging by the drop-off in complaints
during the last two games, Argeringer said, she thought the fencing around the Wagon Wheel and the cooperation of the students had helped solve the problems.
Arginger said there had been talk last week about her experience after games, where people could bring their own beer. She thought having parties at the table would be a good idea and should be conditioned this fall.
Clark said that after the problems developed last year, and after city officials and bar owners worked out their plan, the problems were alleviated around the bars.
Clark said the fenced-in area around the Wagon wheel helped a lot but he thought student awareness of the possibility of falling is the biggest help in reducing the problems.
Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, said yesterday he thought the selling of beer in the Union would also help reduce the crowding at bars near campus.
The Union didn't receive its license to sell
until last in the football season last
year.
"We were pleased with the total activity following the last football game in the fall of 1983."
He also said SUA has had continued successes in parties at the Union and Labour parties, which he said were
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Feel free to contact us for an appointment regarding insurance and estate building programs which are available to you.
Although the brochures have been out for only a few weeks, Robinson said, he expects to see more than 1 million.
842-4708
According to Robinson, the speakers will be available all summer and possibly throughout the year.
OTHER TITLES include: "Religious Skepticism: As American as Cherry Pie," by James Woolfel, professor of religion and philosophy, and "Kansas as Seen from Outer Space," by Roy E. Gridley, professor of English.
--and up
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Robinson stressed that the speakers were volunteers.
"However," Robinson added, "we would hope that if there is very much traveling involved, the speaker would get expenses paid."
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ACCORDING TO Robinson, each of the guest speakers could be contacted by calling their phone numbers which are listed in the brochure. The two parties can then make their own arrangements concerning the date, time and travel expenses.
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Thursday, April 29, 1976
3
By DOMINIC D'ASCOLI
Profs sav notes enhance classes
Some University of Kansas professors, in an effort to help their students in and out of class, have printed their lecture notes for sale through the Kansas Union Bookstore.
The project has developed from two academic practices. Professors who had experience teaching a larger independent study program decided to apply the notes to their traditional classes. Other professors have taught the notes expressly for use by traditional classes.
SALLY BRUCE, editor-in-chief for Independent Study, said Friday most professors working through her department had developed their independent study programs with the alternative of applying them to traditional course systems.
The names of professors interviewed for this story were obtained from the Independent Study Office of the Division of Continuing Education and from the Union Teachers College; the professors contacted require that students be contacted in their classes by the lecture notes.
Switching to notes for regular classes has a good response from both students.
"Teaching this way doesn't reduce the professors' work," Bruce said. "They feel
they know their students better. Students feel it more demanding but they think it is easier.
"So far we've found that these lecture
takes place once a time on anyone's
part, but they seem to be going."
Mike Beehan, assistant manager of the Union Bookstore, said that selling a professor's lecture notes didn't violate bookstore policy.
"It's our policy to accommodate a professor's order, whatever it may be," he
PROFESSORS DETERMINE the cost of tuition Beahon said, and the bookstore sales.
Last semester, John Willingham,
music English offered as lecture
pictures and an archive.
The notes had been used in an in-
dustrial study program for the same
indicators.
Willingham said both he and the students thought the notes, which cost $5, were a "decided help" toward a better understanding of the course.
"I think of them as presenting economically a kind of course background that the students can carry around with them," he said.
Although Willingham didn't give out
James Hillesheim, professor of administration, foundations and higher education, has also adapted his lecture notes from an independent study program.
HILLESHEIM SAID the independent study program consisted of four study manuals, of which his graduate class, history and Philosophy of Education, used two.
"I save my breath a little bit," Hilesheim said, "but we also have more class time to devote to discussion. This helps to make for a more involved class."
Hillsheim said the four manuals, which sell for a total cost of about $15, weren't strictly lecture notes, but comprised assignments, exercises and book selections.
He said an undergraduate class, Survey of American Education, used all fourman
lecture notes to his class this semester, he said, he thinks he will do so again this fall.
Theodore Schleicher, Wichita graduate student in one of Hilleshein's classes, said the manuals were useful for the background information they provided.
"They help you to understand the material in an organizational fashion," he
DORTHEA SIDES, Cape Girardeau, Mo.
Professor's visit aids Syrian ties
In an effort to develop a better cultural relationship with Syria, the U.S. State Department recently sent a University of Kansas professor to the Middle East.
John Erickson, professor of French and Italian, toured Syria March 12-31, lectured to about 4,000 students at three universities in several local government and education officials.
ERICKSON SAID his trip had originally been scheduled for April 1975 but was canceled. He received word in November from the State Department, however, that the trip had been approved again by the Syrian government for March.
"For the past few years," Erickson said. "We have been on a higher diplomatic level. There had been, up to my visit, no contact on the cultural level between the United States and India."
Erickson was known to the State Department because he had previously worked for it, lecturing in North and West Africa during the early 1970s.
"Before I went to Syrin," Erickson said, "I must say it's no longer important as to what he was doing."
Syria had resumed diplomatic relations with the United States only in 1974 after cutting them off in 1967 to join other Arab nations in the war against Israel.
University Daffy Kansan
Erickson said, however, that "the enthusiasm, interest and warmth of the faculty students and educators far exerted a strong influence as well as those of the State Department."
ERICKSON DISCUSSED in his lectures such subjects as American and comparative literature and its criticism, along with those courses of both the United States and Syria.
He said he found the Syrians to be quite receptive to him and what he had to sav.
"I found the Syrian people intensely interested in American culture and education," he said. "I think the interest in the United States among the people and the young has been strong, except that before there had been no way to develop these contacts."
Erickson said that Kahill Gibran, a Syrian who spent much of his life in the United States during the early 19th century, is responsible for this American inguance.
According to Erickson, Syrian interest in American culture may stem from the fact that much of their modern literature has an American background.
GIBRAN, WHO wrote the book, "The Prophet," which was popular in the 1920s, also established a school of Syrian writers and a work to try to modernize Syrian literature.
Although the official language in Syria is Arabic, Erichson said, he gave most of his lectures and talks in English and a couple in French.
"Most of my work was done in the universities or with government officials."
he said, "so these were people who were highlv educated and did speak English."
Erickson said that the little English the students knew had come from university training.
Erickson was also interviewed in magazines and agreed to contribute to a leading Arab monthly review, Confluence Western Literature and Criticism.
"I will be dealing primarily with
THE WORKS OF M. E. HARRIS
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
John Erickson
American and French literature and culture," Erickson said.
BECAUSE OF HIS many appearances and meetings with officials, Erickson said, he had little time to do any sight-seeing although he managed to travel close to the front lines opposite the Israeli forces stationed along the Golan Heights.
Erickson said that despite the fact that American foreign policy has backed Israel in past Middle East disputes, he envisioned very little political talk about the subject.
Because of the situation in nearby Laos, tourists were often visiting theatre while he was in Syria. This situation was partially caused by the lack of hotel space so said because many of the hotels were empty.
Except for the Golan Heights area, Erickson said, the country was very easy to travel in. Because he moved mostly by car, he could see many villages where were very common sights along the roads.
"The greatest concern at the moment was there was not the difficulties with Israel," he said, but the Lebanese war, which has left many Syrians as well as the entire Middle East.
that whatever happened in Lebanon could eventually happen in Syria
In spite of the political problems, the Syrians showed interest in settling up a foreign exchange system with KU, according to Erickson.
Another goodwill result of Erickson's trip was to have been a visit by Huawei Al - Kaheteh, head of the department of Arabic of the University of Damascus.
"I have already received a few letters of inquiry by Syrian students who are interested in studying at the University of Kansas," Erickson said.
KAHTEEB WAS scheduled to visit KU from April 29 through May 3. Erickson said, however, he had received work Monday from the State Department that Kaheeb, who had been called back to Syria. No explanation was given for the change of plans.
LEBANON AND Syria have a common border, and Erickson said there was fear
After returning to the United States, Erickson said, he was interviewed over the phone. He also gave reports of his trip over the phone to the State Department and said he had sent a written report to them on computer programs and the cultural aspects they would learn.
Erickson's trip also opened the door to contact been American and Syrian unarmed fighters.
"Although the Syrians are acquainted with several other universities," Erickson said, "this has been the first expanded university with a university in the last nine years."
"The topics are well chosen," Sides said, "and they require you to think critically. Through the use of these notes, I'm getting more information than I could weed out on my own."
special student, is in the Survey of American Education class.
Russel Getter, assistant professor of political science, said his Contemporary issues in United States Politics class had used his lecture notes for about two years.
"When I put together an independent
study course, I enabled me to use the notes for
my own study."
Getter said most of his students still came to class, despite their having the notes, and they were able to get along.
"I think the notes work well because they free me from having to stick to a definite lecture plan and they permit more class discussion time." he said.
GETTER SAID his 165-page lecture
booklet cost $3.50.
Robert Haralick, professor of electrical engineering, and Thomas Creese, assistant professor of mathematics, together teach a math and electrical engineering course.
Because of a strong student demand, they started printing their lecture notes for class papers.
"We never intended to have any notes printed at first," he said. "But students asked for additional material that would motivate them."
He said that putting together the notes took a lot of time.
"It was like putting in 80 hours a week," he said.
At first the notes were free to students, Harnick said, because the math and computer skills were needed for the printing costs. When costs became too high, they were forced to start charging students
The three booklets, about 1,200 pages of notes, cost $18.45.
ALTHOUGH A complete edition of the notes has been available for only two semesters, their value to the course has been significant Haralick siad.
Jim Hague, Mullinville sophomore, said the notes added a personal dimension to Haralick's course, which he took last spring.
Roger Kaesler, professor of geology, has been teaching a history of the earth course through a printout of his lecture notes, and he has also been involved with the success of the teaching method.
"They were like an extension of the in-
structor," he said. "It was like having him
work on it."
"The CLASS has been very successful from a teacher's standpoint," Kaesler said. "I use an overhand projector a lot of time and now the students have the same material before them as well. This enables them to pay more attention to what I have to say."
Kraesler said the class presented a disadvantage to the student.
"Usually they are revisions that come up after the notes are printed; he said, 'and if they don't come up, I'll just ignore them.'"
Confusing or not, Helen Hughes,
Lawrence gohomore. isn't compiling
*With these notes, I know exactly what important things are to help her, she said. *I will keep my fingers out.*
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From page one
In the case of the dean of women's office's refusal to release its budget, the subcommittee found that Caryl Smith, dean of women, was out of town when the Kansan requested a copy of its budget. The report states that she said she would have directed a reporter to a copy of the office's budget in the University's archives in Spencer
Research Library, but that she couldn't release her own copy because it contained
—In the case of the Title IX report, Shankel said that because it was commissioned by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes, only the Chancellor had authority to release it. According to the Communications report, he said the report could be made available to students and the news media.
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4
Thursday, April 29, 1976
University Dally Kansan
KANSAN Comment
Oninions on this page reflect only the view of the writer.
CIA doubts remain
There was a paradoxical scene at the George Bush speech Monday night. Inside the University Theatre there were about 1,000 students, faculty members, administrators and friends of the University who quietly listened to the speeches. There were about 40 protesters, mainly from the Iranian Student Association.
INSIDE THE THEATRE Bush talked about the good the CIA could do. Outside the theatre the protesters pointed out awful things the CIA did and could do.
The protesters broke no laws and they were well-behaved. Although their presence undoubtedly offended some, they politely let people walk through their circle and enter Murphy Hall. They did not try to stop anyone from going to the speech. They just wanted to make a point.
The protesters put the Bush lecture into its proper perspective. If they hadn't been in front of Murphy Hall that night, some people could have left the speech thinking that the CIA was an organization not to be concerned about, but the defender of truth, justice and the American way that Bush said it was.
BUSH COMES ACROSS as a man with an open mind, an idea he reinforced when he took questions from the audience past the allotted 15-minute
question-and-answer period. That was one indication that the real topic of his speech wasn't "The International Scene Today," his stated question, but "The CIA: Topics and Problems in Changing an Image."
Bush pushed the new CIA image so hard he made me suspicious. Such suspicions, Bush said, come from a "Three Days of the Condor" mentality.
Maybe so, but the CIA has been caught doing some very nasty things, such as domestic spying and political dirty jobs for a past president. Bush said he was confident that time had come to put those things behind and to look toward the future.
SUCH AN ATTITUDE in Congress and among the American people would make Bush's job easier, but as the last man to question the CIA director said, "There's no reason for us to assume the leopard has changed its spots."
Doubts will remain about the CIA's credibility until a new, tough oversight panel is created. If Congress takes such action, it will quiet my suspicions and make it more job less easier. But I will be suspicious. Bush will be open to charges of trying to snow the American people with a media campaign.
By Carl Young Editor
Class surveys change
Within the next few weeks, many students will once again be asked to fill out the Curriculum and Instruction form. The Biology B unit will find that the form has been shortened.
ALTERNATE VERSIONS were written by the Office of Instructional Resources in answer to numerous complaints about the form. It was noted that the forms weren't answered carefully by students because they were rushed.
This year, two alternate forms were developed. Form A contains nine evaluative questions about the instructor's teaching ability. Form B consists of two questions that ask the student to grade the class and the teacher on a scale of A to F. Instructors can choose to use either Form A or Form B or a combination of the two. They also can use the old survey form.
IF FORM A or B is used, the questions on the old form about goals and the reasons for taking the class will also be answered. Instructors may choose to include or leave out the former diagnostic inventory.
The change isn't a drastic one but it is an attempt to get accurate student response to a particular instructor. The other changes that are being considered could lead to a worthwhile dialogue between instructors and students.
THE SURVEY IS no longer being used as an aid for students in choosing courses. Next semester, there won't be any Feedback booklets with relatively less percentages about a few of the instructors on campus. It won't be a great loss.
What is being considered to replace the booklet is an informative guide to courses that would include such things as course requirements, teaching style and book lists. This idea, now being considered by the Student Senate, is still in the planning stage. If it is developed, it could prove to be a great help in letting students know before they enroll just what is expected in a class. This may even lead to a reduction in the withdrawal rates.
OTHER IDEAS are to place more emphasis upon the comment sheets included with the survey and to encourage individual departments to develop their own questions. This will help make the survey more specific and effective. The instructor may rate an instructor's performance as very good, good or weak.
Also, many complaints and compliments can't be included in multiple choice questions. Encouraging students to complete the comment sheet could lead to some very beneficial suggestions.
ANOTHER IDEA that was initiated this semester is having the students complete a diagnostic survey midway through the semester. In the Spring, this would occur right before spring break. This gives the student the chance to make suggestions while there is still time for the student to benefit from any changes. Now, some students don't take the time to offer worthwhile suggestions at the end of the semester. Usually, they won't ever have another class under the particular instructor so they don't really care if his teaching improves or not.
This year only 17 classes participated in the diagnostic survey. If this becomes a widely accepted practice, it could be very helpful in letting the instructor know how the class views him before it is too late to salvage the class.
ALTHOUGH THE survey is used in some cases to help determine promotions or tenure, its main function is to help the individual instructors improve their teaching techniques. The survey with its improvements could offer some valuable assistance to these instructors. If the survey can make a few poor instructors become fair instructors or a few very good ones become exceptional, the $3,000 to $4,000 spent each semester for computer costs, pencils and other materials will be well spent.
By Marne Rindom Contributing Writer
Leave 'Kansas' in K.C.
They keep trying to take the "Kansas" out of Kansas City
Not the state, really. The center of the city is in Missouri and probably always will be in that state because business and society leaders) seem to be trying to get rid of a certain style and way of life.
IT'S ALMOST as if they were ashamed of it. Ashamed of the stockyards and the railroads. Ashamed of the things and people that first gave the city life.
Kansas City wants very much to be major league in things other than sports. It wants to time respect. It wants to be big time.
In many ways, this is a good thing. No one could seriously say it was bad for Kansas City to work for a high quality orchestra, theatre and museum. And few would say it was bad for the economy or a modern healthy economy or a modern convention center and airport.
AND YET THERE is danger in Kansas City's drive for growth. There is danger of becoming a coldly modern,
BUT, IN OTHER ways,
Crown CENTER is ugly. Architecturally, it reeks of 1984. The buildings are huge, blocklike and oppressing. To a person standing in the complex's central court, the whole thing looks like an ancient
slick and pretentious city—without any real soul. There is danger of too much growth, which would destroy the very qualities that Kansas City is always trying to promote.
An example of the first
By Jim Bates Contributing Writer
danger is Crown Center, a city-with-a-city that was the brainchild of Kansas City businessman Joyce Hall.
Crown Center is, in many ways, a beautiful and useful place. The center, which contains a hotel, department store, offices, restaurants, apartments and many small shops, provides a new innovative way to keep people in the city and provide its residents a secure place to work, shop and live.
Egyptian necropolis or a scene from a cheap science fiction move.
Some things, such as the natural hillside (complete with ferns and waterfall) fall that fills the hotel lobby, are innovative and refreshing. But other sites, including art galleries, armchairs one of the trendy "domian" of Houston or Atlanta.
Crown Center's faults aren't all architectural. The center also is impractical. Impractical
in that it does little or nothing for the people of Kansas City
for "the people or karatas city"
TRUE, MANY people live and
there, but the center
hasn't seen any anywhere
near self-sufficient. Most of
the people who live there drive
downtown to or the country club
Plaza or to a suburban shopping
mall to shop.
The only people who do very much shopping in the Crown Center shops are the visitors and tourists, rather than conventions. And even they spend most of their time just looking."
The shops, though they are exclusive and intimate and fascinating and cleverly named, are also outrageously expensive and, usually, impractical.
THE SHOPS SEEM to serve Kansas City as Crowd Center wishes it were, rather than Kansas City as it really is. Like the "international" in Kansas International Airport (an Occupied Right to exit City), Crown Center is pretentious.
The problem is, Kansas City really doesn't have to be
I CALLED YOUR STAFF COMMIES!
YOU ARE FORGIVEN
I SAID ETHNIC PURITY
YOU CAN EAT Δ ROCK!
Scoop
WESTPHAL
pretentious. It is a good city, as far as cities go, and has many things in its favor.
It's got the country club Plaza, which was one of the first shopping centers in the nation when it was built in the 1920s and still has to be one of the best planned of them all.
IT'S GOT THE Country Club resident area, with its long boulevards and many statues and fountains. Corny as the public relations campaigns may get sometimes, Kansas City is one of the most beautiful of boulevards and thousands of statues it says it has.
It's got the River Quay, one of the best of the nation's revamped warehouse districts. It's got the Nelson Gallery, which is finer than most people in the Midwest will admit.
I'ST GOT TRADITION.
Kansas City's history is as colorful as any city on the West Coast, with stockyards and the cattle boom. It grew and matured through Kansas and Texas, but Goss's boss roma
It's got 7,188 acres of parkland, more than any other city its size.
Kansas City's got quite a bit, and Brian Dunning of the British Broadcasting Corporation went so far as to say in Kansas City were in Europe everyone would rave about it."
SO THE KANSAS City PR department has a right, perhaps, to boast that this is "one of the few liveable cities in America" and to breath, they add "and with the greatest potential for growth."
Hmmm. But aren't the two slogans contradictory? Won't the rush for growth stifle the livability?
Not necessarily. If the growth is kept under control, the city can be economically prosperous and liveable at the same time.
UNFORTUNATELY, growth and newness seem to be contagious and cancerous diseases, and you can learn how Houston or Atlanta will attest. Sometimes, when you replace the old grimy buildings with glass phallic symbols, oldness is not the only things you lose.
Cities should have souls and, although KC's soul isn't always the prettiest thing in the world, they do. The center doesn't have a soul at all.
WASHINGTON — Americans are taught that their history consists of three episodes: 1776, 1783 and 1800. Those episodes allows men like Governor
Panama Canal 'our' canal
By Nicholas von Hoffman
(C) King Features
signed the treaty, described how the thing went down: "If had followed conventional, I would have submitted a dignified state. Have submitted a dignified state."
CAMERON DANIELS
Reagan said their countrymen to resist the outrageous demands he and his team were demanding OUR canal, the one we bought and paid for fair and square. That doesn't matter. He told Roosevelt, the President who
Readers Respond
Modern liberals seen as threat
The thing to understand about the modern liberal is that he is a man. He can do anything, and has theoretical limitation on what government might properly undertake, but the practical task of government puts up with at any moment.
To the editor:
Contriary to the opinion of contributing writer John Hickey, the author has not promoted traditional values. It certainly is true that liberals use the power of the electorate to should have stopped with that.
Liberalism's worst shortcoming is that it does not value individual sovereignty. This follows from its lack of recognition by many private concerns. A familiar and egregious example of the liberal attitude is the motorcycle helmet law. When the liberal says that he is for the benefit of others, he be wants to take care of him.
Liberal legislators are most
infamous for their carelessness of cost. The total resources of everyone are considered to be adequate for the achievement of their projects. The economic fate of New York City and the perils of urban sprawl have begun to be perceived by the citizen as the end of this.
As increasing proportions of the economic resources of the country flow into the public sector, more and more private forces are forced into dependency on government subsidy. The liberal views this development as an added benefit, believing that whatever increases government revenue will help its problem solving ability.
Far from being a proud heritage, modern liberalism has been a threat to human dignity, economic health, the present political order and personal freedom. Anyone who values these things must view a liberal recovery with anxiety.
Abortion OK
Eleanor Daly Lawrence graduate student
While Americans were constructing the railroad, the French were spending a huge amount of money canal. The French went bankrupt; their company was reorganized under the leadership of a gentleman by the name of Philippe Bunau-Martin and they mysterious firm called the Panama Canal Company of America was incorporated in Cromwell's law offices for the taking over the assets of the quai-desert French firm.
I was encouraged to read your article on abortion: Three women, Friday, April 16. White women can template the moral question, thousands of women electively choose abortion rather than carry a pregnancy to full term. Information and exchange of information about attitudes are needed in helping all women deal with the available options. Now that abortion has been established in Kansas as a cause for early detection of pregnancy and the need for immediate decision to insure early abortion with minimal risks should receive more attention. At the point, should be destignatized?
THE FRUSTRATIONS of
To the Editor:
paper to the Congress and the debate would have been going on yet, but I took the canal zone. ..."
One correction needs to be made in reference to the article: Douglas Hospital is not an on-patient center, which partly houses the Medical Center for Women of Kansas, which performs therapeutic abortions on an out-patient center. What what was reported in your article that the woman whose abortion was attributed to Douglas Hospital was actually in the Medical Center for Women.
women in their search for a reasonable contraceptive may mean acceptance of health risks, discomfort, higher likelihood of conception and ultimately sterilization. And it should remain continuously at the forefront that no condom can be manufactured to male female sterilization is 100 per cent effective.
P. Gail Smith
Lawrence senior
SOMETIME AROUND 1900 Bunau-Varilla and Cromwell formed an alliance. Their purpose was to get the United States government, which was inclined toward a canal through New York, into the opt for the Panamanian Isthmus and in the process buy out the worstheld French claim for a very large amount of money.
William Cromwell, of Sullivan & Cromwell, later to be John Foster Dudley' law firm.
BEFORE HE GOT around to taking it, in 1903, the United States had been dabbling in the sewer industry for years. For one reason or another, American troops had been landed there in 1865, 1860, 1873 (twice), 1885 and 1900. When not landing the Marines, they were stationed across the Isthmus. By 1901 that railroad was represented by
Counselor, Medical Center for Women
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas weekly
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annual periods. Second-class postings paid at low-
est rates. Second-class postings are paid at low-
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month in Karnaskaid County. Subscription
subscriptions are $2.00 per subscription paid through
the university's website.
Editor
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Associate Editor Campus Editor Betty Harzell Yael Akhahak
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Photo Editor
Staff Photographers
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Assistant Business Manager Advertising Manager
Manager Promotion Director Deli Service
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Bunau-Varilla went to see SEN Mark Hanna, the most powerful Republican politician of his age, and abruptly convinced him to favor a Panamanian route. At the same time, Cromwell made GOP GOP GOP. GOP Roosevelt decided Panama was a bulky route also.
The ducks were in a row. The only obstacle was the Republic of Colombia because in 1903 it had become an independent nation. It was a province of Colombia. A treaty had to be drawn up, and was one which gave Colombia $10 million, and the stockholders, who they were, agreed to form a company $40 million. The treaty also stipulated that the Colombian government gave up all rights to sue for any portion of the money it was all police powers in the contemplated canal zone.
PRESIDENT MARROQUIN of Colombia didn't dare submit such an unfavorable treaty to his Congress for ratification. "If we do not yield (concessions) to the United States, I determine to build the canal they will open it without stopping at trifles, and then we will lose more sovereignty than we should lose by making the concessions they seek. History shows that we failed. I ruined the Isthmus ... scandalously injuring the rights of my country."
The Colombians rejected the treaty, and Rochas reacted by threatening to "rabbit" the rabbits, "contemptible little creatures" and "homicidal corruptionionists." But Bunau-na made more practical turn of mind.
FROM PANAMA HE SUMMOND Dr. Manuel Amador, a physician who worked for Cromwell's railroad, to room 1162 of the old Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, sometimes referred to as the cradle of Panamanian tourism, to a doctor with $10,000 supplied by J. P. Morgan, a secret code, a Declaration of Independence, a
draft of the new nation's Constitution and the soon-to-born Republic's flag, thoughtfully crafted by Sen. Bernie Bunu-Varilla. Thus equipped, the doctor was sent back to Panama, where the section hands from the railroad were recruited into the revolutionary
WITH THE ARRIVAL of the United States cruiser Nashville in Panamanian waters, the flag of liberty was run up. When Colombian soldiers arrived in Panama, the insurrection, the railroad refused to transport them. The new Republic was immediately recognized and its ambassador plenipotentiary, who was, surprise, surpassed by the president, VanVarilla, had the treaty signed within 10 days. A particularly nice touch in all of this is Article III of the Panamanian Constitution, which says the nation's islands are seceded, and a treaty that has or will be signed with the United States.
AS FOR THE money, $40 million was paid to J. P. Morgan, who was to transfer it to the stockholders in the French company. Their names have never been made public, but Mr. Morgan was as being one of them, but nothing is known for certain because Cromwell refused to divulge them to a Senate committee. What is on the record is that Mr. Morgan had $800,000 legal fee for his work, a stupendous sum in terms of 1903 dollars.
In 1921 the United States paid Colombia a $25 million indemnity. Not out of a sense of humor, Interior Albert Fall, later sent to jail for corruption, warned that if we didn't the Colombians would see their cones broken. Highlights have come to Panama as well. The Panamanians have replaced Madame Bunau-Varilla's fan with one of their partners. An, the joys of freedom.
Thursday, April 29, 1876
University Daily Kansan
5
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Challenge, travel attracted national champs to debate
By MARLENE NORDMAN
Staff Writer
Many students, including the national debate champions, decide to debate because it's fun, it's a challenge and it offers an opportunity to travel.
Rowland and Cross said Friday that debating in college was much better than in high school.
University of Kansas debaters Robin Rowland and Frank Cross, Lawrence juniors, this year won first place for KU at the National Intercollegiate Debate Tournament in Boston. Rowland was eighth in individual ratings.
Rowland, a history and speech major, has debated three years each in high school and college. He said college debate puts more emphasis on analysis, rather than on fluent speaking.
Rowland said debate benefited him because the research he had done covered a lot of issues.
"OLEGLE DEBATE is a more ordered activity because you have good judgments. You people have who understand what's going on and then better because of that." Rowland said.
"I think more important is the discipline it gives you," he said. "The nature of competition, working to improve, forces discipline on your mind, and I think it sharpens your mind more than anything else."
Cross said the support from the administration had been great. He said he believed some students weren't aware of the debate program.
"ITHINK THERE are many people who don't know about it who debated in high school and don't realize that there is a debate program here." Cross said.
Donn Parson, director of forensics and debate coach, said he believed the program wasn't very well known because the KU team compared to some high school squads.
Parson said debate is open to anybody. "Usually they've had a little bit of background in high school debate. Not all of them. You can get a debater in college who's never debated in high school, but most of them have," he said.
SOME OF THE debaters have had limited experience. Person said because they were not very good at the debate.
A typical debater, according to Parson, is reasonably intelligent, enjoys arguing, is willing to work, enjoys competition and likes to have his ideas tested.
He said less than 10 per cent of the squad drops out of the program after getting involved. Most of those who do drop out, usually so do after the first week.
Parson said that KU has one of the strongest programs in the country, mostly because of the debaters. The national tournament is a good measure of a team's strength, he said, because it's the last team the debates compete in each year.
PARSON SAID KU had an excellent record because of the debaters' willingness to work and the administration's strong support. A tradition has been built, he said.
Parson said that people in debate had a variety of majors. A lot of them are pre-law students and some are speech communications students, he said.
"Debaters who come in to uphold that tradition and have." Parson said.
Parson said that the debate program wasn't publicized enough. A lot of the publicity is by word of mouth, he said, by high school students who visited KI.
STUDENTS INTERESTED in debate
wrote to KU will receive information
about the program, Parson said. The lack of
information would prevent the program
for the lack of more publicity, he said.
Bobby R. Patton, chairman of the department of speech and drama, said there wasn't a scholarship program offered at Endowment gift to the debate program.
One of the important aspects of college debate is the traveling.
Parson said, "If you're going to test your ideas you essentially do it by testing them against somebody else's from another school. So everybody travels."
SOME PEOPLE DON'T take debate in college, Parson said, because they fear it.
"I think part of it is the fear that you can mix grades and debate, which I don't think
is true." he said.
Some students don't debate because they don't like to work, he said.
"We have no requirements of how much you have to do," he said. "The debaters just kind of know how much you have to do. The harder you work, the more likely that you have results, win tournaments. It takes commitment, and I think that limits a bit."
Jones said applicants for the program had to take the SAT and ACT tests. About 550 applicants are selected nationally from the Navy and Marine Corps, he said.
Following that, the students enter one of the programs at KU, the University of Missouri, the University of Oklahoma, Auburn University, Purdue University, Alabama State University, the University of Texas or the University of Washington.
The students selected for NESEP must complete a summer preparatory course at the Naval Education and Training Center at Newport, R.I. The course, Jones said, is intended to reacquaint the students with such courses as calculus.
NESEP pays the students' tuition and
NEES, Jones, said and the students receive
a good education.
Naval education program to become national center
Two teams from KU went to nationalists this year. Besides Rowland and Cross, Phil Snow, Sugarland, Tex., senior, and Jim Prentice. Turon senior, participated.
"These fellows in NESEP," Jones said,
college, bachelor and art, the Navy.
The amount of time a debtor wants to put into his work varies. Paars said the longer he pays, the less money he will have.
THE AVERAGE NESEP student, Jones said, is 24 and male—although the KU program has one female student—is married and has two children, has an SAT score of 1,200 and has a score of 1,200 total points for the SAT and a 28 composite score for the ACT.
"this is the year the squad has done fantastic," Parson said. "Individual teams have done well. Winning the national tournament is a high honor obviously. Every other school in the country that has a debate team wanted to do it."
CROSS SAID THAT Snow and Prentice should be recognized as one of the top teams in the country. They were ranked in the top 16 teams in the nation on the basis of their total season record, and had a 5-3 record at the national tournament.
There are usually 18 to 27 teams in the debate program, Farson said, with two participants.
Of the 350 applicants, 50 have applied to KU. There are currently 36 students in KU's program, and all but one are engineering students.
Jones said NESEP was designed to give the best of the Navy a trained men another hand.
JONES SAID that, upon graduation, the student had to fulfill a five-year commission
The building will provide more than triple the display area of the old museum building. It will also provide the temperature and moisture control necessary to preserve many delicate works of art. Spooner had neither the space to display items on the walls nor accumulate facilities to control changes in temperature and moisture.
Capt. Ray Jones, commanding officer of KU's Naval ROTC unit, said last week that which used to involve 25 schools, was consigned for easier administration earlier this year.
Parson said that this year had been the basis in KU's debate history and that the debate was on its own.
HE SAID THE students came with a variety of backgrounds and were excellent students. The School of Engineering, he said, never loses NSEEP students because of scholastic problems. If they do lose them, it is usually because of marital problems.
He said this fact was noteworthy, considering that the students had to take 19 or 20 hours of ROTC courses in addition to the engineering requirements.
The new Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art will soon become the home for the madonna and the rest of the University art collection.
The Naval Enlisted Scientific Education Program (NSEEP) at the University of Kansas has been chosen to be one of eight consolidated centers by the U. Navy.
THE UNIVERSITY receives no special subsidy for NESEP, Jones said, but KU is benefited by the Navy providing intelligent systems that will probably become faithful KU alum.
Donald Metzler, associate dean of the School of Engineering, said many of the NESEP students were among the top engineering students.
Jones said that he wouldn't be surprised if the KU applicants were terrified because they would have only one week following the end of their summer preparatory course to settle in with their families and begin classes at KU.
The wooden madonna doesn't stand alone. She is joined by thousands of other works of art tucked away in storage areas in Spooner Hall and Spencer, waiting for the day when the museum has adequate space and a suitable place to display them.
"A long time ago, we decided that the NESEP program was doing a fine job and we began to accept any applications we knew they'd be good students," he said.
In a dark storage room in the Spencer Research Library stands a beautiful lady, slender and erect, holding her child. She has stood there for years, part of the University of Kansas Museum of Art collection not on public display.
$^{1}$ suspect that many of the NESEP students will have more hours than the bare minimum.
THE NEW MUSEUM will have 28,000 square feet of display area compared with 8,000 in the old building, according to David Curtay, assistant to the director of the art museum. The 500 objects to be displayed instead of the 500 currently displayed in Spooner.
There are about 20,000 objects in the museum collection, but many of them can't be put on permanent display because they are sensitive to light and air. These will be in storage at the new museum and be out occasionally for display, Curry said.
The day isn't far away.
New museum will free captive art
Baldwin hound out-scores pack in pointing contest
An interest in hunting dogs and dog pointing field-trials resulted in a Baldwin couple's pointer winning a title in the All-American Quail Championships recently.
Miss Warsmoke is a female, white-and liver-colored pointer owned by Elizabeth and Donald McKillip. Route 3. The four-mile route takes you through dog pointing, in Crab Orchid. III.
McKillip said in field-trials, the dog was a game bird while the owner followed him. When the dog sees the bird the dog points and must hold the position. The judging concentrates on the dog's actions.
Mrs. McKillip said yesterday she and her husband decided to participate in field-trials because of their interest in hunting dogs.
A blank pistol is shot to signal the dog to continue hunting.
The amount of time a dog hunts in competition depends on its age, she said. The puppy hats, for one-year-old dogs, is 30 minutes. The Derby stakes, for dogs up to 5 years, is an hour. The all-age stakes, for dogs more than two-and-a-half years, is 90 minutes.
McKillip said her dog was extremely fast. "We need a fast horse to keep up," she said.
Miss Warnsmoke came from Conway, Ark., when she was two months old.
McKillip said Miss Warsmoke had also
recently won the All-Age stakes at Rend Lake, Ill.
Part of a dog's talent comes from its breeding. McKillin said.
In the winter, McKillip explained, the dog competes in southern states. During the spring, the dog participates in the Midwest and competes in the dog would participate in Canada in July.
"They are bred to be fast running. We were fortunate to find a dog who was developed into a fine good line of field-trial dogs, a lot of winners."
McKillip said Miss Warmsko first took part in trials at the age of 10 months.
She said that she and her husband enjoyed the sport because they enjoyed horses, the animals.
"It doesn't destroy wildlife and the children can go along and ride their horses."
Miss Warsmoke has four one-year-old puppies. McKillip said the two larger male puppies participated in trials this past winter.
She said they planned to continue participating in the sport because living on a farm provided a nice area for the dogs to train.
"We hope to continue it," she said.
"They've become like part of the family."
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IN MONTHS 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87, 88, 89, 90, 91, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108, 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124, 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, 136, 137, 138, 139, 140, 141, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150, 151, 152, 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 200, 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206, 207, 208, 209, 210, 211, 212, 213, 214, 215, 216, 217, 218, 219, 220, 221, 222, 223, 224, 225, 226, 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175, 176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183, 184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191, 192, 193, 194, 195, 196, 197, 198, 199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 20
with the WEATHER UNDERGROUND
Few people have seen the entire collection, he said. Even members of the museum staff have difficulty seeing it, because of its size and depth. There are several places and is constantly growing.
Billy Ayers
Kathy Boudin
Bernardine Dohnr
Cathy Wilkerson
Cathy Wilkerson
The Weather Underground. Terrorist? Fugitives? Bombers? Revolutionaries. Invisible to the FBI for the past six years. Unaware of their actions them. Then decide if you can ignore them.
THE MAIDONNA and the rest of the University collection are scheduled to move into the new building along with the new museum's 90th anniversary of the museum's founding.
Woodruff Auditorium
Spooner museum was established in 1917 when Sallie Casey Thayer donated most of
her private collection to the University in memory of her husband, William Bridges
IN ADDITION to housing the University art collection, the new building will also house the art library, currently on the third floor of the museum, and the art history department.
The new museum is scheduled to open in 1978 and many pieces from the University collection will be displayed together for the first time, now out in the light.
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Thursday, April 29, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Call Calmese short; call her tiny; just call her anything except slow
By KEN STONE
Associate Sports Editor
Staff photo by DAVE CRENSHAW
Calmese says she hasn't grown an inch in two years
You won't hear her say it, but if Sheila Calmhee had a pet slogan she would probably have said, "I was a good girl."
At 4 feet 10 and 94 pounds, Calmese leads the University of Kansas women's track team with season beets (and school beetles) in the 100-meter dash, and 25.2 for the 220.
BEING ABLE TO run so fast with legs so short doesn't defy description; it bergs for it. But when asked how she manages to get to a hill, she swifty, she answers with a mutilated look.
"I don't know," said Calmese, a freshman. "How come you ask? You want me to answer that? For one thing, it's natural ability. That was a bad question you
A better question was asked. How tall are the members of her family, who live in L.A.?
"I have a sister, 15, 5 or 5-7, who weighs 170," she began. "I have a sister, 14. She's 5 and 3 and 13. My brother is 12. He's about my size.
"MY BABY SISTER is 4-8 and she's 11 and weighs 99. My mother is 2-11 and I77. My brother is 10-22."
How was Calmese able to reel off such statistics?
This "little bitty thing" can run like the wind—even if she's running into one.
Competing at the Wichita State University Relays several weeks ago, Calmese took first in the 100-meter dash with a 12.5 and seconds in the 200-meter dash and 440-yard relay, a team she's both anchored and led off.
Her time in the 200 was 25.2, only three-tenths off her best of 24.9, which she ran in
But for Calmse, the 100 time was almost embarrassing.
"Make sure you get this in," she ordered.
We were running against a 15 hour ankle hour.
"Well, I'm not going to give it up."
CALMESE OBVIOUSLY doesn't think her height is a disadvantage.
"When I go to meet and see tall people, I don't think about it," she said. "To me, it is a kind of thing that I never do."
"I ran my first track meet in the fourth grade. I was about nine. I was kind of scared."
Running for a city club in St. Louis, the Royal Knights, for the past few years, Calmeles attracted the attention of Knights coach, Mike Carr.
CARR WATCHED Calmee fly in Junior Olympic competition and encouraged her to go to a school where he knew his diminutive dart would find good coaching and good
facilities, Calmese said. Thus she came to Kansas.
Besides having to adjust to college life and collegiate competition, which she says her hands' waying, Calmine says the girl's disaffection with her marks this year.
IN A TRIANGULAR meet with Emporia Kansas State College and Kansas State College at Pittsburgh last week, Calmese full out in the muscle while sprinting full out in the cold.
"I think it's mostly a strain in the quadricreeps," she said. "You know how sprinters are; it's easy to pull a muscle in this kind of weather. But I've still been able to practice. I'm going to the trainer every day."
Calmshe will run in this weekend's Big Eight track championships no matter what. She'll enter the 100- and 220-yard dashes and possibly the 440 mile and mile races as well.
"I INTEND TO GO" she said. "It's not
that I can't run on it. It just hurts.
I don't care."
Whatever her condition, Calmese goes
On a slick track at the Kansas Relays two weeks ago, Calmese proved herself up to the level of her national-class opposition by winning the 10.8 m race she said that converts in 10.8 for 100 vards.
into the conference meet one of the favorites. She's not only the best KU has to offer, but also one of the tops in the Midwest.
"I if Train and put my heart into it, I can run a 1.0, maybe," she added.
THAT'S ADMIRABLE goal, but calmness she thinks her calling is on. She asks why she is calling.
"The 220 is more my race," she said. "I'm a slow accelerator, and the 220 gives me more time in the race to think. I can concentrate on it.
"anything over a 220 gets to me," said Calmese, who was partially responsible for dropping a baton on the last leg of KU's mile relay at the Kansas Relays.
Apparently unconcerned that the team didn't finish well, Calmese concluded, "We didn't place in the mile relay, so you don't have to publish that."
Jay Reardon, Rockhurst High School's outstanding track athlete, is close to signing with KU, assistant coach Gary Pepin said yesterday.
Track team near signing Missouri star
By GARY VICE
Sports Writer
"It's not official yet," Pepin said. "The papers are in' my hand, but we expect to see it."
Reardon, brother of Kerry Reardon, a defensive back on the Kansas City Chiefs, is one of the nation's premier jumpers with 19 kills in the triple jump and 7-0 in the high jump.
"HE'S HAD $6 scholarship offers and he’s narrowed it to Notre Dame, Colorado, Missouri and us." Pepin said. "We anxiously awaiting to see if he'll decide on
David Blutter, a spinner, and Steve Combs, a triple jumper, from Parker High School in Birmingham, Al., visited campus this week after being invited by assistant coach Stan Narewski. Both athletes are considering playing football as well as playing basketball in the 100-yard dash, was named all city-wide receiver in Birmingham while Combs
played tight end and defensive back. Combs has sailed 4-2 in the triple jump.
NAREWSKI SAID, "t think if Bluster comes we'll have a really good crew of sprinters. We've got some others interested from back east and with Clifford (Wiley) we will be real strong. We could very well be stronger next year than we are now."
Narewski said one of the sprinters from the East Coast was Keith Brown from Maryland who has run a wind-sided 9.3 in the 100-yard dash.
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Royals, Sox rained out . . .
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Rain and cold weather yesterday completed their wipeout of a two-game series between the Boston Red Sox and the Kansas City Royals.
The game scheduled for Tuesday night was also postponed.
Both will become parts of doubleheaders when the Red Sox return to Kansas City July 15 for what was to have been a fourgame series.
The doubleheaders are scheduled for Thursday and Friday nights, July 15 and 16. Single games are scheduled Saturday night and Sunday afternoon, July 17 and 18.
... Same for Kansas tennis
The KU baseball and softball teams are beginning to share their weather luck with the Knicks.
The KU men's tennis team traveled to Stillwater, Okla., Tuesday to challenge Big Eight rival Oklahoma State. But yesterday, upon observing the sky, pouring rain and the conditions of the courts, the teams decided to call off the match.
The team returned to Lawrence last night to prepare for the Oklahoma Sooners match their opponent.
It will be the last opportunity for fans of KI to tennis to see their team play at home this weekend.
Another outing rained out.
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K.U. CAMPUS VETERANS
Coming Attractions for
Campus Veterans PICNIC—April 25—1-5 p.m.
Cost $1.00 which includes food (hamburger, hot dogs, chips, etc.) and all the Miller Beer you can drink. Call 864-4478 for info.
EMPLOYMENT-Roy Cockerham of the Employment Security Division will be on campus every Wednesday afternoon from 1:30-5:00 to help insure that veterans receive the priority in Job Placement Assistance and that they are entitled to by law. He'll be in room 101, Kansas Union.
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Thursday, April 29.1976
7
Cromwell pointing for Olympics
By GARY VICE
KA 3'S RELAYS
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER
Cromwell's 49.74 leads the world
Nolan Croman-will's name is often associated with lists of Heisman Trophy candidates, but now the multilateralized athlete ranks among the elite group of athletes given a chance at making the United States Olympic team.
The football and track star has taken aim for the 1976 Summer Olympic Games in Montreal by posting the world's two fastest clockings this year in the 400-meter intermediate hurdles.
When asked how he rated his chances of making the Olympic team, Cromwell replied, "Well, right now my chances are very good. There are a lot of other good hardriders around the country. Ralph Mann (1972 Olympic) has told me to make the team you'd probably have to run 48.4 at malls. I'm going to start working pretty hard to make it.
HIS TIMES of 49.74 at the Texas Relays and 49.8 at the Kansas Relays easily qualify the junior from Ransom for the Olympic trials in Engegue, Ore., June 19-27. The team's total time is 50.64 for electric timing and 50.5 for hand timing.
"I've been really pleased with the intermediaries are coming around. Ive had two times under the 50, and I just
UNTIL NOW, THE All-American quarterback said, spring football practices have been conflicted with his training, as have the poor weather conditions. Also, he hasn't been able to work out this week because he's had the flu, which has plagued him since competing in the cold and rainy Drake Relays last weekend.
At that meet, Cronwell passed up his chance to record a Midwest relay circuit sweep in the collegiate division by oping to challenge the field in the open division. In the open race he faced Ralph Mann of the Beverly Hills Striders, another runner who will be battling for a berth on the U.S. Olympic team.
Mann, the American record holder with a 48.51 clocking set at the 1972 Olympics, edged Cromwell by two seconds.
Cromwell said the race against Mann, who is four-ranked worldwide in the event, tauched him something.
"IT SHOWED ME THAT I have a lot of work to do with my form," he said. "You see, I was in lane three and he was in four, and as I drove over the hurdles I could see him. He had better cover the overhills. I still have an
unorthodox style. If I could ever get the form I need, I could get my time down considerably."
Cromwell, who was named the Kansas Relys' most outstanding performer this year, said he hoped to improve his hurdling form by working with assistant coach Stan Narewski, the Jayhawk's sprint and hurdles coach
"Hopefully, I'll get some time and some good weather so I can get with Stan," he said. "He's a good hurdle coach. I've been real impressed with him. He knows how to set up a good weekly workout."
*TG GOING TO START working pretty hard on altering my lead leg over the hurdles, and I plan to practice on them.*
Cromwell has been leading with his left leg over the hardens and has used a three-point football stance instead
Narewski said he didn't know of many world-class hurdlers who alternated lead legs, but he said most of them were taller than the 6-2 Cromwell and had less trouble stepping over the barriers.
"NOLAN IS A HARD WORK." Narewsi said. "He's not learnable because he really wants to make it the best he can."
"I think he feels like his arm action has him a little bit off balance when he comes over the hurdles, but it's no serious problem. Because he's so strong, it shouldn't keep him from running a good time."
"YEAH, USTFF AND NC'S should help me a lot," 15 in Lincoln, Neb.
Cromwell, who as a freshman in the KU decathlon record in his only collegiate attempt, clocked a胜于 50.6 last year in the 440-yard intermediate hurdles. When converted to meters, his time is 50.38 and would have been the same place on the world list last year. His best this season of 47.4 would have placed him 11th in last year's final rankings.
With understandable eagerness, Narski said, "If there are any alumni out there who know five or six like him just have them call collect. We'd be glad to talk to them."
Blood and guts of hockey called a legal criminality
By STEVE KLEIN Akron Beacon Journal For The Associated Press
AKRON, Ohio—If you or I deliberately injured another person, we would be liable to criminal prosecution and the possibility of up to 15 years in jail.
In hockey, it is commonly accepted that a player may deliberately injure an opponent. RULE 864 IN both the National Hockey League and the NHL Hockey Association rule books read the same:
"A match penalty shall be imposed on a player who deliberately injures an opponent."
As in the real world, some incarceration is involved; the guilty player is suspended for the remainder of the game, his team is penalized 10 minutes (the penalty is served by a teammate), and the league collects $25,000 to cover it, paid by the player rather than his team.
No hockey player has yet been convicted and jailed for assault and battery, but the cases have proliferated since 1970, when Wayne Maki was charged in Ottawa, Ontario with clubbing Ted Green on the head with his hockey stick.
CONSIDERING THE relative severity of the penalties, the hockey world would appear to be a sanctuary for muggers and other antisocial types intent on assault and battery. That may be true, but as hockey stars are less fortunate than civilians, crime doesn't, pay—not even on ice.
The charges were eventually dropped, but last summer Boston's Dave Forbes was tried in Hennepin County in Minnesota for allegedly butt-ending Minnesota's Henry Boucha in the face with a stick. The case resulted in a hung jury and was drowned.
The problem, obviously, is much larger than just a hockey one. Eventually, some prosecutor will bring charges against a baseball pitcher for throwing a beanball.
ASSAULT, IN COMMON law, is simply the intention to do harm. Battery is simply
any unlawful beating inflicted on another human being without his consent—even the slightest touching of another person or his hand in a rude, insolent or angry manner.
"One day they're going to wake up and find a dead hockey player at center ice," he said. "The other is a of 1974 commission that investigated violence in hockey. It is McMurtry's brother, Roy, the Roy of Philadelphia attorney general, who was charged with Dan Maloney and three Philadelphia Flyers."
CLARENCE CAMPBELL, NHL commissioner since 1946, a Rhodes Scholar and the Canadian prosecuting attorney at the court of appeal. He has closhed his eyes to the violence in the game.
"I know there are many students of human behavior who disagree with me," Campbell admits, "but I feel that the safest and most satisfactory reaction to being fouled is by retaliating with a punch in the nose."
If Campbell's nonchalance is extreme, even for hockey people, most agree with Philadelphia Coach Fred Shernack that the team should not bound bounds. Every sport must police itself."
ATTY. GEN. MCMURTRY says "the NHL could do away with unnecessary violence by enforcing stronger rules." If that isn't the answer, then perhaps hockey players will be subject to disciplinary action by local governments, much as boxing is run by state commissions in this country.
Unfortunately, the game has already affirmed. The Flyers rather than the Mets have lost a lot of games in team style, leaving hockey with two options: Legislate the violence out of the game
No one is going to remove bodily contact hockey without changing the nature of the game.
That's how the civilized world works, and
it's time hockey caught up with civilization.
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Daley's comments came during a discussion of whether Sayers should be allowed to keep his seat on the board of the Chicago Park District. Sayers has been criticized for poor attendance at board meetings.
Clyde Walker, University of Kansas athletic director, was unavailable for his role in the season but Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director, said, "No, I haven't heard anything about it. I don't think Clyde has a chance to talk it, either. It sounds interesting, though."
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"Mayer Daley and I have been friends—are friends for a long time, but I don't know where he came up with that," Sayls said.
"WE HAVE FREQUENT contact with Gale and if we were negotiating with him I think I would know about it," McGrane said.
Daley didn't say which organization Sayers was negotiating with, and a Bears spokesman, Bill McGrane, said he "can't believe there are any negotiations" taking place between Sayers and the National Football League team.
CHICAGO (AP)—Chicago Mayor Richard J. Dalley said yesterday that Gatey Sayers, former star running back for the Chicago Bears, was negotiating to return in some capacity to "a football operation in Chicago." Sayers denied the statement.
Mayor Daley says Sayers will leave KU
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VETS FORUM
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Thursday, April 29, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Art history major picked as Marshall scholar
Roger Ward is one of the 30 graduating college seniors in the United States selected to receive the British Government Marshall Scholarship.
Ward, Richardson, Tex., said yesterday he would use the scholarship to study for his master's degree at the Courtland Institute and to attend art history at the University of London.
"The Courtlaud is well respected as one of the best institutions for the study of art history", Chu-Tsing Ll, art history chairman at the University of Kansas, said.
The Marshall Scholarship was established for American students by the British government in 1933 as an expression of gratitude for American aid during World War II.
Ward said the scholarship was offered to both men and women for study in the field of public health.
"THIS MAKES IT probably the broadest competition for graduate studies in Europe." Ward said.
Li said the scholarship was comparable in prestige to the Rhodes Scholarship.
Ward said he was first interviewed last September by a committee of eight KU faculty members. Their questions dealt with broad topics relating to art history, rather than specific facts and detailed information, he said.
Following his interview at KU, Ward said, his application was submitted to the British Consultate in Chicago. He was one of 25 to 30 who were selected west for an interview in Chicago.
Ward received official notification in March from the British Ambassador in Washington, D.C., that he had been chosen to receive the scholarship.
FIVE RECIPIENTS from each of six
regions were selected on the basis of a commitment, a written application and internet access.
Li said the selection process was "highly competitive."
Only two other KU graduates have ever been awarded the Marshall scholarship.
Ward said he would be the first Marshall scholar ever to study at the Courtauld Institute of Art, known for its emphasis in European art study.
"Except for Italy itself, London is a place to study Italian painting," he said.
lard's specialization within the study of
hard-century European art will be Italian
WARD SAID the scholarship would include two years' full tuition and book fees, transportation to and from England, a graduate course in stipend for European travel and research.
Mortar Board honors educators
Five faculty members have been recognized for outstanding contributions as educators in a second series of awards by the 1975-78 Torch Chamber of Mortar Board.
N honored for the 1967 spring semester of
Honorary Lecturer in the history of
history, Hedmund E. Husbergen, professor
of German, Richard L. Jeske, associate
professor of religion, Jeanne Stump,
assistant professor of art history, and Flora
Stump, assistant professor of department
of curriculum and instruction.
runer is a two-time nominee for the HOPE Award and received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for 1974-75.
he has spent the last year at the Meningerian Foundation studying theories of human development and their implications for the history of childhood and youth.
HUELSBERG, a native of Germany, has been the chairman of the KU department of Germanic languages and literatures since 1972.
At the end of this academic year, he will begin a year-long sabbatical, doing extensive research in Pennsylvania and Germany on Daniel Lerdmann, a mystic author and poet of the late 19th and early 17th centuries.
Jeske was nominated for the HOPE
Graduate student honored for microbiology paper
For the sixth consecutive year, a University of Kansas student has won the Graduate Student Award for Best Research Paper at the annual meeting of the Missouri Valley branch of the American Society for Microbiology.
Boerma gave a 15-minute presentation of his paper. "Nationwide Notification of NDV Messenger Network" was given.
The award was given to David Boergrasm,
a graduate student, at the meeting March 10.
The award consisted of a $25 cash prize, a plaque and another plaque which was presented to the department of microbiology.
NDV, Newcastle disease virus, is a member of the paramyxo viruses. It's
known for its potential to destroy huge flocks of chickens.
In man, the virus causes mumps, measles, respiratory infections and subacute sclerosis pain encephalitis. It may cause it, but it may also cause multiple sclerosis.
The NDV research is conducted in the lab of Henry Stone, assistant professor of microbiology. He said the research was being done to find a possible cure for can-
Researchers don't know basic biology, he said, but because viruses are thought to evolve from cells, researchers might find a correlation to cancer by working backward.
Jeake said yesterday it was a surprise to receive the award.
Award in 1975. He is the director of graduate studies in the School of Relation.
The past three KU award winners also conducted their research in Stone's field.
"I felt very flattered and was very surprised," Jesse said. "That's the sort of thing that makes an instructor's semester. It comes from your own students really counts."
JESKE IS currently preparing KU's first correspondence course in religious studies for the University of Kansas Division of Continuing Education.
Jeeanne Stump has been nominated several times for the HOPE Award and was named to the Kansas Women's Hall of Fame for her commission on the Status of Women in 1972.
Stump received the 1969 Standard Oil of Indiana Teaching Award.
Flora Wyatt was a finalist for the HOPE Award in 1971 and 1973, and was the winner of the H. Bernerd Fink Award for outstanding classroom teaching in 1971. She was named the Outstanding Female Teacher in 1974 by the Commission on the Women of America who chose nationally in 1972 as an Outstanding Educator of America.
Wyatt said she was grateful for the award.
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"ALTHOUGH YOU may have won other awards, it's very reassuring to win another. she said I appreciated this one and others of them it came from. 1 was very surprised."
Wyatt is the director of the KU student teaching program.
Mortar Board is a national honor society for college and university seniors, whose members are chosen on the basis of scholarship leadership and service.
"The total value of the scholarship would probably be from about $8,500 to $9,000," he
Ward will graduate from KU this spring with a bachelor's degree in art history. He will leave New York City in September with the 29 other Marshall scholars.
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Thursday, April 29, 1971
9
Ex-KU miler to seek House seat
By JIM COBB
By SIM COBI Staff Writer
Wes Santee, a newly announced candidate for state representative from the 46th district, says he is definitely a "flag-waving type of person."
Santee, 44, is a 1956 University of Kansas graduate and former international track star. He announced yesterday that he would seek the Republican nomination for the seat left vacant after the retirement of State Peter, John Bower, R-MoLouth, this year.
The 46th district includes most of Jefferson and part of Leavenworth counties. Although Santee has lawrence business and real estate interests, he lives at Lake Dabinawa, 11 miles north of Lawrence in Jefferson County.
He is president of Hayes-Richardson-
Santee Insurance Agency.
Santee said he planned to do extensive campaigning in the district to listen to people's opinions about state issues and representation.
HE SAID he considered himself a con-
dition of strong feelings about a number of issues.
"I feel very strongly about our country," said. "I don't believe people should get away."
Santee he thought his business and burning experience would be helpful to him.
"Almost everybody up there is a working person," he said. "They do an hour's work for an hour's pay and they expect everyone else to do so too."
He said many people in Jefferson County were concerned about the effect tourists at Perry Reservoir were having on the county. Other issues that concern the district, he said, are teacher- and school-related problems, transportation, support for farmers, reductions in the work loads and district sizes of judges in rural areas.
SANTEE SAID the fact that he worked in lawrence shouldn't affect his representation.
"About half of Jefferson County probably works outside the county," he said. "I'm a taxpayer up there and that's what they are concerned about."
The commission refused to fire York. Santee then contacted the Department of Labor in Washington, D.C., Topeka and Kansas City, Mo.
THE INCIDENT attracted national attention when camera crews from CBS and NBS news came to Lawrence to interview York.
In the spring of 1975, Santee, as a representative of the Marine Reserve Officers Association, assigned the Lawrence City Commission to fire Jim York, a former nurse who returned here from Canada and was participating in a national amnesty program.
Work worked in the city parks and recreation department and his job was funded through the Comprehensive Emphasis Program (CTAP), a federal job opportunity program.
York quit his $2.69-an-hour city job the
On March 20, the state manpower planning division ruled that York couldn't work in the CTEJA job he was participating in the amnesty program. As a participant in the program, it said, he couldn't work in a job for which there were other qualified applicants.
Headquarters study shows 1975 suicide rate doubled
In 1975 almost twice as many people considering suicide called Headquarters, a community crisis center in Lawrence, than had called the center in 1974.
The total number of received calls increased about 9 per cent from 7,752 in 1981 to 8,603 in 1984.
A report recently issued by Headquarters says that in 1974 the center received 82 calls from people consideringicide. In 1975 the number was 151.
Condon said that suicides and suicide attempts increased nationally when the death rate was lower.
"When people can't find a job, then they sometimes use alcohol and barbiturates," he said. "This brings them down lower and makes them contemplate suicide."
According to a book entitled "Suicide," by Earl A. Frollman, "The rate of suicide soars during periods of economic depression."
Kirk Condon, a volunteer at Headquarters, said there sometimes was a correlation between suicide attempts and trouble in the suicide calls he received.
HE SAID THAT these people often had family responsibilities and problems and that often their wives or girl friends were also unable to find work.
About three times as many women as men attempt suicide, but men succeed more.
"Some see suicide as the only solution and it flat out," he said. "Others keep it up."
"One woman called up and asked 'How many of these pills do I have to take to kill myself?'" he said. "I had another volunteer look up the information while I talked to her and found out her situation. We talked for about two hours."
CONDON SAID he thought that no one we had contacted Headquarters, and three we had received.
In cases where the caller doesn't explicitly say he is considering suicide, the volunteer has to watch out for phrases like "life isn't worth living." Condon said.
The volunteer will try to draw out the caller's intention and may even ask him whether he has thought of killing himself, he said.
Although Headquarters hasn't made a specific breakdown, Condon said, the ages of those considering suicide was about 18 and people between 18 to 25 and middle-aged people.
The largest single group of calls received by Headquarters, the report says, was from people who were lonely. Of the total number received in 1973, 847 were in this category.
At the time of the incident, Santee said that he had no grudge against York and that he asked for York's ouster because he had been asked to do so.
SOME OF THESE people call once a week, others call several times a week and a third group only calls once. "when their friends are coming down around them," Condon said.
same day and left Lawrence, blaming Santee for his removal.
"A lot of people could have done it, but I
wanted to be honest. The time." I am
harmed by the accent the lawyer
SANTEE SAID yesterday he had no reebrets about his part in the controversy.
"Basically, they just want to talk about anything. about life in general." he said.
"I’m firmly convinced I did the right thing," he said. "If you play the game, you have to follow the rules. The rules were violated in hiring him. I have nothing personally against him. I didn't even know him."
Before receiving a B.S. in education from KU, Sante gained national fame as a trackman and participated in the 1,500-mile race at the 1932 Olympics at Helsinki, Finland.
The Headquarters "hot-line" is open 24 hours a day and can be reached by calling 841-2345.
Originally from Ashland, Santee caught Kansas' attention and earned the nickname, the "Ashland Antelope," after breaking Glenn Cunningham's state high school record mile with a run of 4:26 while he was a high school senior.
NATION THE outstanding athlete of the 27th annual Kansas Relays in 1982, Santee was regarded as one of the world's top millers. He was considered one of the likely prospect to break four-minute best performance in the 30 Texas Relays when he clocked a 4:00.5
In 1956, however, Santee's hopes for further competition were dashed when he
was banned for life from amateur sports by the Amateur Athletic Union (AAU).
The AAU charged him with taking too much expense money and said he should be advised not to do so.
Santee sought a permanent injunction against the suspension, which rendered him ineligible for competition in the 1966 Olympics, from a New York state court.
The court ruled against him.
LAST YEAR, Sante was inducted into the National Track and Field Hall of Fame. He has received awards from two presidents for his work in physical fitness programs and has been a running instructor for the Kansas City Royals.
Santee served two years' active duty in the United States Marine Corps and is now a lieutenant colonel and a national official and director of the Marine Corps Reserves.
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- LIBRARIES
- FOREIGN STUDENTS
- HUMAN RELATIONS
FOREIGN STUDENTS
Parking and Traffic Board
(9 Student Members)
These appointments will be for the 1976-77 school year.
Pick up applications at:
University Events Committee
The Student Senate Office, Level 3 Suite 105 B, The Kansas Union.
DEADLINE FOR APPLICATIONS: MAY 7,1976
The Student Senate is funded from the Student Activity Fee
FREE
Admission for
our
"CANNED
MUSIC"
FREE Admission for our "CANNED MUSIC"
BAR-LOUNGE
20 POOL TABLES
FOOS BALL
PINBALL
MR. YUK UP DOWN
MR.
MR. YUK UP DOWN
9th & Iowa
OLYMPIA BEER ON TAP!
LIVE BANDS Every Night THURS April 29 FRI April 30 SAT May 1 $1 Off with KU I.D. STONE MOUNTAIN
843-3500
THE BAND
NOW PLAYING
Just hanging around?
23rd and Alabama
gets you moving on.
Ford RENT-A-CAR
JOHN HADDOCK
Make Daily Weekly Weekend Rates Overtime
Pinto 9.00 plus 1c a mile 38.00 plus 4c per mile 7.00 plus 1c per mile 1.50 per hour
Maverick 10.50 plus 1c per mile 60.00 plus 1c per mile 7.50 plus 1c per mile 1.50 per hour
Muangtong Torino 11.00 plus 11c per mile 79.00 plus 11c per mile 7.50 plus 11c per hour 1.50 per hour
Granada Plaza 11.00 plus 11c per mile 79.00 plus 11c per mile 7.50 plus 11c per hour 1.50 per hour
LTD 12.00 plus 12c per mile 73.00 plus 12c per mile 10.00 plus 12c per hour 1.50 per hour
Stallen Wagon 12.00 plus 12c per mile 86.00 plus 12c per mile 11.00 plus 12c per hour 1.50 per hour
Above Rates Include Insurance
Insurance Laws Require You Must Be 21
PACIFIC SUNSET
Business Discount
Only natural isn't it, to want something as cool and bare as these little cotton knit T-shirts. Latch on to a couple. They come in as many colors as you-know-who! Sizes s-m-l.
Open:
Mon.-Thurs. 10-8:30
Fri.-Sat. 10-6
Carousel Charge BankAmericard Master Charge Cash too!
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER 711 West 23rd
car
car usel
10
Thursday. April 29.1976
University Dally Kansan
Prof spouts whale tales
By BECCI BREINING
Staff Writer
Ask Elizabeth Schultz what her favorite woman and she'll immediately reply, "Mindy Doe."
When Schultz, professor of English, read the book as a college junior she was fascinated by the mystique of whales and author Herman Melville's attempt to know
Now, after several years of teaching "Moby Dick" to 19th-century English classes in the embarked and Japan, he embarked on a marvelous such that continues where Mellville left off.
"Melville really tried every possible means to understand what she," said recently. "He examined the whale metaphysically and metaphysically and sociologically."
"In view of all these aspects, the whale became a romantic reality which has been repeated for generations."
weather vanes and gigantic rock formations."
This summer Schultz will return to Japan where her fascination with whales first materialized into the research project. On a 1973-74 Fulbright Lectureship in Japan, Schultz was strongly urged to pursue a study of whales by Hennig Cohen, chairman of the Herman Melville Society, Schultz had corresponded with Cohen on this topic and the suggestion of Cohen, Schultz is now
At the suggestion of Cohen, Schultz is studying the attitudes and perceptions of the Japanese before whaling became mechanized, in about 1803.
The Japanese attitude at this time was very "the profound," she said. "It represented an enormous respect and sympathy for the people of Japan." Her body posture is in contrast to the present attitude.
A female whale captured in nets would be circled by her anguished spouse, who would cry for her, Schult said, and the Japanese same saw tears in the whale's eyes.
"The Japanese were confronted by the fact that whales were sensitive creatures in who many ways had a life very much like their own," she said. "And the wonder of it is the parallel attitudes that developed in them as best completely independent of each other."
"To know the whale is synonymous with knowing anything," she said. "To know the whale is synonymous with knowing anything."
Schultz said there were several Western accounts both contemporary and 19th-century, that suggested man had learned many things about himself from the whale.
TO LEARN more about the whale and the men whom it affected, Schultz will visit several whaling sites along the coast of Japan. She knows the country well, she is a great teacher and will teach three years after graduating from Wellesley College, in Wellesley, Mass.
Malott library allows students to bone up
When a person walks into a library, he doesn't expect to see students checking out boxes of human bones and spreading them out on the tables, but that's becoming a regular occurrence in Malot Hall science library.
Marna Young, study librarian, said Monday that students were studying skulls and vertebrae when she walked into the library at 8:30 that morning.
Sets of bones are put on reserve there by Robert Chivetti, anatomy instructor for the University of Chicago's human anatomy. Students usually study the bones in regular lab periods, Chivetti said, but the courses have become so crowded that students have the time to look at them then.
Chiovetti said studying had been much easier for anatomy students since he put the bones on reserve at the science library last summer. He now study them whenever Maltis is open.
"ANATOMY IS a very descriptive science," he said. "Students have to know the name of every bump, bruise and hole in the homes, and that takes a few hours to
The anatomy department has three collections of bones in addition to the one at the library. Each collection consists of three sets—upper extremity, lower extremity, and the scrotum in the library is changed when students begin studying a new area.
"Right now it's skull and vertebrae," he said.
Chiivoitl agreed that bones were an unusual sight in a science library.
"I guess it must be a little disturbing to chemistry students to see bones scattered in the sand."
Young said there were other unusual objects on science reserve.
A collection of 200 slides is used along with library projectors by third and fifth-year pharmacy students to teach them to identify drugs.
THE RESERVE DESR also has a drawer containing 1,600 tapes of supplemental material for the pharmacy course, Principles of Disease.
"There's a heavy demand for these around exam times," Young said.
She said 15 copies of each tape were available to the 80 students taking the course. Students can check them out for 24 hours, and if they do not want the recorders available from the reserve desk.
There's also a big demand for two scientific calculators, given to the library in March 1975 by Alpha Chi Sigma, a chemistry fraternity.
Young said these were almost constantly in use because students taking only one science course liked to have access to calculators without having to buy them.
The kind of material on science reserve reflects a change of emphasis since Young became science librarian in 1970, she said. When she was a librarian, she said, and more books than journals.
"You could call us a multimedia source now." she said.
Schultz will reminisce with old fishermen, sail with them in their small boats and visit the shore where he caught a glimpse of a whale. She will also study whaling artifacts and documents from fishing villages. She said she hoped to be able to share her experiences with people whose lives centered on the whale.
Schultz said that there were several tombstones in Japan paying tribute to the whale and that the whale had been immortalized through Shintōism.
Traditional attitudes of the Japanese toward the whale have been harmonious with nature, she said. Before whaling became mechanized, a fisherman would take on the whale and the whale would take on enormous dimensions of respect for the fisherman.
"BUT THE RECENT attitude toward whales has been strictly for exploitation," Schutz said. "Unlike Western whales, they always part of the whale; they always have
"When the Japanese developed mechanized means to kill the whale, the distance between man and beast increased."
Because more and more whales are killed each year, Schultz fears that distance will eventually cause the extinction of some types of whales.
"We can't go ahead and continue to slaughter the whale," she said. "The answer is simply to stop using modern means."
Schultz said that although meat whale was very popular in Japan, the whale didn't provide any necessary elements that can't be found elsewhere.
1. 'shudder to think about how many wales were slaughtered in the 80s just for luxury'
squares said the whale had inadmitted once then, but a recent book had exploded.
"The novel, Jaws, is a cheap imitation of Moby Dick." Schulz said. "Peter Benchard was right about it."
BONNIE RAITT
TONIGHT
With Special Guest
Mose
Allison
Thursday April 29
8:00 Hoch Aud.
All remaining ticket sales end
from outlets and SUA today.
Some good seats still available!
Tickets are $5 and $6
At: SUA
Kiefs
McKinney-Mason
Better Days
Mother Earth-Topeka
Capers Corner-K.C.
A carnival atmosphere will prevail at the KU libraries' annual book sale each Tuesday and Wednesday on the lawn in front of Watson Library.
Surplus books to be offered by library staff
Members of the KU Library Staff Association (KULISA) will sell balloons, soft drinks and popcorn as well as books donated to the Spencer Library will be sold in Spencer Research Library.
from 3,000 to 4,000 books on sale, covering all subjects.
"The primary purpose is to get the books we don't need into the hands of KU students who are interested in them," McDonough said.
The purpose of the sale is to sell unneeded, duplicated copies of works from the libraries. Resemble McDonough, exchange librarian, said yesterday there would be
There will be an auction on both days at p.m. A list of books included in the action will be posted in the display case in front of Watson Tuesday morning.
Funds from the book sale will given to the
schools. The funds will be used by KULSA and
will benefit the food.
Bengals Ltd.
Fine Gifts and Jewelry
803 Mass.
Come to the Casbah
Riverdale
for those special occasions . . . whether formal or interview or that big night on the town a 3-piece suit from Mister Guy
open thursday nights till 8:30
MISTER
GUY
920 mass.
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 29, 197
11
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without regard to their financial circumstances. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL!
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
ERRORS
Is words or fewer ... $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
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
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.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or online by contacting the UDK business office at 864-5358.
UDK_BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
FREE MAL-MALMUTE PUPPIES. CALL 842-1481 AFTER 5:00 P.M.
5-4
Yard sale. Sat, May 9. 3-5. Plants, furniture,
crawls, carpets, Michigan Michigan | Apr 17,
May 17, 2018
Employment Opportunities
Career related summer job must be locate-outside Kansas. Earn $33 per month. Call 837-7579.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS: Drop in and
visit the front office (phone calls, phone
plates) to pick up materials at WESTBROOK
UNIVERSITY.
Free rental service: Up to the minute listings of
Lewis & Clark Lawn & Garden,
Rental Exchange, 842-250-3900.
2 bdrm. all util. paid, on campus. Furn. or um.
Free parking. n/c. pool. 843-699-103.
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen priv-
ness or for campuses $39 and up. 5- ife-
nities 408 or 842-583 or 648-
SUMMER RATES at Univ. Terr. & Old Mill
Apt. Apt. B, Apt. C, BA calabones,
drains, swimming pools, wet suits,
utilities: 2 bedm. furm; $140 plus utilities. Rates
good approx. May 15 through Aug. 15. Aug 15
inclusive.
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate
and also, save money, leave from June 1,
theater in the middle of town, now before it’s too late Park 25 Apartments, 2 blocks west of Iowa on 35th St. Phone 814-1555.
Garden plots for rent. Four sizes already plowed,
and diiced irrigated by wet walls 842-202-700.
842-202-700.
1 bdm rent apartment for rent for sum-
ple tuition $125 a month plus usl call 642-8547.
Subluate for summer, very nice 2 bdm, apt.
658-2940 location right next to campus. 613-2999-8981,
613-2999-7238
Large house, 3 to 4 bedrooms. Rural type set.
2 car garage. Phone: 843-957-83. 4-29
Subbase: from May 29 to Aug. 2 2 d brm
trailer,训援. AC: CALL 843-5372. 4-29
Furnished apartments one bedroom, air conditioned 19 w. 1 W, #48s. Avail. May. 1, 8:45-6pm to 10:30am
Sublimate for summer. Mid-May to August 15.
Creebe nest, completely furnished. Close to
the creek.
To submit May 28 - August 15, Clean space formation 44523. Close campus and downtown. Call 650-297-3722.
Female graduate student wstudies students, non-smoking female to share 2 bedroom apartment and next year contact $40/mo and part-time occupation. Contact $45/mo.
841-6792 or 846-4577. 4-29
841-6792 or 846-4577. 4-29
For Rent—On-brdb. spt. close to campus.
$125/mo.功, avail. Apl. avail. 841-2610. 4-30
Sublease one room apartment for summer, furnished. AC, all utilities paid - $110, 842-1822-6666
Sublearning studio apartments over summer (Meadowbrook). Call John after 2 p.m. 814-6464-6653
Sublease apartment for summer-Lyackway lease
2130 849-5768 141750 Disonau on deposit. Robin-Baldi
5200 849-5768
$197.50 month for 2, 3, or 4 persons - 2 berm.
$197.50 month for 2, 3, or 4 persons - 2 berm.
free parking on campus. Busunm rate: $83.
free parking on campus. Busunm rate: $83.
Partially furnished older home near campus in Bergen, NJ. Room includes double living room, dining room, kitchen and two bedrooms. No lease at $30 per month plus utilities. A private group of students. Available May 16. 842-573-6900.
House for summer sublease. Furnished and good location near campus. Call 641-2602 mytime online.
HAPPINESS 15 living in your own private study bedroom in an interational cooperative with 30 other students, exercise room, library, water-dry area, other private rooms, and remodeling this summer. Your share of chores includes attending camp; going to campus; Rent $0 to $75 plus for $ evening at Daniels or Danile to 18 weekends 842-9273.
**STUDENTS-ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLE!!** 20
Obtain work management information-
modeling-making. Use of improvement cases, option-
s solving and improvement options, education
examples, utilitarian use of a cleaner-driver, recreation fa-
cilities utilitarian, free-washier-driver, recreation fa-
cility campus. Building to be thoroughly remodeled
CALL Alice or DAM to 10 weeknights at 845
CALL Alice or DAM to 10 weeknights at 845
Sublease late May-Aug. Beautiful well kept 5 bed, house. close to校公队. B64-661-789.
Sublease 3 bdm. house for summer, Summer
house, Ridge. Fence. Near Villersburg. 843-
841-3176.
Snaptures 2 barn. townhouse fully equipped
2 barn. townhouse fully equipped
May 1 2000. W 26th H 84th S 83-9033 4-30
may 1 2000. W 26th H 84th S 83-9033 4-30
Sublease 1 bedroom apartment for summer. Completely furnished, new carpet and downstairs bathroom. Fully equipped with a kitchen.
Sub for summer: nice furnished 2 bedroom
room location: $50, 841-6166 after,
4k for Viking.
$147.50 month for one person - 2 bdmr allutil
$239.50 month for one person - 2 bdmr allutil
parking on campus, Summee rate = $89.50-$91.50
Large apartment for rent for all electric kitchen
furniture. Framless, framed, furnished, unfinished.
Call 843-1855-2 after 5 p.m.
3 to 4 bedroom home near campus for summer months only—call 811-644-1247. 147% Kensington 4-30
Take all the worry out of this summer vacation. fall 20 meals per week with unlimited seconds, weekly maid service, fully carpeted, AC and semi-private bath. Fail schedule of social visits. Wear a mask when steps at front door. Room with your friends or roommates. Use ours. Naihall Hall. 18 Naihall Dorm. 11
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hill equipment other than factory-brand or close-produced products, you are better off benefits at the GAMMOPHONE SHOP at KIEFS.
Tremendous selection of guitars, amps, drums. Bach's Instruments Series. Shop Hose Board Studios, Choose from Guitar, Amplifier, Amp Case, Guitar, Custom, Green, and many others. Nine tuners. After nine minutes, ringing after a minute. g Rose Keyboards Studio, After nine minutes. Rose Keyboards Studio, After nine minutes.
COST 4%—Stereo equipment. All major brands. Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single item or package. Register for free Kose 658. Earnings 6 to 10. Phone: Davenport 869. Earnings 6 to 10.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them
DON SCHICK AUTO PARTS
Parts for Foreign & Domestic Cars
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
A AM Part Stop
Bahai Faith
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Bahal' 4 Club Meeting, April 5, 17:30 p.m. Oral Ballroom, Union
Pat Read
Indian Trader
THE LOUNGE
843-1306 10-5 Tues..Sat.
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
PICKENS AUTO PARTS
25% Off on
all Auto Parts
2601 Iowa 843-1353
a quiet corner
Bud on Tap ★Pool ★Foosball
Southwest Corner Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
Radial Tire Clearance! Your choice of any size is included. 145-150, 152-155, 160-165, 145-153, 152-155, 160-165, 145-153, 152-155, 160-165, CRT-120, 16-14, BHTR-14, Rock Stoneback*, 929 Mass. Service at our store. Woodworth's service at rear of our store. 5-5
WE SELL FOR LESS-11 to 6:20. Good used furniture; Gas and electric rates; Refrigerators; Washrooms; Vacuum Cleaners; Hair Laways-low weekly free delivery, 1228 East Hotel, Topeka, Ks. Phone 1-737-3255 or 545-8288.
Bonne Bob 10-6-0 lotion in a spray! Soothes
the feet. Corner Door Suction 911. Maxi
Corner Door Suction 911. Maxi
Round Course can solve Mother's Day mpf problem.
Round Course can solve Mother's Day mpf problem.
Humboldt, Humboldt, 411 Hallerstrasse, Cary,
Cary, North Carolina
www.roundcourse.org
RADIO-BAADI-antennae-scanner-20%, 80% OFF
RAID-Audio-Scanner-20%, 70% OFF
R-Ray Audio, E 9, Bd 842, 2647, Audio Scope
Sony sale! Save on now on Sony radion, clock radion, clock radion. 929, W590. 929, W590. 929, W590. 929, W590. 929, W590. 929, W590. 929, W590. 929, W590. 929, W590.
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Hardware from our trade. The Furniture & Appliance Center, Toulouse.
Alternator, Starter, and Specialist Speakers
BEL AIR ALUMINIUM
ELECTRIC 843-900, 3200 W, 40 hp
ELECTRIC 843-900, 3200 W, 40 hp
Super summer machine, 75 Catiini Italian motor
supercharger, 125 Galton. Bright $490 or best offer, $414.99.
Motorcycle helmet, $160.
Planning a trip?
Let Maumpintour
Do the LEGWORK For You!
We offer free consulting and reservations services.
*Honda 745, 175. Must sell. 1,000 miles. like new.
hip monitors, 60 mg, best offer. 841-379-1.
4-29
Stephen B. is here! Pure colore spray at a Burn Corner Drug Store 801, Masa 845-0200, 4-29
Losing your tan? Use a sunlamp at Round 'Corner Drug Store - 806 Mass. 843-2000. 4-29
1973 WV Beetle, excellent rating. 20,900 miles,
35 mm. radiolite tires. Call 812-905-496.
4-29
Bargain used books, fiction, medical law,
medicine, history, and parkard Shopping Center. March 3 to May 8
1971 Dodge Challenger, radial radii p., a.a. auto,
computer console, amm radio, 120V charger,
841-445-648 4-29
1971 Dodge Challenger, radial radii p., a.a. auto,
computer console, amm radio, 120V charger,
841-445-648 4-29
Foulder Baumann Amplifier 2¹ 12 speakers w//
Foulder Baumann Amplifier 2½ 12 speakers w/
Foulder. Collector's item, fin condition w/case
w/clean surface.
Wants look like a bum! Beach Burn that is. Use
a sandstone beach mat and lotions. Avail at
Round Table Coffee in Palm Harbor, WA.
4.1% Creator SS images for $5 boll chest. Matched
images from the US or can be com or by Ne27 Hibernation.
If @ 9 p.m. or com by Ne27 Hibernation.
General Electric Stereo Component System
General Electric $50 Will定价 price: $1,925
1023 aspirant 4-30
OVATION 12-string guitar. Price reasonable.
841-6184 after 6. 4-30
1959 Bugeye Sprite, excellent cond. Come see it.
4.50. I bought 84,771.514 after 5.50.
4.50.
Sears 10-speed bike. 842-7114 after 5:30. 4-30
10-speed very reasonable. Must tell quickly.
841-4970.
4-50
SUA / Maupintour
Baby's white wicker changing table. Ironing board. 842-7853. 4-29
I have to leave town. Must sell 98 Triumpth GTS.
I have to spend 400 and make an offer: 842-671-750
35mm RICHON, F1a lens, 2x Xenon telescope,
electronic flash, $165, $850, 4-29
1971 Fiat 124 Sbvder conv. 30 plus miles per gal.
1972 Toyota Corolla 124 Sbvder. Will consider
a charge. Caution: Calibrate Ua 842-788-278.
Ten speed bike. Like new. Ridden only three
times $100 or best offer. B41-6433.
4-30
Samuel 900 Receiver. Less than two months old, mini condition. $800. Mint sell for financial reassurance or re-sale.
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS 72
HORIZON XL 75, 102 Lubber tires.
HORIZON XL 80, 72 Tritumhorse CR 30,
30 HORIZON CT 70, 71 Tritumhorse 500, 74 Yamaha
CC 30, 65 Tritumhorse 90, 75 Horizona
Horizona HI 80, 61 W. 64h, 83-433
-
Rain gear light weight and high quality. Trailwear, rain gear, annakres, caplanes, and rain jacket. Only in Canada.
Acoustic PA column $350, Mitch $844-854, Ovation $129, Meyer $179, low mileage $475, mini-flat bike $14, $84-852.
1974 Kawasaki 500, green, 260 miles, good condition,
875-best by 842-330 and 843-400 - 4-30
Mobile home, 2 bdmm. furn., unfurished,
mobile home, skirted, 2 ACS; under $8,000.
842-765-700
842-765-700
King-size, waterbed-frame, headboard, mattress
size. pad 842 - 888-883
4-30
Help me clean out my garage--4 case bottom chair, old wooden desk, new table, small tables, small chest, dresser of drawers, wicker baby burglar, girl's bed, large black office small desk, May 1. My May 2022 Westchester. 4-30
travel service
60 van, long wheel base A.T. radio, new tires,
motorized (rebuilt motor) Call 841-4583-5-11
CASSETTE TAPE RECORDER SuperScape CS
200 Stereo, ADCP, portable--doubles as home or
tape deck--compact enough for classroom or
recording. Rusty Shilulian, 841-920-3400
4133.
Biker
1959 Capri mobile home 10 to 50 one bedroom
Make offer. Call 841-3532; after 6 p.m.
5-4
1970 Karmann Glb. excellent condition, rebuilt
hospital equipment, vivit tap. Komas torp.
805, 842, 843, 846
Phone 843-1211 KU Union—The Malls—Hillcrest—900 Mass.
70 Suzuki 250, 56x. Six speed, beveled helmet, to take best offer, call Rieke Lambert #819-3-52-3
...
1975. Kawasaki KI 400D. 3500 miles. Call 843-5
6488.
Insight INTO LIFE
King size waterbed; 8" $2 per speaker (pair);
Lloyds or AM tray; FM/AM $64. 862-254-
RECORDED MESSAGE (24 tx)
842·4441
1975 850 Norton Command, bw mileage,
450 miles per gallon. Must be able to
prest the best. Can be seen at 7109 Guestday.
Call 612-349-1395 for details.
1971 Honda CB350, with Fairing, luggage rack
Call: 841-3161. S-5
Kustom amplifier, 150 watts. Four 10" speakers,
like new. Call 841-4478. 5-5
HELP WANTED: Kansas Students Company
carpentry, etc. "you have available now." Flexible
work hours; etc. "you have available now."
Classic Harmonica guitar and case for sale. Call 864-6439. Try early or later. Reasonableness: 5-8
HELP WANTED
Avon can help you have the summer vocation you desire. Earnings earnings. Open territory. Avon is a family-owned business.
PART TIME - EARN $25 PER WEEK, FOR 3
WEEKS. BURST ON THE CARD AT A GREAT
MARKUP. 1-MILFORD, WA - 847-690-3774
OR 1-877-894-3774 FOR 6-mil p.m. FOR INTEGRITY.
Summer work, Johnson County area, Phil C.
684-6424 4-30
College English teachers: possible opening this week to literature-literature courses MA. in English and English literature, teaching English at the University of Kansas research center. For information write James A. Gownen, English For I
COLLEGE STUDENTS NOW HIRING FOR SUMMER WORK IN SUMMER, CALL FOR INTERVIEW WEEKS IN SUMMER. CALL FOR INTERVIEW RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CORP. WORK IN KANSAS AND STATE SUMMER. KANSAS CITY, KANSAS
Full summer employment for reliable young persons on custom cruise vessel. Experience must include:
**STUDENTS:** SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. Pinker-King, of South Carolina, is a student who deserves summer employment as a software engineer. To qualify, you must be 21 or over, have a clear understanding of the job requirements for transportation available and phone. Apply Mammy Kung through The Girls Club of Kansas City, Missouri in person. An equal Opportunity Employer.
Lawrence Gay Counseling Services needs paraprofessionals to need an administration director to develop programs and direct callers to appropriate counsellors. For more information call 846-1313 or 845-588-57. More information call 846-1313 or 845-588-57.
Sirilion Blockade will be interviewing on campus
inferior security, Summerfield, 4-30
equal opportunity employer
Secretary-Receptionist, half-time, for fast paced
seasonal duties. Meet and greet individual who can keep up the pace and get the work out. 7:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m. M-F.
Work with students in Warehouse Book
402 c/o Lawrence Journal World.
Mottles-Casabian fine area restaurant, must be booked in advance and full part-time, evening phone 212-648-7350.
Top Paying Job is open to experienced sales
sales representatives Call Hardy 847-5417. Full time only
Eight dollars to participate in two one hour sessions on making decisions in making decisions on helping others. CBS has a 10% rebate for using the CBS online website.
Summer employment for women largest moving to Florida is increasing. Applications for women packers to prepare homes for summer use must be City and Leavenworth area, must have own transportation. Apply by Sept. 15th. W. Kilder, Shorewood, Kana
Wanted: sales assist - liliths - Greek
wife. 500 sq ft. home in the Bronx.
Resume - resume. Crazy Top Shop, W. 9th St.
N. 7th Ave.
Lost: 2 rings in East Ladder' John at stadium
during relay, Friday' 6. John at college-4-159
8. John at college-4-159
LOST AND FOUND
"Found" advertisements are sponsored as a public service through April by First National Bank of Lawrence, Downtown Bank-9th & Maisa, Lawrence, Downtown Bank-10th & First National South-187 West 21rd.
Pair of prescription wipes in front Wesco.
22nd Black frames Call 814-753-0600 to identify
Lost! on campus, red and white blue-eyed
loving suppo 4 misses, missed 842 123-849 5276
842-9576
Long-haired yellow male cat. Yet affectionate,
needs loving home. 843-5990. 4-30
Reward $100 Lost Identification driver, drivers
found in car accident. Found people found
please contact Neal Durham 841-275-42-30
Found black labrador pup in Oread Hall next to stadium. 643-4298 4-29
Lost: 4/16 female German Shepherd pup, tad.
6 months. No collar, answers to inquiries. 864-684-5290.
Carol I. found your bus pass in Lindley Hall
April 27. Call Ann Maria 4-6663 to Identify 5-3
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The Catalab Cafe special Sunday dinner is a Full
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Come one—Come all. May Day Festival—a-week celebration, for celebration, for celebration, and celebration. Foose, Cherry Bowl, and Women's Furniture. Muse at a Women's Furniture. Lot hunk picnic and volleyball Free of charge. Volunteer with Women's Coatition and Commission on the Status of Women. Funded by Student Activity Fee. 4-20
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Do you wanna dance? Do you like exciting live music? Do you like the Blues? You'll love the Son Sola's Blues Band, appearing at OFF- the -Wall Hall. 737 New York Avenue and 8th & 8th. Call 814-681-7252. info blues! lives.
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Female roommate to share 2-bedroom furnished apartment at the Malls for Fall; Call Carol at (312) 589-4000.
QUANTRILLS
1. or 2. of female roommates to share apt. for
roommate, location, unitities a, c, p租房.
Call 864-8432
Wait, the numbers in line 3 are 864-8432.
Let's look at the first number in line 3. It's 864.
The second number is 8432.
One more check on the characters. In line 1, "or 2." and "of" are on separate lines.
In line 2, "1. or 2. of female roommates to share apt." is on one line.
In line 3, "1. or 2. of female roommates to share apt." is on one line.
The numbers in line 3 are 864-8432.
Let me re-examine the image.
Line 1: "or 2. of female roommates to share apt."
Line 2: "1. or 2. of female roommates to share apt."
Line 3: "1. or 2. of female roommates to share apt."
Wait, looking at the image again, the numbers in line 1 are 864-8432.
The numbers in line 2 are 864-8432.
The numbers in line 3 are 864-8432.
Let me re-examine the image.
Line 1: "or 2. of female roommates to share apt."
Line 2: "1. or 2. of female roommates to share apt."
Line 3: "1. or 2. of female roommates to share apt."
Wait, let me look at the very end of the third line.
It's "Call 864-8432". Yes, that's correct.
Final check of the text:
1. or 2. of female roommates to share apt.
2. location, unitities a, c, p租房.
3. Call 864-8432
Yes, I'm ready!
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Thursday, April 29, 1976
Minority students...
services, as well as information about job opportunities, students have a much better chance to succeed.
ine Black American Law students Association (BALSA) is also among the groups that recruit minority students to go to KU.
Tyrone Means, Chicago law student, said BALSA representatives traveled throughout the state contacting students that might be interested in law school.
THE REPRESENTATIVE IS provide student experience in materials and their questions.
means said the recruitment officer followed up each visit with a letter to reinforce initial contacts, and after that, it was "a wait and see situation."
BALSA received $298 in funding from the Student Senate this year, a cut of almost
He said funding could have been cut because of a feeling that minority recruitment programs were no longer necessary.
"I've heard folks say that there is no more discrimination and so there's no need for special programs to encourage minorities to make a difference in professional fields." Means said.
He said it appeared that only a minimum effort to meet affirmative action guidelines was being made to increase minority student enrollment.
"I DENENTILY feel as though there's a lack of minorities at KU whenever the percentage is less than five per cent," he said, "but myself self being the only one in the classroom."
The Student Council for Recruiting,
Motivating and Educating Rise Engineers
(ERE)
architecture school, are also recruiting students to come to KU.
Charles Lockhart, past president of SCoREBE, said that since the organization's creation, enrollment of black engineers has increased.
"In 1971 when the program began," he said, "there were six black engineers, now there are 60 students participating in the program."
LOCKHART CITED three goals of the program, which are: to assure that more minority student engineers graduate from KU, that there is more financial aid and support for students in engineering and to help minority students find suitable job placements.
Lockhart said most of the students in recent years had been from the metropolitan Kansas City area and other parts of Kansas, but he added that other students came from all over the United States.
He noted several problems that he thought black students in engineering confronted, including student identification, race and the back of black faculty members.
He said SCoRMEBE doesn't begin its program with the college student. It recruits high school students with high capabilities and limited educational opportunity to attend a summer program in engineering at KU.
"ONE PROBLEM that has to be faced in "respect to recruiting black faculty is that industry's offers to blacks are more expensive than the incentives you really have to want to teach."
In addition to recruiting, Black 'teens is geared to give black students some basis to help them work together and benefit from each other's experience in the school of
architecture, Kevin Wilson, Leavenworth junior, said.
"The overall situation isn't too good," he said, "but I know of several students that want to either change their major or drop out of the school because of the misconception that's put out by faculty and administrators."
He said in addition to these problems, black students were often misled about
curriculum requirements and the length of the entire architecture program.
"A lot of times students don't even have the basic courses and they have to take background courses that won't even lead to advanced graduation requirements," Wilson said.
"So oftentimes students start out with no hope of graduating in four years."
(Tomorrow): Recruitment by individual schools plus faculty evaluation.
On Campus
TODAY: J. KELLEY SOWARD, professor of history at Wichita State University, will speak on "Erasmus: The Colloquies as Instruments of Reform" at 4 in
Events . . .
TONGHT: FELLOWSHIP OF RECONCILIATION members will sponsor a cupper at 3:00 in the United Ministries Center, 1204 Oread. The AFRICAN STUDIES FILM SERIES will present two films, "Africa's Fiction," and "Nigeria: A Culture in Transition," at 7 on 2920 Haworth. JOSE A. ARGUELES, art historian and author, will present "The Arguese of Visual Vision," at 7:30 in VIRIO SATO, Fukushima, Japan, graduate student, will present a graduate piano recital at 8:20 Rehouttical Hall.
TOMORROW: The MIDWEST REGIONAL MUSIC THERAPY CONFERENCE will begin at 8 a.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas University. The 15th annual JAYHAWK NAVY SPRING REVIEW will be at 5:30 on the east lawn of Allen Field House. LES COMEDIENDS DE L'ETERVIER of the department of French and Italian will present three short French comedies at 6 p.m. in Strong Hall Ballroom. The program is free and open to all. Ballroom. Kennedy's speech is part of the MAY FESTIVAL, which runs through Saturday and is sponsored by the Commission on the Status of Women and the Women's Coalition.
TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE
A DANCE CONCERT
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UNIVERSITY MURPHY
THEATRE HALL
May 6,7,8
8:00 p.m.
HALL
Adm. $2.00
Female K. U. I.D.
Children 50c
Over 60—Free
Parking fees . . .
From page one
stand by his recommendation.
He said the $ price for campus passes wouldn't produce much revenue, but it might reduce the number of cars driven through campus during the day.
Hugh Cotton, chairman of the parking and traffic board, said he would be disappointed
But Cotton said he was pleased with Shanker's recommendation on campus park.
That number might be decreased if campus passes aren't free, he said.
Cotton said there had been about 1,000 campus passes issued during the 1974-75 school year, the last year for which a total count was available.
THERE WILL have to be an increase in parking fees for the 1977-78 year, Cotton said, or "there will be serious problems in parking lot maintenance."
Cotton said that the condition of some parking lots was "deplorable," and that students might see their cars "fall in to the axle" in the holes in some lots.
The re-paving should begin this summer, be said.
Martin Jones, associate vice chancellor for business affairs, said the O-Zone parking lot southeast of Allen Field House would be paved with or without fees.
Jones said the project's cost, estimated at £50,000, wouldn't seriously deplete the plant.
IT WILL be partially funded by $80,000 remaining in this year's parking services lot maintenance budget and most of the other costs for lot improvements next year, he said.
The remainder of the project's cost will be paid for from the 1977-78 parking services
Jones said it would be possible for parking services to provide adequate maintenance
of other lots without fee increases, "but not for an indefinite period."
Jones agreed that the charge for campus passes wouldn't raise much money, and that, if approved, then would be initiated as a traffic control tool.
"Probably not all the people who have passes now will feel they need them if they need them."
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
CLOUDY
KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.134
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Watkins leader of benefactors to University
Friday, April 30, 1976
Activist lecture opens three-day women's festival
A potluck dinner and a lecture by activist Kimmy Kennedy will open the May Day Festival.
The festival, sponsored by the Women's Coalition and the Commission on the Status of Women, was held in Washington.
A WOMEN'S POTTLUCK DUMP from 5:30 to 6:30 PM at the United Nations institutions.
Building will once be Kennedy's home.
Workshops and films are on schedule from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Institute and Smith Hall. Topics include: self-defense, sex discrimination in schools, poor decision-making, women and divorce, and self-health—a health study group.
Registration for the workshops will be held tomorrow in the main lobby of the Union.
A women's coffeehouse and dance will be the
first pm to 1 am; tomorrow in the Hawk
2.
CAROLYN BOWMAN
Sunday, a potpole picnic will be held from
1 p.m. to 3 p.m. at Potter Lake.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
A free child-care center will be available during the speech tonight and during the workshops and coffeehouse all day tomorrow.
Sinain' the Blues
"I thought I was a child," sang Bonnie Rattit during her hour and 45-minute concert last night in Hector Auditorium. The blues singing redhead brought her own brand music to
KU to start publicity drive
By JERRY SEIB
University officials will soon begin a program designed to generate more public support for the University of Kansas, under Archie R. Dykes announced yesterday.
Dykes sold the University Senate that the program would送 KU administrators, faculty and student officials to speak at conferences and community organizations around the state.
Dykes said the program would be similar to the Ambassadors Club, an athletic department program which arranges for student-athletes to speak at civic functions.
After the Senate meeting, Dykes said administrators had held preliminary discussions on the program with Tedde Tasheff. student body president.
But he said that the program wasn't married yet, and that more details would be added.
Dykes told the Senate that American universities faced a dismal future unless they undertook such efforts to build public confidence.
Unless schools do, he said, they will pounce into deep financial trouble because poor parents are so often the cause.
"As one looks to the future of higher education in America, there isn't much to do."
Dykes cited the examples of the State University of New York, Michigan State University, and the Universities of Georgia, Florida, and Texas. In addition, bud cults are forced enrollment selections.
But he said KU had fared better in obtaining state funds in recent years.
"Truly one of the remarkable achievements of the past two or three years
After talking with administrators of more than 20 state universities, Dykes said, he found that none of the other universities had received a faculty salary increase as large as the 8 per cent hike KU faculty will get next year.
Dykes said another major achievement of the legislative session was the approval of the construction of a new computer center, to be built starting this summer.
Two new computers, purchased with funds from last year's legislature, will arrive this summer eventually to be housed in the new center.
"I'm convinced we will have a computer center unequalled in any university of this country," he said.
has been the improvement of the level of support for higher education in Kansas," he said.
Administrators were disappointed in cuts in library fund requests, he said. Requests for $10,000 each from the Library Foundation were discontinued.
Dykes said that record enrollments at KU in the past two years, after some officials had predicted enrollments would decline, are still more attractive to parents and students.
Because of its strong professional schools, Dukes says he would like to teach the smaller number of students entering colleges. He said the high quality of those schools would continue to attract more students.
Marijuana 'fad' invites research
One result of declining enrollments elsewhere might be that the Kansas Board of Regents, which oversees professional schools of the state colleges and universities in one location, Dykes said.
Field hockey funding to go before Senate
Dykes said that there would be a 30 per cent decline in the size of high school graduation classes during the 1980s, cutting enrollments at some colleges and universities.
improvement had been severely reduced by the legislature, he said.
A bill to give $4,000 to the women's field hockey team will be presented at Wednesday's Student Senate meeting, the Sports committee decided last night.
See SENATE page 3
The funds in the bill, sponsored by John Broadie, Sports Committee co-chairman, would supplement the $2,500 promised to the team by the University administration. The $4,500 would come from the Senate's unallocated funds.
By RON COHN
Staff Writer
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Legal or illegal, moral or moral, the use of marijuana is widespread, and Allen Rawitt says it is for searching the drug at the KU Medical Center.
Rawitch, associate professor of biochemistry, came to KU in July after attending a post-graduate University for six years. He said Friday that he considered his marijuana research, which is a collaborative effort with Kent and is the primary research in thioprotients.
"My interest in this is purely scientific," he said, "and it's not psychological behavior—that's why I collaborate with two psychologists. I don't take any legal or ethical responsibilities, or the other. We respect to advocating it or not advocating it, I don't do either."
"I LOOK AT it as a fault. People are using it, and therefore I believe that it's the obligation of the scientist, if he feels he is doing something wrong in his society with as much information as necessary so that if nothing else, each individual owes respect as to whether he wants to use it."
Rawitch said that the project was started at Kent State two and one-half years ago. A team of researchers from Michigan funding to Kent State with a subcontract to KU from the National Institute of Drug Abuse is awaited. Rawitch and his colleagues are optimistic about the funding,
RATS ARE GIVEN doses of marijuana and tested to determine the drug's psychological effects. The animals are then put to death and their tissues are sent to the Med Center, where chemical analysis is conducted.
Rawitch said that he was one of three investigators on the project. The others are two psychologists at Kent State who conduct behavioral work with female rats.
The exposed rats, he said, show some deficits in learning ability. Also, Rawitch said, he thought a test in which two rats are placed in a tube with its openings closed off had shown that rats would back up unless forced) had shown that the exposed rats pushed the unexposed rats out.
He said that those particular experiments were conducted on mice and rats because researchers couldn't afford to take a risk with human subjects.
"If you give it to, for example, a pregnant or a nursing animal," he said, "it can have an effect."
He said the project tried to tie together small correlations between chemical studies, looked at where marijuana goes down in an animal and what tissues it collects.
"WE ARE DOING some studies." Rawitch said, "in which we have shown quite thoroughly that the drug and its metabolites do get into the developing fetus in rats, and do get into the milk in nursing babies, when the offspring when they're nursing.
"And furthermore, that there are differences in those rat offspring when compared to rats that did not get exposure to the placenta or through the milk."
Rawitch said the test results might indicate that the exposed rats were more dominant or aggressive or clausrophobic. But, he said, these are speculations.
He said the subjects were given a brief written test 45 minutes to an hour after the drug was taken. Then he underwent behavioral testing for a half hour before
"I GUESS THE only thing I could say is that there are differences that are reproducible, and you can document the differences." he said.
HE THEN WENT to the health center at Kent State, where he was taken to a special suite of rooms, and a substance was orally administered.
It's the speculation, he said, that causes the primary concern of researchers.
The substance may have been THC (the most common form of marijuana) psychoactive ingredient in marijuana alcohol, a tranquilizer or nothing at all. The subject didn't know what substance was involved.
There might be validity, Rawit said, to behaviorist's theories that the period in an infant's life immediately after birth is very important. If so, he said, anything that might distort an infant's perceptions is dangerous.
"So long as we have some indication that these rats behave differently, without regard to whether it's positive difference or negative difference, but their perception is modified, you run the risk of seeing potential later consequences."
In the project's tests with humans at Kent State, 100 male volunteers were selected. The volunteers must sign a statement that theyd have smoked pot previously.
The volunteer was screened in an interview, and a psychological test was given. Urine sample was taken to check for the presence of fecal matter. The subject signed a release or consent form.
RAWITCH SAID that the researchers do think that there are differences in baby rats that either nursed from exposed mothers or mothers were given the drug when pregnant.
He said that he would advise a pregnant woman or a nursing mother not to use milk.
"And that really all," he said. "Those differences may not ultimately amount to a hill of beans, but we don't know. And that's where the animal model breaks down because as the rat grows up, how do you know whether he's well-adjusted?"
"Don't use it—not because I can guarantee that you're going to have an idiot or someone that's maladjusted—but because there's a possibility that there's some alteration, and what that alteration will do is unknown," he said.
The second aspect of the project, Rawitch said, has been an attempt to measure some behavioral variables in human subjects, and as a guideline to find out how far the research has come, to look at marijuana in relation to drugs such as alcohol.
"THE PROBLEM, of course, in any of this human work, particularly in behavioral work, is that there is a great deal of variability," he said. "When you're talking about human behavior, every individual is somewhat different in the first place."
He said the way to overcome the problem was to experiment on many people.
taking another written test about the experience.
ranchish said that he couldn't reveal the details of the actual experiment because a naive subject was required for testing behavioral variables.
"The reason," he said, "is that it's not just sensing that there is nothing happening or there is something happening, but diffferent between an alcohol high and a hot pot.
until we have so far, we've adjusted these
tissues to gross body weight," Rawitch said.
But, he said, the subjects weren't asked what drug they thought they were given, only to rate in subjective terms how "high" or "low" the dose was. A low or a high dosage, selected at random.
- AND TO T AX EXPENDENCE p mohkER
* ATTEND TO AX EXPENDENCE p mohkER
"For the purposes of our study now, the
THE DOSAGES were given according to the person's body weight he said, but that presented a problem because two people who weigh the same may have very different body structures, particularly in fat content.
He said he wasn't sure that was the best way to determine dosages, but they were still operating at a dose far below what might be seriously toxic.
Hawitch said that a person knew within certain limits what kind of high he was.
See MARIJUANA page 5
Women's field hockey was cut from next year's athletic budget because of insufficiency.
Marian Washington, director of women's athletics, said the athletic department decided to cut the field hockey program to save the popularity of other women's sports.
Washington said that if the Senate funded a rocketset, she would handle the scheduling of them.
However, Jane Markert, field hockey coach, said she received a letter from Washington Wednesday that terminated her contract two weeks before her contract ran out.
THE SCHEDULDING is usually handled by the team coach.
"I see no purpose in it. I see no reason
whether my contract couldn't have run out,"
Marcus said.
Washington didn't comment on the job termination.
Washington said at the meeting that she thought the dues has to be submitted by the bank.
The Senate won't be able to appropriate any money to field hockey unless the bill amends it.
According to Markert, $30 in dues to the United States Field Hockey Association must be submitted by tomorrow. The memorial is open for regional and national tournaments.
LATER, HOWEVER, she said she would verify the date the fees are due and would ask the regional Field Hockey Association equivalent for an extension, if necessary.
The Sports Committee also will present a bill to the Senate for approval of a petition to establish an advisory board for women's intercollegiate athletics. The board, which includes members from both college and alumni and three students, will oversee women's athletics along with Washington.
A bill to establish an Intramurals Board to act as a grievance committee for complaints on intramural sports' policies and rules also will be presented to the Senate. The board will consist of Brodie, committee members. All five students who were selected last night.
The students are Jill Grubaugh, Sports Committee co-chairman and four members of the Sports Committee: Pam Blasi, Nancy Lambros, Jack Marvin and Joe Sweeney.
By CHRISTINE TYLER
Wagon train rolls into Lawrence
Eastward the wagons move along the great trails, the Oregon and the Santa Fe. They travel through snow and travelers did more than a century ago.
But today they are towns and cities along those trails, so many supplies can be delivered in short periods. Today, cars travel alongside. Today, roads and highways run where roads don't exist.
Today, 13 wagons with a train that has been following the Santa Fe Trail will凋 from their course to spend the weekend in Lawrence.
And some things haven't changed, it's still a long, hard trip.
The wagon train is scheduled to pull into Lawrence between 4 and 5:30 this afternoon.
THE WAGONS, the 115 people traveling with them and an assortment of horses and other livestock
The Santa Fe wagon train is one of five trains traveling from various parts of the country retracing the routes of the American expansion. The five wagon trains will meet near Valley Forge on the Fourth of July.
will camp for the weekend in O-zone parking lot.
The American Bicentennial Wagon Train Pilgrimage is a project of the Pennsylvania Bicentennial Commission.
The Santa Fe procession started from the Rose Bowl Parade in Pasadena, Calif., Jan. 1 and began traveling east along the Santa Fe Trail. The wagon train has traveled 208 miles to Mexico, Colorado and into Kansas.
AS THE PILGRIMAGE traveled through each state, it was joined by a wagon and to represent that state. People on horses and in wagons
The kitchen on wheels has two stoves, two ovens, two old sinks, a three-foot grill, a steam table and a large freezer and refrigerator.
Food for the people who travel with the Santa Fe wagon train is cooked in a large cast iron pan, bask which has been converted into a kitchen on wheels. Bob, Mike and Bob Woodley, a father and his two sons, are fed by a chef and pack sick lunches each day.
The official Kansas wagon joined the train at Coolidge in the beginning of April with Clyde Chayer of Palmer, as waggonmaster.
★ ★
Chayer's assistant, 76-year-old Roe Groom of Council Grove, says wagons aren't new to him. He remembers the town from its territory with his parents in 1904.
also joined the train for a day or two.
$ \star $ $ \star $ $ \star $ $ O$-zone section to be closed
The southeast corner of the O-zone parking lot is blocked off from today until early Monday morning to make room for the bicentennial wagon
Bob Ellison, KU police captain, said yesterday that the driveway on the east side of the parking lot also would be closed except for outpatient facilities at Watson Hospital. Ozone is the city's street south of Robinson Gymnasium
See WAGON page 5
Ellison said that an alternative parking area would be X-zone, near the football stadium.
Another parking conflict may develop. Ellison said the Naval Air Force stationed tonight on the east lawn of Allen Field House. He said that N-zone, north of Allen Field House, would be available to students and parents.
A
A
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
Bicentennial wagon train rolls along Highway 56 toward a night stop in Baldwin
2
Friday, April 30, 1976
University Daily Kansan
associated press digest
Humphrey says he's out
WASHINGTON—With tears swelling in his eyes, Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey, D-Minn., announced yesterday he wouldn't enter the 1976 presidential race.
"I shall not enter the New Jersey primary nor shall I authorize any committee or committees to solicit funds or in work my behalf," Humphrey said. "I intend to run for the senate."
Humphrey announced that he wouldn't enter the June 8 primary, his last chance to challenge former Georgia Gov. Carter before the voters. The filing deadline in New Jersey passed at 4 p.m. yesterday without an entry from Humphrey, although friends had the papers ready and waiting.
MU president asked to go
COLUMBIA, Mo.—The removal of C. Brice Ratchford as president of the University of Missouri was made unanimously by vote by 88 per cent of the students. The campus celebrated yesterday.
The main issue was a university lobbying plan, which was never put into effect, that called for the university to promote a tax increase and legislative candidates.
"The points of contention are in interpretation of where information and communication activities end, and pressure and improper activities begin," Hatchford
The vote was on a resolution expressing no confidence in Ratchford and requesting the board to create arator to revive him. The resolution amounted to a fine of $20,000 for its inaction.
"I am not considering resigning at this time," Ratchford said yesterday. There had been some doubt that he would be able to attend the meeting today because he was recuperating from what a spokesman said was extreme stress and nervous strain.
One Hughes will found
LAS VEGAS—A crudely handwritten document described as the will of the late Hugh Hughes was filed with a Nevada court yesterday, but its authenticity is unclear.
The Morrison church, which found the purported will, was listed as a major beneficiary and a 31-year-old Uta gas station owner was named to inherit one. The owner of the property was later
A spokesman for Hughes' Summa Corp. said the will wouldn't be contested immediately, and the search for a will continue.
According to the document, the bulk of the estate, estimated at up to $2.5 billion, would go to medical research and charitable organizations. 'Hughes' two former officers, Michael Hughes and Daniel Hughes, were
One-eighteenth of the estate would go to Melvin Dummar who said he picked up a man walking in the Nevada desert in January 1988. Dummar said he thought the property had been given to him.
USSR buys more grain
WASHINGTON—Another grain sale of 875,000 metric tons of corn and wheat has been made to the United Union, raising the total to nearly 4.3 million tons, the largest since March 2019.
The sale included 400,000 tons of corn from the 1975 harvest and 350,000 tons of corn and 125,000 tons of wheat from this year's expected crops, the department
The current grain sales to the Soviets had been expected for some time. department officials said there was plenty of U.S. grain to meet export comp- 1965 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053 2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 2071 2072 2073 2074 2075 2076 2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 2031 2032 2033 2034 2035 2036 2037 2038 2039 2040 2041 2042 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 2049 2050 2051 2052 2053 2054 2055 2056 2057 2058 2059 2060 2061 2062 2063 2064 2065 2066 2067 2068 2069 2070 2071 2072 2073 2074 2075 2076 2077 2078 2079 2080 2081 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 2088 2089 2090 2091 2092 2093 2094 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
The latest announcement boosted to 16.2 million tons the quantity of U.S. grain. The latest report indicated having 11.8 million tons feed grain, nearly all corn, and 4.4 million tons of wheat.
City to get CAA requests
The larger of the two requests is for about 150 employees in the new CAA office down town. Koggegrist
The Consumer Affairs Association will submit two budget requests for revenue-sharing funds to the Lawrence City Commission study Kroeger, CAA director, said westerday.
"The Student Senate had a point," she said, using our services they might pay to pay. "So."
The alternate budget request of $8,731 would only supplement the money CAA receives from the KU Student Senate, she said.
The city commission will hold public hearings in May to decide distribution of the bonds.
Snake-hunt trip has waiting list
Because of limited room on the bus, there is a waiting list of 12 persons for tomorrow's skate-hunting field trip sponsored by the KU Museum of Natural History.
The bus leaves the museum at 9 a.m. for
a Clinton Reservoir area and will return
at 10 a.m.
The trip is the semester's last in a series of museum-sponsored educational events on Saturday mornings for people who are at least eight years old.
Tomorrow's hunt will be led by Joseph T.
Collins, vertebrate zoologist at the museum.
Bonnie Raitt concert brings joy to blues
Members of the CAA board of directors were elected during the meeting Tuesday morning.
Elected to two-year terms were Blaine Baints, 1704 W. 24th St., and Robert Unnholtz, associate professor of mechanical engineering at Mississippi. was re-elected to a two-year term.
This had been a week to try students' souls.
They will join the 10 board members serving now. A special resolution was passed in support of Wiley Lawrence, who to take over the position that will be vacated next month.
By BILL UYEKI
Staff Writer
train. Gray skies, Stormy weather Ugh.
But for nearly 3,500 KU students, a life
around the rainbow turned the mood to joy, laughter and fun.
Performing the miracle were blues singers
Blues to make one feel good? Sure,
because the kind of blues played last night
was the blues that snaps people out of trances and gets them back on their feet
Allison started the show and played enthusiastically during his hour-long set. He was backed by Jerry Grinell on drums—who said he had played with Allison for nearly 13 years—and Jack Hannah on the acoustic bass.
review
With roots in the South, Allison's lyrics reflected the back-country blues of his youth. His vocals were yielding—nearly succumbing—to his energetic piano wizardry, which was more of the modern jazz genre.
ALLISON'S SET WAS sparked with contrast. The slow, three-chord blues in "If You're Going to the City" and "Meet Me At No Special Place," really hit home when composing boat, rambling, free-verse arrangements at "Powerhouse" and "Seventh Sun."
His backing musicians formed a tight group, but one that emphasized wandering improvisations, which certainly was a treat for the jazz fans at the concert.
When Rajtt, that sassy redheaded blues
mama, entered the stage, she was given flowers. She didn't disappoint anybody with her hour and 45-minute set, which featured songs from her five albums.
On stage, Ratt was witty and sarcastic,
responding to her warm reception from the
crowd by saying, "I know what Dorothy and
Toto were talking about."
SUA Fine Arts Accent the Arts
Ratt was skillfully backed by four musicians, standouts including Will McFarlane on lead guitar and her old buddie Freebo on bass guitar and tuba.
She is a fine songwriter, but Raiti excels in her arrangements of songs from other artists like Joel Zoss, Jackson Brown, and Seth Green. She's also a black bass singer, Stipple Wallace.
RATTT SANG Wallace's "Women Be Wise" and what she called another equally brash tune, "You Got to Know How It." It's one of those pop-culture popular among women. There's certain demands she makes of her lovers, and in these tunes she was delivering a finger-shaking lecture to young and innocent males whose face intended when she sang the song.
She san four songs off her newest album,
"Home Plate," "Sugar Mama," "Walk Out
the Front Door," "Good Enough," and "My First
Night Alone Without You."
EMOTIONS PORTRAYED in her songs ranged from gratitude in "Thank You Baby," to anger as she scaled selfish men in "The Lost Princess" and in Bryce's "I, Thought I, Was a Child."
The crowd was on its feet for her final song, "You've Been in Love Too Long," which burst out like a funky disco tune, with the vocals of the bassist and pianist Jef Labes' fluttering piano runs.
Natt dedicated the second song of her encore, Stephen Stiles' "Blushed," to her mother, Karen Stiles. She makes her so popular among the liberated women, she said of him, "I know he's home."
Publicity Chairman Interviews May 3 Inquire at SUA Office
Friday, April 30
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Friday, April 30, 1975
3
On Campus
Events ...
TODAY: THE MIDWEST REGIONAL MUSIC THERAPY CONFERENCE runs all day in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. The 15th annual JAYHAWK NAVY SPRING REVIEW will be at 5:30 p.m. on the east lawn of Allen Field House.
TONIGHT: LES COMEDIENS DE L'ETERVIER of the department of French and Italian will present three short French comedies at 8 in Strong Hall
TOMORROW: A program on WHALE COMMUNICATION and a film, "One Species Among Many," will be presented at 10 a.m. in Dvche Auditorium.
SUNDAY: Albert Gerken, associate professor of music theory, will present a CARLILON RECITAL at 3 p.m. at the Memorial Campanile. The KU SYMPHONIC BAND will present a concert at 3:30 p.m. in the University Theatre. An informational meeting for persons interested in competing in the MISSS LAWRENCE-KU SCHOOLARSHP PAGEANT will be at 7:30 p.m. at University State Bank, 955 Iowa.
Announcements . . .
Union's strength attracted city workers,lawver saves
The decision of four Lawrence city employee associations to join the Teamsters Union was almost inevitable, Lawrence attorney said Arnold Berman, because employee were denied the opportunity to negotiate with city officials.
Berman addressed a seminar on labor relations yesterday at the annual City Managers' Conference in the Kansas Union. It was designed, which ends today, 'unfit to the public.'
He used Lawrence as an example to illustrate some of the problems of labor in 1876.
The Lawrence employee associations for parks and recreation, sanitation, street and department affiliated with the Transit Commission had been members of the United Public Employees Association of Lawrence which was affiliated with the AFL-CIO.
The Lawrence city commission had voted in November not to recognize UPEA.
Berman said unionization was a logical outgrowth of employee dissatisfaction.
"They have come to resent the paternalistic attitude of government administrators who tell them what they think would be good for them," he said.
He said the Lawrence employee associations joined the Teamsters because city officials were permitted by law to refuse to negotiate with them.
"They realized they didn't have enough muscle to take on the City of Lawrence," he said, "so they went shopping for a militant national organization to support them."
But, he said, labor unions don't strike just because they enjoy it.
"They don't like strikes any more than any man in this room would like to lose two or three weeks' wages. They go out for good and make sure they get the other side of bargain," he said.
About 150 people are attending the managers' conference, according to Scott Staples, one of the organizers. Staples said there were about 200 managers from across the United States.
Buford Watson, Lawrence city manager,
and George R. Schrader, Dallas city
manager, spoke at yesterday's luncheon on
the theme of how managers toured
European cities last year.
The conference is organized by the In-
sutute of Public Affairs, part of the Division of Continuing Education at KU.
University Dally Kansan
A related conference, "City Management in the Year 2,000," will be tomorrow and Sunday in the Union. It is organized by Ed Steen, professor emeritus of political science at Cornell University management program, and William Conboy, professor of speech and drama.
He said state legislators had already questioned whether there should be schools or departments of education at every state school.
Senate ...
The possibility of consolidating state schools is one reason administrators won't approve a proposed policy outlining the institution's role in the financial exigency or crisis, Dykes said.
Elected from the class of 1977 are Robert Pinnick, Ulysses; James McCarthy, Owen; Frances Wilson, Shawnee Owen; Eliza Zaldi, Wichita; Wichita and Mary Nielsen, Wichita.
From page one
New members from the class of 1976 are Danny Hancock, Mankato; Edward Aaron Hancock, Mankato; Michael Welker, Mission; Joseph Petein, Kansas City; Kan, Ben Franklin, Kansas City; Kan, Mark Shockey, Ablenie; Barbara Hancock, Ablenie; Victoria, and Roscoe Morton, Wichita.
Administrators oppose a section of the policy, drafted by a University ad hoc committee and submitted last spring, which would prohibit expansion of one school or department while financial pressures general of tenured faculty in another area.
If the Board of Regents wanted to consolidate all state schools and departments in an area such as engineering and place the state-wide department at KU, the board would be required to accept the responsibility under the proposal's guidelines. Dykes said.
Alumni members elected are Stanley Friesen, professor of surgery from the class of '43; Robert Hudson, class of '52, associate professor and chairman of the history and medicine department; and Ned Small class of '52, adjunct professor of pediatrics.
On other matters, Dykes praised the work of the administrative staff during the past year, singling out Del Shankel, executive chancellor, for doing a 'remarkable job'.
Dykes said he had been forced to spend
The department of painting, printmaking and sculpture in the School of Fine Arts was renamed the department of art in action recently by the Kansas Legislature.
Medical society picks members
Peter Thompson, assistant dean of the School of Fine Arts, said the name was changed to include printmaking and drawing.
"We won't be doing anything different." Thompson said Tuesday, "but we had to change the name so it would be a little more inclusive of all the categories of art."
Thompson said there was no single word that covered all four activities of the department—painting, sculpture, printmaking and drawing. The word "art" came the closest to describing the entire department, he said.
Increased enrollment in printmaking and drawing classes prompted the name
KANAS CITY, Kan.-Fourteen medical students, three alumni and a faculty member of KU Medical Center were elected President of the Society, honorary society for medical doctors.
Art dept. renamed
about half of his time at the KU Medical Center recently as a result of problems in the heart surgery unit there. That increased the work load for Shankel, Dykes said.
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ADULT MOVIES LIVE SHORT On every street in every city in this country there is a nobody who dreams of being someone. He's a lonely forgotten man desperate to prove that he's alive.
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COLUMBIA PICTURES presents ROBERT DE NIRO TAXI DRIVER
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On every street in every city in this country there is a nobody who dreams of being somebody. He's a lonely forgition man desperate to prove that he's alive.
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TAXI DRIVER
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4
Friday, April 30, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Arts & Entertainment
'Taxi Driver' reflects bleak era
By CHUCK SACK
Reviewer
"Taxi Driver" hypnotizes the viewer as it plunges into the darkness of nightlife. This is not the twilight never-neverland of discosthemes and dinner at Sardis. The NYC in "Taxi Driver" is an amusement park, lums, portoes theater and throbbing neon lights, seen through eyes of the lonely, and beautifully unstinted Travis Bickle (Robert Deniro).
Bickle is a driller. He is an ex-Martine, plugged by insomnia, whose only acquaintances are a group of hack driver-philosopher kings. His one attempt to contact a daylight campaign worker named Betsy (Cybill Shepherd) ends in his death as X-raced movie on 42nd Street. Without this 'angel' to sustain him, Travis slips into a fantastic nightmare world.
As filmed by director Martin Scorsese and cinematographer Michael Chapman, Travis' world is a squalid cage. The cah he drives is first revealed in separate shots of its individual components—review mirrors, taillights, and wind
shields. He is continually isolated in the frame, and the windows of his apartment are barred.
YET DESPIE THE IN-ISENCE on flat shots with little depth of field and fragmented shots, but he is an memorable characters. There's a senior hacker named Wizard (Peter Boyle), who acts as the mentor for younger drivers. There are a few other Prince, a gun salesman with sidelines in dpe and cars. And there's Iris (Jodie Foster), a twelve-year-old hooker whom she rescued to rescue from the street.
At the thematic core of "Taxi Driver" are two character who are polar opposites, and who have opposite approaches to smouldering resentments. One of them is presidential hopeful Charles Palantine (Leonard Harris). The other is Sport, Iris smart-motivated pimp (Harvey
Travis begins to prepare his hand, some sort of act and a gesture he becomes increasingly psychopathic. In a brilliant offense against Sport, and the verb battle momentarily threatens to
overpower the story. The emotional time bomb doesn't detonate for a few more scenes, but the charged tension of this confrontation is the key to understanding Travis' imminent threat.
IN DENIRO'S PORTRAYAL, Travis is a coiled spring, ready
though, Travis is not a Charles Bronson vigilante. The character is three-dimensional. Scorcese and screenwriter Paul Schurer are responsible for defining Travis' relationships. They define Travis through his relationships and carefully explore the ramifications of his
"Taxi Driver" is much more disturbing than last year's "Death Wish," because it doesn't permit the viewer to dismiss the hero's actions as simple revenge.
to be released at the slightest provocation. The actor's slight, angular figure and goofy offense make him a semiliterate nobody. But DeNiro has a cutting edge to his acting style, which can suddenly bring many conflicting views on the surface of his character.
Travis makes a violent assault on his surroundings in the film's climax, when his head shaved into a Mohawk haircut, he is transformed into a machine that slims the clawdust doesn't reduce "Taxi Driver" to a younger version of last year's "Death Wish,"
impulses, both good and bad.
Consequently, "Taxi Driver" is a much more disturbing film than "Deth Wish." It doesn't pose the viewer to dismiss the hero as simple, ineffitable revenge.
WHAT IS EVEN more disturbing is that this is an addition to the list of films that depict the nation's political conscience as in a state of nummied disarray. Last year's "Shameroo" was followed by "Shampoo" and "Nashville," both of which ended with apocalyptic visions of corrupted ideals and shredded lives.
"Taxi Driver" ends on a more
positive note, but the preceding sequences are so vitriolic that viewers may not even see the image aftermath. And this may be part of the reason why there is a strong word-of-mouth for the movie.
Normally, one would expect that a film with this intensity, featuring strong performances and a controversial ending, would generate a lot of excitement. Instead, there has been a very casual disruption to daily life in any term his ironic cold disregard is exactly what leads Travis to make his horrible stand.
THESE FILMS AREN'T the problem. Rather they are the artistic reflections of the problems of the time, when students will learn the manner in which people refuse to relate to each other. If seeing this issue in a rawer form like "Taxi Driver" works better, however, is really less cynical than most entertainment films, for Travis Bickle does manage to find salvation from his hell-on-wheels by reaching out to others. How despairing is that?
Basie, Ellington underrated as pianists
RvSTEVE FRAZIER
As the royalty of orchestral jazz, Count Basie and the late Duke Ellington have also been known for overlooked overlooked pianists in jazz history. Such statements are often enough to make one more proud of ignoring the pair's keyboard talents, but it is true that Basie and Ellington are known mainly for their monumental conventions.
FOR ANY SKEPTICS who might doubt that each of these performers has a major voice in their works, the Pablo label provide ample evidence to the contrary. Ellington teaches talents with his assistant, Justin Assist, "This One's for Blinton," on an album released after his death in 1974. Bass shines on "Satch Cousins" and "Encounters Oscars Peterson."
"This One's for Blanton" is a
worthy tribe to bassist Jimmy Blanton, who, before he died in 1942 at the age of 21, forever altered the role of the jazz bass.
In his playing with the Eminem sessions on piano, Blanton showed the jazz world that the bass could be a solo instrument. The concept sounds deceptively simple now, but before Blanton, the bass was almost like a rather clumsy timekeeper.
As a youngster, Ray Brown would stand outside the neighborhood bar to hear Ellington-Blanton records on the jukebox. Brown went on to take full advantage of the Blanton revolution that brought the blues; and they formed a combo that developed into the Modern Jazz Quartet or Oscar Peterson.
ELLINGTON AND BROWN actually play only two of the original Blanton duets, "Pinter Panther Patter" and
"Sophisticated Lady," fleshing out the rest of the album with Ewington standards and *Frenchtied* placed for Piano and Bass."
Throughout the album, the two performers shift smoothly from solo to accompaniment and back again. Ellington and Brown play harmonies in Brown's melody, then dances above him with rhythmic figures that sketch out the melody while the real focus is on Brown's skattering pizzicato figures and flawless double-stops.
Ellington's solo spots are reminiscent of his orchestral works, but he has entirely keyboard, grabbing rich chords with both hands and carefully splashing colors that show his own classic melodies.
MORE THAN 30 YEARS after the original duets, "This One's for Blanton" stands on its
own as an album of mature and graceful bass-playing and a valuable addition to the tooo-king Ellington piano repertoire.
Ray Brown appears again in the rhythm section for "Satch and Josh," along with Freddie McKay, James Harden, Louis Bellson, drums. Their impeccable sense of time is matched only by the relentless swing of the piano solists, Basie and Oscar Peterson.
Basi's playing has probably been more neglected than Ellington's, because his style is outwardly simple. In fact, though, Basi is master of the English language and understatement, saying all he has to say with a bare minimum of notes.
PETERSON AND BASIE seemingly stand at opposite ends of mainstream piano style, for, while Basie's style is spare.
Peterson is known as the consummate technician.
However, their common respect for the beat overcomes any stylistic differences. Peterson uses his mastery of time to organize his often complicated dance sequence in the secret of relaxed swing remains at the core of Bassi's big-band and piano styles.
not surprisingly, then, "Satch and Not Josh" swings from start to finish. Basis and Peterson prod, but never hint at the potential clutter of two keyboards. Buoyed by a fine rhythm section, their interplay is marked by good measure of mutual respect.
Peterson and Basie settled into their respective styles long enough that they all know any surprising new ideas on "Satch and Josh." Instead, the two manage to jam every track together in a kind of mastery that never grows old.
Staff photo by DON PIERCI
Children's book offers fantasy
VIRGINIA MAYORAL JUDICIAL BUREAU OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK
Earth, sea and sku
TOMMY MURPHY
Staff Writer
"Dog Liarls," by Cynthia Atwood, senior student, invites visual and tactile study. A representation of the earth, the sight sky and the sea, the fabric sculptures are part of the Painting and Sculpture group at Columbia University.
By PEGGI BASS
Enter the world of fantasy and let your imagination flow. That's the meaning of living, according to Beazalea Benjamin, author of "Susan Altencroft," a children's book.
Benjamin, professor of architecture and urban design, wrote the book 20 years ago in his wife's company, by his wife Beaelzai Publishing Company, 2612 Stratford Road.
In the story, Susan encounters a group of fairies in a field while she is trying to make her friends fairies. The fairies agree to teach her how to make the necklace if she will agree to be their friend and caregiver.
Staff Photo by JAY KOELZER Bezaleel Benjamin
BENJAMIN SAID that through Susan's fantasy experiences with the fairies, she learns about their relationship between nature and man.
"I try to make the book as gentle as possible. Even when there is violence, it is not violent and when there is no hate," Bentanquin said.
"I WROTE IT BECAUSE I wanted to be a writer. But it's very hard to live by that craft, civil engineer-*ne*," he said.
"I can almost feel that 'perhaps there are forces that cause all this to occur without being seen by the human mind,' he said, "and I use the fairs to express this."
Bojnainik said that the role of fantasy in life has been full of surprises, by writing particularly children's writers, and that the theme of objective in learning is
Max Sutton, associate professor of English, said that Benjamin's portrayal of death was "apparently messy and reassuring to the child."
"IT'S AS DELICATELY presented as you can do that
"If you can think of death as a long and peaceful sleep, its easier," he said. "Were it not more difficult, life would life be more difficult."
sort of thing," he said. "Death is seen as an enemy to the leaves rather than to a little girl."
Benjamin said that he dealt with death in the fantasy to "remove the fear of it at an early age."
Lichter said Tuesday that children's literature should be "a pleasant experience for the child, but should also give him a chance to explore the possibilities for dealing with the real world without escaping it."
assistant professor of English, both instructors in children's literature, said they agreed that Dianin's interpretation of fantasy.
Sutton and Alan Lichter.
"FAIRY TALES are an excellent example of good children's literature." he said'
Highlights
Sutton said Wednesday in his view of children's literature was qualified by Tolstoi's technical analysis of the fairy tale.
Lichter said the children's book that taught social relationships and was used in a school to waste of time for the child.
"There's a psychological interpretation for adults, but the book was written for children," he said.
"Fantasy is an escape because between you to deal with the real world must have to," Sutton said. "The fairy tale presents a desirable fantasy."
Sutton said that Benjamin had "lain himself on the line before kids openly and beautifully" by offering them a desirable view of the world through fantasy.
"HE SHOWS THEM the two worlds between the world and everyday experience which is important in children's literature," Sutton wrote.
Benjamin said he liked to view his story as a fairy tale, although it could be interpreted on two levels.
"It's either a fairy tale or the story of a child's psychological dealing with loneliness," he said.
Sutton said that it was encouraging "that professor Benjamin can write for many people, many are afraid to."
"THE CHILD ISN'T ready to put these experiences together," Lichter said. "Reality for the child today is closing down his inner world, and this particularly, needs a chance to open into different things, and he does this through fantasy."
The book isn't Benjamin's first publication. He has also written several architecture textbooks, and had an award-winning poem, published in India's literary magazine, Caravan.
Sutton said all the pleasure was taken away from the reader if the writer's position in the book was made known.
"Someone shouldn't step in to tell the child if the author is backging fantasy or reality," he said. "It's very hard for an author to stand up against a fantasy and reality, but for a child there is difference."
Benjamin said the conflict between reality and fantasy, as shown by Susan's choice of letters, was delicater in his book.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"Susan derives strength from fantasy, so that the book ends on a note of both hope and realism." he said.
Published at the University of Kansas weekly journal of education. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas; second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas; or $1 a month in Dorchester County and $1 a month in Lawrence County. Subscriptions are $2.00 a semester through the university. Subscriptions are $2.00 a semester through the university.
Editor
Carl Young
Business Manager
Boss Parris
Theater
TURN OF THE SCREW:
An opera by Benjamin Britten based on novel by Henry James. Combines the efforts of the school's Fine Arts under the direction of Tom Rae, assistant director of the University Theatre, and George Lawner, chief story deans with ghosts and governesses in an English
(8tonight and tomorrow night in the University Theatre)
12-POUND LOOK and ALL ON HER ORN HOW? Two one-accented letters on the first and the second by Terence Rattigan. Barrie's play is about a modern-day knight and he deals with a widow living alone.
WAGON TRAIN SHOW: The Bicentennial Wagon Train Pilgrimage comes to Lawrence Hill Athletic America. The winning Rock Chalk Revuke will be performed and the Lawrence Civic Chair will sing Randall's "Testament of Freedom."
(8 tonight, tomorrow night and Sunday night in the Hashiner Theatre)
(7:30 tomorrow night in Hoch Auditorium)
MICHAEL MURPHEY AND EMMYLOU HARRIS: Murphey's brand of music is rock, folk and country. His biggest hit to date is "Wildfire," on the album "Blue Sky Night Thunder." Harris sings country and 'Eltie Hotel' is "Elite Hotel!"
Concerts
(8 p.m. Tuesday in Hoch Auditorium)
SYMPHONIC BAND: Conducted by Robert Foster, director of bands George Woolf and Michael Wind and percussion, and James Barnes. The band's performance will feature frombone solist Richard Crystal, professor of music and percussion.
(3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre)
OPERA WORKSHOP: Parts of Rossini's "Cenerentola" and
(9 p.m. Wednesday in the Hawk's Nest)
(8 p.m. Tuesday in the University Theatre)
TAU SIGMA DANCE ENSEMBLE; The 40 dancers in this select dance company will perform a variety of dance styles, ranging from classical to modern, jazz and tap dancing.
COUNTRY CURRENT: A band from the U.S. Navy whose performers are all active duty sailors. The group, from Washington, D.C., does its own arrangements of blue grass.
Moore's "The Ballad of Baby Doe" will be performed, as well as "The impressario" by Mozart.
(8 p.m. Monday at the Off-the Wall Hall)
(8.p.m. Thursday, May 7 and May 8 in the University Theatre)
CAMARATA WOODWINGS:
A classical ensemble from the University.
UTAH PHILLIPS: Billed as Great Southwest, by Phillips presidential aspirant, folksinger, songwriter and story writer.
(8 p.m. Thursday at Off-the-Wall Hall)
SOUTH OF THE TROCKS
Dancing music in the form of country rock, boogie and swing from a Manhattan group.
(8:30 tonight at Off-the-Wall Hall)
CORNBREAD: Crazy, foot stomping music from down on the bayou.
Exhibits
(8:30 tomorrow night at Off the Wall Hall)
(Sunday through May 26 at 7E7 Gallerv)
CATHERINE LATHAM:
Owner of an art gallery in Springfield. Mc. Latham has exhibited her work nationally and regional awards. She does abstract prints and drawings.
ART IN THE PARK: More than 150 original exhibits by local artists, including paintings, pottery, jewelry and textiles. A 10 per cent commission on works that are used in scholarships for local students.
(Noon to 5 p.m. Sunday in South Park)
Films
SHAMPOO: This sex-fare stars Warren Beaty, Goldie Harper, Wren Warden and Lee Grant. Robert Towne ("Chinatown") wrote the fire from an airplane by Beaty, but iron on Hail Ash engineers the marvelous pacing this issue has in a bedroom comedy will find it particularly disturbing.Hint: the many televisions onscreen are not
THE WILD ONE The archetypal "tapel" movie. A classic of sorts, its primary attraction is Marion Brando's performance, although his dialogue is often just motorcycle videos. Vroom.
THEM: A largely laughable film about gigantic ants who are created by an atomic bomb test, infiltrated and pinching victims with their huge mandibles. James Douglas and Gordon Douglas directed.
ALL THE PRESIDENT'S MEN: William Goldman's tight sparse script, Gordon Ramsay's photography and Alan Pakua's masterful direction keep this tale of journalistic detection on the right track. The presence of Ramsay threatens Redford to prematurally inflate their characters to mythic proportions, but both actors enter into a shared spirit of the production.
ON DANGEROUS GROUND:
A mystery, with a tough city cop who attempts to solve a murder committed in a rural area in the dead of winter. Starring Robert Gaynor, directed by Nicholas Ray.
IF YOU DON'T STOP IT,
YOU'LL GO BLIND: Or: If you go, you'll see nothing.
BAD NESS BEARS* Tatum O'Neal, Alfred Lutter and Walter Mattheus provide solid advice to children. Children, Parents, however, are advised to get their children's okay before attending, because the light profanity is more tolerable than in other adults may be willing to admit.
THE OTHER SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN: "Love Story" on skies. Only Beau Bridge keeps them from being on the skids as well.
Check ads for theaters and times.
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 30, 1976
5
Marijuana study ...
From page one
all. To someone that just had casual use it's really not so clear."
He said the primary reason for administering the drug orally was that, unlike studies where the subject smokes a joint, the dosage can be controlled.
"We know that they have taken in a given amount of the drug," he said. "It goes in rapidly and its onset, its absorption into the blood, is slower than it is by smoking. It's considerably slower and therefore it gives us more time to do our maniculations."
Rawitch said that the testing of humans
The production will comprise two one-eat plays written by English playwrights. "The Twelve Pound Look" was written by James Barrie, and "All On Her Own" was written by Terence Rattigan. They will be directed by Willard Winfield, Winfield graduate student in theatre.
One-act dramas to be presented by Hashinger
Hashinger Hall will present its final
sunday at 8 p.m. in today's
today, tomorrow and Sunday.
In "The Twelve Pound Look," Neil Muhlberger, Tulsa junior, portrays Harry Sims, a happily married man about to be knighted.
"I think they complement each other," Marchard said yesterday. "The Twelve Words a lot of important points in it. All On Her a lot of important points in it. Show them. They complement but contraptus."
On the day of his knighthood, Harry discovers the typist he has hired to answer his congratulatory mail is his first wife, played by Laura Floyd, bartlesville Oka, sophomore. The argument that follows brings Harry off his pedestal.
The second play, "All On Her Own," is a one-woman show. Valerie Meyers, who comes home from college, who comes home slightly tipsy and in a joking mood starts quizzing her late husband about the true cause of his death. The answers come to her from an unexplicit play.
Maryann said she wanted the audience to feel as if they were coming to visit the museum.
was designed to look at the effects of marijuana on social behavior, including
"OUR PRELIMARY results suggest that there are no dramatic effects on social behaviors."
He said that he considered other evidence tenuous now, including evidence that suggested marijuana use caused chromosome breaks. But, he said, it raised a legitimate question that should be pursued.
"But my feeling is that's not a very acute
fact or important factor." he said.
The question is not whether occasional pot smoking is harmful, he said, because most evidence suggests that there are no acute or mild effects from the occasional use of marijuana.
Rawitch said it had been claimed by two or three laboratories that smoking a marijuana cigarette lowered the testosterone, male sex hormone, level. Also, smoking marijuana that chronic marijuana users had lower than the average testosterone level.
"I THINK ITS too early to really say anything dramatically one way or the other," he said. "But once again, all that says to me is well, look there, there's still unanswered questions here, and we want to have all the data we can weaken, individually based on what as a society is making any sort of definitive judgement one way or the other on this."
He said that one piece of data in medical literature indicated that there have been cases in which heavy marijuana smokers died from complications of cochomatis, an enlargement of the breasts.
"Obviously," he said, "this could be related to sex hormone levels and throwing off the balance of androgen and estrogen. That data is very preliminary, but it is consistent with this testosterone lowering effect."
IN MANY CASES involving chronic
juranic users, he said, a problem arises
with the use of email.
"So it's a difficult thing to say," he said.
"That's why I say this is a very preliminary
"I think it's fairly clear that the androgen, or male hormone, lowering effect is reproducible. It's been confirmed in, I guess, three labs now in one way or another."
"So, that's something which certainly happens when a person with the (THC) has female hormone-like activity is one of the things that we are going to be doing in the next couple of months here in New York."
He said that his duty as a scientist was to continue with the experiments until he was done. He wrote: "The research yielded the publication of two papers and work is being done on a third."
The data on the pharmacological eff-
cumbriums as well as its detrimental ef-
ficulties have been summarized in the
following.
"I guess the thing that I feel strongly about, 'he said 'it is that its probably a marijuana thing' and I said 'I will absolutely 'Marijuana is good or marijuana is bad' without the appropriate reservations because I think it is going to take a total of 15 years before we have sufficient data, years yet before we have sufficient data.
"And in the meantime we have something else going for us," he said, "and that's that we have a massive human experience going on.
"The style of the show eludes categorization, but is closest to easy listening." "Meagher said. 'It's not patriotic in a flag-waving sense.'"
"And we will see as another 10 years pass whether there are some subtle effects. We will see enough offspring of women that have smoked marijuana while they were pregnant, and if there's something that correlates there, well, we'll have that hindsight.
10% DISCOUNT WITH STUDENT ID on all of our services. Good rest of school year. Mon. and Tues. only call for appt.
The group's performance includes uptempo country music, romantic ballads, a tongue-in-cheek love song and a song about immigrants. Meaher said.
TOMORROW NIGHTS show also will include the Lawrence Civie Chair, directed by Andrew M. Bender and the return of Freedom, and the return of "The Grinch Connection," the Rock Chalk Revue winning skill by the Alpha Kappa Lambda Society and Alpha Gamma Delta security.
"So, whether we want to do it or not, the 'human experiment is going on.'"
"It catches the idea that people are the
seen on the wagon train, flirr," he said.
Dan McGechay, a cast member, said the name of the show was summed up by him. "It's a little bit funny," he said.
The wagon train camp will be open to the public all day Sunday and the wagon train party will be hosted at a barbeque at the William Bradley home south of Lawrence.
THE SHOW IS an original musical review of 12 songs produced by members of the theater and music departments at Pennsylvania State University.
Navv's country band to perform
Wagon train . . .
Most of the band's repertoire of country.
Country Current, a country music group from the U.S. Navy Band in Washington, D.C., will perform Wednesday in the Hawk's Nest at the Kansas Union.
From page one
The entertainment troupe that travels with the train will perform tomorrow night in New York City. The performers has traveled with the train from California and has staged a performance in nearly every town in which the train has been stationed, Meagher, stage manager for the group.
The seven-member band, formed in 1972, has appeared in 22 states. They have performed at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville and at the White House.
As part of this weekend's celebration, there will be three dances open to the public tonight. The Calico Bull at the Knights of Columbus and the Calico Cowboy at Carl Johnson, a square dance at the International Organization of Odd Fellows are in place. RFD3. Tickets will be sold at the doors.
THE WAGON TRAIN is in Lawrence as part of the bicentennial celebration and its stay here is being sponsored by the Douglas County Bicentennial Commission, Lawrence Bicentennial Commission and the University Bicentennial Commission.
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From Olate, the wagon train will move on to Independence, Mo., where it will meet another wagon train that has been following the Oregon Trail through Wyoming and Nebraska. Both wagon trains will be loaded on barges for the trip to St. Louis, where they will resume a land route to Valley Forge. There they will meet on the Fourth of July with three other wagon trains from the South and Northeast.
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Emerson, recognized in the country music field as one of the nation's best banjo players, was chosen Banjo Player of the year in 1972 and 1973 by Mulekshen News. He also made television and radio appearances with various country music bands.
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INTERNATIONAL CLUB ELECTION (76-77)
DATE: April 30 '76
PLACE: Forum Room,
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
"PLEASE PAGE PHINEAS"
Doubtless all know the meaning of "page" in this instance is to find, locate and call for the whereabouts of an unknown navy.
Phinneas was a man who picked up a javelin and thrust it through the belly of a woman and men — killing them both — bodily and brazen put on the sex act of adultery regardless of its publicity— even before the rulers and highest authority of the nation!
NOTE GOD ALMIGHTY'S REACTION TO the nation's open and defensive Second Commandment: "THOU SHALT NOT COMMONPREY IN TERRY" AND great numbers were dying. After 24,000 were dead suddenly the plague stopped; it was immediately after Phineas had javelin in his hand.
Hear what God said about his act, and of him: "AND THE LORD SPKE UNT OMES SAYING, PHINEAS the NIS OF ELAERAZ, THESON OF AARON THE PRIEST HAT TURNED AWAY MY WRATH FROM THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL WHILE HE WAS ZEALOUS FOR MY SAKE AMONG THEM THAT I CONSUMED THEM AND THE SHEPHERDS WHO WERE BLESS WITH ME HYM MOVEI MY COVENANT OF PEACE; AND HE SHALL HEAVE IT, AND His SEED AFTER HIM, EVEN THE COVENANT OF AN EVERLASTING PIRIESTHOOD, BECAUSE HE WAS ZEALOUS FOR HIS GOD, AND
MADE AN ATONEMENT FOR THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL" —
Numbers 25: 10-13.
The terrible tits of adultery, whoredom, fornication, homosexuality, etc. strike at the very source of life. The Life from which proceed society, the state, the nation, governments. And The Church These great and horrible sins and enemies of mankind have brought down, destroyed and caused to perish many a great man, many a great nation, and great empires The Bible in the Book of Life God Almighty "PERISH! Consider God's message to mankind at the hands of PHINES: "GOD WAS WITH HIM"
The writer is deliberately making this article short, relatively speaking, with the hope and prayer that all who claim to be Christian will give much serious consideration to "what is written." Have you done anything about "PAGING PHINESA" since this request was publicized to you Has it caused you to give any serious thought? Have you ever felt the same welfare as well as that of your family, loved ones, the Church of God our eternal wife — note and consider that portion of the Sermon Book The Mount record in Matthew E2:7-30.
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PUBLIC RELATIONS CHAIRPERSONS
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Sign up for interviews in SUA office. Interviews will be Thursday, May 6 at 6:30 p.m. in SUA office.
After some minor remodeling We have re-opened!!
We invite all our old friends, and our new ones too, to stop by and enjoy the same delicious food at the same reasonable prices in our new facilities.
And remember to try our new specialty: Char-Broiled STEAK SANDWICH
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The International
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6
Friday, April 30, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Kansas confident against Wildcats
KANSAS
Staff photo by GEORGE MILLENER
Jim Podrebarac owns league's best in shot put
KU women eye third
Iowa State and Kansas State are to
Oklahoma and Nebraska are to football
So when a seven-member KU women's track team competes tomorrow in conference championships at Ames, Iowa, KU coach Curtis Brown guided Hamilton, graduate assistant for the team.
Spinters and hurdlers dominate KU's
two returning players "Jeremy" and "Jason"
poorly.
"THE TOP TWO teams will be Iowa State and K-State," Hamilton said yesterday. "They'll be competing between themselves. We'll be competing against Colorado, Tennessee and Mississippi. Every Big Eight school will except Oklahoma and Oklahoma State."
THE ALSO MAKE up half of KU's entry in the 400-d relay釉. A KU mile relay team
Running the 100- and 220-yard dashes for Kansas will be freshmen standouts Sheila Calmese and Celissa Russell. Both are coming off injuries, however. Calmese had a strained leg muscle and Russell hurt her knee.
Freshman Sheri Lanter and sophomore Connie Lane will run the other two relay legs and double in the 440-yard and 110-meter hurdles.
Lane, who also is entered in the high jump, placed fourth in the 110-meter hurdle later. Lanter, the KU record holder (5.60.5) is considered a favorite for first place.
ANOTHER TITLE FAVORITE is Jessie
Riddle, the runner up in the league meet last
year, who, according to Hamilton, "will definitely place in the shot."
Improving freshman long jumper Adrian Mitchell and discus-javelin throw Dawn Carney.
Gary Pepin, KU women's track coach,
will remain in Lawrence for the men's track
dual meet against KState. so Hamilton,
a former KU long jumper now training for the
Olympic Trials, will be the only one
accompanying the small team to Ames.
"Yeah," Hamilton agreed, "it's very small. We've had a couple injuries and things, but we thought this group could do the job."
By GARY VICE Sports Writer
TGIF at
Tomorrow will be the second, and last time the University of Kansas track队 competes this season in Memorial Stadium, the home team of Oklahoma State. State Wildcats on Jim Hershberger track.
Quantrills
The field events in the cross-stair rivalry begin at 1:30 p.m. and the running events begin at 2:45 p.m.
Pitchers $1.25
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The rivailry should be heightened by the Wildcat's upset victory over the Jayhawks in the Big Eight Indoor Championships earlier this year. K-State's crew took advantage of several Jayhawk mishaps to edge KU. $4,52; for the conference title.
HEAD COACH BOB Timmons analyzed what
chawka will need to do to beat
Hawks.
"We'll have to hope we can offset their strengths in the middle and long distance events, but we will not perform to our potential in the spring events, the relays and events like the steeplechase and shot put, we can compensate for their advantages in other
TIMMONSAID, 'TMY anious to see how we'll do against K-State because undoubtedly they'll be one of the favorites at the conference meet.
The Wildcats have two outstanding milers in Keith Palmer and Jeb Schennel, and the national 600-yard run champion in Bob Prince. Schemell, a sub-four-minute mile, anchored K-State's victorious four-mile relay team at the Drake Relays.
"We'll be running the same events tomorrow as in the conference meet, which is important because we haven't been able to with the relay circuit going on."
The KU track men talked confidently
Bill Lundberg, team co-captain, said,
"There's no telling what could happen with
good weather. If the weather is nice you
do a great job. If it's bad competition itself, something you go after.
You perform your best when the weather is
good."
about winning the meet yesterday as they practiced under a rare day of sunshine.
JAVELIN THROWER MARK Kostek agreed, saying, "I hope we get good weather because we need good conditions to get off some top throws. With all the rain we had in the relay circuit, we haven't been able to make any chances yet. And we need to be lonel."
Jim Podebrabac, the Big Eight's leading
leader in the league, has scored 53
State League challenges against KU in the spot put-
up.
"We can be in our deadbed and beat K-State in the shot," he said. "Maybe we should throw left-banded, but they still wouldn't have a chance."
The Jayhawks feature the nation's only trio of shot putters who have cleared 68-feet this year in Podrebara, Rudy Guevara and Steve Stone.
POLE VAULTER TAD Scales, a Lawrence nainte, said he was ready to return to competition after being stifled during injury he suffered in a spill on his motorcycle.
"Yeah, for this meet IT'll be ready," the AM-Australia vaulter said. "I've got a lot of friends on the K-State team, but you've got to pity them. They can't help it being what they are. You've just got to take care of them and put them back in their place."
On a more serious note, Podrebarek had good guys, but they can get a lot of second
See KANSAS page 7
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"THE TASTE IS IN THE SAUCE"
STABLES opens at noon
Pitchers only $1.00 Noon-6 p.m.
Come join the T.G.I.F. celebration at the Sanctuary and Stables
SANCTUARY opens at 11:00
Happy Hour Is from 4:00-7:00
(Also, Luncheons Mon.-Fri.-Steak Sandwiches,
Hamburgers & Cheeseburgers)
It's Friday again!
Home of the KU Student
TGJF
A Private Club
STABLES SANCTUARY
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804 Iowa St.
Lawrence, Kansas
842-1667
TENNIS & SKI SHOPPE
III9 MASSACHUSETTS
The Program of the Year isn't on TV. It's in the Air Force ROTC.
warm-up SALE
Look into the Air Force ROTC. And there are 4 year, 3 year, or 2 year programs to choose from. Whichever you select, you'll leave college with a commission as an Air Force officer. With opportunities for a position with responsibility...challenge...and, of course, financial rewards and security.
The courses themselves prepare you for leadership positions ahead. Positions as a member of an aircrew, or as a missile launch officer...positions using mathematics,...sciences., engineering.
Look out for yourself. Look into the Air Force ROTC programs on campus.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
TENNIS AND JOGGING
Lindgren
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THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY ONLY
STAFF POSITIONS NOW OPEN 1977 JAYHAWKER YEARBOOK
Photography (Portfolio required) Art Staff
Creative Writers
Opening Features Performing Arts Sports
Business Staff
Sales
Advertising Organizations & Living Groups Publicity
Publicity
Assistant Business Manager
Interested Persons Should Pick Up Applications at the Jayhawker Office, 117B Union, Between 2:30-5:00 p.m. Daily
76
Jawhawker
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An equal opportunity employer
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 30, 1976
7
KU netters challenge experienced Oklahoma
BY STEVE SCHOENFELD
ASSOCIATE Sports Editors
For nine straight years, Big Eight tennis was spelled O-K-I-a-h-o-m-a.
That was until Missouri won the crown last year. Now the Sooners are bound and determined to get the trophy back in redclay country.
Through the years they've gained the reputation as winners who will do almost anything to continue their supremacy in conference tennis. And the OU team that beat Kentucky is matched with the year at 10 a.m. tomorrow on the Allen Field House court is no different.
"They play with a great deal of confidence," Kirkland Gates, KU's tennis coach, said yesterday. "They hate to lose. They scramble to win. They're scrappers."
"Their psychological warfare on the court is with the intent of beating you. They'll try to get them off the court, but we played them we played them we played them one, of their players stalled after a game and took his time over."
Gates does the sooner the Sooners' tactics to long as 'they play within the rules and don't
Oklahoma's strategy has worked against kU before. The Jaynavaks haven't beaten them yet.
Kansas lost to the Sooners only 5-4 earlier this season in Norma, OK.
"Our players now have some experience against stuff like they do," Gates said. "I think they (KU) feel they can win after losing. 5-1."
"Tm Haddiek (KU's No. 2 singles player) was very disappointed with the way he played on stage, and feels he can win against them. And the guys who won for us against them feel they can
Gates considers tomorrow's match the biggest meet so far this year.
"It's a big match for morale purposes," he said. "It could be a confidence builder for our team."
"OU beat OSU, the Big Eight favorite. If we beat Oklahoma then we will definitely be in a spotlight."
To knock off the Sooners, the Jayhawks,
1-8 this season, will have to play well from
the ground up.
Okahara could be in trouble for No. 1.
Layer, Paul Lockow, hasn't recovered
from the infection.
Soccer ends home slate
But Gates isn't counting on Lockwood not playing. He knows how badly the Sooners
By STEVE CLARK
Sports Writer
KU's soccer club makes its final home appearance of the season against Kansas State at 2 p.m. Sunday at Memorial Stadium.
The only other meeting between the two chair was last week for the Big Eight chairs.
From there, KU went on to capture the
Softball team to state tourney
The state qualifying tournament for the College World Series is in Hays this weekend, and if KU wins, it will be going to the Series for its fourth straight year.
The Series, which will be May 13 in
together some of the best
college, tournaments.
this is the weekend for which the KU softball team has worked and played.
The double-elimination qualifying tournament this weekend is open, meaning that any member of the Kansas Association will participate in collegiate Athletics for Women can participate.
However, only six teams will attend the tournament this year. They are all four teams from Division 1-KU, K-State, Wichita State and Ft. Hays State, and two teams from Division 2-Emporia State and Pittsburg.
From page six
and third place finishes and beat us. Especially in the distances "
Kansas . . .
Quarter-milers Randy Benson and Waddell Smith will try different events with Benson in the 200 meters and Smith in the long jump. Smith, who was fifth at the conference indoor meet last year, hasn't recorded a jump yet this year.
Freshman high jumper Steve Rainbolt will be using his long-legged stride to teammate Anthony Coleman in the 110 hurdles.
'I ran them in high school,' Rainbolt said, 'and I’ve got a lot faster since then. I’ve never had the same pain.'
Timmons said several athletes would be competing unattached, including former Bengal athlete Sakshi Paul, half-mile; and Kent McDonald, steeplechase. He also said that red-shirted high jumper Keith Guinn, who is recovering from injured right knee, would probably comet.
There also is speculation that KU sprinters Cliff Wiley and Kevin Newell, ineligible for violating NCAA rules, will compete unattached.
conference title, while K-State finished sixth.
Bernie Mullin, KU player-coach, said he concerned that the Jawlaws might not
"It's bound to be anti-climactic," Mullin said. "It'll be tough to get you. K-State is physical as bell, and I expect them to come out a lot more than they did last week."
K-State coach John Deichmann agreed that his team would be better prepared. In a telephone interview Tuesday, he said he thought the Wildcats were handicapped in the Big Eight championships because of their ballplayers and five freshmen starters.
He said he liked the Wildcats' chances this weekend.
Gale Sayers, assistant director of the Williams Fund at the University of Kansas and former star running back for the Chicago Bears, hasn't said anything to anybody at KU about leaving to work for "a football operation in Chicago."
But that's easier said than done. KU has averaged 4.8 goals in its last five games. And with last week's four-game sweep, KU has now lost only once in the last 10 games.
KU will be without the services of captain Kan Kupiplin and Terry Wilcoxen, both of whom were killed in an attack.
Another player who has been hampered by a bad ankle is frankan star Moshin Miri. He sprained his ankle last week, but still played in Saturday's Big Eight preliminary action.
Walker says he knows nothing of Daley charge
Miri went scoreless in the title game with
the tournaments he most valuable plays.
That was the word yesterday from the KU athletic department in response to published comments made Wednesday by Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley.
"I've seen the story (of Daley saying Sayers was 'negotiating' now to return to Chicago), and I don't know anything about it." KU athletic director Clyde Walker said.
"I haven't discussed anything like this with him (Sayers), and he hasn't discussed anything like this with me," he said. Sayers, who was unavailable for comment, has said he wasn't going to Russell, has said he didn't intend to leave KU for a football job in Chicago.
"Mayer Daley and I have been friends—are friends for a long time, but I don't know where he came up with that," Sayers has been quoted as saying.
There was "no question about it," Sayers added, adding that he wouldn't leave KU unless he said so.
Daley's comments came during a discussion of whether Sayers should be allowed to keep his seat on the board of the Chicago Fire Department, for poor attendance at board meetings.
Daley, who appoints all board members, told the Associated Press Wednesday, "I understand he (Sayers) attends the meetings of the park district, and he has also expressed a willingness to come back" o Chicago.
~
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JAZZ
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only at
Saturday: the GASLITE GANG Just back from appearing at the Wichita Jazz Festival
Tonite: the JOE UTTERBACK TRIO SUPER MODERN JAZZ
Open 8:00 p.m.
Call 843-8575 or 842-9458 for Reservations
Briar Patch
DIAMOND WATER
Pipe and Tobacco Shop located in the Casbah
Doug is back!
Come in and visit with Doug in the CASBAH. Enjoy a bowlful of one of Doug's four mixtures.
10% discount with this Ad
A complete line of tobaccoes, cigars and related smoking accessories
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Serves 32... tastes like a super cocktail!
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Recipe
One fifth Southern Comfort
3 quarts 7UP
6 oz. fresh lemon juice
One 6-oz can frozen orange juice
One 6-oz can frozen lemonade
Chili ingredients. Mix in bucket.
add 7UP + Add a few drops of food coloring (optional, size and flavor desired) to lemon juice slices. Looks and tastes great!
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8
Friday, April 30, 1976
University Dally Kausan
Quiglev readv for K-State series
By JOHN HENDEL
Sports Writer
Quigley Field had been drenched with rain this week. But members of the baseball team under the direction of coach Floyd Temple, yesterday readied the field for this weekend's encounter with the Kansas State Wildcats.
Temple had the Jayhawks working on the pitcher's mound and raking the skin part of the infield to help the field dry out faster. But, he said, the field isn't too bad.
"We could have played on the field today. The field is in the best shape ever," Temple said.
While rain hasn't hurt the field much, it has played havoc with KU's schedule. The Jayhawks have been rained out of five of their last eight games.
TEMPILE SAID THAT when a team was used to playing four or five games a week and then didn't play any in a week (their last game) against Nebraska it had hurt to the team.
He also said K-State had good hitting, fielding and pitching. The Wildcat's starters all were hitting over 290 before they made the double or a four-game series earlier this week.
Ruggers face rugged tournament
IN THE 3 P.M. game today, Roger Slagle (5-2) will play for the Jayhawks, Temple
The Wildcats' 31-13 record, before the Oklahoma games, is based on strength from pitchers like Dave Tuttle (7-1), Ted Power (6-2) and Lon Ostrom (8-0). They are scheduled to face the Jayhawks this weekend.
KU's rugby club will have its hands full this weekend as it takes part in the third annual Sunflower Invitational tournament at Manhattan.
Some of the best teams in the Midwest are entered in the tournament. Included in the field are the Kansas City Blues, River Quay, Houston and the Kansas City Nuggets, Houston and the Kansas City Hubby Club.
The format for the 15-tem team is double elimination.
KU's first game will be at 8 a.m. Saturday against the Emporia Rugby Club, a team the Jayhawks edged 6-3 earlier in the spring.
"This is their first year for rugby," Jon Mellon, club president, said yesterday.
"They don't know a whole lot about rugby, but they're rough as hell.
"And they've had five or six games since we played, so they should be better."
if KU defeats Emperor, they will play again at 11 a.m., against the winner of the game. The other teams have two rounds.
To advance to the finals, KU will have to beat the Kansas City Rugby Club, which has captured the last two Sunflower Invitational titles.
Kansas State club president Chuck Wasker said in a telephone interview Tuesday that KU's Kansas City Rugby team and the Kansas City Rugby have legitimate shots at the championship.
said he wasn't sure who would start the 1 p.m. doubleheader Saturday, and said Brian Rhodes (3-2) and Rob Allinder (1-5) were likely.
KU will rely on hitters such as first baseman Carl Heinrich (.360) and shortstop Lee Ice (.317) to improve its 17-11 season record.
OZ
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friday - 8:30
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2002
Midland,
Mich. 48640
HONG KONG TAILORS
The Jayhawks and Wildcats tangled in a doubleheader earlier in the season. K-State captured both games with scores of 6-5 and 8-5.
DUNHILL FASHIONS
IN LAWRENCE, KANS.
FOR 2 DAYS ONLY.
Men's Double Knit Suits $75.
Temple said he was concerned about the limited number of games the team has played. He said they needed the games against K-State and the two doubleheaders next week, against Emporia State and West Virginia for next weekend's Big Eight Tournament.
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Temple also said that he would like to see a temple of spectators at the games this week.
AT RAMADA INN TEL.: 842-7030
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL PETER RANEY
OPEN HOUSE
See
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS.
2 bedroom apts. • on KU campus. • utilities paid
furnished or unfurnished. • laundry facilities
swimming pool • air-conditioned. • covered parking
on bus line. • security guards. • bonded lock system
roommate service
OPEN
HOUSE
See
JAYHAWKER TOWERS APTS
Now Taking Applications for Fall
CPA REVIEW
"We need some fans out here," he said. We need their support to go out there and send them a message.
Office Hours: Till 8 p.m. Mon..Thurs.
Till 5:30 Fri. 10-4 Sat. 2-5 Sun.
Young, although a definite underdog, is considered a stiffer test for All than was Jean-Pierre Coopman, who was defeated by Ali on Feb. 20.
[ LREx
LANDOVER, Md. (AP)—Ummamudall Ali, confident as always but bigger than ever, predicted yesterday he would knock the door down. "I didn't know what round it would be in."
Lawrence, Kansas 1603 W. 15th
Ali predicts KO in title bout
913-843-4993
ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE MAJORS
LET US HELP YOU PLAN AHEAD TO BECOME A CPA
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Bowl 842-1234
Open Bowling
9 a.m.-Midnight Sun.-Thurs.
9 a.m.-5 a.m. Fri. & Sat.
Free Shoes & Passes for Groups
with Advanced Reservations
Olympia Brewing Company, Olympia, Washington "OLY"®
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In a world buffeted by change, consider the unchanging church key. On a fateful day in October, 1919, Mac C. Rosenfeld received Patent #1.260.321 for it. A gleaming symphony of spring steel, the church key was used by three generations of thirsty colleague Oly drinkers. Not until the wise-top was untiring ventured out although the discriminating Oly drinker will always keep one on hand for tav-Stubbies and Oldtime bottles.
The design of the church key hasn't changed because it was made with skill, ingenuity and simplicity. A great beer doesn't change for many of the same reasons. If it is a small right tight fit, it will have an unchanging standard of quality. Some things never change. Olympia never will
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Garden Center and Greenhouse
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Kansan Business Cards
IVAN'S 66 SERVICE
"Tires—Batteries—Accessories"
19th & Mass.
843.988) 6:10-8:00 m.pm. Sun
843-9891 6:30-9:00 p.m. Mon.-Sun.
Bahäi Faith
"Knowledge is as wings to man's life, and a ladder for his ascent." Baha'i Club Meeting, April 5, 19:30 p.m. Oread Ballroom, Union
GULF BAY
BUTTERFLY
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CHRISTIAN PRESCHOOL
CENTER
1035 Mass.
842-1521
SHAZAAM
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ANYTHING!
if You don't see it, ASK! »« KING GEORGE'S
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DANCING LIVE MUSIC
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Extensible Night People with cold beverages
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An atmosphere designed for wine tasting and small gatherings
Sandwiches — Pizza Pool — American Shuffleboard
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843-9404 CLUB
EVERYONE CAN SAVE HOME
New Memberships Available
Class B Print Only
Open 10am to 9am.
— DL 5
Wayne Pool—owner
530 Wisconsin Behind 66 Station
University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 30.1976
9
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all staff or national origin. PLEASE BURN ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111F FLINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
ERRORS
One time times four time times times times
15 words or
fewer ___ $2.00 $2.25 $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.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks can be added in person or simply calling the UUE business office at 644-8358.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Read about Alice every Wednesday in the UDK. tf
FREE PART-MALAMUTE PUPPIES. CALL 842-
348 AFTER 5:00 P.M.
-1-
Yard sales. 5a; May 1 - 9a. Plastic furniture,
chairs, desk and office furnishings.
Garden Apt. 3, N Michigan, Bldg. 4, Apd. 4,
Garden Apt. 5, N Michigan, Bldg. 4, Apd. 5.
Lawrence Gay Liberal Meeting to plan activities for the summer and next fall. We need input from all segments of the community. Evacuation May 14, 7:30 in the 5-4 Union.
FOR RENT
*ATTENTION ENTERING RENTERS: Drop in app
*ATTENTION ENTERING RENTERS: Drop in app
*(no phone (value "0")) at WESTBURG
*(no phone (value "0")) at WESTBURG
Free rental service. Up to the minute liftings. Lawrence Rental Exhibits in Lawrence. Lawrence Rental Exhibits 842-259.
2 bdm., all util, on campus. Furn. or
unfold. Free parking, a/c, pool. 843-493-199
1- bedroom apartments, room with kitchen pr
kitchen and room to campus $39 and up
or 842-508-9277
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate
1 and 2 bedroom apartments ready for immediate
money, leave from June 1, 2014,
take advantage now before it's too late. Park 35 Apartments.
2 blocks west of Iowa on 25th St. Phone 842-1455.
Garden plots for rent. Four sizes already plowed, and disced irrigated by well water. 842-2502.
SUMMER RATES at Unit Terr. & Old Mill
Ranch. 60% discount. Swimming, swimming
dragon, swimming lone, berm. lbm. $110 plus
utilities; 2 bedm. furn.; $140 plus utilities. Rates
from $189-$359 per person. Aug. 15 to Oct.
843. 842-4297 or 843-1433.
For Rent—120 bdm. apt. 3pc to campus.
$125 mm. pt. all. PDV. inmature. 814-283. 4-30
www.redpoint.edu
191720 month for 3, 8 or 4 per month = 5 bdm.
191720 day free parking on campus. Summa rate =
36.5%.
Sabi aït studi o apâtiment i vert vermer (Meadowbrook) Booklet After 2 app. j 814-645-6435
House for summer sublease. Furnished and
house near campus. Call 841-6022 anytime after
season.
Partially furnished older home near campus in Woodbury, NY. Home includes double living room, dining room, kitchen, laundry room and 12 mo lease at $200 per month plus utilities. Group of students. Available May 16-84.
HAPPINESS IS 15 living in your own private study room. The building has a wall with 30 other members, TV, pool-table—plays of tennis, exercise room, library, water-drier, and other amenities. We are committed to remodelling this summer. Your share of chores includes cleaning the dormitory and campus. Rent $30 to $75 plus for evening or dinner. Dan or Anne T is 10 weeks at 842-9272.
**STUDENTS-ALTERNATIVE LIFESTYLE!** 30
- Students living in dorms make opportunities to interact, mentoring, making. Opportunities include sports programs, on-campus academic credit. Private rooms 800-950. On-campus laundry was driver-recaption facilities, evening meals 6:30-10:30. Faculty Building be to thoroughly remodeled the building. Alumni receive 10 weeknights at 848-7252 Alice or Dale at T 10 weeksnights at 848-7252 Alice or Dale at T 10 weeksnights at 848-7252 Alice or Dale at T 10 weeksnights at 848-7252 Alice or Dale at T 10 weeksnights at 848-7252 Alice or Dale at T 10 weeksnights at 848-7252 Alice or Dale at T 10 weeksnights at 848-7252 Alice or Dale at T 10 weeksnights at 848-7252 Alice or Dale at T 10 week
Sublease: late May-Aug. Beautiful well kept 2
bedroom, close to Campus. Call 864-730
864-6732
Sublake 3 bbm, house for summer. Summer
house, bridge. Ridge, Near Hillerstown,
801-347-8115.
Spacious 2 bdrm, townhouse fully equipped
160 sq ft. Apt. 1, Avail on May 1. 250w h 80h x 843-733
1490 N. 6th St.
Sublease 1 bedroom apartment for summer. Com-
pose lease to the owner and downloan on bus route, $10. Call 841-655-3257.
Submit for summer: nice furnished 2 bedroom
location: localized $100, 941-6546 after;
ask For vikki.
$147.90 month for one person-2 bdmm all urns
$35.90 monthly for one person-2 bdmm all urns
parking on campground, Summer Sunset $84.99-$104.99
Take all the worry out of this summer or next week. A full day of weekly meal service, fully carpeted, AC, and weekly kitchen service is required. Quiet rooms and quiet place to study. This will help us plan for the day. And by book we will limit plans for the day.
Large apartment for rent. All electric kitchen, large fridge, dishwasher, furnished, paid Call 841-1559 at 5 p.m.
3 to 4 bedroom home near campus for summer
month only—call 811-6454, 1247%)4-30
Mrs. L. Browning
2 birm. close to campus, downtown, schools, parks, ideal for married couples, $1050. Men $200, Women $150.
Bulletin nere 4-5 bedroom house June - Aug. 1.
campus call: LinLinder 84169 - 0497 or
8416 - 3868.
Nice one bedroom apartment available. For sum-
mary, call 813-8938. Ask for Km 2.
Call 813-8938. Ask for Km 2.
Sublease for summer 1-Aug. 1-15. (Negotiable) beautiful 2nd floor apartment w/ front balcony and swing. Suitable for 3 or 4 people. 5-bedroom, 3-bathroom. A/C, 5-dryer, utilities paid. 841-2888.
Sublease for summer. May 18-August 15
bedroom. Furnished, Cleaned. $85/month. 841-789-
806.
New 2 or 3 bdroom apt. completely equipped
with air conditioning, TV, sound system,
extra nice audio apa's 843-709-5111
FOR SALE
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, the best option is from the GAMPION SHOP at KIFF. If you want a more affordable option,
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COST * 10% - Stereo equipment. All major brands Guaranteed best prices in this area. Single or package. Register for free Kiss Me or Call. Drive. Phone # 685-6389. Earnings 6 to 10.
Western Civilization Notes—On Sale on New Malibu
Western Civilization Makes sense to use them
1) As study guide
2) For exam preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Anatomy of the Human Body"
"
Alternator, Starter, and Generator Specialties.
BALTO AUTO
Electricity, 845-3090, 9200 W. Eth.
4th Floor
Excellent selection of New & Used Furniture &
Kitchen Appliances. Free shipping.
Trade: The Furniture & Appliance Center, 704
W. 69th St., N.W., Washington, DC 20005.
WE SELL FOR LESS--11 to 6:30. Good used furniture: Gas and electric ranges; Refrigerators; Have Laundry- weekly free delivery; 1228 East Street, Stepkep Kp, Phone 7-322-355 or 7-322-356.
Super sunner machine, 75 Caliatti Italian motor
super sunner machine, Bright red,
$200 or best offer, 841-757-3911
Radial Steel Clearance! Your choice of any size
145-146, 153-155, 162-165, 173-175, ART81, CRT92,
165-14, BRT8-14, Ray Stonebuckle, **929 Mass**
Come thru parking behind Woolworths. The
brush is clean.
**929 Mass**
Sony safety save now on Sony radios, clock ra-
dio, remote controls, 292 MHz Open Thursday lunch,
292 MHz Open Thursday lunch.
Bargain used books, Texts, fiction, medical law, three-day Parkway Shopping Center. May 3 to May 8
C.B. RADIOS- audio-encoders -secuorescuros 28% OFF
C.B. Radio Audios, Atn. E, 8th Bldg. 842-8547, Audit Speech
6-Hay Audio, I, E, 8th Bldg. 842-8547, Audit Speech
4' 14-Cruiser SS maps for k-boll Chevy. Matched
with a 9-pin map or by come on 32. H75H奔野
at 9 p.m. or come on 32. H75H奔野
XVATION 12-string guitar. Price reasonable.
41-6184 after 6. 4-30
General Electric, Stereo Component System
general condition 50. Will distress price Call 642-
1878. Condition 50.
years 10-speed bike. 842-7114 after 5:30. 4-30.
10-speed-very reasonable. Must sell quickly.
841-497 4-30
I have to leave town. Must sell $9. Triumph GT6.
I have to spend $40. Must have to spend
and make an offer 842-767-8181.
Ten speed bike. Like new. Ridden only three
times $100 or best offer. 841-6453.
4-30
1947 Kawasaki 500, green, good condition,
875-best off 82-3358 or 81-481-4-30
875-must have
King-size waterbed—frame, headboard, mattress and pad. $60.42 - 8883. 4-30
CHECK OUT THESE USED BRICK SPECIALS. T 72,
T 65, T 49, T 31, T 23, T 16, T 10, T 8,
T 6, T 4, T 2, T 1, T 0, T 0, T 0,
70. Hondra CT, 70. T 7. Tritumph, 560. T 74. Yamaha
CT, 74. T 7. Tritumph, 560. T 74. Yamaha
Horizons, Horizons, W 11. W 6h, W 6h-333. -3
4
1971. Flat 124 Spyder conv. 30 plus miles per gallon.
Known in excellent condition. Will consider a
pre-purchase offer.
Acoustic PA columns $350. Mitch 843-854, Ovation gutar #105. Nonds 123, helmets, low miltons.
Midwest gutar #107. Middletown 130.
Rain gear high weight and high quality. Trans-
port gear high weight. Parts Only at Surfounder Surplus 644, Mass 511.
Surfounder Surplus 644, Mass 511.
Mobile home, 2 bdm, furn. or unfurnished,
WID, the downs, skirted, 2 ACs, under $5,000.
Home office, up to 16 bdm, up to 3,000.
Samuel 9800 Receives Less than two months old. Financial report calls. Call Tom after six, 864-107-4000.
1970 Karmann Ghae, excellent condition, rebuilt
from stock. $560, 843-3834
$560, 843-3834
90 van, long wheel A.T. radio, new tires,
long mileage (rebuilt motor) Cell 841-653-5-11
195 Capri mobile phone 10 × 50 one bedroom
Make offer. Call 841-3528 after 6 p.m.
5-4
Marty Olson and Teri VanGundy
Styling for men and women
9th and Illinois
CAMPUS BEAUTY SHOPPE
Help me clean out my garage $2 cane bottom
helmet. $1 chair. $3 backpack (painted), silverware, small tables, ol'r-
disk, chest of drawers, wicker baby buggy, girl's
dresser, kid's bedding, lots of mice, May 1. My jacket. 2022 Woman's Day.
CASETTEF TAPE RECORDER Supercop CS
200 Stereo, ADC, portable—doubles on
or car tape deck—compatible enough for classroom or
reuse. Rusty, Sulivan, 8419-4300
4133.
King size watered; 2'-8 way speakers (palt);
Lloyds 4 inch AM/FM; TBM with 68-225.
Dragon 3 inch AM/PM; TBM with 68-225.
1971 Honda CB350, with Fairing, luggage rack
Couch #841-3161. 5-5
1975. Kawanaki KZ 400D. 2500 miles. Call 843-
648.
10.7 Suzuki $10, $5 cash; Sx speed control; intelligence 8.12.72; 5.3
10.8 Kia $10, $5 cash; Lifted truck; intelligence 8.12.72; 5.3
1073 850 Norton Commando has low mileage,
1073 850 Norton Commando can be prepared
the保生. Can be seen at 2709 Gundahl
Downtown.
Kustom custom, 150 watt. Four 10" speakers, like new, Call 841-4478. 5-5
Classic Harmonica guitar and case for sale. Call 861-6439. Try early or late. Reasonable price: $3
Pannasonic FM-AM Cassette Device, Paranasite
6108, Friego 15000 speakers, $125.98
6108
Marmato 2275接收. Akal Cassette deck GXC
6:100- 6:10 pm. Tel. 842-4539
5-6
APARTMENT STOVE in good condition. Come by 1611 Indiana, ask for Deb. 5-4
HELP WANTED
**BELP WANTED:** Kansas Students Company
carservers; currently, they are available for Flexible
car servicing.
Colored TV "RCA" (needs repair). Call 841-2975
4-30.
Avon can help you have the summer vacation of your dream. Excellent earnings. Opentertiy for business. Fun in the sun.
COLLEGE STUDENTS NOW HIRING FOR SUMMER WEEKS IN SUMMER CALL FOR INTERVIEW RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CORP. KANSAS CITY, KANSAS
Summer work, Johnson County area, Phil C.
684-6842 4-20
PART1 TIME-EARN $25 PER WEEK. FOR $4
PER WEEK. FOR $9 PER WEEK.
61-1771 BETWEEN 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. FOR INTERVIEW
**STUDENTS:** SUMMER EMPLOYMENT. Pinkerton Incorporated in now taking applications for summer curry jobs in the Greater Kansas City area. The company offers police record (traffic violations) exclusive hires during summer 8-9 a.m., from Bronson Daycare, 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Biometri Building, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. in building An. Equal Opportunity Employer
Lawrence Gay Counseling Services needs participants to call up counselor for next year. We need an open enrollment program and direct counselors to appropriate counseling programs and direct counselors to more information call 846-1313 or 848-587-3.
Sirlin Stockade will be interviewing on campus
and will be interviewing Summerfield's
equal opportunity employer. 4-30
Secretary-Receptionist, half-time, for fast paced office situation in local form. Requires a pleasure teaching and engaging the work out. 7.20 am - 12.30 pm. M-F. Workshops: 8:45 am - 10:45 am. Write Book 40 c/o Lawrence Journal World.
Hotels-Casual. fine area restaurant, must be 10am or before summer and fall, part-time, evening phone 843-726-9578.
Summer employment for women: largest moving applications for women packers to prepare equipment at City and Leavenworth area, must have own vehicle and Leavenworth area, must have own business. Services 1990 W. Gird, Shawnee, Kansas.
Top Paying Job is open to experienced sales
attendants. Call Cadray at 841-3757. Full time only.
Eight dollars to participate in two hour course on leadership to mark decision making others help. CALL 214-765-3029.
Wattefries and frycook wanted for floating restaurant. Casual atmosphere,宿店 available. For interview, call Frank Burcher, 314-855-6004; Mo Gouda. Barge 5-10 Ozark, Mo. MO 6544.
Wanted: sales assist, newly 12-hours, Greek equiv
degree. Apply by May 30th. Send resume. Crazy Top Shop, 17 W, 9th Dt
Street.
Sorority needs part-time cook, starting Avg.
6:30-8:30 a.m. M.F. for other Saturday;
6:30-8:30 a.m. M.F. for Sunday.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost: on campus, red and white blue-eyed
zombie 4-10;摸 4 mos, nitted badly; had
8-4576
4-30
4-50
Founders' advertisements are sponsored as a publicity tool by the Bank of Canada. The National Bank with a Kenmore and First National Bank with a Kennesaw.
Long-thaird yellow male cat. Yelp affectionate.
needs loving home. 843-5990. 4-30
Reward $100 Lost identification driver, drivers
found in New York. Please contact Dennis Burch 814-235-4720.
If found please contact Neal Burch 814-235-4720.
Fair of prescription墨镜 in front West Wexford
April 2nd and April 21st Black frames. Call 811-745-
360 to identify
Carol, I found your bus pass in Linden Hall
April 17 Call Amar Matre 463 to identify 3.
Lot: 4/16 female German Sheep pup, bd-
l. month; N collar, answer to Rocco. 68-811.
Bellows: No.
I have best a good friend of mine. Her name is Eleanor and she has a beautiful long curly hair. If anyone knows of her where she lives, please call her at 1-800-523-4676.
Lost black wallet on campus or nearby. ID, Gear
Kooler, reward. 841-3268. 5-4
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The Catalhua Care special Sunday dinner is in Full
Disclosure. Call 615-804-2311 for reservation.
cash only. Call 615-804-2311 for reservation.
cash only. Call 615-804-2311 for reservation.
cash only. Call 615-804-2311 for reservation.
cash only. Call 615-804-2311 for reservation.
cash only. Call 615-804-2311 for reservation.
Swap Shop, 620 Mac. Used furniture, dining lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-5.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
transportation privileges. Enroll now in the
transportation provided. Drive new, pay later.
Enroll now in Lawrence Driving School. Receive
After 26 years in business, If George doesn't
serve on Mondays' George's Fire Shop,
he'll be on Mondays' George's Fire Shop.
50% off our entire stock of jewelry, 50% off all blends. Come on down, we have some great finds!
QUILTING, FRAMES and HOOPS. Mother's Day
day, May 5. May 4. Fathers' Day,
706 Mass.
"Baha'ulah and the New Era" the definitive
book on the history of Islam, in paperback in the Town Crier Bookstore.
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number 1 drug, if you need help, call Alcohol Anonymous. 842-8101, tf
MADAME LENA, E.S.P - FALM READY-ADVERT
phone: 612-495-3000; email: madame.lena@falm.com;
reading pal reading free. Good advice on
problems. For more information,电话 862-1831
come to 3803 South Topleau Blvd., Tower
136
INTERRESTED IN NO- FRIILLES LOW COST JET
TRAVEL to Europe, Africa, the Middle East, the
Canada, Australia and New Zealand, helping people travel on a budget with maxima-
vations in terms of travel days and years. For more info call toll free 206-923-5690.
Come on—Come all, May Day Festival—a week away. Our Club participates in workshops see at the Hi Fo Flare Participate in workshops see at Home! Put lots of picnic and volleyball. Free picnic. Great Coatition and Commission on the Status of Women.
n's Coalition and Commission on the Status of
Students' Education Funding. Funded by Student Activity Fee, 420
19th Street, New York, NY 10017.
Do you wanna dance? Do you like exiting live music? Do you want to play the blues? You'll love the Sonic Blues Band, appearing at OFF- the -Wall Hall. Tit 841-8617 or Live! on iblues Live!
President Mullen and Vice-president Hare are in Lawrence this week. Call Weldon 4-30
Friends of the Kahuna. Abha Nv! Sambra right
Mohamed. Nv! Sambra invited Oblie. Mok-
Maulu. No thank you got out.
Buddha. No thank you got out.
CORRECTION. Four dull distressed females defy
inoculation, incomposite aneurysm fisth B-G, C-P.
Inoculated aneurysm fisth B-G, C-P.
Pat Read
Indian Trader
X
X Bengals IN THE
Glass and Jewelry 803-531-6221 Casabah
Room 203 701 Mass.
HIGHEST QUALITY INDIAN ARTS
Room 203 701 Mass.
843-1306 10-5 Tau.Sat.
箭
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
SERVICES OFFERED
MATH TUTORING--Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 612, 500, 508, 567. Regular session, one-time test preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 847-7681.
Happy birthday. Julie Nordhelm.
Trying to sell a musical instrument or sound equipment? Call us at McKinney-Mason, 811-8917.
Do you have a suggestion for the theme of Rock KU-VY offer, 10-18 (Level 3) Kansas Union. If your idea is chosen as next year's theme, you will receive two tickets to Rock Chalk Revue
Passport and resume photo taken at reasonable rates. For appointments call Dave's Bath, 843-756-1200.
THE SKY'S THE LIMIT? Virtually any jewelry the SKY'S possible. Professional (BFA degree) gold-waterman. Complete stone cutting, wide aperture lens. Safety guaranteed. 841-3838 or 843-0970. Satisfaction guaranteed.
TRAVEL
GAY SOCIAL ACTIVITIES—Purdue out shortened the Gay Community Association meetings where to go to more social events.
bankAmericard Mastercharge
LAWRENCE GAY COUNSELING SERVICE--Do you have feelings you can't understand? Do you want to talk about it, or do you want to about? We have professionals, para-professionals and cap-and-tap counselors to talk with. Help us $425.
EUROPE ISHAEL AFRACA AMA ISAIA
Air Travel Airways Inc. 420 First Avenue,
100 East 59th Street New York, NY
EUROPE
less 1/2 economy
jan
SWALEX
Coe
City
900-325-4867
Unitravel Charters
TUTOR
Professional lying, reasonable, work, guarantee of services, compliance with state regulations, electric, D.A. Sacramento Public Services.
TYPING
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the service provider for all of the OSP Services. Our Service pack and printer are free to use.
(Inquiries to: Theis Binding & Printing, 101 Northwestern Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94128)
Experienced typist—term papers, theses, mite.
Experienced word processor, spellcheck,
spiced up 843-554, Mrs. Wright.
! do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476. 5-11
Exp. typi: IBM Selectric, term paper, thesis.
Exp. minis: mine, proofreading, spelling corrections.
Typhis editor, IBM Picaitec. Quality work.
Typhis writer, Desertus diversities welcome.
Mail: 849-392-1972
Need an experienced typist? IBM Selective II
(IBM) system with tape mounting tape,
ribbon). Call Pam at 849-7283.
Will do typing. Elite electric Term papers and
will no thesis Proofreading Hays, 883-2764
www.hesslibrary.com
Experienced tytlist will type term papers, chess, two-
player games. 814-09994. 814-09994.
Bachelor, 641-09994.
Experienced typlid-themes, themed paper themes,
i.e. IBM SelectMix, calla Call; Blds 843-158-1-51
PROCEDURE PROCEDURE
Insight INTO LIFE
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Fitted Sheets
842·4441
WATERBEDS
FIELDS
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Casa de Taco
712Mass.St.
HORIZONS HONDA
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
"Deliciously Different"
Happy Hour 5-6 p.m.
1811 W. 6th
1105 Massachusetts
843-9880
Expert typing /reasonable rates. Proofreading.
Expert typing reasonable rates with
till 11:45pm. Call 842-869-3080.
Nice female roommates wanted to share apt. for
and spring session. Clindy 843-202-8988.
WANTED
Female committee to share 3 bedroom apartment
and family room, located off the mall,
nated dwellers and close to campus. Call
(804) 265-7915 for more information.
Munital, non-studious great student who keeps a book of the Bible to share large dressed bedroom house near campus.
Roommate, serious student, summer only, own
room, extra nice, Xae 841-8438 5. 4-30
Roommate to share 2 bibs, alt. to campus.
Roommate to non- smoking wrist.
stud-nct Call Jim at 842-769-3800.
stud-nct Call Jim at 842-769-3800.
need at least 2 (maybe 3) roommates for large, comfortable 4 bdrm. on west edge of house or utility of rooms for critters and creature. Split rent. utilities. Call 614-845-4340. Keep trying.
Musical, non. student grad student who keeps
an eye on the students in shive large bedroom house near campus.
ANYTHING YOU COULD POSSIBLY WANT
Female roommate to share 2-bedroom furnished
room at the Malls for Fall. Call Cara 531-
841-1861.
1, 2, or 3 female roommates to share apt. for
1 bedroom, unfitness unit, utilities a/c, p.e.s.
Call 64-845-7422
Email cwc@ipec.com
Want to buy good prints from Genesis concert;
Call local 812-425-537. Riek
5-4
Two intelligent men would like to meet
the President of the United States with
the Lord and President Fell. Call Bid-
bel, 714-620-9853.
and SUNDAY
Liberal roomette to share 2 bedroom apts for nine floorplex, central air, close to campuses in the metropolitan area.
Desperately Need Tickets for "Wings" concert
May 29. Please call 841-7327. 5-4
QUANTRILL'S
LEXA MARKET
Male roommate wanted to share two bedroom
through the summer-immediate occupancy.
845-161-106
811 New Hampshire
Now Open Every Sunday
10 a.m.-5 p.m.
*Two female roommates for summer. Available in a shared dormitory, located on the third floor of an 11-bedroom mid-floor. A/C enclosure location. $600/month. Applicants must be at least 21 years old.*
Female roommate to 3 bdm 28m, apt 1 bed
from campus for 76-77, 78-85.慕川 814-4478.
Masumi, 217, 229, 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 243, 244, 245, 246, 247, 248, 249, 250, 251, 252, 253, 254, 255, 256, 257, 258, 259, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264, 265, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 272, 273, 274, 275, 276, 277, 278, 279, 280, 281, 282, 283, 284, 285, 286, 287, 288, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, 296, 297, 298, 299, 300, 301, 302, 303, 304, 305, 306, 307, 308, 309, 310, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, 316, 317, 318, 319, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335, 336, 337, 338, 339, 340, 341, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 347, 348, 349, 350, 351, 352, 353, 354, 355, 356, 357, 358, 359, 360, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 367, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 373, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 381, 382, 383, 384, 385, 386, 387, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 397, 398, 399, 400, 401, 402, 403, 404, 405, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 411, 412, 413, 414, 415, 416, 417, 418, 419, 420, 421, 422, 423, 424, 425, 426, 427, 428, 429, 430, 431, 432, 433, 434, 435, 436, 437, 438, 439, 440, 441, 442, 443, 444, 445, 446, 447, 448, 449, 450, 451, 452, 453, 454, 455, 456, 457, 458, 459, 460, 461, 462, 463, 464, 465, 466, 467, 468, 469, 470, 471, 472, 473, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 479, 480, 481, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 487, 488, 489, 490, 491, 492, 493, 494, 495, 496, 497, 498, 499, 500, 501, 502, 503, 504, 505, 506, 507, 508, 509, 510, 511, 512, 513, 514, 515, 516, 517, 518, 519, 520, 521, 522, 523, 524, 525, 526, 527, 528, 529, 530, 531, 532, 533, 534, 535, 536, 537, 538, 539, 540, 541, 542, 543, 544, 545, 546, 547, 548, 549, 550, 551, 552, 553, 554, 555, 556, 557, 558, 559, 560, 561, 562, 563, 564, 565, 566, 567, 568, 569, 570, 571, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 578, 579, 580, 581, 582, 583, 584, 585, 586, 587, 588, 589, 590, 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 596, 597, 598, 599, 600, 601, 602, 603, 604, 605, 606, 607, 608, 609, 610, 611, 612, 613, 614, 615, 616, 617, 618, 619, 620, 621, 622, 623, 624, 625, 626, 627, 628, 629, 630, 631, 632, 633, 634, 635, 636, 637, 638, 639, 640, 641, 642, 643, 644, 645, 646, 647, 648, 649, 650, 651, 652, 653, 654, 655, 656, 657, 658, 659, 660, 661, 662, 663, 664, 665, 666, 667, 668, 669, 670, 671, 672, 673, 674, 675, 676, 677, 678, 679, 680, 681, 682, 683, 684, 685, 686, 687, 688, 689, 690, 691, 692, 693, 694, 695, 696, 697, 698, 699, 700, 701, 702, 703, 704, 705, 706, 707, 708, 709, 710, 711, 712, 713, 714, 715, 716, 717, 718, 719, 720, 721, 722, 723, 724, 725, 726, 727, 728, 729, 730, 731, 732, 733, 734, 735, 736, 737, 738, 739, 740, 741, 742, 743, 744, 745, 746, 747, 748, 749, 750, 751, 752, 753, 754, 755, 756, 757, 758, 759, 760, 761, 762, 763, 764, 765, 766, 767, 768, 769, 770, 771, 772, 773, 774, 775, 776, 777, 778, 779, 780, 781, 782, 783, 784, 785, 786, 787, 788, 789, 790, 791, 792, 793, 794, 795, 796, 797, 798, 799, 800, 801, 802, 803, 804, 805, 806, 807, 808, 809, 810, 811, 812, 813, 814, 815, 816, 817, 818, 819, 820, 821, 822, 823, 824, 825, 826, 827, 828, 829, 830, 831, 832, 833, 834, 835, 836, 837, 838, 839, 840, 841, 842, 843, 844, 845, 846, 847, 848, 849, 850, 851, 852, 853, 854, 855, 856, 857, 858, 859, 860, 861, 862, 863, 864, 865, 866, 867, 868, 869, 870, 871, 872, 873, 874, 875, 876, 877, 878, 879, 880, 881, 882, 883, 884, 885, 886, 887, 888, 889, 890, 891, 892, 893, 894, 895, 896, 897, 898, 899, 900, 901, 902, 903, 904, 905, 906, 907, 908, 909, 910, 911, 912, 913, 914, 915, 916, 917, 918, 919, 920, 921, 922, 923, 924, 925, 926, 927, 928, 929, 930, 931, 932, 933, 934, 935, 936, 937, 938, 939, 940, 941, 942, 943, 944, 945, 946, 947, 948, 949, 950, 951, 952, 953, 954, 955, 956, 957, 958, 959, 960, 961, 962, 963, 964, 965, 966, 967, 968, 969, 970, 971, 972, 973, 974, 975, 976, 977, 978, 979, 980, 981, 982, 983, 984, 985, 986, 987, 988, 989, 990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999, 1000, 1001, 1002, 1003, 1004, 1005, 1006, 1007, 1008, 1009, 1010, 1011, 1012, 1013, 1014, 1015, 1016, 1017, 1018, 1019, 1020, 1021, 1022, 1023, 1024, 1025, 1026, 1027, 1028, 1029, 1030, 1031, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1036, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1040, 1041, 1042, 1043, 1044, 1045, 1046, 1047, 1048, 1049, 1050, 1051, 1052, 1053, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059, 1060, 1061, 1062, 1063, 1064, 1065, 1066, 1067, 1068, 1069, 1070, 1071, 1072, 1073, 1074, 1075, 1076, 1077, 1078, 1079, 1080, 1081, 1082, 1083, 1084, 1085, 1086, 1087, 1088, 1089, 1090, 1091, 1092, 1093, 1094, 1095, 1096, 1097, 1098, 1099, 1100, 1101, 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1110, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, 1115, 1116, 1117, 1118, 1119, 1120, 1121, 1122, 1123, 1124, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1128, 1129, 1130, 1131, 1132, 1133, 1134, 1135, 1136, 1137, 1138, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1142, 1143, 1144, 1145, 1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1159, 1160, 1161, 1162, 1163, 1164, 1165, 1166, 1167, 1168, 1169, 1170, 1171, 1172, 1173, 1174, 1175, 1176, 1177, 1178, 1179, 1180, 1181, 1182, 1183, 1184, 1185, 1186, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1191, 1192, 1193, 1194, 1195, 1196, 1197, 1198, 1199, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, 2025, 2026, 2027, 2028, 2029, 2030, 2031, 2032, 2033, 2034, 2035, 2036, 2037, 2038, 2039, 2040, 2041, 2042, 2043, 2044, 2045, 2046, 2047, 2048, 2049, 2050, 2051, 2052, 2053, 2054, 2055, 2056, 2057, 2058, 2059, 2060, 2061, 2062, 2063, 2064, 2065, 2066, 2067, 2068, 2069, 2070, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2077, 2078, 2079, 2080, 2081, 2082, 2083, 2084, 2085, 2086, 2087, 2088, 2089, 2090, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2094, 2095, 2096, 2097, 2098, 2099, 3000, 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, 3005, 3006, 3007, 3008, 3009, 3010, 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3016, 3017, 3018, 3019, 3020, 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024, 3025, 3026, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041, 3042, 3043, 3044, 3045, 3046, 3047, 3048, 3049, 3050, 3051, 3052, 3053, 3054, 3055, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3059, 3060, 3061, 3062, 3063, 3064, 3065, 3066, 3067, 3068, 3069, 3070, 3071, 3072, 3073, 3074, 3075, 3076, 3077, 3078, 3079, 3080, 3081, 3082, 3083, 3084, 3085, 3086, 3087, 3088, 3089, 3090, 3091, 3092, 3093, 3094, 3095, 3096, 3097, 3098, 3099, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 5060, 5061, 5062, 5063, 5064, 5065, 5066, 5067, 5068, 5069, 5070, 5071, 5072, 5073, 5074, 5075, 5076, 5077, 5078, 5079, 5080, 5081, 5082, 5083, 5084, 5085, 5086, 5087, 5088, 5089, 5090, 5091, 5092, 5093, 5094, 5095, 5096, 5097, 5098, 5099, 2100, 2101, 2102, 2103, 2104, 2105, 2106, 2107, 2108, 2109, 2110, 2111, 2112, 2113, 2114, 2115, 2116, 2117, 2118, 2119, 2120, 2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2125, 2126, 2127, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2131, 2132, 2133, 2134, 2135, 2136, 2137, 2138, 2139, 2140, 2141, 2142, 2143, 2144, 2145, 2146, 2147, 2148, 2149, 2150, 2151, 2152, 2153, 2154, 2155, 2156, 2157, 2158, 2159, 2160, 2161, 2162, 2163, 2164, 2165, 2166, 2167, 2168, 2169, 2170, 2171, 2172, 2173, 2174, 2175, 2176, 2177, 2178, 2179, 2180, 2181, 2182, 2183, 2184, 2185, 2186, 2187, 2188, 2189, 2190, 2191, 2192, 2193, 2194, 2195, 2196, 2197, 2198, 2199, 3000, 3001, 3002, 3003, 3004, 3005, 3006, 3007, 3008, 3009, 3010, 3011, 3012, 3013, 3014, 3015, 3016, 3017, 3018, 3019, 3020, 3021, 3022, 3023, 3024, 3025, 3026, 3027, 3028, 3029, 3030, 3031, 3032, 3033, 3034, 3035, 3036, 3037, 3038, 3039, 3040, 3041, 3042, 3043, 3044, 3045, 3046, 3047, 3048, 3049, 3050, 3051, 3052, 3053, 3054, 3055, 3056, 3057, 3058, 3059, 3060, 3061, 3062, 3063, 3064, 3065, 3066, 3067, 3068, 3069, 3070, 3071, 3072, 3073, 3074, 3075, 3076, 3077, 3078, 3079, 3080, 3081, 3082, 3083, 3084, 3085, 3086, 3087, 3088, 3089, 3090, 3091, 3092, 3093, 3094, 3095, 3096, 3097, 3098, 3099, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 5060, 5061, 5062, 5063, 5064, 5065, 5066, 5067, 5068, 5069, 5070, 5071, 5072, 5073, 5074, 5075, 5076, 5077, 5078, 5079, 5080, 5081, 5082, 5083, 5084, 5085, 5086, 5087, 5088, 5089, 5090, 5091, 5092, 5093, 5094, 5095, 5096, 5097, 5098, 5099, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 5040, 5041, 5042, 5043, 5044, 5045, 5046, 5047, 5048, 5049, 5050, 5051, 5052, 5053, 5054, 5055, 5056, 5057, 5058, 5059, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 4035, 4036, 4037, 4038, 4039, 4040, 4041, 4042, 4043, 4044, 4045, 4046, 4047, 4048, 4049, 4050, 4051, 4052, 4053, 4054, 4055, 4056, 4057, 4058, 4059, 4060, 4061, 4062, 4063, 4064, 4065, 4066, 4067, 4068, 4069, 4070, 4071, 4072, 4073, 4074, 4075, 4076, 4077, 4078, 4079, 4080, 4081, 4082, 4083, 4084, 4085, 4086, 4087, 4088, 4089, 4090, 4091, 4092, 4093, 4094, 4095, 4096, 4097, 4098, 4099, 5000, 5001, 5002, 5003, 5004, 5005, 5006, 5007, 5008, 5009, 5010, 5011, 5012, 5013, 5014, 5015, 5016, 5017, 5018, 5019, 5020, 5021, 5022, 5023, 5024, 5025, 5026, 5027, 5028, 5029, 5030, 5031, 5032, 5033, 5034, 5035, 5036, 5037, 5038, 5039, 4000, 4001, 4002, 4003, 4004, 4005, 4006, 4007, 4008, 4009, 4010, 4011, 4012, 4013, 4014, 4015, 4016, 4017, 4018, 4019, 4020, 4021, 4022, 4023, 4024, 4025, 4026, 4027, 4028, 4029, 4030, 4031, 4032, 4033, 4034, 403
lateral limb formed (s) to share large home
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Friday, April 30, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Philanthropists keep helping KU
Almost any student at the University of Kansas is familiar with the names Watkins, Pearson, Summerfield and Spencer. It is quite possible that without the support of these professors, we would be where today in terms of size, resources and the quality of education offered.
It would be difficult to calculate the amount of money the University has received, or will receive in the years to come, as a result of gifts from these families.
Information, compiled in the Alumni Association's files and in the University Archives in the Spencer Research Library, indicates that Watkins, Pearson, Summerfield and Spencer were KU's greatest benefactors.
All of the available information indicates that Elizabeth Watkins is the greatest KU student at the University. She is unsurpassed; donations of $75,000 for a scholarship hall and $175,000 for the first Watkins Memorial Hospital are sufficient to cover the total amount of money she gave to KU.
Watkins, formerly Elizabeth Miller, was born in New Paris, Ohio, in 1861. Her family moved to Kansas when she was young, and Watkins attended St. Paul's School. She attended KU for about a year, but was forced to quit because she didn't have enough money to continue. Watkins was determined that other students who couldn't attend, but deserved to be, given that chance.
She married J. B. Watkins, a Lawrence banker and financier, in 1909. They didn't have much money when they first got married, but Mr. Watkins managed, mainly by shrew real estate dealings, to acquire the land they bought for their joint plans for distributing some of their money to worthwhile causes, so Mrs. Watkins had to pursue the plans on her own.
"The fairy godmother of KU made sure that the University would continue to receive gifts on her behalf after her death at age 78 in 1929. She provided for a trust fund of almost $800,000 for the maintenance and large organization at KU and in Lawrence.
Joseph R. Pearson never attended KU, because the University as he seemingly could have
Pearson was born in Wakefield in 1880, the son of a farmer. His marriage to Geoffrey Sellars, who graduated from KU in 1925, gave him his long-time affiliation with the University.
Pearson was a pioneer in the development of oil production in western Kansas. The Pearls moved to Corsicana, Tex., in 1915, where Pearson played a major role in the development of the large, eastern Texas oil fields in the 1930's.
Pearson lived in Texas until his death in 1965, but never forgot KU. At the time of Mrs. Pearson's death in 1968, it was estimated that the couple had already donated more than $700,000 to KU. Most of this money was used for resuctions halls, including Joseph R. Pearson and Gertrude Schallis Pearson residence halls.
Another KU philanthropist was Solon Erb Summerfield, a lawrence native born in 1877. With the money he earned from his Gotham Silk Hiosiersy Co., Summerfield gave generous gifts to KU, where he had received his law degree in 1901.
In 1929, the Summerfield Scholarship for men students at KU was established. The scholarship gives between 15 and 20 Kansas student students a four-year college education.
After his death in 1947, the Summerfield Foundation continued to give money to KU. The foundation's contributions to KU total about $100,000 a year. About one-third of the
foundation's total income goes to the KU Endowment Association.
The largest single gift to the University was given by the Kenneth A. Spencer Foundation on March 28, 1979, for the new Spender to be paid out of his own funds behind the Kansas Union.
The Spencer Foundation was established in 1949 by Kenneth Spencer and his wife, and has continued to contribute to KU long after Mr. Spencer's death in 1960. The Kenneth Spencer Research Library and his home in Mission Hills are but a few of Spencer's trips to KU to help him is some evidence for the Dean of the School of Medicine.
(1)
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KUAC selects pompon squad for next year
junior; Lisa Cave, Dodge City sophomore;
Denise White, Kansas City, Kan.,Junian;
Maria Morrell, Kansas City, Kan.,Junan;
Maria Moss, Kansas City, Kan.;Junan,
Hume, Topea sophomore; Karen Smith,
Shawnee sophomore; Karen Fleeger,
Lawrence junior; Debbie Blaylock,
Freshman; freshman, alternate; Susan
Lytle, Shawnee Mission sophomore;
alternate.
The University of Kansas yell leaders and pompom girls were recently combined into a group called the KU spirit squad. The second half of the group, formerly called the UKY, was led by the eighth judge appointed by the University of Kansas Athletic Corporation (KUAC).
Last night's final troys lasted five and one-half hours and the squad members were very excited.
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