KU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol. 86 No.142
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Cook joins pro draft See page 7
Tuesday, June 8, 1976
Primaries to end today
From the Kansan's News Services
President Gerald Ford could come to Kansas City in August within striking distance of a first ballot nomination if he makes it through the primary. President Obama and New Jersey primaries,
To do that, Ford must beat challenger Ronald Reagan in his home state of California. If Ford wins in California's 167 delegates—along with 164 in Ohio and New York—and he wins the ballot, he will be 1,100 delegates. He needs 1,130 to be nominated on the first ballot.
Pollis indicate that Reagan is favored to win California's winner-take-all primary, but his margin over Ford has been declining.
Kansas governor Robert Bennett said yesterday he didn't think the tight race for delegates between Reagan and Ford would be decided in today's primaries.
In the Democratic races, Jimmy Carter will try to resurrect his early psychological
"It still looks like a dead heat," Bennett said. The race wasn't be broken until the end of the season.
edge over the other candidates, following recent defeats by Sen. Frank Church, D-Utah and Governor Jerry Brown of California.
If Carter wins all three primaries he would be within 350 delegates of the required 1405. He's favored to win in Ohio as well, and he's running second to Brown in California.
Brown and Hubert Humphrey, D-Minn. have been calling upon New Jersey voters to support uncommitted delegate slates in Ohio and New Jersey.
Here's a look at today's primaries:
For the record
Max Bickford, executive officer of the Kansas Board of Regents since 1961, will retire from the post Nov. 1.
"I've been treated excellently by the board as well as the 30 board members I've worked with in the last 18 years," he said. "I can't going to be easy to walk out of the room."
The Board of Regents has begun a search for Bickford's replacement and will name a successor before Bickford's departure in November.
"We just want to take it easy, do some fishing, play a little golf and just relax," he said.
a new assistant to the dean of men has been hired to work with residents and staff members of scholarship halls.
Robert W. Rozelle, 31, will begin a new half-time position in the Office of Residence Halls on July 1.
Rozelle will continue doctoral study in speech communications and human relations
He is currently the acting Director of Continuing Education in Reference Services and has been McCallum Hall's director.
Lawrence S. Wrightman Jr., professor of psychology at George Peabody College for Teachers in Shreveport, will become chairman of the University of Louisiana at LA.
Wrightman, 44, holds a B.A. and an M.A. in psychology from Southern Methodist University and a Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Minnesota.
He taught at Minnesota and at Halmine University in St. Paul, Minn., before joining the faculty at George Peabody in 1958. He has been a visiting professor at the University of Hawaii and the Clarence Graduate School. He now directs a doctoral training program in social psychology at Peabody.
Stephen Goldman, associate professor of English, received the H. Bernard Fink Award for outstanding classroom teaching.
Six University of Kansas faculty members were selected as winners of three teaching awards announced at commencement exercises May 24 in Memorial
three amoco Foundation, Inc., awards went to O. Maurice Joy, associate professor of business; Ferdinic Lovich, associate professor of law; and Mackey
The Chancellor's Teaching awards were awarded to Peyfer, associate professor of health, physical education and recreation, and Max Allen, Hashinger
All of the prizes carry a $1000 cash award.
Tom Greerson, associate vice chancellor for business affairs, will become associate university director of business and fiscal affairs for the University of Kansas Medical Center June 1. Greerson becomes the chief fiscal officer for the Med Center.
Greeason has worked for the University since 1968 as assistant comptroller, assistant to the vice chancellor for business affairs, assistant vice chancellor for business affairs, assistant vice chancellor for budgeting, and associate vice chancellor for budget, accounting, payroll and financial reporting.
The Kansas University Endowment Association announced assets of $50,511,782 at its annual meeting in May. The amount is an Endowment Association record. Olin Petithef was elected chairman of the Endowment Association, succeeding Lloyd Rumpenthal.
In other business, it was announced that the building that houses the Endowment Association, formerly the CRES building, will be named Irvin Youngberg Hall, a new facility for the organization.
Dennis Quinn, professor of English, testified recently in U.S. District Court in 1985 that the courts' regulations on prosecution in an obscenity trial were without serious literary value.
Quinn, also director of the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program, was a witness at the trial of Alvin Goldstein and James Buckley and the Milky Way.
See RECORD page 8
California
DELEGATES: 280 Democrat, 187
Republican.
PRECINCTS: 24.080.
FORMAT: Democrat elect 210 delegates proportional to the vote in congressional districts and 70 more statewide in connection to the delegates won in the districts.
Republicans award all 167 delegates to the winner of the popular vote.
CANDIDATES Democrats, Brown,
McCormack, Wallace, McCormack,
Harris.
Republican: Ford, Reagan.
POLL'S CLOSE: 11 p.m. EDT.
New Jersey
Mother and child at the park.
DELEGATES: 108 Democrat, 67
Republican.
**FORMAT:** Democrat have a nonbinding beauty contest and a separate delegate election contest for 27 at-large delegates and 8 in congressional districts. The Democrats, and elect seven delegates at large and four in each of the 15 congressional districts.
CANDIDATES: Democrat; Carter, Church, Jackson, Wallace and McCormack are in the preferential content. In the recent elections, Mr. Cook partially committed to Humphrey and partially to Brown, and Carter, Church, Jackson, Wallace, McCormack, Udall and
Republicans: An uncommitted slate See PRIMARIES page 9
Enrollment blues
Staff photo
While Jane Eldridge, Lawrence second-year law student, seems to take the pressures of last Friday's enrollment in strids, her children Nanny, age 3, and Giffy, age 7, were
New computers to be tested soon
By DAVID STEFFEN
The University of Kansas' new $5 million computer system is being installed and will be available for use on July 1, John Seitz, assistant director of operations at the computation center, said yesterday.
Computer hardware that arrived in late May is being installed by vendor field engineers and will be ready for testing by computation center officials by mid-June, he said.
In October 1972, a special committee analyzed the long-range computation needs of the University and determined the technical features necessary to fill them. Bids were submitted by four vendors in three categories: administrative, instructional and research integrated systems.
An Evaluations Task Force of 70 persons met last September to evaluate systems on the basis of the cost of a computer's total annual energy use. The IBM Computer unit system, using an IBM Computer for
administrative work and a Honeywell computer for instructional and research purposes, was approved by the State Division of Purchases. Contract negotiations with the vendors were completed several weeks ago.
KULEASE the Honeywell system, with the option to buy it, for $2.7 million, to be paid over seven years. The IBM system will cost $2.3 million, to be paid over six years. Part of that cost is an initial down payment on the computer. The rest of the cost is payment on the lease, which also gives KU the option to buy the equipment.
After the computers are installed, computation center personnel will test them to ascertain that the system meets standards that were established in earlier tests. The system will begin June 11 for the IBM system and June 14 for the Honeywell system.
A detailed conversion process from the old system to the new system is underway.
sessions, special consulting staff and a conversion assistance telephone number have been created to make the transition smooth for users.
The computation center staff is convinced the extra effort involved in the conversion is justified by the benefits of the new system, Seitz said.
The major advantage of the new system is speed. Paul Wolfe, computation center director, said "the savings in terms of time will be substantial."
The turnaround time, which is the time between submission of and return of a program, will be minutes for short programs, but many longer programs have been hours under the old system.
Part of the speed is due to the Express Small Programs (ESP) system," Seitz said.
"I (ESP) is an express system whose hardware may be the fastest in the country. Students can feed small programs into the computer through ESP and have them printed out an extraordinary rate of 1600 lines per minute," he said.
Summer school breaks record; 7.335 enrolled
First day enrollment for the University of Kansas summer session has risen to a record 7,335 students this year, Gil Dyck, dean of admissions and records, said yesterday.
Both the Lawrence campus and the KU Medical Center show increased over last year's enrollment with 5,813 and 1,522 students respectively. This total is 289 more than last summer's first-day enrollment of 7,046 students.
"We've had an increase of about 250
'students for the last five years,' Dyke said.
The increases are part of a trend that has been developing for the past several years.
"Easy Access" enrollment and late registration should boost total summer enrolment over last summer's 7,800 total, Dyck said.
Although a record number of students enrolled last Friday, Dyck said the procedure went smoothly and no major problems occurred. Only one class is in jeopardy of being dropped for a lack of students, he said.
Fourteen days of orientation are scheduled
Transfer students are invited to attend orientation sessions at the University of Kansas for the first time this summer, but few are expected to attend, William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday.
Balfour said that because more than 300 students who plan to transfer to KU attended orientation sessions in April, he didn't expect many transfer students to attend summer orientation.
Balfour said about 2600 students may attend the 14 one-day summer orientation sessions that are held to prepare freshmen for their academic year. Students with advisers to plan their schedules, receive student identification cards and talk with representatives of campus organizations and university programs. Students may also take placement examinations.
Two new topics that student services groups will discuss with freshmen are career planning and special tips for minority students. Other student services discussed are reading and study skills, personal growth through assertiveness training and decision-making and extracurricular activities.
Some students have come from Oklahoma, Ohio and New Jersey. Orientation directors were surprised that they said that far to attend the session, Balfour said.
Balfour said that more parents attended the sessions with the students last year than they did in 2015. Balfour program, which includes a conference with the dean of the student's school, a session on student services with Balfour, a bus tour of the campus hosted by the KU Alumni Association.
...
Burnett's Mound revisited Justice Robert H. Kaul of the Kansas Supreme Court described last Sunday, from atop Burnet's Mound, the 1968 Topeka
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
tornado cut a swath 12 miles long that changed the city. The tornado devastated the apartment complex that Justice Kaul was
Topeka tornado recalled
By GREG BASHAW
Campus Editor
It is one decade ago to the day in Topesau at 7 p.m. The sky is dark-gray as the swell of a storm rolls over.
"Rather gloomy weather is expected to continue over the Topea area tonight," the state weather bureau reported that afternoon.
High above the city on Burnet's Mound on the southwest side of town a policeman and a radio announcer peer at the sky from their cars. By 7 p.m., they sighted a massive funnel cloud winding towards the airplane whose sirens sound their warning: tortured.
Robert H. Kau, a justice of the Kansas Supreme Court, can see the police car stop Burnett's Mound from the patio of his second-story apartment at 29th and Gage Avenues in Waco. In Waco, along "tornado alley," where funnel clouds are often sighted.
The Kauls and the other residents of the
By 7:15 the sky is black and the two cars are racing to the bottom of the hill. The tornado roars over the east side of the Mound. Kaul has never seen anything like this. A massive, twisting black funnel hurls dirt and trees through the air. Kaul and his wife rush to an apartment below and cover themselves with cushions just as bricks begin tumbling around them as a freight train, as loud as a battleship broadsides.
Leveling stretches of land sometimes a half-mile wide, the tornado moved northeastward, ripping through Washburn University, stripping the College Hill and through it. The tornado passed through the main business district. By the time the tornado hit the Oakland area on the east side of the city and twisted planes into piles of wreckage at the airport, 17 people were dead and hundreds were injured. It was the worst tornado in Kansas' history from June 26 to August, after news that the twister had touched down in Manhattan and Jarbado.
In Topeka alone, final damages to insured buildings totaled $41.9 million; 814 homes were damaged or destroyed. On June 10, the city declared an emergency Guard and Forbes Air Force Base controlled traffic and guarded the demolished east side of the city from looting. President Lyndon B. Johnson declared Topeka a viable for emergency federal assistance.
apartment complex near Gage Blvd. were among the first Topekans hit by the tornado that ravaged the city on June 8, 1966. The apartment complex's three buildings and scores of new homes nearby were demolished, beginning the 12-mile path of destruction the tornado would carve through Topeka.
The settlers' legend that Burnett's Mound would shelter the city from any appalling storm.
The tornado also made a mockery of man and his structures. Houses were reduced to kindling, cars lay in heaps like crumpled timber and the roofs were flattened in areas looked as if they had been bombed.
More devastating was nature's wrath against itself. Trees were tossed and twisted. Most of the oak's in front of the storm were blown out, the scars of the storm on their trunks.
For many who endured the storm,
memories seem as permanent as the
snow.
"I'll never forget this even if I live to be a thousand," the Maven Brother said the day.
Ten years later she says, "I remember it every bit of it I'd like to forgive the thing but I can't."
When the tornado tore toward Mrs. Bennett's home in the Oakland district, on the east side of the city, she was with neighbors in the front yard of her house.
"A huge, white cloud with a tail on it came upwards and I ran quick next door and got into a coal chute in the basement," she said. "The tornado sure made a horrible noise when it struck but the worst part was coming back out of the basement."
Live electric wires dangled on the street, torn and chipped bark was imbedded in houses, and people were crying outside. The house was safe, sheltered by the larger house was safe, sheltered by the larger
See TORNADO page 6
2
Tuesday, June 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Church refused TV time
WASHINGTON—A request by Sen. Frank Church that the NBC, CBS and ABC networks be forced to sell him five minutes of simultaneous air time last night to match a Jimmy Carter broadcast was rejected by the Federal Communications Commission Monday, an FCC source said.
Carter had taken the unusual step of broadcasting a taped campaign message on each of three networks at the same time Sunday night, the source said.
Church and Carter are on the Democratic presidential primary ballots in California, New Jersey and Ohio today.
Church complained to the FCC over the weekend by telephone that the networks would not sell him simultaneously prime time last night, and the FCC called an emergency meeting of four commissioners. They voted 4-0 to turn Church down, the source said, and he was notified by telephone.
the SOUTH and he held the FCC agreed with the networks that they had fulfilled their equal time obligations to Church, since the networks had sold him air time during the past two weeks.
Gov. blamed for bad roads
TOPEKA - The Democraticocrat reserve of the Kansas House said yesterday that the roadblock tactics of Gov. Robert P. Bennett during the 1976 legislative session may have been inaccurate, according to a report by the group.
Carlin said his remarks were prompted by news stories that some Kansas counties were tearing up blacktop roads that had deteriorated and were replacing them with crushed rock roads, which are less expensive to maintain than blacktop roads.
"We've spent three decades building blacktop roads in rural Kansas," said Carlin. "Now, because the 1978 legislature was more concerned with the governor's highway theory than with real existing city and county needs, rural Kansas and agricultural interests have again taken a backseat in the list of priorities of the government."
"This backseat position is appalling since Kansas farmers must have good roads to set their crops to market." Carlin said.
"Ordinary, legislative blame for ineffectiveness should be shared," he said. But this time the blame runs straight to the governor's front doorstep.
"The problem is not with me," she said.
O'Neill acts a boost
WASHINGTON—Rep. Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill, so far unopposed in his bid to speaker of the next House of Representatives if Democrats retain control, got an A-10 vote in the House on Wednesday.
"I am recommending that he would make a good speaker," Albert said of the Massachusetts Democrat who is now majority leader.
Albert announced Saturday that he wouldn't re-election to the House in which he has served 99 years, including five as speaker.
As O'Neill made his candidacy formal with a letter asking the support of the 267 House Democrats, the campaigns of several potential successors to him at the time were threatened.
Rep. John J. McFall, D-Calif., appealed for support in another letter to Democritus. He cited his experience as whip, the Who, 3 post in the party leadership. Other contenders for the leader's post are Reps. Phillip Burton of California, Christine Miller of Wisconsin; and Richard Bolton of Missouri, a senior member of the Rules Committee.
Joplin renames street
JOPLIN, Mo.—The Joplin City Council voted Monday night to rename Broadway, a landmark street in the city, as Langston Hughes-Broadway in comedy.
His memory still proved a controversial subject at the council meeting, which attracted an estimated crowd of 230 people with speakers about every divided for round one.
A resolution of the Robert S. Thurman American Legion Post was read into the council's record. The resolution accused Hughes of "being a Communist, an agent of the Nazi Party."
Attorney William O. Russell presented a petition signed by about 1,600 people changing the name of Broadway, which extends from downtown Joplin to
In deference to the mixed opinions and emotions, the council split the difference and approved Langston Hughes-Broadway, rather than Langston Hughes Lincoln.
Film shows rape defenses
Pettit is directing a movie, in this that will show rape prevention methods.
Few women are immune to the possibility of being raped, but with training most women could prevent an attempted rape. Polly Pettit of the Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service, said yesterday.
Local volunteers are producing the 13-minute film, which also is being filmed locally. It is being funded by a $2,100 grant from the Governor's Committee on Criminal Administration. The grant covers a new member receive a salary, Petit said.
The film is based on the experiences of three rape victims. The film's purpose, Pettit said, is to dispel some myths about rape and to teach women against rape.
She said that one way a woman could protect herself was by avoiding the appearance of vulnerability. A woman who walks assertively and acts as if she knows where she is going is less likely to be raped or a woman who appears unassertive, she said.
Planning is another way a woman can avoid an attack. A woman can let family or
The film will show methods of self-defense for women who are confronted by an intruder.
We Write
friends know where she is going, have her car keys ready before reaching the car and check inside the car before getting in, Pettit said.
"Self-defense includes both physical and verbal methods," Pettit said. "A woman who can't physically overpower an attacker can be able to tell her way out of the situation."
Motorcycle Insurance
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
A state-wide rape prevention conference will be held in October to help other communities start educational programs, Pettit said. Communities that commit themselves to developing programs will receive a copy of the film.
A copy of the film is available to any group requesting one through the Rape Victim Support Service. Copies may also be delivered through the department of radio- TV-film.
"The Continuing American Revolution"
1967 Summer Theatre Festival
1967 Summer Theater Festival
Summer theatre offers three plays
By SUSAN APPLEBURY
In celebrating the Bicentennial, the University is presenting three American plays: "The White House Murder Case," "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf," and "Guy and Dolla." The University Theatre is also sponsoring the presentation of 'Lay My Burden' a live docu-tormat by the Kansas City Player
The documentary is based on materials collected by B. A. Botkins, a prominent folklorist of the early 1800s. Botkins intertwined with the community and exploring their reactions to freedom.
The documentary, directed by Wilbur Goodseal, will be presented Sunday, June 13. The performance will begin at 2 p.m. Tickets are available at the theater.
The first production of the KU Summer Theatre season is "The White House Murder Case" by Jules Feiffer. It will be presented June 30, and July 1, 2. 3.
"The White House Murder Case," a black comedy satire of our political system, was written in 1970. It is set in a battlefield in Brazil and in the White House.
The government bungles a secret mission in Brazil by killing hundreds of American soldiers with nerve gas. Meanwhile, some investigators suspect that the murders the first lady with a pickup ticket.
With an election six weeks away, the president is worried about public opinion and how to respond.
Feiffer is a nardonic caricoon who has also written "Little Murders" and "Knock
"By moving reality one step further to the outrageously grotesque, Feefer succeeded in letting us laugh at ourselves for being the dupe in a game of high political power
The members of the cast are: Dawn,
Bruce Sayles; Cutler, Duane LeDage;
Pratt, Tim Connors; Sweeney, Alan Gordon;
Mrs Hale, Mara Grundt; Stiles,
Coleen Hewes; Mrs Hewes; Parson,
David Stiles; President Hone, Irmie; and
Weems, Bruce Jones.
Carol Bilgen, director of theatre at Clark College, Dubuque, Ia., is the guest director of the production.
play." Rufus Cadigan, director of the play,
said yesterday.
One of the dominant American works of the 1980's, the play was presented at KU several years ago. Richard Kelton, a member of that production, is now on Broadway repeating his role in a production directed by Albee.
The drama is set during an evening in the home of a professor at a small college. The professor, George, and his wife, Martha, have returned drunk from a party. Martha has invited a young professor and his wife to stop by for a nightcap.
Biltgen see the evening as a "ritualistic purgation of years of frustration and bitterness built up by the leading characters, George and Martha, through the games and pretenses that they have used to cope with reality.
"At the same time, the events of that evening initiate the younger couple, Nick and Honey, into a world of personal vulnerability." Biltz said.
"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" by
bord Albeen will be presented July 7, 6
and August 2.
The cast of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" is: George, David Cook; Martha, Maureen Hawley; Nick, Michael Wise; and Honey, Heather Laird.
The final production of the summer festival will be a musical, "Guys and Dolls." The play will be presented July 16, 17, 22, 23 and 24.
"Guys and Dolls" was written by Frank
Court delivers decision on "discriminatory" laws
WASHINGTON (AP) - Employees and others seeking to prove charges of racial discrimination were handed a setback by the Supreme Court yesterday.
The court ruled 7-2 that laws that "bear more heavily on one race than another" are not necessarily unconstitutional for that reason.
Although the case dealt with employment discrimination, the greatest impact of the decision may be in other areas such as bousing and schools.
"The school desegregation cases have also adhered to the basic equal protection principle that the invidious quality of a law claimed to be racially discriminatory must ultimately be traced to a racially discriminatory purpose," he said.
Justice Byron R. White said that the Supreme Court's previous rulings in cases involving jury selection and congressional apportionment had "not embraced the proposition that a law or other official act, without regard to whether it reflects a law of their own jurisdiction, constituted solely because it has a racially disproportionate impact.
Specifically, White rejected arguments of blacks that they suffer unconstitutional discrimination because they fail four times in court. Most police police recruits in the District of Columbia.
In other action, the court ruled that consumer advocate Ralph Nader could use an airline that "bumped" him from a flight case it had sold more tickets than it had tests.
The two dissenters, Justice William J. Brennan Jr. and Thurgood Marshall, did not discuss the constitutional issue but said the case had been invalidated under Table VII.
They said the court's decision "has the potential of significantly weakening statutory safeguards against discrimination in employment."
The decision was a victory for consumer advocates in their battle against the airline practice of overreserving flights as a hedge against who make reservations but fail to show.
The high court ordered the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which had earlier refused to rule on a case against a defendant.
Nader had presented sufficient evidence to support his claim for damages.
Nader filed the suit after being bumped from an Allegheny Airlines flight from Washington to Hartford, Conn., on April 28, 1972.
nearly 83,000 persons were bumped from airline flights in 1972 and about 76,000 met the same fate in 1973. In each year, this was one of the most successful passengers who arrived on board airplanes.
Harris trial to start despite publicity
LOS ANGELES (AP)—A judge refused yesterday to delay for a year the trial of Symbionese Liberation Army members William and Emily Harris, despite a hearing that many area residents feel the Harris are guilty and deserve harsh punishment.
Superior Court Judge Mark Brandler did agree to a brief continuance so the defense could file appeals. But he said he felt the figures in the defense Commissioned survey did not show "a reasonable likelihood that the Harris cannot receive a fair trial."
Brandler said no delay would diminish the amount of publicity surrounding the cases. Brandler said no delay would diminish the amount of publicity surrounding the cases.
The judge scheduled the trial to begin June 21.
The HarriSES are charged with assault, robbery and kidnapping in connection with a shooting incident at a sporting goods store and the kidnapping outside the store of a van. The van is charged in Alameda County with kidnapping Mika Heart.
Miss Heart also is charged in the store shooting case, but the date of her trial is indefinite because she remains in San Diego for tests which will determine the length of her sentence. The bank oblige a conviction. Brander has entered a plea of innocent for her.
Loesser, a native of Manhattan, Kannas,
Loesser moved to New York and began
writing about people who live in Manhattan,
where "Gues and Doll" is set.
trot, operator of a floating crap game look for a home; and Miss Adelaide, a singer who wants Nathan to go straight and marry her.
The play revolves around Miss Sara Brown, who is in charge of the Save a Soul Project. The characters learn to accept their
Auditions for "Guys and Dolls" were open to members of the lewis community. The audition will be held on Friday, November 7th at 10am.
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Tuesday, June 8, 1976
3
Successor to Balfour being sought nationwide
A search to replace William Bailour, who resigned May 9, as vice-chancellor for student affairs, is being conducted nationwide through advertising.
After more than eight years of troubleshooting for students at the University of Kansas, Balfour said Sunday that he had started to discuss his resignation last April with Del Shankel, executive vice-cancellor.
After Balfour's resignation announcement had been made, a search committee was formed to fill the vice-cancellor office.
The vice-chancellor position is advertised in national educational publications such as the Chronicle, a journal which, according to Balfour, lists "pages and pages" of available positions.
interested persons are encouraged to send in resumes.
Other advertising is done through the Office of Affirmative Action and Shankel's office, Balfour said.
The search is to be completed by Aug 15. according to Balfour.
University Daily Kansan
"There's a lot of satisfaction in the job," he said, "but I want a pace not quite so hectic."
"I'll help wherever I can in the department of physiology and cell biology," he said.
Balfour said that he would move his office to Haworth Hill to continue his teaching responsibilities. He has been involved in physiology (Biology 305) since 1981.
Balfour said he would enjoy getting away from some of the job's frustrations and would devote more time to hobbies.
He said he liked the stage and would out this week for the KU summer festival.
Two government geologists doubt Teton dam strength
Flood waters spread 60 miles downstream from the collapsed Teton Dam Monday, but many people, thought by friends and relatives to be dead, were found alive while the flood continued along the Teton and Snake rivers.
Seven persons are known to be dead, 288 people have been treated for injuries but only five have been discharged.
The 307-foot-high, earthfurd was being
used for the first time when it gave way at
noon.
Fishermen and environmentalists had opposed it, but their lawsuit was dismissed by a federal court. The 4th U.S. Circuit Court appeals upheld the lower court's dismissal.
Two government geologists had
doubt the stability of the canyon
ground the
In 1973, a former Bureau of Reclamation geologist, Shirley Pytlak, warned that the $55-million dam might leak because of the nature of the soil in the area. Testifying in the case, she said 500 gallons of water in minute poured into test holes where the dam was to be built.
"It just soaked it up," she said. "If this much water can be absorbed by drill holes, how much would leak from the whole reservoir!"
Morrison Knudsen Co., which built the dam in a joint venture with Peter Kleviw Sons, Omaha, Neb, has maintained official silence on the break. A spokesman for the company said it was built according to government specifications.
The areas that were flooded and threatened by flooding stretched over 100 miles of the Teton and Snake rivers in eastern Idaho between the dam site and the lake. Because of this, which is also weakened by age and kept below capacity pending replacement.
Officials said they believed the dam could no longer be used because there was concern debts might block its outlet.
The Red Cross said at least 3,100 hornes
A Boy Scout troop of 80 listed as missing for more than a day, turned up safe, said Bob Howard, Red Cross spokesman. This reduced the count of missing to about 60. He了 6,000 cattle were lost in the area, a city of 10,000, hardest-hit by the flood.
were destroyed by the floods. Damage was estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars.
The flood water spread Monday to the Blackfoot area, 60 miles downstream, flooding a shopping center, a golf course and a hundred homes.
But upstream, the water was receding in Rexburg and other cities where damage estimates reached $350 million. In upstream areas, there was fear of disease from animal carcasses and water poisoned by farm pesticides.
Some people started removing their belongings from their waterlogged homes, fearing that thieves might take what little was left.
Others had nothing to retrieve. One of the destroyed farms belonged to Harvey Klein, who said he spent 21 years building the place. 18 miles from the dam.
Klein said that when he heard the flood was coming he took his family away first, then they went back to work.
"But then I looked about a quarter of a mile and the water was just rolling 10 feet deep, trees in front of it, nothing but just a few leaves." The water was bringing these trees through.
"I think it was going 15-20 miles an hour,
the water coming over that hill.
"We just barely made it out. It never saved a thing. Everything's gone," said Klein.
His wife Irene said, "I feel a lot of hard work gone. We don't really have anything left. We don't know what we are going to do. But we're glad we've got our kids."
"There's no future here, I don't think," said Mrs. Klein, crying as she looked at shattered buildings and broken farm equipment.
MIAMI (AP)—Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Castro categorically denies his government had anything to do with the assassination of President John F. Kendall.
But Castro has implied that he will reply in kind to further attacks on Cuban government officials in displeasure.
In a speech reported over Havana radio Monday, Castro also said Cuban combat troops were being "gradually withdrawn" from Angola but that civilian personnel were being taken to the newly independent African nation.
Castro denies plot
Speaking in the context of terrorism and what he said were attempts to kill him and other Cuban leaders in the early days of the revolution, Castro said about the Kennedy murder;
"Some imply that such an action could have been retaliation by the Cuban revolution for the actions carried out against the lives of our leaders at that time. In truth, we reiterate that never has the Cuban revolution utilized terrorism.
"I can categorically affirm that the Cuban revolution never had the most minor participation in the death of the president of the United States. John Kennedy."
The CIA planned a number of assassination plots against Castro in the early 1960s, the Senate Intelligence Committee has disclosed.
Castro said, however, that because Cuba had not utilized terrorism overseas in the past, it should be able to do so.
Castro's reference to the Kennedy assassination apparently touched off rumors that Castro himself had been assassinated.
Rumors of Castro's death set off a flurry of activity in some commodity markets in New York on Monday, but diplomatic sources at the United Nations said they had no information that would verify the rumors.
Castro, in the speech which was delivered Sunday in Havana, referred to an attack that day at the Cuban mission to the United Nations, a recent fatal blast at the Cuban Embassy in Lisbon, Portugal, and others and declared:
WASHINGTON (AP) — Great Britain's financial allies rushed to its old yesterday as a billion emergency lending program began to the steep decline in the value of the pound.
The announcement gave the pound much-needed psychological support in world markets. After the announcement the pound rose by 1.75, to $1.75, in one of the best gains in months.
The United States agreed to put up $2 billion of the $5.3-billion program. The U.S. announcement said the program was "in the common interest in the stability and efficient functioning of the international monetary system."
The British central bank can use the money to buy pounds on world money markets. The U.K.'s central bank
Treasury Secretary William E. Strom said there was no way of knowing how much the debt would be paid.
I
Other nations that contributed to the aid effort are Switzerland, Canada, Japan, Sweden, Italy, France, West Germany, Belgium and the Netherlands. The Zurich-based Bank for International Settlement also contributed.
We can make the advantage in your game.
The pound had dropped from $3.02 in early March to about $1.71 at the crossword site.
Britain's pound gains in value
and give you 24 hour service even if we have to work all night.
Borg Strung With Us.
Also in Topeka in the Brookwood Shopping Center.
We treat the stringing of your racket with the same making atention.
String with us the way the professionals do.
So stringing for Borg was a detailed and demanding assignment.
Borg likes his racket strung with gut—almost to a breaking point of 88 pounds. He has lost 5-62 pounds for most players.
When Blori Borg
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"the governments where bandits carry out attacks against Cuban interests should measure to avoid that the Cuban state denies reporting Confirming earlier reports, the Cuban leader said. "We are diminishing the number of civilians in Angola."
Castro said Cuba and the Soviet Union were training the Angolan army and Cuban soldiers would withdraw after the defense of Havana was guaranteed against outside aggression.
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Sotheby's and other auction houses
MUSEUM OF THE YEAR
THE WESTERN GLOBE
1990-2005
--presents
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The 1976 Kansas Theatre Festival
"The Continuing American Revolution"
a live documentary based on materials collected by B. A. Botkins.
Lay My Burden Down
featuring:
2:00 p.m.
in the
University
Theatre
The Black Contemporary Players
of Greater Kansas City
Sunday, June 13
Tickets: $1.50 - K.U. Students: Senior Citizens
$2.50 - Others
---
For reservations and Info, call 864-3982.
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Edward and Naomi Rosto invite you to stop in soon.
4
Tuesday, June 8, 1976
University Dally Kansan
ALL TOGETHER NOW--OH,
IF YOU BELIEVE IN PEANUT
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JIMMY PAN WHOLLSOME INNITURES WAP! © 1976 WYT SPECIAL FEATURES
The summer prospectus
Good morning and welcome to summer school. You're Kansas. What's your excuse for being here?
We've got to admit it. This is an unlikely place to be during the summer. It's a first for me, and I find it more than strange to attend classes when I could be doing one of any number of enjoyable summer activities.
No. And that's where we hope to help you this summer. The Kansas will continue aggressive coverage of the University and its many departments, political arms and interesting people. We'll also cover the city of Lawrence and Douglas County.
That it's all a bit of a pain is magnified when you look at the summer social possibilities. Things just close down don't hev?
Keeping you informed of what can keep you busy will be another goal. Summer theaters on campus and around the Lawrence community abound; the SU has a group of summer films and other events of interest continue to present themselves.
Reviews, news analyses and feature stories will keep you up to date on all aspects of life in Lawrence throughout the summer.
Kelly Scott, Wilmette, Ill., graduate
student, will frequently add her passion,
sports writing, to her duties as managing
editor. The campus editor, Greg Bashaw,
Elmhurst, III., senior and the associate
campus editor, Becci Brenning, Basin,
Wyo., senior, manage a staff of almost 30
reporting students and assign a story to
each reporter every day. Yet Greg
managed to gather about 60 student
names at the Topeka tornado and
Becca plans to be a frequent contributor of
book reviews. Both Greg and Becci will
graduate at the end of summer school.
Our resident literary master, Ron Hartung, is a wizard with words. His comedic ability involves a lot of skill, so vital when juggling words for a headline in a tight spot.
Of course, the Kansan couldn't function without the purveyors of advertising space; so they were not available.
Carol Stallard, Omagna senior, spurs a staff of about 15 salesmen and business employees. That our first paper is larger than theirs is because the book edition bears witness to their prowess.
The Kanan has always had good looks. It's printed with care by people who are proud of their work. In each step, from make up to the camera to the press, it's handled by craftsmen. We appreciate their dedication.
Scientists begin search for Loch Ness monster
DRUMNADROCHIT, Scotland (AP)—An American-sponsored search for the elusive Loch Ness monster is in full swing, using aerial imagery to uncover the murky waters of Britain's largest lake.
The constant flashing, scientists hope, might nure "Nessie," the monster first reported in these waters 1,500 years ago.
Robert H. Rines, president of the Academy of Applied Sciences of Boston, called a news conference yesterday to announce that the hunt was under way. A time-lapse camera is taking an underwater flash picture every 15 seconds.
The team of 24 U.S. engineers and scientists has turned into a tourist attraction
Thousands of visitors swarmed here over the weekend to see the expedition lower masses of electronic equipment 20 to 40 feet deep about 100 yards offshore in Urquhart Bay, along the northwest coast of Loch Ness.
From the surface, the only visible evidence of the search is a pair of small boats moored to an orange buoy in the bay of a range of cables leading to a nearby cabin.
Inside, team members keep a 24-hour watch on a monitor screen. If anything should swim into view, they would activate a battery of lights and stereo cameras that they hope will provide the first three-dimensional pictures of the monster.
Last year a team led by Rires took hazy pictures of something in the lake that led to claims that it was the monster. Most scientists doubted that it was "Nessie," believed to be a long-necked creature with fins, possibly 40 feet long.
Rines is deed of the Franklin Pierce Law School at Concord, N.H.
TUTOR with M.A.
in MATH
It's hard to cover a semester in 8 weeks.
I'm Tieckel Casselman, Hiawata senator.
This summer, I think, promises to be busy.
Of course, there's the inevitable B—
celebration to look forward to, but also a
big challenge. I'm in the world.
I'll be sharing my views with you on all of
these topics and more.
Call 841-3708 after 6:00 p.m.
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I must say I'm glad to be here, even though it's not exactly what I'd like to be doing. This summer I complete my college career, a bit reluctantly I must admit. But I can't think of a better way to spend the last six hours than immersed in the exciting job of editor. I hope that as you read the book, you learn about our job shows, and that as you are kept abreast of the times, you have a better eight weeks because of it.
JAZZY LOVES
WESTERN
Summer choice: think or swim
Something there is, Robert Frost almost said, that doesn't love a classroom. Yet for some students who have few sorts, throughout the fall, the winter, the spring. And now the summer.
By RON HARTUNG
Contributing Writer
Summer school: those words seem mutually exclusive if any words ever did. That lovely, musical word "summer" brings to mind so many things: melting fudgelsicles, the Fourth of July, baseball gloves, sweaty upper lips, sunburned feet, mosquito bites, summer replacement shows. All right, not all the associations are identical, but they're all associated with summer and summer alone. Summer and school simply were not meant for each other.
Yet here we are, the hapless offspring of that loveless marriage.
Attitudes toward summer, school and combinations thereof were formed, for most of us, quite early in our scholastic career. Where schoolwork was drudgery, as viewed through our young eyes, summer was the ultimate recess, a three-month break from school to work on the educational ladder. Summer's sunny hours were to be frittered away in swimming pools, baseball diamonds, Dairy Queens, anywhere but school.
But always those troubling rumors: that for some of our less fortunate brothers school was a year-round affair. Remedial math, remedial spelling, remedial
Letters Policy
Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be signed; KU students must provide their academic standing and hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
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higiene—those the stuff of summer school. What a horrifying thought for those of us who hung up our Crayolas in early June, who for three months would have raised our hands or opened a book for no one. Pity though we might some summer books that it summation pushes, we were still pleased that it was they and not we who had been nabbed.
the VILLAGE SET
But recess is over, and here we are in summer school. Of course we are sophisticated enough to know that university summer classes are not for children but for adults, however. Anxious parents are sometimes concerned when they learn their young
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scholar won't be coming home in May. ("Failing behind in your studies, Sonny?"
Summer classes have their advantages, though. One can wear his sandals and Bermuda shorts to class; he can hope to catch a glimpse of the chancellor in his seersucker leisure suit and he can plead for tightenings as an excuse for late papers.
Undoubtedly, by the time September falls upon us, those "hazy, hazy, crazy days of summer" will seem in retrospect to have been far less lazy and far more crazy than they are now. The school has having attended summer school far more hazy, far more hazy indeed.
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5
University Daily Kansan
Kissinger warns Soviets
SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)—Henry A. Kissinger declared yesterday the United States had the military capacity to protect itself and its friends and wouldn't accept such an adventure as the Soviet-Cuban intervention in Angola, sources reported.
They said the Secretary of State, here for a conference of the Organization of American States-OAS, vowed that the United States was resolved to counter Soviet thrusts that would upset the world's power balance.
Kissinger told reporters earlier in Bolivia that the presidential primary election campaigns in the United States wouldn't allow President Obama to negotiate a new Panama Canal treaty.
They said Kissinger, in his half-hour speech, directed his fire at what he called "selective detente" by the Soviet Union. He defined this as Moscow's active support of Russia in some areas while also pursuing a relaxation of tensions with the United States.
Klissinger was quoted by one source who took notes during the secretary's speech as saying, "We will never again accept another Angola adventure. In matters of global security, equilibrium is its strength." Klissinger added that military details, but the United States maintains a military capacity to protect itself and to protect its friends."
He is in Chile for the annual meeting of OAS foreign ministers after stopovers in the Dominican Republic and Bolivia on an eight-day tour of Latin America.
U. s delegation sources said Kissinger, addressing more than a score of foreign ministers at a closed-door session, told Americans that he was American hemisphere should have no fear.
used Russian armaments and some 12,000 Cuban soldiers to defeat two Western-backed factions in that southwest African region, a long-standing dependence from Portugal last November.
Angola's pro-Soviet Popular Movement
Kissinger, talking about the Cubans, was quoted as saying, "An expeditionary force intervened there in the civil war. This adventure we will not accept again. The United States does not have any national power over Cuba, and that a larger country, like Russia, can use regional troops while it talks about peaceful coexistence."
At his news conference in Santa Cruz, Bolivia, Kissinger said President Ford's administration was committed to a peaceful solution with Panama over the future of the canal. Panama's foreign minister, Aquilino Boyd, responded in Santiago by saying he wanted to publicly thank Kissinger for the reaffirmation.
No one is predicting the outcome. At one point pollster Mervin Flevl declared the public was "incredibly confused" on the crucial issue of nuclear energy development versus guaranteed' safety from radiation.
Calif. to vote on nuclear power
LOS ANGELES (AP)—A proposal on today's primary election ballot in California will provide the first test of public reaction to the question of nuclear power safety. The outcome could have national impact on atomic energy as a source for electricity.
Proposition 15, the Nuclear Power Plants
binding nationwide, are 18 similar proposals
binding nationwide.
The proposition would not, in itself, cause a shutdown or ban nuclear plants. But it would leave in the hands of the legislature a decision by 1979 on whether plants could operate safely and nuclear waste could be stored without risk.
Proposition 15 asks voters to say "yes" or "no" to a safety plan so stringent it could shut down the state's three existing nuclear plants on two plants now under construction.
"It's the most important issue facing Californians in at least 50 years," said Assemblyman Charles Warren, a Democrat from Los Angeles, whose Assembly committee held hearings on the subject last year.
Colorado and Oregon have similar initiatives on their November ballots.
If these requirements are not met, existing plants would have to reduce output to 60 per cent of licensed capacity in 1981 and increase it to 108 unless the safety阀 changed.
Utility companies say this would force them to seek alternate sources of electricity, increasing expense and possible pollution.
The controversial proposal also would remove the utility companies' shield of a $600 million liability limit in the event of a nuclear disaster.
In months of emotional campaigning, utility companies have thrown millions into their effort to defeat the measure, which will be necessary and threatens economic disaster.
"I's the people against the money," insisted David Personen, a San Francisco attorney who drafted Prop. 15 and saw it as an opportunity to promote policies on panies and radiation-threatened customers.
Proponents of the measure repeatedly raised the spectre of a "nuclear accident" because the nation's more than 50 nuclear reactor plants were in danger of slow death for perhaps 30,000 Americans.
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Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. did not take a stand on the issue. Only days before the election, he signed into law three nuclear safety bills approved by the legislature.
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The bills were seen as a milder alternative to Prop. 15 which might discourage some voters from approving the more extreme ballot measure. None of the three plans would affect the state's three existing plants or the two under construction.
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Abzug urges retainment of CIA files
WASHINGTON (AP)—Chairwoman Bella S. Abzug of the House government information subcommittee urged the new Senate Intelligence Committee on Monday to block CIA plans to destroy files of improper and illegal activities.
"It seems the CIA wants to avoid the mistake that cynics claim that Richard Nixon made—that he should have burned the tapes," she said in a statement.
Rep. Abuqzab released a sheaf of letters she wrote in an effort to prevent destruction of the files primarily on CIA antiwar surveillance activities in the early 1970s.
She wrote Central Intelligence Director George Bush, "I urge you to rethink your request and to withdraw it."
records relating to assassinations of foreign leaders and other matters which may be of containing interest to various congressional committees."
"Your request," she said at another point, "presumably would include files and
Bush testified to Rep. Abzug's subcommittee that the CIA wishes to destroy its Operation CHAOS and other domestic surveillance files because it wants to put that period behind it and feels the CIA has no business keeping the files.
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McCall's
"Put Yourself in our Shoes"
Downtown Lawrence
6
Tuesday, June 8.1976
University Daily Kansan
Tornado . . .
From page one
homes around it. But the rest of the neighborhood was destroyed.
"We always had a close, tight-kitty shirt. It was blue, she said. After that it boke up, it was all over."
Mrs. Bennett still lives in Topeka, but in a different house that she dislikes because it
"I just get frantic when about any storm blows up and the worst part of it is that they can attack you."
towe up and the worst part of it is that there ain't a basement handy', she says. One of the devastated areas in Topaka was the Washuburn University campus. The tornado cut diagonally through campus, leaving no room for math and destroying five major buildings.
"The tornado changed the look of the whole campus," Lloyd Durow, director of the physical plant at Washburn, said. "One of the reasons is that we had to move and the next day there were none."
Final damage estimates for the campus were $8 million and 124,000 square feet of classroom space. Classes for the summer fall sessions had to be held at other sites.
Washburn's clean-up after the tomato and its eventual reconstruction are representative of Topeka's recovery from the disaster. From the shells of buildings built by Topeka, Washburn's washburn rebuilt and expanded into a modern camp with worth more than $30 million.
"Returning alumni can't believe how much different campus looks." Durow said. The comment we get most from people is "They're not going to the storm is, 'All the trees are gone!'"
toy Reynolds was bowling when the storm hit. Weather reports had him walking back and forth from the bowling alley to a window to look at the sky. When he saw the funnel cloud it was only 300 feet from the building.
"It was worse than Pearl Harbor because the damage was instant," Reynolds, who fought in World War II, said. "After the storm there was nothing but devastation."
Kenneth Grate, who lived in an apartment building at 12th and Kansas Ave., was trapped under the rubble of his demolished kitchen for hours after the storm.
He heard the civil defense siens but thought they were police or ambulance siens. When a driving min gushes into his car, he sees no injuries without seeing the twister approaching.
"I'd no sooner closed the windows when they popped right out," he said. "Then the mirror on the wall stuck straight out and the just floated right out the kitchen window."
The next thing Gate remembered was regaining consciousness in a pile of plaster, but he wasn't sure. He laid there for several hours until the police spotted his feet sticking out from
under the pile of rubble and pried him out,
Of course not everyone now living in
Toppeka was around on the evening of
the storm.
"We have a few staff members, mostly young guys from out of the area, who've never even heard of the storm," Dick King of the Topeka Daily Capital said.
But King remembers it well. He reported on the tornado's damage minutes after it laid the city low. The Capital's phone and power lines were blown down so King and other reporters had to guess which parts of the city to canvass in search of stories. They wrote their copy in a hotel room by candelight.
"Because we had no communication lines and it was impossible to drive anywhere, we had no idea that the tornado had even hit up the airport until the next day. King Clementine. We did not correct the tornado to strike the entire city, but it touched down all over."
For the first time since just after the storm, Justice Kaul climbed Burnett's Mound Sunday, a clear and almost windless sky. The windblows from the tornado followed through Topeka.
"It came on the left side of the Mound, a black funnel about 300 yards wide at the base," he said, making an arc with his arms. "If you follow a line from here to the Capitol building you get an idea of the tornado's course. It was just that straight."
The Midwest Health Exposition and Conference that opened this morning in Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City, Mo., will feature University of Kansas Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and University of Kansas Medical Center public relations director Helen M. Sims in a public relations event on Monday at the University of Kansas Image-Who's Responsible?" according to Pris Owings, public relations director for the conference.
Med Center hosts meeting
Kaul inglued awhile on the Mound and then went home to his apartment at 29th and Gage Blvd. It's the same one he and his wife ran on of the day of the storm. Neither the man nor the woman were stop Burnett's Mound minutes before the tornado live in the city or the state.
Owings said 7,000 people are expected to attend the three-day conference.
Other Med Center staff members who are speakers or members of panel discussions are encouraged to serve as instructor in radiology; Doris Gelgely, dean of the School of Nursing; Larry Alkire, director of pharmacy computer application; and director of emergency medical training.
Thursday morning sessions will be conducted by Owings; Peter Beyer, assistant professor of dietetics and nutrition; Lowell Flore, coordinator of training; and Jean Taylor, director of education and respiratory therapy.
Viola Unrush, assistant director of nursing, was the program coordinator for
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A Pacemaker award winner
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--864-4810
Business Office--864-4235
Published at the University of Kansas weekdays during the academic year except holidays. All other hours are 8:30 AM to 5:30 PM and all are $2 a weekender or $18 a year in *Bachelor's* or $19 amateur or $29 year. No late fees. Admission is free unless already registered.
Editor Dierck Caselman
Managing Editor Kelly Scott
Campus Editor Greg Haakwu
Associate Campus Editor Beecl Breining
Copy Chief Ron Hartung
Dialer John Koulany
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager
Promotion Manager
Ad Manager
Marketing Manager
Carol Stallard
Jim Marquart
Irene Kwon
Sarah McAney
Jolene McCennaghan
News Advisor Bob Gluex
Business Advisor Mel Adams
Publisher David Dary
Member Associated Collegiate Press
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The journalism camp provides three weeks of college work in print journalism and digital media.
STEREO COMPONENTS
Drawing, art history and design are required courses In the art camp, but students select other courses, such as History of Art, said William Bullock, art camp director.
High school campers begin activities
Music and art are the main divisions of the Midwestern music and Art Camp. Camper's in music and art will be on campus from June 20 to July 17. Journalism campers will be here June 6-25, and speech and debate campers will study here from June 13 to July 24. An astronomy section, which meets twice a week, will meet will meet from June 20 to July 3. A junior high division of the music and art camp will be in session June 10-18.
Approximately 2,000 high school students will take time out from their summer schedules to receive specialized training at the University of Kansas.
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The camp provides an environment for concentrated study, Foster said, and is also a program to help high school students decide their futures.
provide a unique opportunity for students to perform, which they cannot get in their homeoutets," Robert Foster, director of the camp, said yesterday.
Marines and Col. Arnald D. Gabriel of the U.S. Air Force Band.
"The goal of the (music) camp is to
The theme of the music camp will be Bicentennial. There will be a celebration at Memorial Stadium with a music show and the largest fireworks display in the Midwest, according to Foster. KU and the Lawrence Jaycees will sponsor the event.
Each section of the camp is taught by KU
instructors, graduate students and guest
instructor.
Guest conductors for camp music include
Sir Vivian Dunn of Her Majesty's Royal
Taste the Sixties with
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Reading is a tonic that refreshes and renews.
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But now, with the help of Reading Dynamics, you can handle your "must" reading in far less time. You'll be able to read a complete report on the morning traint or a lengthy memo while waiting for a long-distance call to be completed. You'll have more time for the "action" business on your desk, and for the extra reading that makes you more valuable in your job. In short, you'll be able to do more new responsibility and move ahead in your career.
Summer classes begin Monday and Tuesday, June 14 and 15. Each class meets 7 times, 7-9:30 p.m.
Phone 843-6424
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, June 8.1976
7
Cook forgoes KU for NBA draft
Norm Cook, leading scorer and rebounder for the University of Kansas' basketball team, led Jayhawks next season, Cook, the Jayhawks captain, has decided to keep his name in
Sports
today's National Basketball Association player draft.
Look is one of 26 underclassman, a record number, who have applied as hardship cases for the player draft. Under the hardship rules, college basketball players may be drafted by the NBA before having played out their eligibility with their schools.
Cook's participation in the player draft
will make him ineligible for further collective basketball competition.
"I've had several teams show an interest in me, which is the reason I plan to stay in the running," Cook said yesterday from his office at the University of Missouri. The teams that have expressed interest.
Cook, a 6-8, 210-pound junior, average
16.0 points, 7.9 rebounds and 6.4
assists.
Ted Owens, KU basketball coach, said, "I'm very sorry to lose Norm, but at the same time, there was a great deal of interest in him by the pros. With the possibility of a merger between the NBA and ABA, I will probably mean con- centration, not just interest entering salaries. Norm felt it was in his best interest to turn professional at this time."
Cook recently returned from the U.S.
Olympic basketball trials
Olympic basketball trial did not
manage to return.
The four teams that want to join the NBA are the Denver Nuggets, New York Nets, Indiana Pacers and San Antonio Spurs, Vance said.
"I felt honored to have been a part of the trials," he said.
The Spirits of St. Louis franchise was asked to Upson after the past season and has not, but will.
"If the other four teams want to merge
the 15-man squad, but said the right decisions were made for the team.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) - Four of the six American Basketball Association teams have decided in a secret meeting in Chicago to pay $4.5 million each to enter the rival National Basketball Association, General Manager of the Kentucky Colonels said Monday.
ABA teams plan merger
The Olympic trials were headed by Dean Smith, head coach for the University of North Carolina. Smith played for KU when Phog Allen's team won the national championship in 1952 and was runner-up in 1953.
Vance said the Colonels and the Spirits of St. Louis voted against the move to disband the ABA and merge with the NBA and that the other four teams agreed to buy out the Colonels and the Spirits. The latter team is expected to resume operations in Utah next season.
Cook said, "Coach Smith was a great guy and will be a good coach for the Olympic
they are going to have to buy the Kentucky franchise," Vance said.
He said Kentucky decided not to go along with the merger idea because "it's just not a very realistic approach to our way of thinking."
"We don't know yet with this." Vance said. "If the NBA is going to do with it, Vance said. If the Nets are going to do with it, Vance said."
The Louisville Times reported on the meeting in a front-page analysis story in its late editions. It said the Colonels and the ABA are dea, for all practical purposes.
NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien said this week the ABA has made no formal proposal to cut its salary.
"At no time have we discussed specific teams," he said. "Obviously, any proposal the ABA makes will be given full consideration by the NBA."
Baseball Standings
By The Associated Press AMERICAN LEAGUE
W W L Pet. GB
New York 24 15 37 59
Baltimore 24 15 40 59
Charlotte 24 26 48 59
Cleveland 22 26 458 514
Detroit 22 26 458 514
Milwaukee 10 15 40 59
Kansas City 21 28 10 .633 —%
Texas 21 28 10 .633 —%
Chicago 25 24 8 .510 6%
Missouriota 25 24 8 .510 6%
Oakland 25 24 8 .510 6%
Indiana 25 24 8 .510 6%
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Mendel* Games
Texas 6, Baltimore 10
Minnesota 7, Cleveland 3
Kansas City 10, Detroit 0
Only games scheduled
W L W. Pet. GB
Philadelphia 20 18 57 69
Pittsburgh 29 22 38 59
Baltimore 29 22 38 59
St. Louis 23 29 442 13½
Los Angeles 23 29 442 13½
Chicago 23 29 442 13½
Montreal 17 17 17 17
West
Cincinnati 32 21 651
Los Angeles 21 22 835
San Diego 22 22 194
Houston 27 20 482
Alabama 27 20 482
Seattle San Francisco 21 33 113
Pittsburgh 5, Chesteriit 1
St. Louis 6, Houston 7
Columbus 4, San Diego, n
Pittsburgh 3, Dallas, n
Only games scheduled
NHL may terminate debt-ridden Scouts
MONTREAL (AP)—The Kansas City Scouts were not represented on Monday's meetings of the National Hockey League committees and the league's finance committee.
The Scout's absence heightened speculation that the team's two-year run would be ended Tuesday by the NHL Board of the Governors.
The Scouts are $5 million in debt, a reported $1.75 million of which is owed the league's member teams. No progress has been made with attempts to secure new financial backing.
Rovals devour Detroit, 10-0
KANSAS CITY (AP)—With Frank White drive in five runs with a single and a bases-loaded triple and Steve Busby hurled six innings of two-hit ball in leading the Kansas City Royals to a 10-4 trouncing of the Detroit Tigers Monday night.
The Royals scored three runs in the second inning and two in the sixth off Vern Ruhle, 4-2, then turned it into a runaway with five runs in the seventh.
Busby, 2.1, was relieved in the seventh by Mark Littell.
Busby made only his eight start of the year since being hampered by sliness and stiffness.
his strongest showing so far. He had three strikeouts and four walks in the six innings.
The Tigers mounted only one serious threat against him, in the third. Bruce Kimmel led off with a walk and two later Chuck Scrivener singled into right field. With runners at first and second Ben Ogilvie tapped harmlessly to the mound.
Royals shortstop Patate sole second base in the sixth inning to run his theft total to 28 and regain the league leadership from Oakland's Bill North.
Before the game, Ots and Dennis Leonard were honored as Royal player
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Intramurals and trips to K.C. planned
Seven different sports programs and bus trips to Royals baseball games and Starlight Theater in Kansas City, Mo., are being offered during the summer session by the University of Kansas Division of Recreation Services.
are being offered. All sports have both men's and women's programs. Coeducational teams may be formed in softball, basketball, tennis and volleyball.
Softball, three-person basketball, tennis,
volleyball, ball, raquetball and horseshoes
The trip to the Kansas City games will be June 22, when the Royals play Chicago, and November 15, when the Steelers host.
with the Wind " June 28, " The Buck Owens
Show" July 7 and " Showbowl" July 20.
The Starlight Theater will present "Gone
are one for the July 22 game and July 8
for the July 15 game.
Starlight Theater deadlines are Jum 24 for "Gone with the Wind," July 5 for "The Buck Owens Show," and July 16 for "Showboat."
10
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8
Tuesday, June 8, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Prof challenges UN poem
Beatrice Wright, a university of Kansas professor of psychology, didn't like the "inadvertent sexism" in a poem printed on linen calendars that the U.N. Women's Guild produces annually on behalf of children throughout the world.
So, in early April of last she wrote the U.N. and requested that the word "man" and the masculine pronouns in the poem be changed to include both sexes.
"Although the word 'man' and the masculine pronouns have been accepted over the centuries as the generic terms to refer to both sexes," Wright said in her letter, "the subtle exist implications of such usage calls them into question. And the fact that the pronoun hasn't been established as yet to stand for he or she as the case may be."
Without replying directly to Wright's letter, the U.N. changed the wording after
getting approval from the poet's author who lives in England, where she collected the poems of the poet.
As it stands corrected, the poem reads:
There shall be peace on earth, but not untlAll children daily eat their fill.Go thru all schools and learn to teach them learn their lessons with a tranquil mind. And thus released from hunger, fear and need,/Regardless of their color, race or creed,/Look upwards smiling to their faith in people reflected in their eyes.
Before the poem was changed, each
man "was a "his" and "people" was
"man".
"I say a bit whimily that this is my one great achievement of the year," Wright said Sunday. "So many times when one writes a letter it is just lost in the wind. But I was delighted that they changed it at my suggestion."
From nage one
The record .
Productions Inc., who publish "Screw" magazine and "Smut, the World's Dirtiest Paper."
Quinn said that although modern literature wasn't his specialty, he felt he was qualified to compare the publications. He placed them at the bottom on a scale of 10.
Construction that will add 2,000 square feet of space to the Kansas Union began in May and is expected to be completed this fall.
The northeast entrance to the Union will be closed during the remodeling. Several lounges and picture windows will be added to the front of the building. The renovation is designed to make the building more accessible to handicapped people.
Floyd Temple, head baseball coach, has announced the signing of Terry Sutcliffe, a metropolitan Kansas City high school pitcher, to a national letter of inent. Sutcliffe, a right-hander, had a 144 record and a 1.04 ERA this season for Horn High School. In addition, Sutcliffe was a two-year letterman in football at
Temple said Sutcliffe would try to fill the gap vaceted by the graduation of ALL-B light fitter Roache Shailer, who graduated in May.
Sutcliffe's brother Rick is a pitcher in the Los Angeles Dodger baseball organization.
The University of Kansas track team could muster only a ninth place tie with San Jose State at the NCAA Track and Field championships in Philadelphia over
The 'Jayhawks' high point finisher was Roger Hammond, who finished third in the javelin. The 400-meter relay team of Clifford Wiley, Anthony Coleman, Clifford Wiley and Larry Jackson second. Bill Lundberg was sixth in the 3,000-metre steep chain and Larry Jackson was sixth in the 200
Olympic hopeful Nolan Cromwell failed to qualify for the finals in the 400-meter hurdles,
Jay Reardon, who has set Missouri and high school track records in the triple jump and high jump, was recently recruited to play at the University of Kansas. "He is one of the most versatile athletes we've ever recruited," Bob Timmons, track coach at KU, said.
Gary Pepin, assistant track coach, said Reardon probably decided on KU for two reasons.
"The University of Kansas track team has been fortunate enough the past three years to be known as one of the best two schools in the nation for jumpers." Pepin
The other reason, Pepin said, is that KU is close to Reardon's homeetown, Kansas City, Mo., where he graduated from Rockhurst High School this month.
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Class schedule:
Under the Uniform Anatomical GHF Act passed by both Kansas and Missouri, it is no longer necessary for the next of kin to release the remains.
NEEDLEPOINT—Wednesdays 7-9 p.m.
for 6 wks (starts June 16)
Thursdays 10 a.m.-12
(starts June 17)
CREWEL EMBROIDERY—Tuesdays 7-9 p.m.
for 5 wks (starts June 15)
CROCHET—Mondays 7-9 p.m.
for 6 wks (starts June 14)
KNITTING—Day & time to be announced.
The will, which must be witnessed by two individuals, reads: "I... I being of sound mind and desirous that my body be given to the University of Kansas Medical School, department of anatomy for scientific purposes, do hereby request that those in my department above mentioned to that effect immediately in the event of my death."
No individual is paid for his or her body.
Once the cadaver has served its purpose,
the remains are cremated and buried in a Lawrence cemetery with a clergyman officiating at the expense of the departant.
The remains are made at the family's request and expense.
was begun about 1900 when the department of anatomy was confronted by persons interested in willing their remains to science.
All Classes—$12 plus materials
$5 deposit due before class begins.
About 15 years ago the department of anatomy at the KU Medical Center was forced to curtail studies because of a fire and several cadavers available for research and study.
"AND THAT ROCK WAS CHRIST!" So, the Spirit of God tells us in the 10th chapter of *1 Corinthians* regarding the Angel of God that conducted Moses and the Children of Israel from the slavery of Egypt to The Promised Land. We are also told that some of the people were idolators and committed fornication, with the result that 23,000 fell and one of them "tempted Christ" and were destroyed by the destroyer!
Howard A. Matzke, chairman of the anatomy department, attributes part of the boom to increased national publicity on the cost of dying. He said recently that many people will their bodies to avoid the high cost of burial. Others will their bodies for the sake of "doing something for humanity," he said.
Ample supply of cadaver at Med Center
Today, however, the supply of cadavers is more than sufficient for the department's needs. The department, which uses about 75 cadavers each year, receiver 18 in 1975.
Prior to the willed body program, most cadavers used by the department were the unclaimed bodies of mental patients who had died in state hospitals. According to Kansas law, the bodies of persons who withdrew a record of survivors become the dead body of an individual. The number of unclaimed bodies has decreased to zero. Moatts said.
The source of all the department's stewards' data is the program and the document at the Med Center.
Willing a body to the Med Center involves obtaining a "codicil to will" from the individual and providing two duplicates, one copy for the individual and one for the department. The individual is given an identification card which states that the individual should be notified at the time of his death.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
On the basis of the we are above in saying that it was Christ who appeared to Moses at the Burning Bush in the land of Midwane where he was a shepherd, and sent him into Egypt to deliver His people from persecution. He said to Moses, "God has resisted the assignment to the point where God got angry with him and demanded that he go, promising 'SURELY I WILL BE WITH YOU,' AND THEN SHALL WORKHE ME HERE WHERE WE ARE TALKING."
Moses obeyed and went. After many signs and wonders, the visitation of death of the first born in every man of family and beast, excepting those homes protected by blood on the door posts; and after the drowning of Pharoh's army in the Red Sea, Moses led forth the people towards the Promised Land, and later they stopped and worshipped God at the place of The Burning Bush.
It may have been in the neighborhood of this same place where Moses and Aaron ran into the same devilment and spirit of hell that today is p pleasing our country and the world demonstrators and students. I will tell you what they should teach their teachers how and what they should be taught: Servants telling their Masters what they will do: Strikers telling the possessors of their property; Mothers telling the possessors of their devils raging against lawful and God ordained authority, etc.
Is not that just the same spirit with which Mozes was confronted in the demonstration and strike against his authority recorded in the 18th chapter of the Book of Number? Read and meditate upon it! Four men, all prominent and high officers in the nation promoted this affair.
and just about the entire nation approved of their action and gathered together for a great march on Moses headquarters.
Moses had tried to get out of the job of leading the nation, but God would not take "no" for an answer, and told him "surely I will be with you." Later, when in the earth in the flash Christ told His people to pray the Heavenly Father: 'DELIVER US FROM EVIL' *Note* now how God delivered Moses and the nation from this great time of evil. When the demonstrators and strikers go to Moses headquarters, God appeared too confident. The remainder of this article tells what happened: you can confirm by reading the 16th chapter of the Book of Numbers.
A sudden earthquake, the earth opened up, several entire families, men, women and children, household goods and all earlily effects.
The Almighty says: "I CHANGE NOTJESIS JUSHSCHIST, THE SAME YESTERDAY,TODAY,and FOREVER!"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 WILL BRING EVERY WORK INTO JUDGEMENT, (with every secret thing) WHETHER IT BE GOOD, OR WHETHER IT BE EVIL."
The presence of God was revealed by a fire over the Tabernacle. Flames leaped from this fire and burnt to death 250 princees and great men of the nation who had approved and supported the demonstration and strike against Moses and Aaron.
Next day, the people instead of repenting and seeking God's forgiveness, blamed Moses for the terrible judgements of the previous day. This augmented the fierce anger of God and the result was a plague broke out and the people began to die in multitudes. All this time Moses was pleasing for mercy for the people, and ordered Aaron to make an atonement. Before Aaron could complete this service and be freed from it, Moses numbered this number the 280 princes burned to death, and probably 50 wipers which swallowed up and you have a total of about 15,000 that perished.
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Tuesday, June 8, 1976
Israelis optimistic for Olympics
0
TEL AVI (AP)—Four years after 11 of its athletes were murdered at Munich, the Israeli Olympic Committee is planning to hold a memorial ceremony ever for the Montreal Summer Games.
"Let's just hope the crazy man with guns stay home and watch the Games on television this time," said Olympic team director Shmuel Lalkin.
Officials say Israel will send a delegation of 50 athletes and coaches to the 21st Olympiad—twice the size of the team decimated by Arab terrorists in 1972.
Only two survivors of the terror attack are scheduled to make the trip to Montreal. Except for the black stripes on their uniforms, the new Israeli Olympians will display no memorials of the siege and shootout at Munich.
"Our athletes will be under no special security restrictions," said Lakil, who known for his charm and skill.
University Daily Kansar
He said Canada "has taken sincere consideration" of Israel's security risks at Montreal. But the Canadians will not allow Israeli guards to accompany the team.
Israel sports officials say, however, that Israel has managed to arrange protection for its athletes abroad in previous events. They decline to elaborate.
"Some countries take a travel risk when they go to the Olympics, and we take a
Sports
terror risk. But it does no good to worry," Lalkin said. "We never considered dropping out of Olympic competition after Munich was destroyed, and we were staying ever organized. We weren't stay away."
eighth in an Olympic event since it began competing in 1952. But a painstaking rebuilding program following the terror attack has bolstered the chances of at least two athletes who will be serious medal contenders at Montreal.
Israel has never finished better than
Israel's best-known competitor, hurdler Eather Roth, returned to competition.
"Why should I compete?" she said then,
"Everyone hate us. You're always afraid
of them."
But she came out of a depressing year's retirement at the encouragement of her husband-trainer, Peter, won three gold medals at the 1974 Asian Games in Tehran, and will lead Israel's medal chances this summer.
israel's only other anticipated medal weight,weightford Edward Wetz, was not a first.
Primaries .
From page one
whose members support Ford and a Reagan slate, he ballot as "Fermer the governor."
Ohio
POLLS CLOSE 8 p.m. EDT.
PRECINCTS: 12.948.
DELEGATES: 152 Democrat; 97
Republican.
CANDIDATES: Democrat's Carter, Udall, Church, Jackson, Wallace, State Treasurer Gertie Donahue at large, plus Rep. Wayne Hays and Louis Slokes.
**FORMAT:** Democrat elect 38 delegates at large, allocated in proportion to the popular vote, and 124 in congressional seats. Democrat elect 28 at large and 69 in the districts.
Republican: Ford and Reagan.
POLLS CLOSE: 7:30 p.m. EDT.
Stainless steel quotas approved
MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP)—President Ford announced yesterday he had approved the purchase of two new schools.
The quotas are the result of a partial failure in negotiations aimed at getting agreement from other nations to limit their exports to this country.
The administration announced March 15 it would try to get orderly marketing agreements with the European Common Market and with Japan to limit their ex-factory domestic steelmakers claimed were unfairly competing with domestic stainless steel.
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KANSAN WANT ADS
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J. HOOD, BOOKSELLER, welcomes new and returning students to the summer session. Renewals of half-paid paperback books most meet our requirements; college, etc. come in and browse. We are all welcome. Saturday, 10 a.m.-p.m. p.m., Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m.-p.m. Sunday, p.m.-6 p.m. Closed Mondays, 145 Masses at St. Mary's Church.
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
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If you have been confused or have any knowledge of the contrast and confusion between FOOTAMAT and STEVEN, please call (collect) 323-0544 (Topkak). STEVEN, please mail (collect) 323-0544 (Topkak). Please talk to the Price. Price
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PUBLICATION NOTICE
1. The names and addresses of the publisher, managing editor and business manager are:
Female roommate for summer $2. bedrooms,
clean, quiet, extra extra cost—$32. Call
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Business Manager - Carol Stallard, 1012 Emery Road,
Lawrence, KI. 60044.
3. Known bondholders, mortgagees and other debtors own or hold a per cent or total of the loan.
*Location of news office of publication—Wilson-Area, University of Kansas, LaGrange, Kentucky; H. University of Kansas, LaGrange, (Douglas County); W. University of Kansas, LaGrange.*
2. The owner is the University of Kansas, State of Kansas, Lawrence, (Douglas County), KN 69045.
3. A average number of copies of each shirt sold or distrib-
uced per person was 12.5. The 12 months preceding the data shown above are 12,000.
David Dary Publisher's Agent
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Tuesday, June 8, 1976
University Dally Kansan
On Campus
Events
Professor PETER YAUSCOUGH, of the UNIVERSITY OF LEEDS in England will speak on "Computer Assisted Learning in Modern English" at the Kingdom! 4 a.p.m. today in 123 Malott.
There will be an ORGAN INSTITUTE RECITAL at 8 tonight by ALBERT GERKEN on the carillon.
SUA SUMMER FILMS presents "Breathing Together," a documentary about the lives of John Gnlsburg, the Hoffman, John Lennon and David Aitken at 7:30 on tonight for Auditorium Rudolf.
Grants and Awards
PETER MORALES, Lawrence graduate student will serve as an instructor at the University of Oviedo, Spain during the 1976-77 academic year. CHAE JNEE LEE associates professor of political science, will teach in Korea during the summer of 1977.
A University of Kansas faculty member and a graduate student have been awarded grants by the FULBRIGHT-HAYS program to study abroad.
THE AMERICAN COUNCIL OF LEARNED SOCIETIES has awarded two Grants-in-Aid and one one联hip to three KU professors. G. DOUGLAS ATKINS, associate professor of English, received a Grant-in-Aid to teach at the University David M. BERGERON, professor of English, received one to study patrons of English drama, 1558-1642.
F. ALLAN HANSON, associate professor of anthropology, received a fellowship to study religion, philosophy and world view of the New Zealand Maori.
He's been working on a statute of Moses for nearly nine years and it could take him another two to three years to finish it.
Sculptor casts Moses
"I'm a fast worker," Elden Tefft, professor of sculpture, joked yesterday.
The bronze statue will be about 10 feet tall and weigh between one and two tons, Tefft said. When it is finished it will stand in front of Smith Hall, which houses the School of Religion, and will face the building's stained glass window.
The statue's design is based on the official University of Kansas seal, he said. The KU seal shows Moses, the Hebrew leader who led his people from Egypt to Palestine, kneeling in front of a burning bush, which symbolizes God.
The status, however, shows the figure of Moses with his arms crossed in front of him rather than with his palms together. This is being done so it won't be identified strictly with one religion but will be a symbol of inner strength to all, Tefft said.
The stained glass of Smith Hall will stand for the burning bush and the statue will be bellow with openings to allow the viewer to look through it.
This open effect symbolizes the spiritual feeling of religion, which is more concerned with the souls of people than outward appearances, he said.
"from a distance the figure will look solid and life-like," Teit said. "But you can't be so realistic as to show every hair and skin pore. You have to be abstract, to show the innermost feeling rather than just the exterior."
The KU School of Religion commissioned the sculpture, which Teft works on without pay. He can work on it for only a few hours and must attend his other duties as a teacher and sculptor.
In the last nine years nearly 100 of his sculpture students have helped him with the statue, though it isn't part of any regular class. Tefft said.
He has no idea of what the total cost of the materials has been. He said he it wouldn't be extravagant, Tefft said that making the statue had been a long, involved process.
He spent the first year looking for a site to build his house. He finally rised he finally settled in Learned Hall. During this time several small clay models were made in designing the final version of his house.
The first working model of the statue was made with light steel. Layers of styrofoam,
wax and clay were added later to stabilize the design, Teff said.
From this a plaster mold will be made and baked at 1,000 degrees. When the mold is sturdy enough, bronze will be poured into it and left to harden for 20 minutes.
Wax is now being applied to the working surface of a mirror and bronze brushes still on camph. Teef said, "The wax is so sticky that it can be applied."
"There's plenty left to do he," he said. "could it get it this summer if we get the
Most statues are as hollow as the one of Moses will appear to be and are much lighter in weight than one might expect, Teft said.
"It would be impossible to move large statues inside a building if they were solid brone," he said. "Also, bronze shrinks if left in a large, solid mass."
The statue of Moses isn't the first sculpture that Tefft has done for the KU campus. He sculpted the busts of former chancellors Wescoe, Strong, Murphy and Snow. The busts are in the buildings named for these educators.
But his most well-known work is the statue of the Jayhawk in front of Strong Hall, the bird which he referred to as "the pterodactyl." The Jayhawk he sculpted is the representative looking then to the usual smiling representations of KU's mascot, Tefft said.
Many people think the sculpture is ugly and mean-looking, or that it resembles a buzzer more than a school's symbol, but they still look at it with disbelief. Over the sculpture he completed in 1866.
"It's more in the spirit of the fighting Jayhawks rather than a cartoon character," Tefft said. "Besides, some people get tired of cuddy mascots."
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THE KANSAS UNION
Meeting Rooms Lounges/Study Space Bookstores Check-Cashing
864-4651
Recreational Facilities Entertainment Dining Services KU Concessions
WELCOME TO KU SUMMER '76
NEW "COURSES" OFFERED BY UNION DINING SERVICES:
Large Cold Plates Fruit Salad Bowls
Special Sandwich of the Week
Cafeteria
New "Tempting" Desserts (baked daily in the Union)
Deli
All Dining Areas
C. R. H.
Cafeteria—
VARIETY OF FOODS AND BENEFITS
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7:00 a.m.-8:30 a.m./11:00 a.m.-1:20 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
Complete hot breakfast and luncheon
CONVENIENT DINING SERVICES located on level two & three
11:00 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri./7:45 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Sat.
Old fashioned dell food
Hawk's Nest—
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Full service banquets, receptions,
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THE KANSAS UNION
THE EARTH CENTER FOR AGRICULTURE
Loading in the face of Space Technology
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Physics lab supervisor G. M. McGeough has been spending his spare time before and after work tending this field of hay which surrounds the KANU radio tower. Tuesday evening he loaded the hay, which he'd loaded earlier in the week, onto his truck in order to take it home from feed his livestock.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, June 9, 1976
Vol.86 No.143
Ford, Reagan to standoff in KC
From The Associated Press
President Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan fought to a standoff in primaries yesterday that virtually guarantees a fight to the convention in Kansas City two months
Reagan took the California primary and with it the 167 delegates that go to the winner there. But Ford won almost all of Ohio's 97 delegates, and an uncommitted slate that swapped New Jersey's 67 delegate with packed with the President's supporters.
Jimmy Carter, at best an outsider when the primaries begin, has抓 his cap from nowhere with a delegate harvest that he can wield as a political force in the Democratic presidential nomination.
For the Republicans, the end of the primaries means a continuation of Ronald Reagan's policy. The Democrats are pushing back.
Carter won only in Ohio of the three big
states that held primaries yesterday. But he picked up more than 200 delegates, and all his rivals had one seemed ready to concede him the nomination.
The one who said he won't quit chasing Carter is Jerry Brown, who won in his home state of California and was joined with Hubert Humphrey as preferred candidates on an uncommitted delegate state that won in New Jersey.
California
With 19 per cent of the counted cases:
Reagan 282,817 or 61 per cent.
Reagan got all 167 delegates under the winner-take-all system.
Among Democrats:
Brown 378,442 or 58 per cent and 200 delegates.
Carter 130,296 or 20 per cent and 70 delegates.
Udall 35,292 or 5 per cent and four delegates.
The rest of the vote was scattered among five other entries.
Church 60,201 or 9 per cent and six delegates.
In delegates, Brown was ahead for 200. Carter for 70, Church for 8, Dallor for 4.
... per cent of the prescripts counted:
Dors 345,184 or 55 per cent and 88
percent.
Reagan 296,443 or 45 per cent and nine delegates.
Among Democrats:
Carter 391,511 or 52 per cent and 119
Adelante
Udall 154,786 or 21 per cent and 20 delegates.
Church 104,533 or 14 per cent.
The rest of the vote was scattered in the
Girls Staters elect officers today
Rv LEWIS GREGORY
Staff Writer
Elections for state offices and an address by Attorney General Curt Schneider will highlight today's activities of the 34th anniversary of Kansas State, at the University of Kansas.
The 406 girls attending the conference will choose candidates from the Nationalist and Federalist parties. Schneider will speak on the role of the Attorney General in Kansas.
Winners in the primary race were announced yesterday. Nationalist candidate Ann Walderd, Greensburg, will run against nominee Ann Covitt, Russell, for governor.
Federalist Chery Lindy, Dexter, will run against Nationalist candidate Susan Sawyer in the presidential race.
"The most important thing I have learned from Girls State is that people should start taking back control of their government," Carlie said. "There is not enough interest in government and I feel people should get involved."
The 1792 governor of Girls State, Betty
Cruille, Caney, said she believes citizens
can teach them to bear arms.
The attorney general's post will go to Rochele Michaux, Federalist, Leavenworth, or Lori Heidebrecht, Nationalist, McPherson.
The nominees for secretary of state are Dorothy Frey, Nationalist Party, Hutchinson, and Jodi Buterbaugh, Federalist, Winfield.
Girls State is a week-long program designed to teach girls about city, county, and state government procedures, Imagine the director of Girls State, said yesterday.
She said she thought there were too many appointed officials and not enough elected
The Girls State "Government in Action" program is sponsored by the American Association of Teachers.
The program began Sundav.
"Everyone involved with the Watergeague mistakes were appointed, except for one," Carlie said. "The government is being asked to review all of the people and we should get it back."
No political ideology is pushed on the girls from the directors, Carlie said, and a girl's speech in this room could be anything.
Melissa Mitchell, Overland Park, she said was excited about the week-long political debate.
All girls were assigned to political parties on Sunday. The Nationalists and Federalists debate during the day, and some discussions have continued until 3 a.m. Carlie said. "It was like one big slumber party," she said.
"I feel like a real politician, with all the campaigns going on here," Mitchell said. "I was bewildered at first, but I'm enjoying all the issues raised."
Three delegates to Girls Nation will be elected Saturday, Girls Nation will be next month in Washington, D.C., and will be joined by Boys Nation for the first time this year.
According to previous Girls Staters,
friendship is the highlight of the experience.
Former delegates help as counselors during the week. "I've made a lot of friends here. Everyone wants to help each other," Deb Feldhausen, Marysville, said.
The motto of Girls State is, "Pride In Thy Country; Faith In Thyself." Girls State's purpose is to develop leadership, to stress the importance of democracy, to instill a better understanding of our national values, to give students involvement and to develop potential leaders of the future, Fatt Huffman, Girls State news director, said.
City commission studies stray animal problem
The Humane Society opposed any action that might increase the number of animals sent to the center. The shelter has a number of animals that usually butts between 56 and 60.
For more than an hour, city commissioners discussed the growing problem with irate citizens, Humane Society officials, and the animal control officer.
According to the animal control officer, the majority of offenders are University of Kansas students. KU officers are not tough enough with students who own dogs, he said.
Careless dog owners will be given tickets for allowing their animals to run loose. Mayor Fred Pence said at last night's Lawrence City Commission meeting.
The amount of the fine should increase with each repeated offense, the commissioners said. They also suggested that the dog should be paid if the dog has no rabies license.
Pence said that his plan would soon teach "chronic abusers" to think twice before he did anything.
In 1974 and 1975 an average of 123 dogs per month were destroyed.
The mayor's suggestion was met with approval by the Humane Society officials, but the animal control officer said that such a policy would increase the difficulty of his
The Commission, and most of the assembly, agreed that the owner is responsible for his dog and that he should suffer the consequences, not the dog.
The meeting began with an invitation to the Commission to attend the Bicentennial celebration at the Kaw River Trail and participate in the ribbon cutting ceremony.
City Manager Buford Watson will consider the various proposals and submit his report.
"I believe you ought to be your brother's keeper—but not his dog's," said Pence.
Bids submitted by area construction firms for three sewer projects were then opened and read to the Committee by the Director of Public Works, George Williams.
The celebration will be held on Saturday and will include the presentation of the official Lawrence Bicentennial Commission.
Among the apparent lowest bidders for the projects were Brown Brothers Construction Co. of Lawrence, and Hill Construction Co. of Olathe.
statewide competition for 38 Democratic delegates
The Commission also considered appointments to fill vacancies on six boards and commissions. Following adjournment of the meeting the Commission members continued their discussion on the new appointments in an executive session.
With 83 per cent of the vote counted in Republican delegate competition, a nominally uncommitted slate of party leaders who actually favor Ford won 63 convention seats, with returns yet to be tailed for the other four.
In the Democratic presidential preference vote, which was only for show since it committed no delegates, 91 per cent of the precincts had been counted.
Carter had 188.261 or 57 per cent.
Church was second with 64,771 or 19 per cent.
The rest was split three wavs.
In the Democratic competition that really counted, 75 per cent of the precincts had reported. Udall was leading for three delegates. New Jersey elected 108 Democratic delegates, but no returns had been tallied in the other contests.
The statewide delegate vote, which was for 27 of the delegates, showed:
for 27 of the delegates, showed
Uncommitted 157,920 or 42 per cent.
Carter 106,428 or 28 per cent. The balance was split four ways.
Here is how the delegate count looks with the primaries over :
Carter, who picked up 218 delegates on Tuesday, now has 1,125 of the 1,963 needed for nomination. His closest pursuit is Rep. Morris K. Udall, who has 334.8, Brown, who won 208 in California, has 225 and a number uncommitted bloom of over 400 delegates.
Ford has a lead over Reagan of 892-688, with 1,130 needed to be the nominee. But Ford's edge is actually greater since no more than a handful of the nominally uncommitted 67-member New Jersey delegation backs Reagan.
Library support, care head '78 KU budget
See ELECTION page 2
By TOM BOLITHO
The University of Kansas submitted to the staff of the Board of Regents its budget for new and improved programs for fiscal year 1978 yesterday.
Staff Writer
University officials will meet with the budget official June 17 or 18 to submit the budget officially.
The University has categorized the budget into four priority sections totaling nearly $2.5 million. Library support and maintenance and replacement of scientific and general equipment headed the sections with a total request of $660,000.
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday that he met with the Regens' staff yesterday to list University's requests for student requests would be made of the Regents.
The section that deals with programs directly related to the University's "instructional mission" is most important, Shankel said. In addition to containing a faculty catalog of tenure and replacement of scientific equipment, the first section contains requests for fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants ($156,241) and occupation and operation of the Helen Spencer Museum of Art ($108,734).
The second priority section, which includes programs related to the University's organized research and service missions, lists requests for funds for a program for the University's Geological Survey ($71,132) and additional funds for research by the State Biological Survey and the State Geological Survey ($432,119). The survey institutions propose to study the chemical quality of irrigation waters in western Colorado, where most of new fuel resources and other tonics.
Full funding requests for the law enforcement training center and firemanship instruction (4281,380) constitute the third section. These are programs already approved by the Kansas Legislature but requiring state funding.
The final section deals with federally-funded programs. The department of agriculture made a macy capitation grants ($108,558) were previously funded in part by the federal government. This federal money will likely be cut off next year, Shankel said.
Shankel said he hoped the regents would accept eight or 10 of the University's priorities, but probably only about five or six would be accepted.
At an earlier meeting, all the state schools were granted a seven per cent salary increase for faculty and a 10 per cent increase in operating expenses. The University is also seeking a seven per cent increase in student hourly fees.
"I think that these programs would be better in terms of being as well as the University," Shankel said.
The program for the severely hand-dicapped in rural areas and the research funds for the State Biological and Geological Surveys are also important, although they will probably be trimmed, he said.
Shankle said that the political considerations concerning acceptance of the budget were complex and that it was too difficult for the legislature and the governor would react.
"The library support request is very important if we are to keep up with the rising cost of books and journals, and we need to be more patient longer for the students," Shankel said.
Shankel also said that the requests for maintenance and replacement of scientific equipment, fee waivers for graduate teaching assistants and operation of the new Spencer Museum of Art were at the top of the priorities list.
"With the elections coming up, I really can't say exactly how they will react to the budget, but Governor Bennett has always done a goal job in the past," Shankel said.
Union's image modernized
The Kansas Union logo, as well as the main entrance to the Union building itself,
A new logo submitted by Debbie Stiles, a former senior, was selected by a panel of three.
The design was selected from a group of 15 logos submitted to the Union by juniors and seniors in graphic design classes. The students also entered a cover design and an internal layout design for a new Union logo and feature in the Union-sponsored contest.
Stephens received $50 from the Union for her design. She's also helping the Union
incorporate the design in the brochure and Union advertisements.
"I used the circle to represent the center of things. The Union is the center point of KE."
THE KANSAS UNION
The logotype was chosen by Frank Burge, Union director; Patricia Wolfe, Union administrative assistant; and Mike Miller, Union activities adviser.
Miller said all the designs were good, but
these had a clean, vibrant and pleasing look.
and sophistication.
"We're updating the building and we're updating the building. We've been here 50 years ago." Miller said.
The Union judges also picked a design by Danny Womack, Kansas City, Kan., senior, for the inside layout of a Union services brochure.
The new brochure will be both informational and promotional, according to Miller. It will be indexed and will provide a building map of and phone directory for the building.
Two classes in graphic design taught by Jerry Moore, associate professor of design, and Frank Reiber, associate professor of design, tackled the Union's design problem. Each participating student submitted a design solution, and Moore and Reiber narrowed the entries to 15 before sending the designs to the Union.
The northeast entrance of the Union meanwhile, should be re-opened by the fall semester, but facelift work elsewhere in the city will continue through the summer of 1977.
Pat Wolfe, an administrative assistant at the Union, said yesterday the renovation would give the building a new appearance inside and out.
Woife said the terrace outside the east entrance would eventually be remodeled into a garden.
On the main level of the union, the lounge area will be renovated and expanded by the removal of the music and browsing room, Wolfe said. The center-west stairs, no longer needed, will be removed, providing more floor space on all five levels of the building.
The northeast entrance has been closed since May 25, and the aluminum and glassfloor canopy outside is being replaced with a more substantial structure, which Wolfe said would complement the brick Union.
Woife said that permanent stations for leaflet distribution would be built near the northeast entrance, eliminating the need for setting up tables for groups there.
The Hawk's Nest is to be remodeled for its new role as an evening entertainment center. Wofa said work should start there in mid-July.
During the remodeling, she said all customers included, including the bookstore and food services.
TAMPA BAY
Union remodeling
Construction materials now fill the space at the north end of the Kansas Union lobby that use to be occupied by tables set up to
distribute leaflets. Work on remodeling the inside of the Union should continue through the summer of 1977.
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Murderess aiven parole
YORK, Neb. -Saying she wants only to melt into the everyday stream of a normal life, to become a "dumpy little housewife" and live in convict, convicted
By a 4-1 vote, the Nebraska Parole Board granted Miss Fugate's request for freedom after 18 years in prison.
The decision was greeted by applause from about 30 persons who attended the parole hearing Tuesday.
"I would just like to say thanks," said Carl, a blender, brown-brained woman, after the decision was read. Tears were in her eyes as she was led quickly and quietly from the room at the reformatory here which has served as her home for more than half her life.
Miss Fugite, now 32, accompanied mass killer Charles Starkweather on his 1983 spree which left 10 dead and shocked the nation. She will be released June 20 in New York City. (AP)
Federal aid to flood area
IDAHO FALLS, Idaho—As flood waters from the Teton Dam flowed safely into another dam's reservoir Tuesday, the federal government assumed responsibility for cleaning out and repairing irrigation canals and diversion dams damaged by the flood.
The announcement was the first indication of significant government aid in an area that suffered losses estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars following
An estimated 300 square miles, including more than 30,000 acres of fertile farmland, were immedate along the flood's 80-mile path.
Officials fear much more farmland will dry up unless damaged irrigation systems are repaired quickly.
Library plans unchanged
How the University of Kansas should spend an estimated $20-25 million on the remodeling of Watson Library and on a proposed new library was discussed yesterday by the Library Facility Planning Committee.
The University has plans to build a new library and to consolidate the libraries of the business schools and math and science departments. The remainder of the allocated funds would be used for the university's research.
Sites under consideration for the new library include the area north of the Military Science Building and the area east of Haworth Hall.
Ranz said he thought that the area west of the Military Science Building would be ideal because it was between all the schools it would be serving.
Allen Weichert, associate director of facilities planning, said construction would begin in 1980 and be completed in 1982. The committee decided to plan for facilities that would fulfill the library's needs to the year 2000.
Ranz said future enrollment at KU was
the key factor in deciding on the space needed for the library. The statistics on student enrollment cover only the next 10 weeks of expectancy is expected to decline in that period.
No effective changes or plans have been made, Ranz said, although a library building consultant, Ralph Ellsworth, has visited the University.
From page one
Carter told supporters in Atlanta: "I think I'm going to be the nominee."
Election . . .
And at a news conference, he said he had spoken by telephone during the day with three active rivals, Udall, Frank Church and George Wallace; one inactive rival, Humphrey, and Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago, who controls a bloc of 86 delegates nominally committed to Sen. Adlai Stevenson, a favorite son.
"All of them, as a general group, agreed that I would be the nominee," Carter said. And that was what just about seemed to them when it first met after a few of seeing silver linings in cloudy results.
The Program of the Year! You Can TV. It's in the Air Force ROTC.
Look into the Air Force ROYAL AIR FORCE, or year, 2 programs to you. In your position, you'll learn college work, you'll learn a commission as an Air Force pilot, and will position with responsibility, challenge, ... and of course, fit your requirements.
The courses themselves pres-
ent a variety of teaching aids. Positions as a member of an archey, or as a teacher in mathematics,科学 using mathematics, sci-
Look out for yourself. Look into the Air Force ROTC programs on campus,
Check into the Air Force ROTC Program now-perhaps we can fit into your plans for the Fall 1976 Term.
Inquire in room 108, Military Science Building or call 844-4676.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
A systematic program to develop the full potential of the individual
FREE PUBLIC LECTURE
Wed., June 9 7:30 p.m.
Parlor A—Kansas Union
Transcendental Meditation and TM are service marks of ZC—U.S. Students International Meditation Society is a profil educational organization.
842-1225
V.
difference!!!
PREPARE FOR
MCAT
DAT
LSAT
GRE
GMAT
OCAT
CPAT
VAT
SAT
FLEX
ECFMG
Over 35 years of experience and success
Email classes
Voluntous home study materials
Courses that are constantly updated
Tagge facilities for reviews of class books and for ease of supportory materials
Make up for missed lessons
NAT'L MED BDS
NAT'L DENT BDS
Most classes start 8 weeks early
Spring and Fall Compulsions
Courses in Memphis, Knoxville,
Nahville and Little Rock
MEMPHIS
417 Pleasant
Memphis, Term. 38117
(901) 863-0121
CHICAGO CENTER
(312) 764-5151
STANLEY H. KAPLAN
Educational Center
TEST PREPARATION
14% Extra Room Bedroom, N. 11990
(212) 236-5000
There IS a difference!!!
PREMARE FOR
MCAT
DAT
LSAT
GRE
GMAT
OCAT
CPAT
VAT
SAT
FLEX
ECFMG
Over 35 years of experience and lessons
Small classes
Volumous home study materials
Courses that are constantly updated
Tape teachers for review of tests, lessons and for use in supplementary materials
Makes use for missed lessons
NAT'L MED BDS
NAT'LDENT BDS
Most classes start 8 weeks prior to exam
Spring and Fall Compacts
Courses in Memphis, Knoxville, Nashville and Little Rock
MATHIS H. KAPLAN
Memphis, Tenn. (839) 17
(861) 863-0121
CHICAGO CENTER
(312) 764-5151
Stanley H. KAPLAN
Educational Center
1347 East 94th Street, Des Moines, IA 50720
(712) 336-6000
BASF
The world's first jamproof cassettes
BASF invented it. Special Mechanics! the first jamproof system that really works. Not just sometimes - all the time.
Two precision guide arms inside each of our SK. LH and Chromidioxid Cassettes feed tape smoothly from reel to reel.
No snags, no drop-outs. No distortion.
This unique jamproofing system combined with the super sensitivity of BASF tape results in a flexibility and range you'll have to fear to believe. Come in and see the only full line of completely jamproof cassettes today.
Now: Buy 1, Get 1 Free (limit 2)
AUDIO TRONICS
STEREO & ELECTRONICS CENTER
928 MASS.
843-8500
BASF
The world's first
jamproof cassettes
BASF invented it. Special Mechanics™ the first jamproof system that really works. Not just sometimes – all the time.
Two precision guide arms inside each of our SK, LH and Crimsonflex of Cassette fast tape smoothly from reel to reel.
No snags, no drop-outs. No distortion.
This unique jamproofing system combined with the super sensitivity of BASF tape results in a idyllic and riny feel you have to hear to believe. Come in and see the only full line of completely jamproof cassettes today.
Now: Buy 1, Get
1 Free (limit 2)
AUDIOTRONICS
STEREO & ELECTRONICS CENTER
928 MASS.
843-8500
C90
Friday June 11
Saturday June 12
SPECIAL SHOWING AND SALE of OUTSTANDING INDIAN JEWELRY
Brought to Lawrence by
ERIC PHILLIPS,
Trader from Artesanos of Corrales, N.M.
and
PAT READ, INDIAN TRADER
New Location: 845 Mass.
Dean of men fills new post
The dean of men's office has hired a new assistant dean to advise Chicano students and to direct the Reading and Study Skills Program.
The position was filled by William O. Long of Kansas City, Mo. He will begin his career.
Lona is currently an equal opportunity
Lona has been a board member of the Kansas City Manpower Consortium, the Youth Action Condition, and the Western Mental Health Center Advisory Board.
officer of the Human Resources Corporation, a social service agency.
PITCHERS
$1.00
with any pizza
all day
Wednesday
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
Read "HELTER SKELTER" Faster Than You Can See The Movie
See how you can read almost as fast
as you can turn pages . . .
and with better comprehension.
1 BENSTELER
THE THEATRE OF
THE MANSON HIRDERS
Helter
Skelter
WAGON BACKGROUND
WITH THE GARDY
A WOMAN'S REVOLTION
A MUSIC BY JOHN LEE AND A NEWTON MURPHY
A CINEMAS AND THEATRES SHOW
BENSTELER THEATRE
1234567890
www.bensteler.com
(212) 555-7890
Today we are in the midst of a communications revolution. Hundreds of thousands of hardbound books are sold yearly in this country—in addition to millions of paperbacks. We read 10,000 newspapers and supplements and 650 general interest magazines. Books on international and trade periods published in 180 different fields. If we are to keep up with this flow of information, we must read more and more.
Through reading you can achieve more in school, move up in business, and give yourself new depth and confidence. Many men and women have made over their lives through reading. Aberthaw Library offers a variety of reading materials we taught themselves finance, psychology, advertising, electronics, business management, comparative religion—entirely by reading. Thousands of high school and college students throw to Reading Quest books like the S.A.T. and Graduate Record Exam, where slow readers are severely penalized.
Reading is a tonic that refreshes and renews.
Through reading you can travel to the far corners of
the earth, move backward and forward in time and draw on all the knowledge of mankind. Do you continually feel you would read more if you just "had the time"? You can read more, even in the time that is now available to you, with the help of Reading Dynamics.
Reading is one of our most relaxing and rewarding pastimes. Make sure you get all the enjoyment this pastime has to offer, by learning the modern Reading Dynamics way.
Today virtually every field of business and the professions is vastly more complicated, and executives are expected to know more and more. With the many demands on your time, you increasingly face a choice between neglecting valuable reading ... and taking more of it home.
But now, with the help of Reading Dynamics, you can handle your "mind" reading in far less time. You'll be able to read a complete report on the morning train, or a lengthy memo while waiting for a long-distance call to be completed. You'll have more time for the "action" business on your desk, and for the extra reading time you need. In addition, you'll be in a position to take on new responsibility and move ahead in your career.
Be a better informed, more interesting and more successful person
ATTEND A FREE EVELYN WOOD SPEED READING LESSON AND INCREASE YOUR READING SPEED UP TO 100%—FREE Thursday, Friday, Saturday
7:30-8:30 p.m.
Located in ADVENTURE a bookstore Hillcrest Shopping Center 9th & Iowa
Summer classes begin Monday and Tuesday, June 14 and 15. Each class meets 7 times, 7-9:30 p.m.
a t P o M G t h a l c e s s h c t a s S h O v p H i o c E f f c t d i
Phone 843-6424
---
Wednesday, June 9.1976
3
Children study natural sciences
University Daily Kansan
More than 100 children aged 5 to 13 are attending Summer Workshops for Young People offered by the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History, Ruth Geimeinch, director of public education for the museum, said yesterday.
The summer workshops teach children about zoology, geology, archaeology, ecology and other natural sciences, she said.
The classes meet for three-and-a-half hours each morning for a week and are taught by graduate students, Geinreich said.
Five weeks of classes are offered at Shawnee Mission South High School in Overland Park and a three-class pilot program in Oak Ridge. Shawnee Heights
Lawrence classes meet in Dyche Hall and occasionally at other campus museums. Each class, except archaeology, takes two field trips in the Lawrence Area. The archaeologists will take a tour of a working dig near Kansas City.
State wants nuclear data
TOPEKA (AP) - Atty. Gen. Curt Schneider said yesterday he wants two power companies to give better answers to questions about need, safety and available fuel and water before they are permitted to start the first nuclear power plant in Kansas.
"We presented evidence and testimony to the board, whose approval is necessary before construction can proceed, to show that there are too many unanswered questions regarding the plant at this time," the attorney general said.
"Our position all along has been that the economic and safety factors must be answered before the plant is built," Schneider said in an Associated Press interview after his office filed a statement with the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission opposing granting a license to build the plant at this time.
"We have never taken a position of total opposition to nuclear power, but because of the extremely high cost and safety factors involved, we felt an obligation to give the hearing board as complete a picture as possible."
BETTER DAYS
a record store
list $6'98
$3'99
on Columbia
DANIEL LEWIS
64310905
724 Mass. 842-0530
The state's official opposition to granting Kansas City Power and Light Co. and Kansas Gas and Electric Co., Wichita, a license to build its proposed nuclear generating plant near Burlington, Kan., was filed with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in Kansas City Monday. It became public yesterday.
In the state's findings of fact, it is contended the two firms' environmental report is inadequate, and also that the two companies' proposed on-site spent fuel pool doesn't have the capacity to handle wastes from the proposed plant.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GREATER COMFORT, SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT
"It isn't always an invitation for a kiss."
Monday
Spaghetti
Dinner reg. $1.89
99¢
With Coupon
Friday
Buy 1 pizza, get
2nd one free (same
topping)
With Coupon
Daily at 2:30, 7:30, 9:30
Granada
14719 - Sergio La Torre 23080
Varsitu
THEATRE - INCORPORATION
"BILLY JACK" PG
Hillcrest
Tom Laughlin Delores Taylor
7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:30
Lipstick
Eve. 7:30 & 9:40
Sat.-Sun. 1:55
To Woman . . .
In 41/2 Weeks
Hillcrest EZ
PG
"MOTHER, JUGS & SPEED"
Bill Cosby Raquel Welch
Hillcrest Alfred Hitchcock's
"FAMILY PLOT" PG
Pizza inn 841-2629
Sunset
DIN & DENLD - West or Highway 94
H. G. Wells'most horrifying
4:40 9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:05 PG
"FOOD OF
THE GODS"
"OLD DRACULA"
"Gods" 9:00 "Dracula" 10:45 PG
Tuesday
9th & Iowa (in Hillcrest Shopping Center) "The place to be" Welcome back students
(served with toast and coffee)
We also serve breakfast, opening at 7:00 a.m.
Saturday
All the pizza
and salad
you can eat,
5-8:30
$1.98
Beer $1
All the coffee you can drink for 10°.
Omelets: plain----89°
Canadian bacon, sausage, cheese----99°
French toast----99° (served with coffee)
pitcher.
Wednesday
with medium pizza With Coupon
5-9
Lunch buffets 11-2 daily $1.79 All you can eat.
All you can eat buffet 5-9
$ 1 0^{c} $ draw
(1/2 price daily for first 5 students with this ad and student I.D.)
---
$1.98
MUSIC BY BENJAMIN BROWN
RECORDING BY MICHAEL ROBINSON
AND JOHN KLEMMER
the GRAMOPHONE shop
342-1811...Ask for Station No. 6
BOB Album from
DYLAN Columbia
DESIRE
Reg. '6.98 Now $3.99
Q
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS & STEREO
KIE
MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANASAS 1-913-842-1544
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, and employment advertised in the University Dally Kansan are offered to all students without regard to their disability. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FALL HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
a1 a2 a3 a4 a5
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
word ...
AD DEADLINES
ATTENTION STUDENT BENTERS - Drop in and enter at the front (on the left) of the room (on the right) at WESTERN STUDENT CENTER. Please place your phone call簿(s) at WESTERN STUDENT CENTER.
to run
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.
2 bdr. all utilities paid, on campus Furnished and unfree停车 Parking a/c/ pool 843.
ERRORS
Studio ed, private entrance, furnished, bath,
utilities included, campus: Georgia
University preferred, ed. 2827
FOR RENT
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
FOR SALE
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 DK business office at 661-4258.
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale!
"New Analysis of Western Civilization!"
Makes sense to use them.
*For 1st class preparation*
*For 2nd class preparation*
"New Analysis of Western Civilization!"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization!"
Nice 3 Ndr. house, sunken living room, beamed
occupancy, a/c, 424-787-6000, immediate occupancy.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
W. FILOt HALL
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or cheap pre-owned models, there are great benefits at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KEFS. If
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialists.
Electrical and exchange unit BEL AUP,
ELECTRIC 4835, 6th, 6mm
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade trade The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
N. Damen Blvd., Chicago, IL 60611.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CAMPUS
15 East 8th 841-2664
10.5 Monday-Saturday
2018.06.17
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
RAASCH
SPORT
842-841
Mastercharge
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Can
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
the
GRAMOPHONE
shop
BEST BUY AM PON STATION #
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion
Than Most Stereo Components
STATE OF
THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S
DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
1974 Honda 360, 3700 miles. Tip-top shape. Must sell Call 913-653-5255, Overbrook 6-14 Size king size and Foster mattress and box set, 1 year old, best offer takes. 7274 7274
HELP WANTED
Research assistant, Bureau of Child Research, Grosse Pointe Charter Schools, programming on PDP 11 Mini Computer. Experience patients at the systems and applications level require Bachelor's degree. Experience desirable deadline date June 15. Cumulative hours: 864-798, or 864-425. Equal opportunity employer. Qualified men and women of all race backgrounds.
EARN MONEY- You can earn $2 an hour for participating in psychology studies. If interested, fill out the form below:
OVERSEAS JOBS - temporary or permanent.
Australia, S. America, E. Africa, etc. All fields.
$400-$1800 Monthly. Expenses paid lighthearted.
Cape Town, South Africa. Mail resume to:
KA, Box 490, Berkeley, CA 94704. 6-15
LOST AND FOUND
Lost black, medium hair, male ear (9 months)
With some white on chest. Reward. Barday 18045-657 11
Least: Light orange eat with fuffy tail in vicinity
At least: Call Linda at 843-653-16
At least: 842-909-64
NOTICE
Cool it. these hot afternoon, with fruits and
floats, patfalls and peaches. Gold ice cream and
chocolate cake at the Casabah Cafe, 809
Diamond Drive, Dinner) loosens H-1-30 to
Sundays.
J. HOOD, BOOKSELLER, welcomes new and returning students to the summer session. Reminders half-print paperbacks in just fields; Western references in printed editions; technology, etc. Coms in and broms-yen are allowed on campus only 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m., Closed Monday, 1403 Mass Chapel
If you have been confused or have any knowledge about any confusion or mistake between the two dates, call STEVEN'S (call collect) 232-954-7068 during the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. in Room A101 on Friday nights.
Kabar Shop. 620 Mass. Uard furniture. clothes
849. clock televisions. Open daily at 12.
Swap Baths.
GUARANTEED WEIGHT LOSSES. One dollar each
would cost 25,000 pounds in Moca Vista,
Mocau Vista Bldg. A Beverly Hills, Ct. 90078.
www.moca.ws
WIN A CASE OF BEER! Earn $2 an hour for participating in a psychology study. Also earn $10 for presenting your research have participated—the winner receives a free case of beer or coke. If interested, call 864-815-6155.
KU-KARATE CLUB Summer sessions Tuesday and Thursday 7:30 P.M., beginning and advanced 1:45 meeting Thursday, June 16; 7:30 P.M. for January 25; 9:30 A.M. for August 21; 8:41-24:31 after 5 p.m. for 6-10
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous. 842-0110.
MUSIC LIBRONES--for your kind of music. Blues,
Gospel, Pop, Rock and Jazz. Fiddle and
ballet; and calli. Call 1-877-469-8711, McKenzie
Lynn, Music Director.
SERVICES OFFERED
WANTED
Experienced tutor and instructor to aid students in many liberal arts areas. 842-8719. 6-10
Math Tutoring—Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 002, 102, 105, 115, 116, 121, 122, 123, 124. Regular sessions or online lessons. Reasonable preparation. 842-781. 7-29
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. **Call** 641-7308 after 6 p.m. **tf**
A
Experienced typist—form papers, thesis, mike,
spelling, spell check; 843-858-9346, Mr. Wright.
Goldencher Optical
Dyna, professional quality work guaranteed.
Dyna's expertise in designing these,
those, quantifying piecélectric,
B.A. Qualified Engineer.
male romantique Uppercups for fall-ring 76-77.
bedroom apartment Kit Call collection 913-745-6801
after 6.
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476, 7-29
1:00 (messages taken 24 hours).
TYPING
Experimented typist JM1 Selective, term papers,
spreads, and proof-reading. Sp2
corrected. Jones 881-3067.
Typhier editor, IBM PCA cite/lea. Quality work.
Typhier contributor, dissertations web. **92**
*M85-11279*
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
842 85298
Female roommate for summer. 2 bedrooms.
In quiet, extra info space.-$62.50
Cabin. 6-14
- PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED
AND LENDED
DUMPLED WITH
PLAYERN ACCURACY
* COMPLETE OPTICAL
SERVICES
FIELDS
THE HAWK
Chilled Glasses
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Fitted Sheets
-Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
Chiffed Glasses & Schooners
- Pitcher Night Wednesday
THE WHEEL
-Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
Sandwiches
- Outdoor Beer Garden
"Heat the Summertime Blues at 14th and Ohio"
in the summer.
Keep your car healthy
Use the student discounts
at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Happy
530 Wisconsin
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
843-9404
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
— 6 Nights a Week —
Open 2 p.m.,3 a.m. Dancers 3:08 p.m-3:08 p.m.
Photography Availablc
Class B Private
Wayne Pool—Owner
4
Wednesday, June 9, 1976
University Daily Kausan
Celtics grab Cook in first round
Norm Cook's basketball in joining the National Basketball Association's hardship draft paid off yesterday when he was 19. He also played with the 1976 World Champion Boston Celtics.
Cook, a junior from Lincoln, III., decided Monday that he would leave his name in the NBA hardship draft. Even if he hadn't been drafted, he would be an invalible for further college competition.
Cook was the Big Eight's freshman of the year during the 1973-74 season, averaging 11.4 points and 6.5 rebounds. This past season he averaged 14.8 points and 7.0 rebounds.
K-State guard Chuckie Williams was the only other big Eight player to win a road game. St. Louis, Missouri's
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE Eazi
W W L W Pct. GB
New York 19 18 17 .49 6
Baltimore 24 36 .480 6
Boston 24 36 .480 6
Cleveland 22 27 .449 7/4
Detroit 22 27 .449 7/4
Milwaukee 11 25 .430 7/4
Kansas City
Texas
Chicago
Michiganstate
Oakland
California
11 21 19 19 .630
28 24 22 232 1/4
28 24 23 232 1/4
28 24 23 232 1/4
28 24 23 232 1/4
22 33 33 330 7
22 33 33 330 7
Oakland 6. Boston 10.
Charlotte 7. Denver 13.
Cleveland 3. Cleveland 1
New York 4. California 2
Detroit 3. Chicago 6
Detroit 3. Chicago 6
**NATIONAL LACQUELION**
W W L L Pet. GH
Pittsburgh 28 23 158 7
Pittsburgh 28 23 158 7
New York 26 23 454 13%
Slokey 26 23 454 13%
Chicago 22 30 157 13%
West 13
Ciremailai
Los Angeles
San Diego
Houston
Houston
Albertson
Franklin
Late game included
Alabama 10, Pittsburgh 5
Ciremailai 10, Pittsburgh 5
Houston 5, Seattle 5
New York at San Diego, n
Philadelphia at San Diego, n
Philadelphia at San Francisco, n
13 21 20 622
13 21 20 622
17 23 21 414
28 20 20 451
28 20 20 451
13 21 20 13
SUA Summer Films
Wed., June 9
Mel Brooks'
The Producer
An Academy Award Winner starring a great comedian, the *PRODUCER*." When his account shows him how to make Broadway than in the zane comedian over sells shares to an untrustworthy company, he a biblical vile sheer launery.
Fri., June 11
Jean-Paul Belmondo
in Alain Resnais'
Stavisky
starring
Charles Boyer
Woodruff Aud.
7:30 p.m. $1.00
Great Combination
STEAK & DEEP FRIED SHRIMP $3.99
Steak and Deep Fried Shrimp. It's a great flavor combination, now at Mr. Steak Restaurant. It is one of the finest U.S.D.A. Choice beef, naturally aged for tenderness. A tender, juicy steak with an open flame. Then we add plum, pink ocean shrimp. Butterflied and deep fried to a crisp, golden green salad, oven warm bread and a streaming baked potato. Steak and deep fried shrimp. A great combination and a great flavor week at Mr. Steak-America's steak expert.
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.—10 p.m.
clutch shooting guard, was the second-choice of the Chicago Bulls.
Other Big Eight players who won in yesterday's two-hour draft were Jerry Fort, Nebraska guard, by the Boston Celtics; Jason Heyward, by the Detroit Pistons; Dion Frost, Iowa forward, by the Milwaukee Bucks; and Hercile Vire, Iowa State guard, by the Houston Rockets; and Kate St. John, by the Atlanta Hawks in the seventh round.
The Kansas City Kings chose forward Richard Washington of UCLA, also on the college eligibility list, in the first round. Washington signed a five-year contract to the Kissens.
Mr. Steak AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
Terms of the contract were not disclosed.
Washington, a 6-foot-10 All-American
forward, was voted the outstanding player
of the 1976 NCAA championship tour-
ment.
John Lucas from the University of Maryland, signed a five-year, no-cut contract with the Houston Rockets moments before his retirement. The National Basketball Association draft.
Among the other first-round picks were All-American forwards Scott May of Indiana and Jonathan Davis of College Player of the Year and a member of the U.S. Olympic squad, was the 2. pick, going to the Chicago Bulls, the team with the worst record in the league.
Other first-round picks were center-forward Leon Douglas of Alabama, by the Detroit Pistons; forward Wally Walker of Virginia, by the Portland Trail Blazers, and 7-0 Robert Parish of Centenary, by the Golden State Warriors.
After Golden State made Parish the No. 8 pick, Atlanta took guard Armond Hill of Princeton. Then guard Ron Lee went to Phoenix, Seattle grabbed Wilkerson, Philadelphia selected guard Terry Furlow of Michigan State, Washington had two straight choices and picked Olympic center Mitch Kupchak of North Carolina and guard
Larry Wright of Grambling and Golden chose forward Sonny Parke of Texas & Missouri.
TUTOR with M.A.
in MATH
It's hard to cover a semester in 8 weeks.
RIBS
We Write Motorcycle Insurance
Call 841-3708 after 6:00 p.m.
G's
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
HAM
FEATURING "SPECIALS" ON DINNERS EVERY DAY.
530 W. 23rd St.
BEEF
BAR-B-Q
CHICKEN
Open: Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-9 p.m.
Fri. and Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m.
TACO TICO
"THE TASTE IS IN THE SAUCE"
BUY ONE SANCHO GET ONE FREE
WITH COUPON
Tomatoes
Cheddar Cheese
Meat
Soft flour tortilla
Lettuce
Bite into a sancho today. It's so good, you're sure to want another! So buy one...and get one with this coupon. Just bring it to Taco Tico the next time you're hungry for something special.
BUY ONE SANCHO GET ONE FREE WITH COUPON
Limit one per customer.
Offer expires: June 15, 1976
Holiday Inn 2340 Iowa
J. Jour Si
Holiday Inn IOWA
TACO
TICO
Always in season and seasoned to please
with
Tonite
June 9
8:00 p.m.
$3.00
$3.50 at
door
Taste the Sixties with
Tonite
June 9
8:00 p.m.
$3.00
$3.50 at door
The
HERMANS HERMITS
SHOW
Get tickets at
BUGSY
BETTER
That same group from England
thatarked the crowds
642 Mass.
That same group from England that rocked the crowds into mad frenzies
Bugsys
SUMMER SPECIALS
MISS STREET DELI
50c OFF with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH
Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian
Kraut served on cottage rye
Reg. Price $1.90 Expires June 30, 1976
A
The Bull & Boar
11 W. 9th
50¢ OFF—with this Coupon
Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH
Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes--mothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included.
Reg. Price $1.95
Expires June 30, 1976
NEW YORKER
1021
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
$1.00 OFF—with this Coupon
ANY LARGE PIZZA
"The original thick crust pizza
from New York."
Expires June 30, 1976
NEW YORKER
1021
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Coors Pitchers
95c 60 oz.
with this coupon
Expires June 30, 1976
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
the
GRAMOPHONE
shop
842-1811...ASK FOR STATION #6
SOUND POWER!
"THE JBL RANKS WITH THE MOST ACCURATE SPEAKERS WE HAVE EVER TESTED—CERTAINLY NO OTHER HAS BEEN BETTER."
STEREO REVIEW-JUNE '74
THE GRAMOPHONE SHOP IS THE ONLY FACTORY-AUTHORIZED JBL DEALER IN THE LAWRENCE AREA!
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
RAIN
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.144
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
'Stavisky' blends fact and fiction
Thursday, June 10, 1976
See page 4
THOMAS E. PARKER
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Cooling-off the Attorney General
Kansas Attorney General Curt Schneider coiled his dry throat young ladies of Girls State. The popsicle was provided by Tamera with a perspice Wednesday afternoon after giving a talk to the Wark, a delegate from Osage City.
Ex-city worker may go to court
Bv RANDY SEBA
Attempts are being made to reinstate Dennis Smith, former sanitation employee, Phil Bohlander, secretary of the Lawrence County Workers Association, said yesterday.
Smith was dismissed from the sanitation department April 23 for not having been able to work since January 22 because of a back injury.
"The next step as far as I'm concerned is going to federal court," Bohlander said.
Smith had no comment other than that his attorneys were "working on things."
"His (Smit's) case is closed as far as I'm concerned," Buford Watson, city manager, said.
As president of the Lawrence Sanitation Workers' Association, Smith helped on the ground for a day as the Teamster local in Teopaka last April after workers felt an impass had been reached negotiating with city management. The criticized city and sanitation management
Union representatives and other supporters appealed to the Lawrence City Commission May 5 to reinstate Smith to his job. Smith said he had a job-related injury and that no attempt had been made to switch him to a job his back could stand. He said he had been fired for criticizing management. Smith was denied, but he is remaining involved. Smith was denied, but he is remaining involved.
Bohlander said that in other matters, the workers could see some progress being
made in the sanitation department. Some safety improvements concerning exhaust fumes from the garbage trucks have been made. he said.
They also think that management is showing more concern for the workers, because
"We feel were in an interim period," Bohander said. "There have been some attempts to solve various problems. There have been some improvements."
One thing that hasn't improved, as far as the workers are concerned, is the city commission's attitude toward the union affiliation. Bohlander said.
"The city at this time has no intentions of negotiating a bargain," he said.
The city commission voted 3 to 2 last year not to negotiate with union officials.
Watson and Lawrence mayor Fred Pence agreed that some improvement in relations
between management and sanitation workers has been made, but both men denied any responsibility.
"That decision is made and over," Pence said.
Pence said that negotiations should be kept at the local level and that workers were wasting their time trying to "whiplash or browbeat" him into submission.
“If you’ve got a problem, come tell me.” Pence told the workers. “We will talk about it and we will do it in a human, rational manner.”
Bohlander said the workers weren't trying to brobeat anyone by using Teamster rules.
"I know the Teamsmasters have a bad reputation nationally," he said. "I don't know whether or not all the stories are true, but they are clearly real. They're a clean and fair-minded local."
Lawrence teachers end negotiations with district
By DAVE WARD
School District 497 negotiators and the Lawrence Education Association (LEA) reached an agreement Wednesday afternoon with the teachers of contract bargaining for 1967/72.
The agreement was reached after the LEA team said they would reject any further compromises regarding new money for teachers' salaries for next year.
The LEA contended that the district's May 26 offer of $385,078 in new money, which was circulated to all schools, was the figure they could accept.
However, the district team said that the figure of $385,078 was a non-binding estimate of money needed to pay a base salary of $1,100. This would be an average salary increase of 7.3 per cent to teachers currently employed by the district.
Jack Brand, chief negotiator for the district, said from the onset of the negotiations that there would be no salary adjustments made with money that might be left over after the 7.3 per cent increase is paid.
At one point in yesterday's bargaining session, the district agreed to adjust a new money total of $474,000, which would turn any excess money into teacher salaries. However, the LEA rejected this proposal, and the total figure they wanted was $385,000.
"You can only press us so far with such
The two sides agreed in previous sessions on a base salary of $8,100. The issue separating the two sides was whether an allocation of $33,000, which would be needed to place six elementary physical education teachers on the salary schedule, would be included in the district's offer of $47,400 or would be added to the budget would be done if money budgeted for salaries wasn't spent also separated the negotiating teams.
"We have offered to expose ourselves up to $385,000; however, this is just an estimated figure." Brand said. "We don't feel it will take that much money to cover teacher salaries, but we cannot make any adjustments."
Brand said that the LEA had misunderstood the intention of the $385,000 figure, and he believed it was intended for the district by Carl Knox, superintendent of schools. Brand said that figure shouldn't be taken seriously by the LEA team because they couldn't not pass over the bargaining table.
The LEA team contended the proposal to make a minsterevaluation if it wasn't to be taken.
Journal-World under investigation
BY HUST FORCELL
Staff Writer
An investigation to determine whether the World Company, publisher of the Lawrence Daily Journal-World, is in compliance with the Fair Labor Standards Act is being conducted by an officer from the U.S. Department of Labor.
Vernon Crites, wage and hour compliance
The law also requires that employees be paid time and one-half for all hours worked in excess of 40 hours a week. But employees said they were paid a straight salary no matter how many hours a week they worked.
abusive and deceptive actions. We will not take them sitting down any longer," said Tony Gauthier, spokesman for the LEA team.
"I don't consider your 'new' proposal of including the $38,000 allocated for the physical education teachers in the sum of $474,000 a new proposal at all," Gauthier said. "In fact, the only thing new about this proposal is that it is worse than the last one."
Brand answered these accusations by saying that the LEA's approach to the issues separating the two sides was the same, and he heard in six years as a district negotiator.
Gauthur countered by insisting that the $385,000 was a viable offer from the district and the LEA wished to work with that figure.
officer for the labor department, said yesterday that his office was investigating wage and hour practices of the newspaper. He refused to discuss what he had learned or the reason for the investigation.
Negotiations speeded up when the LEA dropped its $30,000 proposal to add an additional half hour of planning time to the project. The LEA agreed to drop the plan after LEA
Critics said that he didn't know whether there were any discrepancies between the law and the pay practices at the newspaper and that the investigation was continuing.
newsroom employees, although records were kept for department employees of newsroom.
One employee of the newspaper said he was hired to work a 44-hour week, but it was understood that he would work until the was done. He said that he averaged more than 50 hours a week and that a 55-hour week was not uncommon.
Dolph Simons Jr., president and publisher of the newspaper, was out of town and unavailable for comment. Dolph Simons Sr., editor, refused to comment.
Leo Eller, controller of the Journal- World, said the labor department told newspaper officials that the investigation was a routine audit.
The Fair Labor Standards Act require that employees keep time巡察 on all employee days.
team member Jayne Polcyn asked to make
priority to priority item in next year's
contract talks.
Present and past employees said no such records were kept for Journal-World
After the meeting, Brand said, "I feel that the total dollar figure of $5,138,882 allocated to teacher salaries, constituting an average of $6,099," she said, "a was fair and consistent agreement."
after the LEA compromised, the district added $83,000 for physical education and $25,000 for library.
Darrell Ward, president of LEA, said, "I think the settlement was as good as could be expected under the limitations imposed on us by the legislature and the other needs of the district. It is a package that we will recommend that the teachers accept."
Besides setting the salary dispute, the two sides agreed to establish a committee to design a fringe benefit package that may be started in 1977.78.
The agreement will then be subject to ratification by the Board of Education.
Negotiators for both sides will meet again tomorrow morning to tie up the loose ends of the agreement.
Halls filling quickly
Residence halls always are nearly fun, for the fall semester, and the University of Kansas may have to put some students in temporary quarters again this year.
J. J. Wilson, director of housing said yesterday that although 700 to 800 spaces were still available in the residence hall system, they would fill up quickly. Proposals are being considered for temporary housing, he said.
"Everyone who wants in a residence hall is encouraged to make agreements early," said Jennifer A. Krauss,
Hess said that GSP-Corbin, Lewis and Oliver halls were already filled to capacity. Ellsworth hall is closed to men. She said that housing administrators were discussing possible off-campus housing because of the fall housing crunch.
Some men who applied for residence hall contracts last fall were turned away and those still enrolled in housing were full. About 30 students were paying $5.25 a day to live in utility rooms in McCollum, Hashinger and Oliver halls until regular accommodations were found for them.
Both Wilson and Susan Hess, graduate assistant to the dean of women, said that a record enrollment for fall 1976 would again fill the residence halls, as it did last year.
Wilson said that no one applying for a residence hall contract would be turned away and that about 200 more spaces could be made available in the residence halls. Some rooms will have triple occupancy, and students will live in converted utility rooms.
Wilson said that students living in utility rooms would have the option of moving into a basement.
"We anticipate the usual attrition rate the first month of the semester, which will open on Monday."
Wilson said the arrival of foreign summer at the end of the summer could fill up all the storage.
FDR came to the convention with a majority of delegates but lacked the two-thirds needed. That's where Farley's behind-the-scenes skills came to bear. He negotiated a trade by which Texas and Oklahoma were drawn to John N. Garner, swung into the FDR conference and gave him the victory. Garner became vice president.
Allen Field House and Robinson Gymnasium were being considered for temporary housing if the converted rooms filled up.
Juanita Wehrle-Einhorn, assistant to the dean of men, said that contracts were coming in at twice last year's rate. She said that the dean of men's office was considering seeking community help if the residence halls filled up quickly. The staff had decided to meet single-occupancy rooms to 30 per cent of the total occupancy, she said.
One-time FDR mastermind, 'Genial Jim' Farley, dies
Wilson and Hess said that they thought the student population would level off in the next few years and that there was little chance of an residence hall being built in the near future.
NEW YORK (AP)—James A. Farley, former postmaster general and political mastermind who engineered Franklin D. Roosevelt's ascendency to the presidency in the 1930s, died last night at his home. He was 88.
Wilson said that if such temporary housing were used, students would be transferred into the residence hall system within three to four weeks.
KU expects tuition hike
Farley's wide-ranging contacts and his chummy style earned him the nickname "Genial Jim." Those contacts—reported calls to him "the man who knew 40,000 people by their first names"—and his letters signed in green ink played a crucial role in the "selling" Roosevelt and the Democratic party to the voters in 1892 and 1936.
A Kansas Legislative Research Department recommendation to increase tuition and fees at state colleges and universities "was not at all surprising." L. Martin Jones, associate vice chancellor for business and fiscal affairs, said yesterday.
Sources said Farley had seen a doctor earlier in the day. He lived alone in the Towers, an adjunct to the Walderfort Astoria hotel on Park Avenue. It has his residence for more than a quarter-century.
For seven years, from the beginning of FDR's administration in 1933, Farley directed Democratic strategy as party leader and served as postmaster general.
"The pressure for increased student support is on and will continue to grow as the Legislative Educational Planning Commission and the Board of Regents note the necessary level of student financial contribution in the 1977 budgets. Jones said."
His political career began in 1911 when he was elected town clerk of Stony Point, a few miles from where he was born—in Grassley Point, N.Y., on May 30, 1888.
came to him in 1930 and after Roosevelt's nomination for the presidency, he be-
The outcome of the tuition increase debate won't be decided until later this year, after the Legislative Planning Committee of Regents and the legislature have met.
He said that it would be unconventional for the University to leave-off campus housing.
In 1913, he became a county supervisor and went to the state assembly in 1923. Five years later Farley had attracted the attention of state party leaders and was named secretary of the State Democratic Committee. The state chairmanship
He was floor chairman at the Chicago convention that nominated Roweitch to the first of a record four consecutive terms in the White House.
The Legislative Research Department recently proposed the tuition hike based on facts that indicate student fees and tuition collected in 1977 will cover approximately 19 per cent of the state education budgets. The lowest level of coverage in a decade
During FDR's second term, differences arose between Farley and President Roosevelt. The break became complete in the summer of 1940 when he called for a retreat. Farley said the President had told him a year earlier he would not run again.
The last tuition raise at KU was in the 1973 fall semester. KU's education budget had increased by about $2 million.
On the first cross-country campaign in 1931 to promote FDR, Farley shook the hands of hundreds of key Democrats. Then on his return, he sent each one a letter signed in the Irish green ink that was trademark of "Mr. Democrat."
InFiction has taken its toll. Jones said, and the projected 1977 edition portion of the book will be available in print for $40.
Farley discussed the break in a 1947 magazine article. Two reasons were offered: Farley's own political ambitions and his desire to Democrats with whom he did not agree.
"The increased income coming from a greater enrollment has been not proper
See TUITION page 6
Dali print presented
A KU Medical Center biochemist's Spanish heritage was a factor in his recent acquisition of three limited-edition prints of the work by his father. Yesterday he gave one to the state of Kansas as a joint gift from the University of Valencia and the Valencia Medical School in Spain.
Grisolia, under whose direction the painting was created, approached Dall with the request for his assistance at a conference in Valencia last year, Grisolia said recently. His proposal was for Dall to create a painting based on a complex reaction in protein metabolism, he said.
Santiago Grisolia, the Sam E. Roberts distinguished professor of biochemistry, presented the signed print, one of 78 made from the painting, to Gov. Robert F. Benton, with a letter of presentation from Chancellor Archie R. Dykes accompanied the print.
Because the subject was so different, Grisola said. Dall agreed.
Assistants to Grisola sent Dall chemical models of the reaction as background resource material. Dall used the models, and the labels from the datasets labels randomly on the canvas surface.
Dali kept the original painting in his private collection. The print is valued at about $1,000.
Although Grissola has lived in the United
States for 22 years and is a naturalized
marine biologist, she was born in
Nebraska.
He was instrumental in organizing an international food conference which was in Valencia in April. Bennett gave the keynote address.
He recently was one of four persons granted an audience with King Juan Carlos and Queen Sophia of Spain on their visit to the United States. He presented the king the key to Kansas City, Mo., and carried Bennett's greeting to the king.
Grisola said he had trained about 35 or 40 Spanish students to be biochemists. They are now heads of departments or researchers in Spanish universities, he said.
Recently Grisola taped an hour-long television program about Kansas City, which was aired on Spanish television station NBC. The program featured the traits of the mural of Coronado in the State Capital and pictures of the Plaza to emphasize the connections with the Kansas City skyline.
Neville Mankin
Staff photo
Inspecting a Dali
Santiano Grisalmo (right), the Sam. E. Robert distinguished professor of biochemistry at the KU Medical Center, presented to the state of Kansas one of 78 prints of a painting by Salvador Dali. Accepted the print, a gift of the University Valencia, Spain, Medical Department of San Antonio, Gov. Robert Bennett. The painting is an abstract representation of a vital cycle of life.
2
Thursday, June 10, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Senate lures Mounihan
NEW YORK (AP) -- Former U.N. Ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan has decided to enter the U.S. for nomination to the U.S. Senate from Kentucky close him up.
Moynihan scheduled a 10 a.m. news conference here Thursday. He couldn't be reached for comment yesterday.
The two sources, who refused to be identified publicly, said Wednesday that Moynahan, 49, would announce for the Senate seat now held by Republican-
Wheat forecast aloomu
TOPEKA - The Kansas wheat forecast was trimmed sharply yesterday to 279.5 million bushels, down 22.9 million bushels from a month ago. If the forecast holds true, the crop may have surpassed the previous year.
A month ago, the Kansas Crop and Livestock Reporting Service was forecasting a crop of 302.40 million bushels. It said the reduction was the result of damage caused by pests. The report also predicted that prices would be higher.
The new forecast, based on conditions existing June 1, estimates 10.75 million acres will be harvested with an average yield of 26 bushels per acre.
Spain's parties given OK
MADRID_The Spanish parliament legalized political parties yesterday for the first time in nearly 40 years. The move could give the country as many as 120 parties and could include the Communists, officials said.
Parliament approved the measure backed by King Juan Carlos by a vote of 338 to 91, overriding objections from rightist leaders.
to 91, overriding objections from rightist leaders. Political parties were banned at the end of the Spanish civil war in 1839.
The vote was seen as a defeat for the "Bunker," the rightist establishment by Gen. Franco Principe. The Franciotes have been declining in power rapidly since the fall of Mussolini.
AG raps Bennett veto
TOPEKA-Atty, Gen. Curt Schneider said yesterday that Gov. Robert F. Bennett's aide on a public television item in the 1976 omnibus appropriations bill ordered by the governor.
The item that the governor vetoed provided "this shall constitute approval of the recommendations of the Public Television System as contemplated by state statutes, which recommendations were submitted to the governor and the legislature." The provision also included the appropriation of $249.00.
Schneider said there was no question that Bennett had power to exercise his line item veto power to disapprove the $240,000 appropriation, but that the veto power would have been insufficient.
Kina's killer 'not alone'
MEMPHIS—One of James Earl Ray's attorneys said yesterday he was convinced his client wasn't acting in the 1804 slaying of Dr. Martin Luther King
"I'm convinced he's covering up for someone," attorney Robert L. Livingston said. "If he's withholding information—and I think he is—he might have hope of executive clemency from the governor of this state if he made a clean breast of what he knows." I think there are those who have not been brought to justice."
Livingston has represented Ray for six years in an attempt to win him a full trial on murder charges in connection with the King assassination. But the courts have refused to grant Ray's petition to withdraw his 1989 guilty plea. The Sixth U.S. Court Circuit of Appeals recently refused to consider the case.
Statue site of vet protest
NEW YORK- Fifteen Vietnam war veterans were arrested by National Park police Wednesday after the veterans barricaded themselves inside the Statue of Liberty in New York City.
A U.S. Park Service spokesman said a force of 15 police smashed through the barricades when protracted amnesty negotiations bogged down.
The one-on-one operation ended peacefully, while the cornea protesters submitted quietly to arrest. Liberty Island was sealed off to reporters and the authorities.
The member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War took over the famed monument when it closed at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. They drove 10 employees out and stayed inside until closing.
LOS ANGELES (AP)—Californians overwhelmingly rejected string controls over nuclear power plants in one of the most emotional and expensive ballot battles in California.
But the measure's defeat Tuesday still left California with three newly signed laws that Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. calls "the toughest ever passed." Brown, who will be held in contempt of justice, was concerned with nuclear safeguards and credits the initiative for success of the bills.
With almost all votes counted, the tally was 3,756,215 against 1,848,518 for the party.
The initiative would have voided the bills signed by Brown, and would have required power companies to operate nuclear plants in order to maintain liability or have their outputs restricted.
It also would have required the legislature to decide by two-thirds vote that nuclear power systems are safe, or new technology was needed and old ones phased out starting in 1981.
Strict nuclear controls rejected
Limits on use of tax returns recommended
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Federal Privacy Commission yesterday urged sharp limits on the use and distribution of income tax information, but stopped short of recommending that only the collector see taxaver returns.
Making their first report to President Ford and Congress, the seven commission members said voluntarily submitted tax returns. The commission agreed a "generalized government asset."
"The commission believes that the confidentiality of tax returns and related information is an essential element in preserving the effectiveness of the tax system in this country," the 71-page report said.
The commission, headed by New York management consultant and accountant David Linweis, was created by Congress in 1982 to protect rights of private security of American Americans.
The tax return report was issued to coincide with Senate considerate next week of a tax reform bill dealing in part with issues. A final report is due next spring.
In its most controversial recommendation, the commission said the Justice Department and other law enforcement agencies should no longer have easy access to tax returns for investigations and prosecutions not involving tax laws.
The panel said that before the Internal Revenue Service turned over individual returns for such investigations, prosecutors should be required to obtain a federal court order. The taxpayer should be notified that the government is trying to his federal return, the panel said.
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In 1975, the Justice Department sought to examine returns of 2,374 taxpayers suspected of various criminal offenses, the report said.
A major difference between the initiative and the bills is that the bills will not affect existing plants or those being built.
More than $4 million was spent on the campaign, including more than $3 million by opponents who included such industrial companies as Electric, Westinghouse, and Bechtel Corp.
Pacific Gas & Electric, which operates one of California's three licensed reactors and has two more under construction, spent more than $400,000 to fight Proposition 15.
Proponents spent nearly $1 million. When all reports are in, the spending on proposition will surpass the $3 million it was spent. Proposition 1956 in state officials said.
Delegate tallv
WASHINGTON (AP)—There are delegate wites so far for the national party nomination.
Republican:
Ford 964
Reagan 883
Needed to nominate: 1,130
Democratic:
Carter 1,138
Ullrich 205
Brown 229
Church 71
Needed to nominate: 1,505
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Thursday, June 10, 1976
University Daily Kansan
3
Camera will capture Navajo life
Bv CHARLOTTE KIRK
Staff Writer
While our nation is in the midst of a birthday celebration, one University of Kansas professor will be studying Americans who have been here longer than 200 years.
Gary Mason, director of photojournalism, will photograph and record moments in the lives of Navajo Indians during his sabbatical this fall. He will be working on a Navajo reservation near Farmington in northeast New Mexico.
"I will be documenting the life style for tomorrow's children and for history, because many have lost the original culture." Mason said recently.
"The documentary is basically for the tribe's use for future generations," he said.
"The documentary is basically for the tribe's use for future generations," he said. He was asked to do the film, Navajo Films and was given permission from a Navajo film board to photograph ceremonies, which are usually restricted to members of the tribe.
One such ceremony is a sing performed when a person becomes ill. The family and medicine man guide them. This, like many ceremonies, is quite secretive, and outsiders rarely are permitted to attend. The painters and painpainters that are destroyed when they die
"The families are very close-kit and traditional." Mason said. "The ceremonies are one of the things that bring the families close together."
Mason said the Navajos are tied very closely to the land. Many still live in houses, called hogans, made of mud. The women and children herd huge hooks of sheep, while most of the men work on the reser- under the direction of the tribal council.
Mason will also photograph traditional wedding ceremonies. Although the Navajos have church weddings, they also get married in the Indian ceremony.
Some modernization such as new medical facilities, has come to the reservation, Mission.
"The problem is that we must educate the people to live in modern dwellings," he said, "because many are not used to electric ranges or running water."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Published at the University of Kansas weekdays during the academic year except holiday and summer holidays, postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60645. Subscription by mail are $ a$ serif or $8 or $12. Postage for delivery is $ or $2 a year outside the county. Student activity fees are paid through the student activity fee.
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This fall, he will document Indians working, participating in powwows and ceremonies and visiting the trading post, where they trade sheep and food.
Mason's first experience in working with the Navajos was in 1963 when he and his wife volunteered to teach reading, writing and money-handling to the adults.
Since Mason doesn't speak the Navajo language, he will be accompanied by Wilma Redhorse, a Navajo interpreter. Mason will live with Redhorse and her family.
Mason. "When you do research and try to keep up with changes in the field of photojournalism you don't have much time for personal work."
Mason said he thought the Navajos would accept him because he has worked with them before. With strangers, he said, many Navajos are quite camera shy.
*“Doing this project will allow me to get back into work with photography, which is not what I was doing,” she said.
After Mason finishes shooting and recording, which will take about three months, he will organize and copy the documentary. The tapes will have to be translated into English, since they will all be recorded in Navajo.
Although most of the work will be kept by the tribunal council, some of it will come to Lawrence. Spencer Library will receive one copy of the book from Junior College will receive one in Navajo.
"This documentary will also bring Haskell and the reservation closer together," said Mason. More than 100 Navajos attend Haskell.
Letters Policy
Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 400 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space limitations and the editor's judgment. Letters must be signed; KU students must provide their address, hometown, faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
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The 1976 Kansas Theatre Festival
"The Continuing American Revolution"
presents
a live documentary based on materials collected by B. A. Botkins.
Lay My Burden Down
featuring:
2:00 p.m. in the University Theatre
The Black Contemporary Players of Greater Kansas City
Sunday, June 13
Tickets: $1.50 - K.U. Students: Senior Citizens $2.50 - Others
For reservations and info, call 864-3982.
--only at
the CRAMOPHONE shop 842-1811...Ask for Station No.6
the GRAMOPHONE shop
342-1811...Ask for Station No. 6
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MALLS SHOPPING CENTER LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1-913-842-1544
JAZZ JAZZ JAZZ
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass. above Paul Gray's Music
TONITE: Jazz Jam Session. Bring your horn or come to listen. FRIDAY: the Joe Utterback Trio, exciting West Coast jazz. SATURDAY: the Gaslite Gang, great traditional Dixieland jazz featuring John Brust—Vocalist. SPECIAL NEXT SATURDAY, June 19th: Skip DeVol, banjoist direct from Las Vegas.
Call 843-8575,842-9458 for Reservations
Grand Opening of Sandy's Across from Hillcrest Dairy Bar
Sandy's
Dairy Bar
Come in and register for a chance to win a ten-speed bike, no purchase is necessary. We're giving away bike flags with the purchase of a large Hot Fudge Sundae. If you buy a Black & White Sundae, we'll give you a bike back pack. We'll have balloons for the kids and a good time for everyone. So come by.
DAIRY BAR MENU
Cones...15 25 35
Chocolate & Vanilla Twist
Dip Cones...20 30 40
Banana Split...69
Parfait...65
Pints...45
Quarts...75
Floats...35 45
Soft Drinks...20 30 40
Sundaes
Hot Fudge...40 50 60
Black & White...60
Chocolate, Butterscotch,
Strawberry, Pineapple,
Marshmallow...35 45 65
Nuts 5' extra
Shakes...45 60
Chocolate, Vanilla,
Strawberry, Pineapple
THURSDAY,FRIDAY,SATURDAY,SUNDAY ONLY
Thursdav. June 10.1976
University Daily Kansan
Excellent acting marks 'Stavisky'
By CHUCK SACK Contributing Writer
With Jean-Paul Belmondo and Charles Beyer heading the cast of a film about a character in the early Art Deco '30s, one might expect "Stavisky" to be nothing more than a French imitation of "The Sting". Furthermore, in a press release announced throughout the events of the film are true, his intentions are not historical.
Movie-gore stung by decades of Hollywood's "creative" approach to history may steel themselves for the worst at that point, but this is definitely not a factual potpourri. Yet "Stavisky" has the same disturbing quality of recent works such as Nashville and the 1980s film *Garden City*, introduce to the film's fictional characters, and "Ragtime", where the novel's central figures brush elows with the likes of Freud and Houdini.
The appeal of juxtaposing fact and fiction, in roughly equal proportions, is that by including legendary actors in the soap opera material is transformed into a pop epic. Like "Nashville" and "Ragtime," "Stavisky" blends emotional fiction with political face to paint.
To its credit, this 1974 film achieves this purpose with a much steedier hand than the two American works of last year. "Stavisky" chronicles the last great scheme of the controversial swindler who gives the film its title.
When the story begins, Stavisky (Belmindo) is enmeshed in an international bond fraud. Disguised as the impresario Serge Alexandre, an alias he has assumed with the full knowledge of the police, and about cheating a gallery of corrupt victims.
Ever concerned with the subjects of time and memory, Resnais jugles scenes and settings the way that his protagonist juggles accounts. However, because the director's
earlier attempts in this field ("Last Year at Marienbad," "Muriel") were so disjointed, it's possible to overlook the ambitions (and successes) of "Stavisky." The transitions are smoother and more logical, not so much because he has abandoned his affiliation with the individual, but because he has enlarged the scope to depict the confusions of an era.
Some of this credit is due to screenwriter Jorges Semprun, who also scripted "Z." Semprun has carefully balanced Stavisky's capitalistic shell game with the destiny of another contemporary Russian emigrant, Leon Trotsky.
with Trotsky's every off-screen move faithfully reported, "Stavisky" becomes a metaphor for the death of socialism and the subsequent rise of fascism. The attempted French coup of February 6, 1934, Trotsky's exile and the unresolved "suicide of Stavisky become major in the war in end, whether the con-man or the police pulled the trigger of the gun that killed him—he has been murdered by the politico-economic system.
Lest all of this sound too imposing,
"Stavisky" gains much of its charm from
the more commercial aspects of its
production. The rich, dense detail of the sets evokes the Thirteens without the ostentatiousism. And Sacha Vierny's photography gives the reds, whites, and blacks an edge that complements the style of the settings.
But as a commercial venture, the film must stand or fall on the basis of its actors, and it must also be able to support the weight of the themes they carry. It is in this area that "Stavskij"
Charles Boyer as the right-wing Baron Raoul, Amy Dupuy as the Stisky's wife and the symbol of his pursuits, and Claude Burroughs, an angel whoBonny head the excellent support cast.
And finally, Jean-Paul Belmonde, with
'Good old rock and roll' dished out by the Hermits
Staff Writer
By JIM MURRAY
Herman's Hermits, one of the most popular of the English rock groups to invade America in the early 60's, enthralled and electrified a standing-room-only crowd of young fans. It best night with music ranging from Chuck Berry to the Eagles to their own '60s hits.
The first hour-long set featured the group's biggest hits interspersed with songs by the Eagles, Graham Nash, Nilsson, and Three Dog Night. Among the original songs were "Gone With You," "Some Good You," "Henry VIII," and "Mrs. Brown, You're Got a Loved Lady."
During "Mrs. Brown," band leader Carl Green called two women up from the club to watch him play and the women's performances. The winner remained onstage while Green put a male volunteer through the same routine. The two then joined the entire band for a final performance.
The hour-long intermission between sets.
as well as the wait before the show, was filled by local disc jockeys playing raucous disco music. The wait before the show was made bearable by a virtuoso performance by a couple dancing to "Surfin U.S.A.". The dedication had no such redeeming feature.
The Hermits' second set, like the first, featured tunes by other artists, notably a cousing rendition of Bob Dylan's "Till You Bring Your Baby Tonight." The main part of the song is about an unhappy girl that included "Hold Your Hand," "Ticket to Ride," "Get Back" and "She Loves You."
The Hermits followed the medley with what Green called "good old rock and roll," and they kept it going. Sally, They played two more of their hits, "No Mail Today" and "There's A Kind of a Hush," to the wild apollause of the crowd, and they set the two sets on its feet dancing to the music.
The band's combination of light music and loose banter with the crowd created an
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his fat nose and tired beagle eyes (some say rugged good looks) gives a thoroughly enjoyable performance as Stavisky. Instead of looking uncomfortably out of place in elegant clothing as he has before, Belmondo gives the role the smooth charm and natural authority appropriate to an almost mythological con-man.
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"Stavisky," 7:30 p.m. Friday at Woodruff
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With every aspect of the film fully realized this way, "Stavaisly" has the wide-ranging appeal that is part of a great film-flam man's bag of tricks. Luckily, when the pay-off comes, you aren't left feeling cheated.
PEPSI
GOSH POPEY! HOW'D YOU GET TO BE SUCH A GOOD SAILOR?
IT WAS A CINCH OLWE.
I JUST TOOK LESSONS FROM THE K.W. SAILING CLUB.
THEY'VE GOT THE BOATS, CLASSES AND EVERYTHING!
K.U. SAILING CLUB tonight 7:30 Kansas Union
For those wonderfully hot summer days come in and get cooled with one of our crisp French Boussac cotton from John Meyer in either yellow or a soft light blue. You'll love it.
Also . . . we've got selected summer dresses, shirts and skirts at 1/3 off and all our famous swim suits at 10% off.
Country House
ALEXIS MUNKEL
for women.
Located at the back of the Town Shop
Downtown, 829 Mass.
for women.
MARY BLAIR
our own corsican soccer shirt designed by Mister Guy new for spring '76
reg. $15.00 now $11.95 for the summer session
open thursday nights till 8:30
MISTER
GUY
920 mass.
university of kansas contemporary traditionalists
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 10, 1976
5
Girls State officers elected
BY LEWIS GREGORY
Staff Writer
Aplause and screams of delight greeted Nationalist party candidate Ann Waldford as
she was declared the winner of the gubernatorial election at 34th Annual Sunflower Garden.
Waldorf, Greensburg will be sworn in as
THE WORLD'S FAIR
Ann Waldorf
Staff photo
the 1978 Girls State governor tonight at the inaugural ceremony by John Conard, executive assistant to Gov. Robert F. Bennett.
"I will have a tough time representing the greatest girls in the state, but I'm going to do it."
Wulford defeated Ann Covall, Russell,
cederal candidate. The vote was taken
after a week of debate.
Waldorf said she believes the U.S. government is not open enough to its citizens.
"The government says the people know what is going on, but I don't believe we know it," she said. "It's time we went back to basics and be open with one another."
However, she added, any information vital to the safety of our country should be kept.
"I just don't know if I trust the ones keeping the secrets," she said.
"No one should be discriminated against. It women have to go to war to protect the men."
She said the Equal Rights Amendment, which was discussed during the election decision, is not a right.
"The highlight of Girls State for me this week has been the support I've received from girls in my city, county and everyone here." Waldorf said.
The gubernatorial candidates agreed that abortion shouldn't be legal unless it is medically approved.
"Too many girls have beliefs to protect themselves socially and I don't like that. I hate to think a human being is killed because I am afraid of judgment in the first place," she said.
Federalist Cherly Linda, Dexter, won the election for lieutenant governor. The attorney general, John Lori Heidebrecht, McPheron, State treasurer is Nationalist Barbara Brinkman.
The secretary of state is Federalist Jodi Butehring, Winfield; the state auditor is Nationalist Karol Dowell, Arkansas City; the commissioner of insurance is Federalist Janet Rohl, Cunningham; and the writer is International Klim Werner, Empiria.
SUMMER SPECIALS
Waldorf and the other officers will meet their counterparts in Topeka tomorrow. The Girls State Senate will have 16 Nationalists and 14 Federalists. The House of Representatives has 29 Nationalists and 25 Federalists.
MISS STREET DELI
50c OFF— with this Coupon REUBEN SANDWICH
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11 W. 9th
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Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH
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Hot Cornbelt, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on coffee rye
Reg. Price $350 June 30, 1976
NEW YORKER 1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
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ANY LARGE PIZZA
"The original thick crust pizza from New York." Expires June 30, 1976
NEW YORKER
1021
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Coors Pitchers
95¢ 60 oz.
with this coupon
Expires June 30, 1976
"STAVISKY is one of the most rewarding films I've seen this year." -Nora Savre, New York Times
this year." Nora Sayre, New York Times
"Resnais brings the period to life, creating an aura of elegance and grace and a mood of sadness and corruption."
"STAVISKY with Jean-Paul Belmondo is an exquisite recreation of the early thirties milieu of political scandal and prejudice."
-Kathleen Carroll, NY Daily News
SINCE 1927
"Resnais never makes a false move... creates the mood missed by 'The Great Gatsby.' The cast is sullied.d." — *Newswear Magazine*
"STAVISK is Alain Resnait"
best film." William Paul. Voice
office.
JERRY GROSS Presents JEAN-PAUL BEI MONDO
IN ALAIN RESNAIS STAVISKY
Staring CHARLES BYER
Directed by ALAIN RESNAIS • Screenplay by JORGE SEMPREM
Musical Score Composed by STEPHEN SONHEIM
Soundtrack Album Available on RCA Records
PG PRESENTATION GUIDANCE SUGGESTED
Distributed by CINEMAION INDUSTRIES
MORRIS PLAINS, N.J. (AJ)—Karen Anne Quinan was moved last night under tight security to the Morris View Nursing Center from St. Clare's Hospital in Denville.
The move was made by ambulance during a pouring rain. At least two Morris County sheriff's patrol cars escorted the ambulance to the county-operated nursing home, where about 25 sheriff's deputies waited to keep away reporters.
Quinlan moved from hospital
few minutes before the ambulance did:
In a statement to reporters at the nursing home, Armstrong said, "The transfer was decided upon by Mr. Quinlan in the exercise granted to him by the state Supreme Court. The judgment sided judgement rendered on March 31."
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Quinlan arrived a few minutes before the ambulance did.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered to all students not related to regard to the University or national or national institution. BALL ALL ACCOMPANY TO 111 FLELL HALL
H
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
Each additional word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The DUK 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.
6th & Mo.
ERRORS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These ad can be placed in person or by calling the UDX business office at 843-655-1234.
FOR RENT
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
Bring this ad and receive 50' off on 12 Shrimp or 8 delicious pieces of Chicken. Good through Sunday, June 13.
N 3' bie: dwarf, sunken living room, beamed ceilings, a.s. excellent location, immediate access to outdoor space.
ATTENTION STUDENT BENCHES—Drop in and be sure to check back often (e.g., call phone calls) at WESTERN COPE HOUSE.
2 bdr. all utilities paid, on campus Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking / e-mail pool. $48
per room.
Studio art, private tutoring, furnished bath,
bathroom, kitchen, laundry. Must be a
student preferred. 843-7827. 6-16
3 bdrm house with attached garage, unfurnished
2 bedrooms, home from price $2495.
Call 643-0073
e-17
2 bdm. furnished large apt. near bus and downway.
$120 to $180 Utility费 843-830-6, 17-
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them-
1) As study guide
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
This week end Special
TEXAS
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
T1 - 2500II 79.95
T1 - SB8-30A 65.95
T1 - SB8-31A 99.95
T1 - SB8-43A 143.95
T1 - SB8-179 179.95
T1 - SB8-32 299.95
T1 - SB8-32 90.90
HP - 25 148.50
HP - 25 148.50
HP - 27 185.00
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Plus 12.50 Shipping
SEND MONEY ORDER OR CASHES CHECK FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialists.
BEL AUF ELECTRIC. 843-909-3600. W. 6th. 8:45 a.m.
ELECTRIC. 843-909-3600. W. 6th. 8:45 a.m.
DALLAS, TEXAS 75230 PHONE 214-691-0215
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
DISCOUNT CALCULATOR SALES
BAASCH
Mastercharge
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
---
Selling something? Call us
BankAmericard
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STERIO COMPONENTS
THE GRAEMOPHONE
NEW AND FOR SIGNATURE
shop
VI 3-2139
the GRAMOPHONE shop
AUC 1812 AM PON VISION A
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Three Less Distortion
These Most Stereo Components
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THE ART
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AND STEREO
WALLEY BUFFET CENTER LANCARE ANGELS 1 807 694-644
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Component*
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
MALL SHOPPING CENTER
LARKIN CENTER, INC. 806-754-6449
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory price or close-on product, buy the STEREO COMPONENTS AT THE GRAMMOHOP SHOP at KIEFS.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
Trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
North Avenue, New York, NY 10020.
1941 Honda 360, 370 miles. Tip-top shape. Must sell. Call 913-8555, Overstock 6-14
King size Berners and Foster mattres and box-set set. I year old, best after takes 825.
Must sell 1957 350 Yamaha RD $755 or best offer.
844-6818, keep try.
*59 Ford I`s ton and 82 Chevy I ton panel boat*
*Best offer: 842-6705 or 842-8421.*
6-17
HELP WANTED
Research assistant, Bureau of Child Research, Applications and system programming on PDP. Participates in internships at the systems and applications level re-training degree in Computer Science doubles research Applicant's degree. 864-798 or 864-8254. Equal opportunity employer to work and women of all race encouraged to apply
EARN MONEY--You can earn $2 an hour for participating in psychology study. If inter alia, you can earn $40 a week.
OVERSEAS JOBS - temporary or permanent. Australia, S.A., America, etc. All fields. $62-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid. Signature required. A.K. Box 4409, Berkeley, CA. 94704. 6-15 KA. Box 4409, Berkeley, CA. 94704.
Coordinator of curriculum and instruction survey (MCIS) for grades 1-8. Monthly 12-hour appointment starting in Aug. Seeking person with active interest and community support, and instruments for faculty improvement and development for faculty improvement and development C & D Survey next year. Apply at 490 Baylair Hall, Suite 630, Burlington, VT 05407. Affirmative action employer Qualified and insured to accept job offers.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost: black, medium hair, male age (9 months) with some white on chin. Hearn. Bedard 82-0503-67-17
Lost: Light orange cat with fluffy tail in vicinity of room. Call Linda at 84-630-46-16 offer 5 at 82-904-900
NOTICE
J. HOOD, BOOKSELLER, welcomes new and returning students to the summer season. Returning students will be required to have half-pitted paperbacks in most fields. Western philosophy, humanities, biology, technology, etc. Come in and browse you are able to choose from a variety of p.m., Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. to p.m., Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. to p.m., Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. to p.m., Closed Monday, 140 s.f. 814-644-6644
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
parfaits, foafs and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and thresherse cheese at the Catahill Castle 803
back door). Dinner to lil' 8:30 a.m.
Sundays.
If you have been confused or have any knowledge about any confusion or mistake between the dates of your departure and STEVE's call, call collect (322-6546 (Topeka), during the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. each day.
Papar Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
pans, lamps, clocks, televisions. Daily open 12 p.m.
to 5 p.m.
GUANANTONG WEIGHT LOSS. Bend one dollar at the top of the hole on a piece of wood at Montica Ridge. DIVA, ABERDEEN Hill. C9. 9587. U.S. Post Office. 10202 N. 36th St.
WIN A CASE OF BEER! Earn $2 an hour for participating in a psychology study. Also each student must participate in a course they have participated—the winner receives a free copy of coke. If interested, call 8-615 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 8-615
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CUP BOARD
10-5 Monday, Saturday
KU-KARATE CLUB Summer sessions Tuesday and Thursday. T 3:30 p.m., beginning and ending classes. 1st meeting Thursday, June 10th. 2nd meeting Monday, June 13th. LAWN, for 6-10
814-257-433 after 5 p.m.
PERSONAL
After 28 years in business, if George doesn't he will make it. George's Google Shop, P272, is one of the world's most popular.
SERVICES OFFERED
Alcohol is America's number one drug. If you need help with alcoholism, 842-0110. - It can treat alcohol use, kind of music, bluegrass rock, folk, and baroque. Call 841-6147. McKenna Mason Siren Music.
Experienced tutor and instructor to old studies in many liberal arts areas. 82-9719. 6-10
Math Tutoring—Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 092, 102, 105, 116, 115, 121, 122, 123, 500. Regular sessions or test preparation. *7-29*
842-784-601
SUMMER COMMUNICATION WORKSHOPS
COMMUNICATION MAIL Call Whiting Klink 8146-9490 or 835-9811
COMMUNICATION SUPPORT 8146-9490 or 835-9811
TUTOR
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 862-4476,
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours). 7-29
Experienced typist IBM Selectric, term papers,
spreads. Proof-reading, proof-writing, spying.
corrected Jena 841-2906.
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-3708 after 6 p.m. **tf**
Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mile. Mail resume to: 843-705-9683. Mr. Wright.
Typtip (editor, IBM Pica/cille), Quality work
Typip, editor, dissertations, welcomes
help 842-192-8271
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed,
typing tests, software development,
thesis, dissertations, ptc electric, B.A. Social
Sciences, Master's degree.
Female roommate for summer. 2 bedrooms.
Night care via suite price-$25.00. Cairn
101 evening.
WANTED
Male roommate Upperclass for fall-spring 76-77. Roommate bedroom apartment Call collect 813-744-6854 after 6
Pessimal roommate wanted to be beautiful 2-
bedroom girl. Call 814-593-6700 and ask for Coryde
814-593-6700 and ask for Coryde
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & Arkansas 843-3328
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Fitted Sheets
530 Wisconsin
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
843-9404
sin THE HIDEOUT CLUB
F
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Open 2 p.m. 3 a.m. Dancers 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Memberships Available
Class B Private Club
Wave Pool—Owner
THE HAWK
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
- Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
- Chilled Glasses
& Schooners
Pitcher Night Wednesday
THE WHEEL
-Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
- Sandwiches
Outdoor Beer Garden
"Beat the Summertime Blues at 14th and Ohio"
6
Thursday. June 10. 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU's Slagle drafted by Yankees
Former KU pitcher Roger Sagle, an All-Big Eight ace for the Jayhawks this year, was drafted yesterday by the New Yrk baseball organization in the free agent draft.
Slagle was picked in the second day of the draft. Players who have been chosen in previous drafts but have failed to sign with that club are chosen in a separate phase. Slagle never been drafted. Slagle was drafted by the San Diego Padres in December, 1975.
KOM KRATTIL, who played both left field and third base for KU this year after
Sports
leaving the football team, was picked in the previous undrafted players by the Kansas City
The Kansas City Royals selected FRANCIS McCANN, a sluggish infielder from the University of Delaware, as their first major league free agent draft Wednesday.
McCann, 22, 5-11, 168 pounds, was among the collegiate leaders in several offensive categories this past season while leading Delaware to a 31-19 record and the Western division championship of the East Coast Conference.
Kansas City's other selections yesterday were William Yarbrough, a third baseman-outfielder from Mantee, Fla.; Marty Serrano, a 18-year-old shortstop from San Jose, Calif.; and Javier Sierra, a 21-year-old third baseman from La Puente, Calif.
Running back JOHN RIGGINS, the first 1,000-yard rusher in the history of the New York Jets, on the verge of picking a new team, his agent said here yesterday.
"All I can say at this point is that an announcement made in no later than March 24, Agent Bob Levine."
Riggins became a free agent May 1 and has held lengthy negotiations with teams in Los Angeles, Houston, Minnesota, Washington and New Orleans, Billings said.
Major league baseball attendance is up
1 million over the same period last year,
it's nearly doubled.
Through Sunday's games, the 24 major league clubs had played before 9,635,200 fans, an increase of 13 per cent over one year. The team also number of playing dates for the two seasons.
Seventeen teams had increased attendance, headed by the Boston Red Sox.
York Yankees, Philadelphia Phillies,
Cincinnati Reds, Atlanta Braves, Chicago
White Sox and Kansas City Royals are each up more than 100,000.
JOHN MAYBERRY hit two home runs and AL COWENS collected a pair of hits to spark the Kansas City Royals to a 6-3 victory over the Detroit Tigers last night.
'The victory was the Royals' seventh in the
KANSAS CITY
DETROIT
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| Mayer 4b | ab | r | h | h1 | Woldiford r | ab | r | h1 |
| Stabch 8b | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | G Fried 1b | 3 | 1 | 2 |
| Stabch 8b | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | G Fried 1b | 3 | 1 | 2 |
| A Rhodgine 4a | 4 | 0 | 1 | 0 | McRae dh | 4 | 1 | 2 |
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| Klimm c | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Robas jb | 4 | 1 | 1 |
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| Wockenm p b | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Silmon c | 4 | 1 | 1 |
| Wockenm p b | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Silmon c | 4 | 1 | 1 |
| Sutherland 2b | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Filmerp jb | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Sutherland 2b | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Filmerp jb | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| J Cwearfong p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Minigap p | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Minigap p | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | Minigap p | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Total 34 3 10 3 Total 30 8 6 6
Detroit 101
*same city* CJB - D, X - same city CJB - D, De - same city CJB - D
CJB - Y - same city CJB - Y, same city CJB - Y, same city CJB - Y
Mary - same city Mary, same city Mary, same city Mary
| | IP H R ER BB SO |
| :--- | :--- |
| Bare (L, 4.5) | 3 1 0 1 0 |
| J. Crawford | 3 1 0 1 0 |
| Hilke | 3 1 0 1 0 |
| Flitzerwirth (W, 7.3) | 71.3 10 3 0 |
| Moyers | 13.3 0 3 0 |
| Moyers A.-12.39 | 13.3 0 3 0 |
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE East
New York W 19 Pet. GB
Boston 23 18
Rhode Island 23 25
Railroad 24 17
Cleveland 23 27
Detroit 23 28 460 7/8
Milwaukee 17 57
West Kansas City 32 19 627 ---
Texas 32 10 800 --%
Chicago 26 25 510 4 %
Minneapolis 26 25 510 4 %
Oakland 25 25 510 4 %
Oklahoma 25 25 510 4 %
Boston 6, Oakland 4
Houston 5, Milwaukee 2
Milwaukee 4, Minnesota 1
New York 6, California 3
Washington 5, Kansas City 6
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W 15 L Petr. GB
Philadelphia 20 15 347
Pittsburgh 20 24 184
Boston 20 31 456
St. Louis 22 31 149
Chicago 23 11 415
Claremont 34 20 .830
Los Angeles 34 20 .830
San Diego 34 20 .554
Houston 28 20 .500
Alanta 28 20 .403
San Francisco 24 20 .343
Miami 24 20 .333
Alicante 2, Chilco 0
San Francisco 2, San Diego 2
Boston 1, Boston 1
St. Louis 2
San Diego 3, New York 3
Sydney 3
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last nine games and enabled them to maintain their 1/4-game margin over the Texas Rangers in the American League West.
Despite the ten hits he gave up in the 7% innings he pitched, AI Fitznorz raised his record to 74. Steve Minster struck out two games and the oighth innings. Bare got the Tigers' loss.
Mayberry's first blast followed a two-out walk to George Brett by Ray Bare, 3-5, and ignited a four-run Kansas City first inning. Hal McRae then singled, Cowens tripped him home and Cowens scored on a Cookie Rosajos plate.
Del Shakel, executive vice chancellor,
echoed Jones' comments and added, "Some increase is probably necessary to keep the students current with what inflation has been."
tionate to the rising cost of instruction;" he said.
The effects a tuition raise would have on KU offices a mention. Gil Dyk, dean of admissions, said, "Although it depends on the circumstances, increase, it probably will have little effect."
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Dyck said he "hopes the individual will choose his educational institution on the basis of its academic programs rather than dollars and cents."
Jerry Rogers, Director of Financial Aid, said he saw the idea of a tuition raise as yet another obstacle in an already difficult situation.
now and a tuition increase will only make it harder to meet everyone's needs," Rogers said. Although the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant (BEOG) program has helped many students to attend KU, a raise in tuition would create more financial need that could only be met with loan help, Rogers said.
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Health care decisions lie ahead, Mrs. Roy says
Bv KENNA GIFFIN
In the next few years, Americans must decide what kind of health care they want, the equity with which it will be dispensed and how it will be paid for, Mrs. Jane Roy, a district court trustee from Topela, told about 50 people attending a Lawrence League of Women Voters meeting Thursday night.
Mrs. Roy spoke in place of her husband, Bill Roy, physician and a former member of the U.S. House of Representatives. Congressman Roy was active in presenting health legislation in the House.
Mrs. RoyRead her husband's talk, An Agenda for Physicians and Legislators, on the problems and prospects of health legislation. She focused on Roy's views on the health legislation and his agenda of decisions that must be made.
forces that are determining our nation's current health problems," she said.
from these forces, "Three medical facts of life Emerge," she said. "One, that we cannot do everything for everyone everywhere, two, that if we cannot do everything for everyone everywhere, then we must decide what we are going to do for whom, where, when, and why." The only one is only of the things that determine health.
Americans consider personal health care to be a human right, Mrs. Roy said, and they are more likely to take that responsibility.
*Expenditures for health have increased from $38.9 billion in 1965 to $18.1 billion in 1975—a 300 per cent increase over a 10-year period," she said. "The portion of the GNP (gross national product) spent for health has increased from 5.9 per cent in 1965 to 8.3 per cent in 1975."
Health care costs are rising rapidly as medical
science and technology expand, she said. There is a need to seven years for medical knowledge right now.
She said that health care in America was already rationed by its costs, its unavailability in some areas, the inability of some patients to find a point of care, and the chance utilization of already limited resources.
National health insurance would also ration health care, Mrs. Roy said. She discussed in detail five possible systems of national health care payment.
First, we can continue with our present system of private health insurance, government payment for the indigent and out-of-pocket payment for uncovered services, she said. This system gives us unlimited funds and latitude for innovation and the adoption of new services.
However, this system also includes costs that are increasing to the point of unaffordability of services
and a dual system of health care, in which some pay fully for their health care while others costs are not.
The second possible system she described would be a return to free market forces. Private health insurance would be prohibited and some kind of guaranteed annual income so that everyone would be financially able to decide the kind and extent of health care they desired would be needed, she said.
This system would make the health care system open to anti-trust actions and rules for increased freedom of market for those providing services, she said.
A third system would combine the present system of payment plus catastrophic health insurance by private companies or the government, Mrs. Roy said. This system would need strong legislation to ensure that all workers are covered for economic increases. The individual would pay for normal expenses, as one does now, but would be covered for
very large expenses under the catastrophic insurance, she said.
The fourth system would be national health insurance with full government payment. Personal health care would be limited because the government did not provide it, and would receive. However, the system would offer equity and affordability for the individual. There would be a risk of inadequate funding since the system would compete for funds with all other government programs. The central planning and regulation, she said.
A combination of national health insurance and private insurance would make up the fifth possible system, Mrs. Roy said. The government wouldn't determine the total distribution of health services, but it could be possible depending upon what kind of insurance the government bought for the poor.
BENZÉ HAYE
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Monday, June 14, 1976
Poco remembered
The late Bernard "Pace" Frazier, KU faculty member and renown sculptor, is seen at work in his studio in Strong Hall days before his death May 24, 1976. Frazier will be eulogized in a memorial service today at the Plymouth Congregational Church. See story page four.
Carter supports women's rights
By The Associated Press
On the Democratic side, Carter had
1,229.5 of the 1,563 needed for nomination.
He picked up 23 delegates over the weekend,
11 in Missouri, 10 in Delaware and the remainder from scattered delegate switches.
California G. Evid, Gennedin G. Brown Jr.
Jr., against active opposing
Curtin, hd72 defenses
Newsweek magazine reported yesterday that a survey compiled by its correspondents indicated Ford will go to the convention with 1,160 delegates and Reagan
Reagan and Ford are still locked in battle for the GOP nomination, with both predicting victory. After 19 delegates were chosen at the Missouri state GOP convention at 865 for Ford and 886 for Reagan. It takes 1,130 delegates to win the nomination.
In Washington the Democratic platform drafting subcommittee recommended yesterday the party support a new incomprehensive program that would guarantee a minimum income for the poor and elderly whether they are working or
Co-op to benefit artisans, buyers
The panel also said the party should go on record favoring national health insurance and pardons for Vietnam war draft evaders. The draft prepared by the subcommittee
Jimmy Carter looked toward New York as he pressed to wrap up the Democratic presidential nomination while Ronald Reagan, in weekend delegate selection, continued to whiteway at President Obama lead in the race for the GOP nomination.
Staff Writer
Artists and craftsmen as well as art
artists may soon reap the benefits of a
Craft Co. on
By CORA MARQUIS
Twenty-five local potters, fiberworkers,
quilters, jewelry makers, photographers,
weavers, clothiers and leather workers are
beginning of a Lawrence Craft Co-op.
and dress maker; and Bob Hubbert, leather worker and jewelry maker, agreed the coop will benefit artists in several ways.
The four originators of the co-op idea,
patty Doria, jewelry maker; jody Deutsch,
a designer; martha Born.
Doria said that the greatest benefit of the proposed co-op would be to provide a retail outlet for the artists' and craftsmen's products.
Currently, about the only means available to artists and craftsmen of marketing their creations are shops, Doria said.
Doria said this would benefit art purchase because artists could price their articles more reasonably knowing that 30 to 40 per cent of their profit would not be taken.
signment, that is, they take 30 to 40 per cent of the retail price.
The proposed co-op would operate on a non-profit basis and artists would receive funding.
The shop owners take products on con-
goes to the full platform committee Monday.
Another advantage of the proposed co-op, or said is, that the co-op members could be more involved.
Carter, meanwhile, pledged to make the fullest possible use of women in advancing his programs and announced yesterday the need for more female leadership called the Committee of 51.3 Per Cent.
He said he would be making a detailed speech on women's issues later in the week. He also promised to support passage of the Equal Rights Amendment, enforcement of laws against sex discrimination in employment and housing and ending discrimination against women.
In a letter made public over the weekend, Church told campaign workers in Utah that he planned to endorse Carter today. He has written to the governor and go to Carter for one follow Church's lead.
Jackson added, however, that he would not formally release his 221 delegates.
Carter will be in New York City today, seeking the support of New York delegates to next month's Democratic national convention.
Brown and Rep. Morris K. Udall of Arizona will also address the New York delegates. Sen. Frank Church of Idaho, who received the meeting, canceled out yesterday.
And Washington sen. Henry Jackson said
saturday he would work for "America if I am
a president."
See CO-OP page 2
Carter continued his fence mending with former rivals Saturday, meeting in Montgomery, Ala., with Gov. George Wallace. The meeting was one of the few publics that "puffed and mushed portly."
Wallace has already released his delegates and announced his support for Cohen.
Carrier's fence mending moved into high gear as mot part of officials acknowledged that the fence had been damaged.
He talked last week by telephone with Maryland.gov. Marvin Minden, a key man in Brown's victory over Carter in that state last month, and Carter aides said he has called other Democratic figures, including Sen. Edward M. Kennedy of Massachusetts.
Reagan picked up 18 of 19 delegates selected Saturday at the Missouri Republican State Convention. Ford and Mitt Romney had both campaigned at the convention.
"I'm smiling. I feel good. I feel very good.
I feels like North Carolina and Texas
at the same time."
primary victories that had sustained his campaign.
There was no direct comment from Ford on the Missouri outcome, but a deputy press spokesman said he was disappointed with the results.
As he flew to California for several days after he the Missouri meeting, Reagan said his "sunbelt strategy" is working and that he has the confidence with a little help from the mountain states.
There are still 10 states where Republicans will pick convention delegates at state conventions. Reagan is pimping his job as governor, and the new New Mexico, Colorado and Washington.
The six target states are the final pieces of the "sunbel strategy"—Reagan's plan to capture the GOP nomination with big cities in the southern and western states.
Without picking a winner or declaring a preference, former Treasury Secretary John Connally predicted Sunday the outcome of the party's August 16 convention in Kansas City.
'I don't know whether we can sweep them, but we have a good chance for
The remaining uncommitted delegates will be under severe pressure from both President Ford and challenger Ronald Reagan, he said on NBC's "Meet the Press," and it will be very hard for them not to take sides before the convention.
sizable majrites", Reagan said. "We are on our projections, may be ahead with our expectations."
Asked if he might be a possible selection for vice president, he said: "I doubt that it will be offered. I have doubts that I would take it if it were offered."
Newsweek reported yesterday that Ford's advisers are pushing Connally and Tennessee Sen. Howard Baker as possible runningmates.
Polish freedom different native instructor declares
Bv GARY WALLACE
"Poland—not yet lost while we still live!"
This refrain from the Polish national anthem speaks of a smoldering freedom both in the past and in Romana Boniecka carries in her mind.
As a guest instructor of the University of Kansas slavic department, Boniecka has spent the past year comparing America with her Polish homeland.
"The first question students always ask is, How did you get out?" she said.
"Americans still envision Poland as it was 20 years ago."
Twenty years ago, Bonnieka was a political dissident repressed by Communist Party leader Wladyslaw Gomukla for her involvement with dissident university intellectuals.
She speaks of a freer Poland now, one that permits unimpeded travel and criticism of the government. Bonnieck believes most Americans measure freedom in terms of personal liberty. In contrast, she is the struggle for national freedom.
"The Polish people are primarily concerned with freedom from repeated invasion, subjugation, and persecution," she said. "My generation, like others before it, have seen the tragedy of losing our country. America has existed for 200 years without ever knowing this heartache."
Boniecka said the memory of war is eked deep into the Polish soul. She recalls her mother clawing among hordes of starving countrymen to grab fermented potato peels dumped into the streets by the Nazis. She recalls being herded out into the streets to witness the merciless executions of a firing squad.
When the war ended Bonieke learned
to use a knife and the officers shot
in the Katyn Forest massacre.
"You really don't know the value of freedom until you've dug your out from home and have seen how far you have gone. One of my most vivid memories of Poland was watching my countrymen salvage a streetcar from the debris and working together to make a refreshment stand out of
Bionicea said the common American See POLAND page 3
Basketball camp teaches self-control, Owens says
Instilling discipline in young people is as important a part of basketball camp as teaching basketball skills. Ted Owens, the University of Kansas, said Friday
Owens is directing the ninth annual Ted Owens Basketball Camp, which is for players from seven to 17 years old. The players try to improve their offensive, defensive and ball handling skills.
"You can't be successful in this world without self-discipline and self-control," Owens said.
The campers pay $135 for one week of instruction from Owens, Sam Miranda and Duncan Reild. KU assistant coaches, Theo Sullivan and Roger Minstormer, form KU forward.
The third weekly session of the camp begins today, with another week of boys followed by one week of girls' camp. During this time, boys are beginning in the program since its beginnings.
"The coaching staff believes the week is more organized and successful when we are firm with the campers. The camp is hard work, but a lot of fun." he said.
Miranda believes the campers get their money's worth because of the personal instruction for each camper.
The campers are divided into age groups to work on skills which they use during scrimmages. The players in High and Central Junior High School.
"With a staff of 29 coaches and plavers.
we are able to help all campers with their basketball skills," Miranda said.
When the afternoon break is announced all campers are rounded into center court and walk quietly in single file to receive a popsicle. Once outside the gymnasium the campers can talk and everyone seems serious about the camp.
Each day is packed full with basketball.
Wake up call is 7:00 a.m., and basketball is taught, played, discussed until bed at 10:00 p.m.
Edmond said the test given each week to the campers on the fundamentals of basketball, which includes block dribbling and quick handsling, is difficult, but informative.
"We have strict discipline and it should be that way. The coaches have cooperated with the campers just great," he said.
Camper Chris Edmond, 12, Topeka,
said he has learned a lot of basketball
skills and enjoys the coaches.
"Sportsmanship and responsibility is also stressed." Edmond said.
Slagle, Krattli sign contracts, head for minors
Roger Shagle and Tom Krattli have signed contracts with major league baseball teams following their selection last week in the spring draft of free agents.
Slagle, a right-handed pitcher, signed a contract for an undisclosed bonus with the New York Yankees of the American League. He is named to a class "A" minor league team Wednesday.
This year Slagle pitched the Jaywhacks to their best win-loss record ever, earning a 7-3 record and a league leading 1.19 earned run average.
Floyd Temple, KU baseball coach, declined to speculate on the amount of Slaghe's burden, but said he doubted it was too much. Expos boss gave Steve Renko, the last pitcher from KU who was drafted and signed a deal with the Chicago Cub.
Temple said Slagle's age and an old arm injury probably would keep his bonus down. Both Slagle and Kratth get the standard league fee, but get the year minor league players. Temple队
Krattli leaves for Sarasota, Fla. to join the Kankan in the Kentucky City sales "A' farm in the city," which includes a third base for the Jayhawks this spring, was drafted as an outfielder in the 12th round of the NL.
Neither Slagle nor Kratli anticipated being drafted by two teams, because the team was a defensive force.
Elliott Wahle, the Yankees' assistant
director of Minor League operations, said
yesterday that Slagle was drafted on the basis of reports from scouting systems the Yankees belong to, and from scouts who play players only for the Yankees.
Bruce Carnahan, a Royals' representative, said the Royals thought Kraitdill had the mechanics to play the outfield, and that Kraitdill's experience playing with good athletes in both baseball and football was a factor in the Royal's choice.
Krattli, a junior, said he would return to KU for the fall semester, but would report to the Royals' training camp next March and wouldn't enroll for the spring semester.
Slagle graduated from KU in May. He had considered an offer from the San Diego Pudres from the National Academy of Slager after they drafted him in the winter free agent draft last December, but couldn't talk about a contract with him this spring while he was still playing.
See DRAFT page 4
Slagle silenced doubt this spring,
however, when he won his first three starts,
Another factor in Stlagle's decision not to sign with the Padres when they drafted him last year was a serious arm injury that cast upon his value as a major league pitcher.
Before the 1975 baseball season, a tandem in Slager's arm pulled loose from his shoulder bone, then was damaged further by doctors during the operation. He pitched only two-thirds an innning that season, and was granted another year of eligibility by the league.
HU
Roger Slagle Staff photo by DON PIERCE
2
Mondav. June 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Kissinger ends Latin tour
CANCUN, Mexico (AP)—Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger's eight-day Latin American visit, ending yesterday, brought assurances on human rights from Chile and some proposals to swap Americans held in Mexican jails for Mexican inmates in the United States.
The trip took Kissinger through the Dominican Republic, Bolivia, Chile, where he attended the Organization of American States general assembly and Mexico. He and his wife Nancy spent the last day of the visit relaxing at a Yucatan resort. Kissinger posed two themes on the Latin American trip.
- The United States and Latin America have special bonds between them and if they cannot alleviate economic distress in the hemisphere there is little hope for a resolution.
—Human rights must be advanced in a hemisphere where, he told the OAS, “requested for the dignity of man is declining in too many countries.”
In Mexico, where some 500 Americans are held in jail, most of them on drug charges, Kissinger was given proposals for a general exchange involving the sale of cash.
mexican held in U.S. prisons
Intensive negotiations will begin within a few weeks.
Intensive negotiation will begin in January to secure the Kissinger summit on Chile seemed to score points for the United States at the OAS meeting.
Carter leads Kansas poll
TOPEKA (AP) -- Democrat Jimmy Carter would defeat either President Ford or Ronald Reagan if presidential election were held now, the statewide voter registration showed yesterday.
1,964 poll conducted for the Topека Capital-Journal by Central Research Corp. Topека, sampled 1,000 potential state voters by telephone between June 2 and June 3.
It gave Carter, the likely Democratic nominee, at 44 to 39 per cent advantage over Ford, with 17 per cent undecided. It also gave Carter a 44-40 edge over his Republican opponent.
In a match of Ford and Reagan, the poll showed, Kansas Republicans favor incumbent President, 43-33, with three per cent mentioning someone else and two per cent mentioning a Democrat.
Among Democrats, Carter drew 28 per cent to 15 per cent for Hubert Humphrey, eight for Gov. Edmund Brown, Jr., seven for Edward Kennedy, six for Frank Church, four for Morris Udall, three for George Wallace and one for Henry Jackson.
Reporter, bombing victim dies after 11-day struggle
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) — Newspaper reporter Don Bollos, the victim of a gangland style car bombing while running from police after fraud and Arizona politicians, died Sunday.
Police arrested John Adamson, 32, at a bar and charged him with murder. The arrest came 2% hours after Bollos died. He was charged with assaulting doctors imparted both legs and an arm.
Paramedics who treated the 47-year-old reporter at the scene of the bombing June 2 said he told them he was working on a story about the Mafia. They said Bolles also mentioned the names "Adamson" and "Johnson". A former member of the testimony had linked to organized crime.
Emprise is a sports concessionaire which once owned half-in interest in dog racing tracks in Arizona. Adamson owns greyhound racing dogs. He is a former tow truck operator and one-time associate of the American land promoter Ned Warren Sr.
Bolles had written several stories about organized crime and Emprison during his 14 years as a police officer.
He had told colleagues shortly before the bombing that he was going to talk to them.
allegedly had concerning a land transaction and Arizona politicians.
Harold Milks, managing editor of the Republic, said Bolles had been assigned to legislative coverage and was checking a tip about land fraud when he was fatally injured. Milks said there was no indictment against him, but he could not discount the possibility.
Bolles died at 11 a.m. Sunday, 11 days after a bomb exploded under the driver's seat.
William Dozer, Bolles' physician since 1962, said BolLES' condition started deteriorating 12 to 20 hours before his death. The reporter's condition had swung back and forth between very critical and very grave since the explosion.
"He put up the most courageous, heroic fight of any person I've ever seen," Dover
Police Capt. Don Lozier told reporters Sunday that police were interviewing Arizona politicians in connection with the case, including a state senator.
Assured u authorities inform screen Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., Lozier said officers would if it became necessary. He would not elaborate.
Co-op . . .
stones, clay, fabrics and varn.
Pooling studio space and equipment for use by co-op members is another advantage, Doria said. One artist with studio space but little equipment could find another artist with equipment but in need of space through co-op membership, she said.
Although she knew of at least 30 craft coops throughout the nation, Doria said, she knew of none that worked on a nonprofit basis.
Doria said the co-op would provide reasonable prices for a public that is becoming increasingly interested in hand-made products.
"Within the past five to eight years there has sprung up a new appreciation for non-mechanized, hand-made crafts within the counter-culture. The greater culture is now becoming aware of the beauty of old ways," Doria said.
It was proposed that the artists would price their own products which would then be examined by a quality control board of members, Doria said. The co-op members would take turns serving on the quality control board. she added.
Correction
Another meeting is planned for 7:30 p.m.
June 23 at the Lawrence Public Library.
Don Anderson, executive director of UNISERVE, District 1, was incorrectly identified as Kansas Atty. Gurt Schnieder in a photograph in Thursday's UNISERVE is a legal protection agency for the National Educational Association.
"I have little hope that hand-made crafts can change the production techniques of our industry. But they can make it a little more beautiful." Another meeting is planned for 7:30 p.m.
The co-op intends to open the shop for the public in late August or early September.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Kansas Telephone Numbers
Washington, DC
Business Office - 864-4328
Published at the University of Kansas daily on Sunday through Thursday during June and July except this January; Sunday and Holidays. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60041. Subscriptions by mail are for a senior rate of $15 a year in Drauger County and for a junior rate of $20 a year outside the county. Student membership is $60 nonmember, paid through the activity fee.
Editor Dierick Causman
Campbell Manager
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NEW YORKER
1021
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Coors Pitchers
95¢ 60 oz.
with this coupon
Expires June 30, 1976
NEW YORKER
1021
MASSACHUSETT ST.
Coors Pitchers
95" c 60 oz.
with this coupon
Expires June 30, 1976
1980
Hoof it on down here and brighten up your summer with some fresh new threads from the Town Shop. Everything... tennis gear, slacks, swim suits, sport skirts and the greatest collection of knit skirts you've seen. Come on down . . . it's well worth the hike.
Town Shop
839 Mass. Downtown the men's shop
The best presents
are the ones
you make yourself . . .
Make a T-shirt for your father
for Father's Day.
17 WEST 9th 841-7878
CTS
CRAZY TOP SHOP
not your ordinary optical dispensary!
742 Massachusetts • Lawrence, Kansas
(913) 842-5208
Goldnecker Optical
Watch the want ads in the Kansan
University Daily Kansan
Monday, June 14, 1976
Area tennis courts can't meet demands
The tennis boom has hit Lawrence and shows no sign of slowing, according to tennis equipment store owners and a Lawrence recreation official.
"Tennis is the largest sport in the United States and it's just now hitting the Midwest," said Mike Howard owner of Firstserve Tennis Shop, 1119 Massachusetts.
"It is a boom and it won't be gone in a few years," said Lawrence parks and
The problem with playing tennis in Lawrence now is that there aren't enough courts to allow everyone to play as much as they want to play.
"We aren't keeping up with the pace but we're truing." DeVictor said.
He said two more courts are under construction at the Holcolm Sports Complex. The city has no plans to build more. Two lighted court is cost $30,000 to build, he
The city used to build a few courts in various parts of the city to serve neighborhoods, he said, but the tennis boom was slow. It sits on the center of four or more courts in one area.
The city has been late in responding to the demand for tennis courts, Phil Brookes, 2111 Kasoid Drive, complained. He said there weren't enough courts with good playing surfaces. He also said that five years ago, he seldom had to wait for a court. The sometimes hard to handle conditions he had to wait for. He said he plays in mid-summer to avoid waiting.
George Francis, owner of Franks
Sporting Goods, 731 Massachusetts, said he thought the popularity of tennis was increased because people have more spare time now.
Poland...
From page one
perception of Poland is a satellite nation that passively accents Russian tutelage
She said the fact that Poland is governed by its own people and maintains sovereign boundaries is more important to Poles than the degree of Russian influence on Polish society. She also argued against foreign intervention was never extended to the Russians, she said.
Opponents of the government, particularly a terrorist group called the Process Tatawan Kow, don't have the country's support because they're trying to overthrow what Poles consider their own government, not Russian stogues, she said.
"With our own government in power, there is always the hope of more reform and freedom, she said. "The people don't want to lose that hope when they've come this year."
tennis class enrollment. The sport is
inexpensive, don't take much time and is
easy to play.
She said that change within Poland was partly officials who quietly press for reform.
Poland has exchanged heads-of-state and made grain deals with the United States.
Lawrence has expanded its recreation program to accommodate the many people she had been calling and said there were 4,500 people in city programs last year. In 1970, there were 600.
"A lot of factories are shutting down timewise and are closing on Fridays," Francis said. "This gives workers a three-day weekend and they have to fill it somehow."
Lawrence has two full-time instructors to teach the 500 people in the summer tennis
Adults account for most of the increase in
Besides spending more time on the courts, people are spending more money on tennis clothes. Francis said sales of tennis clothing had doubled since last year.
Workshop draws black newsmen
The two-week workshop, sponsored by the KU School of Journalism and the Newspaper Fund, Inc., is a program for minority high school students who have basic writing skills and an interest in journalism. The KU Adams, professor of journalism, said.
The School of Journalism will provide intensive instruction in newspaper and yearbook work, TV production and photography, he said.
The workshop's 14 participants, recommended by area high school teachers, principals and publications advisors, were asked to answer the following questions they submitted with their applications.
The presence of Brown and other guests at the workshop provides participants an
opportunity to have direct personal contact with successful minority professionals.
Brown will speak Tuesday June 22, at St. Luken A.M.E. MCH, 9th and New York.
Other guests are Paul Brook, vice president Mutual Network Services of the Minnesota managers of the Minneapolis Star; Owen T. Wilkerson, national news executive for the Boy Scouts of America and Emory F. Greene, manager of technical operations for the Public Library.
Also. . we've got selected summer dresses, shirts and skirts at 1/3 off and all our famous swim suits at 10% off.
The workshop will also include a visit by Gannett newspaper Technology Van June 15. The van is equipped with the latest electronic news-processing machines.
fries salad
You'll get tender top sirloin on Sizzer toast. Along with golden french fries. So, why brown-bag it when you can have steak?
Meat for lunch at the Sizzler.
Motorcycle Insurance
--for women.
Located at the back of the Town Shop Downtown. 829 Mass.
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
Good only at 1516 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
STEAK SANDWICH $1.59
Let us help you brighten your summer wardrobe with some dynamic California denims (also some from Ms Lee) and a fresh selection of tops in gauze, madras, and knit. You'll love 'em.
Country House
We Write
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
(1)
Curious!!! Call 841-7100
for women.
FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT
Bugsys
Disco Theater
TONIGHT
IS STUDENT NIGHT
642 Mass.
Doors Open at 7:00
Show Starts at 8:00
$ 2 5^{\circ} $ Beers (with I.D. — no cover)
COTTLE CABIN
Patronize Kansan advertisers.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanaan are offered by the University of Nebraska or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAINT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
15 words or
few...$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word...0.12 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These add can be placed in person or taken to the UKB business office at 641-4358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Fint Hall 864-4358
FOR RENT
2 bdr, all utilities paid, on campus Furnished or unfitted Free parking, a/c, pool 843
3 Nice bld. house, sukunen living room, beamed
ceiling, double bedroom, ceiling capacity
Capacity: 847-785 or 847-687 6-10
ATTENTION STUDENT BENTERS—Drop in and
visit the Student Entrance (also) at WESTER
MOBILE HONEYPOOL.
Studio apt, private entrance, furnished, bath,
student preferred. Campus: Camp Grove.
univ student preferred. 843-7827
3 bdrm. house with attached garage, unfurnished.
2 bdrm. house with free park, $2250.
Call 843-6072. Call 843-6072.
6-17
2 bdm. furnished large apt. Near bus and downtown.
$120 a month. Utilities paid. $435-687. - 6
17
Apartment: 3 bedroom downtown. 7 rooms to
accommodate 4 people. No pets, 942-7357. Avail.
Mon-Fri-Sat 10am-7pm.
Nice room in 4 bedroom, 3 bath townhouse. A /C/
843-342-757, usites $77 plus 1$_4$ usites
843-342-757.
FOR SALE
Studio apt. private entrance, furnished, bath,
dry room. 841-782-9056
student prepare, 843-782-9056
6-16
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, most of the equipment at the GAMROPHINE SHOP at KIEFS.
1. No study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
Trade The Trade and Appliance Center, 7041
Eastern Ave., Boston, MA 02116.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BELT AUTO
ELECTRIC 483, and w/ fourth.
19th Edition
'New Analysis of Western Civilization'
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
Woman's 3-uped bike, $25. Call 842-3137
weekend, six-17
2 woven rope chairs and foot stools and a really
comfortable bed. $300 for a knock down. $200 for the call. Set up
anywhere you like!
99 Ford lot, 40 & 128 Chevy 1 ton panel trucks
Best offer, 843-6705 or 843-4241
6-17
1944 Horseshoe 360, $760 million; Top-tip shot. Maud
1945 Horseboat 280, $640 million; Top-tip shot. Maud
1947 Mail w/150 Yamaha YD-30, $870 or best offer.
Maud 1957 Mail w/150 Yamaha YD-30, $870 or best offer.
Sony STR M302 receive 24 watt RMS/channel
like new 6 months old, all papers and warranty.
Receipts included. *Note: Prices are per month.*
HST BIST 110 receiver 7 watt RMS channel 60
Looks and sounds well. Call 841-254-6-14. 6-16
8. *Impulsa*, AT, PS, AC good tires; good condition;
9. *Kathy*, AT, PS, good tires. Must sell. Call 6-172
10. Katherine.
Planner XS-424 receive 12 RMS wals per channel, with 8 RMS for small speakers, 6 RMS for large speakers, 6-16 4832-169 4832-199 4832-209
GIRLS-SUPER SUMMER SALE! GREAT BAR-
GAIN! THE CITY 927. WTSS 6-24
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS AND
Jog
HEWLETT HP PACKARD
T1 - 25018 19.95
T1 - 25019A 68.95
T1 - SBR-501A 99.95
T1 - SBR-511A 183.95
T1 - SBR-520A 179.95
T1 - SBR-512 299.95
HP-21 299.95
HP-22 190.80
HP-23 148.50
HP-25 148.50
HP-27 1180.00
HP-28 1180.00
SEND MEMORIES OR CHECKS ON CURRENCIED IMPERIAL DELIVERY
**DISCOUNT CALCULATOR SALES**
P. D. PIXXI 305
DALLAS, TX 78214 - 218-491-0211
CANON CAMERA EQUIPMENT. FD-85-300mm-
EK finder, extension tubes. Sieve 8411368-6-21
28,000 BTL air conditions (used only 1 month);
5,000 BTL air conditions; 1784 Kentucky;
6,000 BTL air conditions; 6-16
HELP WANTED
Research assistant, Bureau of Child Research, K.I. Applications and system programming on IBM PCs, and systems engineers at the systems and applications level required degree in Computer Science science designed for IBM PCs or 864-4798, or 864-4798, or 864-4252. Equal opportunity employer. Qualified men and women of all races. 6-15
EARN MONEY - You can earn $2 an hour for
earning 164-118 (a m-n p-m). If interrupted
64-118 (a m-n p-m).
Coordinator of curriculum and instruction survey
and assessment for students, 1 month,
by time appointment starting in Aug.
1978. $44/month. Seeking participation in the
programs and institutions for faculty improvement of programs
and instruments for faculty improvement of programs
administrating C & S survey next year. Apply at 409 Bailey Hall
imprint alternative action employee surveys and affirmative action employees.
OVERSEAS JOBS—temporary or permanent. Australia, S. America, S. Africa, etc. All fields. $50-$120 monthly. Expenses payable directly to KA, Box 449, Berkeley, CA. 94704. 6-15 KA, Box 449, Berkeley, CA. 94704.
The Stables are now taking applications for part-
icipation in the 2013 Annual Conference. Contact Roger In person at the Stables 619-584-7030.
LOST AND FOUND
Black, black, medium hair, male (0 months)
with some on wrist on chest. Reward. 842-605-6-17
Light: Orange cat with fluffy tail in vicinity
Light: Orange cat with fluffy tail in vicinity
5 after 84-892-640-1
5 after 84-892-640-1
+
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SMOP
Open 9 30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
308 W 8th
842 8413
Mastercharge
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
BOOTS MATS LEANS
GRAN SPORT
BankAmericard
Bikes-Boofs-Backpacks-Canoes-Tentr
71th & Arkansas 843-3328
Ladie's watch. Found May 20, in Fraser Hall.
81-2729
Man's 1969 class ring. Tuesday, June 8 in 1200
block of Kentucky. 843-723-371. 6-16
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
J. HOOD, BOOKSKELLER, welcomes new and retiring students to the summer session. Remembrance books for all years of half-pirt paperbacks in most bookstores. Western art books, art history books, ecology, etc. Comin & in brown- you are always welcome. Holmes Tues.-Thurs. 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Café Thursday. Monday-Friday. p.m.-6 p.m. Closed Mondays. 1405 Madison Ave.
Cool it these hot aferrones with fruits and
foats, patafits and peaches, Gold Cup ice cream
and cheese cake galore at the Cahab Castle; 680
and Dinner; dinner too! III $30 every
Sundays.
If you have been confused or have any knowledge about any confusion or misunderstanding between the staff and patients, STEVES call (collect) 223-0564 (Topeka). during the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. call (collect) 223-0564 (Topeka).
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, duplex offices, telephones, television. Open daily 12:30-5:47. 843-3577
PERSONAL
KU KARATE CLUB Summer Session - Tuesday
Sunday 10:30am - 12:30pm DODES HOSUE LAW For
$69.95 for $149.95
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't he will make it his George's Pipe店. SEE 737-459-1800.
WIN A CASE OF BEER! Earn $2 an hour for participating in a psychology study. Also earn $10 a day for each case you have participated—the winner receives a free case of beer or coke. If interested, call 6-1580-6-15
Foreign students are fun persons to know and learn from. For a challenging cross-cultural experience, Join Operation Friendship each Week on the at, Center of the City, 659 W. I9th St., 5783
6-21
GUARANTED WEIGHT LEGWL. Load one dollar each.
GUARANTED HEIGHT LEGWL. Load one dollar each.
Monica杖 is on Montica杖. 303A, Beverly杖. Cs. 9087.
Monica杖 is on Montica杖. 303A, Beverly杖. Cs. 9087.
RIDES ___ RIDERS
Interested in carpool to LC to Lawrence M-F-3: 7:30 a.m. to return about 1:30, 7:53-6411.
Alcohol is America's number one drug. If you wear a black tank top and headphones, MUSIC LESSONS - for your kind of music. Blue, bluesgrapes, rock folk, and classic guitar, mandolin, mandolin with bells. 841-687-16, McKenna Mason String Instrument Company.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math. Tutoring. Competitive. saggered tutor.
THE WHEEL
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CAMPER
15 East 8th 841-7064
10-5 Monday, Saturday
- Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
- Sandwiches
- Outdoor Beer Garden
---
"Beat the Summertime Blues
TYPLNG
at 14th and Ohio"
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics, Call 841-
7708. 6 p.m. tf
SUMMER COMMUNICATION WORKSHOPS
Sexual Health Call Center 854-655-1000 or 854-655-1331
854-655-1000 or 854-655-1331
TUTOR
THE HAWK
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 862-4476,
4:90 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-28
Experienced typist. IMH Selective. term papers. Mail proof-reading. paper-proofreading corrected. 841-260-5288.
- Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
Typist/editor, IBM PcM p/cille. Quality work.
Typist, editor, dissertations webpages: 82-91
842-912-9177
Chilled Glasses
& Schooners
WANTED
- Pitcher Night Wednesday
Experienced typif-term paper, files, misc.
Experienced typif-term paper, files, misc.
Spelled illiteracy 843-555. Mrs. Wright
Experienced typist will do all kinds of typing in my home. Call Carolyn at 814-0984.
6-28
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed,
computerized data processing electric, B.A. Social
Sciences, career-defined D-144
Female ensembles for summer. 2 bedrooms.
Romantic quiet, extra size rooms-$620. Call 814-735-9611.
Audio Components
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Storee Components
STATE OF THE ART
male roummate Upperclass for fall-spring 76-77
base bedroom bed apd Call collect 913-745-2800
after e.
GRAMOPHONE
Wanted: Sailor Davis for Bahamas rescue team
Davis has experience in helicopter
equipment installed. Cost $810 - $1450 or
$1750. Male, 26-34 years old.
Female remote woman wanted to beautiful 2-
6-15. Call 814-1847 and ask for Cynad.
6-15
YAMAHA
Female roommate for summer, possibly fall Prt.
Science instructor for location. Debbie evening 843-725-6000
6-12
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
530 Wisconsin
sin THE HIDEOUT CLUB
843-9404
T
H
E
L
A
N
G
T
R
O
U
P
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
—6 Nights a Week—
Open 2 p.m. 3 a.m. Dancers 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Memphis Dancehall
Cleveland B Private Club
Wayne Jr—Owner
Keep your car healthy
in the summer Use the student discounts
at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Smiley
4
Moadav. June 14. 1976
University Daily Kansan
'Poco's sculptured history
"I have more to do than I ever dreamed I would. It is such a big field and there is so much to be learned, it is true I am just starting."
These were the words of the late Bernard "Poo" Frazier upon retiring this spring from his 36-year professorship at KU. His unexpected death on May 24 meant the loss of a great exponent of American heritage and culture. He was founded upon the pioneering spirit.
Frazier, raised on a cattle ranch near
Riverhead, graduated as career as a
scientist when he was a boy.
He made small sculptures of deer and horses and studied cow bones and animal
That study was his first art training and the source of sculptural vitality that was to be characteristic of his work throughout his life.
Frazier attended KU from 1928 to 1929 as a student in the department of design. In addition to his academics, he presented an annual exhibition called "Poco," Spanish for "little," the 5'2" Frazier won six individual championships in the "Big Seven" conference and established con-
Upon graduation from KU, Frazer became an apprentice to two prominent sculptors in Chicago—Lorado Taft and Freder Torrey. He learned the design and construction of monumental sculpture and began to pursue it professionally.
Frazier returned to KU in 1835 and created 12 dioramas in Dyche Museum of New York.
Between 1940 and 1950 he won six national sculpture competitions.
In 1944 Frazier left KU to become the director of the Philbrook Art Center in Tulsa, where he started the first Annual African American Museum of American Indians. He was one of the first to recognize Indian art as an important part of the American heritage. He contacted, encouraged and sponsored such classic Indian paintings, Black Bear Bosin and Woodie Crumbo.
Dick West, Chairman of Humanities at Haskell Indian Junior College, from Frazier University.
"Frazier was interested in the perpetuation and preservation of Indian culture, and he was one of the first to do anything about it." West said yesterday. "He was a way ahead in favoring the native Indians in the struggle in stimulating Indians to make their art and in preserving it just as one would the ancient Greeks or Assyrians."
Frazier resigned his position at the Philbrook in 1850 to devote full time to sculpturing. One work, the "Hunt," was a tribute, in Frazier's words, to the "10,000
year partnership between man and the one that has come to an end in our life.
Well-known to the people of Lawrence is praiser's work on the brons doors of the church, and his study of the architecture.
In 1964 Fräizer completed his tribute to all the religions of man in his 70-foot long mosaic relief, "Be Still, Know That I Am God," on his First Methodist Church in Chicago.
"Every sculpture he did was a tribute to something," his son, Benni, said. "He was very proud of it."
"Justice" is a 24-foot white marble
"Building" in Kansas. Supreme Court
Building in Kansas.
"When my father originally designed the sculpture of 'Justice' he conceived the idea of a woman releasing a falcon into flight in order to symbolize what he felt were the most important ideals of our system of justice in America." Frazier's son said
"The two elements of the sculpture are the woman and the falcon. To him the
woman was the symbol of compassion and understanding, but at the same time he designed her in a way that she was also active and forceful. The falcon she is often called a falconer and to him was a symbol of speed, precision and vision," he said.
Near the end of his life Fradier wrote, "Mankind forever has created symbols to mark in his mind and heart the reality of his hope for reaching higher levels of existence.
"There is evidence, it seems to me, that the first purpose of these symbols has most often been to foretell the courses of his spiritual progress rather than to record them afterward. Great works of art are more inclined to lead than they are to follow others." And this is what philosopher Byron their unique powers of providing a focal point for his aspirations they firmly fix the concept which until then may have been fleeting and elusive."
Memorial services will be at 3 p.m. today.
The Plymouth Congregational Church,
801 W. Fifth Street, Plymouth, MN 55465.
KJHK plans to showcase local talent this summer
Campus radio station KJHK will record performances of local rock groups for use in its summer rock programs, Ernest Martin, KJHK faculty advisor, said yesterday.
Martin said he wants to find new compositions, written and performed by local
"The idea behind this is that we have tremendously good rock groups around the Lawrence area, but unless they are club clubs, they don't hear them." Martin said.
He said that any group can contact KJHK to set up a time to record.
KJHJ will be on the air this summer from 1 a.m. until 2 a.m. daily. Five minutes ahead of showtime.
KHIK's programming is mostly album- ockertone music, jazz classical music and song accompaniments are included.
Connie Nusser, station manager, will introduce a program of interviews taped with the actors, directors and producers of "The Maze," an eight-week series began last night with an interview of Robert Redford, who produced the film. The event will be held, reporter for the Washington Post,
Nusser will also produce "Heel to Reel." a program about movies that will be playing on the screen.
Rita Charlton, program director, said that most of the radio programs come from the KU Radio Network, some programs are produced by students at the university.
"Sounds of Soul," produced by Ken Spann, will be expanded to a four-hour program aged 6 to 10 p.m. Sunday. John Darkett will broadcast "Unique Perspectives on the Classics" from 3 to 5 Sundays. Ted Culverson will produce "Wishing Well," a program of children's music, aired 10 a.m. Sundays.
"On Stage" will focus on actors and stage personnel who are working in the KU and Lawrence summer theater, heres to some of the most exciting and Thursday's "Day in the Life" is a five-minute program of odd or bizarre news, and can be heard at Wednesdays and Fridays, Charlton said.
A job hotline to help people find job openings and information on summer events at KU and in Lawrence will also be broadcast, Martin said.
W W L Pts. GB
New York 10 27 14 39
Cleveland 27 27 250
Houston 25 24 481 4/6
Detroit 25 29 481
Baltimore 28 31 435
Milwaukee 28 31 485
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Wa. 36 31 29 28
Kansas City 36 32 19 854
Texas 32 19 11 654
Chicago 27 27 21 400
Minnesota 27 27 21 400
Oakland 27 27 21 400
California 24 24 24 24
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Cleveland 8-9, Chicago 5-7
California 10-10, Detroit 7-7
Detroit 10-10, Boston 10-10
Kansas City 8-8, Baltimore 4-6
Louisville 7-8
Pittsburgh 20 W L Pet. GB
Pittsburgh 22 17 381
Pittsburgh 22 20 561
New York 20 22 484
Cleveland 20 21 484
St. Louis 20 23 431
San Francisco 20 431
West 77
Cheektowaga 32
Los Angeles 35
San Diego 32
Houston 29
Atlanta 28
San Francisco 34
West 77
32 25 .627 ½
35 25 .583 3¼
32 34 .475 9
29 34 .475 13
32 34 .475 13
KANSAS CITY (AP) -Rumours flew yesterday that the Baltimore Orleans would trade unsigned pitcher Kole Holtman to the Toronto Blue Jays, nor nor nor
Orioles trade Holtzman, KC may have signed him
Chestnut 4, St. Louis 0-1
Pittsburgh 6, Atlanta 5
Los Angeles 3, San Francisco 2-1
New York 4, San Francisco 2-1
Los Angeles 3, Minneapolis 1
The speculation began after Baltimore announced that Holtzman had been traded to another American League team and the Rangers' former head coach scheduled start here against the Royals.
Joe Burke, general manager of the Royals, said he was engaged in trade discussions with three American League teams, including the Orioles.
"But we have not made any deal yet. And I won't trade for any unsigned player," Ibanez said.
The deal, according to Peters, won't be complete until Holtman signed with the other team. Peters said a decision on the expected no later than this morning.
The American League trading period expires at midnight tomorrow.
The most common rumor had Holzman and second baseman Bobby Gritch going to hit the pin. The rumor was that
O.J wants to head west
NEW YORK (AP)—O. J. Simpson says he only wants to play one season of pro football and a family season he would be trained to play at Coast. Buffalo Bills officer Ralph Wilson said he would oblige his star running back after dealing a deal—what he got his fair value in return.
"It has to do with a number of things—mainly, wanting to stay near my family and not be separated for another football season."
"This is my last year to play football," Simpson, the National Football League's leading rusher last season, said by telephone from Las Vegas Saturday night. It was in the situation it has nothing to do with Buffalo, the fans there, money or a new contract.
Wilson said Saturday that he had offered Simpson $1 million for the next two years to remain with Buffalo. That's $440,000 more than Simpson is to receive under his present salary, and he's not going to run. But Wilson said Simpson turned him down. saving money was not the issue.
running back Lawrence McCutechon, two top defensive players and cash. Rams owner Carlo Rosenbloom expressed an interest in having a specific discussion had as yet been held.
A report in the Los Angeles Herald-Examiner said Wilson would consider dealing Simpson, who will be 29 next month, to the Los Angeles Rams in exchange for
"No one associated with the Rams, including myself, has talked with Ralph Wilson or anyone from the Buffalo Bills that talked with Rosenbloom said. With Simpson," Rosenbloom said.
Rovals win, 8-4
KANSAS CITY (AP)—George Brett knocked in three runs with a home run, triple and double yesterday to boost the Kansas City Royals to an 84 victory and a sweep of their four-game series with the Baltimore Orioles.
Despite a call from the Orioles' Reggie Desmond, pitches to pitchers at Kansas City, batners. The team retaliation by Baltimore for a pitch that hit Lee May in Saturday's game between the Giants and the Orioles.
Kansas City's Fred Patek was struck by a pitch in the fifth after Jim Wohlford tripped two home runs, but it did not appear to be intentional.
baseman Frank White and outfielder Jim Wohlford.
Other speculation had Fitzmorris, in-员镊员 Jauk Quirk and outfielder Tom Krause.
Holtzman, who was represented by agent Jerry Kapstein, has been playing for the Orioles without a contract since April 2. He also joined Oakland A's, along with Reege Jackson A.
Holtzman left yesterday morning for his home at Lincolnshire, Ill., and neither Baltimore manager Earl Weaver nor another staff member would shed much light on the matter.
"I don't know anything about the trade story and I have no comment on it," remarked Weaver after his Orioles dropped an 84 decision to the Rovals.
"I wish I could tell you 'yes', but Joe barke knows more about that than me,"
There was no indication who the Royals might give up in such a trade, but Herzog has remarked in the pass that he considers the Celtic team to be Bird and Dennis Leonard "untouchable."
The original announcement was made in Baltimore by Orides spokesman Bob Brown, who said the Orioles wished only to explain why Holtzman had missed his game against the Giants, whether the trade was a one-for-one deal or whether any other players were involved.
The 30-year-old Holtzman, a 12-year veteran, has compiled a 54-score so far with the Orioles after an 18-14 performance last year with Oakland.
Draft ...
From nage one
including a stirrup win over Nebraska on
the Big Ten playoff tour and a play on the
Big Eight start line for the Nissan
Temple said the Yankees' contract was a good opportunity for Slager, but emphasized that only five per cent of the players signed to their draft ever made it to the major leagues.
"Roger's got a real good attitude, and his arm is very close to being what it was two years ago."
"But he's older—he's a gamble for the Yankees and I don't think they'll invest a lot of money."
Temple said he had mixed emotions about the loss of Krattili.
"You're glad to see that he had been drafited, but you're also disappointed when you were fired."
(2)
For most, the drive into Lawrence was a time to sit in the shade, and talk about old cars.
Story & photos by Jay Koelzer
Looking like some lost procession from a parade long since over, 35 antique automobiles arrived in X-zone parking lot Friday on a tour from Topeka.
The tour was a special activity of the annual spring meeting of the Antique Automobile Club's Central Division, held last week in Topeka.
Only one car had to turn back because of mechanical problems, a commendable average since the temperature was near 90 and most of the cars were at least 40 years old.
Steve Jewett, a Lawrence spokesman for
Hot drive in Kansas
the club, said that the majority of the cars had been restored to reasonably good condition, about like that of a car two or three years old.
Icomobile
1465
In some states owners of antique automobiles have to update their machines in order to drive on the road. Kansas laws are less strict, although many owners add that can be detached easily if their cars are ever to be put on display, Jewett said.
"Of course they don't have the comforts or safety features of the newer cars," he said.
The oldest car participating in the tour.
The general feeling among the antique-car buffs present Friday was that authentically restored automobiles are not as good than those modified for speed or comfort.
The drivers milled about in the lot, the men in straw hats and the women in billowing dresses, before heading for shade under nearby trees. Sure, it was a hot afternoon last Friday in Lawrence, but it was a beautiful day for a drive.
"New things hurt the value of antique automobiles," Jewett said. "The majority of the people want their cars the way they were originally."
T
Vintage cars spanning over three decades brought together contrasting styles, such as in the types of spokes used for the wheels.
KANSAS
RAIN
ANTIQUE
KANSAS
JB
ANTIQUE
While some favored the shade of surrounding trees, Kermit Schrenk, from Topeka, escaped the sun by using the shade of his 1926 Model T.
Z
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
COMFORTABLE
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Attaboy, Fury
See page 3
Tuesday, June 15, 1976
Vol.86 No.146
Law building half finished; open in mid '77
Construction of the new School of Law building reached the halfway mark yesterday morning when the roof was finished and the last bit of concrete poured.
The progress was celebrated in a "tipping-out" ceremony, attended by several members.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes; Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Martin C. Mendelssohn; Robert Howard Immel, KU Law society president; Anne Lolley, student bar association president; and Keith Lawton, facilities planner, will review construction progress.
The next step in the building's construction will be the placing of windows and prestressed concrete walls in the building's framework. Did the said building was exactly on schedule?
The $5-million building will be completed by early next summer, he said, when the school will transfer from its present classrooms to classes in the building will be in fall 1977.
Early predictions said the building would be left unfinished because inflation had cut into available funds, but Dickinson said he would be available to complete the facility.
The new building will allow the School of Law to increase enrollment by 129 students, from the current 440 students enrolled. Dickinson said more faculty members would be added, but didn't disclose how many.
The new building will include a courtroom which doubles as a classroom, student desk and other facilities. The wcrooms holding four to eight students and space for the Legal Aid Clinic.
Fulbright-Hays orientation lost
Students arriving in the United States to study on Fulbright-Hays scholarship grants will no longer come to the University of California for their courses. Instruction during the summer session.
"There are not any Fulbright scholars enrolled in any English courses here this summer," Charles Sauer, assistant director of Applied English Center, said yesterday.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
J. A. Burze, director of the KU Orientation Center since 1951, had turned the program's English instruction courses over to the Applied English Center. But because students would arrive too late for those classes, the program will be cancelled too, he said.
For the past 25 years Fulbright students have come to KU for cultural orientation and English instruction. This year, however, a $50,000 cutback by Congress eliminated the funds for the orientation phase of the program.
"Our English courses are over in the beginning of August, and Fulbright students don't arrive here in time to go through the course." A director of the Annied English Center, said.
A. M. B. A. H.
In past summers there have been 50 to 60 Fulbright scholars at KU, the oldest of four Fulbright orientation centers in the United States. The other centers, Indiana University of Texas, have also canceled their programs.
kabcock resident
Surrounded by memes her son brought her from Japan, Ella Valentine tells about her life in Babcock Place, a HUD-funded retirement community in Lawrence.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Government officials are for the first time admitting that a campaign to give 215 million Americans a shot this fall may not get off the ground.
The mass immunization, on a scale never before attempted, has run into possibly the worst of its kind.
Flu shot plan faltering
if it does fail to fly, I think the scientific basis is sound." Dr. Delano Meriwer, director of the National Influenza Immunization Program, said.
One of the nation's four influenza vaccine manufacturers is holding out for a new federal law protecting it from liability for human injuries beyond its control. Organizations representing health workers, volunteers and local governments are also worrying about their liability. Newspapers are questioning the wisdom of giving flu shots to people who haven't been since a brief appearance confined to Ft. Dix, N.J., early this year.
The government is going ahead with plans in the hope that problems will be ironed out.
All the factors have led to pessimism in parts of the U.S. Public Health Service.
Results of experimental vaccine tests on about 5,000 men, women and children will be presented at an open meeting of government scientists June 21. The information will be presented the next day to the Committee on Immunization Practices.
Out of that session will likely come a recommendation for a proper dosage of vaccine against swine flu, more properly called A-NEW Jersey-78, for most adults, and A-Victoria flu strains of Jersey and A-Victoria flu strains for elderly persons and those suffering from serious
Bids have been advertised to the four drug companies—Merrell-National Laboratories, Parke, Davis & Co. Wyeh Laboratory and Merck Sharp & Dohme—to initiate price negotiations for the swine flu vaccine.
Elderly find a home at Babcock
"The tenant association suggests improvements to me and it's up to me to take it on."
Babcock Place, 1700 Mass., a residential center for elderly presidents with low incomes, has become a home and social center for many of its residents.
Residents must make less than $2,500 per year and be over 62 years old to be eligible to live in Babcock Place, Doris Kaiser, executive director, said yesterday. Residents must also be able to care for themselves and their apartments.
Lavetta Washburn, resident, said the residents' suggestions were listed to.
The residents have a tenant association that serves as a communication link between the residents and the landlord.
Babcock Place comprises 120 apartments. There are studio apartments for singles, one-bedroom apartments for couples and two-bedroom suites available when medical reasons require separate sleeping spaces, Kaiser said.
Rent is 25 per cent of the resident's gross income, she said. Babcock's first residents moved in October, 1973, five years after the Lawrence Housing Association received aid to begin construction on the building from Housing and Urban Development Office.
"The few problems that have come up are fixed, by the week's end." Washburn said.
Golden Johnston, resident and floor director, said each floor elected a director to decide social activities or to handle comings and might come up at monthly meetings.
"This allows us to decide what we want done." Johnston said.
There is a monthly birthday potluck dinner that each of the six floors takes turns sponsoring. The community oftenVolunteer attainment for these dinners, Kaiser said.
Bridge is scheduled twice a week and
customs played every night. John D.
Brown plays at the bridge.
Washburn had a television set, pool table, ping pong table and record player had been installed.
The tenant association has combined its funds with donations to buy a piano.
Ella Valentine, resident, said that each of the six floors of living space had two windows.
Earl Jernings Edmonds, resident, said,
"The only time I'm bored is when I'm sick."
Lessons in textile painting and sewing are offered at cost of materials by persons in the community, Violet Flemming, project manager for Babcock Place, said.
Kaiser said the Council on Aging sponsored low-cost noon meals five days a week.
"Babcock Place offers everything but groceries," she said.
The meals are prepared in the Kansas
and then taken to Babcock Place,
Kaiser.
Babcock Place has provided space for a screening room. Douglas County persons with cancer need a place at the county hospital.
Rose West, Health Department nurse,
said that once a week three Health
department nurses gave blood pressure and
bearing tests. If a health problem shows up,
the individual is referred to a doctor, West said.
She said a professional dietician was also available at the clinic for nutritional guidance.
Washburn said she "very definitely" felt Babcock Place was her home.
"The thing that like best about Babcock is like an Ilae Bryant's song," she said. "I love it."
Robbins added that everyone was "as free as they want to be."
Robbins and Washburn said they would rather live at Babcock Place than in their apartment.
heart, lung and kidney diseases and diabetes.
Meanwhile, the Advertising Council Inc. on June 10 unanimously approved the government's $150,000 public service advertising campaign informing Americans about the importance of swine flu shots and how to get them.
A draft bill dennifining vaccine manufacturers against injury lawsuits has been written and is being considered. The law does not yet supported its introduction.
Some officials in the Department of Health, Education (HEW) and Welfare are
doubtful the bill could pass, mindful of the Senate Appropriate Committees report last April directing that various government agencies, including the vaccine and that drug producers remain responsible for the vaccine, its quality and any adverse reactions directly involved.
Contract language offered by HEW to the manufacturers holds the government responsible for informing patients about the benefits and risks of getting a flu shot. Three companies seem to believe that they are not responsible for liability suits, although they know they would remain responsible for their own negligence.
Computation center begins testing of new computers
By DAVE STEFFEN
Vendor field engineers will complete installation of the University of Kansas' multi-million dollar computer systems today and turn them over to computation center, said Paul Wolfe, director of operations at the computation center, said yesterday.
KU's $2.7 million instructional and research computer system now begins a research experiment in which it is called 'a carefully monitored 30-day period' and a looser 90-day period." The system must satisfy certain standards during these periods, he said, and payment can be withheld.
Waife said the computation center staff would test the computer system to see whether it would perform as well as it did in performance tests before the bidding.
Chief field engineer Don Whiteley said the team would keep it steady, least once a week for three to six months.
In addition, the Honeywell Evaluation Analysa System (HEALS), an automatic monitoring unit, will make daily records of the computer's performance and try to detect problems before they become serious. Whiteley said.
Computation staff members Jerry Crow,managing operations systems on
testing operations systems on
Honeywell system today. An operating system is the software that communicates that system with other computer systems.
Three (IBM field engineers finished installing KU's new $2.2 million administrative computer system yesterday morning. IBM's chief engineer Jim Friberg said that each component of the system had been tested as it was installed, and that the entire system had been tested after installation.
installation testing is followed by maintenance testing. Friberg said IBM engineers had selected tests that would be tested on the system. But also he run if the system's performance fell.
Computation center staff members Bob Rudine and Allen Blum will finish the course on Monday, March 25, week Wole, said Rudine said he and Blum spent 80 hours at the Kansas Employment Security computer in Topeka compiling the operating system off master selection files.
Should serious problems arise on either system, on-site maintenance engineers are on hand during the day and on call at night to investigate service interruptions, Wolfe said.
Wafu said the Honeywell system would be available to users as soon as possible. Some testing by users could begin as early as next week, he said.
Staff Writer
Teachers fail to ratify
By DAVE WARD
As a result of a light turnout, School District 497 teachers failed to accumulate a majority of votes necessary to ratify the 1976-77 contract agreement last night.
According to Lawrence Education Association (LEW) president Darrell Ward, the teachers needed 230 affirmative votes for ratification. However, only 205 teachers voted last night. The result was 199 votes for LEW, while 84 votes opposing the tentative agreement.
LEA representatives will contact teachers who didn't vote last night by telephone to reach a final verdict, said Ward. He also said he thought there was any difficulty securing the number of votes needed to ratify the agreement.
The agreement calling for an average salary increase of 7.3 percent was made last week after nearly six months of negotiations.
LEA representatives are urging the acceptance of the agreement by the teacher to think the package is safe in light of the need and imposes limits by legislation.
Although fewer than half of the district's 460 teachers voted last night, Ward said that it was not unusual since many teachers are in workshops or out of town on vacation. Those out of town will be contacted through the mail, he said.
The LEA hopes to get a majority of votes sometime today.
The Board of Education will then meet Wednesday morning to ratify the contract.
Have it your way at Lawrence's hamburger joints
By MARTI JOHNSON Contribution Writer
Face it. You deserve a break today. You've sunburned your toa cip, haven't done dishes for three days and the refrigerator is cold. You've two wrapped slices of American Cheese. Or maybe you just cruised into the cafeteria at the dorm and found a green screen soup recipe, sandwiches with yellow soup for lunch.
Time to buzz out for a burger, right? But where should you go Sandy? Texas Tom? Peter Fan? Gerrit? Steve? Griff? Henry? A&W? Burger! McDonald? Those are your choices, but where you go
The Lawrence fast-fodder burger vendors have a burger for every appetite and every pocketbook. Two of the standard items on all the menus are a quarter-pound hamburger with cheese (or a third-pound in some cases) and the plain, basic hamburger, in all its simplicity.
And the prices look like this;
% lb with cheese basic harmless
McDonald's 84
Sandy's 84
Burger King 70
Texas Tom's 79
Burger King 39
Dairy Queen 69
Vina 69
Moore Burger 90
AW W 80
Burger Chef 40
1 (1.5 oz) frozen meal
A quarter-pound designation refers to a precooked weight. Before a meat pattie is cooked, it weighs four ounces. But when it's off the grill and in the bun, it weighs less.
The prepacked weight of the meat patty for a classic hamburgers in Lawrence varies from an ounce of beef to about 2.5 pounds.
At McDonald's, as every six-year-old knows, when you order a Big Mac you can "twoleaf-bettie specialissaleletucettepickspiesonionna - sesamezebund." A Big Mac costs 75 cents and takes up to two ounces of cheese. Once ounce. McDonald's also has Quarterpounders and regular hamburgers and cheeseburgers.
Tierney Lindsay, McDonald's manager, said big Macs and Quarterpounders are the best sellers, with the top spot fluctuating with the national advertising.
A Big. Mac costs 75 cents and misses being a quarter-pound by about half an ounce. McDonald's also has Quarterpounders and regular hamburgers and cheese burgers.
Peter Pan Stores are primarily retail outlets for the Stefano's Dairy Co., but they also sell hamburgers and Flo Christopher. Peter Pan area is about 8 percent of the total sales in the Lawrence area.
McDonald's currently has 80 employees and on McDonald's flat surface grill, it takes them three minutes to cook a Big Mac and five minutes to cook a Quarterpounder.
A meat packing company in Missouri that supplies all the area McDonald's delivers the ham-purgies weekly and the buns are fresh daily from the Krust Bruk bakery in Topola.
&AW have a "burger family" and all the burgers are有garnished to order, Mervil Ellott, &AW's manager, said. Papa Burghers weigh in pre-cooked at a third of a pound followed by mama Burghers.
Teen Burgers and a small ounce and a half Baby Burger.
A&W's meat comes from a locker plant in De Soto and the buns from Butter Krust. The A&W corporation sets a 20 per cent fat content standard for its menu, which is periodically comes by and checks his hamburgers.
But Hamburgers only make up 35 to 40 per cent of his total sales, he said. AAW currently has 78%.
For quality of meat, Dairy Queen has the market cornered. Kenneth Murphy, Dairy Queen's chef, is known for his expertise in use for Brazier Burgers is strictly controlled by the International Dairy Queen Corporation. Brazier Burgers are extra leak, with less than a 10 per cent difference, and are mixed in the meat when it is delivered, he said.
Murphy said the Dairy Queen hamburger is processed in Oklahoma and distributed through Kansas City. He also gets his buns from Butter Krust.
Brazier Burgers also are cooked a special way. They're cooked on an open fire grill, but a protective shield keeps the fire from actually hitting the meat as it cooks and helps drain the fat away. Murphy said, and Brazier Burgers are less apt to induce indigestion because of the special cooking process.
Dairy Queen sells a half-pound Super Brazier, a quarter-pound Big Brazier and an ounce, a half
And then there's Moore Burger. It's a small, circu-
1960's burger joint with a devoted following that
maintains, "If you ever eat one Moore Burger, you'll never buy another Big Mac."
Manager David Cowden laughingly acknowledges that he turns out the "gourmet hamburger" in Lawrence and says he's able to compete with McDonald's and Burger King by putting out better quality food. He added that 75 per cent of his business is from regular customers.
The Moore Burger menu is simple: a half-pound Double Moore Burger, a quarter-pound Moore Burger and a two ounce Less Burger. They're made with all the trimmings: mustard, catup, pickles, onions, lettuce and tomatoes and Moore Burger does it with six employees.
When the Hardee's Corporation bought out the Sandy's franchise several years ago, Duane Buck, manager of the Lawrence Sandy's, decided it was time for $400,000 investment to "hurry on down to Hardes."
Buck said the independent franchise operators were given the opportunity to change over to a charnel broiled treat. But the Lawrence Sandy's was doing a good business that wouldn't have been helped by national advertising, he said, and so it didn't make the switch.
Sandy's has a Deluxe Dandelion (quarter pound with cheese), a Sandee JR, (a double cheese burger) plus the regular hamburger and cheese burger. Sandy's has 40 employees, gets its buns from Butter Krust and buys meat from Harwood's with an 18 per cent fat content.
If you're extra hungry, or you're going out for a burger with a friend, Griff's Burger Bar has got the price that's right. On Mondays through Fridays, $1.10 will buy two quarter-pound Giant Hamburgers
(compatible to a Delux Sandee) at a savings of 50
cents. Giant Hamburgers are regularly 80 cents.
Gary Benson, manager at Griff's, said the Lawrence Griff's will be remodeled this summer, adding a dining area which will help it to cater to the noon-time construction workers trade.
A meat company in Manhattan supplies all the
eagle
Griffis' in Kansas and Missouri with hamburger with it, fat content, Benson said. Griffi's 22 employees
On April 12, Burger King gained the distinction of being the 32nd fast food operation on 32nd Street.
See HAMBURGERS page 2
2
Tuesday, June 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Kansas Udall delegates hold
TOPEKA-Rep. Morris Utdall of Arizona may have released Democratic delegates committed to him from feeling any moral obligation to vote for him at the Democratic National Convention, but that didn't sway them in Kansas yesterday.
yesterday.
Three of the four Udall delegates elected in Kansas said they wouldn't switch just yet—and not perhaps at all. The fourth Udall delegate could not be reached. Louis Douglas, a Kansas State University faculty member, came the closest to
saying he would switch to tummy care when he thinks Another Udall delegate, James Johnston, Wichita, said, “I’ve got to tread water”
Another Udall delegate, James Johnston, Wichita, said, "I've got to treasure for a while and see what develops from this. I'm still going to support Morris Udall. However, Johnston said he might switch later this week after getting more details on Udall's position.
details of his positive behavior.
A Udialude barry, Sharalinsky, Overland Park, said he wasn't ready to accept Carter.
Farmers called anti-Ford
TOPEKA—President Ford is in trouble with western Kansas farmers, U.S. Rep Keith G. Sebelius, R-Kan., said yesterday.
"they have never forgotten the gambar embargo of 1978." Sebellus said in explaining the anti-Ford feeling prevalent in Sebellus' stewardship 1st District of Washington.
"Many of the reasons for imposing it were valid," the congressman added. "I can understand his reasons, but the farmer can't."
Sceemus he had maintained a neutral stance in the battle between Ford and Ronald Reagan for the Republican presidential nomination, but he would lean toward Ford. He said that he had preached a free international grain market to the Ford Administration and that he didn't agree with the grain embargo.
Judge in Hearst trial dies
SAN FRANCISCO-Oliver J. Carter, the federal judge who conducted the Patricia Heath bonaparte trial and was to have passed final sentence on her, and was hit with an assault.
The 68-year-old jurist was坠死 on arrival at Ralph K. Davies Medical Center here, a hospital spokeswoman said. Carter was strker at his home and rushed to the hospital.
U. S. Atty, James L. Browning, the prosecutor in the celebrated trial of Miss Hailey, said the case now would go to a committee for reassignment to another
"No retrial will be necessary." Browning said. He pointed out that another federal judge, Alfonso Zirpoli, had handled a pretrial hearing last January when Carter was hospitalized briefly for minor surgery and said there was a good chance he would be selected to complete the proceeding.
Busing review denied
BOSTON—The U.S. Supreme Court's decision not to review the basing plan for school integration in Boston means residents are going to have to accept the plan, even if they do not want to.
Court-ordered bursa to racially integrate the Boston school system survived a challenge when the Supreme Court announced it wouldn't review a controversial order of U.S. District Court Judge W. Arthur Garrity under which 21,000 pupils are based between neighborhoods.
"The decision is against us and there's nothing we can do about it," said Thayer Fremont-Smith, attorney for the Boston Home and School Association, which had filed a lawsuit.
This decision marks the end of challenges to desegregation in the city of Boston, "said Thomas Atkins, president of the Boston branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Women."
Rv The Associated Press
Candidates endorse Carter
Carter met with party leaders yesterday at a delegate conference in New York,
Jimmy Carter got help yesterday from Sen. Frank Church, who withdrew in his favor, Fred Harris, who urged his delegates to back Carter, and Morris Udall, who said a vote for Carter was a vote for party unity
Police name assistant chief
Darrel W. Stephens, Kansas City, Mo., police department unit commander, will be Lawrence's new assistant chief of police, Lawrence's Watson, city manager, said yesterday.
Stephens, 29, was selected from more than 200 applicants for the position. Watson would take on many responsibilities currently delegated to retiring Police Capt. Merle McClure. Watson made the decision to hire Chief Richard Stanwik, who is on vacation.
Stephens has a B.A. degree in ad-
ministration of the University from the
University of California.
He is a former consultant to the St. Louis Police Academy and has received the Outstanding Service Award from the Outstanding Services of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice.
Stephens has had reports published on "Kansas City Preventive Patrol Experiment" and "The Use of Availability of Patrol Time." He was in the U.S. Marine Corps until 1972 and has been with the Kansas City, Mo. Police Department since 1968.
The annual salary for the post of assistant chief of police is $18,000.
The Program of the Year is Nonty
ITS in the Air Force ROTC.
Look into the Air Force ROTR. And they are a 5-year, $2 million commitment to choose from. Whichever you select, you will receive a commission as an Air Force officer. With opportunities for a career in the Air Force, and of course challenge...and of course, challenge...
The courses themselves prepare you for leadership post-
school. You'll need to be a member of an arrow, or as
a student in a math class using mathematics,
solutions using mathematics, or
Look out for yourself. Look into the Air Force ROTC programs on campus.
Check into the Air Force ROTC Program now-perhaps we can lift into your plans for the Fall 1974
Inquire in room 108, Military Science Building or call 864-4474.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC
Harris, a former Oklahoma senator whose campaign has been inactive for several months, released all 18 of his letters to the state and urged them to support Carter.
where Udail said he wouldn't actively pursue any more delegates and would release any delegate who asked to vote for the former Georgia governor.
Church, the Idaho Democrat who entered the primaries late but collected 79 delegates according to an Associated Press count, released them and urged them to back
Udall didn't officially release his 336 delegates, but Carter said he understood his
Udall will retain floor privileges at the Democratic convention and remains eligible for federal campaign matching funds.
EATING
Lawrence employers and employment services are confirming what students looking for summer jobs know; if they don't have a job, it's too late to start looking.
Most of the jobs available for the summer in factories, food services and grocery stores were taken by April, Judy Sardo, of Security Division, said yesterday.
One of the biggest problems with students looking for summer work is that they set up their own schedules.
"It's typical that they have expectations that are unreasonable. If only people could be more realistic. In April they stomp out of prison, but they keep doing it then a month later, nothing." Serdá said.
Traditionally, the summer job for the college student has been within the field the student is interested in, but this trend has been changing, she said.
Construction work is one of the least obtainable summer jobs. Two construction firms, Kansas Construction Co., 201 Perry, and Lawrence Construction Co., 637 E. 22 Terr, said no students were hired for work this summer.
Employers say jobs gone for summer
'Now, the economy is such that they (the employers) won't do it anymore. A lot of them are very sick.'
Good Old Summertime
STEAK &
CLAM-BAKE
£450
Mr. Steak
"Usually we hire KU students. There just
Thick in jucy silicon steak. Crunchy deep-fried clams. Corn on the cob drizzled with butter. Served with Mr. Steaks' own crisp green salad, baked potato
It's a special summer treat. Right now at Mr. Steak, America's steak expert.
Most of the students work as playground superintendents, day camp counselors or in park maintenance. The department also buys a swimming pool crew. he said.
Students who work in grocery stores during the school year hold on to them during the summer because the jobs pay less. Students at Kroger, 23rd and Naisthm Drive, said.
In August, between 200 and 400 students
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
If you'd like to be creatively expressive with your hamburger, go to burger Chef. At Cafe Barron, you'll find a variety of hamburger the way you want it, or order it plain and garnish any way you like at a
Parks and Recreation between 300 and 400 applications for summer work each year, starting in November, Ross said. The department stops taking applications
Quarter-pound Texas Hamburgers at Texas Tom's are cooked to order, Roger Smith, Texas Tom's manager, said Hafidh Oshawy. Popular popular Hamburgers also are on the menu.
Smith said the Texas Tom's commissary in Kansas City furnished him with meat and that his Texas Hamburger is his best selling Texan. Texas Tom's has about 20 envelopes.
ABC Management, 101-T Windsor Place, hired about the same number of students as last summer, Andy Galyard, a spokesman for the company, said.
haven't been any jobs the last couple of
years, so I don't mind for Lawrence
Construction Co. audit.
The Burger King menu includes a half-pound Double Meat Whopper, a quarter-pound Whopper, a double meat hamburger and the regular hamburger, all available
"We use students for lawn and garden,
painting and clean up work. We like to use
wood," she says.
Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department hired about 100 summer employees, according to John Ross, superintendent. Many of those were KU students, he said.
Paul Rogers, manager at Burger Chef,
said his burders are cooked on an open-
burner.
Burger King buys its meat and buns locally, but Ollaia declined to say from which company. Burger King presently has 65 employees.
Burger Chef sells a half-pound Super Shef, a quarter-pound Big Shef, a double cheeseburger and regular hamburgers and cheese burglers.
The meat comes from Harwald's with a
20 per cent fat content and buns from Butter
Ham.
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERI
At Vista you'll get hand-shaped meat patties in your hamburgers. Duane Gauger, a chef at Pret A Manger, said: "I love them."
Burger King also has an unusual cooking process. The meat patty is cooked in about one minute on a charcoal broiler conveyor unit. After the cheese and garnishes are added, the burger is reheated in a microwave. It cooks at 180°F or hot when it eats to the customer, be said.
"You wouldn't want to eat two of them," he said in reference to a double Meat Wheel. "So I should be careful."
Burger King sells the most expensive hamburgers in Lawrence. But Ken Oilla, manager at Burger King, said his customers get their money's worth.
Hamburgers
From nave one
In contrast, the Green Pepper, 544 W.ord, has experienced a large turnover this
apply for a few openings at the store, he said.
hamburger in bulk from a company in Emperoria and puts up the patties by hand.
Niki Lakki, day manager, said the large turnover was due to students leaving for the summer, quitting school or needing more time to study.
Vista has a half-pound Texas Burger, a quarter-pound Vista Burger and a standard hamburger called a Kiddie Burger. Vista companies and buys bags from Burtter Krust.
Second work at Stokley Van Camp Inc. 10th, creates a large market for his products.
That's where you can go and what you'll get, so throw out the mushy orange, grab your money and head out for a hamburger.
The factory work is harder than what most students expect and about 10 per cent of the time.
*About 80 per cent of our current night shift are KU students. Caranning at a peak weekends is challenging.*
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
. . .
Students hired by Stokley's begin in general labs and after 30 days are free to continue their studies.
the jobs are production line work, Elston said.
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and July, and Jolyb expires April Saturday, August and Holidays. Second-class scripts by mail are $9 a semester or $18 as scripted by mail are $9 a semester or $18 as $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $4 a semester, paid through Jolyb.
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Editor Dierck Casselman
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THE TASTE IS IN THE SAUCE G'S BAR-B-Q
530 W. 23rd St.
OPEN: Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-9 p.m.
Fri. and Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m.
Plan Your Picnics with Us We Specialize in Catering
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Jesus left Judea and walked in Gallilee because the Jews sought to kill him. It appears that the sons and daughters of His own Mother might have thought he was scared to go back into Judea when a mother of Jesus had been alive. But Jesus and his mother and go into Jeudea that Thy disciples may see the works Thy doest." "Then Jesus said unto them, My time is not yet come; but your time is always ready. The world cannot hate you; 'But ME TU HATETH, THY HATETH, THY HATETH,' EVIL.' FOR MY TIEST IS NOT YET FULL COME." The foregoing is based on the 1st ten verses of the 7th chapter of John's Gospel.
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
Examine yourselves whether ye be in the Faith if you are indifferent to, anil, avil and any one or more of you broken Commandments, is
"Ye that love The Lord hate evil Take thou away from me the noise of thy songs; for I will not hear the melody of thy viol. But let judgement run down as waters and righteousness as a mighty stream!" Psalm 170:10 and Amos 5:23 and 24.
One may love the hymns and great music of the Church, but if one
does not "hate evil" It appears God does not appreciate the music, and it is unacceptable. Do we hear many voices being lifted up today crying SHAME ON YOU; THIEF, LIAR, ADULTERER, PROFANE AND COVETEOUS WRECHT!
"Thy throne O God, is forever and ever; the scooper of Thy Kingdom is a right scaper. Thy love lighteventh anger, and hated wickedness; therefore God, thy God, hyath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above they fellows." Psalm 45:6,7.
"But unto the Son He saith, Thy throne, O God, is forever and ever a "Baptist of righteousness is the ascetic of kinghood. Thou has loved righteousness and had lainting!; therefore God, even The Holy God hallowed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows." Hebrews 18. 8.
"Ye that love The Lord hate evil — let judgment run down as waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream!"
"All the enemies of Christianity are more triters in comparison with those who give you exemption from obedience to God's Commands."
DECATUR, GA.
a new face for your feet . .
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop
... by Famolare
Eight Thirty-Seven Massachusetts Street
30031
University Dally Kansan
Tuesday. June 15. 1976
2'
Joy politics out to pasture
By RON HARTUNG Contributing Writer
Pundits apenty have called California's Gov. Jerry Brown the harbinger of politicians to come. Such a bold pronouncement means either that formality will remain and will sleep in airplane ailes or, more likely, that they will be preaching a new austerity to the American superconsumer. The message of the Brown-type politician, in so many words: "There is no free lunch." Or, to use another terminology: "There is no 'Ruby,' ending."
the ill-informed among you, Fury was the four-legged star of "the story of a horse and the boy who loved him." This Saturday—a celebration of the triumph of right (Fury
Comment
and friends) over wrong (just about everyone else).
The typical "Fury" episode went something like this: Two incorrigible bandits would escape from the local calabose and hole up near the Broken Wheel Ranch, home of Fury and his boy, Joey Newton. There were four people in the schoolhouse, incarcerate the forest, disrupt the sack race—mind you, these are not friendly men.
Without fail, young Joey and his pal Paddy, or maybeFee Wee, would fall into the clutches of these desperatees, who clutched our young heroes with glee if not for.
"Fury! Fury! Fury! boy, boy! Save us!" that call and a shill, well-timed whistle brought the mighty stallion galloping in just in the nick of time. Quicker'n you could say "gol durn." Fury had the bandits pleading to be saved from a hooved death. Then, invariably past the nick of time, father Jim Newton and cranky cook Pete would come down on the hillside, plopping off the shiffle, to escort the criminals off to the sheriff.
Which brings us to the stock "Fury"
ending (or what Quinn Martin calls an
*apollog*) . All the principal characters are
gathered on the front porch of the Broken
Wheel tying up all the loose ends of the just-
resolved caper.
"What'll happen to those two?" Joey would ask.
"Joey, they've been headed for hell in a handbasket for a long time," Jim would answer. "They won't bother you anymore." "They'll be back, you'll be back, rocks for a long smell."
At that the group would start to chuckle, and someone would launch Fury a question such as, "Isn't Pete a wrinkled old fossil, Fury?" And Fury would throw back his
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head and neigh in obvious agreement. Needless to say that would bring down the ranch house, and the sound of laughter and "Atthew Fun" always closed the show.
Hillcrest
PG
Bill Cosby Raquel Welch
"MOTHER,
JUGS & SPEED"
Ah, to those of us weaned on the "Pury" ending, that laughter still rings today. And, expecting Life to imitate Art, we come to expect such neat solutions to problems for ourselves and, consequently, from our government.
Hillcrest Alfred Hitchcock's
"FAMILY PLOT" PG
7:20 & 9:35 Sat.Sun.Mat.1:45
Sunset
H.G.Wells'most horrifying
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plus
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"Gods" 9:00 "Dracula" 10:45 PG
Until fairly recently, most of the politicians seemed to have been graduated from the Fury school of thought. Secure in their positions, they wait for our government to rescue us from any and all villains. There was no question that we would prevail, that whatever we did would work.
But now more and more of our national leaders are saying there are no simple questions anymore, much less simple answers. They may have to do without such things as a third car, a second electric knife or a fourth television set. No more Camelot, no more Politics of Joy. Instead, we're being forced to accept that our lives must us Fury must be put out to pasture.
These naysayers attract audiences now because their different message falls on ears that enjoy novelty—after all, there's no danger in listening.
Audiotronics carries brand name stereo components, portable tape recorders, black and white and colour television, modular stereo, car stereo, cartridges and needles, recording tape, record care products, clock radios and portable radios, telephone answering devices, intercoms, closed circuit television systems, microphones and public address systems, headphones and parts and accessories. Audiotronics maintains a full time in house service center for the convenience of our customers. We've been in business at our present location for over twenty one years. Selection, service, dependability . . .
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STEAK SANDWICH $1.59
Meat for lunch at the Sizzler.
You'll get tender top sirloin on Sizzler toast. Along with golden french fries. So, why brown-bag it when you can have steak?
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
Good only at 1516 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
---
© 1986 WET SPACE MAGAZINE
But woe to the politician that tries to deny us the "Fury" endings we grew up expecting. He may attract token support, but from beyond the horizon he'll hear the
BURGER
BRAIN NERVES
huzzas of the multitudes for the dark horse candidate, who'll come galloping in just in time to save us from hardship, to make sure there is a happy ending. Attaoy, Fury
BURGER HOUSE
KANSAN WANT ADS
Associated medium, goods, services and employ-
ment. Responsible for the development of an en-
gineering platform, developing, testing, implem-
ting, configuring, integrating, maintaining,
INMIA and other related systems.
ATTENTION STUDENT BENTERS—Drop in and pick up the materials you need for this (phone calls) place at WESTERBURG (phone calls) place.
Nine 3 bld house, sunken living room, beamed
dining room, 4 bld house, 6 bld house,
cuparity. House 847-795 and 847-829
6-15
CLASSIFIED RATES
2 bdr, all utilities paid, on campus Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking, a pool, $48
4933
2 bdrm. furnished large ap. near bus and downtown.
2 bdrm. a $100. utilities. 843 bus. 6-17
7 bdrm. utilized.
one two three four five
times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$0.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional
$0.00
BigMac
Limit one coupon per person per visit. Void after Tuesday, June 22.
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
$1.19
Apartments, 3 bedroom downstory, 7 rooms in
houses. Occupancy is 5 people. No pets. #42, 842.737. Avail.
(212) 619-5000. www.airbnb.com
AD DEADLINES
Nice room in 4 bedrooms, 3 bath townhouse. A/C/
shading. Modern utilities: 3 beds, plus 1; ceiling
582-8475.
582-8475.
McDonald's
ERRORS
Studio apt. private entrance, furnished, bath,
basement. Student must be enrolled or
student preferred. 843-7827. 6-16
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Friday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
FOR RENT
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.
with this coupon
Lawrence Gay Liberation, first meeting of the summer; 7:30, 8. June Student Group; 6-15
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or non-product materials, the STEREOS are supplied at the GRAMPOHONE SHOP at KIFES. **ft**
2
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ad can be placed in person or by calling the UX business office at 864-1258.
Must sell 195, 300 Yamaha RD $755 or best offer,
864-8181, keep trying.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
for
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties.
and exchange units. BELT AUTO
ELECTRIC, 50/65 VAC.
864-4358
For new Chevrolets and used cars at
Call Otis Vann!
Offer good only at:
901 West 23rd St.
Lawrence, Kansas
We do it all for you $
2015
843-7700
Turner Chevrolet
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Western Civilization Note—Now on Sale!
Make sure you have:
Makes sense to use them
For class preparation
For exam preparation
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade, trade, furniture and appliance店, 704-218-3800
(www.furniture.com)
95 Ford I ion and 82 Chevrolet i panel trucks
best offer. 842-6705 or 842-4841.
6-17
Sony STR 705 receive 24 watt RMS/channel
power, 36VDC 12.8A, front dollar bottom $225,
front bottom $225, back dollar BH-8414, 6a-164, 6s-164
Sony HST 110 receiver great RMS/channel 60
Looks and sounds great. Call 841-2541. 6-16
2 woven rope chairs and food stools and a really comfortable couch. $300 for one or knock down $200 for the call. Call 800-417-5960.
Women's 3-speed bike, $25. Call 842-3137
weekend, e-6-17
84 Impuls. AT, PS, AC, good tires, good condition.
95 Impuls. Httall, Httall. Sell Cap 6-17
& after 6. Kaitlyn 6-17
GIRLS-SUPER SUMMER SALE! GREAT BARGAIN! THE 1ST, 927. MASS.
6-24
Pimmer SX-424 receive 12 RMS wats per chan-
pion 16 RMS wats per chan
Excellent deal on a new AM- FM receiver - 35/25
only - only $150! Donw wait. Hay Attenuation
13, E 80, H81
CANON CAMERA EQUIPMENT: FD 45-300mm
in 6-Session set up
for use in observation tubes. Bags 811-2392-01.
Cair streses--J.I.L. - Craig + Prairie + Jenson --
6th St. 84-2047 - Dance Rays. Audio. G-22
8th St. 84-2047
28,000 BTL air conditioner (used only 1 month);
12,000 air conditioner 1734 Ketucky-6
12.000 hour.
1970 Beechey WV, 54,000 miles, body fair. Will sell for $600. Call 824-2249.
6-17
Record Sale - buy one, get one free This week
on Henry - limited supply. DVDs
A-622
Sail in a KOOL boat this summer! Hardy used,
good condition, $50, phone 823-9340. 6-17
Need a good deal on a turbable? We have h11
New 600hp Hayon. Available now.
New 600hp Hayon, I5 E 8H 6L-2 6Z
Twin bed, small table. Both. Very reasonable.
Leaving Lawrence tomorrow, must sell. Cell 853-
610-9472.
Toyota Cellez - 1972. Red with Black vinyl top, big wheels. Fur car, great fuel. Good boy. 845-503-6800
New V.K. 'S 2 way speaker - Reg $80 - two row
pair. Only at Hay Audio, 13 E. Kiffin
482-579-6920.
Big-bleu beautiful-fantastic-Jeremiah 15-“powerful”
Big-bleu beautiful-fantastic-Jeremiah 15-“powerful”
Only $45. Audrey J. 18 E. BM 842-2977
Ralph N. 18 E. BM 842-2977
HELP WANTED
Use the student discounts
Research assistant, Burdens of Child Research,
Research Assistant, PDP 11 Mini Computer Experience with companion
Lab (PCL) in Child Development. Application deadline June 12. Contact Greg Diaz
Application deadline June 12. Contact Greg Diaz
Qualified护士 and women of all race groups.
in the summer.
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
EARN MONEY - You can earn $2 an hour for participating in psychiatric study. If interested, complete the online registration form.
Coordinator of curriculum and instruction survey
involves a monthly assessment of one month's time as appointment starting in Aug.
1976 $342/month. Seeking a candidate for program and instrument for faculty element of programs and instruments for faculty element of programs for administering C & I Survey work. Apply at 409 Ballard Hall
3503 Broadway, New York, NY 10022 for an alternative active employer. Qualified and nominated candidates may apply.
Keep your car healthy
OVERSEAS JOBS- temporary or permanent.
Australia, S. America, Africa, etc. all fields.
$500-$1200 monthly. Expenses paid. sightseeing
holidays. Travel included. Call 800-
490-6700 or Box 409, Berkeley, CA. 94704. 6-15
The Stabiles are now taking applications for part-time and full-time positions in person at the Stabiles 6-12 Center, Contact Ringer 901-543-7680.
Aztec Inn
Home of the
Aztec Calendar
Use the
at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
All Mexican Dishes served
842-9455
Happy car
Experienced car stereo and CB installation. Men for time only! Excellent账付 Car 841-727-9222.
Housekeeper—part time. Call 842-6279 eleven-
g, 622
Director of Admissions and Assistant to the Director of Admissions and Dutton includes administration of admissions, responsibility for publications, and other administrative duties. Full-time, year-round appointment allows tenured positions including writing, and mathematical ability, skill in relevant areas. Salary: Open depending on experience and ability, range expected to be $12,000 plus. Prior experience to Dean Martin H Dickson, experience to Dean Martin H Dickson, experience to Dean Martin H Dickson, Kansas 68453. Equally Opportunity Employer. Qualified women of all races are required. 6-17
LOST AND FOUND
Lost, black, medium hair, male eat (9 months)
with some on white chen. Reward 1823-65-17
67
Lost: Light orange cat withuff tail in vicinity
with 82-5024 Call Linda at 809-616-4
at 82-5024
Ladie's watch. Found May 20, in Fraer Hall.
61-2729
Man's 1968 class ring. Tuesday, June 1 in 1200
block of Kentucky. 845-732-571. 6-16
Man's black umbrella, 4th floor Worcest. Call
811-5162 and identify.
NOTICE
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
foams, palatits and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and cheese galore at the Cashah Hotel, 803
Brown Street. Dinner) to be on I H 330 Rustic
Sundays.
J. HOOOD, BOOKSELLER, welcomes new and returning students to the summer session. Remembrances half-pardoned by the mobk for Western heritage pay tribute to Mary Westerham, choreographer, ete. Come in and browse you are a celebration of choreography, p.m. friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. p.m. Sunday, p.m. friday and Saturday, 10 a.m. p.m. Sunday, p.m. 6-1 p.m. Closed Mondays, 146-155 MAR
If you have been confused or have any knowledge about any event, please contact UCKUCK PHOTO PHOTO STEVEN'S (call collect) 325-0654 (Topak). during the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. at UCKUCK PHOTO STATE.
Swan Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
cookware, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12
hours. 842-387-377
GUARANTED WEIGHT LORS. Send one dollar
in Mount Rushmore $30, Beverly Hills $90,
Mountain Ridge $334, Beverly Hills $907,
Mountain Ridge $345, Beverly Hills $907.
WIN A CASE OF BEER! Earn $2 an hour for participation in a psychology study. Also each participant will be given a drink with a variety of drinks have participated—the winner receives a free cup or coke. If interested, please 9 am - 5 pm. B-15
After 28 years in business, if George doesn't he will be make it. George's Pipe Shop, Inc.
KU KARATE CLUB SUMMER Session. Tuesday
Friday Saturday Sunday
KU KARATE CLUB FIELD HOUSE LAWN For
nursing students only
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 823-0100.
MUSIC LESONS-on-for your kind of music. Blues,
Rock, Jazz, and Pop. You can call John Fiddie,
and Call John Call! 877-253-6796; Mekkennan
877-253-6796; Mekkennan 877-253-6796.
Foreign students are fun persons to know and learn from. For a challenging cross-cultural experience, Join Operation Friendship each Monday at the, at Center 69. W. 18th, 3782. 6-21
FREE KITTENTS, very cute. Paul or Jim 843-
9146. 6-22
RIDES ___ RIDERS
Interested in carpool to KC to Lawrence M-F
7:30 a.m. to return about 1:30, 739-641-691
SERVICES OFFERED
Mathematica Tuition–Competence, experiential tuiers,
19, 15, 12, 11, 10, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1,
11, 15, 12, 11, 12, 12, 12, 12, 50. Rogerian session or
7-8 week course.
SUMMER COMMUNICATION WORKSHOPS
Seattle Center
Call Howlett 846-3900 or 846-3911
Lawrence Gay Liberation social activities 843-
929. Counseling 842-7505. 6-29
TUTOR
Have your children learn Spanish and art. Grad-
183-906 Spanish speaking art school—seton C.
6-21
TYPING
I do dumbo good typing. Peggy, 842-4476; after
40 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-29
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-7308 at 6 p.m. tf
Typtip/editor, IBM Pixe/elite. Quality work.
Correspondence, dissertations welcome.
Contact: 842-215-9278
Experienced typist. IBM Selectric, term papers,
formatting corrected. Been proof-reading, sp.
corrected. Been 841-1069.
Experienced typist—term papers,史料, misc.
Expressions of opinion. Spelled, spelled,
corrected. 843-543, Mr. Wright.
Typing, professional quality work, guaranteed,
technical expertise, plea electrics, social
themes, distortions, plea electrics, Social
Intervention, plea electrics.
Experienced typist will do all kinds of typing in my home. Call Carolyn at 841-0884. - 6-29
WANTED
Roommate wanted to live in home, separate bedroom, living room and bath. Call me 6-178-6-17
Female roommate for summer, possibly fall Prt-
Iron, female roommate for location, location.
Debbie evening 843-721-6555
Diana evening 843-721-6555
Female roommate wanted to share beautiful 2
bathrooms. Call 814-3617 and ask for Cyrus,
914-3508 or Michael, 914-3516.
II - H
Hire. Call 814-2647 and ask for Cynde. 6-12
Wanted-Scuba Diver for Bahamas excursion.
Meals, drinks, meals, drinks, meals, drinks,
dive boat. Food. accommodations, and some
equipment included. Cost $841 - $1034 per day.
6-16
1 roommate wanted, female or male to share a furnished furnished 8-year,史家年 old, large kitchen and laundry. Kitchen miles south on 3% acres next to Wakara river. Complete kitchen and laundry. Storage in at least 2% acres anytime. 8-10 p.m. best time. For future rental, call 415-697-3111, Mike Manley Rt. 2, Box 20, Lawrence, Kansas
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FELDS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
AWINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
the
CRAMOPHONE
shop
842 1311 FOR STATIONS •
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Thomas Loss Misstortion
Than Most Storee Commemnts
R
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECOR
AND STEREO
BULK CINEMAS LIVE LIBRARY 140-521-6344
'76 ROYALS BASEBALL TOURS
July 1 Oakland A's
Lobby
Aug. 9 New York Yankees
Sep. 4 Texas Rangers
SUA Maupintour travel service
Kansas Union Building
quality travel arrangements since 1951
Phone 843-1211
4
Tuesday, June 15, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Lady Jayhawk ball camp is starting off like a shot
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Heat and humidity failed to dampen the first-day enthusiasm of the Lady Jayhawk Basketball Camp participants. After a two-hour workout in preparation for the upcoming week of hard work, several girls still ran laps and practiced lay-ups.
The Lady Jayhawk camp is in session until Saturday.
The first practice session, in Allen Field
the formation of the girl's
determination.
"Hopefully they'll have less energy by focusing on Washington, director of their organization, is a dedicated member."
Washington is directing the first Lady Jayhawk summer Basketball Camp. She said that the ages of the campers ranged from 12 to 17 but that most were 13 and 14. Skill levels range from the novice to the accomplished player, she said.
most of the girls are of average height.
Nance and Diane Van Hoozler, Fredenia freshmen, are less than five feet tall, but speed easily makes up for the lack of踝.
Two girls in the camp session are more
honest than the Harrie Horn, Shawnee
Mission North aphrodite.
An emphasis on the effective use of speed and play execution gives each player the opportunity to develop her size and abilities, Washington said.
Connie O'Bryhim has an additional factor to contend with in working on her basketball skills. She is deaf. Connie doesn't know sign language, nor do her parents, Washington
SUA Summer Films
rues., June 15 The Candidate
with Robert Redford, Peter Boyle, Melvyn Douglas
7:30 p.m.
75
Wed., June 16 Grand Illusion
Jean Renoir's classic anti-war film. With Erich Von Stronheim
7:30 p.m. 75°
"Pure Gold"
Thurs., June 17
Victorio De Sica's Gold of Naples by the director of A Brief Canton and The Garden Curtis Conti with Sophia Loren
7:30 p.m.
75°
Fri., June 18
Jeanne Moreau in
Going Places
Directed by Bertrand Blier
7:30 p.m. 7P
75°
All films shown in Woodruff Auditorium
"She's been going to a school in which the teaching is primarily linguical so she's learning to lip读. I introduced her to the other campers, explained the situation to them, and I expect it will be a real experience for the girls to extend to her."
Laurie Walker is here with four other members of the Columbus, Kan., high school team. She said she had played for two years.
"When I was just a freshman I didn't even know how to dribble," she said.
Many of the younger and less experienced girls are at the camp just to have fun. Others are serious about future prospects in college basketball. Washington said at least four girls who attended University of Kansas next fall would be prospective team members.
The object is to soundly develop the
oddoman's basketball, Washington
and Ohio State. The girls are
the girls at the nationals.
Sports
we don't intend to give them much time to run. They will work about eight hours.
Mornings are spent working on individual aspects of the game—defense, offense and drills on fundamentals. Lectures on techniques and strategy during the afternoon sessions are followed by inter-team games each evening.
With six or seven players on a team, each girl will get to play a lot. Washington said.
he can get to a pay lot, Washington said.
"A major portion of the learning is done during the actual games when they can see how it all fits together," she said.
There will be breaks from the basketball schedule during the week. A picnic and tour of the campus are planned. Awards will be given next Friday evening at the close of the
Each girl will receive a certificate of participation and special awards will be presented for individual achievement. The teacher should think should receive a congratulatory award.
Washington said she hoped the girls who participated in the camp would be her best bet. "I have no doubt that they will."
"Word-of-mouth publicity from past participants talking about the summer camps to friends is the best way to encourage support for girls." "I have no doubt the camps will provide an excellent source of funds for the women's athletic programs."
A consideration in the promotion of the camp was the use of tuition fees. Funds from the Lady Jayhawk camps are kept within the women's athletic department, where she is instructed that she and her staff received no compensation for conducting the summer camps.
WESTERN HARVARD
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Straight shooting
Julia Yeater, Lawrence graduate student, instructs Brenda Thompson, Lexington, Mo., in the fine points of shooting a lay-up. Thompson is one of 50 women participating in the Lady Jayhawk Basketball Camp this week.
Royals use Tiger errors, win 5-2
DETROIT (AP)—Fred Patek doubled in two runs and Al Fitzmarricks picked up his eight victory last night as the Kansas City Royals extended their winning streak to six games with a 5-2 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
Fitzmorris gave up six hits and raised his record to 8-2. He was relieved by Steve Mingori, Marty Pattin and finally, Tom Hall, who not the save.
Kansas City scored twice in the fourth with the aid of three Tiger errors. One run scored on an error by right fielder Rusty Staub; another came across when Hal
Mrae stole home as Cowsena stole second
sacrifice in the opera. Mrae also hit a
sacrifice飞 in the opera.
Intramural scores
Results of the first day of intramural softball.
Monday: Wednesday Yesterday
Monday: Thursday Friday
Monday: Saturday Monday, 11 One, Man in the face is not enough 7
Prince and Monkman Women's winners 7
Prince and Monkman Women's winners 7
Monkey Racers 10, Lawrence Glaus 1
Monkey Racers 10, Lawrence Glaus 1
Amateur actors cast in musical
Last year's production of "Okalahoma"
was the first musical to have open
fields.
The University of Kansas summer musical, "G guys and Dolls" is the second KU summer theater production to hold auditions open to everyone in Lawrence.
Several Lawrence citizens who aren't usually associated with the theater auditioned this year, some for the second time.
"Guys and Dolls" is set in New York City and revolves around Nathan Detroit, the operator of a floating crap game; Miss Adelaide, who wants Nathan to marry her; and Miss Sara Brown, who runs the Save a Mission near Times Square.
William M. Balfour, vice chancellor for
Griff's
BURGER BARS
A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM
1618 WEST 23rd
Griff's
BURGER BARS
A NATIONWIDE SYSTEM
1618 WEST 23rd
SACK
LUNCH
DAYS!
Giant
Sack Lunch
A mountain of a meal in a sack. Giant ham, burger, French fries, and a 12 oz. drink.
Regular
Sack Lunch
Hold out your hand and say cheese. You'll get a Double Cheeseburger, French fries, and a 12 oz. drink.
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Bailorf had high school acting experience in Rochester, MN, and worked back-stage at the University of Minnesota. He later involved in the community theatre there.
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one line and I thoroughly enjoyed myself," he said.
Although rehearsals decrease the amount of time Balfour can spend at home, he said his family was glad he is involved with the play.
Jerry Hutchison, associate vice chancellor for academic affairs, is one of the leaders.
it was a personal dare," Hutchison said. "I wanted to see if I had the courage to walk out."
Balfour doesn't have any solos; though he does sing with the chorus.
Balfour isn't the only vice chancellor in "Guvs and Dolls."
Hutchison's last encounter with the theater was in 1348 when he was in a ninth grade class at Bainbridge High School.
formance in the operetta as "marginally competent."
Hutchison" his family had little comment, except for a few laughs, when he told them about his part. He and his family are proud of their ability, or lack of it, to dance, he said.
Douglas Walker, assistant county prosecutor, is also a member of the cast. He portrays Lieutenant Brannigan, who is trying to stop the floating crap game.
Walker played the lead in a high school production of "Time Out for Ginger" and was in the chorus in "Oklahoma!" last year.
Walker, who is working on a degree in drama, is a part-time student at KU.
y.
"theater is a form of recreation for me," Walker said.
Marshall Fine, a reporter for the Lawrence Journal-World, auditioned with the idea of writing a story about what it was like to grow up in New York. He wasn't expecting to be a big part.
Fine plays Bain Southstreet, a gambler, and two songs another charmed.
Remembering his past theater experiences, Fine said, "I've always been amazed at what I saw."
Fine had theatrical experience in Minneapolis. Minn.
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Vol.86 No.147
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
See page four
Wednesdav. June 16. 1976
Commission studies utilities and parking
The Lawrence City Commission last night discussed utility rates, parking problems and the sale of fireworks within the city limits.
The commission approved a study by Black and Veatch of Kansas City, Kan., to determine water and sewage rates if a proposed sewage treatment plant were built in Lawrence. The engineering company will develop a system for manure, according to snookman Ron Hardin.
Commission members decided the limited parking facilities for non-University members in the 1100 block of Mississippi isn't under the jurisdiction of the city.
David Beard, 1218 Miss., asked the commission to support his request to the Kansas Board of Regents to make parking available to non-University members.
BEARD SAID parking for residents was taken during the day by university students seeking to avoid the cost of permit stickers. The University of Florida has a parking close to their houses during the day.
Beard proposed a special sticker for car owners in the block east of the stadium to prevent them from parking on the west side of the street. The commission members referred him to the
The commissioners also discussed the sale of fireworks locally.
"I'm dead set against fireworks and I 'm
giving 365 days' notice I don't want any sold
armer, Arngerman, commissioner,
commissioner.
THE REMARK was made after Jean Woodhead, 1339 Haskell, asked special permission for her son to sell fireworks on land recently annexed by the city.
Woodhead made the request because the land had been annexed less than two months ago and the fireworks were ordered a year in advance. She agreed to discuss the matter with George Williams, director of public works.
The commission also voted to allow the yearly sidewalk sale of the Downtown Merchants Association to sidewalks. The sale will take place July 15 and 16.
IN OTHER ACTION, the commission agreed to draw up an amendment to the city sign ordinance to permit churches to spot burials. The ordinance be limited in size, number and location.
The addition of a liquor store to the existing service station at 23rd and Louisiana will require changes in the en-route to the station, the commission decided.
20% of black professors leaving KU this year
By DWIGHT THOMAS
and KATHY SOKOL Staff Writers
Six black faculty members, more than 20 per cent of the total at the University of Kansas, are leaving their positions this year for similar jobs at other colleges or universities, according to the Black Faculty Steering Committee.
"In other words, we want to be involved in a meaningful way to improve the hiring and retention of alums and other minorities," she said. "We also dean of engineering, said yesterday."
The resigning faculty sent a letter to Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs at the University of Chicago, chancellor, asking to meet with the administration and deans to discuss departments that the faculty said showed evidence of black faculty members, or none at all.
HARRISON SMITH, a member of the Steering Committee, said, "The purpose of the course to Shankar and Calgard was to make the students familiar with the knowledge known and to offer assistance to the central university administration in fostering better relations in retention, recruitment and development."
Ron Calgaard, vice chancellor for academic affairs, in a letter to the secretary of the black faculty group, said he shared the group's concern about the problem of hiring and retaining black faculty members.
Calgaard said he was "distressed by the comments" made by the group in the letter and suggested a meeting between himself, Shankel and the faculty members.
Calgaard is out of town until June 21. A meeting with the black teachers has been tentatively scheduled for next week when he returns.
SHANKEL SAID yesterday he thought the letter presented the problems of the facultyulty well. He suggested a meeting with the faculty, and one of the University in discuss the problem.
"My role is to help and improve the situation," Shankel said.
Both Smith and Hogan said Shankel and others had been very cooperative in their efforts.
THE SIX black professors said their reasons for leaving were tied to problems with their academic departments, with the degree or with the Lawrence community.
Peggy Jelks, assistant professor of education and instruction, said she had a teaching experience at University in Monroe. L. Living in Louisiana she said, will bring her closer to him.
Jelks said that while she was at KU there were no conflicts in the School of Education.
"I was free to try out new ideas and had
certain flexibility in teach me." Jollys said.
Roderick Harrison, assistant professor of See BLACK nage.3
JELKS SAID that Lawrence was an ideal town for raising a family, but that for the single person its opportunities were somewhat limited.
"However, I do feel that there is a need for more blocks in the School of Education to be offered," she said and because we do have minority students who never see a black professor," she said.
Judith B. Ferguson
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Nun of many habits
"if you're going to be an artist you must deal with all kinds of reality," Carol Hilgitt, a sister in the Order of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, said yesterday. Bilton is here at the University to drive the summer theatre production of "Who's Afraid of Me."
Title IX report in final stages, Tasheff says
The Title IX report concerning racial and sex discrimination at the University of Kansas is reaching its final stages, Tedde student body president, said yesterday.
Tasheff said the Title IX steering committee would probably send its final version of the report back to the Title IX Self-Evaluation Committee in the next few days.
The steering committee is comprised of Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor; Mike Davis, university general counsel; Richard Jackson, vice chancellor for clinical affairs.
She said the self-evaluation committee should probably take a week to 10 days to complete.
Subcommittees studying discrimination in the treatment of students, employment and admissions submitted guidelines intended to end racial and sex discrimination at the University to the Title IX Self-Evaluation Committee in March.
The self-evaluation committee combined the subcommittees' findings into one report which was submitted to the steering committee.
Under the Title IX Education Amendments,
complete civilization by July 14, 2016.
Tasheff said she didn't know when the report would be made public.
No effect seen in KU policies by Court ruling
A recent Supreme Court decision that would make charges of racial discrimination more difficult to prove won't substantially affect the University of Kansas, Bonnie Patton, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, said yesterday.
Last week's decision entrances examinations required by the District of Columbia to be racially discriminatory, although blacks failed the test five times more often than whites.
Under the new ruling, charges of discrimination would have to show a discriminatory intent as well as a discriminatory effect. This is a departure from a 1971 decision that prohibited discrimination regardless of intent.
Patton said the new decision wasn't concerned with placing blame or assessing fines, aspects which directly affect KU and concerning discrimination complaints.
Nun unafraid of 'Virginia Woolf' challenge
Bv CHARLOTTE KIRK
The Edward Ablee play will run from July 7 through July 10 in the University Theatre.
KU's summer theatre festival production of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" will be directed by Carol Bilten, chairman of the theater at Clarke College, Dubuque, IA, and a sister in the Order of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
between the society and is one of the best
operators in American theatre,
Bilten said yesterday.
Bilten, who entered the convent in 1960, received an M.A. from KU and a Ph.D. from the University of California at Santa Barbara. He then owned stock and three plavers a vow at Clarke.
The play explores a harrowing duel
"OUR COMMUNITY has always en-
courage students to pursue their
education through education." Blain said.
"Arts on some levels are an integral part of education."
Biltgen, who wears slacks, sandals and lots of silver or turquoise jewelry, she said she would like to see the theatre into her religious life. Since Vatican II, a movement in the '80s that encouraged members of religious orders to work in the church, Biltgen added to their attention to wider activities, she said.
Local flu campaign awaits definite plan
Martin Wollmann, director of health services at the University of Kansas, said yesterday Watkins Hospital would administer swine flu vaccinations to the university community in late August or early September.
redemption of sorts on a ritual level," she said.
She said that profanity was very important to the play and that it didn't bother her. The terrible verbal fights show the characters to cope with the world, she said.
determining how many people would request the vaccine, but that Watkins Hospital could be asked to administer up to 25,000 doses.
"If people read it on a surface level it is profane, but it's not profanity for profanity's sake," she said. "The profanity of reality that are much more profound."
The government hasn't determined the proper dosages and hasn't set a distribution schedule.
Wollmann said that there was no way of
★ ★ ★
Vaccine supply imperiled by insurance cancellation
BLITGEN SAID the play had different levels that were important to its meaning.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Parke, Davis & Co., a manufacturer of swine influenza vaccine, announced yesterday that it was losing its liability insurance coverage for a Government official said the development would jeopardize the vaccination program.
Parke-Davis did not explain why the swine flu liability coverage was being waived and could not identify its insurance carrier. It could not estimate insurance companies could not estimate their actuarial risks because a mass immunization program had never been implemented.
Parke-Davis, one of the four U.S. manufacturers of the vaccine, said it was losing its liability insurance coverage on July 1 and asked the government for help
E. Burke Giblin, chairman of Warner-Lambert Co., president of Parke-Davis, said that insurance is necessary to protect the producer of the vaccine in case of unrestricted supply.
Dr. Delao Meriwether, director of the government's national influenza immunization program, said that for Parke-Davis to be forced out of production" would make it very hard to implement the program."
"For the vast majority, it can be anticipated with certainty that complete protection with minor or no side effects will result. Others, however, may obtain less than full protection and others may have more severe side effects," he said.
plan definitely yet. Government reports indicate the vaccine should be available in
WOLLMANN SAID the vaccine would be distributed in stages, the first doses given to the elderly and those with chronic diseases. He said the remainder of the vaccine would be shipped at different times, depending on demand.
"Greater side effects than anticipated or even a subsequent unrelated illness may be considered in the minds of some as a basis for liability against the company," he said.
Wollmann said the hospital was considered several options for administering the vaccine. Stations may be set up on campus, and the vaccine may be given only on specific days or during specific weeks, he said.
She said possibly 40,000 people would request vaccines in Douglas County. The health department has applied for federal funding to nurse to administer the inoculations.
"On one level Albee is making a social comment that the world is falling apart. He shows this through the characters' drinking," she said. "At a personal level this is an agonizing love story in which two people have endured 23 years together."
Kay Kent, Douglas County health department director, said no one knew what the chances of a national epidemic were; we were very few people with natural immunity.
The Douglas County health department hasn't made definite plans for administering the vaccine, but Kent said there are community clinics throughout Lawrence.
Wollmann called the immunization program an exercise in probability. He said that "the vaccine is really effective."
"Being a person comes first before being religious," she said. "Our part in being in the world and in the present moment is to sacralize the secular."
DISTRIBUTION is tentatively scheduled for September 1, but the date isn't definite because of an uncertainty of availability of vaccine in large quantities.
epidemic was abnormally high because of the new strain.
Government concern arose over the swine virus because normally the disease is transmitted through contact with hogs, but Ft. Dix recruits who contracted the disease hadn't been around swine. Apparently the virus was transmitted by humans.
THE U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW) recently reported in Medical News that a new strain of influenza appeared, the population had little or no immunity to it. It also said an aggressive strain of influenza could cause the new strain to spread rapidly.
The National Influenza Immunization Program provides two vaccines—one for the "high-risk" groups and the other for the remainder of the population.
THE HEW report said success of the program depended on the proportion of the population vaccinated and on the potency and safety of the vaccines used. Results of the study were presented at June to provide a basis for determining vaccine dosage and expected side effects.
"If you're going to be an artist you must
be familiar with all kinds of reality," she said. "I
worked with a number of artists."
Wollmann said there wasn't any medicine to cure influenza once a person contracted it, and fli symptoms usually lasted three to 14 days.
The immunization program is purely voluntary, Wollmann said, and there will be no coercion. He said he didn't know what the chances of a nation-wide epidemic would be if a significant number of persons weren't immunized.
"The play's ritual level ends with a release of the characters' agony and a redemption of lives lived under illusions," Biltgen said.
She said she would use her particular talent, directing, to add her own touch to the performance.
"I BELEVE there is in the play agonized passion, suffering, a moment of grace and
Teachers get quorum; ratify 7.5% pay hike
BULLETIN
U. S.D. 497 Board of Education untimely approved the new teacher contract
School District 497 teachers gained the majority of affirmative votes necessary to ratify the 1976-77 tentative agreement late last night.
The agreement is being considered for ratification today by the Board of Trustees.
The settlement was reached last Wed-
Lawrence Education Association (LEA) representatives gathered the approval of a majority of the district's 466 teachers. The survey gave an average for 7.3 per cent may increase.
"We don't anticipate any opposition to the agreement by the Board of Education," said Darrell Ward, president of LEA, yesterday.
neseday when the two sides agreed to a base pay boost from $7,800 to $8,100, with an additional pay increase in September if all other benefits are paid. When the new salary scale is implemented
LEA representatives had some difficulty in securing the majority of votes because many of the district's teachers were out of school and I vote in Monday night's balloting session.
"By 8 p.m. last night I wasn't sure we were going to have enough affirmative votes to ratify the agreement before the education meeting this morning," Ward said.
in the final balloting, only six teachers opposed ratification of the tentative con-
Contingent upon the board's ratification, last night's action will have ended nearly immediately.
2
Wednesday, June 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Oil bill out of committee
WASHINGTON—A hill to force the breakup of the nation's 18 largest oil companies squeezed through the Senate Judiciary Committee by an 8-7 vote yesterday.
University, Sens. Robert Byd, D-W.Va., Hugh Scott, R-Pa., and Charles Mathias,
The bill will require the companies to divest themselves of all but one phase of their operations—production, transportation or refining and marketing.
their operations' requirements.
Supporters continued at the committee meeting that the forced fragmentation of the plants would increase competition and reduce prices.
But opponents argued the effect would be to impair efficiency, add to costs, raise prices, reduce production and increase dependence on foreign oil.
*Mathas put a substitute proposal before the committee that wouldn't have required the breakup of the oil companies but would have imposed on them what they considered appropriate.*
Rombs called for extortion plot
WASHINGTON—Thirteen terrorist letter bombs have been mailed to corporate offices and the home of one business executive in an extortion scheme demanding millions of dollars from 200 U.S. corporations, FBI Director Clarence M. Kelley said yesterday.
Kiley said the 200 corporations having receiving extortion letters last fall. The letter bombs appear to be part of a continuing crime, he declared.
None of the recipients of the extortion letters have complied with the demands, he said. Kelley refused to identify the recipients.
"We do not know as of yet just what is the genesis of this," Kelley said. "It could be a single person, or it could be an organization." He refused to say how the extortion letters were signed or whether they appeared to be the work of any sort of political group.
He described the extortion scheme as a terrorist attempt to frighten people. He called the extortion letters "threatening communications."
But, Kelley said, "Whether or not there's any revolutionary connotation is something I cannot discuss."
Bland platform passed
WASHINGTON—The Democratic party's Platform Committee last night overwhelmingly approved a campaign platform that gave Jimmy Carter essentially what he asked for—a noncontroversial document likely to rally the party behind him.
The platform, still subject to final approval at the party's national convention in New York in July, calls for establishment of national health insurance, minimum-income guarantees for poor Americans, a plan for a return to full employment and a strong U.S. defense posture.
It was clear that delegates on both the left and right spectrum of the party had compromised to draw up a platform they hoped would appeal to all Democrats, or not.
However, the platform says little about how the program it recommends would be paid for, or even how much they would cost. Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dakoski, who was instrumental in its preparation, put an overall价钱 on the program, except for答应 national health insurance, where he declined to make an estimate.
Watson renovation plans wait for facts and figures
The remodeling plans for Watson Library have a long way to go before they are reality, according to the Libraries Facilities Planning Committee.
The committee met yesterday to discuss the reorganization of services and resources.
Nancy Bengel, chairman of the committee, said the committee was waiting for enrollment projections from Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, in order to determine how much space should be dedicated for study areas and service facilities.
IN DETERMINING how much working and office space is needed the committee is trying to calculate how much the library staff will enlarge in the next 25 years, she
The committee's final report will go to the University Library Planning Committee, who will submit a report to Chancellor Archie Dykes in November. In April, the Board of Regents will receive the report and discuss money appropriations.
The 13-member committee is trying to allow for any unforeseen restrictions.
"THIS IS not something we can do with curt actions," John Glinka, associate dean of libraries, said. "We have to be general in our approach." We sure we try and account for everything."
The easiest planning, committee members said, is estimating how much space should be allowed for stacks, study space, conference rooms and stair areas.
Two of the main planning problems are the growing rate of incoming books and the innovability of the stacks in the east and west wings.
THE LIBRARY gets 30,000 to 35,000 new books each year and one floor of the largest stacks area holds about 55,000 books, Bengel said. About 60,000 books be the library for the future science library but this only allows for a two-year expansion, she said.
The committee had hoped the stacks could be remodeled to allow for study and office areas. But columns in the stacks can't be removed because they support the floors above them and are built into concrete, Glinda said.
The center stack's floors are glass,
600 bankers at clinic
The clinic is sponsored by KU and the Bank Management Commission of the Kansas Bankers Association.
Top management is the theme for over 600 Kansas bankers attending the 37th annual Bank Management Clinic which began Monday at the University of Kansas.
Individual privacy rights will be discussed at 3 p.m. today in Woodruff Auditorium. Terrence H. Klasky, the assistant federal administrative counsel of the federal government, assoca-tion will discuss a recent Supreme Court decision, U.S. v. Miller, in which the Court refused to acknowledge any confidential relationship between consumers and their banks. The Court uplifted the law that banks could be held to have no access to government agencies to turn over financial data on its depositors, sometimes without the depositor's knowledge.
The Kansas Bankers Association (KBA) is a trade association that serves commercial and business interest of banks in the state. It is a branch of director of public relations for KBA, said.
--framed in concrete and steel, which can be removed. Tentative plans are being made to design possible offices and study areas in the center column.
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SEVERAL MEMBERS of the committee toured the east sub-basement and the ramp room to inspect the areas for possible problems. They also visited the public and are used to store books.
The two levels of the east sub-basement are used to store books, boxes of law documents, old library furniture and shelving components.
The committee hopes to have this area cleaned and furnished with steel shelves to store the tools.
THE PROPOSED remodeling is predicted to start in 1979, "and that' s if everything keep on schedule." Glinka said. The science library will begin about 1811.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 16, 1976
3
Blacks . . .
sociology, and Deborah Harrison, instructor of psychology, said they were leaving KU because he had been offered a position at the University of California in Los Angeles.
From nage one
Deborah Harrison has a job offer from the psychology department at California State University.
"PROFESSIONALLY our jobs were fine, but there was a social isolation problem," she said. "For blacks or young married courts, Lawrence didn't have much to do."
"I am leaving not because conditions here are bad," he said. "We exist within a racial dominated society, so wherever we go in the borders of the United States we will still run into problems black people find here—and there are racial problems at KU."
Harris' main reason for leaving KU, be said, is to make his family as comfortable as possible and still make a contribution to society and the black community.
"WORKING conditions there (in Richmond) will be better," he said. "There is a multi-racial population which provides the necessary information that occurs every day of our lives."
Harris is receiving a promotion and a pay raise. He said that the African studies department, where he taught part-time, was supportive and congenial, but that the psychology department had poor working conditions.
"There is a great deal of blatant, overt racism in addition to covert racism that I will not describe."
He said he was uncertain whether he would return to the KU faculty after his graduation.
BLACK FACULTY members should become more concerned about the rights of
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newsroom--864-4810
Business Office--864-4358
Published at the University of Kanaan daily August through May and Monday through Thursday. See www.uki.edu for details. Sunday and Holidays. Second-class scriptures by mail are $ a semester or $1 a month; scriptures by mail are $ a semester or $1 a month; scriptures by mail are $ a year outlast the county. Student subscriptions are $2.00 a semester paid through the county.
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blacks and other third world people, and the psychology department should develop flexibility in its attitude toward the kinds of material and courses it teaches, be said.
News Advisor Business Advisor
Bob Giles Mel Adams
Member Associated Collegiate Press
He said he was also frustrated with the department's rules for tenure and specialization.
harris said he did applied research rather than traditional research and that the department hadn't given credit to his practical projects.
The faculty members said they had been offered better positions than those they held here, but that salary increases and conditions were not the main reasons for leaving.
They all said that the communities they were going to would provide better attentions.
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In St. Louis, Goodwin served as an assistant psychiatrist at Barnes and Renard hospitals and was consulting psychiatrist to Malcolm Bliss Health Center.
cieved his A.B. from Baker University. He intermed at St. Luke's Hospital, Kansas City, Mo., completed residency in psychiatry and was a faculty member since 1968.
A 1964 graduate of the University of Kansas School of Medicine, a specialist in drug abuse programs, is returning to head the department of psychiatry at the KU Medical Center.
KU grad heads psychiatry dept. at Med Center
Donald W. Goodwin, professor of psychiatry at Washington University, St. Louis, will become chairman of the department July 1, according to a recent announcement by Robert Kugel, Med Center executive vice chancellor.
Goodwin is author of about 100 scientific publications and co-author of a psychiatric textbook, "Is Alcoholism Hereditary?," which was published this spring.
Goodwin received the Jellinek Memorial Award for Outstanding Contributions to Research in Alcoholism in 1974. He directed the Addiction Research Center, supported by the National Institute of Drug Abuse, at Washington University. He is also associated with the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
Goodwin is a diplomat of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology in Psychiatry. He was corporect of the Hofstetter Hospital by the American Psychiatric Association.
Goodwin is a native of Parsons and re-
Paul C. Laybourne has been acting chairman of psychiatry at the Med Center since October 1974. Laybourne will continue to serve as chief of the child psychiatry department.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan office offer a wide variety of educational options, or national origin. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSROOM TO 111 FIINT HALL.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
AD DEADLINES
15 words or ___ $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional ___ 01 02 03 04 05
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or the UXK business office at 864-358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
FOR RENT
864-4358
2 bds, all utilities paid, on campus Furnished or unfurnished Free parking / a/c pool 843
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS--Drop in and attend the following meeting (the phone call please) at WESTERN CITY, 12345 METRO AVE.
Studio apt. private entrance, furnished, bath.
Students must be 18 and under.
student preferred. 843-7827. 6-16
3 bdm house with attached garage, unfurnished
building across from park. ZK2
call 845-7100. Call 845-6217
@bdn.com
2 bim. furnished large apt. near bus and downstairs. $130 a month. Large utilities. $445-628. 6-17
Apartment, 3 bedroom downstairs, 7 rooms in
apartment, 4 bedrooms, accommodated 1 people. Prices, $425, 847.50 Avg.
Prices, $425, 847.50 Avg.
Nice room in 4 bedrooms, 3 bath lowhouse. A/C/
furnished. Modern utilities: 80+ feet² plus 1⁴
room. 842-5475
Studio apt. private entrance, furnished, bath.
Student preferred. 843-7827. G-16
unit student preferred. 843-7827. G-16
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Nodes—New on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense 1)
1) As study guide
2) For exam preparation
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS. Negative-resistance
cables for stereo systems are made from
beam bonded MAGHONE plates, becoming
the STEREOMAGHONE PLATE.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CARROD
15 EAST 811 842-020
10:5 Monday, Saturday
For new Chevrolets and used cars at
Call Otis Vann!
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialist.
BELL AUSTRALIA,
ELECTRIC 843-300, 290 W, 40 hp.
BELL AUSTRALIA,
ELECTRIC 843-300, 290 W, 40 hp.
843-7700
Turner Chevrolet
Must sell 1975 350 Yamaha RD, $755 or best offer.
864-8188. keep trying.
6-17
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
and home furnishings. The Trade-Furniture and Appliance Center, 7041 S. Hancock Ave., Suite 638, New York, NY 10021.
89 Ford I' ion and 82 Chevro I ton panel trucks
Best offer. 8675-6705 or 8675-6715
6-17
Sony ETR 7055 receive 24 watt RMS/channel.
Sony ETR 7055 receive 24 watt RMS/channel.
$300 new dollar,
$600 new dollar,
BOSS HST 100 receiver 7 gets rms /channel 6E
Looks and sounds great. Call 841-2541. 6-16
2-woven row chairs and foot stools and a really
chic chair, or a stand-up desk or knock down. $200 for the set. Call (866) 794-3155.
Woman's 3-speed bike, $25. Call 842-3017
weekend, weekend.
85. Immuna, AT, PS, AC, good tires, good condi-
tions. Must eat. Must sell Can 64-17
& keep 6. Katy)
GIRLS-SUPER SUMMER SALE! GREET BAR-
GAMES! THE AST.227 MASS. 6-24
Pinzer SX-424 receiver, 12 RMS speakers per channel, small front small speakers, $140–649
483-629 168-590
$49.99
CANON CAMERA EQUIPMENT H D-85mm-
3.3 (6 X SERIES IX FILMS); boster T FILTER
4 X SERIES II FILMS
Excellent deal on a now AM-FM receiver-25/25
Excellent offer only-$150 stay.阻抗 Ray-Am-
18 E 5m St.
Car stereos -JLL - Craig - Pioneer - Jensen -
discounts - discount RAY Audio, 6-22
8h. 5i. 84-2477
28,000 Btu air conditioner (used only 1 month);
5,000 Btu air conditioner, 1734 Keltyaucky kcf
8,000 Btu air conditioner, 1634 Keltyaucky kcf
1970 Bedell VW, 54,000 miles, body warr. Will sell
for $900. Call 842-2249. 6-17
Record Sale—buy one, get one free. This week only. Harry—limited supply. Ray Aud. 13, E X.
Sail in a KOOL, host this summer! Hardly use,
good condition. $0, phone 813-9430. 6-17
Need a good deal on a turbable? We have it!
Need a nice computer for work. New $100 bonus. Buy Augie, 12 E, Btch E-22
New E. V* 2 way耳机 - Reg. $80 - two now
patrol. Only at Hay Audio, 13 E. W.
42-2047
Toyota Colosseo - 1972. Red with Black vinyl top.
Toyota Camry - 1986. Black with White vinyl top.
Good buy. Toyota 4353-845 after $29.00.
e-mail: sales@toyota.com
big-breathtiful-famille-Jerson ii5-10powerful-
pair only $69. Ray Allison 13. F. Belford 81. B24-827-
pair only $89. Ray Allison 13. F. Belford 81. B24-827-
"74 HAWAII 125. Excellent condition. 3 helmets.
$75 or best pay. 1713 Louisiana. $844-860. Nick.
HELP WANTED
Experienced car stereo and CB installation. Men
excellent Excelent pay. Bid 841-373-7787 for
Ridley.
Director of Admissions and Assistant to the Director of Duties include administration of admissions, re-mentation duties, full-time, year-round appointed duties, full-time, year-round appointed duties, writing, and mathematical skills in relevant areas; Salary: Open depending on sex and tenure in School of Law. Submit resume of qualifications and a salary to $18,000. Submit resume of qualifications and a salary to $21,000. School of Law. University of Kansas. Lawewes. Qualified men and women of all races are eligible. Qualified men and women of all races are eligible.
Housekeeper—part time. Call 842-6279 evenings. p 99
LOST AND FOUND
Wet: black, medium hair, male cat (9 months)
Lost: some hair on sheer. Reward 86203-6-17
Gift card
Ladic's watch. Found May 20, in Fraser Hall.
811-7270.
Lust! Light orange cat with fluffy tail in vicinity
5 after 4 a.m. Cindia Linda at 844-1470
5 after 4 a.m. Elisabeth Gorilla at 844-1470
Man's 1969 class ring. Tuesday, June 8 in 1200
block of Kentucky. Hail 483-7271. 6-16
Transistor radio east of campanile. 842-8725. 6-21
Man's black umbrella, 4th floor Wescow Cane
841-5162 and identify.
6-17
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
-Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
THE HAWK
& Schooners
-Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
- Pitcher Night Wednesday
THE WHEEL
& Schooner
- Chilled Glasses
- Outdoor Beer Garden
- Sandwiches
NOTICE
If you have been confused or have any knowl-
edge about FOTOMAT and QUICK STOP PHOTO
STEVKS? please call (collect) 232-0584 (Tepaque),
or call (collect) 232-0617 (Tepaque).
Please talk to Maureen Price. 3-6-17
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishware,
clocks, clock radio. Open daily 12:30-
12:45.
"Beat the Summertime Blues
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't he will have it made. It George's Flip Shop, $350.
PERSONAL
KU KARATE CLUB MEMBER Session: Tuesday
5 p.m. FIELD HOUSE LAWN FOR
M-10 M-20
Cult it these hot aftershows with fruits and floats, paraffits and peaches, Gold Cup ice cream and chocolate cake at the Casabah Cafe, 803 N. 75th Street, door dinner). Dinner too, ill 8:30 a.m. Sundays.
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous. 852-1010. itf
842 8413
Mastercharge
Forenid, are fun persons to know and
parture, join Ouverture Friendship on Monday
and Tuesday from 10:30-12:00. Email:
mary@ouverture.org
SERVICES OFFERED
at 14th and Ohio"
FREE KITTENS, very cute. Paul or Jim 843-
9146. 6-23
smile
MUSIC LESSONS--for your kind of music. Blues, Jazz, Country, Pop, Gospel, etc. Iddie and Bonnie call Baju 841-6700, McKinney 841-5932, or click here for more info.
RIDES ---- RIDERS
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
Have your children learn Spanish and art. Grad-
inguish Spanish speaking artist senor - call Carol
64321-7900.
HAASCH
SADDLE AND BRIED SHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
RAASCH
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Lawrence Gay Liberation social activities: 843-
929. Counseling: 843-7505. 6-29
Interested in carpool to LCW to Lawrence M-F-7:30 a.m. to return about 1,350,735-6491.
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
BankAmericard Mastercharge
SUMMER COMMUNICATION WORKSHOPS
Coral Channel Call Howard Killen 816-454-2800 or 816-454-3911
Math. Naming, Compentent, appertinent, written
formulas, equations, inequalities, problem-solving,
test preparation, Reasonable rate, Test
preparation
SPORT
Keep your car healthy
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
in the summer.
Use the student discounts
209 W 811
FIELDS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedprems • Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
at
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
TUTOR
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476, 7:29
4:50 (messages taken 24 hours), 7:29
Experienced typist IBM Selectric, term papers
Experienced typewriter proof-reading,
corrected image. JANUARY 2015.
-29
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/pencil. Quality work.
Typist, IBM Pica/pencil. Distributions welcome.
842-8217. 842-8217
Audio Components
Aztec Inn
Home of the
Aztec Calendar
STATE OF THE ART
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mhs.
Specialized in typesetting, spellcheck,
843-654-834, Mrs. Wright.
1 roommate wanted, female or male to share beautifully furnished 2-story, 70 year, large old home with a spacious kitchen miles south on 3% acres next to Wakarusa river. Complete kitchen and干湿库. Storage in attic and on basement. Free parking anytime. 8-10 p.m. best time. For future rental send name, phone and other pertinent info. to: 615-496-6232.
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed,
using a variety of computer languages.
buses, distributing power electrical, B.A. Social
sciences, teaching at US universities.
Wanted-Secuba Dive for Bahamas excursion.
Group of KU students have chartered excellent dive boat. Food, accommodations and some equipment cost. Incuded. 891-340-6911
2829 6-16
Female roommate for summer, possibly fall. Birth
wage: $1800; environment: 'convenient' Office:
6-17 St. Winslow Street, Apt. 238
Experienced typist will do all kinds of typing in my home. Call Carolyn at 841-0984. 6-29
Nepeded: Female roommate to resume 3 bed 3er room; Nice location, near campus 6-29 845-313-311
Roommate wanted to live in New home, separate
room, and room bath. Call 614-7
614-7 for Hardy
WANTED
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates
807 Vermont 842-9455
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD AND STEREO
R
GRAMOPHONE
842-1897 ASK FOR STATION
shop
Aua. 9 New York Yankees
Lobby
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENT'S
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion Than Most Storero Components
July 1 Oakland A's
THOREM
E TRAINING
TEACHER
DE STUDIO
FINANCIALS
'76 ROYALS BASEBALL TOURS
Sep. 4 Texas Rangers
SUA Maupintour travel service
$1450
Kansas Union Building
530 Wisconsin
Wait, there's a word in the image.
It's "GREAT."
Actually, it's "GREAT".
The first line starts with "GREAT".
The second line starts with "GREAT".
The third line starts with "GREAT".
So it looks like:
"GREAT"
"GREAT"
Phone 843-1211
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
FINAL
843-9404
—6 Nights a Week—
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
—6 Nights a Week—
Open 2 p.m. -3.m. Dancers 3:30 - 10:30.
Memberships Available
Class B Private Club
Monthly Membership
4
Wednesday, June 16, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Cook looking forward to playing with Celts
Cook, who will have a friend on the Celtics in Joa White, said he would feel comfortable playing Boston's run-and-gun brand of basketball, and acknowledged what all NBA fans are starting to admit: John Havlicek can't last forever.
"Boston is going to be needing forwards, and I think there won't be any problem adjusting to Boston's running play of piay. I'm going to do yesterday." "Jo Go be a bla bbl!"
Cook, who gave up his eligibility to play for KU by allowing himself to be part of the hardship draft, is in Lawrence this week. He played with the Rangers with Owen's spring basketball camp.
Owens said, "I think that Boston is the best team he could have gone to." White said, "I'm going to be on my way."
COOK SAID he thought playing for Owens at KU was better training for playing for the Californians.
Cook, who averaged only 14.8 points for the Jayhawks last season and saw limited duty, said he'd hold his own against the superstars of the NBA, such as Rick Barry.
"I'll just tell myself that I wouldn't be there if my potential was at least as good
Cook had a chance to play professional basketball last season when the Utah Stars of the American Airlines non-binding draft. Cook didn't sign with the Stars, however, because
On Campus
"Grand Illusion," directed by JEAN
Woodrift and Audrey Holm
Workshop, Audrey Holm
Albert Gerken will hold a CARILLON
RECITAL tonight at 8 p.m.
Grants and Awards
Announcement
YAEL ABOUHAKALH, Overland Park senior, has been selected as a 1977 Sears Congressional候选. Abouhakalh will work with the president of the Kansasressman during the Spring, 1977 semester.
Events
Today is the last day for half refund on dropped courses or withdrawals in the GPA category.
KRISTA HETHERINGTON, Lawrence graduate student, and PAMELA HOOVER, Lawrence graduate student, have been awarded a Fulbright-Hays Full Grant to study in Germany for the 1976-77 school year.
WILLIAM J. EBANKS JR., resident associate of the Geological Survey, has been given an award by the Energy Research and Development Administration.
AMERICAN COUNCIL OF Learned Societies has awarded the University Press of Karasu a $7,000 grant to help subsidize its research activities. The universities for the humanities field by young scholars.
JUNE MILLER, chairman of the department of speech and hearing at KU Med Center, has been appointed to a three-year term on the National Advisory Committee to Education. The committee is an advisory board to Health, Education, and Welfare.
he thought they had a shaky financial footing.
But Cook passed up a possible fourth year of play for the Jayhawks.
ELENA BASTIDA, Lawrence graduate student, has been awarded a Fulbright-Hays Travel-Spanish Government Grant to study the history of Madrid during the 1970-77 school year.
"It came down to a decision of what would make me happy," he said.
OAKLAND (AP) - Oakland 'A' owner Charles Finley unloaded three more of his star players Tuesday night, selling first baseman-outfielder Joe Rudi and relief pitcher Rolle Finger to the Boston Red Sox pitcher Vida Blue to the New York Yankees.
Finley nets $3.5 million in player sale
An A's spokesman said the Red 50x pain $1 million each for Rudi and Fingers. The Yankees, in announcing the acquisition of Blue, said, "Finley will announce the sale price at $1.5 million, but we will deny that. Our policy to buy our purchase prices."
rinkley, reached at his home in La Porte,
Ind., said the sales were made because of
"a combination of things. . Naturally I
would like to thank you over the necessity of
making these sales."
Earlier this season, Finley traded slugging outfielder Reggie Jackson and pitcher Ken Holtman to the Baltimore Orioles in return. This time, though he got cash.
"he built a team and he has a right to tear it down," said A's third baseman Bali Sando.
All players Finley has dealt away this season were unsigned and, apparently, playing out their options. Also unsigned are the players and Bert Campenfers and Don Bavlor.
With Rudi, Fingers, Blue, Jackson, Holtzman and pitcher Catfish Hunter, whom Finley让 slip away following the 1974 championships. He won three straight world championships.
Walden was delighted with his move to the Yankees, leaders in the American League East.
NBA-ABA merger close; four-team plan scrutinized
HYANNIS, Mass. (AP)—National Basketball Association Commissioner Larry O'Brien said yesterday that a four-team plan for merger with the American Basketball Association seemed to be most acceptable to both leagues.
O'Brien said that before any decision could be made on accepting ABA teams into his league, a "miridal of questions have to be answered."
'O Brien said that while the five and six team packages still were alive, "I wouldn't call anything dead." He emphasized that he was not there, were focusing on the four-team concept.
Prior to the NBA's summer meetings at the Cape Cod resort, the NBA had been considering three plans—acceptance of four, five or six ABA teams.
UNDER THAT proposed arrangement, the teams that would join the NBA for the 1976-77 season would be the Denver Nuggets, Indiana Pacers, San Antonio Spurs and the New York Nets, this year's ABA champions.
That would leave out the ABA's other two franchise—Kentucky and Utah.
The ABA Players Association, headed by its counsel, Prentiss Yancy, has been maintaining that if only four teams are available for the playoffs, he leaves itself open to an immediate lawsuit.
O'Brien said that after reviewing the merger proposals Monday night with his advisory board; William Wirtz of Chicago, William J. Pike of New York and William Alverson of Milwaukee, he was aided by the number of problems facing such a situation.
Intramural scores
results of games play
Bob and Jerry's 10, T. 5
Ryan's Wardens 6, Wardens 6
Med Chadin 10, Naimihall 9
Physical Wrecks 2, Acacia Alumna 8
THE COMMISSIONER said the most optimistic development that could result here when the meetings end Thursday would be "an agreement to agree."
O'Brien emphasized that the ABA had been encouraged to present "any and all proposals it wants" to the NBA, but apparently decided the four-taime plan was
The numerous problems still to be solved include financial matters, dispersal of players, territorial indemnification and schedule of payments.
Meanwhile, O'Brien announced that the league had been enjoined from taking any action with respect to transferring the Buffalo Braves franchise out of Buffalo.
UNIONDALE, N. B. (AP)—George Foreman smashed Joe Frazier to the floor twice and stopped him in the fifth round Tuesday night, to end Frazier's career.
The end of the heavyweight fight came at 2:26 of the fifth round with Frazier standing dazed and bleeding after getting up from the second knockdown.
Foreman stops Frazier in 5th
Frazier's trainer-advisor, Eddie Futch, snaped onto the ring apron and called for a refusal. "I don't want to be in this," he said.
The official end of Frazier's career came about half an hour later, when Frazier said, "it's time to hang my gloves on the wall and booie, booie, booie."
For much of the first four rounds, Smokin' Joe, his head and beard shaved, was Boxin' Joe, jabbing and moving around as he tried to force Ferman in tiring himself
just in the fifth round, Formerman's vaunted power caught up with Frazier, pounding him.
"We're $ 5^{1 / 2} $ games ahead, and that's a
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO: All organizations funded by Student Activity fees.
FROM: Office of Student Senate treasurer.
REGARDS: End of fiscal year and change of officers.
1. All transactions concerning fiscal year 1976 must be received in our office by June 18,1976.
2. Any new officer wishing to learn expenditure procedures should contact this office at 864-3746 to arrange for individual instruction.
Funded by Student Activity Fees
PIVS STREET DELI
50c OFF—with this Coupon
REUBEN SANDWICH
STUDENT SENATE
---
11 W. 9th
SUMMER SPECIALS
The Bull & Boar
Hot Cornbelt, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye
Req. Price: $160.00 June 30, 1976
Expires June 30,1976
NEW YORKER
1021
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
$1.00 OFF — Coupon
ANY LARGE PIZZA
"The original thick crust pizza"
Expires June 30, 1976
from New York."
Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH
Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included.
Reg. Price $1.95
NEW YORKER
1021
MASSACHUSETTS ST.
Coors Pitchers
95° C 60 oz.
with this coupon
Expires June 30, 1976
Kansas City 38 19 .667
Tampa 33 21 .674 % 10%
Minnesota 27 29 .482 10 %
Oakland 27 29 .482 10 %
California 27 29 .293
New York W 21 L Pts. GB
Cleveland 27 28 .492 .51%
Baltimore 26 27 .492 .51%
Baltimore 26 27 .494 .51%
Detroit 24 30 .446 .51%
Milwaukee 22 29 .446 .51%
Cinnamati 39 22 639 ... 4
Los Angeles 39 22 639 ... 4
San Diego 29 24 534 ... 4
Houston 29 23 468 ... 17
Alaska 29 31 430 ... 17
San Francisco 29 31 371 ... 18
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
W 10 L Pet. GB
Philadelphia 23 10 79 Pittsburgh 23 10 78 Pittsburgh 23 10 78 Chicago 23 10 441 North Lauderdale 25 10 417 St. Louis 25 10 416 St. Louis 25 10 416 St. Louis
Baseball Standings
JAMES CANG
JAMES CANG
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Late games not included Wednesday's Games
GAME OF GAMES
Kansas City 21, Detroit 7
Baltimore 4, Seattle 7
Atlanta 3, Florida 6
Tasua 3, Cleveland 2
Nashville 2, California 2,
Boston at Oakland, n
Boston at Oakland, n
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Toronto's Yankees Philadelphia 18, NY New York 2, NJ Los Angeles 1, Chicago 4, Cleveland 6 San Diego 3, Montreal 6, San Diego 3, Montreal 6
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
304 Locust 843-8080
M-F.8-5:30 Sat.8-12
Position Open for College Graduate
Marketing representative with a small brokerage firm dealing in fertilizer and agricultural chemicals. Main contact with clientele would be by phone. Compensation by commission with guaranteed base.
Send resume to Box 378
Parsons, Kan. 67357
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GENERAL CONSOLE SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT
CO
"FOLLOW ME, BOYS"
Daily at 2:15, 7:15, 9:20
Granada Walt Disney's
Varsity Edgar Rice Burrough's classic
"AT THE EARTH'S CORE"
7:30.9:30 Sat.Sun. 2:30 PG
Hillcrest "I could murder her in front of your eyes and you couldn't prove it."
JON VOIGHT
JACQUELINE
BISSET
END OF THE GAME
Sat.-Sun. 1:55
PG 7:30 & 9:40
Hillcrest 2
BILL CASBY
RAquel Welch
"MOTHER,
JUGS & SPEED"
7:40.9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:05 PG
Hillcrest Alfred Hitchcock's
"FAMILY PLOT" PC
7:20 & 9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:45
Sunset
CITY, STATE, ZIP CODE
phone number or email address
He's out there still
"THE LEGEND PG OF BOGGY CREEK" 9:10
plus "BOOTLEGGERS" 10:50
pretty good place to be," the hard-throwing lefthand said.
Blue denied an earlier report that he had signed a three-year contract just before he was hired.
MYSTERY WEDNESDAY
Call 841-7100
Father's Day Specials
Reg.
CCLAS
Reg.
Boursin . 1.98 ea
Smoked Gouda . 2.49/lb
Port Wine Spread . 2.49/lb
Blue Cheese Spread . 2.59/lb
Havarti . 2.89/lb
Bavarian Limburger . 1.89 ea
Salami . 3.29/lb
Sale
1.79 ea
2.29/1lb
2.32/1lb
2.69/1lb
1.69 ea
2.69/1lb
The Stinky Cheese Shoppe 8451/2 West 23rd
15c/lb off on Fresh Whole Bean Hawaiian Kona and Goloan Marmo Coffeees with Tahoe Certificates available
Sale good through Saturday, June 19
Before having your car repaired,ask yourself WHO's doing the job.
OR
A MASTER FORD MECHANIC
SERVICE BOARD
123 456 7890
TAXIDER
MISSION
POLICE
MAINTENANCE
ADMINISTRATION
WE SELL
THE CHEESE
FOR £5.00
A JACK OF ALL TRADES (master of none)
At John Haddock Ford we stand behind our work. That's because our mechanics have over 50 years of combined experience with the equipment and tools that money can buy.
Our prices are low but we won't kid you about the price of repairing your car. In fact we'll guarantee the price. We'll guard the job, too. For 90 days or 4,000 miles.
FORD INC
FORD INC.
SECOND GENERATION SINCE 1914
23rd and Alabama
ph. 843-3500
John Haddock
Ph.843-3500
BUY ONE TACOBURGER GET ONE FREE
TACO TICO
WITH COUPON
KINZ
Delicious! Extraordinary! Taco Tico tacoburgers.
Served on a bun filled with savory taco meat,
garnished with taste cheddar cheese, crisp lettuce,
tomatoes and topped with your choice of sauce. The whole family will love our tacoburgers.
---
Clip this coupon and get one FREE tacoburger when you buy one.
Holiday Inn
23rd St.
2340 Iowa
TACO
TICO
Offer expires: June 23,1976 Limit one per customer.
Always in season and seasoned to please
Y
THE NATIONAL BASEBALL LEAGUE
Thursday, June 17, 1976
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Still Pitchin'
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.148
Although somewhat slowed by a broken arm he received in a softball game, Bob Chabot, Cheshire, Connecticut, graduate student pitched batting practice Wednesday to the ballpark. "It's been a little windy," said Chabot.
Ford decries murder of 2 envvoys
Bv the Associated Press
President Ford said yesterday that all appropriate resources of the United States would be used to name the killers or the perpetrators. The president, Ambassador and an attacke in Beirut.
American Ambassador Francis E. Meloy Jr. and economic attacker Robert O Waring were shot to death as they crossed a noose in front of the U.S. sectors, U.S. government spokesmen said.
In Washington, high-ranking officials of the State Department, the Pentagon and the White House stressed after a meeting yesterday afternoon that there was no decision to pull out of the Middle East country.
IN FACT, President Ford indicated the United States would maintain its presence in Beirut when he promised to nominate a new ambassador as quickly as possible.
Nevertheless, it was obvious that the United States was increasing its readiness to evacuate the 53 American embassy officials and 1,400 U.S. citizens in Lebanon.
The Defense Department disclosed that
three U.S. transport planes and four helicopters had been sent to a British base on Cyprus in the event an evacuation was ordered from Lebanon.
President Ford said the two slain officials were "on a mission of peace."
Appering personally before reporters at the White House, Ford said the assassination—that was the word he used—was the act of senseless, outrageous brutality.
HE SAID he had told Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger to continue intensive peace efforts, adding that by achieving peace in Lebanon "we can best honor the brave men who gave their lives for their country and for the cause of peace."
However, "the United States will not be deterred from its search for peace by these powers."
Kissinger has also been ordered to contact Middle East governments and leaders in numerous Lebanese factions to help identify the source of the attacks, which they were brought to justice, Ford said.
Meloy, who arrived in war-torn Beirut
last month, disappeared on his way to his first meeting with President-elect Elias Sarkis, in the Christian-held Hasmiye district. He left the seaside U.S. Embassy in the Moslem sector of Beirut in his bulletproof automobile.
The U.S. Embassy spokesman in Beirut said a guard car carrying Lebanese security men followed the ambassador's car part of the way but turned back.
Department spokesman Robert Funshee said in Washington the procedure apparently was part of an arrangement with the Moslems who control west Beirut, implying they had taken it upon themselves to deliver Miloy safely to the Christian side.
QUESTIONED repeatedly by newsmen about why and where the guard car turned back, the spokesman refused to answer on security grounds. He said there was "nothing abnormal" about the guard car turning back.
There was no immediate clue to the motive behind the killings. Freelance investigators are looking for evidence.
disorders have pulled off numerous attacks, robberies and abductions in recent months.
IT WAS learned in Washington that Kissinger may send retired Ambassador L. Dean Brown back to Lebanon as a special envoy to replace Melov temporarily.
Budget goes to Regents tomorrow
requests for $627,527 in additional support for new facilities.
The University of Kansas will request budget increases totaling $8,889,749 for Fiscal Year 1978 (FY78) when University seeks accreditation to the Board of Regents tomorrow in Topeka.
Brown served in that same capacity earlier this spring and, in fact, was succeeded in May by Meloy. Brown retired from the Foreign Service last year.
The proposed FY78 budget, divided into three categories with increases requested in them:
The categories and their requests are:
General Use Fund, $57,044,569, an increase of $3,707,848 requested to keep up with rising costs and salaries;
The new law school, now under construction, and new facilities at the KU Medical Center will require state funding for operation, he said.
Nitcher, who will accompany Archie R. Dykes, chancellor, and Delbert M. Shankel, executive vice chancellor, to the Topeka meeting, said that in addition to the three funds, the University would present
Local detective returns to work after suspension
Restricted Use Fund, $302,186,701, an increase of $2,107,073 requested for predicted additional costs, particularly housing, health care and personnel salary increases:
New and Improved Programs Fund, $2,447,301 requested for one-year programs and improvements such as increased training and enhancement of scientific and general equipment.
Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said yesterday, "We don't expect the regents to approve all of our requests, but these increases represent what we anticipate our additional costs will be."
Background
Early each year, the University of Kansas prepares a budget of its spending needs for the next fiscal year. This is the first step in a long process which involves the Board of Regents, the Kansas Legislature and the governor. It is anticipated that changes will be made at each step before the budget is approved and money is allocated to programs and services. The budget now being proposed must be approved by the Board of Regents before it begins its journey through the legislature and the governor's office.
Police Detective Ted Crady resumed his job today with the Lawrence Police Department after more than seven weeks of suspension without pay.
An ouster petition filed in April by County Attorney David Berkowitz accused Crady of perjury, misconduct, selling LSD and disclosing the identity of an undercover agent. The case resulted from an investigation of the police department by the county attorney's office.
Crady was suspended soon after the petition was filed.
Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said the decision to reinstate Crady was made after City Attorney Milton Allen talked to Berkowitz about a court decision made Monday that dismissed the ouster procedure against Crady.
Judge Frank Gray of the Douglas County District Court dismissed the ouster procedure. He said it was improper because city actions such as firing or disciplining employees should be done before county officials initiate disciplinary action.
Berkowitz said he had eliminated the possibility of appealing Gray's decision. He and Allen declined to say why an appeal wouldn't be made.
50% more students seek grants
BY ALEXIS WAGNER
The number of University of Kansas students seeking basic educational grants may increase 50 per cent this year, but all
By SUE WILSON
Facelift planned for Hawk's Nest
A clean, contemporary look will replace the Hawk's 'nest' "institutional motel decoration."
The Hawk's Nest and the Trail Room in the Kansas Union will close July 5 when renovation and the addition of a souvenir shop begin. Mike Miller, SUA adviser, said yesterday.
The remodeling will provide a nightclub setting—a stage and dance floor, friday and saturday evenings. The Weekend entertainment sponsored by SUA was started last fall to attract students to the club.
THE DESIGN will stress flexibility,
the HEAVY. The Hawk's Nest will maintain its reef
surrounding the ocean.
be transformed to an entertainment spot at night.
As part of the night service to students, the Union will add a delicatessen in the Trail Room, which is adjacent to the Hawk's Nest. The delicatessen will open at 6:30 p.m., when other Union eating areas are closed.
"We're planning a supplement to food service that is open when everything else is closed. It has the potential of doing a lot of things we need to do in limited space." Mariann Scheetz, food service manager, said.
The delicatessen will serve sandwiches, beer and hot pretzels to Hawk's Nest customers. The sale of fresh pastry and cooked meat by the pound and carry-out
service are also being considered, Scheetz said.
A UNION Bookstore souvenir shop will also be built in the Trail Room. The shop, which will sell KU mugs and sweatshirts, will be open beyond the Union Bookstore hours, but the exact hours haven't been set. J. D. Christman, bookstore manager, said.
The remodeling of the Trail Room may take longer, Ferguson said, although construction there will also begin July 5. Ferguson estimated the cost of the
Work on the Hawk's Nest should be completed by fall enrollment, Warner Ferguson, Union associate director, said. Estimated the cost of remodeling at $40,000.
dellicertesses and souvenir shop additions at $25,000. Bids have been let, but a contractor must be approved.
While the Hawk's Nest is closed for remodeling, a coffee shop will be open from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
THE RENOVATION of the Hawk's Nest and the addition of the delicatessen and the souvenir shop are part of long-range plans to make the second level of the Union a dining, entertaining and merchandising center. Miller said.
If a proposed $8 million continuing education building north of the Union is approved, the Union's second level will be a large building where passengers traveling between the two buildings.
who show need will be awarded money, Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said.
Rogers said that about 1,420 students would seek the grants during 1976-77 compared with 970 this year. The primary reason for the increase, he said, was that members of all four classes would be eligible for the first time.
The federal grants began in April 1973 under the Basic Education Opportunity Act and were made available only to incoming students, not those previously enrolled. Now, four years later, students in all classes will be applying for the grants.
Rogers said that 970 students last year split a total of $787,164 of the federal money, and the amount for next year was sure to be higher.
"We don't know what the allocation will be," said Mr. Cunningham, who will meet the needs of the program." Knowing that we have a lot of time on our hands."
Rogers said that no matter how much federal aid was appropriated to KU, the University could apply for more until the needs of all eligible students had been met.
available when President Ford signed the Second Supplemental Appropriations Bill this month, bringing the total amount of funding to $791 million for the 1976-77 academic year.
Students receiving a basic grant are given a cost of live allowance, a fee allowance and a miscellaneous allowance, Rogers said. The maximum amount a student can receive is $1400 and last year the average grant to KU students was $800.
Additional grant money was made
Eligibility for a basic grant is determined according to an eligibility index that considers such things as medical and dental expenses, family size and taxes, and subscriptions from the family income. Anyone below $1200 on the index can receive a grant.
Rogers said there was no grade point average requirements but that to receive the maximum amount of aid, a student had to be enrolled in at least 12 hours of classes. The money is available only to undergraduates.
KANU chief Wright stepping aside July 1
Rogers said that anyone who thinks he or she is eligible for a basic grant should inform Rogers of their status.
By CHARLOTTE KIRK
Staff Writer
Wright, who has been station director since 1970, will resign to post officially. He will continue as associate director and do jazz programming, however.
Richard Wright will resign his full-time position as director of University radio station and will accept a position as lecturer in the School of Fine Arts this fall, he said yesterday.
ALTHOUGH WRIGHT'S teaching schedule hasn't been worked out yet, he said he hoped to teach courses in the history of jazz, rock and popular music. He also wants to each such jazz performance classes, as well as classes for the non-music major, he said.
"I has been very difficult to split up my time between my duties as director and my office," Wright said. "I enjoy teaching very much that, just I couldn't do both jobs at once."
Since Wright has been director, the station has received several awards for
Besides being a teacher and programmer, Wright is a professional singer, a member of the boards of directors of the Topeka Jazz Workshop and Friends of Jazz in Kansas City, and the president of Public Radio in Mid-America.
programming excellence, including two Frank Armstrong Awards and a George F. Peabody Award, the first presented to a Kansas radio station. The station also has from the Public Broadcasting Service and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
"Under Dick's leadership, KANU has grown from an educational station to a fullpower public radio station with national director of development for KANU, said.
"We went from vintage equipment to modern equipment and got more people on the staff because of his help with the grant," Brad Dick, chief engineer, said. "He has also given us a lot more freedom to grow and develop our personal techniques."
WRIGHT ALSO was instrumental in getting a federal grant for KANU.
"He runs this station like it is a family." Dick said. "We will be sorry to lose him as director, but we hope to benefit from his increased programming."
WRIGHT IS also an avid record collector. He has 12,000 albums in the basement of his home, 7,000 of which are jazz recordings he has collected. He said he had been collecting them since 1960.
Wright is a popular man among his staff and students. Dick said.
tereno
Hooked on Jazz
A jazz player turned collector, Dick Wright is the owner of some 12,000 albums, including more than 7,000 jazz albums. Wright has been a mainstay of the University's jazz enthusiasts for many a year.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
2
Thursday, June 17, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Fitzsimmons retains reins
LAS VEGAS- Teamsters President Frank E. Fitzsimons was elected without opposition to a new five-year term yesterday by delegates to the union's national convention who had earlier voted him a hefty pay raise and sweeping new powers over union locals.
There was no dissent among the 2,300 delegates, who stumped, shouted and cheered their approval with moaersmen, sirens, banners and placards. The entire team was outraged.
Fitzumza, 67, was nominated by the union's General Secretary, Treuurer, Ray Schosseless, who praised him as "North America's premier trade union leader."
Obscenity count dismissed
WICHITA—A federal court judge reversed an earlier ruling yesterday that newspaper and other publications criminally liable for reviews of obscene movies.
U. D. District Court Judge Frank Theis said he was reversing his earlier stand and dismissing a charge against him, whom accused of providing indictments against a allegedly obscene film.
Defendants Alvin Goldstein and James Buckley still faced 12 charges of conspiracy and mailing obscene materials into Kansas.
Theis said in his new ruling on the charge of giving information on obscene movies that constitutional protections of the First Amendment outweighed the moral objections.
South African riots erupt
JOHANNESBURG—Bloody rioting swept through a sprawling black suburb yesterday in an eruption of violence over use in schools of Afrikaans, a language despaired as a symbol of white oppression. Police opened fire on the mobs, and at least six persons were reported killed and dozens injured.
Hundreds of police with guns, dogs, tear gas and helicopters converged to herd the rotters onto a small hill in Soweto, a vast township eight miles outside Johannesburg. More than one million blacks live in Soweto, segregated from whites under South Africa's apartheid policy.
The riots began as a march by Seweto pupils to the Phefima secondary school, located atop the hill, to support pupils who there have been boycoting classes for them.
The language, derived from Dutch, is used by South Africa's Boers, who dominate the four-million-strong white minority that rules over the country's 18 states.
Two local motels to lodge CBS, NBC news staffs
Two Lawrence mottles will house major portions of the NBC and CBS network staff working at the Republican Convention in Kansas City. Mo, this August.
NBC News' personnel are tentatively assigned 25 rooms in the Lawrence Travelodge, 801 Iowa, and CBS plans to use 25 rooms in the Holiday Inn, 2309 Iowa.
The networks have made no indication of which parts of the staff will be using the rooms, but Jim Glenn. Travelodge managers would probably be used by technicians.
THE RAMADA INN, 6th and Iowa, is the only Lawrence hotel currently reserving rooms for delegates during the convention. The Ramada inns, or 30 per cent of the Ramada's rooms.
The only other Lawrence motels holding rooms open for the Republican Convention are the Westview Motel, 1313 W. 6th, and the Virginia Inn Motel. 2007 W. 6th.
Accomodations for the Utah delegation were switched to Lawrence from Kansas City at the request of a Kansas City motel manager, who reportedly felt that the tectonal Mormon delegates wouldn't contribute much revenue.
Roger Moyer, manager of the Westview rooms in his model for the conventioneers.
WILLIAM GRIER, Village Inn manager, said he would accept a block of reservations for 25 rooms in the Virginia Inn if conventioneers will prepay their reservations.
The final assignment of rooms for conventioneers and the presentation of room furnishings will be held on July, June Gibbs, chairwoman of the Republican National Convention Housing Committee.
Gibbs said the committee office was still receiving requests for rooms and wouldn't be able to complete contracts until all the requests have arrived.
The Housing Subcommittee is the sole coordinator for finding rooms for the almost 6,000 people expected to flood the Kansas City area from August 15 to August 21 to attend the convention.
GBIBS SAID she had hoped for more rooms in the Lawrence area motels, but that the convention period conflicts with Lawrence motels' business time. The University of Kansas begins its enrollment for the fall semester during this period.
Many of the rooms in the Lawrence area
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Holiday Inn manager Rita Skaggs said that August is a peak period.
had been reserved at least a year ago and are reserved on a continuing basis.
"You don't kick out your regulars to some people you will never see again."
2 KU grads busted
Dennis P. Hitt, 1017 Alabama, and Ted Allen Adams, address unknown, were arrested Tuesday morning and taken to Dougas County Jail.
Seven burlap bags of marijuana and some unidentified plants and plants were found in the trunk of their car. The pills and plants were then sent to a plant identification. Marijuana seeds were also found
Two KU graduates were released Tuesday on $1,500 debt after being charged with fraud.
Adams graduated in 1971, and Hitt is a May graduate.
The trunk also contained a loaded hand-
drum and a 22 riffle.
Lawrence police officer Larry Kasson spotted a green leaf caught on a chrome streetlight.
the men for a traffic violation. Adams, who first identified himself as Richard R. Martin, got out of the passenger's seat, opened the trunk and threw a box of plants on the ground when Kasson approached the car.
Bike to sell? Advertise it in the Kansan. Call 864-4358.
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Happy Hour
Come enjoy yourself tonight at the Eldridge House. During the week, you can enjoy yourself during Happy Hour, every Monday through Thursday night from 9:00 until 10:30. On weekends have dinner in the Eldridge House Dining Room or Club, then come downstairs to the Disco, where there's no cover charge after dinner.
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After 4 P.M. And Get . . .
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with this coupon
BigMac
McDonald's
Offer good only at:
901 West 23rd St.
Lawrence, Kansas
Limit one coupon per person per visit. Void after June 22, 1976.
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO: All organizations funded by Student Activity fees.
FROM: Office of Student Senate treasurer.
REGARDS: End of fiscal year and change of officers.
1. All transactions concerning fiscal year 1976 must be received in our office by June 18, 1976.
2. Any new officer wishing to learn expenditure procedures should contact this office at 864-3746 to arrange for individual instruction.
STUDENT SENATE
Funded by Student Activity Fees
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 17, 1976
Discovery:
By MARION ABARE Staff Writer
Although the recent discovery of a lethal kidney disease in white mice was accidental, a Kansas University Medical Center researcher who made the finding opened the door to active research for ways to help human victims of the disease.
Alvar A. Werder, director of leukemia research laboratories and chairman of the department of microbiology, discovered that the polycystic renal disease (PCRD) was infecting laboratory mice used in his leukemia study.
PCRD usually appears in human beings while they are in their 30s, Werder said.
WITHOUT TREATMENT, a person with PCRD may live from 10 to 30 years after diagnosis. He said dialysis and transplantation were used to treat the disease, which occurs in five to 10 per cent of all kidney ailments.
Although the disease in mice was described in 1940, Werder said, his findings will help other researchers to see whether they have missed observing a PCGRD strain.
In 1962, Werder and his research associate, Anne Neilson, began a germ-free colony of white mice to produce an incidence of leukemia virus.
Nelsen observed that kidney disease in the mice was hampering leukemia study, Werder said. About two years ago they found that the mice were dying of PCRD. In one study, 70 per cent of 1,627 mice died of PCRD.
ALTHOUGH LEUKEMIA and PCRD
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansai daily August through May and Monday through Thursday. Mail resume to: Wanda C. Doyle, university day, and Holidays. Second-class subscriptions by mail are $19.60; 6064k subscriptions by mail are $39.90 in Douglas County and $10 a semester in Yorkshire. Submit your resumes with descriptions are $2.50 a semester, paid through the U.S. Postmaster General's office.
Editor...Dierck Caseman
Managing Editor...Kelly Scott
Business Manager...Carol Stafford
Assistant Business Manager...Jim Mankatt
Publisher David Dary
News Advisor Business Advisor
Bob Giles Mel Adams
Kidney disease in mice aids Med Center research
appear unrelated, Werder said, another study in which 143 mice were inoculated with leukemia cells showed that 50 per cent got leukemia and 41 per cent got PCRD. Two per cent developed both diseases, which Werder said was rare for animals.
PCRD is thought to be hereditary in person. Werder said the PCRD strain had a variable penetrant, which meant that 40 to 50 percent of members would be likely to contract the disease.
Werder and Neilsen will continue research on PCRD with Lynn Wolfe, mammalian geneticist in the KU department of zoology.
Work is done with mammals, which are milk-producing females, because there is evidence that something passed in their milk may carry antibodies of the virus. Werder said. Experiments will be done in animal facilities at the Med Center.
"WERE GOING to cross-breed our mice with some of Wolf's in an attempt to determine if PIDR is hereditary, and if so, would it be hereditary system in humans," Werder said.
Werder's discovery of PCRD in mice
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immune complex disease, then with the results of research the severity of the disease might be lessened.
become more significant for him when he discovered his wife had the disease. He said about 60 per cent of his wife's family has had PCRD. However, their two children, who are in their 20s, have no symptoms of the disease, he said.
If the disease is hereditary, nothing can be done to ston it. Werder said. But if it's an
Werder stressed the "iffs" of his research but said he hoped it would eventually help people who are susceptible to or suffering from PCRD.
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INFLATION FIGHTER SALE CONTINUES
Shredded Beef Sandwich ... Reg. 89° $75^{\circ}$
Bar-B-Q Beef Sandwich...Reg. 89° $75^{c}$
Italian Steak ... Reg. 79° $65^{\circ}$
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Thursday, June 17, 1976
University Daily Kansan
The truth will out, even on TV
By LARRY FISH Contributing Writer
Simplification is the homage television pays to the deepest currents in the American experience, inscribing the most expansive themes, the highest drama, the widest hopes on the head of an electronic pin, where they can be easily seen.
With All Deliberate Speed," last night's offering in the "American Parade" series, is a program that allows a comprehensible. The program was a dramatization, in a symbolic sort of way, of the struggle against segregated schools, and the Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Topeka.
Because the struggle for integration embodies the ideals that are so close to the national heart, it is a natural theme for a Bicentennial special.
The problem any television writer would have, of course, would be trying to bring these intangible concepts to life on a 19-inch screen in the space of 55 minutes.
That's an absurd tall order, and "All Deliberear Speed" suffered from the limitations of any television program. The television writer is a caricaturist, trying to draw a likeness by exaggerating some features and imoring others.
"All Deliberate Speed" was a symbolic sketch, like a newspaper editorial cartoon, without much subtlety, fine shade of meaning or literal adherence to the message. South Carolina, in 1947, and it dramatizes the struggle of a black preacher and teacher to provide basic educational necessities for the black school children, who watch their white counterparts ride a bus to their brick school building. In the same town, bron building, separate and hardy equally. Under the courageous leadership of the preacher (whose life is threatened and whose house is burned) and with the equally courageous (if tacit) support of a white federal judge, the black parents of a small school segregation to court. Eventually, that suit and several others were joined with Brown v. Topeka for the historic decision.
It's all so neat and reassuring that it is easy to dismiss 'Allegiance Speed as an actual tool for destruction.'
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FRIED
Good Old Summertime
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£450
Good Old Summertime STEAK &
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Thick in jicy sionil steak. Crunch deep-dried clams. Corn on the cob drizzled with butter. Served in own crisp green salad. Bake potato and warm bread.
It's a special summer treat. Right now at Mr. Steak, America's steak expert.
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
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The epilogue, however, provided a surprising counterpoint to the simplistic story line. The final words were: "Today, only children are taught in schools in Summerton, South Carolina."
It's a rather ominous statement to be
making during this national birthday party, an indication that we aren't yet capable of living up to our ideals. Clarendon County and other places still have de facto segregation, and the President of the United States is taking the easy political route of
Sandy's
Sandy's
SPECIAL
Small Ice Cream Cones only 19'
in flavors of Butterscotch, Chocolate,
Marshmallow and Pineapple.
Offer good until Sunday, June 20.
DAIRY BAR
Sandy's
SPECIAL
Small Ice Cream Cones only 19' in flavors of Butterscotch, Chocolate, Marshmallow and Pineapple.
Offer good until Sunday, June 20.
DAIRY BAR
Father's Day Gifts
DAIRY BAR
A
Bengals
803 Mass.
A sensual Keystone comedy.
This four-letter ode to amorality is socked across winningly.
The scenes make 'Last Tango in Paris' look like a sixth grade dancing class.
Sometimes pornographic, generally subversive, but always brilliant.
An important film.
Going Places
suggesting alternatives.
FRI., JUNE 18 7:30 p.m.
Woodruff Aud. '1.00
underrining busing, without suggesting alternatives.
"With All Deliberate Speed" struck just about the right balance—it permitted a little pride in what this country has striven for, and it also reminded that the goal is attained yet.
Position Open for College Graduate
Marketing representative with a small brokerage firm dealing in fertilizer and agricultural chemicals. Main contact with clientele would be by phone. Compensation by commission with guaranteed base.
Send resume to Box 378
--wants to introduce you to our FAST DELIVERY SERVICE
Parsons, Kan. 67357
CAROL LEE
DONUTS
and sandwich shop
OPEN
5am-6pm
DAILY
Ham
and Cheese Special: 65¢
1730 W23rd
842-3664
and sandwich shop
★
★ JAZZ ★
★
HEAR THE GREATEST SOUNDS OF JAZZ AND THE BLUES
TONIGHT: JAZZ JAM SESSION (everyone welcome)
FRIDAY: JOE UTTERBACH (modern jazz trio)
SATURDAY: GASLIGHT GANG
TINY TROMBONE
Dixieland Band
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
Open 8 p.m. 842-9458 or 843-8575
THE GREEN PEPPER
by offering you these valuable coupons.
75c off any
16" Pizza!
Expires July 1
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second one for
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544 W. 23rd
843-9003
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Sun. 4-12 a.m.
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THE GREEN PEPPER
4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, June 17. 1976
Entertainment
Film dawdles while 'Going Places'
By CHUCK SACK
Contributing Writer
It would be simple to write off the French film "Going Places" with a waship, "No it isn't," but this minor movie deserves more attention. For one thing, the aimlessness of the lead characters is intentional, so the narrative is not overly complicated; it initially inclined to do. Would you be fellicit
Bertand Blier, who directed this film based on his biter novel, followed two smalltime hoodlums, aged 23 and 25, in their random flight from authority. Already on the run with his friends, he thieves before graduating to car theft and winding up as accomplices to a murder.
But "Going Places" is less concerned with the narrative of these events than it is with thestudied amorality of the duo. Raw images of the actions of film ignores the legal and moral implications of the actions. This style quickly puts the viewer on notice that this is an adult tale. Those who are shocked by casual sex can eliminate violence will be in for a long evening.
ACTUALLY MUCH of this is less interesting than such a general description makes it sound. The hoods (played by Gerard Depardeau and Patrick Dewaea are very watchable, but they are too vicious and unintelligent to be engaging in any way), the shiny glossy support of other characters, and there aren't enough of those around in the early soo
What saves the film in its first forty-five minutes is the variety of situations that the men get into. A joy-ride ends with one of the pair getting shot in the left testicle, and in the right one in the back of the room. Later, after they've had their pleasure with this waffle, the men escape on a train, where they encounter a young mother on her way to be reunited with her husband. Later still, they flee to a deserted resort in its off-season, where they occupy an abandoned house.
The first half of the film is paced like a merry-go-round: quick enough to make the ride diverting, long enough to more than satisfy your desire for the experience. Unfortunately, these sequences do little to illuminate the characters. Perhaps Biler is
YOUNG, WHO wrote the song, has emerged as an instrumental wizard in Poco, performing on acoustic guitar, 12-string guitar, banjo, kanoj, dobro and pedal steel guitar.
However, a string arrangement without any true direction bogs a song down and eventually takes complete control as the song draws to a close.
Ultimately, "Going Places" needs something else to make it a totally satisfactory experience. Adding another name actor would only serve to further unbalance the fragile grace that Moreau's character suspects that it is no coincidence that the most arresting and memorable episodes character with specific goals.
"Stealaway" is reminiscent of "Good Feelin' to Know," the closest Poco has ever come to a hit single. Schmit's lead vocal is nothing short of excellent, and he carries expression and emotion to their highest limits.
"Stealaway" and "Company's Comin'
Slow Poke" are by far the album
has to offer. Not surprisingly, both
songs were penned by Young.
Cotton's country ballad, "All Alone
The happy, bouncy songs that filled country-and-western band Poco's early albums are a part of their past, as their song "Rose of Climarron," demonstrates.
The album is an improvement over "Head Over Heels." Poco's previous release, but still falls short of the mark they made with their early records.
By GREG HEJNA Staff Writer
Songwriting is weak in Poco's new album
Staff Writer
The title cut is based on Rusty Young's 12-string guitar riff that introduces the song, Timothy B. Schmit and Paul Cotton give the song a super vocal treatment, easing in and out of harmonies, ringing the words out clear and strong.
--absurdly violent act in the movie. So great is her presence that she imparts an afterglow to the next section of the film, the mark of a true star.
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
"Come Around") is a remake of a hit cotton had with the Illinois Speed Press. The tune flows well in a country vein with the sweetness of melody and the graceful confidence. Cotton's vocals exude confidence.
Side Two is saved from total failure by two of Cotton's songs, "When You Come Home" and "You'll Be Mine."
JAMES GANG
304 Locust
M-F 8-5:30
ON "COMPANY'S Comin' Slow Poke"
Poco comes closest to the type of good-time music that was once its trademark. A vocal, banjo and drums combination starts a lope of song followed by another song. Cotton and Schmitt trade vocal leads, ending in a four part crescent that breaks into the instrumental "Slow Poke." The tone is Young's vehicle. He solos brilliantly on his instruments and only Cotton's guitar keeps the song from being a one-man show.
French fries
So "Going Places" is destined to be a minor film because it lacks any other features. But you may not save the film for everyone, but she makes getting there more than half the fun.
STEAK SANDWICH $1.59
Victorio De Sica's Gold of
Naples by the director of A
Burtton and The Garden of
the Finn-Continis with Sophia
Loren
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
Woodruff Auditorium
SIZZLER
FAMILY STAKE HOUSE
This sensation is reinforced by the startling appearance of Jeanne Moreau just above the screen, and more vicious. In the role of a middle-aged woman just released from prison, Moreau dominates the screen. And in some scenes she becomes transferred to the young men and the story.
75
7:30 p.m.
SUA Summer Films
MOREAU PROVIDES the film with a sense of drive and purpose that the main characters lack. Gaurit of face, yet thoroughly appealing, she portrays a woman cautiously savoring her freedom, who then convincingly commits the most
too familiar with his material to condense to supply more background, but after the first 20 minutes, the film seems to be marking time.
Thurs., June 17 "Pure Gold"
You'll get tender top sirloin on Sizzer zler toast. Along with golden French fries. So, why brown-bag it when you can have steak?
Meat for lunch at the Sizzler.
Together," hovers only inches above mediocrity. Only his strong vocal performance and some fine pedal-sheet work by Dudley MacLean is smiling into a Hank Wills imitation.
OVERALL, THE album has many weaknesses, especially in the group's songs.
Perhaps it is time for Poco to record some other group's material to light a spark under the band. The group is clearly not able to hold an album together with the material they write. This may be the only way that one can be a part of and a chance to have the adjective "potential" dropped from its description as a top act.
Good only at 1516 W.23rd St.
Lawrence, Kansas 66044
Schmit's two efforts are mediocre, even in comparison with other tunes on the album. His "Starin" At the Sky" is mildly interesting only for Garth's alba sox alcyon, and he's as good as he is even close to the excellent writer he has proved himself to be in the past.
PUFF'S
FRAGRANT WEEDS
PIPES OF PEACE
Cheroots! Meersechauns! Brier Roots!
FOR FAMILY USE:
George's Pipe Shop
727 Mace
Politicians' Stumps constantly on hand.
Walt Disney's
OMMONWEALTH THEATRES
Granada
917-431-8266 - shingwai.wj.1088
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Daily at 2:15. 7:15. 9:00
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Edgar Rice Burrough's classic
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7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:30 PG
"AT THE EARTH'S CORE"
"I could murder her in front of your eyes and you couldn't prove it."
JON VOIGHT
JACQUELINE
BISSET
ROBERT SHAW
Hillcrest
END OF THE GAME
PG 7:30 & 9:41
Sat.-Sun. 1:55
7:20 & 9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:45
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannen are offered to all students without regard to race or ethnicity. BING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 113FALL HALL
"FAMILY PLOT" PG
Hillcrest Bill Cosby Raquel Welch
CLASSIFIED RATES
Hillcrest
"MOTHER, WIGS & SPEED"
one two three four five time times times times times
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Friday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
7:40-9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:05 PG
time times times times times
15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word .00 .00 .00 .00 .00
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.
... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
OF BOGGY CREEK" 9:1
He's out there still
AD DEADLINES
FOR RENT
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or via the UBK business office at 864-1535.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ERRORS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
3 bdm. house with attached garage, unfurnished
4 bdm. house from park, from park,
month. Call 643-902-7177
627
2 bdr., all utilities on, campus. Furnished.
Furnished. Free parking. aa, pool. 842,
4933
"BOOTLEGGERS" 10:50
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS--Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTERN MOBILE HOMES, 3409 6th Street. Lawrence, KS 75031
2 bdrm. furnished large apt. near downtown, furnished a $100 month. Utility fees: $45,850-6,17- 6
Apartment. 3 bedroom downtown. 7 rooms in
house. 4 bedrooms in apartments. Accomodate
people. No pets. $44, $53, $73. Ave.
Cameron.
Nice room in a bedroom, 3 bath townhouse. A/C/
Fridge/Freezer. Insulated stoves, 87+'s plus 4'\
insulation. 840-5475.
FOR SALE
Alternator, starter, and generator Spectra-
ture BALER ELECTRIC, 843-209-6000, W. 40 h.
ELECTRIC, 843-209-6000, W. 40 h.
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sales
"New Classification of Western Civilization!"
Makes sense to use them -
21) For class preparation
22) For classroom presentation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
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STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, your most important benefit is the GAMMAHOOP SHOP at HALF PRICE.
SPORT
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDELPPOINT
TIMES-REPORTS
THE CREWEL
CUPBOARD
10-5 Monday Saturday
Aztec Inn
Home of the
Aztec Calendar
Excellent selection of new and used furniture and appliances at bargain prices. We buy-swap-trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7041 Nass. Mass. 842-7211. tt
Must sell 1975 350 Yamaha RD. $275 or best offer.
864-618, keep trying.
6-17
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
590 Ford 1/2 ton and 622 Chevrolet 1 ton panel trucks
Best offer. 8475-6705 or 8475-6715
6-17
84. Impaul, AT, PS, AC good tires, good condi-
tions. 85. Emerson, Mert, Must sell $612 for
6. Katy. 87
Women's 3-speed bike, $25. Call 842-3137
weekends, weekend.
GIRLS-SUPER SUMMER SALE! GREAT BAR-AGAIN! THE CHEESE, 927 MASS.
All Mexican Dishes served
on piping hot plates
807 Vermont 842-9455
CANON CAMERA EQUIPMENT FD-85-300mm
e of Series IXIS 18mm, bonus 6mm
e of Series IXIS 18mm
Excellent deal on a new AM-FM receiver -25/25
$19.99 for only $150. Only 110 must buy. Kay $49.
13 E. Nahsh St.
1700 W. 68th Street
Record Sale - buy one, get one free. This week
Record Sale - hire limited space. Ray Ackel,
81st St.
6-22
Sail in a KOOL boat this summer! Hardly use
good condition, $50, phone 813-8340. 6-17
1970 Bedford VW 54,400 miles, body fair. Will sell
for $600. Call 822-2249.
6-17
Need a good deal on a turntable? We have l!1
New 1016 complete. Ray Audio, 13 E. 8th St. 6-22
R
Toyota Celica -1972. Red with Black vinyl top, 16"
"good paint. Very good overall. Good buy. Battery 843-819 after five."
"days."
b. Beautiful-funfitable 'Jason' #15-powerful.
c. Beautiful-funfitable 'Jason' #16-pair only
45-$80. Buy IA, 15 E. Ft. 84 St. #84-293. Buy
IU, 15 E. Ft. 84 St. #84-294.
14 Horda 125 Excellent condition 3 helmets,
$875 or bess or 1713 Louisiana, 842-6960, Rick.
HELP WANTED
The Stables are now taking applications for part-
icipation in the Bristol Mellon College Corner Roger in person at the Stables on 26 September.
Housekeeper--part time. Call 942-6279 evenings.
Director of Admissions and Assistant to the Director of Admissions, Duttes includes administration of admissions, research, and intensive collaborative duties. Full-time, year-round appointment. Requires a Master's degree in writing, and mathematical ability; skill in relevant areas. Open depending on experience and position. Resume cover letter. Year-end resume of qualifications and experience up to $15,000. Reqs. Bachelor's degree in Mathematics, Law, Tennessee, Kansas, 66003. Equity Opportunities. Women of all races are encouraged to apply.
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
STATE OF THE ART
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Steroid Components
'76 ROYALS BASEBALL TOURS
Lobby
YAMAHA
July 1 Oakland A's
GRAMOPHONE
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
Sep. 4 Texas Rangers
Aug. 9 New York Yankees $14.50
SUA Maupintour travel service
Kansas Union Building
Phone 843-1211
LOST AND FOUND
Lost: black, medium hair, male eat (9 months)
on white on cheek, Hewlett BD652-67-17
Ladie's watch. Found May 20, in Praer Hall.
841-729-7
6-17
Transmitter radio east of campanile. 842-8735. 6-21
Man's black umbrella, 4th floor Wesco. Call
811-5126 and identify.
Lost. Oval ring, yellow gold setting. Call pat
loot. For 4-1854a. 843-7737, evenings 6-12.
Wardens' office.
Found, large male tabby, 12th and Vermont, call
841-7360 6-22
NOTICE
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
boats, parfaits and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and cheesecake galore at the Cabab Cafe, 803
Dinner); dinner too. Hilt 830 except Sundays.
If you have been confused or have any knowl-
edge about the differences between
FOTOMAT and QUICK STORE, PICK
NEVIES' please call (collect) 232-0548 (Topkaka),
or visit www.nevies.com or 330-4960.
Please talk to Maureen Price.
Ship Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
dinners, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-5.
842-3577
GUARANTEED WEIGHT LOSS: Send new dollar bill at Mimosa Blvd. 2175, Mimosa Blvd. 3035, Beverly Hills 90021, CA 90027, or call (818) 647-6600.
After 20 years in business, if George, don't he will it have made it. George's Pipe Shop, 727
Attention Sun Layers: Back Corner Drugs now have Bonnie Belt's and Corner Drugs in stock. Get the correct Tuning Bucket, Sure-tun Maltolizer and Lp Snackers with Suitcase. Everything you need for a skater.
Round Corner Drugs—for summer sun special!
60 make up with $1.75 one oz. liz, or $2.00 one oz.
$175 more优惠仅$175
KU KANATE CLUB SUMMER Session. Tuition
$125. CLEARANCE $70. ACLIMBED HOME HOUSE LAWN For BEN
AND TERRY, ACLIMBED HOME HOUSE LAWN For BEN AND TERRY.
Bound Cover Cereal Dye-one, a your print sale on
Bound Cover Cereal Tender-one, your $5.95, sale on
the cover!
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 842-0110. If you
MUSIC LESSONS - for your kind of listener, apply
these tips and call: bal. 811-3240, MKCmpk
the fiddle, and call: bal. 811-3240, MKCmpk
Foreign students are fun people to know and learn from. For a challenge cross-cultural experience, Join Operation Friendship each Monday at the, at Center, 629 W. 19th St., 629 5783
FREE KITTENS, very cute. Paul or Jim 843-
9146. 5-22
Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 115, 116, 121, 122, 124, 500 Regular session or text preparation, 749-758, 842-761.
Lawrence Gay Liberation social activities 843-
929. Counseling 842-7505 6-29
Have your children learn Spanish and art. Grade 2 Spanish speaking art senior - cellar. Carolie Bordes 506-749-3800.
FAST AND ACCURATE SERVICES OPERATED:
1. from cassette or tape recordings Call Katie
2. from cassette or tape recordings Call Katie
TUTOR
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics Call 841-7638 after 6 p.m. if
TYPING
1 d amed good typing. Peggy, 462-4476;
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-29
Experienced typist—term papers, tests, mike,
electric picture board, computer-spelling,
spell-checking. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced typist, IBM SelectR, term papers,
proofreading, proof-reading, spelling
corrected. 841-369-1288
Typhier / editor, IBM Pica elite/ Quality work.
Typist, designer, dissertations welcome.
Call 842-1237. 842-1238.
Typing professional quality work guarantees,
using the following tools: text editor, bussiness
database, disquettes, picaelectric B.A.S. Social
Sciences degree program.
FINE SELECTION OF MOTION SHIRTS,
BONE MATE JEANS
WANTED
Experienced typist will do all kinds of typing in
your home. Call Carolyn at 814-0044.
6-29
Female residence for summer, possibly fall Pri-
lor. Wednesdays 1435-2077.
Debbie evening 1435-2077.
6-12
Needed: Female roommate to share older 3 bed
room; Nice location, near campus
842-3131.
842-8413
芦
Roommate wanted to live in new home, separate
room and room and bath. Call 843-741-6095
for help. Ask for Ruddy
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
9.30 a.m.-5 p.m.
www.raschshop.com
Open on 30 March
SADDELLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Open 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
1 roommate wanted, female or male to share bedroom. Must be at least 25 years old, country home owned, and photographers. Located 5 miles south on $3 acres near to Wakawaka river. House must have a walk-in closet and bark pets. Born RK. Request $85. Mickey or Ken Clement will rent the property for future rental need name, phone and other pertinent information. Ms. Mike Manley. Mi. 2. Bottle 6-17
O
842.8413
Lastercharge
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
-Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
THE HAWK
1964 HONDA CB160
1965 HONDA CB250
1966 HONDA CB750
1967 KAWASAKI 350
1968 DT250
1969 DT250
Chilled Glasses
HORIZON'S HONDA 1811 W.6th 843-3333
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Fitted Sheets
& Schooners
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Pitcher Night Wednesday
- Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
- THE WHEEL
- Sandwiches
Outdoor Beer Garden
at 14th and Ohio”
530 Wisconsin
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
843-9404
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
—6 Nights a Week—
Open 2 p.m.-3 a.m.
Maternity Chapels Available
Class B Private Club
Wave Neil -Owner
6
Thursday, June 17, 1976
University Daily Kansan
KU trackmen try for Olympics
Rv COURTNEY THOMPSON
Staff Writer
Twenty-two current and former University of Kansas athletes will represent KU this weekend at the opening of the 2016 Big Ten Track and Field Trials in Eugene, Ore.
The week-long competition, which begins
saturday at the University of Oklahoma
team for the NCAA Tournament,
is played in Monroe.
"I'm really happy that so many of these men have qualified for the trials," Bob Timmons, head track coach, said yesterdays. "We need to elevate individual talents and the overall strength of
Sports
our track program. I don't think we've ever bad this many men qualify before."
"The TRIALS will present the toughest competition any of our present team has seen, although some of our former athletes may since have faced competition comparable to that of the Olympic trials," Timmons said.
Often the trials proved to be more difficult than Olympic competition itself, he said.
The KU athletes must be in top form every day of the trials to make the Olympic team. One bad performance could cast doubt on qualifying for the Olympics isn't unusual.
for Jajawkh trackman. Timmons said that this tradition in Kansas track program is similar to the traditional one.
"When you talk about people like (Billy) Mills, Biller Nider and Jim Ryun, you're talking about some of the greats in the history of track and field." he said.
RAY MOUTLON was the first KU trackman to go to the Olympics, in St. Louis in 1904. Since then, 16 KU track athletes have competed in a total of 11 Olympias and have won a total of 13 medals, including seven gold ones.
The first KU athlete to win a track gold medal was decathlon runner Jim Busein in the 1964 Olympics, and the 1956 Olympics to start his string of four consecutive first-place finishes. In 1960 Bill Nieler won the win in the 10,000 meter run at the 1972 Summer Games.
The strength of this year's group appears to lie in the sprint events, Timmons said. Current KU sprinters Laverne Smith, Larry Jackson and Clifford Wiley have qualified for the trials in the 100 and 200 meters, which will be joined by former KU star Mark Lutz.
THOSE FROM THE '76 team who have qualified for the 400 meter dash are Waddell and Erik Schmidt.
Big Eight track and football star Nolan Crownhill will be competing in the 2014 MLS season.
In the field events, the javelin and long jump will be the Jahwaha's strong points.
the current KU team, will throw the javelin.
Each has thrown it over 280 feet.
Six former KU athletes will also represent the Jachayhs in field events. Long jumpers David Smith and Andrew Whitley have qualified, Keith Gunn and Randy Smith will compete in the high jump. Terry Porter, who recently cleared the 18 mark in vaulting, will also represent KU.
FOR THE first time the U.S. Olympic Committee will pay the athletes' transportation, room and board. Timmons said. "We are very disappointed for workdays lost from the
beginning of the training period until the conclusion of the games, he said.
Another first is that men's and women's trials will be held simultaneously.
Intramural scores
Co-recessional slowpitch
Our Gang 27, Plumbers' Unit 7
Praetier and Associates 19, Royals 12
THE TASTE IS IN THE SAUCE
All the Kirk's Men 18, Speedtraders 4
Late Cormiers 9, Once is Not Equal 8
Men's sleepspych
Manny O'Neal's Hairy Rators 12, Ballet Hall Bombers 9
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THE ATTIC
927 Massachusetts
NEW YORK (AP) - Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhin help up Oakland's sales Tuesday night of Vida Blue to the New York Yankees and Rookie Fingers and Judi Roi to the Boston Red Sox, and the New York Mets, who will play players are still officially on the A's roster.
'No sale,' Kuhn says to Finley
"The Blue-Fingers-Rudi assignments by
the Oakland club raise questions that I feel require a hearing. Accordingly, I will hold a hearing today at 2:30 p.m. EDT in this office. The Oakland, New York and Boston clubs and Marvin Miller have been asked to attend," a message from Kuhn to all 24 major league clubs said, as reported by the Times.
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Attitudes separate N. Lawrence from city
Bv BERNEIL JUHNKE
Staff Writer
Some residents think more than a river separates North Lawrence from the rest of the city.
City aid for improvements such as street repair, sidewalks, traffic lights and recreational facilities hasn't met the needs of North Lawrence, some residents said last week.
Muriel Paul, North Lawrence Planning Council (NLPC) organizer, said the city's 'at large' election system made it difficult for a North Lawrence representative to be elected to the city commission because a large body of votes was necessary.
IT HAS BEEN more than 25 years since North Lawrence had a representative on the city commission. Last year John Taylor, 328 Locust, was defeated as a candidate for the commission.
Heather Reis, another NLPc organizer, said,
"North Lawrence people aren't represented, but
they are."
Louise Gulley, a member of the North Lawrence Improvement Association (NLA), said there was a lack of interest and communication within the lack of concerning the problems of North Lawrences.
Betty Mallonee, secretary of the NLAJ, said she thought that North Lawrence had a better rapport with the city commission in the last two years, but that it deserately needed a representative.
"WE'RE GOING to fight very strongly in the next election," she said.
The NLAI was formed in 1968 and chartered in 1983. It allocates the Community Development Fund to local schools.
The NLPC was formed less than two years ago as a study group to make long-term plans for North Carolina. The NLPC members were opened to the public about nine months ago. The NLPC was formed as a planning organization, with the support of the NC state legislature.
SHE SAID the University of Kansas real estate and business interests rule the city.
"It is in their interest to see this area changed from residential to industrial." she said.
She said it was difficult to get loans by buy private, property in North Lawrence and that young people who rent in North Lawrence often go to South Lawrence when they want to buy homes.
Reis said that banks charge higher interest rates for housing development loans in North Lawrence.
PAUL SAID that North Lawrence needed an
organization that wasn't just concerned with pot holes in streets and wouldn't accept a "bended" floor.
"There is contempt by the city commission toward North Lawrence," she said. "I watching a girl walk on the street."
Mallonee said that residential areas in North Lawrence have recently been rezoned for commercial and industrial use. Her house at 404 Locus industrial has been rezoned for intensive industrialization.
She said many residents weren't aware that their property was to be rezoned until it had happened. Residents didn't receive letters informing them of meetings where the action was to take place, she said.
IF A resident didn't see the newspaper announcement, she said, he was voiceless when the police raided his home.
"The city has an obligation to property owners to let them know." said Mallonee.
She said the city wasn't considering North Lawrence's problems in its plans for the future.
"Industrial and residential areas can't live together," she said.
"The city has written off North Lawrence as an industrial park," she said.
REIS SAID the city apparently didn't care about North Lawrence.
North Lawrence needs the city's help in cleaning up Second Street. Reis said.
"We can't clean up our own image, she said," the rest of Lawrence sees us as that one little piece.
SHE SAID the city should buy some of the businesses along second when they change hands and move to another city.
Paul said NIPAK, a fertilizer wholesaler, should be relocated and the area made into a park area.
Storm sewers, new sidewalks, more street lights, trees to replace those the city has cut down, resurfaced streets, a community center, and recreational facilities including a swimming pool and tennis courts, are some of the requests that have been made by North Lawrence.
Mallonee said the city bus service to North Lawrence was duration less than years ago and did not like it, says it requires
MALLONEEN SAID that the NLA requested $400,000 for specific community improvement projects.
"What can you do with that kind of money?" Reis asked.
Development Funds, which she said were shared with Far East Lawrence.
NORTH LAWRENCE received $3,344 for the 1975-
fiscal year and will receive approximately the
same amount in subsequent years.
Malloween said that the NLAI spent the money on playground equipment for Wooddawn Elementary School, alley lights, trees and office supplies for the NLAI.
Tom Cooley, city rehabilitation specialist, said that the 1975-76 fiscal year was the first Community Development Fund program year. The city is granted $292,000 per year. he said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
BEAUTIFUL!
In 1974 the NLAI received $10,000 in revenue sharing funds. Mallaine said $1,000 of it was given to the city to buy property owned by Lawrence Alison at 632 N. 79th, so the Lyons Park in North Dakota was purchased and equipment and books for Woodlawn were also purchased. Mallaine said there was about $200 left.
See NORTH LAWRENCE page 3
Mike Wilden, assistant city manager, said there were seven entitlement periods under the revenue code.
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.149
Mondav. June 21. 1976
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
BUTTON CITY, N.Y. -- A police officer helps a man get off the bridge after he was hit by a car in Butler County.
Summer's right for softball
Lawrence sophomore, occurred late yesterday afternoon and involved five people. No one was injured. Investigating the accident were James Burridge, David Watters and Todd Kelley.
The Brown's Grove bridge, on the way to Lone Star Lake saw quite a lot of action Sunday with two accidents occurring on the bridge. The cause is unclear.
Dangerous Bridge
By TOM BOLITHO
See page 4
Regents review'78 budget
Staff Writer
The Kansas Board of Regents will make final budget recommendations for fiscal year 1978 to University officials today or next week, and will nominise theencouncil for business affairs, said yesterday.
University officials met with the Regents Friday in Topeka to outline proposed budget increases for fiscal 1978. Chancellor Archie Clarke, chairman of the university committee, proposed for new and improved programs.
Dykes and Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, told the Regents that the library support request of $300,000 was uppermost on the new and improved programs priority list. He said that approval of the increase was crucial to the efficient upkeep of the library.
"We're determined not to let our library建成 after building it up for over a bridge."
DYKES SAID that the University wanted to keep the library open longer and that more money would be needed for the increasing cost of books and journals.
Shankel said that funding for the maintenance and replacement of scientific teaching equipment ($259,000) was second in importance. Shankel said the request was important if KU laboratories were to keep pace with comparable universities.
Dykes and Shankel also requested $156,241 to be used to waive the fees of graduate teaching assistants. Dykes said that graduate students were leaving Kansas because the University couldn't offer appealing benefits.
Committee recommends simpler fee structure
By TIM PURCELL.
Staff Writer
A complicated and sometimes unfair fee structure for on-campus courses at the University of Karsas would be eliminated if a recommendation for change were implemented, according to a report released last week.
The recommendation, approved by Chancellor Archie Dykes, was prepared by an ad hoc fee structure committee appalled with the decision. Del Stackel, executive vice chancellor.
If approved by the Board of Regents, it would replace the present fee structure in
The report said the present fee structure was "inordinately complicated, having grown unchecked over the years as fee after fee was added."
At present, students taking seven to 12 credit hours must pay full fees. Residents pay $205 and non-residents pay $600 in incidental fees for these hours.
Incidental fees pay teaching and ad-
An informed legislature is more generous,profs hope
If University of Kansas professors hope to win salary increases from the Kansas Legislature, they must educate the legislators on the expenses a professor incurs in his work, according to a KU professors' group.
"The way inflation is rising, the eight per cent we received last year from the legislature isn't to keep pace," Schutz said. "We were supposed to get 10 per cent for three years and we got it for the first two, but last year they uset us down."
"Legislators need to talk more with teachers to find out what is needed for quality education," Margaret Schutz, associate professor of social welfare, and member of the KU chapter of the American Association for University Professors (AAUP) said recently.
A recent report released by the AAPU indicated that for the third consecutive year, salaries for University professors are on average $127,000 and average worker's salary is in keeping pace.
Schutz suggested that KU update its retirement plan to a sliding scale rather than a flat five per cent each year. Other employers have also planned a plan to cope with inflation, she said.
George Griffin, former president of KU's AAPU and director of the Spencer Library
if enrollment continues to rise KU will need to attract more qualified professors,
Ellen Johnson, treasurer of KU's AUP and cataloging librarian, said professors had outside operating expenses such as attending local conferences of professional associations, keeping abreast of new trends in library fields and maintaining an office at home.
Kansas Collection, said projections for KU's enrollment predicted an increase for at least
Business and industry will always keep pace with the economy, but teachers will always lag behind it is hard to get there. The boss in the state legislature, Johnson said.
"The argument that it is less expensive to live in Lawrence does not hold," he said. "We're right on the fringe of Kansas City and the cost of living is about the same."
Robert Frauf, professor of physics and astrology and current president of KU's AAUP, said the association was not entirely dissatisfied with the state legislature.
ministrative salaries and general University upkeen.
"We feel fortunate here at KU when other universities around the country received only a three to five per cent increase, or none at all."
Students now pay an hourly fee up to seven hours. The committee proposed an hourly fee up to 12 hours. The charges would remain the same: $14 and $40 per credit hour for residents and non-residents respectively.
Although a privilege fee—health, activity and Kansas Union fees—would increase by $4.24 under the proposal, the recommendation said new privilege fees would be designed to generate approximately the same total dollars as the present system.
That means a resident student taking 10 hours would pay only $140 in incident fees.
The present system is unfair to partime students, according to the report. They don't have the same opportunities to enjoy campus privileges as do full-time students.
The report said that at universities
similar in size to KU, hourly charges are made in up to 10 or 12 hours.
If the proposed on-campus fee structure is to do any good, a new drop policy would be required. When classes were dropped, students had to register in a class below a nine-hour class load.
At the University of Minnesota, for example, at $17.50 per credit hour is charged up to 12 hours, and students pay $210 for 12 hours or more.
"A nine-hour refund cutoff would be a compromise between the need to treat parttime students flexibly and the need to support full-time teachers in implementing commitments," the report said.
The committee also recommended that a $5 fee be charged during the first four weeks after enrollment for changes in enrollment that reduced credit hours. If a course were canceled, however, there would be no charge under the proposal.
Grant aids KU Press
Bv PAUL JEFFERSON
The University Press of Kauai has received a $7,500 grant from the American Council of Learned Societies to subsidize research and development of books in the humanities field.
John Longley, Director of the University Press of Kansas, said the money would be used to help new authors get research findings published, and to absorb the cost of publishing some specialized manuscripts of limited appeal.
Staff Writer
"Most scholarly works have a limited market and it's hard for new authors to get started in any area." Langley said yesterday. "They bring their books to us, and if we think the book has merit, we'll bear the cost of publishing it."
He said the University Press receives about 20 manuscripts a year, 12 of which they are able to publish. Publication will be handled by the University Press with the additional money, said Langley.
He said there were no restrictions or preferences on accepting manuscripts. Whether an author had published previously or was a newcomer to the field of literary publishing makes no difference, Landley said.
"Our only yardstick as to whether to publish or not is the quality of the manuscript," he said.
Funds for the grant were given by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to the American Council of Learned Societies, which administers the awards
Langley said most of the books published were the results of research by University professors and others with advanced degrees. Not all those published are associated with Kansas colleges, he said.
The Mellon Foundation provides funds to more than 70 publishing houses across the country to improve the publication opportunities for books in the humanities field.
"We lose good minds who want to attend the University of Kansas because we can't be at home."
IN ADDITION to hearing the budget requests, the Regents established increased salaries for the heads of the five state colleges and universities. Chancellor Dykes received a $5,000 raise, from $60,000 to $55,000.
The Regents approved the issuance of $23 million in revenue bonds for completion of the Clinical Care Facility addition to the Kansas University Medical Center; $9,500 for air conditioning repairs to Haworth Hall; and $431,136 for installation of a
sprinkler system at the clinical facility of the Medical Center.
The Regents also elected a new chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents. Glee Smith, Larned, will replace Prudence Hutton, Newton, as chairman on July 1. Smith is a former president of the Kansas Senate.
Dykes and Shankel are optimistic that approval will be given to the programs.
AFTER THE Regents give their recommendations next week, the University will revise the budget requests to be delivered to the Kansas Legislature in October.
Background
Early each year, the University of Kansas prepares a budget of its spending needs for the next fiscal year. This is the first step in a long process which involves the Board of Regents, the Kansas Legislature and the governor. It is anticipated that changes will be made at each step before the budget is approved and money is disbursement to the project. The budget not being proposed must be approved by the Board of Regents before it begins its journey through the legislature and the governor's office.
RR
Basking on the Lake
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
With Sunday's temperature reaching in the lower 80's, many students took advantage of mild weather to involve themselves in leisure activities, such as sailing at Lone Star
2
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Delegate quotas voted on
WASHINGTON - With Jimmy Carter's forces in clear command, the Democratic party's Rules Committee voted yesterday on a formula designed to reverse a decline in the participation of blacks and other minorities in choosing the party's presidential nominee.
"I think we did well," said Ann Wexler, the chief Carter strategist at two days of meetings held in preparation for the party's July 12 national convention.
But Carter represents defeated proposals for equal numbers of men and women delegates to Democratic national conventions and for dramatic changes in presidential election outcomes.
Haldeman describes Nixon
KANSAS CITY-President Nixon did not have a drinking problem, although he did drink on occasion. R. H. Haldenman is quoted as saying in the second part of a speech that "The problem with alcohol is that it is
Haldeman said when Nixon was tired and unwindings, he often had a bottle of beer before soining to bed and sometimes took a sleeping pill.
In the series, "Inside the Nikon White House," the former White House aide portrays Nikon as a competent President, in control of his administration and himself. Haldaemon explained their relationship as a working one only: they did not meet socially, nor were they friends.
Reporter's death studied
INDIANAPOLIS—Some 250 investigative journalists, hoping to advance what they called the pursuit of justice, voted yesterday to send a task force Phoenix to determine what role they should take in the probe of reporter Don Boles' murder. "I am an investigative reporter for the Arizona Republic, was seriously injured," he said.
The Journalists, winding up the three-day inaugural meeting of Investigating Reporters and Editors Inc., also adopted funding guidelines and voted to establish a committee to select investigators.
Meanwhile, The Los Angeles Times reported Sunday that police believe a control person for flying planes was used to trigger the bomb that killed Bobby Fischer.
Murderess leaves prison
YORK, Neb.-Convicted murderer Carol Ann Fugate, who spent 18 of her 32 years in prison, left the women's reconstitution institute at 12 a.m. 10:30 a.m.
YORK, Neb. —Convicted murderer Carol Ann Fugate, who spent 18 of her 32 years in prison, left the women's reformatory at institution at 12 a.m. yesterday.
Fugate was granted a parole June by a 4-1 vote. The Nebraska Parole Board. All of the board she boarded would be lead a normal life as "an ordinary, dumb little housewife."
Her ultimate destination was not revealed, but she was to report to a parole officer in St. Johns, Mich.
In 1958, Fugate, then a 14-year-old schoolgirl, accompanied Charles Starkwether on a mass murder spree that began in Lincoln, Neb., ended in Douglas, MN.
Harris trial gets underwau
LOS ANGELES - The trial of William and Emily Harris, a key chapter in the Patricia Hearst story, was scheduled to open today with jury selection.
Chief defense attorney Leonard Weinglass says he anticipated a lengthy and difficult jury search because of publicity surrounding the case.
The Harriers, Miss Heart's traveling companions for more than a year, lost a one-month battle to delay proceedings until the newspaper heliac, on a visit to New York City, delivered her a message.
They are charged with 11 counts of kidnapping, robbery and assault in a case that features Miss Heuer as an allegedly prime participant in a night and day of "terrorism."
Staff Writer
By CORA MARQUIS
Record number enroll for parent orientation
More parents of University of Kansas students will participate in the Parents Summer Orientation Program this summer and will receive a Bachelor's degree, associate dean of Nunenmaker College.
This is the third summer for the parents' orientation program.
THE IDEA for the program originated with students.
Over 1,000 parents have already registered and as many as 1,500 may participate in the 12 one-day orientation programs this summer, Lewis said. This would be a 33 per cent increase in participation over last summer.
Lewis said he thought one reason for the program's success was that parents who have participated in past summer return home with positive comments about the program and this encourages other parents to come.
"We used to think that students didn't want their parents here during orientation," Lewis said, "but the students told us loudly and clearly that they did. We listened to them and the success of the program tells us that they were right."
Lewis said students don't want their parents to interfere with course selections but do want their parents to become more involved and share the student's sense of pride in it.
The program is an anxiety releasing process for parents, Lewis said.
"THEY COME with a lot of fears and we try to release a lot of those fears," Lewis said. They find out that even though the victims are in institution, they really are flesh and blood."
The orientation program makes it easier for parents to visit KU because they feel like they have been given a special invitation, so she Lorna Grunt, assistant dean of women.
During the orientation programs parents meet with representatives of the college or school in which their son or daughter will enroll. They also meet with representatives
Lawrence Gay Liberation
Summer Dance
June 25
Student Union
8:00-1:00
$1.50
Beer will be sold
Everyone welcome
from Student Services and either the
manual or online registration.
completes the application is provided for the payment.
LOU BRUGHS, mother of Laurie Kaster, Leawood sophomore, said, during a session last week. "I've been to three different orientation programs in three different settings with this morning's session. Things were explained without a lot of confusion."
Clara D. Patterson,母 of Regina Patterton, Coffeyville freshman, said she thought getting more information in the orientation sessions than they would get in large groups
Henry Buklstra, father of Leah Buklstra,
Downs freshman, he was especially pleased to receive an explanation of the different trees of deers available at KU.
The parents orientation programs will continue through July 10.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
DELICATE COMMUNITY SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT
Granda
Walt Disney's
"FOLLOW ME, BOYS"
Daily at 2:15, 7:15, 9:20
Varsity
Edgar Rice
Burroughs classic
"A T AT THE EARTH'S CORE"
7:30:9:30 Sat.Sun. 2:00 PG
Hillcrest
"I could murder her in front of your eyes and you couldn't grow it"
JON VOIGHT
JACQUELINE BISSET
ROBERT SHAW
PG 7:30:9:40 Sat.Sun. 1:55
END OF THE GAME
Bill Cosby
Raquel Welch
"MOTHER,
JUGS & SPEED"
7:40:9:35 Sat.Sun.Mat. 2:05 PG
Hillcrest
Alfred Hitchcock's
"FAMILY PLOT"
7:20&9:35 Sat.Sun.Mat.1:45
Sunset
Monty Python's
"NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT"
"BLACKBIRD"
9:30 10:45
Four convenience voter registration booths will open in Lawrence today, beginning Voter Registration Week, D. E. Mathia, Douglas County clerk, said.
The registration booths are located in the three Rusty's IGA Grocery stores and at Edgewood Homes. 1600 Kaskell. They will be open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. today through
END OF THE GAME
by ROBERT KEARNEY
Drive to register voters for primary begins
Staff Writer
On Campus
Once registered, a voter is registered forever, even if he fails to vote in an election. Voters must re-register if they change their permanent residence or their name.
Applicants need only to fill out a card swearing that they are U.S. citizens, will be at least 18 years old by election day and will have not been in the army for at least 20 days prior to the election.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A Paemaker award winner
Kangan Telephone Numbers
Newroom - 864-851
Telephone - (864) 851-2307
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday, Sunday and Holiday. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. $606.5. Subscription fee required to support the university.
In Douglas County and $1 a semester or a year in Douglas County and $2 a semester for all applicants are $2.00 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
Editor Dierck Caselman
Mission Editor Kelly Scott
Campus Editor Kim Giles
Editorial Manager Beet Breting
Copy Chiefs Ron Hartung
Photo Editor Jay Koezel
Business Manager Carl Stallard
Assistant Manager Jim Paulen
Assistant Manager Jim Pawl
Ad Manager Sarah McAbany
Classified Manager Jolene McCleamann
Publisher
Davary David
News Advisor Business Adviser
Bob Giles Mel Adams
Classified Collage Press
To vote, you may request an absentee voter's ballot from their home office or submit it. Requests for the ballot should be submitted at least 30 days before an election.
Immediately following the August 3 primary, the county clerk's office will again be open to the registration of persons not registered in the county and to vote in the November general election.
Students now living in Lawrence don't need to re-register in Douglas County if they have not changed their permanent home address, he said.
Kansas law also requires that election officers ask applicants whether they wish to declare a political party affiliation when registering.
FINAL WEEK
FINAL WEEK
Of Our Quitting Business SALE!
Rock Bottom Prices
Good Selection Still Available
Prices 2/3 – 3/4 off
THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
1420 Crescent Road • Lawrence, Ks. • (913) 843-4633
IT HAPPENS EVERY JUNE...
Vista ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS!
SAVE 15c
VISTABASKETS
1.05 REG.
$1.20
TEXAS BASKETS
$1.55 REG.
$1.75
SAVE 15c
CORN DOG
30¢ REG.
45c
SAVE 6c
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE
39¢ REG.
45c
FINAL WEEK
Of Our Quitting Business
SALE!
Rock Bottom Prices
Good Selection Still Available
Prices 2/3 - 3/4 off
THE UNIVERSITY SHOP
1420 Crescent Road • Lawrence, Ks. • (913) 843-4633
Prices 2/3-3/4 off
IT HAPPENS EVERY JUNE. . .
Vista ANNIVERSARY SPECIALS!
NOW THRU JUNE 24 ONLY!
SAVE 15c
VISTABASKETS
1.05 REG.
$1.20
TEXAS BASKETS
$1.55 REG.
$1.75
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SAVE 15c
CORN DOG
30¢ REG.
45c
SAVE 6c
STRAWBERRY SHORTCAKE
39¢ REG.
45c
Vista
1527 West 6th, Lawrence 842-4311
University Daffy Kansan
Monday, June 21, 1976
2
$2 bills collect dust, not interest
By CORA MARQUIS
Staff Writer
Many newly issued $2 bills may be lying unused in the dresser drawers of the American public, according to Barry Ridley, a chief economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City.
It was the hope of the Treasury Department, Robinson said, that the $2 bills would win widespread acceptance and thus save money. But the Treasury Department printings and handling costs of currency
"We think that many of the bills issued were taken as collector's terms," Robinson said.
It is unlikely the bills will become valuable because 400 million are being printed, but they seem to have been taken as mementos of the Bicentennial. Robinson said.
USE OF the bills doesn't seem to be ammonium. The bank wants to bank of accounts, merchants, and students.
Judy Wenger, vice president of Lawrence Bank and Trust, 647 Massachusetts, said that the bank hadn't had much demand for cash because the bills on April 13. She said hasn't been any regular demand for the bills in businesses' change orders. Businesses may not be using them because the bank does not accept designs to accommodate an extra bill.
"They really haven't been an overnight success." Wenner said.
David Pickett, assistant manager for K-Mart, 31st and 1st law, said that out of every $1,000 taken out of the cash drawers, there were only about ten $2 bills.
"Just in the last three weeks there seems to be some acceptance of them. At first people held them back. Now they are being used more," Pickett said.
COLLEEN ABRAMS, Lawrence senior,
said that she had received a couple of the
bills as change since they were issued,
but that she had spent them right away.
"I don't think students are too likely to save money by Bicentennial memors,"
On April 13, the birthday of Thomas Jefferson, whose portrait appears on the face of the $2 bill, 225 million new $2 bills were made available to banks through the Federal Reserve System. An annual printing of 400 million is anticipated.
AN ESTIMATED $27 million to the Federal Reserve System in handling currency and $8 million for the Treasury and $4 million for the resuscitation was an incentive to resuscite $2 bills.
Although the $2 bill was issued in conjunction with the Bicentennial, it will continue to be issued in subsequent years. It is the hope of the Treasury Department that it will become a permanent component of the nation's currency.
An average of 1.7 billion $1 notes are required each year, accounting for nearly 60 per cent of the total volume of currency printed. The Treasury Department hopes the $2 bills will replace about half of the $1 bills in circulation.
The first $2 bills appeared in 1776, issued by the Continental Congress as "bills of credit for the defense of America." Forty-nine thousand were circulated.
The $2 bill reappeared in subsequent years as over-size U.S. notes, silver certificates, Treasury notes, national bank currency and Federal Reserve notes. They possess certain features including those of Alexander Hamilton and George Washington.
THE LAST PRINTING before this spring's was the 1963-1964 series in May 1965. It was discontinued because of lack of public demand.
In 1928 the more familiar-size bill was presented with the portrait of Thomas Jefferson.
The past unpopularity of the bill has been attributed to many things. It was said that some people were handing out $2 bills instead of $1 bills. Some people said they were mistakenly accepting them as $20 bills. Two was even said to be an unlucky number.
It is hoped that the low volume of past printing may have been the real reason for their unpopularity. In 1966 one third of one per cent of all outstanding currency was $2 bills. The current printing will greatly exceed that percentage.
The face of the newly issued $2 bill looks the same as that of the 1963-1964 series, with an engraving based on Gilbert Stuart portrait of Thomas Jefferson. But it's been changed from a U.S. note to a 'Federal Reserve note.
THE REVERSE of the bill has been completely changed. Where the old bill had an engraving of Monticello, Jefferson's home, the new has a version of John Trumblund's painting, "The Signing of the Declaration of Independence."
The original painting hangs in the Trumbull Gallery at Yale University. Trumbull painted the original shortly after he graduated from Yale and missioned to reproduce the painting in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington, D.C. Six figures on the extreme right and extreme left were painted had to be dropped from the painting on the bill because of lack of space.
KU Theatre will lose director to classroom; Davis retiring
By CHARLOTTE KIRK
The lure of the classroom seems to have drowned out the call of the stage for Jed Davis, who will retrace as director of the school's return to full-time teaching effective July 1.
Davis, who has been director of the theater for nine years, said it was time for a choreography.
Davis will continue to work with University Theatre's children's productions. He will teach a new course on children and drama this fall.
"I have contributed as much as I was able to and I think the theater needs some different direction," Davis said Thursday. "There are things happening in my field and I haven't been able to keep up with them."
HE WILL also continue to teach an
outreach program which involves creative drama in Topak's school system and civic
"We have taken the children's theater out of the experimental theater, putting it on the main stage," Davis said. "We have also used them in writing and production of original plays.
Davis said that since he had assumed directorship in 1967, several changes have taken place. He has also served as chairman.
From page one
But whatever has been done in the past nine years, we have done it as a faculty," he
DAVIS ALSO instituted a system of student involvement in the decision-making process.
North Lawrence
"We now have three graduate and three undergraduate students in addition to the five graduate students."
Lawrence received funds only in the third entitlement period, he said.
Mallonee said there had been a good response to rehabilitation grants from the US.
Coley said there were $110,000 in rehabilitation grants available to the city and that currently North Lawrence has two grants to every one from East Lawrence.
"NORTH LAWRENCE has been pushed to the back burner in the past and now it is being moved up. Cooley said, "We have to move the front." LawRENCE makes the requests it's "fine with us."
However, Reis said, the grants were difficult to qualify for. Unless someone is destitute, he doesn't qualify, she said, and it can take up to two years to get a grant.
"Pride gets into some people's way," she said.
THERE ARE a few projects that would directly benefit the North Lawrence area in connection with the project.
The Capital Program is a guide to assist the city's departments and divisions in decoding capital expenditures.
REQUESTS FOR ALEY improvements and sidewalk construction in certain parts of North Lawrence were rejected under the Capital Planning Program because city policy requires those requests to go through different channels.
The 1977-82 Capital Improvement Plan includes an estimated $62,500 for Lyons Park improvements. The total cost for the 1977-82 improvements under the Capital Improvement Plan is an estimated $48,233,415.
Marketing representative with a small brokerage firm dealing in fertilizer and agricultural chemicals. Main contact with clientele would be by phone. Compensation by commission with guaranteed base.
Position Open for College Graduate
Sond resume to Box 378
Parsons, Kan. 67357
A request for a recreation-social building at Lyons Park was also rejected because the city didn't find that there were adequate need.
Reis said a community center was desperately needed, especially for the large number of elderly people living in North Lawrence.
Paul said there was no city-financed community center in North Lawrence.
Mallonee said North Lawrence residents help each other. Her husband laid the sidewalk in front of their house himself, she said.
general clean-up done in North Lawrence.
"no faults left with the people
thiefpened by them."
The theater has also sent two plays to the national festival in Washington, D.C., since Davis has been here. "Indians" was sent in 1971, and "Con Personas," a play written by KU student Paul Stephen Lim, was sent this year.
PERIPHERAL AREAS of lots need care, she said. Because they lack storm sewers, she said, ditches are used and often overgrown with weeds.
Reiss said many myths exist about North Lawrence. There isn't a large welfare population in North Lawrence, she said, although North Lawrence has a proportionately large number of elderly residents. She said there was a low crime rate.
DAVIS, WHO received his Master's and Ph.D. at the University of Minnesota, taught by Michigan State in East Lansing and by Michigan in Paul, Miln., before committing to KU in 1960.
Reis said vacant lots with crumbling houses, unsightly industrial areas and fields in the residential areas added to the unkempt appearance.
"I think of all the places I have been, KU is the most exciting," he said. "It's one of the few places that offer theater and music we. We produce many new plays and musicals."
Harold Mallonee, president of the NLA, said that North Lawrence residents have done without so much, for such a long time decided to "do with what they've got."
"People believe it's the city's responsibility to clean up its own property," she said.
"I think we have a very good caliber of students, and this helps us put on the show."
Davis said that KU had an outstanding university theater program that aspired to prepare students for many different kinds of careers, not just those in the theater.
"We're WAITING for a lot of the students to mature professionally, and we'll continue to give them practice in the meantime." he said.
"We have had the support of the upper administration, students and the Lawrence community, which helps the theater quite a bit. But we feel the theater here has a great future."
The productions aren't put on solely by beater majors. Usually about 300 people are hired.
We Write Motorcycle Insurance
Davis's successor has not yet been chosen.
742 Massachusetts • Lawrence, Kansas
(913) 842-5208
not your ordinary optical dispensary!
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
Three Mount Oread Bicycle Club riders qualified for U.S. Cycling Federation National championships by winning state trials this weekend at Manhattan.
3 Mt. Oread bicyclers going to nationals
Mark Kolar, a former University of Kansas student, finished first in the 10-mile race on Saturday at Cloe Park, qualifying for the championships August 7 and 8 in Northbrook, Ill.
In the 25-mile trial competition yesterday,
Mount Gore riders took seven of the top
points in the event.
Although all four riders broke the national's qualifying time of one hour, four minutes, Conrad and May fill the quota of seven riders. Kansas by the U.C. Cycling Federation.
Conrad, Lawrence sophomore, was first followed by Jim Mary, Wichita graduate student, Carl Melick, a former KU student, and Roger Schwenpe, Lawrence senior.
said is comparable to breaking the four minute barrier in the mile. Conrad's time broke the state record held by Bill Nicholson, Overland Park.
Corrad missed breaking the one-hour mark by 35 seconds, a feat Gene Wise U.S.A. couldn't accomplish.
Corned and May will compete in the time
national nights. August 11 and 12 in
London.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students without charge. FREE RELEASE. FREE RELEASE. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FIRELHALL
one two three four five
time times times times times
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CLASSIFIED RATES
The Mount Oread club will try to qualify other riders for the nationals next weekend at the state road championships held in Manhattan.
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word ... 98 ... 98 ... 98 ... 98
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These add can be placed in person or phone call the UDK business office at 864-4388.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Lawrence Gay Liberation Conference: Kansas University
summer and next fall. Everyone welcome. ¢-22
summer and next fall. Everyone welcome. ¢-22
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
LAWRENCE GAY LIBERATION'S SUMMER
CAMP IN WASHINGTON, TO NOVEMBER
or June 22. Beer will be sold. Everyone
can participate.
FOR RENT
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NOTICE
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, diaries,
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Cool it these hot aftersavings with fruits and
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and chwackshe galve at the Cashah Cafe, 808
Dinner; door to. Dinner; till 8:30 except
Sunday.
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TYPING
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40 messages taken 24 hours).
Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, mile.
Instructed typists. After proofreading, spelling
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Outdoor Beer Garden
"Beat the Summertime Blues at 14th and Ohio"
4
Monday, June 21, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports Soda, pretzels, beer mark summer softball
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
The theory that exercise renews the body, supports the spirit and keeps the mind in vigil is tested at 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday on the field east of O-Zone.
Intramural softball competition began last week as the teams got a first look at the field.
Encouragement came from small but vocal cheering sections made up of wives, sisters and friends.
Mike Heaston, summer intramural director, said last week the leagues had been formed for all interested University people - faculty, staff, undergraduates and graduate students. He said teams were primarily formed from students, although some living groups and miscellaneous groups were represented.
Last week's games began the seven-week season involving five men's fastpitch and 15 men's slow-pitch and four co-rec (combined) teams. The games, scheduled for Sunday, are mostly for fun. Heston said, although some teams become very competitive.
"Some of the fast-pitch group get real serious about it," he said. "They take it like a champ."
The league roster boasts a variety of interesting team names. Some of the names are
The Late Corners is an expansion team, and Once Is Not Enough and Ancient Mariners are groups representing the students in the marine science team as a sports team of Student Senate members.
Two of last week's games suggested the prevailing tone of summer intramural games: exercise to renew the body, beer to cool the mind and pretzels to keep the mud vigorous.
In a contest between the Late Comers and Once Is Not Enough on Wednesday, there was a very vocal cheering section, even more so than the cheering came from the players themselves.
Umpire Rob Ohm, Fort Wayne, Ind., senior, said, "These teams apparently know what they're doing. That's not always the case."
Randy Robertson, Lawrence graduate student, plays third base for the Late Comers. His wife, child and dog swelled the gallery to a total of four.
One member of the Late Corners didn't know the names of his team members.
"They just called me and asked if I wanted to play. But I still don't really know."
Across the field the Psychosis (psychology
department) and the Tic (a miscellaneous
condition) are covered in detail.
Their large cheering section seemed to be enjoying the game, as evidenced by a full cooler, bags of pretzels and discarded Coors cans.
Dedication seemed to be the key in the Psychos' strategy.
Despite a broken arm, Bob Chabot,
Chesire, Conn, graduate student, pitched
batting practice for the team and was
seldom seen sitting on the sidelines.
Heaston said getting enough players for the leagues was no problem but there was a need for more umpires. Officials for the NHL were not available, and for KU baseball team members, he said.
There are no specific qualifications for being an amputee, other than knowing how to play softball. An instructional clinic is held before the season starts. Heaston said.
Susan Mundinger, Shawnee Mission,
sopromore, is a rookieump for the intre
lment of the National Guard.
"She's pretty good, but she needs to be more vocal!" Oli said.
Mundinger said she enjoyed umpiring the games but thought umpires unnecessary.
"I think those guys don't really need
their for their games, she said.
"People would find it easier to
better if they were calling the plays.
Sometimes they get mad over such
ridiculous things."
She said she'd received compliments on her work and was respected by the teams.
our work and was respected by the teams.
All games are seven innings, or one hour
and 15 minutes, whichever comes first. A
tournament will be held at the end of July.
NEW YORK (AP) —The lawyer for Oakland A's owner Charles O. Finley said yesterday he was filing a lawsuit against baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and his office, asking for damages in the neighborhood of $10 million and a preliminary
Finley vows Kuhn suit
Attorney Neil Papiano said the complaint would be filed "Monday but more likely on Tuesday." There would be several cause of action, Papiano said, "at least
The lawyer said there had been no change in Finley's order not to play the trio of players in limbo: Vida Blue, Rollie Fingers and Joe Rudi.
"This is not a vindictive move," Papiano said. "It's made from legal and practical considerations. These are somebody else's property." You might also be property. What if they get hurt?"
Marvin Miller, executive director of the Players' Association said Kuhn single-handedly plunged baseball into the biggest mess it has ever seen. He said he thought the potential, in terms of damage, was tremendous.
The Yankees, thus far, have been quiet on the matter, refraining from commenting until their promised news conference early this week. The news conference would do when he said at his Friday news conference that he expected legal action from Steinbrenner's ballclub.
There will be no litigation from the Red Sox, however.
"I don't know what the hell the Commissioner is basing his ruling on," said Boston owner Tom Yawkey. "But I will use it as evidence that there are too many laws in sports already."
**GAMES**
Cleveland 11, Kansas 8
New York 4, Chicago 3
Boston 4, Cleveland 3, 11 innings
Baltimore 9, Texas 7
Baltimore 9, Texas 7
Kansas City 39 21 659 *
Texas 33 26 638 *
Oklahoma 26 26 8 *
Minnesota 29 32 475 *
California 29 32 475 *
California 29 32 603 *
W L Pct. GB
Philadelphia 35 26 1374
Pittsburgh 35 26 874
Baltimore 33 26 483
Chicago 32 26 483
St. Louis 32 26 483
Milwaukee 32 26 483
Cleveland 40 25 613
Los Angeles 37 29 540 5/4
San Diego 37 29 540
Houston 30 25 462
Atlanta 35 25 420
Alabama 35 25 418
Puerto Rico 35 25 418
| | W | L | Pet. | GB |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| New York | 20 | 18 | .78 | -7 |
| Cleveland | 30 | 29 | .70 | -7 |
| Detroit | 20 | 28 | .65 | -7 |
| Boston | 29 | 30 | .42 | 8 |
| Detroit | 27 | 33 | .42 | 8 |
| Milwaukee | 27 | 33 | .42 | 15/4 |
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Baseball Standings
Indians defeat Royals, 11-8
Houston 9, Pittsburgh 4,1st
Houston 9, Pittsburgh 4,1st
Rainford, rainford, rainford
Philadelphia 6, Cleveland 1
San Francisco 2, New York 2
Baltimore 2, Boston 3
San Diego 5, St. Louis 4
Los Angeles 5, Los Angeles 5
AMERICAN LEAGUE Foot
SUCH LOGIC may help to explain why "End of the Game" has the look of being
"I like the decision," said Ted Borda, the Cleveland Indians' owner. "I think it was that bad."
The Indians scored three runs in the second inning with Fosse driving in the first
The single in-joke with any importance is
The Indians pouned on Kansas City starter Mark Littell, 3-2, for seven runs in two innings. They led 9-0 before Kansas City sent 13 mph to the plate in the fourth.
Bibby, 3-2, came in with none out, the bases loaded and seven runs home in the fourth innning and retired the Royals with a strikeout by Hal MMcAe and a single by Al Cowens.
CLEEVELAND (AP)—Jim Bibby and two other Cleveland hurriers组合 for six innings of shutout relief and Ray Fosse drove in four runs as the Indians survived an eight-run fourth-inning outburst by victory and defeated the Royals 138 yesterday.
Gather your hair up and come to see the pros at Head-to-Head for a great cut, extra body, super-natural hair coloring, reconditioning or plain old good advice. Together, we can do it.
"The autumn landscape is full of the beauty of nature before death or winter and it contains a lot about death. Schelld has declared, "I think if you are interested in life, if you want to live life to its fullest expression, you have to be interested as well in death, which ends with death."
However, Schell was evidently satisfied much too early that he had a sure fire hit. Instead of leaving open the possibilities for the magic, jarring chemistry necessary for great motion pictures, Schell has sufficed the production in the name of "art."
Rules of 'Game'prove pretentious
901
Kentucky
842-9001
instantly entombed. The camera work is beautiful to look at, but it is as static as the still portraits that comprised the greater half of "Bary Lydney," and far less detailed than "The Wizard." A great motion picture, one would think, would concentrate on motion. Not Sochell.
DESPITE THE traditional premise of the story, very little attention is given to the evidence that he has condescend to explore the alternate topic, the all-important motives of the suspects, victims and sleuths. Instead, the viewer is left with a murious or puzzling, yet over-composed, shots.
Review
Now Baerliack is investigating the death of his assistant, Robert Schmidt (Donald Sutherland). He is aided by an ambition (not pretentious) junior officer, Walter Wright (Vaughn). Together, the two men set about pinning his murder on Gastmann.
Head-to-Head
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Potentially a diverting mystery with the proper number of twists and turns, "End of the Game" might even have become one of the greatest films in recent intriguing cast in Martin Rittin, Robert Shaw, Jon Voight, and Jacqueline Bisset; a respectable source in Friedrich Duerrennat's novel, *Directions* and His衬衫 and a solid director in former actor Maximilian Schell.
Violinist Pinchas Zakerman plays under a lone tree, Shell's prized autumn leaves falling around him. A mask of a decapitated woman's head rests on a silver platter. a cheetah strolls into a room shortly after Jon Vogt has entered. And Maximilian Schell Voigt has entered. The two must-see Gastmann's parties. Alas, none of these things have any bearing on the plot.
Contributing Writer
Duerrmann's appearance as a writer named Friedrich. He makes some cryptic comments about a chess game he is playing with himself, then proceeds to sweep the figures off the board. In view of the many clues he leaves for the opponent undoubtedly some thematic significance to this speech, but it's not worth the effort of figuring it out.
The difference between "ambitious" and "pretentious" is the difference between wishing to succeed and claiming to have already succeeded. On no theater screen in Lawrence is this distinction more apparent than the nightly showings of "End of the Game".
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Even the key actions in the story are downplayed. The "game" is a lifelong duel between police commissioner Hans Baerlach (Ritt) and an international criminal industrialist, Richard Gastmann (Shaw). Since Gastmann's murder of their friend, Erik Burchard, years earlier, Baerlach has sought to prove his rival's guilt in other affairs.
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WITH DEFICITS in all other areas, only the cast could salvage this film. Martin Ritt is properly and pensively dogged, and Shaw is convincingly villainous. Jo Vontgirl's performance is embarrassingly shallow, while Jacqueline Bisset is merely enigmatic and disarming. Her performance provides the winning necessary to interest the viewer in the characters.
"End of the Game's" pretensions are so pervasive that the actors don't bother to do anything particularly watchable; why stop them? The role already assumes to have succeeded?
4 blocks east of Mass. on 15th 843-2004
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Fortunately, there is a single bright spot in the picture, and you can have the full benefit of it without staying for the end of the game. Donald Sutherland does a highly comic turn that avoids being pretentious, and is certainly not overambitious. Fittingly, he is a casket killer, he sketches with his pen, corpse. Which may mean that Maximilian Schel is breaking new ground as a master of dead weight.
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GRE Volumous home study materials
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OCAT Courtesies that are currently updated
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Spring and Fall Compacts
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They batted around in the third, scoring six more off Littell and Steve Mingori. The key blows were a two-run single by Fosse and a two-run double by rookie Orlando
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.150
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
New meanings pervert old words See page 3
Tuesday, June 22.1976
Higher tuition on agenda
By the Kansan Staff
A tuition increase at least $50 a semester for resident students and $150 for nonresidents beginning the fall of 1977 could be made today by the Kansas Board of Regents.
Glee Smith, Board of Regents chairman,
said yesterday that the Regents would
be posting the text of this morning. But if they find they don't
have enough information to make a decision today, the tuition hike question would be postponed until the Regents' August 13
THE COUNCIL of Presidents, made up of presidents of the Board of Regents' colleges and universities, made a counter proposal of a $5.5 million increase. That would mean a $50 increase per semester for residents and $150 for non-residents.
One proposal, which was formulated by the 1922 Commission of the Kansas legislature, calls for a $9.1 million increase, or a $30 million increase, in墨ester for resident schools, at all state universities.
Smith called the proposal from the Council of Presidents "more realistic," and said it would receive more serious consideration from the Revents.
"I think it's in line with what's needed," he said.
Although the Karas Legislature makes appropriations which feed the operating funds for the Regents' schools, the recommendation from the legislative 1202 Commission isn't banning. Only the Board of Regents can determine student tuition and
"THE LOGISLATURE does have some
reason to matter, but we see the
fees, Smith said.
The 1020 Commission is a generic name given all committees in the country set up to coordinate the activities of the Commission.
Title 1202 requires that all universities set up educational planning committees. Kansas' committee is known officially as the Legislative Education Planning Committee, one of its kind in the country composed entirely of members of the state legislature.
SMITH SAID the proposal from the Council of Presidents would bring the proportion of students in their education to approximately 25 per cent. The recommendation from the 1202 Commission would result in students paying slightly more than 25 per cent of that cost.
University of Kansas students currently pay 22 per cent of the cost of their schooling. The average for all Regents' universities is 19 per cent.
All student fees go into the general operating fund of the university they attend. Smith said he thought a flat increase for all of the Reserves' schools was appropriate
THREE YEARS ago, tuition was raised at the universities in the Regents' system: KU, K-State and Wichita State. But it's been eight years since the last raise at Fort Hays State College, Kansas State College at Pittsburg and Emporia Kansas State College, the colleges in the Regents' system.
B-school lacks blacks, women in recent surge
Enrollment in business schools nationwide is increasing rapidly, and KU's school is "bursting at the seams," Dean Joseph Pichler said vetteday.
Enrollment in the undergraduate business program has increased 36 per cent since 1974, he said, though the number of white and black students is still relatively low.
Business has come of age as a respected area of collegiate study, Picher said, and today's business school isn't simply a training school, but an attempt to apply liberal arts knowledge to the traditional areas of business.
The school is eager to expand the number of women and blacks enrolled, he said, and the number of girls enrolled will increase.
"Historically, minorities have not chosen business as a field of study," Pichler said. Only 10 of the business school's 1,200 students are black, he said.
Pichler said the business school should be attractive to black students because the economic opportunities are unlimited. He said minorities who were active in business could have an impact on society and help solve problems of discrimination.
Blacks in the school have shown interest in increasing black enrollment, Pichler said. The Black Business School Council (BBSC) has started a counseling and program and has brought black high school students to the school to encourage them to pursue a degree.
The BBSC has also solicited about $3,000 from private firms for minority scholarships.
Enrollment of women in the business school is also low. Pichler said that of the 1976 business school graduates, only 12 per cent were women. He said that in three or four years women could comprise 40 to 50 per cent of the business school enrollment.
“It's appropriate at this time for a flat
statement,” he said, that the Council is
proposing, "Srith said."
Del Shanker, executive vice chancellor,
said the Council of Presidents' proposal was "lower than many others that were floating around as possible alternatives."
"My guess is that there will probably be some increase in fees for the fall semester and I hope that they will increase by no more than was suggested by the Council," he said.
HOWEVER, SMITH said any fee increase wouldn't become effective until the 1977-78 law.
Tedd! Tashse, student body president,
said she would probably support the $5.5
million fee increase because she thought if
would help avoid harmful budget cuts later.
Regents recommend part of new program requests
Faculty merit pay increases, fee waivers for graduate students and computer funding are some of the budget items she said she was afraid would be cut if Regents' universities don't support a tuition raise, Tasheff said.
by TOM BOLITHO
The Kansas Board of Regents yesterday recommended an increase of $6.7 million in the operating budget of the University of Kansas for fiscal year 1978.
The Regents' approval of the $6.7 million increase gives KU a total operating budget request of $88,210,954. University officials also approve the governor and the legislature in August.
Partial approval was also given for the maintenance and replacement of scientific and teaching equipment, $169,476 of the cost, by the second second on the priority list, Shankel said.
"I wish that the Regents had been able to approve more requests," Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday. "But they under the restraints from inflation and a tight fiscal year. We fared reasonably well in new and improved program requests, though you always wish you could get more funding."
The Regents gave full approval to seven of KU's new and improved programs requests. They were: study of the chemical quality, training in Western European cooking, $13,600; physical placements provements, $12,460; operation of the new Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art, $100,734; development of special education programs, $64,648; master's degree programs, $54,098; salary payments for unused sick leave at retirement, $74,150; and expiration of secondary prospects of hydrocarbon prospects in Kansas 440 460
The Regents approved $19,500 of the $2.5 million increase sought by the University for new and improved programs. Partial approval was given for increased library support, $180,000 of the $300,000 requested. Regents last week that library support was the first priority on the new and improved programs list.
KU also received approval to seek a $31 million increase in the general use fund and to increase the number of students to fund. Included in these increases is a seven per cent faculty merit salary raise, $259,716; for unclassified salaries and benefits, $484,887; and new maintenance positions, $488,887.
The Regents completely cut a program for the severely handicapped in rural areas and a program for the replacement of federal capitation grants for the School of Pharmacy. Shankel said that these two programs were high on the priority list.
MARK TWAIN
The longest day
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
Yesterday the sun reached its northernmost point on the celestial sphere, the summer solstice. so the sum final set over Frazier
Hall, students at the University of Kansas experienced the longest day of the year.
Leaders consider problems of black faculty
By KATHY SOKOL
and
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
DWIGHT THOMAS
Staff Writers
After pouring the mold for the statue that will be used as the new national symbol for the Federal Weather Bureau, Elden Teft (left), professor of painting and sculpting, and David Boon (right) Lawrence special student, unloaded what was left of the molten bronze in a chamber of molten ingots, a form that could be kept easily and used at a later date. See story on page 2.
Formal discussion of the problems of retaining and recruiting black faculty members at the University of Kansas began last night when University administrators met with a two-member faculty steering committee.
"Before this it was disjointed communication; now it is rational and organized planning," Harrison Smith, associate professor of social welfare, said.
Hot stuff
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor,
who arranged the meeting, said, "There are
a lot of things that we are trying to do but it
is a slow process."
RON CALGARD, vice chancellor for academic affairs; William Argersinger; vice chancellor for research and graduate programs; William Hogan for student affairs; and William Hogan, associate dean of the school of engineering committee, were at the meeting.
Melting metal in the furnace.
Hogan said, "The meeting was an indication of people interested in arresting the problems, although there was a difference of opinion in how to obtain our goals."
Shankel said, "We are trying to recruit more minority teachers, but the demand for minority teachers exceeds the supply. There are a number of areas where there is a need." Ph.D.s are a very limited number. Ph.D.s in business and mathematics."
Robert Sanders, associate professor of biochemistry, said, "I think KU has a problem in competing because first KU is in the Midwest and the concentration of
minorities is in the east, west and south parts of this country."
SANDERS, A member of the black faculty for ten years, said he was disappointed to see that the retention rate of black faculty was low.
"To see that 20 per cent of the black faculty is leaving a bit high," Sandif
Six black faculty members will leave in positions they are rent for jobs at other institutions and pursue degrees.
Jacob Gordon, associate professor of African studies, said he thought the reason for his interest was the lack of
compete effectively for qualified blacks professionals; not just in terms of salaries, but in terms of a community which people want to live in."
Gordon said there were no black professionals who were native to Lawrence and that it was the community and school that bring black professionals into the area.
ANOTHER SOLUTION, according to Gordon, would be for KU to adopt a reverse discriminatory practice in which minorities are paid high salaries.
"We have to allow the job market to
By KARENSALISBURY
Ritter says civil rights lag at KU
See FACULTY page 2
Discrimination in both employment and academic recruiting continues at the University of Kansas, according to Bonnie Bracken, director of the Office of Affirmative Action.
The squealing of tires has recently sounded from Jayhawk Drive as they go up the hill. Signs stop signs at the intersection with Sunflower Road by Watson Library.
"We consistently confuse saying we believe something and doing it," she said in a speech last night at Swarthout Recipe Hall.
Speaking on the topic of "The Continuing American Revolution," Fitter said a revolution wasn't continuing in the progress of civil rights.
RITTER SAID KU was losing minority faculty members and making little progress in bringing women's salaries up to men's or cutting new women and minority faculty.
For the 1974-75 fiscal year, recruitment of
"It seems like we were going somewhere and then chanced our minds," she said.
She said KU was losing minority faculty because the already small number of faculty members would be gone.
"There is no social life for the black professional in Lawrence," she said. "We have failed to develop the kind of com- munity would attract major black scholars."
The intersection became a four-way stop Friday afternoon.
THE ABSENCE OF a larger minority presence, rather than problems over salary and benefits.
KU installs 2 stop signs
Bob Ellison, captain of KU police, said yesterday no tickets had been issued for not stopping at the sign.
Ritter said her office was concerned with salary discrepancies between men and women.
"We will warn for a short period of time," he said.
Ellison said the signs were installed for safety reasons because an increase in night classes had increased traffic on Jawhack Drive.
minority faculty showed that minority persons were offered no full professorships; 1.3 per cent of the all associate professorships offered; 1.1 per cent of all the assistant professorships offered; and 5 per cent of all the instructorships offered.
DEPARTMENTS DON'T get applicants unless they have a reputation for hiring minority persons, she said but sometimes the recruitment candidates because of poor recruiting channels.
"KU depends on the grapevine to recruit minorities," she said.
Ritter said that the university community
had been protected from taking responsibility for a short shortage of minority faculty.
"We must look at ourselves honestly," she said.
THE IMPLEMENTATION of anti- discrimination policies will be complicated in the light of a new law.
"There is an increasing anger towards women and minorities," she said. "All federal legislation is heaped together and resented in the minds of many."
The existence of reverse discrimination or discrimination directed towards white persons is still unresolved.
Director's job at SIU looks good to Savers
By LEWIS GREGORY
Gale Sayers, assistant director of the Williams Fund at the University of Kansas, said yesterday he thought his chances of winning would be good. Illinois in Carbondale, III., were good.
Sayers, the former Kansas all-American who has been with the KU athletic department for three and one-half years, is one of five men named as finalists for the position. Sayers will interview for the position July 5 or 6.
"I WANT to be an athletic director and I'm looking forward to interviewing with you."
Also under consideration for the job are:
Paul Lambert, SIU basketball coach; Leo Cahn, SIU athletic director; Memphis Southman of the World Football League; Dale Foster, athletic director at Dayton University; and Bill Blekrak, athletic director at Arizona University.
The position opened when SIU athletic director Dou Weaver resigned to take the head coaching role.
Southern Illinois University has two
"I've never been on the SIU campus, but I've read about it and know persons who graduated from there and work there," Savers said.
Sayers is the last candidate to be interviewed by the SIU selection committee. He said he expected the new director would assume the position August 1.
SAYERS SAID he didn't want to talk about his reasons for wanting to leave KU but said he would discuss matters later if he were appointed athletic director at SIU.
major campuses, at Carbondale and at Edwardsville. Together, the campuses comprise a university with a full-time enrolment of almost 30,000, ranking it as one of the most prestigious universities in the country. The Carbondale campus is located 100 miles northeast of St. Louis.
Sayers starred for the Jayhawks during the 1962-63-64 seasons before gaining a greater reputation with the Chicago Bears of the National Football League.
HE WAS a two-time all-American at Kansas and was selected to the all-Big Eight team three consecutive years. Sayers finished his career in 1965, times and was Rockie of the Year in 1968.
Sayers totaled 2,675 career yards and scored 20 touchdowns as a Jaiyhawk. During his sophomore season he rushed for 1,125 vardens and seven touchdowns.
After a junior season of 917 yards, Sayers was considered a Heisman Trophy candidate, but he had only 833 yards and five touchdowns his final season at KU.
After college Sayers was the first-round draft choice of the Chicago Bears and the Kansas City Chiefs. The Bears won his contract from the Chiefs.
SAYERS' PRO career was shortened by injuries to both knees. He had a total of five operations on his knees. His last injury came in 1970.
After his last operation, Sayers decided to make one last effort with the bears. He had a discouraging year and announced his retirement in September, 1972.
Savers then lived in Chicago, where he worked for a stock brokerage company.
2
Tuesday, June 22, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Haldeman wrong on tape
KANSAS CITY—H. R. Haldeman, former chief of staff to President Nixon, said he cautioned on several occasions against destroying the White House tapes because he felt they could absolve the President and him of any wrongdoing in Watertec.
"Little did I realize how the tapes really could lie by creating a presumption of infallibility as to their being the ultimate source of truth," he said.
In the third of a five-part copyright series distributed by Universal Press Sym-
phony City, Haldeman said he learned later he was wrong in his belief that the tapes had been
Haldeman said his recollections of the taping system varied from some points made in a deposition by the former President last fall.
"I do not remember, for example, any conversation with Don Kendall, as the deposition states, in which Nixon's close personal friend is to have communicated, through me, an urgent request from former President Lyndon Johnson that Nixon install a tapping system to assist in writing his memoirs," Haleman said. "Nixon's concerns were more in the area of maintaining an accurate historical record—especially in areas of national security and foreign policy."
Mrs. Ford hits road again
WASHINGTON—For the second straight week, First Lady Betty Ford will represent her husband at a Republican state convention—this one in Minnesota.
White House Press Secretary Ronald Nelsen said he knew of no present plans for President Ford to make any political trips between now and the fall.
However, Nessen said Mrs. Ford might well turn up at other convention conventions choosing who will decide the closely fought contest between the two candidates.
Mrs. Ford's press office announced the first lady's plans to fly to St. Paul Friday to attend the Minnesota GOP convention. She attended the state convention on Monday.
In last weekend's state conventions and other delegate-chosing conclaves, Reagan outgained Ford SS-38. Nelsen said that the results "turned out to be just what I expected."
Western trade bloc urged
PARIS-Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger proposed Monday that the western industrial countries democratize their trade with the Soviet block in order to bolster their exports, which were cut off by sanctions.
In a speech to ministers of the 24-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Kissinger said a unified approach would expand the flow of Russian oil to the West and keep Moscow from using "selective political pressure" to play one Western country against the other.
The Soviet Union and its allies, accounting for about 20 per cent of world output, have the second largest economy in the world but, needing consumer goods and technology, are in severe debt—mostly to the European Common Market countries and Janan.
Child's flu vaccine needed
WASHINGTON—Several recently tested vaccines appear safe and effective in immunizing adults against bacteria but researchers say they have trouble finding them for young children.
Researchers Monday disclosed preliminary results of the first human tests with several variations of swine flu vaccine.
Because persons in different age groups had varied reactions to the vaccine, scientists said it was possible that it would take more than one kind of vaccine to treat all those at risk.
OnCampus
Events
"THE CONNECTION," directed by Shirley Clark, will be shown tonight at 7:30 in woodruff Auditorium.
OPERATION FRIENDLY MEETING at 7 a.m. / 3:30 p.m. in Sixtwenty-Fourth Street
OPERATION FRIENDSHIP MEETS at 7 p.m. every Monday at the Center, 1628
W. 19th Street
"UNIQUE PERSPECTIVES on the Classics" will begin this Sunday at 3 p.m. on KJHK-FM 91.
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holidays. Second-class postage for subscriptions by mail are $a a semester or $1 a year in Douglass County, and $1 a semester or the county. Student subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Editor ...
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Villia Scott
Business Manager
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New exhibit to encase Little Big Horn relic
A new exhibit featuring Comanche, the army horse that survived the Battle of the Little Big Horn, will be on display by the end of this year at the Dyche Museum of Natural History.
Tom Swearingen, the museum artist who is doing construction on the exhibit, said he was finishing his work this year with anniversary of the battle in Montana where Gen. George A. Custer led more than 250 troops of the Army against the Indians of the Great Plains.
The display, located on the Museum's fifth level will have two new showcases. One will feature works by Charles Wearnley the stuffing of Comanche, and the other features Swearingen's drawing of the horse used in the book "Comanche" written by Dariy, a associate professor of journalism.
Comanche's story became history when he was badly wounded in the battle and was found, two days later, the sole living creature on the battlefield.
Swearingin will also work on Comanche, repairing tears in his skin. The skin, which had been preserved in a salt brine, was seamed to the skin with an igniifier was installed in the display case.
Later Comanche was given special attention as a symbol of the conflict between the U.S. Army and the Indian tribes of the Great Plains.
"It was very hard to work with," he said. "I'll stick with glue and pull it together, the best I could."
When Comanche on died on Nov. 7, 1891,
officers at Ft. Riley asked naturalist Lewis
Lindsay Dyche of the University of Kansas
Museum of Natural History to preserve the
Cormanche was displayed at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893 and was
The horse remains as a reminder of the outcome of the Indians' attempt to keep out of the country in the tragedy of the U.S. government's Indian policy, a plaque at the display states.
"I chose bronze because it was basically a lost process which Elden Tefl, professor of painting and traveled, traveled around the world to revive," Boon said. "I have been with Tefft for about a year as his assistant, and he has shown me this process."
then returned to KU instead of the ofl-
des they could not pay the $400 taxi-
difficult fee.
JAMES HARRIS, associate professor of psychology, said, "Decisions are made at the departmental level and this is where the need to be made in recruiting blacks."
determine the law of supply and demand." The price is few, few qualified, so the price has to go up.
Sixty-eight out of 79 academic departments at KU, or 86 per cent, have no black administrators and 64 or 81 per cent have no black faculty, according to figures released by the Office of Affirmative Action. Of these faculty members, seven, have tenure.
"I'm doing this piece to show the federal government what I can do," Boon said. "The exposure has already won me the chance to do an emblem for the state of Kansas showing the state's most important crop, wheat."
"With the cooperation and acknowledgment of Shankel, we are beginning to meet with key persons in the central administration to find solutions to our problems. This step is to meet with deans of the professional schools and then department heads."
Shankel disagreed with Gordon's suggestion.
The emblem, which took six months to complete, was approved by Congress after the 1972 presidential election.
"Bronze is very expensive, and the wing tips of the bird had to be cut off of my original design before it could be approved," he said.
This was Boon's first experience with such a large piece of bronze.
"To offer blacks more money is a dangerous practice and I philosophically don't believe in it," he said. "It would invite reverse discrimination suits."
David Boon, Lawrence special student,
designed and sculpted the statue, which
the national Oceanic and Atmospheric Adm-
inator's new emblem throughout the country.
About 15 people watched as Boon poured the red-bronze bronze into a mold a glass silica杯. The brass and glass pieces were
Almost 30 pounds of bronze heated to 2,000 degrees was poured into its mold last night as the final step of a project by a University art professor. The Bronze Museum and the Federal Westher Bureau in Topeka.
Faculty . . .
From page one
Student pours molten bronze for new statue
SUA Summer Films
A film by independent film maker Shirley Clark of Jack Geelbars play. With Rosco Rose Browne "... Forms the basis for a brilliant theatrical occasion"—Drama Critic Brustein.
June 22
THE CONNECTION
7:30 p.m. 75°
Directed by Joseph L. Hankiewicz,
With Marlon Brando, James Mason,
Sir John Gielgud, Louis Calherr,
Greer Garson.
7:30 p.m. 75°
A controversial and gripping portrait of the U.S. role in Latin America, based on an actual incident. By the director of "Z."
Directed by Costa-Garves. With Yves Montand.
JULIUS CAESAR
June 23
June 25
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, June 22.1976
3
Life of words isn't totally 'gay'
By RON HARTUNG Contributing Writer
Like it or not, we are judged not only for ourselves but also by the company we keep. When we socialize with respectable types, we are assumed to be similarly respectable; when we cruise along with the low-life crowd, we are judged accordingly.
As with us, so with our language. We speak it meaningless course—but that judgment is complicated complex combination of emotions, connotations and associations. In short, words are expressed in a way.
The chief distinction is that, words, unlike ourselves, frequently have little control over the other words with which they are seen.
NATURALLY, THERE are always words that travel simultaneously in two circles—words that elicit nods or snickers, depend on the listener. Wien leads this mottle crew.
But 'sometimes a thoughtless minority adapts a perfectly hardworn word to its own limited ends, rendering that word useless to you. Can there be a better example than Gay?'
Remember what a wonderfully light-hearted word Gay used to be? It used to skip hand-in-hand with such pleasant words as lovely, Lively, Ab, what a group that was,
showered with sunshine and sprinkled with flower petals.
But this Eden was not to last for Gay. One fateful day it lagged behind its merry hour, but the gullies chanced some coquettish little preposition, when denly! from behind a closet door an arm reached out and plucked poor little Gay in his head. The squirrels. Gay was kidaped by homosexuals.
SUNSHINE, FLOWERS and bubbling laurels are no longer the province of Gay.
lest Gay next appear as (shudder) a verb (I
gay, you gay, he gays)
Sad as the story of Gay is, it is but one of many. Really is another example. It once told me that she was a song to Aong with such brethren as "Yeshh," "What?," "You kidnille?" and "HUH?" it used to be delivered with a chipper innocence that Dale Evans might have found
THE CHIHPER Really has been largely replaced, however, with some people who are really ChiHPER Really.
Comment
other words that have been applied, justifiably or not, to his new masters, seen in the company of such scruffy types as authority, Unnatural—a godless group to be sure.
Lord, grant that this humiliation cease.
of the heavy artillery, a word used to punctuate some pitty utterances with a show of force.
Today Really is a staple in pseudo-political dialogue. (Speaker A: "The military-industrial complex is bleeding away," and then a corn flake." Soeker B: "Really.")
And the insult doesn't stop there. The pathetic, once-proud adjective that used to be sung in lifting tones has even been forced to masquerade as a noun that is shouted in militant defiance. How debating? Gaws were exposed to excels at the sound of Gays used as a title.
Sometimes Really replaces "For sure" or that favorite of millions, "Dig it," in more casual colloquy. (Speaker A: "His parties on campus." Speaker B: "Really").
The rationale behind Really's use seems
It's true, you can't go home again
By GREG BASHA
Campus Editor
The train ride back from Chicago was quiet until we clucked across the bridge over the Mississippi near Fort Madison, Iowa. The river there was wide, gray and sandy, with a single motorbelt challenged the swerving of safety light tint and white on the water.
The Mississippi was the midway mark of my journey back to Kansas for summer school. The train stopped for water and fuel and I walked up to a small stream flowed in a steady rhythm that seemed to free my mind, letting me drift back to where I had been and wonder about where I was headed.
The points of my journey were clear: to the wheat lands of Kansas, back from Chicago and its cloudy sky. What each of us called he home meant to me was uncertain.
I found Kansan held no less distorted pictures of my home. To them, Chicago was heads busted on a television screen in '68, murderers and Mayer Daley's iowls.
FOUR YEARS ago I saw Kansas only as an abyss, a vision pulled from the walls of the city where the murders of "In Cold Blood" had been committed, a world of tortures and desolate. Hat fields. City friends snickered, "Goin' to Oz, huh?" when they heard I was killed.
But the town has grown up and is getting tough in its maturity. It's been hernied on all sides by superhighways that carry cars farther away from the city to newer suburbs with quieter streets. "Nature" in Elmhurst has become a sea of traffic and a
It took me years to adjust to the pace and people of Kansas. Now, returning to Chicago, I saw it new. I spent a week in my home both and the two days after moving to Chicago. I call home, is a man-made haven, unlike the virgin plants that slope away from Lawrence. It was planned as a placid place to return to after a hectic business day in Chicago, a 'decent place to live', with well-defined streets and lawns sleeted with elm trees.
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hurricane swoosh of jets en route to O'Hare airport.
"ELMHURST IS starting to smell like Cicero," my mother often says, referring to the tough industrial bump once ruled by Al Capone. And now Elmhurst is becoming a Cicero. To collect the town's loss of income, the company employs symbols of its decline from planned牢寂.
the town the town was cursed from the day it pore down call Sandburg's house. A chair now stands where the poet's white two-story once did. And follow York Road, Sandburg's house, where the poet lived. I like a few find a few discarded sapphire bottles and crushed beer cans adorning the gutters.
On one of Elmhurst's prettier streets, Cottage Hill, a street shaded from the sun by tall, arching elms, my home town more clearly lost its innocence.
On a sidewalk on this street, David Hamby, a 23-year-old self-proclaimed presidential candidate, allegedly stabbed his father to death May 3rd. "Allegedly" is the word used by some children on their way back to a nearby grade school from lunch witnessed the killing in terror. When I was home the kids were walking on the sidewalk by the Hamby family, and they went to weeks after the killing. But any stranglers from a group would quickly catch up with the rest of the pack for the walk past 311 Cottage Hill. The blood had long been on the sidewalk, but that city street elms the elms is still somehow tainted.
focused on the river. The sun had dropped to the edge of the horizon and the Mississippi was fire red with the last light of the day.
"I don't remember ever seeing the sun set the whole time I lived in Chicago." I said to the girl in the seat next to me. "The sky was always too cloudy or gray."
She nodded and stuck her head back into Reader's Digest. It was all right. There would be plenty of sunsets ahead in Kansas.
THE TRAIN bolted from our stop and I
to be that it adds a sense of importance to the topic of conversation and, consequently, to the conversants. Thus when one replies "Really" to a statement about the weather, he's no longer discussing the weather; he's lesscussing The Weather, in all its musicality. A bouncy little "Gosh yes, you right!" just doesn't have the same effect.
Gene
Motorcycle Insurance
Doane Agency 824 Mass.
A LIST of words similarly maligned could go on and on. Really, Most of them we accept with resignation and a trembling lower lip. We steel ourselves to the realization that our vocabulary has been decreased by one once again.
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But sometimes the loss of a special word cuts us to the quick, shakes us to our very being. Such a word is Shoehorn, and you can't be able to use it again. That just isn't fair.
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Place an ad. Call 864-4358
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to their status. Students who wish to BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALF.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
times times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$0.00 $2.25 $5.00 $7.50 $9.00
Each additional
...01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
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 additions can be placed in person or via the UK business office at 864-1558.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
Lawrence Gay Liberation meeting, Kansas U.
University, next fall. November 25, summer and next fall. Everyone welcome. $2
LAWRENCE GARY LIEBERTON'S BUMMER
10 a.m. on June 22. Jerry will be served. Everyone
will get the chance to win.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS - Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTER MOBILE HOMES, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS.
Western Civilization Note—On Sale on Sale
1. Study the Western Civilization
Makes use of two materials:
2) As study guide
3) For exam preparation
*New Ancient Persian* *Proposal*
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
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Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade, furniture and Appliance Center, 70141
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LOST AND FOUND
Found, large male tabby, 12th and Vermont, call 841-7369 6-22
Lost: Opal ring, yellow gold setting. Call pat
Lost: 4-3854 via 777-6233. Call pat
Lost: 4-3854 via 777-6233.
Found, small yellow kitten in area of 9th and
Calli. Calli 2-793. 6-23
Newton High School 1974 clarring blue Stone
Baseball last month. Found last month.
Pepper every time.
6-23
Found- Tennis racquet at Robinson's tennis
house 842-163-685 or come to 908 Energy Blvd.
Apollon AiB - 28
NOTICE
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
foams, parfaits and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream,
and chocoalte garniture at the Cabat Cassi Cat 803
(check desk). (Himmer) Up to $13; offer
Sundays.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
cabinets, clocks, televisions. Open daily 18-
30PM.
GUANTIED WEIGHT LOSS: Send one dollar
guaranty for the weight loss in the
monitor at Monica Bivs. Beverly Hills, CA. 90672.
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After 26 years in business, if George doesn't have it he will make it. George's Phone Shop, 713-598-0114.
CANNING! Freshipes and herbs in bulk. The
Cheese Shoppe, 8900 W. 21rd Street #54
675-736-5000.
WIN A CARE OF BEER OR COKE. Joade Sheri
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PERSONAL
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Lawrence Gay Liberation social activities: 842-959.
Counseling: 842-7805.
TUTOR
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TYPING
WANTED
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476, after
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79
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Typist/editor, IBM PICs/altec. Discussions welcome.
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Nested: Female roommate to share older 3 Bed
842-313-692 Nice location, campus
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R
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
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WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
July 1 Oakland A's
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Aug. 9 New York Yankees
Sep. 4 Texas Rangers
Lobby
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Kansas Union Building
quality travel arrangements since 1951
Keep your car healthy
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Use the student discounts
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1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
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happy
---
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Haldeman wrong on tapes
KANSAS CITY—H. R. Haldeman, former chief of staff to President Nixon, said he cautioned on several occasions against destroying the White House tapestries because he felt they could absolve the President and him of any wrongdoing in Watergate.
In the third of a five-part copyright series distributed by Universal Press Syndicate of Kansas City, Halstadman he learned later he was wrong in his belief
"Little did I realize how the tapes really could lie by creating a presumption of infallibility to their being the ultimate source of truth," he said.
Haldeman said his recollections of the taping system varied from some points made in a deposition by the former President last fall.
"I do not remember, for example, any conversation with Don Kendall, as the deposition states, in which Nixon's close personal friend is to have communicated, through me, an urgent recommendation from former President Lyndon Johnson that Nixon install a taping system to assist in writing his memoirs," Haleman said. "Nixon's concerns were more in the area of maintaining an accurate historical record—especially in areas of national security and foreign policy."
Mrs. Ford hits road again
WASHINGTON—For the second straight week, First Lady Betty Ford will represent her hand at a Republican state convention—this one in Minnesota.
White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen said yesterday he knew of no present plans for President Ford to make any political ties between now and the coming presidential election.
However, Nessen said Mrs. Ford might well turn up at other state conventions choosing delegates who will decide the closely fought contest between the two parties.
Mrs. Ford's press office announced the first lady's plans to fly to St. Paul Friday to attend the Minnesota GOP convention. She attended the state convention
In last weekend's convention and other delegate-choosing conclaves, our outfitted Ford Escape drew a lot of attention out to be just about on its side. Ford's campaign advisers had antithetical
Western trade bloc urged
In a speech to ministers of the 24-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), Kissinger said a unified approach would expand the flow of Russian oil to the West and keep Moscow from using "selective political pressure" to play one Western country off against the other.
PARIS-Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger proposed Monday that the Western industrial democracies coordinate their trade with the Soviet bloc in response to growing economic and political tension.
The Soviet Union and its allies, accounting for about 20 per cent of world output, have the second largest economy in the world but, needing consumer goods and technology, are in severe debt—mostly to the European Common Market countries and Japan.
U. S. officials said a joint trading arrangement could be politically sensitive because it would give the United States a more prominent role as compared with other industrial countries. At the same time they said the proposal, which will be made at the meeting of the Organization for Trade and Investment committee, was not put forward in a spirit of confrontation toward Moscow.
WASHINGTON—Several recently tested vaccines appear safe and effective in immunizing adults against swine flu, but researchers say they are having trouble delivering them.
Child's flu vaccine needed
---
Researchers Monday disclosed preliminary results of the first human tests with several variations of swine flu vaccine.
because persons in different age groups had varied reactions to the vaccine, because of differing immune responses, and because of vaccine to carry out the federal plan to immunize 215 million Americans this year.
On Campus
MONTREAL HOTELS
Events
"THE CONNECTION," directed by Shirley Clark, will be shown tonight at 7:30 in woodruff Auditorium.
in Wood of Amurthor
There will be a FACULTY RECITAL at 7:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
There will be a FACULTY RECTAL at 7:30 p.m. in Swartwout Recital Hall.
BABY SHOW BONUS FRIENDSHIP meets at 7 p.m. every Monday at the Center, 1629 W.
19th.
"UNIQUE PERSPECTIVES on the Classics" will begin this Sunday at 3 p.m. on KJHK-FM 91.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holidays. Second-class postpaid mail paid at County and $10 subscriptions by mail are $ a semester or $1 a year in county. Mail to the county and $1 a semester in the county. Student subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
Editor
Managing Editor
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager
Dierck Casselman
Kelly Scott
Coral Stellard
Carol Stallard Jim Marquart
Business Advisor Mel Adams
News Advisor Bob Giles
Publisher
David Dary
Member Associated Collegiate Press
Professional Hair Styling for Men and Women
Head-to-Head
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901 Kentucky
842-9001
New exhibit to encase Little Big Horn relic
A new exhibit featuring Comanche, the army horse that survived the Battle of the Little Bighorn, will be on display by the end of Natural History.
Tom Sweataringen, the museum artist who is doing construction on the exhibit, said he was finishing his work this week. Friday's battle took place in Montana where Gen. George A. Custer led more than 250 troops of the Seventh Army against the Invasion of the Great Plains.
The display, located on the Museum's fifth level will have two new showcases. One contains a series of photographs showing the stuffing process of Comanche, and the other features Swearingen's drawing of the horse used in the book "Comanche" written by David Dary, associate professor of journalism.
Swearingen will also work on Comanche, repairing tears in his skin. The skin, which had been preserved in a salt brine, was removed by the micrissimifier was installed in the display case.
Comanche's story became history when he was badly wounded in the battle and was found, two days later, the sole living creature on the battlefield.
Later Comanche was given special attention as a symbol of the conflict between the U.S. Army and the Indian tribes of the Great Plains.
"It was very hard to work with",
"glue and seal it together the best I could,
and it together the best I could,"
"it worked."
Comanche was displayed at the Columbian Exposition in Chicago in 1893 and was
"Bronze is very expensive, and the wing tips of the bird had to be cut off of my original design before it could be approved." he said.
"I chose bronze because it was basically a lost process which Elden Telfent, professor of painting and sculpting, traveled around the world to revive." Boon said. "I have been with Teff for about a year as his assistant, and he has shown me this process."
The horse remains as a reminder of the outcome of the Indians' attempt to keep the United States from attacking and the tragedy of the U.S. government's Indian policy, a plaque at the display states.
"I'm doing this piece to show the federal government what I can do," Boon said. "The exposure has already won me the chance to do an emblem for the state of Kansas showing the state's most important crop, wheat."
Almost 30 pounds of bronze heated to 2,000 degrees was poured into its mold last night as the final step of a project by a University professor at the University of Texas and the Federal Weather Bureau in Topeka.
The emblem, which took six months to complete, was approved by Congress after a three-year investigation.
determine the law of supply and demand." Gordon said. "There are few qualified, so you can see what happens."
then returned to KU instead of the of-
tachments used; they could not pay the $400
indefinite time.
JAMES HARRIS, associate professor of psychology, said, "Decisions are made at the departmental level and this is where the need to be made in recruiting blacks."
Faculty...
Student pours molten bronze for new statue
David Boon, Lawrence special student, designed and sculpted the statue, which the national Oceanic and Atmospheric Admiring Council has its new emblem throughout the country.
About 15 people watched as Boon poured the red-bronze into a mold of silica glass tissue.
This was Boon's first experience with such a large piece of bronze.
"With the cooperation and acknowledgement of Shankel, we are beginning to meet with key persons in the central administration to find solutions to this problem. The step is to meet with deans of the professional schools and then department heads."
Shankel disagreed with Gordon's suggestion.
Sixty-eight out of 79 academic departments at KU, or 86 per cent, have no black administrators and 64 or 81 per cent have no black faculty, according to figures released by the Office of Affirmative Action. Of these faculty members, seven, have tenure.
"To offer blacks more money is a dangerous practice and I philosophically don't believe in it," he said. "It would invite reverse discrimination suits."
From page one
A film by independent film maker Shirley Clarek of Jack Gelber's play. With Rosco Lee Brown "... Forms the basis for a brilliant theatrical occasion"—Drama Critic Br罗斯堡.
SUA Summer Films
June 22
THE CONNECTION
7:30 p.m. 75°
Directed by Joseph L. Hankiewicz,
With Marlon Brando, James Mason,
Sir John Gieglud, Louis Calhier,
Greec Garson.
7:30 p.m. 75°
JULIUS CAESAR
A controversial and gripping portrait of the U.S. role in Latin America, based on an actual incident. By the director of "Z."
June 23
Directed by Costa-Garves. With Yves Montand.
June 25
STATE OF SEIGE
7:30 p.m. '1.00
All Films Shown In WOODRUFF
AUDITORIUM
PUFF'S
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Cheerios' Meerzacham's Bier Roots
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Politicians' Stumps constantly on hand.
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SAMC TUARY
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, June 22, 1976
3
Life of words isn't totally 'gay'
By RON HARTUNG
NONHUMAN CONTRIBUTING Writer
Like it or not, we are judged not only for ourselves but also by the company we keep. When we socialize with respectable types, we are assumed to be similarly respectable; when we cruise along with the low-life crowd, we are judged accordingly.
As with us, so with our language. We judge words by their meanings, of course. We judge speech by its complexity and complex combination of emotions, connotations and associations. In short, words are always about what is being said.
The chief distinction is that, words, unlike ourselves, frequently have little control over the other words with which they are seen.
NATURALLY, THESE are always words that travel simultaneously in two circles—words that eicit nouns or smickers, depend on the listener. Wiener leads this motive cowt
But sometimes a thoughtless minority adapts a perfectly hardwrist word to its own limited ends, rendering that word useless to them. Can there be a better example than Gay?
Remember what a wonderfully light-hearted word Gay used to be? It used to skip the ladies, like Frisky, Fisky, Hivasson, Blith, Feestive, Lively, Ah, what a group that was,
showered with sunshine and sprinkled with flower petals.
But this Eden was not to last for Gay. One fateful day it lagged behind its merry hour and the Eden had coquettish little preposition, when suddenly! from behind a closet door an arm reached out and plucked poor little Gay into his bedspreads. Gay was kidnapped by homosexuals.
SUNSHINE, FLOWERS and bubbling laurel are no longer the province of Gay.
Sad as the story of Gay is, it is but one of many. Really is another example. It once told that he had a girlfriend Aong with such brethren as "Yeah! What?", "You kidnidd'?" and "HUH!" it used to be delivered with a chipper innocence that Dale Evans might have found
lest Gay next appear as (shudder) a verb (I gav, you guv, he grays).
THE CHIPPER REPEAT has been largely replaced, however, by what some people call the "chippewheel."
to be that it adds a sense of importance to the topic of conversation and, consequently, to the conversants. Thus when one replies "Really" to a statement about the weather, he's no longer discussing the weather; he's discussing The Weather, in all its glory. He's glory. A bounce little "Gosh yes, you right!" just doesn't have the same effect.
other words that have been applied, justifiably or not, to his new masters, seen in the company of such scruffy types as Holly, Unnatural, a godless group to be sure.
Lord, grant that this humiliation cease.
And the insult doesn't stop there. The pathetic, one-proud adjective that used to be sung in lifting tones has even been forced to masquerade as a noun that is shouted in militant defiance. How debasing! How the insults are excels in the sound of Gueses was used as a title.
A LIST of words similar maligned could go on and on. Really. Most of them we accept with resignation and a trembling lower lip. Westeel ourselves to the realization that our vocabulary has been decreased by one once again.
Comment
of the heavy artillery, a word used to punctuate some pitiful terms; a show
CATFISH
BAR & GRILL
Today Really is a staple in pseudopolitical dialogue. (Speaker A: "The military-industrial complex is bleeding the earth with a corn flake." Speaker B: "Really.")
CATFISH
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Sometimes Realty replaces "For sure" or that favorite of millions, "Dig it," in more than two places. Ms. Ari: "Hs fraternity has the gayest parties on campus." Speaker B: "Really."
The rationale behind Really's use seems
It's true, you can't go home again
The Mississippi was the midway mark of my journey back to Kansas for summer school. The train stopped for water and fuel before we arrived, but I flowed in a steady rhythm that seemed to free my mind, letting me drift back to Jenna and wonder about where I was headed.
The points of my journey were clear: to the wheat lands of Kansas, back from Chicago and its cloudy sky. What each of us called me home meant to me was uncertain.
I found Kansans hold no less distorted pictures of my home. To them, Chicago was heads busted on a television screen in 188, murderers and Mayor Daley's iwls.
The train ride back from Chicago was quiet until we clucked across the bridge over the Mississippi near Fort Madison, Iowa. The river there was wide, gray and muddy. The motorcar challenged the swirling tides, its safety light tiny and white on the water.
Campus Editor
FOUR YEARS ago I saw Kansas only as an abyss, a vision pulled from the sky where I came to be, where the murders of "In Cold Blood" had been committed, a world of torados and desolate, flat fields. City friends snuckered, when they heard I was to come to college before.
By GREG BASHAW
It took me years to adjust to the peace and people of Kansas. Now, returning to Chicago, I woke a new. I spent a week in my neighborhood. The suburb of Elmhurst, the suburb of Chicago I call home, is a man-made haven, unlike the virgin plains that slope away from Lawrence. It was planned as a placid place to return to after a hectic business day in Chicago, a "decent place to live," with well-maintained lawns and streets lined with elm trees.
But the town has grown up and is getting tough in its maturity. It's been hemmed in on all sides by superhighways that carry cars farther away from the city to newer suburbs with quieter streets, "Nature" in Elmhurst has become a sea of traffic and a
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focused again on the river. The sun had dropped to the edge of the horizon and the Mississippi was fire red with the last light of the day.
On a sidewalk on this street, David Hamby, a 23-year-old self-proclaimed presidential candidate, allegedly stabbed his father to death May 3rd. "Allegedly he went on a rampage and stabbed children on their way back to a nearby grade school from lunch witnessed the killing in terror. When I was home the kids were walking on the sidewalk by the Hamby house." He was killed weeks after the killing. But any stranglers from a group would quickly catch up with the rest of the pack for the walk past 111 Cottage Hill. The blood had long been washed from the sidewalk, but that city behind the elms is still someones tainted.
"ELMHURST IS starting to smell like Cicero," my mother often says, referring to the tough industrial burged once ruled by Al Capone. and now Elmhurst is becoming a symbol of innocence not easy, but there are symbols of its decline from plumed purity.
hurricane swoosh of jets en route to O'Hare airport.
On one of Elmhurst's prettier streets, Cottage Hill, a street shaded from the sun by tall, arching elms, my home town more clearly lost its innocence.
Perhaps the town was cursed from the day it tore down Carl Sandburg's house. A red, white and blue Standard gas station was built on the side of the road once did. And follow York Road, Sandburg's old street, down to North Avenue. You'll find a row of brown brick buildings and crushed beer can sacks that the gutters.
"I don't remember ever seeing the sun set the whole time I lived in Chicago," I said to the girl in the seat next to mine. "The sky was always too cloudy or gray."
She nodded and stuck her back into Reader's Digest. It was all right. There would be plenty of sunsets ahead in Kansas.
THE TRAIN bolted from our stop and I
We Write Motorcycle Insurance
But sometimes the loss of a special word cuts us to the quick, shakes us to our very being. Such a word is Sheohorn, and we can be able to use it again. That isn't just fair.
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
Pizza inn.
AMERICA'S FAVORITE PIZZA
Tuesday
Night
Buffet
5-8:30 p.m.
All You
Can Eat
$1.98
All the pizza and salad you can eat. A deliciously convenient way to enjoy a quick meal with a friend.
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925 Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Center
HAPPY HOURS
Place an od Call 864-4358
All the pizza and salad you can eat. A deliciously-convenient way to enjoy a quick meal with a friend.
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925 Iowa
Hillcrest Shopping Cen
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.30 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word 0.12 0.16 0.19 0.23 0.26
word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UCB business office at 664-838.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4258
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Lawrence Gay Liberal meeting Kunan University
Lawrence Gay Liberal meeting Kunan University
summer and next fall. Every weekend $-62$
and every weekend $-62$
LAWENCHIE GAY LIBERATION'S SUMMER
m. June 16. June 23. Beer will be served. Everyone
will be encouraged.
FOR RENT
2 bdr. all utilities paid on campus Furnished
furnished. Free parking. n/c pool. 843-4932
ATTENTION STUDENT BENEFITS - Drop in and attend the 'Bring Your Child to School' (in phone) class at WESTERN PRESTIGIOUS (in phone)
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
1. What is Western Civilization?
Makes sense to use them.
2. For class preparation
3. For class preparation
4. "New Analysis of Western Civilization"
5. For class preparation
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialties. BELLO AUTO ELECTRIC, 4830-3000, 4800 W, sth (3). ELECTRIC, 4830-3000, 4800 W, sth (3).
--swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
clocks, cloaks, televisions Open daily 12
hours
CHECK OUT THESE
USED BIKE SPECIALS
1964 Honda CB160
1972 Honda CB50
1973 Honda CB50
1974 KAWASAKI 350
1975 KAWASAKI 725
1974 Honda XL725
HORIZON'S HONDA
1811 W. 6th 843-3333
Aztec Inn
Home of the
Aztec Calendar
All Mexican Dishes serve
on piping hot plates
807 Vermont 842-9455
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
GRAMOPHONE
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Staroo Components
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS AND STEREO
MUSIC FESTIVAL CITY, LOS ANGELES, WA 93107
STEERO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on your high equipment other than factory dummy or close-out products, you will receive a $100 discount at the GRAHAMPIOL SHOP at KIFFS
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
and accessories. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7041
W. 2nd St., New York, NY 10019.
GURLS-SUPER SUMMER SALE! GREAT BAR-
GAIN! THE HASTY 927, MASS WT. 6-24
Excellent deal on a new AM-FM receiver -25/25
Excellent deal on a new 4150. "Allight" Ray 8.
13 E 881.
Car stereo--JJL. - Craig. Palmer - Jenman -
Stereo - Ray Audio. Ray Audio.
8-22 St. Bridges 8-24 St. Bridges 6-22
Record Sale- buy one get one free. This week
Burry-Harry limited-supply Ray Audio. Rau-
dio. 6-22
We need a good deal to deal on a turretable. We have it
available for $50,000. The next installment of
New 100 bays. Ray Audit, I3d. E 8th L6- 22
New E W "8' 2 way play -Reg $80-now two
new E W "pital. Only at Ray Aiary, 13 E
St. 84-2017.
Honda 125, Excellent condition. 3 helmets.
H4 or best offer. 121 Louisiana, 842-6986, Rikc.
H1 or best offer. 120 Louisiana, 842-6986, Rikc.
Big-boit-tuned-fastartian - Jernon I 15-powerful
bottle tuner - Jernon I 15-phone tuner
pair only $89. Ray Audit, 15 F.inth 843-2047,
2047-6012
9' sailboat, 80 lb. royalehull (stronger than
45g艇, 45 oz. ft. sail) 843-8007 6-29
HELP WANTED
Housekeeper—part time. Call 842-6279 evenings.
AVON extra extra money for college and vacation expenses or supplement your income 18% of total annual earnings.
LOST AND FOUND
Found, large male tabby, 12th and Vermont, call
841-7396. 6-22
Found, small yellow kitten in area of 9th and
indiana. Cana 811-2793. 6-23
Lost: Oal ring, yellow gold setting. Call pat
number: 4-15945. nights 843-7717 events 634-7720
Newton High School 1954 class ring. Blue stone
Grace last month. College Gates 1952.
Pearl anyone?
Found—Tennis racket at Robinson's tennis court.
Call 841-6239 or go to 803 Enery Hall.
NOTICE
Cool it thee, hot afternoons with fruits and
foams, paraffins and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and chocoalte glaze at the Gabash Cafe, 803
deck door. Dinner too. HI 11:30 except
Sundays.
GUANTAINED WEIGHT LOSS. One dollar each.
GUANTAINED HEIGHT LOSS. One dollar each.
Mobiles Bred. Bread. Beverly Hill. Cs. 90077.
Bread. Brewery. Beverly Hills. Cs. 90077.
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't he will it make toGeorge's Google Shop, 727 504-3985.
CANNING() Fresh primes and herbs in bulk. The
Cheese Shop, 8909, W 23rd Street
6-244
7-245
WIN A CASE OF JAHVEE OR COKE- JOeer Sheridan of Jayhawk Towers is the first to receive a case of JAHVEE. The case also received $2 for simply participating in a psychology study. Need extra care maybe a judge or a psychologist?
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number one drug. If you were asked to choose between alcohol and music, MUSIC LESSONS—for your kind of music, blueglows, rock folk, and classic guitar, mandolones, jazz, and more—M41-057, M6-23 Mason Strings Instrumental
FREE KITTENS, very cute, Paul or Jim 943-
9146. 6-22
SERVICES OFFERED
Lawrence Gay Liberation social activities 843-
929.592. Counseling 842-7505.
Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 002, 102, 106, 118, 119, 118, 121, 122, 123, 500. Regular sessions or test preparation. Test readiness rate. 7-29
843-781-7
TUTOR
FAST AND ACCURATE SERVICES OFFERED.
Fax number: 514-708-3629 or log in to recordings. Call 514-708-3629 at 1-800-249-7858.
Mike L. Hutson
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 862-4476; latex
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours). 7-28
WANTED
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call $414-
3708 after 6 p.m. ti
Experienced typist—term term, thesis, mule.
Experienced proofreader—terminator, spelled out.
843-7634, Mrs. Wright.
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed,
thesis, dissertations, p.e.i.clectic B. *Scaled*
thesis, dissertations, p.e.i.clectic B. *Scaled*
Experienced typist. IBM Selectric, term *pap*
corrected by 841-3690. Passed proof-reading,
corrected correct. 841-3690.
Witness to car back into red. 75 "Vegan 6/11"
Witness to car back into red. Field House. Reuse
841-2326 evening. 841-2326 evening.
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/clite. Quality work.
Typewriter, dissertations web. **92**
Mail. **84-182** M217.
Experienced typist, IBM M-Mag-Card, term papers.
846-4305 or 843-9471
*
Experienced typist will do all kinds of typing in my home: Call Carolyn at 814-0984. 6-29
Call Otis Vann!
Needle needs to large house 411-516-508,
483-874-608 evening, 726 month, utilities, 6-24
Needed: Female roommate to share older 3 Bed
room. New location. Need area.
6-238 841-313.
For new Chevroletst and used cars at
R
Turner Chevrolet
843-7700
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FIELDS
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedheads · Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
July 1 Oakland A's
'76 ROYALS BASEBALL TOURS
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Aug. 9 New York Yankees
Sep. 4 Texas Rangers
Lobby
Kansas Union Building
SUA Maupintour travel service
in the summer.
Keep your car healthy
Use the student discounts
at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Phone 843-1211
Smiley Face
4
Tuesday, June 22, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports
KU sports arenas boast computerized scoreboards
Nearly $80,000 has been spent by two national and two local companies to buy electronic scoreboards for Allen Field House and Memorial Stadium this year, Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director for operations, said.
Phillips Petroleum Company, McDonald's University State Bank and Mitchell-Stephens Real Estate Agency bought the company's lease on the advertising space on the signs.
After the 10-year period, the scoreboard will become the property of the Kansas University Athletic Corporation, and advertisers will negotiate contracts. KUAC hopes the renegotiated contracts will increase revenue after the initial 10 years.
MEMORIAL STADIUM'S scoreboard will light up for KU's first home football game, 1:30 p.m., September 11, when KU plays Washington State.
The scoreboard was installed in five days. It is set in the ground in 22 feet of concrete, Waugh said. The sign measures 43 and one-half英寸, and 23 and one-half feet vertically.
More than 4,000 lightballs are in a message center above the scoreboard which, like the scoreboard in Allen Field House, is controlled by a computer that will flash messages and information, Waugh said.
KUAC had been disatisfied with the scoreboard, and the new scoreboard is part of what Waugh called Athletic Director programs to upgrade athletic facilities."
THE SCOREBOARD was designed and installed by American Sign and Indicator Corporation, Spokane, Wash., one of the electronic display companies in the nation.
More than 60 colleges and universities have similar scoreboards, Bob Christian-ann, president of the American Music Association, said.
The University of Oklahoma has two scoreboards from the company, and the other is from a vendor.
said. The University of Colorado will have a similar scoreboard soon, along with Iowa State and Arizona State. Indiana State now has one.
"Showmanship is the name of the game, from the jerseys a team wears to the scoreboard," Christianson said. "Scoreboards that display paid advertising are appearing in college sports complexes across the country," he said.
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Jim Spencer singled home Chicago's tying run in the ninth innings and the winning run in the last night as the White Sox nipped the Kansas City Royals 2-1 and snapped a 10-game losing streak.
Chisox beat KC in extra innings
The defeat was the third straight for the Royals, the first time this year the American League's West Division leaders have dropped three in a row.
Barrios, a 23-year-old rookie making his third start, showed a veteran's poise in working out of difficulty. The Royals, whose 200 team buitting average led a league at batting of the game, grunted runners in scoring position in the first five innings.
In the ninth, Ralph Garr and Buddy Bradford singled and, with two away, the first game. Bradford joined 10th jersey Orla led off with a single and was safe when reliever Tom Hall 11, fielded Bradford's bunt and threw late to second, then picked up second, later Bradford singled in the go-go-runward.
5 high school students join computation center
Staff Writer
By DAVE STEFFEN
The program is an outgrowth of resource sharing and job-training agreements between firms.
Five Lawrence High School students joined the University of Kansas computation center staff June 2 as participants in a program designed to teach exceptional students about computers, Paul Wolf, coordinator of the computation center said.
Input, output and simple operations work will be done until Jv 15. Wolfe said.
In fiscal year 1977, resource sharing will be extended to include development of curriculum materials for LHS and KU, Wolfe said.
Jeff Lindbaum and Arthur Parker, KU freshmen this fall, and John Huxtable and brothers Roy and Bruce Leban are involved in a program initiated this year to train talented high school students with all aspects of using computers, Wolfe said.
LHS STUDENTS have received on-the-b job-training in data entry techniques at the computation center since 1973. In 1974 LHS and KU began sharing computers.
The sharing program has several goals, he said, citing increased knowledge of computer operations for LHS students as a fundamental goal. Trained students could operate Saturday morning activities when computers were available to teachers and students. Because some students in the program will enrol in KU this fall, trained students could make up a year-round student staff for the compilation center, he said.
IN MID-JULY the students will be involved in applications and systems programs.
operations applied to individual student interests.
Rail Wavil, chairman of the LHS math department, said each of the students was a member.
Parker and the Lebanese be among the top three scorers on the Mathematics Association of American test the past two years. They first in the state on the test since 1974.
Lindenbaum's work at the computation center will be interrupted July 10 when he begins studying math and physics in a room at the Weitzman Institute in Israel.
ALL THE students said they had taken or would be taking calculus courses next year. Although Parker quit taking math after sophomore geometry, he has reached tensor calculus by reading math texts on his calculator to KU finals in the subject, Wilbur said.
Parker and Lindenbaum have taken computer science courses, but they have taught themselves most of what they know about computers. The Lebans and Huxtable have had no formal course work in computer science.
"I have trouble keeping new information in front of them, they learn so fast." Wafu so.
The students said they wanted to move past simple operations into complex programming as soon as possible. Roy Leban said simple operations work was especially mindboggling." He said he hopes to gain more challenging programming.
*ACCEPTING CARDS from users and
taking them into card readers is becoming
slow.*
Parker said he was looking forward to difficult programming, too.
Dine At A World-Famous Restaurant
BEEF BURGER
After 4 P.M. And Get . . .
Hamburgers
with this coupon
Big Mac
2
for
$1.19
Offer good only at:
901 West 23rd St.
Lawrence, Kansas
Limit one coupon per person per visit. Void after June 30, 1976.
Although eating habits may change in the summer, the body's needs are unchanged and a well-planned program of exercise and physical activity is necessary to keep up with the season's activities.
Good nutritional habits required for summer activities
We adapt to the season and the foods
Baseball Standings
W 8 L Pet. GB
New York 28 11 .500
Baltimore 31 21 .500
Indianapolis 31 21 .500
Boston 29 31 .483
Detroit 29 31 .483
Dallas 31 31 .483
Milwaukee 31 44 .13
McDonald's
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Kansas City
Texas
Oakland
Minnesota
Cleveland
California
39 23 629
38 21 497
39 32 475
29 32 475
39 32 412
We do it all for you $ ^{ \textcircled{2}} $
The sugar from the candy enters the metabolic process at a higher level than many nutrients found in the fruit, Cross said.
melons, strawberries and tomatoes are good sources of vitamin C. Fresh fruits like strawberries and melons are great additions to a diet.
W W I Pet. GB
Philadelphia 48 11 374
Pittsburgh 33 28 374
Baltimore 35 28 374
St. Louis 29 36 446
Chicago 29 36 438
Atlanta 29 36 416
NEW YORK CITY
New York 8, Cleveland 2, Washington 16
Detroit 5, Milwaukee 9, 11 lines
Detroit 3, Milwaukee 10, 11 lines
Detroit 3, Milwaukee 10, 11 lines
Detroit 3, Milwaukee 10, 11 lines
Texas 1, Oklahoma 1, 10 lines
NATIONAL LEAGUE
utilized equally by the body for energy production. But the fruit will give other nutrients like vitamin C, vitamin A and minerals—the candy supplies only sugar."
Cleveland 41 25 621 -
Los Angeles 39 27 608 -
San Diego 29 27 347 -
Houston 30 26 455 -
Atlanta 30 36 455 -
San Francisco 34 26 368 -
Philadelphia 8, Montreal 3
Atlanta 11, Houston 9
Denver 10, Indianapolis 8
St Louis 7, New York 2
San Diego 6, San Francisco 3
Intramural scores
Late Comers 15, Speedrats 1
All the King's Men 7, Ancient Mariners 1
Fast pitch men:
Late Corners 15. Speedrats 5
Coffee:
Royals 8, Plumber's Unit 7
Our Gang 9, Frazer and Associates 8
Slow pitch
Haas Racers won by forfeit over the 71's.
Ball Hall Bombers 18, Lawrence Gains 7
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GREATER COMFORT SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT
Walt Disney's
Granada
1416121 - Granada y 133892
"FOLLOW ME, BOYS"
Daily at 2:15, 7:15, 9:20
that are available at the time," Marie Cross, associate professor of human development, said last week. "It's important to be aware of what foods are good sources of particular nutrients and to take advantage of such products when they're in season.
Edgar Rice Burrough's classic
Varsity
Date/Time: November 21, 2015
"AT THE EARTH'S CORE"
7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:30 PG
Hillcrest "I could murder her in front of your eyes and you couldn't prove it."
"A piece of fruit and a candy bar will be
JON VOIGHT
JACQUELINE
BISSET
ROBERT SHAW
END OF THE GAME
Summer produce such as cantaloupe.
Sat.-Sun. 1:55
PG 7:30 & 9:40
Snack foods have little, if any, food value, according to Cross. The idea that these food provide quick energy for active people is incorrect, she said.
Hillcrest
Bill Cosby
Raquel Welch
"MOTHER,
JUGS & SPEED"
:40-9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:05 PG
Hillcrest Alfred Hitchcock's
"FAMILY PLOT" PG
7:20 & 8:35 Sat, Sun, Mat. 1:45
"NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT"
7:20 & 9:35 Sat..Sun. Mat. 1:45
"BLACKBIRD"
Sunset
Saturday 10:30 AM - Wednesday 6:30 PM
Sunset Monty Python's PC
9:30
"YUK DOWN"
Mr
Yuk
Live Bands Tuesday-Saturday
Thursday—"Equal Rights"
Guy's and Gals Free,
$1.00 Pitchers
Friday and Saturday
*1.00 Admission*
Lawrence Gay Liberation
Summer Dance
June 25
Student Union
8:00-1:00
$1.50
Beer will be sold
Everyone welcome
Before having your car repaired, ask yourself WHO's doing the job.
OR
A MASTER FORD MECHANIC
STOCKPOTS
POLICE DEPT.
WE SELL
METROPOLITAN
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A JACK OF ALL TRADES (master of none)
At John Haddock Ford we stand behind our work. That's because our mechanics have over 95 years of combined experience in repairing equipment and tools that money can buy. Our prices are low but we won't kid you about the price of repairing your car. In fact, we guarantee the price, for 90 days or 4,000 miles.
John Haddock
FORD INC
SECOND GENERATION SINCE 1914
23rd and Alabama
Ph. 843-3500
Men's Formal Wear Sale
Complete outfit $20
Includes jacket, slacks,
shirt, tie, cummerbund
and jewelry.
The University Shop
1420 Crescent Road Lawrence, Ks. (913) 843-4633
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
THERE IS NO PEACE, SAITH MY GOOD, TO THE WICKED, CRY ALoud, SPARE NOT, LIFT UP THE VOICE LIKE A TRUMPET, AND MY PEOPLE MYTEIR THEIR TRANSGRESSION, and THE HOUSE OF JACOB THEIIR SINS: *taishl 57:21*, etc.
No peace to the wicked There are two places in The Bible that tell of peace among the nations when they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spoors into pruning hooks — lashin 2nd chapter, and Micah 4th. Both messages are practically the same. The following
"AND IT SHALL COME TO PASS IN THE LAST DAYS, THAT THE MORDE OF THE LORD'S HOUSE SHALL BE ESTABLISHED IN THE TOP OF THE MOUNTAINS, AND SHALL BE EXALTED ABOVE PEOPLE WHO WILL GO HOME TO PEOPLE WHICH SHALL GO AND SAY, COMEY, ANDLET US GO UPON THE HOUSE OF THE LORD, TO THE HOUSE OF THE GOD OF JACOB; AND HE WILL TEACH US OF his WAYS, AND WE will RUN in HIS PATHS; FOR OUT OF ZION SHALL GO FORTH THE WILD WOLF, FOR OUT OF NORTHERN SHALL JUDGE AMONG THE NATIONS, AND SHALL REBUKE MANY PEOPLE; AND THEY SHALL BEAT their SWORDS into PLO- SHAREES, and their SPEARS into PRUNING HOOKS: NATIONSHALL NOT LIFT UP SWORD AGAINST NETHERNESS, AND LEAVE THEM HERE; AND COMEY, AND LEET AND IWALK IN the LIGHT OF THE LORD."
This shall come to pass in the last days, when the House of God is exalted above all else in the earth; on the highest hill of a mountain in the top of the mountains. all nations shall flow unto that High Place to judge upon all nations, and it is then that The Lord will judge upon all nations and bring peace.
Are you and I who claim to be Christian and heavenbound flowering up to that High Place, or are we flowering downward seeking another level? You and I were both at the very beginning of our journey and as many others as we can. Jesus Christ took a whip of cords and lapped out at the hypocrites and profane wreathes in The Temple, and later his disciples remembered that it was written of Him: "The seal of God is upon your head." (2 Peter 1:19) But so did a goat be shipped by express; the agent sent his porter to
and out where it was to go, who returned and reported: "Do甘走咆 *eit up where it wilt*. It is to be feared that many of us so-called Christians have "eaten up our hawkenbound tag, if we ever had one Ourcel for the world, the flesh, and the devil has consumed us, and ourSELves are gone." And he degrades the House of God, His Day, His teachings, and His paths. How then can we expect peace Charles the first, of England, in opposition to the Puritans' strict obedience to The Law of God promulgated "The Declaration of Sports" which made law for the people to spend their time at the sports field. He tried to run away from it and come to America and was on the boat to sail, but Charles 'boys took him off and would not let him leave, or may be more correct to say that God took him off as He had a job for him in England — to lead the movement that was eventually to "chop" the trees. When the church leaders excused the Story of Cromwell being kept in England to upset the "apple-cart" of Charles and his Cavaliers reminds one of Homan in the Book of Esther who thought he was building a gallows on which to hang Mordalea, when in reality he was building it for himself and his wife. He did not want his house to be made under Legislature had made it "no sin" to fish on Sunday — the one day in seven set aside by most Christians to be observed in obedience to God's Fourth Commandment, Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy, etc. It might be well for you Sunday hatchery to get a copy of the Bible, or a copy of the book of Job, or sirt, or sirt, so as to take it along to the other world. "If it seem evil unto you to serve The Lord," don't do it, that is Scripture. "Choose ye this day whom you will serve." is also Scripture, Speaking of the shroud, the late Sam Jones was often criticized for lack of knowledge, for failure to comply with the law, or sirt, so as to make much dignity as any of you. We hear a lot about the "dignity of the individual," regardless of his character, or lack of it. If we would seek to impress upon the individual the importance and necessity of "humility and the fear of The Lord" the dignity part would take care of itself. Today we seem to think that "expression" should be of impression. "Don't forget to climb the mountains!" we peace!
P. O. BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
S
urgy
her
and
ir."
the
man
oss
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
mku
KANSAN
Big senders get postal break
Wednesday, June 23, 1976
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.151
See page 4
TOM HERBERTS
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
Grazin'
While the temperature climbed to the upper 90s yesterday, this mare and her foal munched on grass throughout the early afternoon at a farm just south of Lawrence city limits. Rain forecast for today may drive these two under cover. Toppea weather of today is forecasted to be mild.
Dog control measure Ok'd
City Commissioners last night unanimously approved a new animal-control ordinance that would impose a mandatory fine on any convicted of an oral violation.
The ordinance, passed at last night's regular commission meeting, stated that animal control officers would be authorized to impound any dog found running at large within the corporate city limits and to issue a citation to the owner.
Within 72 hours from the time a dog is impounded, the owner may claim the dog as a pet.
If the dog were picked up again within one calendar year of its first impounding, the fee to obtain its release will be ten dollars more than the fee to obtain the dollars with each successive impounding.
The impounding fees will be paid to the city clerk, and no dog will be released until the owner has proved that the dog is immunized against hydrophobia.
Many applicants have responded to advertisements for the position of dean of the School of Social Welfare in the last two weeks, Arthur Katz, professor of social welfare and chairman of the University search committee, said recently.
"A significant number of highly qualified applicants have shown initial interest,"
Social Welfare sifts applicants
Katz said the search committee would make a recommendation to Ron Calgaard, vice-chancellor for academic affairs, as to whether the search would focus on candidates from KU's faculty by the end of the month.
Theodore Ernst, present dean of the School of Social Welfare will resign effective June 30 to resume full-time research and teaching.
A national search would necessitate the appointment of an acting dean as soon as possible.
Katz said the new dean's qualifications should include successful academic administrative experience or the potential for administrative leadership.
*The individual should have an interest in scholarship and the ability to encourage students.*
KU still awaits rating of bonds by NY agency
The University of Kansas is still awaiting the rating of bonds to be issued for the construction of a clinical facility at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
According to Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, the bonds, worth $22 million, were taken to New York last fall and are now available to Moody's, Inc., a bond rating agency. Moody's will rate the bonds in terms of interest, and then the bonds can be sold
Nitcher said that Moody's would probably set a rating for the bonds by the end of the week. The bonds are scheduled for sale June 29.
The proposed ordinance called for a $15 release fee for first offenders. The ordinance was amended when Commissioner Hunt said he thought the $15 fine was too high.
"We're not after the guy whose dog accidentally gets loose. We're after the habitual offender—the guy who indiscriminately lets his dog run loose."
The new ordinance also states that any dog not claimed within 72 hours of impounding became the property of the Lawrence Humane Society.
In other action, the commission approved Phase 1 of "Pedalaplan" and authorized city planners to apply for federal money to fund the project.
"Pedalplan," prepared by Myles Schachter, is a five-stage system of bicycle paths designed primarily to increase bicycle safety on Lawrence streets.
Included in Phase I, estimated to cost $106,000, is a bike path along the east side of Tennessee Street that will run from 14th街 to downtown Lawrence.
Also included in this phase are bike paths along the Kansas River levee and a path across the new Kansas River bridge that is now under construction.
The application must be approved by the U.S. Department of Transportation to obtain federal funding. Buford Watson, city manager, said he was fairly confident that the prepared plans demonstrated the necessity of the project.
"I'm confident that these proposed paths will be used extensively because they are as safe as possible."
community the proper use of the bicycle routes.
A portion of the estimated $10,060 has been allocated for advertising to teach the
The commission also approved a proposal to use the city parking lot at 8th and Vermont every Saturday morning for a farmers' market.
Watson said there had been a favorable response to the ideas of an open farmers' group.
However, Commissioner Marl Beke said he wanted to know what local grocers
Watson said, "There has been quite a bit of publicity about this, and there has been a lot of research."
The placement of a stop sign at 19th and Barker was reviewed by the commission, and the report by the city manager's office stated that the placement was beneficial in material.
Binns, however, urged the other commissioners to be a "little more apprehensive about placing stop signs and traffic signals near bus stops" in traffic too much during the rush hours.
In other action, the commission rejected a proposal to amend the city's sign ordinance, which prohibits churches and businesses on municipal signs on property other than their own.
"We need to make an effort to keep traffic moving as much as possible."
—the placement of underground utilities
—The rezoning of 9.8 acres near 27th Street and Lawrence Avenue from RS-1 to RM-1
Students at the University of Kansas will pay higher tuition beginning with the fall
Fall '77 fees up $50, $150
In other action, the commission passed ordinances regarding:
By TOM BOLITHO
—the construction of streets and sidewalks west of the country club.
Staff Writei
The Kansas Board of Regents yesterday approved the Council of Presidents' recommended increase of $6.9 million in incidental fees (tuition) for the regent colleges and universities. The Council is all the regent colleges and universities.
Kansas residents will pay $50 more a semester at colleges and universities; out-of-state students will pay a $150 increase at universities and $102.50 more at colleges. Resident students have been paying $255 a semester and an activity fee of about $80, but many students are paying $900 a semester and the activity fee KU's activity fee will be $83.90 this fall.
Glee Smith, chairman of the Kansas Board of Regents, said yesterday that the increase was largely due to rising salary costs and Other Operating Expenses (OEO). Smith said that an average 19 per cent of the total instructional budget and that the instructional budget contains all of the educational and physical plant operations at the colleges and universities.
"The regents and the legislature agreed 12 years ago that fee revenues should account for about 25 per cent of the total instructional budget. This increase is right in line with the percentage we desire," he said.
The $6.9 million increase is based on projected enrollment figures for the fall 1977 semester. Poe revenues would jump to $30 million of the instructional budget with the increase.
"Fees haven't been increased at the universities for four years, and the colleges haven't increased fees for eight years. This is a problem," said Brandon Rees, revenues at a better level. "South said,
Smith said that The Legislative Education Planning Committee of the Kansas Legislature didn't submit incidental fee recommendations to the regents.
The legislative committee had reportedly formed recommendations calling for a b.1.1 amendment to Bickford, executive officer of the Kansas Board of Regents, met with the legislative committee last week and discussed what amount of increase the regents were likely to request.
Smith said that the legislative committee could advise the legislature, but the setting of the committee would be difficult.
Keith Nitcher, vice chancellor for business affairs, said that the increase in incidental fees was inevitable and that there had been many controversies over what percentage of the instructional budget student fees should cover.
"We at the University feel that fees should be as low as possible for the student, but the 25 per cent figure is historically higher. Government considers about right," he said.
Both Smith and Nicher said that OOE costs continued to climb and that much of
the increase would be used to pay those costs. OOE cost includes the operation of libraries, museums and galleries and instructional costs. Some of the increase will be used to fund a seven per cent faculty pay approved by the regents Friday, they said.
The regents also met with the Student Advisory Committee yesterday. Tedde the regent, who is a member of the regents with recommendations for studies concerning the fee increase. The Student Advisory Committee is made up of all the regent colleges and universities.
Tasheff said that the committee's main concern was the possible counterproductive effects of an overemphasis on regents to study the effect of the increase on low-income students and university students.
Tashef proposed that the regents study the financial and resources offered by KU in their studies.
J-W's management changes work rules
Wage and hour practices for newroom employees of the World Company, publishers of the Lawrence Dully World-World have established a number of boa's employs can work each week.
The Journal-World had been the subject of an inquiry into the number of hours employees work and the amount of compensation they receive for overtime work.
Vernon Crites, wage and hour compliance officer for the labor department, wouldn't say whether his investigation of the Journal-World had been completed.
New wage and hour procedures were outlined last Wednesday by Ralph Gage, managing editor, in a meeting of newsroom employees.
Hours worked by newroom employees will be recorded and a maximum 44-hour shift is required.
newroom employees work overtime, they
work within the same two-week pay
period because he is paid
The Fair Labor Standards Act requires that all employees covered under the law,
Before last week's policy change, newsroom employees openly worked more than 44 hours each week and weren't paid for any time they worked over 44 hours.
No record of hours worked was kept at the Journal-World, and reporters were paid a straight salary. One employee said he had been fired for making a 55 hour week was uncommon.
If an employee's work is not finished by 5 p.m., he must obtain permission to remain in the newsroom. Employees must sign in if they go to the newsroom at night.
Gage said at the meeting that time cards were kept until three years ago.
Bell junkets under fire
The Observer story said investigators had uncovered several specific instances of questionable entertainment expenses related to the resort, including a side trip to Las Vegas for Kansas utility commission members to visit a Bell cable factory in
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP)—Bell System executives spend millions of dollars annually trying to influence lawmakers and rateregulators, and then hide the expenditures in vouchers labeled "conference observer" or "tableau observer reported in today's editions.
The Observer, in the final installment of a copyrighted, four-part investigative series, said much of the expense was charged indirectly to Bell customers. The Observer reported customers also faced higher rates and were more successful in efforts to win rate hikes.
The newspaper quoted Bill executives as denying that confidential expense vouchers
existed. But the paper reported that investigators in nine states, including Kansas, found last year that Bell executives had access to a confidential escape catego
Other states named by the article were Missouri, Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
“There is no confidential category of vouchers,” insisted a spokesman for the Bell parent firm, American Telephone and Radio, who said a written reply to Observer questions.
The Bell spokesman said, however, that "in some companies some vouchers have been labeled confidential to preclude these data from being read by the many employees who process and view such vouchers for company purposes."
Other questionable Bell entertainment expenses the Observer reported included:
Hosting key North Carolina legislators, including current House Speaker Jimmy Green and former Lt. Gov. Pat Tayler, on Monday night, will engage in other entertainment between 1969 and 1973, and charging the city to customers in the state. Green will appear on the Observer report.
—Paying the way for the five South Carolina Public Service Commission members and their wives to attend long courses at the several seminars at Hilton Head Island, S.C.
- Paying former South Dakota Lt. Gov. Bill Dohover $55,000 in what were called public relations consulting fees while he was in office. Dohover admitted during a hearing in May on a rate hike request by the telephone co. that he had taken the fees.
Metric measurement conversion no problem for KU professors
According to the South Dakota attorney general's office, Duoherty won't be prosecuted for any offense because South Dakota has no conflict-of-interest law.
By DAVESTEFFEN
Conversion to the metric system may intimidate most people, but to some University of Kansas professors it's a bit of almost complete and not at all painful.
In 1895, the Voluntary Metric System Bill, which outlines a 10-year plan for voluntary transition to the metric system, will be in its last year of operation. The Bill projects that Americans will have weathered the problems of transition by then.
"Transition to the metric system will be a hardware problem rather than an intellectual one," Gordon Wiseman, associate professor of astronomy department, said yesterday.
"The concepts of the system are easily mastered," he said, "Kids take to them like a duck to water. The intellectual problem will be zero."
Paul McCarthy, professor of mathematics, said his department is relatively unaffected by the conversion process. The mathematics department has texts using the metric system and texts using the current (English) system, he said.
The Observer said the spokesman was asked for the names or types of people entertained through confidential vouchers, and replied: "AT&T does not maintain copies of operating subsidiary telephone companies' expense vouchers."
Wiseman said the major problem would be adapting machines, tools and machine parts. About two-thirds of his department's equipment was used in the new system's specifications, he said.
They will continue using whatever is in a particular book, McCarthy said.
KU's chemistry department has always used metric measurements, but must purchase most chemicals in English units, Alfred Lata, chemistry lecturer, said. His department plans no special conversion activities.
—Taking Missouri Secretary of State K. Ciprattk and Missouri Public Service Commissioner William R. Clark on separate deer and antler hunting trips in February 1975 after the hunting trips were disclosed by former Southern Western Bell executive James H. Ashley, who said Clark took more than six trips as a Bell guest, the newspaper said.
version. Markings were reset to fit metric standards for the Kansas Relays this
Doug Messler, assistant athletic director, and track and field is the only KU sport director in Missouri.
"We don't anticipate any action in the near future. The national rules committee determines our changes and there haven't been rumblings of any," Messer said.
Max Lucas, assistant to the chancellor,
said most metric changes will be dealt with
through departments rather than at the
University administration level.
Flu shots for adults only
WASHINGTON (AP)—Federal advisory committees yesterday recommended that the nation go ahead with a federal plan to vaccinate children against the coronavirus by off a decision on vaccinating children.
Researchers said a study on vaccinating children and young adults should be completed by late August and a decision made then on how to proceed with children.
Committees advising the U.S. Public Health Service said that after considering vaccine options, the flu vaccine see no reason to change plans to immunize the entire adult population.
Dr. David J, Sencer, director of the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta, said there is little data on the effectiveness of vaccines.
adult immunization shortly after Labor Dav.
Sencer said the committees will decide within two weeks on the composition and selection of the board.
One of the problems is that Congress is still considering a Ford administration bill that would require the government to invest in new military technologies for human injuries beyond their control.
He conceded there have been problems with the $13-million flu program recommending an exemption.
The proposal was sent to Congress last week as the administration sought to overcome legal complications facing the insurance companies, and we inadequate liability insurance coverage.
TENNIS
Runner-up
Staff photo
Jeff Hodges, Lawrence resident, lost to Tom Kurata, also a Lawrence resident, in a men's intramural singles tournament for 4-8. Dedicated for applications for the tournament, he is a member of the USA Tennis Association.
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Scandal curbs proposed
WASHINGTON—Democratic leaders proposed yesterday a monthly accounting of every House employee's pay and duties as one way to prevent the kind of payroll-sec scandal that hit Rep. Wayne Hays.
also provide the package of recommendations approved by the House Democratic leaders would remove the power of the Administration Committee to increase the size of the House Democrat caucus.
The recommendations, made by a three-man task force and approved by the leadership's Democratic Steering and Policy Committee, also would end membership of the Board.
The Democratic leaders also nominated Rep. Frank Thompson, D-N.J., to succeed Hays. Thompson tried two years ago to unseat Hays as chairman.
Food leads price jump
WASHINGTON—Consumer prices jumped by the largest margin in six months in May, pulled up by suddenly higher food costs, the Labor Department said yesterday.
Consumer prices in May were up by six-tenths of 1 per cent, which amounts to an annual rate of 5.4 per cent, the department said. Prices went up by four-tenths in April.
The May increase means the cost of maintaining what the Labor Department considers an intermediate life style for a family of four increased last month by 70 percent.
Food prices were up a full percentage point, the biggest increase in that category since the 1.8 per cent rise last July. Meat and poultry prices staged the
Commodities other than food were up at a faster pace because gasoline, fuel oil, houses, clothing and new and used cars were more expensive.
Bribery bill proposed
WASHINGTON—A bill allowing the bribery of foreign government officials by U.S. corporations was recommended yesterday by the Senate Banking Committee.
The legislation would make it a crime under U.S. law for a corporation to bribe an official or foreign political party to stimulate or increase business.
Although the committee acted favorably, Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., and Banking Committee chairman, ordered the staff to prepare a report on the constitutional question of whether U.S. law can reach out to punish a crime by American citizens which takes place entirely outside the United States.
Rodino suggested for VP
WASHINGTON—A group of House Democrats announced a stepped-up drive yesterday to obtain the vice-presidential nomination for Peter. W. Rodino Jr. (NJ).
*Rep Charles B. Rangel, D-NY, said he will urge consideration of Rodina at a meeting Wednesday with Jimmy Carter, the probable Democratic presidential
Rangel and Rep. Mario Biaggi, D.N.Y., principal organizers of the group, circulated a list of 48 House members backing Rodino.
Biaggi said Rodine was informed of the move and did not discourage it, while saying he was not seeking the vice president. Biaggi and Rangel said they were confident that Rodine would be present.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily through Thursday during June and July, through Thursday during August and July, unday, Sunday and Holidays. Second-class subscriptions are $1 a semester or $18 a year; mail articles by $9 a semester or $18 a year; $30 a year outside the county. Substitute subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through Thursday.
Photo Editor
Publisher
Editor Dierck Caslanman
Magazine Editor Cameron Editor
Campanion Editor Grab Bassow
Associate Campus Editor Begwine Breeding
Copy Chiefs Larry Fish
Larry Fish
Business Manager Carol Stallard
Assistant Business Manager Jim Marquart
Promotion Manager Sarah McAhny
Classified Manager Johne McCleaghan
Poocher David Dary News Adviser Business Adviser Bob Giles Mel Adams
Mr.
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PASADENA, Calif. (AP)—The surface of Mars, where previous mechanical visitors came to auction and mysterious enda, was also prepared for the Mars landing preparation for a July 4 landing attempt.
Hoping to avoid the fat of U.S. landlords that went dead within seconds of touchdown, Vikingen began a 10-day safety study of the team's driving and with two cameras and other instruments.
Viking scans Martian surface
During Vikking's new orbit, 58 photographs were taken yesterday from Vikking's new orbit, where it was placed Monday. Vikking now circles the planet once every 24.6 hours—the length of a day. It approaches the surface of the sun one point and swings out to 20,255 miles above the surface at the other extreme point of its elliptical orbit.
At 11.07 a.m. PDT every day, Vlking passes over the low-lying mouth of an ancient valley where the landing site is to search for signs of living organisms.
Cameras mounted on the Viking mothership take a series of pictures each time the landing site is beneath the spacecraft. Transmitted to Earth and combined into a mosaic, the photos of project officials and the three crew will still encounter when it detaches itself from the Viking orbit and descends to the surface July 4.
On Campus
TONIGHT: "JULIUS CAESAR," directed by Joseph Mankiewczec and starring Marlon Brando, James Mason and Greer Garson, will be shown at 7 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union. Mark Holmberg, assistant professor of music theory, will present a rectal as part of the concert. The band MARK HOLMBERSONS at 8. The third summer concert by the LAWRENCE CITY BAND at 8 at the South Park bandstand will include a program of selections by Sousa, Rossini, show tunes and popular songs.
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7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:30 PG.
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---
SUMMER SPECIALS
MISS. STREET DELI
MAASSACHUSETTS
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REUBEN SANDWICH
Hot Cornbeef, Swiss Cheese and Bavarian Kraut served on cottage rye
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11 W. 9th
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The Bull & Boar
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Open Faced HOT BEEF SANDWICH
Served with thin sliced roast beef, home-made mashed potatoes—smothered in dark brown gravy. Relishes included.
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The Soviet Union, meanwhile, announced it launched yesterday a new space lab, Salyut 5, that would orbit the earth for scientific and technical studies.
The Bull & Boar
11 W. 9th
50¢ OFF — with this Coupon
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The official news agency Tass, which announced the launching, said nothing about immediate plans to man the research station. But a Western specialist in Moscow predicted that "sooner or later" the new station would be manned.
NEW YORKER
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The construction of orbiting space stations for scientific and possible military use appears to be the main priority in the continuing Soviet space program.
Lawrence Gay Liberation
Summer Dance
June 25
Student Union
8:00-1:00
$1.50
Beer will be sold
Everyone welcome
A Western space expert in Moscow said recently, "Their program today is certainly as aggressive as it ever was."
SCHOONERS
"They (the Soviets) have the resources to do whatever they want, he said. "The Soviets have made advances in some area of space that the West would love to copy."
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, June 23, 1976
3
Bugging books at KU impractical
By SUSANLYNN
Staff members at Watson Library think an electronic system to detect stolen books
Staff Writer
The system, which many libraries have adopted, requires a strip of sensitized material to be placed in each book. Elec-
trical computers also sound an alarm if a strip is detected.
"We figured it would cost us between $50,000 and $70,000 to install a system," Nancy Bengel, circulation manager, said. "We thought we'd lose that many books to be worth the cost.
"Our present expenses used to prevent books from being stolen are to hire 10 persons, paid minimum wage, who stand at the exit desk and check the books," she said. "This really doesn't compare to the expense of the electronic system."
John Glinka, associate dean of libraries,
said the electronic system wasn't esoteric.
"Even with that system you still have to have persons stationed on the exit desk," he said. "In the case of the alarm going off in the zone area it also could become a contest against the employee and the person being accused as whether he actually had stolen a book."
She said many books weren't stolen but similarly lost.
Bengel said, "We have no way of knowing how many books have been stolen. The library would have to do a complete in-depth search for all the money's worth in books are lost, each year."
Under the present system the library discovers that a book has been stolen or misplaced only after it searches in vain for a book someone has requested.
"Many times persons have illegally taken books from the library only to return them maybe three weeks later. They don't mean you can just borrow a sort of long-term loan." Glinda said.
Conversion to the electronic detection
Topekan guilty in robbery
Clarence R. Jordon, Topeka, the first of three men to be tried in connection with the February 28 robbery of a Mr. Steak Restaurant, was found guilty yesterday in Douglas County District Court of nine felony charges.
A jury of nine women and three men found the 29-year-old Jordan guilty on three counts of aggravated robbery, five counts of assault with a weapon, and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
After the verdicts were read, Jordan's attorney, Robert Brown, and Judge Frank R. Gray, set July 6 as the date for a hearing to consider motion for a new trial.
On the afternoon of the robbery three gunmen entered the restaurant, at 920 W. 22rd, and ordered a meal. They then took their weapons, including a sawed-off shotgun.
Rachelle Rasing, a waitress and a University of Kansas student, was forced by the gunmen to hand over $120 contained in the cash register.
Ronald G. Cade—he and his family were the restaurant's only customers at the time.
The cook, Samuel Marklan, also a KU student, was ordered to the robbers to kill them.
Rasing, Cade, his wife and their two
children lead to a walk in cooler
and shut up.
The suspects were arrested, following a high-speed car chase, by Highway Patrol Trooper Donald Kearns. Kearns spotted the gunman and began pursuit.
Michael Malone, assistant county attorney and the prosecuting attorney in the case, said the maximum sentence that Jordon could receive for each count of
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aggravated robbery is life imprisonment; 20 years for each count of kidnaping; and a maximum of 10 years for illegal possession of a firearm.
Trial dates for the other defendants,
cause E. Reed and Roy S. Nelson, have
been established.
Jordon is being held in the Douglas County jail.
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system would be a long, expensive process. Only a portion of the books would have the sensitized strip inserted, but library users could pick out which books had the undetectable insert.
Because of their expense, periodicals and reference books would be converted to the electronic format.
Bengel said she thought the system might be effective in, for example, the future science library, which would contain many expensive research books.
SCHOONERS
Math chair funded by Stouffer estate
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--one two three four five
time times time times
15 words or
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The Kansas University Endowment Association will receive enough funds from the estate of Jean Stoufler, associate dean of students and professor of education at Fort Hays State College, to complete the acquainted professorship in mathematics honors father, the late Ellis B. Stoufler. He was a professor of mathematics at KU.
Miss Stouffer died June 2 in Hays at the age of 65. She worked at Fort Hays State for 21 years and was dean of women for several years.
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During her lifetime, Miss Stouffer contributed funds to KU for the professorship, Todd Seymour, president of the KU endowment association, said yesterday. The contributions will total $100,000 after KU receives its share of the estate.
The $10,000 must be invested, and the income from it is given to the professor in
the course.
Seymour said the last professor to hold the professorship was Baley Price, who is now retired. The position is vacant now.
Fort Hays State will receive the rest of the Stouffer estate after contributions are made to two girl Scout councils, the YMCA of the town and the Boy Scouts Presbyterian Foundation of Kansas.
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KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kaman are offered to all students without regard to their financial status. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FILLHAT LUNCH
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ERRORS
transcendental Meditation and TM are service marks of
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The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or on the DLR. The DLR business office at 664-8358.
Tonight, June 23
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7:30 p.m.
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LAWRENCE GAY LINEHATION'S SUMMER
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10 a.m. June 25, Beer will be sold Everywhere
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Found, small yellow kitten in area of 9th and
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Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
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and choucroute galore at the Carshab Cafe, 803
(dark door). Dinner too. HI $30 extra.
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Found, black hard-haired male dog Set. after
around Winton Library 8122-4978 6-28
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Alcohol is America's one drug. If you
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**Math Tutoring—Competent, experienced tutors**
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Lawrence Gay Liberation social activities: 843-925.
Counseling: 842-7505. 6-29
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Alcohol is America's one drug. If you play MUSIC LESSONS- for your kind of music, Blues, blinggrass, rock, folk, and classic guitar, mandolin, Mandolin String, Call 841-6071, McKinney Mansing Strings Inc.
*Free dog-dip at Sunshine Food and Sciences, Sat-
day, 6th through 12th March.*
*Fees 6th, 16th and Wisconsin, 14th–18th*
*6-24
CANNING! Fresh spaces and herbs in bulk. The Cheese Shoppe, 80913, W. 23rd St. 6-24
Open 2 p.m. -3 a.m. Dancers 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Encourier/Gestalt, workshop. A week expenence with the faculty of the Human Potential School. We'll use systems of awareness training and basic addition to be a basic encounter and Gestalt modes of work at Eukaryote Institute, a part members of the faculty of the Human Potential School for 7th, 9:30 a.m., $20; Call 842-9135
WIN A CASE OF BEEF OR COKE. Joede Shorewater also received $2 for simply participating in a case of her favorite beverage (Dr. Pepper). Joede also received $2 for simply participating in a case of her favorite beverage (Dr. Pepper). Call 864-4156, 8 or visit www.joedeshorewater.com to see the case of beer!
For new Chevroletos and used cars at
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Memberships Available
Shore Dwellers Club
Class B Private Club
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
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843-9404
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I will wait for your response. Let me check the image again.
The text in the image is:
Wayne Pool-Owner
530 Wisconsin
TUTOR
TYPING
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I do dummed good typing. Peggy, 842-4476; after
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Witness to car back into red 75 Vegan 6/17
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Jim B12-8334 evening.
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Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, misc.
Experienced typist—writing, spelling,
scripting. 843-7043, Mr. Wright.
Need females to share large house. 841-5136, 8-5-2
843-764 evenings. $76 monthly, split utilities. 843-764
STATE OF THE ART
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10.5 Monday, Saturday
-Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
Audio Components
Experienced typist will do all kinds of typing in my home. Call Carolyn at 841-0984. 6-29
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Experienced typist, IBM Mag-Card, term papers,
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Aug. 9 New York Yankees
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July 1 Oakland A's
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SUA Maupintour travel service
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Kansas Union Building
Phone 843-1211
4
Wednesday, June 23, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Postal discount aids local mailers
By SUE WILSON
Chief Writer
The University of Kansas may not significantly benefit from a new postal regulation that would give a one-cent fee for mailing local businesses may soon get a break.
The discount would apply to presorted mail sent out in 500 pieces or more. Presorting would save time and money for the U.S. Postal Service, which is $1.6 billion in the red, Theodoric Bland, Kansas City area postmaster, said yesterday.
The discount, which will go into effect July 6, is one of six changes approved by an 11-man board of governors that controls the Postal Service.
The modifications and additions provide
opportunities for the Postal Service to reduce costs and pass a portion of the savings to the mailers under a work-sharing arrangement," said a statement issued by
To qualify for the reduced rate, mallers will have to meet certain regulations. Size and weight restrictions, a $30 participation fee and preserving costs may eliminate all the largest bulk mallers, even at KU. Last year the University spent $2600 on postage.
The KU Office of Admissions and Records, which mails 20,000 to 22,000 grade cards each fall and spring and 7,000 to 9,000 cards in the summer, probably won't use the service. Don Trible, assistant systems director said.
Sports
Chisox beat Royals, 14-8
KANAS CITY (AP)—Three home runs, including a grand-slam inside the-park shot by Kevin Heyel, keyed 16-bit Chicago attackers, and a 14-8 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
The White Sox leaped to a 3-4 first-inning lead off Steve Busby, 3-2, with a hit, a walk and Jim Spinners's sixth homer of the year. After Bell made it 7-0 in the third, Jorge Orta made it 9-0 in the fourth with another long homer.
The Royals, who managed three runs in the fourth, came back with three more in the sixth.
Jesse Jefferson, 2-2, picked up the victory.
The White Sox, winning their second
straight after a 10-game losing skid,
pounded blundy for nine hits and nine runs
The Royals managed three runs in the fourth on a Helder's choice by Buck Martinez, an error and Amos Olsi double. The Royals won both games against ground ball by AI Cowens to score Solita.
While chasing Bell's inning-inbast, Tom Pouette, Kansas City's rookie left fielder, crashed head-first into the wall and was carried unconscious from the field.
Despite the loss, Kansas City's fourth in a row, the Royals remained four games in front of Texas in the American League West. The Tampa Bay defeated 5-3 to Oakland in an afternoon game.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East W 38 L Pct. GB -
New York 38 20 1.54 - -
Cleveland 31 20 1.54 - -
Baltimore 31 20 1.54 - -
Houston 31 20 1.54 - -
Dortheast 29 32 1.64 - -
Detroit 29 32 1.64 - -
Northeast 29 32 1.64 -
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Kansas City West 39 24 619 37
Texas 39 27 357 4
Oklahoma 27 27 44 4
Minnesota 30 23 478 9
California 28 23 478 9
California 28 23 478 9
W L Ft. Pet. GB
Philadelphia 38 16 581
Pittsburgh 34 26 581
Baltimore 33 29 455
St. Louis 30 27 455
Ottawa 39 27 455
Montreal 36 27 455
Minnesota 10, California 7
Oakland 7, Texas 2
Michigan 6, Georgia 8
Chicago 14, Kansas City 8
Detroit 10, Milwaukee 13
Tampa 15, innings
West Coast
Cincinnati 42 25 627
San Diego 32 28 954
San Francisco 31 29 544
Houston 31 36 463
Alanta 28 37 113
San Francisco 28 37 402
Pittsburgh 10, Chicago 7
Montreal 8, Philadelphia 3
San Diego 8, Houston 5, Atlanta 7
Sluces 4, New York 0
Louisville 2, Ohio 0
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"Grade cards come out of the computer already sorted," Triblel said, "but we would still have to bundle the cards, add rubber bands and color-coded zip code dots and sack them."
University Relations, which mails quantities of 500 pieces or more, sends items of different weights and thus is eliminated from the bulk. In division, division of information writer, said.
FREEZER PAK
$3.49
The main users of the reduced bulk rate probably will be local utility companies.
NEW FLAVORS ... Plus Many More
* BEACH * LUNCH * MENACH * MINT BON BON * TEAKS PECAN CANDY
Kansas Public Service Gas Company will definitely use the discount, Bill Salome, vice president and general manager, said. The company mails 16,000 local bills monthly.
The Postal Service board also approved a new fee structure for business reply mail. Fees will be reduced for mailers who establish advance deposit accounts with the Postal Service. The new fee structure will take effect in September.
The cost for business reply mail sent by Kansas University Endowment Association
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will be reduced f for n 18 cents to $16^{\frac{2}{3}}$ cents
for each mailing.
Rick Whitson, greater university fund director, said in addition to special mailings, the association mails 75,000 letters three times a year.
The board approved three other changes that will go into effect July 6, a special rate for presented fourth class bulk mailings, expansion of the existing fourth class category, and established zone rate classification.
SUA Summer Films
June 23
JULIUS CAESAR
Directed by Joseph L. Hankiewicz.
With Marlon Brandon, James Mason.
Sir John Gielgud, Louis Calhern,
Greer Garson.
7:30 p.m. 75°
June 25
STATE OF SEIGE
Directed by Costa-Garves. With Yves Montand.
A controversial and gripping portrait of the U.S. role in Latin America, based on an actual incident. By the director of "Z."
7:30 p.m. '1.00
All Films Shown in WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
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A young man stands in front of a car, holding a pen and notebook. He appears to be writing or reviewing something on the paper. The background features a large tree with a thick trunk and dense foliage.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
A watchful eye
Nell McCann, Overland Park senior, said that although he was Mt apprehensive at first, he now treats ticket writing as he would any other job. McCann is one of 40 student officers at the school.
Students wield ticket books
The 40 University of Kansas students who work as ticketers for Traffic and Security know that each ticket they write is a potential five-dollar fine for someone.
That took some getting used to, they say, writing those citations comes naturally.
"The first few days you get paranoid." Becky Scott, Lawrence senior and one of the tickers, said yesterday. "After a while, though, it becomes just another job."
SARA McALLISTER, Liberal, Kan,
senior, said, "I would walk around with my
ticket book hidden. I didn't want anyone to
know what I was doing."
Scott said that working in the winter was uncomfortable and difficult, but that being outdoors kept him cool.
"I really like it in the summer, it keeps you outside and it keeps you going," she said.
It keeps her going because all student employees who ticket cars must cover their territory on foot. Two students usually receive a section of the campus at the same time.
JOIN THOMAS, director of security and parking, said students wrote almost all of the parking tickets given. The campus police write only a few, he said.
The startage waiter for a student ticketer is $2.20 an hour, with a nearly automatic raise of the fee based on the number of hours there. There is a waiting list for the ticketing jobs, and openings are given to the earliest applicants.
John Jamison, Lawrence senior and a ticketer in the mornings in X-zone, said he wrote 10 tickets Tuesday afternoon in the morning at the Library and Lindley balls and HBO auditorium.
The students said no one had become angry when he got a ticket. If anyone questions a ticket, he's referred to the Parking Services offices.
students nor faculty members were given any breaks.
THE TICKETERS said that neither
"You have to remember that if we didn't give parking violators tickets, people who pay $30 to $40 for parking spaces wouldn't have any place to park." said Scott.
Jamison said, "I'd even ticket the Chancelor if he deserved a ticket."
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second story of a two-part series examining the problems of a community within a community, North Lawrence. In Monday's Kansan, North Lawrence residents voiced their complaints and concerns about their neighborhood. City officials answer the residents.
City sees N. Lawrence's needs, officials say
Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager, said Tuesday that neighborhood development and preservation were high priorities in city planning.
Some city officials disagree with recent
disagreement. North Lawrence residents
hike in the neighborhood on Sept. 18.
By BERNEIL JUHNKE Staff Writer
notified through the newspaper. Because the entire city was involved, sending individual letters would have been impractical, he said.
"There are definitely things we should be planning and taking care of in North Lawrence. However, we can't fund everything at once," he said.
He said that industrial areas were concentrated near the railroad and that city planners had been careful not to let industry elbow into residential areas. He said the residents had the right to request rezoning of their property.
"North Lawrence is living with the consequences of living in a railroad area,"
He said that no rezoning had been done in North Lawrence in recent years.
Muriel Paul, North Lawrence Planning Council organizer, said, "As long as it inconsistent with the city's comprehensive plan, citizens won't be able to get areas
Wildgen said he didn't think charges that the city planned to make an industrial park would be justified.
He said the city was currently trying to
He said $8,000 of this year's Community Development funds were for North Second
buy property to expand Lyons Park near Seventh Street.
Nothing has been done on the Second Street project yet, he said. The city is trying to buy right-of-way on Second Street and has paid for a study of the area, he said.
Of $529,000 available to the city in Community Development funds for the 1977 fiscal year, North Lawrence will receive $348,000; South Lawrence follows: $265,000; demolition: $100,000; housing rehabilitation; $86,000, administrative contingencies; $50,000 engineering; $15,000 survey and planning; $20,000 Lawrence; and $3,500, Far East Lawrence.
Buford Watson, city manager, said the city provided some playground equipment and a baseball diamond in Lyons Park. He also helped establish a 5-years ago, and $35,000 was used to
resurface every oil-mat street in North Lawrence in the last two weeks.
He said millions of dollars had been spent on the Kansas River levee and the Mud Creek channelization project to prevent flooding in North Lawrence.
The levee was construction after the 1951 flood that caused the evacuation of 2,000 North Lawrence residents and the loss of millions of dollars worth of property.
Wilden said a traffic light was installed at Second and Locust streets more than five years after North Lawrence residents petitioned for it. He said the State Highway Department didn't determine there was a need for it until last year.
Several North Lawrence residents are recently that neighborhood streets needed repair.
y Mallonee, North Lawrence Im-see N. LAWRENCE page 4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"The city does yearly maintenance on city streets," Wilgen said.
Vol.86 No.152
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, June 24, 1976
Angola's UN entry vetoed bv US
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)—The United States vetoed Angola's application for U.N. membership yesterday because of the "continuing presence and apparent influence of Cuban troops" in the West African nation.
U. S. representative Albert W. Sherer Jr., sitting in for Ambassador William W. Scranton who is on an African tour, cast America's 15th Council veto.
The other council members, Britain,
France, Italy, Japan, Panama, Sweden,
Pakistan, Benin, Guyana, Libya, Romania,
Sudan and Tanzania, voted for
membership.
The United States and China are the only council members that have not recognized the Popular Movement government in Angola.
The U.S. veto was its third this year and 18th since 1970. The Soviet Union has used the veto 110 times in the Security Council, the last time in 1974.
Sherer said the United States opposed Angola's U.N. entry at this time because it was not convinced the former Portuguese naval force required as a "peacekeeping state."
Proof of this, he said, is the "continuing presence and apparent influence of Cuban immigrants."
The United States also was irked by rejection of its requests to postpone the release of the book.
the convention, the issue of Angolan U.N. entry would no longer give Reagan a campaign weapon against the Ford administration.
Diplomatic sources said the Soviet Union pressed its Angolan angel to demand action on membership this week so as to embarrass the United States at the time Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger is visiting the United States, Minister John Vorster of South Africa.
"unhelpfully ignore the interests of Angola to the temptations of short-term leaders"
Sherer, in an evident reference to the Soviets, criticized those who, he said.
A Cuban force estimated at 12,000 to 15,000 helped the Marxist战败 the win war over two rival Western-backed movements in Cuba became independent last November.
Most of the Cubans reportedly have stayed in Angola, Shera said. "There is no justification for such a large and armed force in a truly independent African state."
The United States reportedly indicated at an earlier closed session of the Security Council's admissions committee that if Angola agreed to wait until mid-August its chances for U.N. entry would be "maximized."
the political conventions, Foreign policy has become a major issue in the rivalry between President Ford and Republican challenger Ronald Reagan.
The Republican convention is scheduled to
begin of Aug. 16 in Kansas City.
Knowing that he is facing Republican
Struggle continues, Brown says
From his vantage point as a black who has become one of the two highest elected officials of his race in the country, George Brown, lieutenant governor of Colorado, looks at a world that has consistently oppressed blacks and sees little variation today.
Brown, who was the first black graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism, was at the University of Kansas this week to participate in the Urban Journalism Workshop at the School of Journalism to speak with Kansan reporters yesterday.
black issues paralleled struggles by blacks throughout history.
"I think that in South Africa you see the youth heading the way," Brown said. "In the early civil rights movement in this country, there are many examples of protests. They sit at the lunch counters."
Student rioting in South Africa erupted recently over the practice of requiring students to learn the Afrikaans language in schools, according to a rather learn English, perceive Afrikaans as
"They were the ones who could afford to—the older blacks had to worry about their jobs, while the students had little fear of economic reprisal."
Brown noted that certain contemporary
"I see no reason why the bees wouldn't do well in the Gulf and Southern states all the way to California," Michener said. "But if we try to get as much sun as possible by hybridize by maturing, with other strains."
Another troubling parallel Brown sees is between the harassment of the first elected black officials during the Reconstruction era, a similar harassment of black leaders today.
a symbol of oppression by early Dutch settlers in South Africa.
It's possible the bees' ferocity would be inedown if they were mixed with gentler bees when they were released.
The killer strain is native to Africa but was brought into the Brazilian because of
He cited a recent article by Carl Rowan in Ebony magazine that detailed harassment of black officials. Brown said a small part of the media contributed to that harassment.
Rv ALEXIS WAGNER
"I'm not accusing the media of a conspiracy," he said. "It's just that some of the media aren't accepting the responsibility for the attacks, the press and the freedom of information."
WHEN THE BEES will reach the United States depends on how well they can overcome natural barriers that slow migration, such as the northern Andes Mountains.
The bees are migrating north from Brazil at 10-20 miles a year and threaten to move into Central America, Mexico and eventually the United States. Micheler said.
African bees pose threat to US
A breeding mistake made almost 20 years ago could result in an invasion of the United States by a brand of killer bees, Charles Wentz and professor of entomology, said yesterday.
An unusually intense strain of killer bees was accidentally released by the Brazilian government after an attempt to crossbred them with a gentler strain for honey producing puposes. The African or "killer" bee produces large amounts of honey.
Michener said that the African killer bee was slightly smaller than the honeybee of this area and that its venom was the same as the honeybee's.
3 interns will be named
THE BEES developed their fierce, aggressive nature to fight predators that were constantly raiding and destroying their colonies for the honey stored there, Michener said. He said that the bees were fiercer in areas with many people, indicating that people may be responsible for their aggressiveness.
Their killer reputation derives from the bees' nervous nature. They've more easily disturbed than other bee strains, Michener doesn't attack unless they are threatened.
When disturbed, the bees secrete a chemical which communicates an alarm to the entire colony. The bees respond by attacking and stinging by the thousands.
Three administrative interns for the coming school year will be announced this week, Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
its ability to produce large amounts of honey.
"If the intern is a teacher, we assign an
Eleanor Turk, assistant to the executive vice chancellor, said that applicants specified administrative criteria accepted on the basis of merit. Turk said that only University employees could receive half-time positions.
The interns will be selected from University employee applicants who wish to gain administrative experience.
The intern program was set up two years ago to increase the number of women and minorities in administration.
"THE SEEN swarms of the bees in Africa and they haven't bothered me, but I was
assistant instructor or teaching assistant to take over half of his duties while he works on his internship," she said. "We reinburse all the departments somehow so the interns can concentrate on the new area.
"Most of the applicants are attempting to increase their knowledge of administrative work so they can later move into a more comprehensive job in administration. It will be a big help to many careers." she said.
In 1956, 30 of the killer queen bees were taken to southern Brazil for use in breeding experiments. A year later 26 were accidentally released. The killer bees mated with local bees, robbed them of their honey and took over their hives. The bees are now moving north into areas previously inhabited by the gender European strain.
Kurt said that the interns would not be receiving promotions but would simply devote half of their time to learning new techniques.
Shankel will meet with the other vice chancellors for advice before making the announcements.
Michener will leave on sabbatical in September to go to French Guiana, Colombia, Venezuela and Central America to bees and their effects on the environment.
MICHEREN SAID that the bee was a pervasive, "weed-like species" and that it was important to know how a species affects the environment in this way influenced the environment.
Michener wrote a book called "The Social Behavior of the Bees," published in 1974. He has studied social insects for more than 25 years and is working on another book about the biology of bees. He has organized two conferences on entomology and travelled extensively through the southern hemisphere to study bees.
'One of my objectives is to get data on
various kinds of bees to see if any have been eliminated by the African strain," he said. Michener said that the bees could affect vegetation in some areas.
"It may be that this bee is more efficient at pollinating certain plants and these plants could then take over areas and replace other vegetation," he said.
ALEXANDER J. TURKMAN
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Charles Michener
Brown was the target of a scandal last year concerning misuse of state funds for traveling expenses. The charges have since been cleared up.
There also seem to be similarities in the environment KU offered to blacks when Brown was a student here 25 years ago, and the situation today.
"There weren't a great number of us," Brown said of his years at U. "I hope it improved tremendously, but some things did. Our chance indicate opportunities are still limited."
"When I was here, black students couldn't compete in sports," he said. "I played in baseball."
The Big Eight was known as the Big Six before Colorado and Oklahoma State joined them.
See BROWN page 4
IRS completes routine audit of endowment
An official from the Wichita office of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is conducting a general audit of the University of Kansas Endowment Association, Todd Seymour, Endowment Association president, said yesterday.
Bill Rees, an IRS official, is conducting the audit, which will continue two or three
"Most everybody gets it (audited) at one time or another," Seymour said.
He said he thought the audit was part of a general program of IRS audits of public foundations. The Endowment Association, in which he is now, is classified as a public foundation.
IRS officials visited the Endowment
Association a month ago to discuss auditing
procedures.
The IRS office in Wichita couldn't estimate how long it would take to complete the audit. The association will receive a copy of the audit report, and must sign when the auditor has finished.
The Endowment Association is listed in the exempt organization group, which means that it is exempt from paying taxes because it is a non-profit, public foundation.
2
Thursday, June 24, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest From the Associated Press
Teamster bosses indicted
NEWARK N.J. — Two New Jersey Teamsters teams, both linked to organized crime and the investigation of Jimmy Hoffa's disappearance, have been indicted on charges they helped kidnap and kill another Teamsters official in 1961, the FBI announced yesterday.
Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenznak, 59, secretary treasurer of Local 680 in City N.J., and Salvatore Brigullo, 46, the business agent for the 13,000-member local of the Teamsters Union, were charged along with two other men in the murder of Anthony "Three Fingers Brown" Castellio.
Fingers Brown customer
Castellito was secretary treasurer of Local 560 when he disappeared.
Assistant assistant was based on an indictment returned by a federal grand jury in New York, charging the four men with violating federal kidnap and conspiracy statutes. The indictment was returned Tuesday and sealed until just before the FBI announcement.
Castellio' s body has not been found, the department said
The other two defendants are George J. Vangelakos, Jersey City, and Harold Kongsberg, now serving a 44-year sentence for extortion at the Clinton Correctional Facility.
Jobs bill passes House
WASHINGTON—The House yesterday approved a $3.95 million employment bill that includes funds to create 2020, new public service jobs.
the measure was passed on a 328-43 vote and sent to the White House despite a warning from Rep. Garry Brown, D-Mich., that President Ford would veto the measure. A previous bill aimed at creating 600,000 jobs was veted by Ford last February.
Friday, 9
a. margin of approval in the House was more than the two-thirds needed to override a veto. The Senate margin of approval also was sufficient to overcome a
9 deplete matching funds
WASHINGTON—The Federal Election Commission determined yesterday that nine presidential candidates would get no more federal matching money except to those with a net income of $10 million or less.
The group includes Rep. Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz. Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash. Gov. George C. Wallace, L.A., and Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho.
one only candidates still considered for matching fund purposes are apparent Democratic nominee Jimmy Carter, President Ford, Ronald Reagan and Ted Cruz.
Federal law says that a candidate can't receive money for new debts if he isn't an active presidential candidate in more than one state.
Peace meeting suggested
WASHINGTON—The United States should consider a world conference to end the 14-month civil war in Lebanon if the Arab peace-keeping force cannot moderate the fighting, Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan, said yesterday.
In a statement released by his office, Pearson said a grave threat would be posed to the stability of the Middle East if the peace-keeping failed and the conflict escalates. He said the world could once again he threatened by an oil embargo.
"For the first time since the civil war began, the United States, Syria and Israel appear to be on convergent paths," said Pearson, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "It is time that the United States seize the diplomatic initiative to encourage the warning sides to work toward a compromise."
Communists drop demands
ROME—The Italian Communist Party apparently put aside demands for a role in the national government yesterday but sought a voice in making government policy and key leadership jobs in parliament.
The party was strengthened by勾展 in weekend general elections and by a majority in the city of Rome but failed to outpoll the dominant Christian Demo-
Premier Aldo Marci's Christian Democrats renewed their offer for a center-left coalition with the Socialists to run the country through its worst economic and social crisis in decades. But the Socialists, troubled by a poor showing in the elections, postponed any decision until a meeting this morning.
Haldeman says Nixon weakness aided Kissinger
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Henry Kissinger's appointment as secretary of state may have been influenced by the weakened position of the Nixon administration in the wake of Watergate, Nixon's former chief-of-staff said.
Despite a general myth that Kissinger expected to be secretary of state, there was no thought that he would inherit the post or that he even wanted it. H, R. Haldeman said in the last of a five-part copyright release of his book, *Press Syndicate of Kansas City*. Haldeman coauthored the series with Joe Scott, a Los Angeles freelance writer.
"A specific chain of events had been set in motion during the reorganization period following the President's re-election in 1972 for the appointment of a new secretary of the Rogers. Kissinger knew who the new secretary was going to be and he knew it was not Henry Kissinger," Halderman said. It did not名 the proposed Cabinet officer.
"I was very surprised, therefore, to learn that Kissinger was appointed to replace him and so began his work in doing with the weakening of the administration after the Watergate crisis."
Haldeman said Kissinger's views on foreign policy matters did not always coincide with what he was writing, example, Haldeman wrote that he and Kissenger differed on whether Nixon should cancel a proposed summit meeting in the spring of 1972 to mine Halip Harbor.
Kissinger felt the Russians would cancel the summit and proposed that Nixon should at least delay the meeting, Haldemar said, but he said he suggested plans to go ahead for the summit on the chance it would not be canceled. The President suggested they get back to the summit as secretary John Connally, who adopted Haldemar's view of the matter, Haldemar said.
"The arguments by Connally apparently had an effect on Kissinger, because when we both went back to the Executive Office Building to report to the President, Henry said he was willing to accept the risk and try it on that basis." Haldenman wrote.
Haldeman said he had no doubt that Kissinger had been aware of telephone taps to plug national security leaks in the administration while he was Nixon's national security adviser "and with the President's full knowledge and probable direction."
He also said that there were none of the internal clashes between Kissinger and me that have been reported by journalists over the years. Kissinger had total access to the Oval Office and was never screened off from the President."
Kissinger was the only White House staff member who would burst right into the Oval Office and confront the President, Haldeman said.
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Thursday, June 24.1976
University Daily Kansan
2
CIA, FBI hid evidence committee report says
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Senate intelligence committee said Wednesday the fate of former Trump administration evidence the Warren Commission has substantially affected the course of the investigation" into whether there was a conspiracy to kill President John F. Kenney.
The committee stressed that it "has not uncovered any evidence sufficient to justify a conclusion that there was a conspiracy to assassinate President Kennedy."
But the panel said that failure of the CIA and FBI to pursue the possibility of a conspiracy behind the assassination "impeaches the process" which led the Warren Commission to conclude that Lee Harvey Owald acted alone.
The committee outlined these leads which it said were never adequately investigated.
—The possibility that Cube's Fidel Castro ordered Kennedy's assassination in retaliation for a CIA plot against his life at the Nov. 21, 1963 slaying in Dallas:
"A report that on the evening of the day Kennedy was killed a Cubana airlines flight from Mexico City to Cuba was delayed five hours awaiting the arrival of an unidentified passenger who boarded the plane without passing through customs:
—The "strange travel" of "a Cuban-American" who an FBI inform claimed was involved in the Kennedy assassination have been in indirect contact with Oswald.
Sen. Richard Schweker, R-Pa., who headed the committee's investigation, said other "interesting leads" had been left out of the study, not to岛earapearate further investigation.
Schweiker accused the CIA and FBI of "a cover-up" and said "there is no longer any reason to have faith in the Warren Composition of the Kennedy assassination."
But committee chairman Frank Church, D-Idaho, said that "whether there was a conscious cover-up or not has not yet been determined" and added that he was not yet prepared to call for a full-scale reopening of the assassination investigation.
The report said that senior government officials "wanted the investigation completed promptly and all conspiracy rumors dispelled." According to the report, within 14 hours of Kennedy's death the FBI had filed an indictment against Oswald and Oswald alone and within weeks issued a report concluding that Oswald had been the sole assassin.
FBI director J. Edgar Hover "perceived the Warren Commission as an adversary" that might criticize the bureau's monitoring of Oswald's activities before the assassination and its investigation of the killing itself, the report said.
Hover concealed from the commission the fact that 17 FBI agents had been disciplined for their failure to recognize Oswald as a security threat. The commission also was never told about the FBI's involvement in the note which Oswald had delivered to bureau offices in Dallas several days before the Kennedy killing.
The report strongly criticized the CIA for failing to inform the commission of the potential significance of the 1963 plot attack on the CIA, named AM-LASH, in a plot to kill Castro.
According to the report, CIA agents were in direct contact with AM-LASH, and one senior agency official told him in October 1963 that he was the personal representative of the President's brother, then Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy.
PHILADLPHIA (AP)—An Allegheny Airlines DC9 jet plane attempting to land during a thunderstorm broke in half on a flight from New York to Delphia International Airport westward.
There were no fatalities. Officials said 44 persons were taken to Methodist Hospital with neck and back injuries. At least 10 others were taken to St. Agnes Hospital.
The plane was Flight 121, carrying 10 passengers and four crew members from Paris to New York. The airline airport in Windsor Locks, Comm., to Memphis, Tenn., with a stop here. It
A passenger, Philadelphia Fire Capt.
Frank Scipione, 29, said both engines and the tail section fell off when the plane landed.
Landing jet breaks apart; 54 hurt
Jack King, Allegheny vice president, said 99 of the passengers were evacuated. One person, evidently seriously injured, and two others to receive medical attention, King said.
The pilot and copilot were trapped in the cockpit for a time and apparently suffered back injuries. Witnesses who were re-arrested with their backs strapped to supports.
The plane was removed from the runway about 1½ hours after the crash. The airport
O-zone gets drain system
Many persons may have found themselves facing an unusually long walk to classes this week when they were turned down from their regular parking spaces in O-Zone.
Contractors have begun to install a new drainage system at the south end of O-Zone, Harold Blitch, of Buildings and Grounds, said yesterday.
Bilttch said the new system would correct a run off problem in the parking lot by channeling water into storm sewers through a pump. He said the addition of islands for plants, he said.
Currently, overflow from rain runs into the streets or collects in the southeast corner of the lot and damages its surface. A series of underground pipes will control the drainage from the lot and redirect the flow. Biltch said
"Hopefully, when we get an inch of rain we won't have a勾奶 washer in that area! I think you can just buy a cloth."
The construction involves about two-thirds of the O-Zone lot. People with parking permits for this area are being reassigned to other parking lots in Allen Field House. Fee-parkers are still
Visitors miss spirit of '76
Excessive commercialism flowing from the Bicentennial seems to be a source of irritation not exclusive to Americans. Many of the foreign students at the University of Kansas feel that commercialism is drowning out the real spirit of the celebration.
"They tend to overcommercialize, but the substance of it is good," Chunchuan Rujanwacha, Thailand graduate student, said. "It's a great job and an increased love for the United States."
"All I have seen is the commercialization. There is something of more substance behind the Bicentennial that should be shown," Kamil Hasabi, Jordan, said yesterday."The celebration should be exhibited in a different way."
Some students have ignored the commercialism, Jose Rodriguez Applied English student and teacher.
SUMIO WATANABE, Japan graduate student, said he felt businesses were profiting too much from the Bicentennial, including Japanese businesses.
Anand Burman, India graduate student,
said, "It started out as a fun thing and not
too commercial, but when they put out
bicentennial toilet paper, that's too much."
"I just see all of the advertising and overlook it," he said.
Several students had mixed feelings about the Bicentennial.
"I don't have any feelings at all for this special day," Helen Lee, Taiwan graduate and doctoral student, said.
The bicentennial celebration wasn't criticized by all foreign students. Some said it was good for the United States.
RAZA RIAHINEJAD, Iran graduate student, said he wasn't going to participate in the celebration because he didn't feel he was a part of it.
"I think it is a very unique opportunity for the American people to regain that national closeness that was lost by the Vietnam war. Davis P. K. Lau, Taiwan graduate student," The celebration is a type of social education for the people to renew an identity."
Ruwajenwich said, "The American people are very nationalistic and they have lots of resources."
"I THINK the Bicentennial will help the younger generation to learn and love this country by seeing the older generation's traditions and customs."
Bilch said other campus parking lots wouldn't be resurfaced.
Some students said they endorsed commercialism and were enjoying the celebra-
admitted to the lot but are directed to the west section.
"I don't think the commercialism is nonsense," Zulfi Saylawal, Pakistan sophomore, said. "I have seen a lot of apart in this country, but not a lot in Lawrence itself. I myself plan to celebrate along with the Americans on the Fourth of July."
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"From what this costs, we're not beating the others," Bliitch said. "That's why only a part of the lot is being done now. The other lots will lust be patched as usual."
Work on the lot should be completed by the end of July, Blich said.
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"I watched the tail come off," he said. "It
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SUA Summer Films Presents A knockout of a movie
The utmost in suspense - Archer Winston, New York Post
Yves Montand in STATE OF SIEGE
From the team that made 'Z'
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4
Thursday, June 24, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Royals bow to Rangers
ARLINGTON, Tex. (AP)—The Texas Rangers came within three games of Kansas City in the American League West last night, defeating the Royals 7-5 behind Steve Foucault's clutch relief pitching and Toby Harrah's three-run home.
Foucault, 63, picked up the win after relenting starter Jim Hirsch in a rocky
The Rangers broke a 5-12 tie in the bottom
of the sixth off loser Dennis Leonard, 7-3.
Mike Hargrove singled, took third on Harrah's hit-and-run single and scored the tie-breaking walk on Leonard's wild pitch. Following a walk and a sacrifice, Tom Grieve brought Harrah home with a groundout.
Brown . . .
It was only the second victory for the Rangers in their last eight games and extended the Royals' losing skein to five games.
From page one
rule was changed when the conference expanded to eight schools.
"Lawrence is my home," Brown said. "But I have to admit that it has limited opportunities for the associations and the extra-life that goes with college.
"I know what it was like for black
students in the past, but still it
is still all that, then it's too much
"The University and the Lawrence community have an obligation to do the job for black students as citizens here on this campus." Brown said.
Brown is now chairman of the Black Caucus, a national group of black
Democratic delegates to the national
congress will be supported Jimmy
Carter for the presidency.
The black Caucus will push for a black vice-presidential candidate, Brown said, and is considering Rep. Barbara Jordan, D-Tex, Richard Hatcher, mayor of Gary, Ind., and Julian Bond, a Georgia state legislator.
When he was a student, Brown was also the first black reporter on the University Daily Kansan. He later became sports editor
Brown joined the staff of the Denver Post from KU in 1951. He became night editor.
In 1955, Brown was appointed to the
Colorado House of Representatives, and has been involved in state government continuously. He has since quit the Denver Post.
While Brown was in Lawrence, he spoke to about 75 people at the St. Luke African Methodist Episcopal Church. Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, took that opportunity to announce the creation of the Brown Urban Journalism Scholarship.
The scholarship will be awarded tomorrow to two of the 11 high school students participating in the workshop. The students will pay half the tuition during their first semester at college.
Kest W 38 L 38 Pel. GB
New York 10 24 10 16
Cleveland 11 32 316 8
Baltimore 12 32 300 48
Rochester 13 32 490 74
Detroit 14 29 354 50
Dallas 15 29 354 171
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Baseball Standings
Kansas City 39 25 .609 —
Texas 39 27 .609 —
Oakland 31 32 .692 1/4%
Chicago 31 32 .692 1/4%
Minnesota 31 32 .692 1/4%
Chicago 4, Minnesota 9
Baltimore 2, Boston 5, 10 innings
York 2, Seattle 1, 10 innings
Milwaukee 9, Detroit 6
Charlotte 7, San Francisco 7, 10
Oakland 6, California
NATIONAL LEGAL JUDGE
Philadelphia W L Pet. GB
Pittsburgh 36 27 371
Pittsburgh 36 27 371
St. Louis 30 27 479 (8) 14
St. Louis 30 27 479 (8) 14
Chicago 30 27 379 (8) 14
San Francisco 26 Games
Yesterday's games
Cinnamint
Los Angeles
San Diego
San Jose
Houston
Atlanta
San Francisco
42 26 618 .418
38 36 114 -
31 37 757 .458
31 37 774 .458
31 37 746 .458
31 37 746 .458
SPORTING GAMES
Chicago 6, Pittsburgh 5, Minnesota 6 game postponeed, darkness
Atlanta 3, Montreal 2 4
Los Angeles 1, Houston 0
New York 5, St. Louis 4
Phoenix 3, San Diego 6
N. Lawrence . . .
Once an area becomes a benefit district, the residents in the district are assessed for 100 per cent of the cost of the item they wanged installed by the city.
From page one
Wilderden said neighborhoods must request to become more districtly if they want to stay.
provement Association secretary, said, "I've lived here 12 to 14 years and I've never seen any maintenance on Locust in front of my house."
Mallonee said some North Lawrence neighborhoods didn't apply to become benefit districts because they didn't have the money to pay for the assessments.
"I don't know of any requests from North
districts since I've been here," Wiley said. "I am
Watson said neighborhoods that couldn't afford to become benefit districts had no recourse for getting streets and sidewalks in the area. The funds had been assumed for that purpose.
"The city has money to do studies but they don't have the money to tell people in Lawrence what grants are available in terms they can understand," Mallorea said.
The North Lawrence Improvement Association requested $450,000 in community development funds for the 1975-76 fiscal year.
It requested $125,000 for housing rehabilitation; $115,000 for a community center with tennis court; $95,000 for beautification of North Second Street; $50,000 for solution of drainage problem; $30,000 for roadside improvement; $20,000 for street and alley improvements; and $10,000 for administrative costs. The association received $3,334.
Wilden said his planning responsibilities were to do what was best for the whole city.
Tom Cooley, rehabilitation specialist,
said the money given the association was
intended mainly for administrative needs.
The size of the North Lawrence community probably doesn't justify projects such as swimming pools and tennis courts, Wildden said.
Watson said the city didn't established a policy of creating neighborhood centers
Wildgen said bus services in North Lawrence had been discontinued because there wasn't enough patronage by residents there.
Watson said the bus service was privately
owned and heavily subsidized by University of Kareas students.
"It goes where the students want it to go," he said.
Lawrence doesn't have a neighborhood bus service anywhere in the city, Watson
"City planning has tried hard to cooperate with North Lewis," Watson
He said he didn't think North Lawrence had been ignored.
Cooley said that the Community Development office hadn't worked with a child, Ms. Dregg, Community Development director, contested the Housing and Urban Development guidelines preventing Community Development funding in North Carolina.
"HUD wanted us to concentrate our program into one area, which was the business of our job."
The Community Development program is under HUD guidelines.
SUA Summer Films
June 25
STATE OF SEIGE
A controversial and gripping portrait of the U.S. rule in Latin America, based on an actual incident. By the director of "Z."
Directed by Costa-Garves. With Yves Montand.
7:30 p.m. $1.00
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Thursday, June 24, 1976
University Daily Kansan
5
Entertainment
Movie fare is merely fair
Won Ton Ton the Dog Who Saved Hollywood—Madelaine Kahn, Bruce Dern, Art Carney and their canine companion walk through a series of dog-fired routines. The only real diversion is trying to meet the supporting bits by a cast of 60 has been.
Logan's Run—This science-fictional manhunt stars Michael York, and is set in a 23rd century that is an art director's tribute to plastic.
Mother, Jugs, and Speed—An ambulance story beed up with "M-A-S-H"—style antics and the performances of Bill Cobay. The two are watching the ride. Raguel Welch is just along for the ride.
State of Siege—Constantin Costa-Gavras's political thrillist is based on the Uraguan Tupamaros' kidnapping of a C.I.A. supported American diplomat. The rapid-fire editing provides a perfect counter-balance for Franco Solinas's internal script, making this the most entertaining of Costa-Gavras's post-"2" efforts.
The Uninvited—A mild-mannered ghost story, starring Ray Milland and Rirk Hussein as siblings who buy a haunted hussein to usell portraits the mysterious medium who makes up the nasty habits of wilting flowers, frightening dogs and playing the plano.
For students contentedly immersed in academia, "The Case Against College" may be too late. Then again, it's never too late to view school from a new perspective. College may be seriously getting in the way of your education.
College investment often pointless
Associate Campus Editor
By BECCI BREINING
IT'S TIME we realize college isn't a ticket to success. For too many people the start of
Caroline Bird has expanded that theme, added some powerful ammunition and written an incisive critique of higher education. America's esteemed bastions of learning, our showrooms of intellectual pursuit, have been thoroughly researched and boldly stated attack. And she's hit too close to the bull's eye to ignore her marksmanship.
Athert means getting a degree. Bird tells us that universities are genuine rip-offs. They are merely isolated shelters where only 25 per cent of students are serious enough to return for a very expensive investment. And "expensive investment", isn't used.
And "expensive investment" isn't used casually.
BIRD'S DOLLARS and cents calculations
Happily Ever After means getting a degree.
If a student was to forgo a Princeton education and take a modest job instead, at the end of four years he would be $11,925. If you were attending Princeton and attending Princeton and the total is $34,181. Of course, Princeton is more expensive than most schools, but even trimming a few thousand dollars off that cost will encourage for a penniless high-schooler.
Coming of Devil's child bad political 'Omen'
are extensive and astonishing. In 1927 if a Princeton-bound 18 year-old had invested $30,000 in companies into a bank at 7.5 per cent interest, companies daily, he would have $1,129,200 by the time he was 64. This is about $528,200 more than the average of an average male college graduate.
By CHUCK SACK Contributing Writer
Indebtedness is implicit in a college degree. And while a student can expect to leave college owing much more than his or her income, he can't expect to leave assured of a job.
For those who opt to remain in the academic womb at the end of four years, Bird points out a startling fact: the years in school are growing much faster than our life expectancy. College is robbing people of their most precious possession—time.
Remember the political jokes of the last few years that were inspired by horror movies like *Snow White* and *Baby*, and that Jerry Brown will refuse to move into the White House until it is exorcised? Now there's a horror movie that seems to have been inspired by a political joke.
"The Omen" deals with the coming of the Devil's child, the Anti-Christ, and the punchline is, in the last frame of the film, the kid ends up in the White House. Unfortunately, this is given a solemn treatment.
Numbers aren't the author's only game.
She is a sociologist more than an economist,
and she views the situation as symptomatic
of it. For many people college is a denial.
Bird presents her case from the standpoint that success means having money, rather per cent of the people that earn more than $15,000 a year never went to college.
The child is the five-year-old son of the U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain (Gregory Peck) and his wife (Lee Remick). In the prologue it is revealed that the child is not their natural son, but a baby that has been substituted with the diplomat's cooperation when he learns that his own child was stillborn.
What exactly is to be gained by placing a five-year-old in proximity to the President? This is what turns "The Omen" into a poor political force in the last moment. How threatening is a Devil who can't even get his attention or for a being capable of the ultimate in dirge, ignoring, this must be one hell of a let-down. For the rest of us, he hope's an omen.
"Academics are poor role models for any kind of success." By teaching old ideas, most colleges inhibit creative thinking, a common ingredient of success stories.
AS THE child grows older, it begins to reveal its dark soul, and the horrific elements of the plot manifest themselves through a series of unnatural deaths and the ambassador's attempts to track down the true origin of the child.
and her delivery wavers between soft and shrill. What makes her preferable is that she takes up less screen time, having the decency to get killed halfway through.
"The Omen" opens tomorrow at the Varsity Theatre.
The problems with "The Omen" begin with the lead actors. Gregory Peck is normally good in the type of stolic father role that won him an Academy Award in "To Kill A Mockingbird." However, here he is required to gradually comprehend the plot of the character that makes world order, and Peck seems incapable of shading his performance. Consequently, his shift from disbelief to grim determination is much too abrupt.
"DENIED PARTICIPATION in a real" adult world, young people are called into subversive activities and attitudes natural to the excluded."
aspect about film reviewing is that you can demand that every one's motives be appalled.
And for those who do "make it," particularly those from prestigious schools, it's because of an embarrassing fact: in our supposedly classless society, the diploma is given to everyone, egalitarians hope to somehow make every upper class.
THE SUPPORTING characters' only function is to look evil. The child fares the worst, because he is required to glare at the guardian's dog. The guardian is good, the guardian dog,守护犬, the samiilar, does.
Bird believes countercultures are sparked by the conviction of young people that even with a college degree, many of them won't "make it."
SHE DEFLATES the mystique that knowing about Milton is somehow superior to knowing about Venneur, or even Kojak, who is master of middle-class culture is best for everybody.
Things are further confused by Peck's delivery. Blessed with a rich bass voice that is the key to his paternal portrays, he fails to modulate it in any way, so that statements of petty irritation and announcements of soul-blasting import are unguishable. After watching him for 10 minutes, one begins to discount everything he says.
Through extensive interviews with reluctant parents, disillusioned students, employers, teachers and administrators, I discovered that a secondary reason for choosing colleges.
The sole acceptance acting is that of John David Warner, who plays a photographer who helps to solve the mystery of the child. Warner (best known for his uncredited appearance as the idiot in "Straw Dogs") shows great resource with an underwritten script. The script is filmed in Hindi darms the rest of the cast to wandering through the silly ending alone.
Lee Remick is only slightly better. Her character has even less depth than Peck's,
Despite convincing arguments and statistics, Bird's case has one flaw. She has always been wrong. It provides an atmosphere that can't be duplicated in any other part of society. There are a lot of people in college soolely taking this air atmosphere, regardless of its priceting.
The film does have some good moments, most of them courtesy of director Richard Donner. Despite the generally insipid level of the storyline, Donner succeeds in creating a properly chilling atmosphere in the most normal surroundings. Even more
Bird's previous books, Born Female and a Woman Necessary to Get Know Painful Worth, are written from a feminist's viewpoint. A humanist's College is written from a humanist's viewpoint. It is a realistic, myth-shattering account of the suffering college and puts it in a proper perspective.
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Overall, what "The Omen" lacks is a sense of purpose. Beyond the simple shock effects, it attempts nothing. "Rosemary's Baby," had the theme of motherhood to hang, and "The Exorcist" was really the story of the struggle for the soul of the younger priest.
crucially, he imparts a sense of foreboding to the action sequences.
IT'S IMPOSSIBLE to make any such statement of intent about the "Omen." Not only is it difficult to tell what the devil will do, but Devil is up to in the film. (One comforting
THE CASE AGAINST COLLEGE, by CAROLINE Bird (385 pages, Bamn Books).
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
Bruce Dern
Madaline Kahn
Arf Carney
Granada
1924 M. Algueras 1-38
The Dog That Launched a Thousand Stars Daily at 2:30,7:30,9:30
Varsity
"WON TON TON" PG
Varsity Edgar Rice Burrough's classic
TUESDAY
SPECIAL ENDS Tuesday, June 29th
7:30 8:30 Sat Su Sun 9:30
THE EARTH'S CORE"
In the 22nd Century you can have anything—except your 20th birthday.
Lupea Js 98
7:20-9:40 Sat.-Sun. at 1:45
7:40-9:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 2:05 PG
KANSAN WANT ADS
"MOTHER, JUGS & SPEED"
The Hillcrest
Bill Cosby
Raguel Welch
Head For Henry's
THE WINDS OF AUTUMN
7:00-3:35 Sat.-Sun. Mat. 1:55 PG
Sunset
What would you do it?
it was your sister?
What did you do it?
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Sunset
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"Thunderbolt & Lightfoot"
Weekend Special!
"TRACKDOWN"
11:03
henrys
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6th & Missouri
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students upon request to the Student Information office. BALL ALL CAMPUS TO 113 FLINT HALT
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
time times times times times
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AD DEADLINES
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Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or via the UDR business office at 864-4358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
L艾摩威 L艾摩威 GIERY BAIERATT SUIEMFE
10 amu i 10 amu i
Dreary, but clean and cheap basement rooms.
In-law suite. 482 sq ft. utilities paid. 1135 Teenagers. Apt 21, formerly 2007.
ATTENTION STUDENT BENCHERS - Drop in or
take up desk space (phone, cell phone) at WEISTER
PROGRAMMING LAB (www.weisterv.org).
GRAN SPORT
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
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4933.
Desperately need roomate for summer i-
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FOR SALE
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Make sense out of Western Civilization!
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Alternator, starter, and generator Specialists
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STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS- Regardless of any prices you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dams or dams out-of-products, they are available at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFES. **tt**
Excellent selection of new and used furniture. The Trade. The Furniture and Appliances Center, 7041 N. State St., Atlanta, GA 30326.
GIRLS-SUPER SUMMER SALE! GREAT BAR
GAIN! THE CATER 927. MASS 6-24
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barges), 45 g, ft. sail, $tq 843.0-6007. - 6-29
MANDALON
MAJORITY Line Harmony, excellent
BMR 140; BMR 3-way machine, $100;
BMR 816-966.
We have many like new album for sale at very low prices. Come into Ray Audio, 13-28
143-249-7500
www.randallaudio.com
Jensen 628" and 511" mobile speakers—20 oz.
or pair only at Ray Avalance 12-600.
B4. 824-2024
Save before you buy. Consult with Ray Audio
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e.g. E 8th htl 142-9947, F 8th htl 142-9947.
HELP WANTED
Assistant to the Dean of the School of Architecture, Department of Architecture, Supervise internal administration of training and exporent programs; administrate training and exporent programs; manage accreditation of programs. University of Kansas, Ksau 86214. Design July 1, 2021.
AVON—earn extra money for college and vacation expenses or supplement your income *B**B*B*B*B*B
Oval opal, yellow gold setting. Call past
4-4584 or 843-7873 evenings. Ward of:
2424
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RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
FURNITURE
15 East 8th 841-2656
10:5 Monday-Saturday
1966 HONDA CB160
1972 HONDA XL250
1972 HONDA XL300
1972 KAWASAKI 350
1972 KAWASAKI DT250
1972 HONDA XL450
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
1811 W. 6th 843-3333
1ORIZON'S HONDA
Female Saint Bernard, 841-3595. 6-24
"Beat the Summertime Blues at 14th and Ohio"
- Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
PERSONAL
NOTICE
Pitcher Night Wednesday
Found- Tenniss trenacca at Robinson's tennis
airbnb 844-625-016 or come to 905 Energy Apt.
A2l. Bt 28
SERVICES OFFERED
-Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
**Swap Shop** 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
clock televisions, Open daily 12:30,
643-347-397
Sandwiches
THE WHEEL
Chilled Glasses
Found, black short-baleted male Dog. sat. Adventure around Wonat Library: 843-212-76.
6-28
After 24 years will make in business, If Gracey company
dies, they will make in business.
Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 115, 116, 119, 121, 122, 126, 506. Regular sessions or time preparation. Reasonable rates: 7-29
842-764-781
- Outdoor Beer Garden
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
foats, patafits and peaches, Gold Cup ice cream
and cheesecake gallery at the Catshaw Cafe, 803
davis, deer). Dinner too. 1:30 bim. 128 cou-
Sundays.
Free dog-dip at Sunshine Feed and Seeds, Sat-
day 5th; Free your dog from ticks at
6th, 11th and 14th
Sewing, tailoring done at reasonable rates. Will also make alterations. Those interested in something for that special occasion this summer should call the office (pillows, curtains, drapes, etc.). 6-30
& Schooners
PAST AND ACCURATE SERVICES OFFERED. FASTEST FROM GASSTER TO THE STATION FROM gasster to tape recording. Call Katherine at (212) 465-3078.
Lawrence Gay Liberation social activist 8a-
9529. Counseling 8a-705, 6-20
CANNING* Fresh spices and herbs in bulk. The Hinky Cheese Shop, 80914, W. 23rd Street, 6-24
Recreator/Gestalt, workshop. A weekend excursion to the University of Wisconsin-Madison where We'll use systems of awareness training and other skills to addition to basic encounters and Gestalt models of work at Eden Institute, are part members of the faculty of the Human Potential School of Education and 27th, 9:30 a.m., $20; Call 821-5195 or 27th, 9:30 a.m., $20; Call 821-5195.
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous. 841-0200. iff.
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
(Open 8am-7pm)
WIN A CASE OF BER OR COKE. Joade Sher-
won a win of 4,600 for her favorite beverage (Dr. Pepper) she received $8 for simply participating in a contest. She won the $125 value of beer (Draper). Call 864-1285, 8 to m.p. 5-6 to 8. Phone: 864-1285, 8 to m.p. 5-6 to 8.
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
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842.8413
stercharge
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TUTOR
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-754-
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Experienced typist, IBM Selectric, term papers
Incorrect correction. 841-384-29
Corrected correction. 841-384-29
1 do damned good typing. Fugger, 842-4476, latex
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TYPING
Experienced typist—term paper, tests, mice, misc.
experiments. Skilled in letter writing, spelling,
corrected 843-853, Mrs. Wright.
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/site. Quality work
with leading clients. Desert dissentations welcome.
E-mail: 842-912-3872
Experienced typist will do all kinds of typing in my home: Call Carolyn at 814-0984. 6-29
Experienced typist, IBM Mag-Card, term papers,
mobILE correspondence,
L-947 or 835-9711
6-30
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Designing musical themes, diagrams, piec electrics. B.A. School of Music. University of Queensland.
WANTED
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Need females to share large house. 811-515-626
843-874 evening, 876 days, split, unit spill; 6-26
Aztec Inn
Home of the
Aztec Calendar
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
807 Vermont 842-9455
FIELDS
All Mexican Dishes served
530 Wisconsin
FUNNY
843-9404
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
—o Nights a Week.
Open 2 p.m.-3 a.m. Dancers 3:00-3:00 p.m.
Memorabilia Available
Cab B Private
Wayne P-Owner
R
July 1 Oakland A's
Lobbv
'76 ROYALS BASEBALL TOURS
Aug. 9 New York Run
Sports Runners
Aug. 9 New York Yankees $1450
Sop. 4 Texas Rangers
SUA Maupintour travel service
Kansas Union Building
quality travel arrangements since 1951
Phone 843-1211
6
Thursday, June 24,1976
University Daily Kansan
Juveniles work off fines
Punishment for juvenile offenders in Douglas County, Alaska, more than 10 years old, did pay.
Since November, eight juveniles have served sentences for crimes by performing community service. County Probate Judge Mike Elwell said yesterday.
Elwell said the juveniles had served sentences by working at the Lawrence Community Center, the Lawn Park, and the Humane Society and local nursing homes.
Before he gives such sentences, Elwell said, he considers the nature of the offense, the age of the juvenile and whether the offense was intentional. He primarily forges such as vandalism.
Elwell said the sentence was devised because juveniles often weren't able to pay
"The sentence is a form of punishment for the juvenile and retribution to the community." Elwell said. "The alternative is to do nothing."
The sentence is usually 30 hours. But, about 100 hours were served in one day.
The job sentence isn't a formalized
program. It is a successful
successful program for adult use.
said. Punishment for juveniles is measured in numbers of hours that must be worked. In contrast, adult offenders work off fines at a rate of $5 an hour.
Judy Osburn, director of county corrections, said more than 30 adults had worked off $2,000 to $4,000 in fines since the start of the war, where juveniles have served, adult offenders have worked at the Boys Club, adults and at picking up trash along county roads.
"At one time, we had the idea of requiring a juvenile who had damaged private property to work off his punishment with a police officer. "However, we were afraid that the juvenile might be required to perform a dangerous job or that the property owner might be convicted."
Ann Evens, director of the Lawrence Art Center, said she supported the job sentences because the art center didn't have funds to hire a regular janitor.
"The offender that worked here started out with a negative attitude but finally realized she deserved punishment," Evans said. "I think it's a super way of working off an offense, and the parents in this instance felt the same way."
1
Events
TODAY: Marsson ORIENTAL PRINT SALE, South Lounge, Kansas Union
Lobby, 11 a.m.--6 p.m.
TONIGHT: KJHK's STARSHINES will feature The Tubes at 8:30.
TOMORROW: JAZZ BAND Concert, Swarthout Hall, 7:30 p.m. SUA film State of Siege, Woodruff Auditorium, 7:30 p.m., $1.
SATURDAY: VENEZUELAN FORUM for Venezuelan students, 9 a.m.—noon,
Council Room, Union.
SUNDAY: JOHN BARKETT will begin the Summer Series of "Unique Perspectives on the Classics" on KJHK at a p.m. theme, on the series and variation, will highlight the two major sets of Diabellia variations: one by Beehoven and two by the national Society of Artists. The sets will be played on pianos from the era of Beethoven.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom-684-4510
Business Office-684-4538
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday during June and July except Saturday, Sunday and Holiday. Second-class postage paid at Lawrence, Kan. 68603 subscriptions by mail are $a a semester or $1$ a year in Douglas County. Subscription to the county. Student subscriptions are $25 and through the student activity fee.
Editor Dierck Camelman
Managing Editor Kelly Scott
Campus Editor Eric Baidaw
Associate Campus Editor Becel Brewing
Copy Chiefs Ron Hartung Larry Eshl
Photo Editor Joe Kooler
Business Manager Carol Stallard
Assistant Business Manager Jim Marquart
Promotion Manager Jim Fawl
Ad Manager Sara McAnnay
Classified Manager Jolene McCleaghan
Business Adviser Mel Adams
News Adviser Bob Giles
Publisher David Dary
Clip
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Special
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Includes salad, beverage, choice
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One coupon per person
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SIZZLER
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O
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Shredded Beef Sandwich . . Reg. 89c 75c
Bar-B-Q Beef Sandwich . . . Reg. 89c 75c
and Sandwich Shoppe
Phone 843-3264
Plump Hot Dogs . . . . . . Reg. 69c 55c
Italian Steak . . . . . . . . . . Reg. 79c 65c
Kurly KU Fries ... Reg. 40c 25c
Pork Tenderloin . . . . . . Reg. 75c 65c
GIANT SIZE SOFT
Pretzels . . . . . . Reg. 29c 19c
Panhellenic gives scholarships
the scholarships this spring. They may choose to have either their fall or spring semester tuition paid by the scholarship. They will be given annually to one male and one female student. The scholarships are awarded on the basis of academic records and campus activities.
Two University of Kansas students will have one semester of their in-station tuition by the first Panhellenic Scholarships, Maureen O'Sullivan, Hutchinson senior and graduate, Jeff Rhoads, Leawood junior and a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, received
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842-1059
7th
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Limit one coupon per person per visit. Void after June 30, 1976.
Friday and Saturday 1.00 Admission
Lawrence Gay Liberation
Summer Dance
June 25
Student Union
8:00-1:00
$1.50
Beer will be sold
Everyone welcome
CATFISH
BAR N GRILL
Sandwiches and Salads Open Grill 11:30-9:00 Daily
Try Your Luck at Our Dartboard— Bring Your Darts
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3-6
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Ken's
2040 West 27th
OFFER EXPIRES JUNE 30,1976
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Ford
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Make Daily Weekly Week-end Rates
Pinto 9.00 plus 9c a mile 80.00 plus 9c per mile 7.50 plus 12c per mile
Maverick 16.00 plus 12c per mile 64.00 plus 12c per mile 7.50 plus 12c per mile
McIntosh Turbo 17.00 plus 12c per mile 94.00 plus 12c per mile 7.50 plus 12c per mile
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LTO 13.00 plus 12c per mile 73.00 plus 12c per mile 10.00 plus 12c per mile
Station Wagon 18.00 plus 12c per mile 80.00 plus 12c per mile 10.00 plus 12c per mile
Above Rates Include Insurance
Insurance Laws Require You Must Be 21
Business Discount
MKU
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Program to entice Med Center graduates to stay in Kansas
Vol.86 No.153
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Monday, June 28, 1976
See page 3
Satellite union plans hinge on new estimate
By SUE WILSON
Planning for the proposed satellite union was stalled because the 1965 estimate of卫星 orbit is not correct.
Pat Wolfe, Kansas Union administrative assistant, said Friday the new cost study, which is being conducted by the Satellite Network, should be ready sometime next month.
If the revised costs go over a $2.5 million limit, those planning the union would have to pay for costs and other recommendations which were approved by the Facilities Advisory Committee last April, said Jon Josserand, student member of the ACLP and the Memorial Corporation Board.
The first plans for a second union, drawn
Search group to start study
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
The search committee to select a vice chancellor for student affairs has been formed and is to meet July 10, the University of Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
Shankel said that at the first meeting the committee would begin to study some of the names already recommended for the vacancy.
A. M. HARTLEY
William Balfour announced his resignation as vice chancellor for student affairs in May. The office is to be filled by Aug. 15.
in 1968, called for a 40,000-square foot three-level structure northwest of Allen
The task force, appointed by the Student Senate last March, used the 1968 blueprints in determining where services should be placed in a new building, Jossner said.
The committee members are
Donald Alderman, dean of men; Clark
Bricker, professor of chemistry;
Joseph Berry, professor of physiology and cell biology; Leonard Davis, student affairs secretary; Joan Edwards. University of Kansas alumna; Salvador Gomez, Garden District College graduate; Lawrence junior; Kathy Hoggand, director, KU Information Center; Richard Rrundquist, director, University Counseling Center; Tedde Winters, assistant director; J. J. Willem, director of business.
Since 1968, construction costs have risen dramatically, he said, making a completely new estimate by architects and contractors necessary.
Bleary-eyed radioman
The Memorial Corporation Board authorized spending up to $5,000 for a cost of $12,000.
Josserand said the cost analysis would help determine whether leaving the first level of the proposed satellite union unfinished would save enough money or whether new plans or different financing would have to be considered.
"We'll know then whether we'll have to scratch again." It is seconded.
The Satellite Union Task Force report divided 31,000 square feet among food services, a bookstore, land areas and facilities for banking and postal services and ticket sales. The report endorsed an aggressive foot lower level for future development.
Although he could manage only a few hours of sleep, during the night, Dave Redwell, president of the KA Amateur Radio Club,
The Kansas Board of Regents approved a satellite union project in June 1966. After four years of study and planning, the project was completed by a student referendum in April, 1920.
In 1975, a study released by the College Union Evaluation Systems said 89.9 per cent of the students surveyed wanted a satellite union.
kept broadcasting near the end of the 24-hour marathon sponsored by the American Radio Relay League at Wells Overlook Park.
The Student Senate Services Committee, which recommended a satellite union, said the west campus area was not conveniently served by the existing Union.
This February a second student referendum on the project endorsed the plan to move the university from New York.
Costs for the 1970 project were estimated at $1.8 million compared to $2.5 million for the 1960 project.
If a cost analysis finds the financing within the $2.5 million limit, the Facilities Advisory Committee, composed of students and faculty, would begin final planning, Burge said.
As soon as the figures are in, planners will have to move quickly before construction starts.
Local hams join global marathon
All parts of the world heard Kansas ham radio operators this weekend when 30 members of the Douglas County Amateur Radio Club broadcast a 24-hour marathon from Wells Overlook Park south of Lawrence.
Beginning under sunny skies and stretching into the night, the club broadcast a simulated emergency message which was received by more than 10,000 harm operators as part of their annual nationwide Field Day festivities.
The Field Day is a contest sponsored by
Women's job roles researched
The Doughs County Amateur Radio Club has 40 members licensed to broadcast and 40 more awaiting arrival of their novice members in the Communications Commission. Higher license levels technician, general, advanced and extra. Each level has required oral and written exams based on the number of messages sent in able to send and receive in a given time.
The radio operators also use the moon to bounce signals to points on the earth.
The pressures foreseen in marriage, motherhood and coping within a male-dominated world are the reasons women account for less than one per cent of dentists, doctors and engineers, according to two University of Kansas researchers.
Walter Smith, assistant professor of curriculum and instruction, and Kala Stroup, dean of women, have written a book that encourages women to enter medicine and engineering. Smith and Stroup said they hoped the book would be published by the University of Georgia Foundation as a guide for high school and junior college counselors and teachers.
Schumaker said many people who previously had experience with citizens' band radios were joining the band. The harm was real, he said, and he pointed to the area of mobile communications, he said.
the american Radio Relay League to see which of its clubs can receive the most direct transmissions, or contacts, from a local radio station. The president of the Douglas County club, said.
Another reason for the shortage of women in such areas is that girls are unaware of opportunities and aren't exposed to role models in the science area.
Smith and Stroup were cautious in assessing whether most science teachers will use the book.
"The contest is used as a way of gauging your performance over a year to year period," Schumaker said. "We had over 1,000 contact with the same amount this year."
"The surrogates of the *20s* inspired
these in 'these men' are man
presently being led, Seth."
Each club set up its own broadcasting stations, generators and antennas to begin broadcasting.
"I don't know if the book will sell," she said. "Primarily, it will present how-to techniques."
Strop said careers in engineering and medicine were well-suited to the wife or mother returning to study after a short absence.
The Department of Health, Education and Welfare's Office of Education has found that teachers come to a high school counselor with a case. The science she's told not to worry while boys with the same problem are told that they'd better buckle down, Stroup said. Most students are men, so there is a need to expose girls to women role models, she said.
These opportunities are offered in professions in which women are rare: race, dentistry, research, nuclear physics, occupational studies, obstetrics and gynecology. Stroup said.
"We a little more flexible than the CB's. We can do a lot more, like fast-scan radio telemetry, and we have more bands to have a wider area of coverage," he said.
Bud Waugh, who recently joined the club, said he had no experience with radio and he joined the club for social reasons. But now, when he was hooked on being a harm operator.
Research shows that girls with abilities in mathematics and science aren't choosing courses once they do enter, Stroup said. Gearing down demonstrated by women between the ages of 16 and 24 who want to enter an art school would settle for a humanities degree. Strom said.
"I can't understand it," Stroup said, "Engineering and medical careers offer the opportunity to have your own hours or work on a part-time basis."
Hijackers seize Air France jet, land in Uganda
Smith and Stroop's findings indicate "girls believe science is not compatible with a woman's desire to get married and raise children.
Workshops for science teachers on science careers are poorly attended and have higher priorities than encouraging women's careers, Smith said.
The heart of the ham operat rs communications system is a satellite.
Stroup said that parents usually expect three goals of their daughters: to marry, to bear at least two children and to settle comfortably in suburbia.
The French consul in Benghazi, who assisted in the negotiations, said none of those aboard the plane had been harmed. He said the hijackers allowed food and drink to be delivered to the aircraft. One of the passengers was a baby, he said.
"Parents must tell their daughter that there is more than just one track to follow." Stroup said. "Women have the same nature to achieve as men, except that women think hard about what they achieving, they may hurt someone such as their parents. Men don't think like this."
Air France sources said the plane had
it airborne for 20 minutes when it
was granted permission to land.
"We have found that parents and
children don't encourage science to
girls." Group study.
"Even though parents will say that they want their daughter to do whatever she desires," Smith said, "the daughter says that she doesn't pursue a career in areas because her parents don't encourage her."
"These jobs are not only conducive to 'raising a family'," Stroup said, "they are also careers with openings everywhere; so you can move directly to a job that easily should her husband be transferred."
Airline officials in Athens said nine Americans boarded the plane there. There were conflicting reports about the number of passengers with the figures ranging from 70 to 83.
"We beam our signal up to the satellite and it retransmits it around the country and around the world. The only place where we are connected is signal is Antarctica," Schumaker said.
The Israeli Transport Ministry reported to TeVak that seven Arabs were known to be inside the building.
Entente is on the shores of Lake Victoria
is northeast of the Ugandan capital of Kigali
The idea for the book originated from Stroup's and Smith's involvement with a 1973 grant by the National Science Foundation. Workshops funded in Wichita, Shawnee Mission, Topeka, Hutchinson and Lawrence were set up to encourage high school girls with high ACT scores in science and science to enter these fields, and to let them know what to expect if they do enter. The workshops also familiarized parents with the idea their daughters can enter non-traditional fields.
The club operated two transmitting stations during the contest, including a continuous wave (CW) transmitter. The CW transmitted signals into sound to send and receive messages.
The book will stress that women do not sacrifice their feminine identity by entering these areas, and will install self-perception into the girl with science and math abilities, allowing her to make a more stabilized choice in a career, Stroup said.
One ailing passenger, believed to be a British woman, was freed in Benghazi, while French and Syrian officials negotiated for several hours with the blackjacks and the plane took on a full load of fuel.
"Mostly, it gives you the opportunity and the means to talk to so many different parts of you that you get to learn about different parts of you in the work through your contacts," he said.
Radio Israel, which broadcast special newscasts throughout the night, carried a report from Paris saying the French Foreign Ministry had instructed its embassy in Kampala to do everything possible to safeguard the lives of the hostages.
The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, a radical guerrilla group, told a Syrian news agency in Damascus that it was responsible for the hijacking. Air force officials spoke in Spanish and broken English during the negotiations in Benghazi. Libya.
"Our total operation uses no commercial power or phone lines to aid transmissions," Schumaker said. "We want to make it seem like an actual emergency, and our transmitters are the only source of communication."
The hijacked plane was on a flight from Tel Aviv to Paris yesterday and had made a stopover in Athens when it was commandeered.
Hijackers seized an Air France jetliner carrying 265 persons in Athens, forced the plane to land deep into Africa and landed at Entube, a airline officials reported early today.
Staff photo
Cairo's Middle East News Agency had reported, without attribution, that the hijackers were heading for Khartoum, Sudan or Aden, the capital of South Yemen.
Israel radio monitors tracking the plane reported the pilot once said he had been told to land at a small airfield on the border of Uganda and Tanzania. Later they said the pilot was heard notifying another aircraft in that he had been told to fly to Entebbe.
Tammy Quick, age 9, explained to an officer from KU police and parking why she and her friends were swimming in Potter Lake on Sunday. Although there is no rule against swimming in the lake, the children were warned to watch out for broken glass and debris.
RANGER
By The Associated Press
Khartoum to about 1,375 miles southeast of Bengazi, and Aden is 750 miles farther east.
No swimmina?
Sudan is a moderate member of the Arab League, while South Yemen is in the radical wing and has granted asylum to Palestinian-backed hikiers in the nast
Ben Gurion Airport outside Tel Aviv was placed on alert because of concern the hijackers might order the plane to fly there and have their own demands for the lives of the faraselis aboard.
The 257 persons aboard flight 139 included 12 crew members.
Bartender's job a challenging mix
Bv LEWIS GREGORV
the bartending business is more than fixing simple highballs; a bartender must know how to fix such delights as a Freddie Kruger, a Bubba Johnson, and White Spider and Yellow Bird.
Staff Writer
Run, Jump, Skip and Go Naked, Blue Tail Fly and Prairie Flower are other favorites for the winter.
"I know about 100 drinks by memory, but there are probably more than 700 drinks altogether." Chris Black, bartender in Russell's East, 3400 W. 30th, sdi..
"The Harvey Wallbanger was the drink a few years ago that everyone ordered, but last year it was the Tequila Sunrise," Black said.
Black admitted that he had to look up some drink recipes, but most he already
"You only need to know about 20 different drinks, because there is a lot of combinations," Steve Gasper, manager of the 7th Club, 7th and Massachusetts;安杰斯.
Gasper said he didn't mind asking the customer how to fix a drink if he hadn't. "I don't know," he said.
"The customer usually feels great when you ask them how to fix a drink, because they like it."
"We serve a lot of Flaming Pine," Mothers because we light it on fire and people like the looks of the drink," Gasper said.
Gasper said he didn't think it was hard to make drinks, but that some bartenders are like him.
The bartenders they talked poor upbing by the students and people in [1].
"We have a lot of student, but they don't up well, we don't. Olafie the piano man, the Ribaygurus."
said. "The businessmen are great because they tip well."
One bartender who asked not to be identified and the fact that people didn't tip him, was the chef.
Hayes said the Rubayay was looking forward to having delegates for the Republican National Convention because of the expected increase in business.
Despite the lack of tipping, the bartenders seemed to like their jobs.
Black said bartending was the best job that he could find. He graduated with a B.S. in education, but couldn't find a teaching job.
"Sob Hills lives up to its name by people thinking they didn't have to pay for good meals."
"I wanted to stay in the Lawrence area
and teach social studies, but there wasn't a teaching job available," Black said.
Gasper said, "When I knew I was going back to school in the masters of business administration program, and needed a job. I interviewed for several jobs and decided to bartender. I didn't know much about bartending, but they trained me to do the job."
"I've been working here more than a year and it's the best payin' job I can find," she said.
Karen Hidaka, bartender at the Sancor
bakery, she thought she had the best job in town.
Gasper and Black said they favored liquor by the drink in Kansas. Black said he believed Kansas was losing money because of the liquor law.
By The Associated Press
Reagan cuts Ford's lead
Ronald Reagan cut President Ford's lead to a slim 25 delegates over the weekend as the race for the Republican presidential nomination headed for a convention showdown with 182 uncommitted delegates holding the key.
The tally yesterday stood at 1,001 delegates for Ford and 976 for Reagan, according to an Associated Press delegate poll. With only 98 delegates left to be chosen, the outcome of the nomination the outcome apparently resists with the 123 still undecided resists.
Ford went into the weekend 16 delegates ahead of Reagan, 894 for the President to 928 for Reagan. But at GOP conventions in four states, Reagan picked up 46 delegates in addition. In addition, two previously uncommitted Wyoming delegates switched to Reagan.
The weekend began on a strong note for the President as his well organized forces held firm to win 17 of the 18 delegates chosen early Saturday morning at a Republican state convention in Minnesota.
Reagan had hoped to pick up six of the Minnesota delegates, but the Ford people were willing to give him only one after pushing through a rules change guaranteeing them control of the delegate selection.
Reagan forces were firmly in control at state conventions Saturday in Montana, New Mexico and Idaho and refused to give Ford's backers even a single delegate.
The former California governor swept all 20 delegates chosen in Montana, all 21 selected in New Mexico and four elected in Idaho.
2
Monday, June 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
General leads in Portugal
LISBON, Portugal - Arny Gen. Antonio Ramalho Eanes swept to a commanding lead early today over three rivals in Portugal's first free presidential election.
The 19-year-old officer, certified with a major role in crushing an attempted bullet coup last fall, appeared headed for the presidency with a majority that was expected to win.
Under Portugal's new constitution, the presidency is a powerful force. The president names and can dismiss the country's premier and can veto laws and regulations.
The turnout, lighter than forecast, was about 72 per cent, or an estimated 6 million voters. No violence or maor incidents were reported.
Martian landing delayed
PASADENA, Calf.-Because of danger craters, knobs and pitted terrain, scientists delayed yesterday the scheduled July 4 landing of Viking 1 on the Martian surface, possibly for several weeks.
Viking Project Manager James Martin said recent pictures of the primary viking date shown are too blurry to be used, but it could be too humiliated without landing just investing other sites.
From the beginning, scientists at Jet Propulsion Laboratory stressed there would be flexibility in choosing a landing date. They said the bicentennial touchdown target was set because of a fortune conjunction between celestial circumstances and earthly considerations.
Mayors rosy on jobs bill
MI.WAUKEE -- Big city mayors, meeting here to discuss the nation's urban economic crisis, expressed confidence that President Ford will sign a public works bill.
Several Republican mayors said they did not think Ford could afford to veto the measure, and predicted GOP lawmakers could not afford to sustain his veto even if
The measure, which passed Congress last week, affords some federal aid to almost every city, with allocations based on jobless rates and population.
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)—Former federal judge G. Harrold Carwell has denied any wrong-doing in an incident in which plainclothes vice police charged him with misdemeanor battery, State Atty. Harry Morrison said yesterday.
Carswell denies charge of misdemeanor battery
Carswell, 68, whose nomination to the Supreme Court was rejected in 1970, remained hospitalized yesterday and would see only close family members.
Morrison said Carwell "categorically denied any wrong-doing" after his arrest Thursday in a wooded area north of Tallahassee.
"He said, 'I'd rather be dead than in the clutches of vice officers under such circumstances. I may just kill my sister." He got it all wrong. "Morris said."
On Campus
TODAY: Incoming FRESHMAN SUM-
MER, JUNE 20th, day 1, liberal, Liberal
and Sciences-campus.
TONIGHT: MARSHALL FINE, Journal- World reporter, will present a Theatre Festival Lecture, "Producers and the Press," 7 p.m., Swarthout Reacult Hall.
TOMORROW: United States Independent TELEPHONE ASSOCIATION conferences, all day. Kansas Union. Conferences will be held daily through Friday.
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences has two new administrators who have filled vacancies created by three departing staff members.
Two selected to fill vacancies in LA&S office
Eleanor Turk, assistant to executive vice chancellor Del Shankel, will become assistant to the dean of the College on July
Theodore Wilson, professor of history,
became associate dean of the College on
Syria.
The departing members of the college staff are: Veda Gibson, assistant dean, who retired in May; Marilyn Stokstad, associate dean, who will return to teaching art; Howard Baumgartel, associate dean, who will return to teaching psychology.
Turk came to KU a year ago from the University of Wisconsin where she was a teaching and administrative assistant in the department of Computer Science at B.A. at Ohio Wesleyan university, her M.A. at the University of Illinois and her Ph.D. in European history while studying in Germany on the dean's scholarship. As an undergraduate, she will work with students and their problems.
Wilson has been a history teacher at KU since 1965. He obtained his B.A., M.A., and M.S. from the University of Oklahoma.
Wilson was appointed head of the program last summer but had already accepted a teaching position at the University of Dublin in Ireland. Ellen Gold, assistant professor of speech, filled in for Wilson until he returned this summer.
In his new position, Wilson is in charge of KU's outreach program and will assist in carrying forward graduate studies programs. The outreach program organizes off-campus classes under the auspices of the Continuing Education Center.
Clarification
Bonnie Ritter, director of the Office of Affirmative Action, said Friday that she would have preferred the use of the word "affirmative" in her name. Kansan's report on her speech concerning KU's hiring and student recruiting policies (page 1, Tuesday, June 22). Ritter said that her students were often treated as the university was guilty of an illegal act, which was not what she said she intended.
"He and the policeman first came face-to-face there, and they talked for some while."
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Morrison said the incident started in the vestible of a men's room at a Tallahassee shopping mall, where merchants had complained of homosexuals.
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"During that time they were in the car, passes were made to the officer," Morrison
Carswell touched Green in the car, Morrison said, refusing to elaborate.
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He was hospitalized shortly afterward. A hospital spokesman said yesterday that Carswell was there for a nervous condition and he was in satisfactory condition.
No hearing on the battery charge has been set, Morrison said, and the charge is ready.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, June 28. 1978
2
Health Days a push for recruits
By MARION ABARE
KANSAS CITY, Kan.-Kansas com-
munities could have a greater supply of
health care professionals if the K.U.
Medical Center Health Dav is successful.
Staff Writer
The Med Center has scheduled two Kansas Health Days in September as a "total push effort" for Kansas communities and needed health care personnel to meet, Robert Kugel, executive vice chancellor for the Med Center, said yesterday.
Kugel said Health Day would "provide opportunity for people from various communities to be introduced to medical and health services" and that there are quite a few communities out in the
state who are interested in having them there."
"It sometimes seems paradoxical that a number of KU students have never really been approached by people in Kansas to go into practice," he said.
Kansas Health Days will be held September 10 at the Radisson-Muebleah Hotel, Kansas City, Mo., and September 16 at the Broadway店, Wichita.
Kugel said the state had been blanketed
A. J. Yarmat, assistant vice candleman for students, said 43 communities have already responded to invitations sent last week by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes
Sexuality studied by prof
"It looks like the needs out there are being tapped," Yarmat said.
Sexuality is the most vital and frightening aspect of human relationships, Dennis Dailey, associate professor of social welfare, said recently.
This is the first year of the three-year program in which social work educators are trained to deal with human sexuality topics in their teaching.
Dalley will attempt to learn how to incorporate sexuality counseling into his social work at a four-week workshop starting today at the University of Hawai'i's Center for the Study of Sex Education in Social Work.
Ten social work teachers and five social workers who have been involved in human sexuality education and research will participate in the program, which trains social workers in counsel in the area of human sexuality in a cautious, responsible manner. Daily said.
The area of sex therapy, for example, has been subject to quackery, Daly said.
"People need to be cautious about the credentials of sex therapists," he said.
The workshop includes information sharing programs and a program to monitor the outcomes.
Communities are invited to send representative tax to students and universities, or digital library, by mail.
with invitations to all counties, cities,
mayors, chambers of commerce and the
city officials.
Kugel said he hoped the representatives would emphasize telling about their commitment.
Young physicians need to know what opportunities hospitals have, and about the latest medical advances, said.
"It's a matter of making certain persons are introduced to each other," Kugel said. "We'll start something and the community will have to keep it up."
The morning sessions will offer panel discussions and information exchange. The afterwards will be open for visits to booths at the Kansas Women's Museum with representatives from Kansas丈园
Physicians are included in this year's invitations because they are important to our patients.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Last March Dykes appointed an outreach task force for health related programs to help meet health care needs in the state. The task force overall outreach program, Kugel said.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
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Business Office-864-4358
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Meeting health care needs in rural Kansas communities has long been a priority.
Published at the University of Kaisaun
August through May and June is a
special edition except Saturday.
Sunday and Holidays. Second-class
scripts by mail are $9 a semester or $18
as
A bill introduced to the Kansas legislature this spring which would have changed the method of selecting medical students to take part in medical clinics, which make up the 200 openings, for
"We must reach a level of confidence, competence and comfort about our own sexuality and then we can help others with theirs," Bailey said.
State Rep. Keith Farrar, R-Hugdon, said in 1976 only one student came from a county west of U.S. 81, which runs through Salina and Wichita.
"The focus is on getting people in touch with their own sexuality, their own behavior and attitudes toward it. It is a desensitizing loss of one's own sexual biases," Dalley said.
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Dailey will be teaching graduate courses on human sexuality this fall in the School of Social Work, where he will be an independent study course on the sexually oppressed," which would deal with the problems that groups such as the aged, ill women and men accused and mentally ill face in regard to their sexual needs.
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"The final objective is to see if we can induce more young Kansans to stay in Kansan."
In addition to his teaching responsibilities, Dailey has a private practice counseling homosexualus and married couples. He also teaches from KU to study homosexual relationships.
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The University of Kansas Theater's 1976 Summer Theater Festival
--one two three four five time times times times times
"The Continuous American Revolution" presents
THE WHITE HOUSE MURDER CASE
Wed.-Sat., June 30-July 3 All Shows Start 8:00 p.m.
BY JULES FEIFFER
Tickets $2.50
K. U. Students, Senior Citizens Music & Art Campers $'1.50
For Information and Reservations Call: 864-3982
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dialysis Kannan院 for all students without regard to sex, color, grade or background. BIRL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 115 FILLT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
M run
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Tuesday 5 p.m.
times times times times
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word
... ... ... ... ... ...
AD DEADLINES
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowance will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the field.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks and can be sold in person or simply by calling the UDR business office *864-3238*.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR RENT
All persons parking on the east side of the Pihi
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ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and ask us about our mobile a room. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WEBER MOBILE HOMES, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS
2 bdr. all utilities paid, on campus. Furnished
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4933.
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general modern宜墅. Discount! Only $800.
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842 8413
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Assistant to the Dean of the School of Architecture at the University of Arkansas during a period Superintensive internal administration training and experience, degree preferred. Training and experience, degree preferred. Dearest University of Kansas 864-2514. Deadline July 1.
Two half-time graduate assistants in the School of Nursing have been appointed to a Kansas. One position serves as an adviser to a research institute and involves research on women's concerns and issues; the other includes completed Bachelor's degree and enrollment pointitions begun August 8 at salary $320,000. Dean of Women, 229强 Wall, Hl (913) 644-6200, Dan of Women, 229强 Wall, Hl (913) 644-6200.
Cashier-Houses. Fine area restaurant. Over 21
evenings. Phone 614-343-1234, 2 p.m.
evening. Episode 614-343-1234
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Found. black short-haired male dog Sat. after around wound Atason Library. 428-71. 6-28
Found - Diedhalland at Frontier Ridge Apts. Call
heartbeat in office in noce. Collaborate
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Last-a ring in a bathroom on the 2nd floor of a building. A person on it. Reward offered. 843-0884 evening.
NOTICE
C it cool it thou afternoons with fruits and
foats, parfaits and peaches, Gold Cup ice cream
and chereecheese galore at the Cafe Cale, 600
Snowdale. Dinner too. Ilt $38 soup.
Sunday.
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+3-377+ +3-377+
After 28 years in business if George doesn't
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WIN A CASE OF BEWOK OR COKE- JOade Sherrin a hoover Towers is the first to receive a call from her husband. She also received $2 for simply participating in a case of bewok or coke. In many cases a case of bewok. Call 841-416-3000.
For new Chevroletls and used cars at Turner Chevrolet
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Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous. 843-0100.
1811 W. 6th 843-3333
SERVICES OFFERED
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Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 002, 102, 106, 118, 151, 161, 121, 125, 150. Regular sessions or online text preparation. Rate: 7-29.
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Sewing, tailoring at reasonable rates. Will also make alterations. Those interested in some special occasion this summer should call 843-6556. Also contact (pillows, curtains, drape, etc.). 6-30
TYPING
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-
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1 do damned good typing, Peggy. 842-4476, 7-29
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours).
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Call Joan, 842-1027, illustrations or phone:
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- Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
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Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, manuscript writing. 843-7295, J. Wright. 843-7295, J. Wright.
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
Female romantics wanted for 'fall (or earlier)'
serious student and like dogs. Phone 847-721
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Experienced typist, IBM M-Mag-Card, term papers,
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Need male roommate immediately to share good
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Experienced typist will do all kinds of typing in my home: Call Carolyn at 841-0984. - 6-29
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Testing software products.
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7th & Arkansas 843-3328
THE HAWK
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K ADVERTISE
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
THE WHEEL
- Pitcher Night Wednesday - Outdoor Beer Garden
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A
Mondav. June 28,1976
University Daily Kansan
KC wins in 11th; A's use players
KANSAS CITY (AP)—John Mayberry slammed a bases loaded single with none out in the 11th inning Sunday to give back victory over the Gallucci Angels.
Mayberry came through off left-hander
Andy Hassler, who was relieving Dick
Dixon.
Drago gave up a double to Jim Wohlford and an intentional walk to Amos Otis. Wohlford reached third on an errant pickoff attempt and then Hassler came on and walked George Brett to set the stage for Mayberry.
The decision went to Doug Bird, B-1, who limited the Angels to one run and three hits
the last line might be:
The Royals' tied the score in the ninth
against Drago on Osi's second hit, a single to center, and Brett's fourth home run. That stretched the American League's leading hitter's streak to eight games.
Kansas City scratched out a run in the third against Kirkwood without a hit. With one out, Wohlford walked, stole second, and continued to third when Terry Humphrey's throw sailed into center field for an error and scored on Amos Otis' grounder.
In other American League action, Rolle Fingers and Joe Rudi returned to action, with the Oakland A's after nearly striking against owner Charles Finley and topped the Minnesota Twins, 5-3 yesterday. Fingers got the save, his ninth of the season.
The game was delayed 10 minutes while
Sports
KU women golfers lose to southerners
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Sports Writer
Even with low expectations of success,
the University of Kansas women's golf team
had a tough time at the ALAW National
CompetitionJuneteenth LeagueJuneteenth
14-19 in East Lansing, Mich.
The competition, hosted by Michigan State University and played at the Forest Akers course, proved to be a humbling experience for KU women and their coach, Nancy Boccy.
The final results of the tournament weren't yet available, Boozer said, but the University of Florida was the top team. She attributed KU's poor showing to the difficulty of the course, the stiff competition and the lack of teams from southern universities.
"I didn't think we could qualify as a team when we went up there," Boozer said. "The trip was primarily a reward for good play during the year."
Boozer said schools enter the tournament could take five players and use their four best scores. KU's three top golfers, who played were Beth Boozer, Nate Boozer and Nancy Hoins, dependence senior; and Nancy Hoins, Leavenworth freshman.
Diane Nesser, Kansas City, Kan. sophomore, didn't qualify for the trip but paid her own way to gain experience in college tournament play.
The field of 220 individual golfers was narrowed to 81 after two days of 18-hole play. The average score needed to make the cut was 83, down from a 103 cutoff four years ago and three strokes less than last year's requirement of 86.
Beth Boozer was the only KU golfer to qualify, with rounds of 79 and 81.
The girls also thought the time element was a factor in their poor play, Boozer said. The course was laid out so that it took three minutes to finish. It was easy to lose concentration, she said.
"The difficulty of the course caused delays, not just slow play," she said. "When people spend time in and out of sand traps and other hazards it slows play."
The caliber of golf intimidated some of
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W W L Pts. GB
New York 48 12 367
Cleveland 34 12 307
Baltimore 34 12 300
Detroit 34 12 494
Boston 31 12 350
Houston 31 12 319
Nashville 31 12 319
Kannan City 42 36 618 — 1/4
Texas 18 36 618 — 1/4
Oakland 35 36 618 — 1/4
Chicago 33 35 485 9
Minnesota 33 37 485 10
California 32 37 485 10
Saturday's Games
Baltimore 2. Cleveland 1.
Houston 2. New Orleans
Boston 2. Detroit
Minnesota 1. Oakland 3.
Kansas City 1. California 6
Detroit 4. Philadelphia
New York 6, Milwaukee 2,4
Cleveland 6, Baltimore 3,8
Philadelphia 5, Atlanta 3
Oakland Clip 5, California 4, 1.1 images
Dallas 5, Minnesota 3
Baltimore (Patron 97) at Boston (Jones 10), in Milwaukee (Cowell 4) at Cleveland (Hood 34), in New York (Holman 5) at Detroit (Freddy 71), in San Francisco (Kuhn 8), in Oakland (North 5) at Oakland (Under 7.5), in Philadelphia (Davis 2) at Philadelphia (Davis 2).
Tomorrow's Games
Baltimore at Huntington,
Mineapolis at Cleveland,
Omaha at Kansas City
California at Minneapolis,
California at Chicago.
PUFF'S
PUFF'S FRAGRANT WEEDS
the players, Bozer said, especially freshman Hoins.
"The level of the game was comparable to the LPGA tour and we just weren't accustomed to it. Those girls we faced are getting their turn," she said. "We'll join the tour upon graduation," she said.
Chevroots' Merschmanns' Breuer Roots
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Patinaism' cores contaminate on hand.
The southern schools' domination was expected, because girls who attend those schools are able to play all year and are ready for tournament play, she said.
"Only one northern school was able to qualify as a team and that was Michigan on ice."
KU can't compete with southern teams because their philosophy toward their golf team is that they are
For example, the entire women's sports program at Tulsa University centers on golf and tennis. The school uses money to attract top golfers and give scheduling benefits, benefits, and incentives.
the A's made a last minute decision to play the game. The A's had voted to walk out if Finley had not allowed Fingers, Rudi and he would participate in the contest. But Finley released.
Boozer acknowledged the talents of these golfers but questioned the validity of flying to tournaments every weekend during the spring.
Despite the team's setback at this year's AIAW competition, Boozer said, they would try to qualify for next year's tournament in Hawaii.
We Write Motorcycle Insurance
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
FOR FINE ENTERTAINMENT
Bugsys
Disco Theater
TONIGHT
25c Beer
Students Get In Free Open at 7:00 Show at 8:00 642 Mass.
Coming the Drifters in concert
For Two Nights—July 2 & 3
Four hours of music including
Their Hits—Cover only $2.50
Bugsy's Bicontennial 4th of July Weekend
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
A systematic program to develop the full potential of the individual
FREE PUBLIC LECTURES
Tonight, June 28
Campus Bank 9th & Louisiana 7:30 p.m.
Wed., June 30
Parlor A, Kansas Union
7:30 p.m.
Transcendent Meditation and TM are service marks of
Transcendent Meditation and TM is a Transcendent Meditation Society is a
nonprofit educational organization.
942-1225
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THE KANSAS UNION
The Kansas Union Bookstore and Oread Book Shop Will Be Closed July 1 through July 5 for Annual Inventory
Selling something? Place a want ad. Call 864-4358.
Cloudy Day
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.154
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Sawmillers swear by sweat and sawdust
See back picture page
KU gives boost to Villages fund
By KENNA GIFFIN
Staff Writer
More than $30,000 has been collected from the faculty, staff and alumni of the University of Kansas in a fund drive for a cottage being built for Villages, Inc., Sally Bruce, coordinator of the drive, said yesterday.
Contributions from the KU faculty and staff were requested through departmental communication channels, she said. There are more than 500 students in a University-wide campaign.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Villages, Inc. is a home for dependent and neglected children, whose parents are dead and-or unable to care for them. The Lawrence Villages, Inc. project began in 1983 when the children, aged 10 to 19, lived with houseparents in a temporary residence at 291 Missouri.
UB
The fund raising committee for Villages, Inc. set a goal of 880,000 to be raised to pay for the first of two cottages and a sewer baron in Pleasant Valley, Bruce said.
The KU faculty and staff donated more than $2,500, and $27,500 were given by KU alumni and others interested in Villages, Inc. she said.
The $30,000 was received in time for the groundbreaking for the first cottage, which was held June 2, 1976. Carl Menninger, founder and national chairman of the board of Villages, Inc. in Topeka, attended the groundbreaking.
Plans call for a second cottage to be built, but so far no funds have been collected, and it won't be built until the community expresses a need for it. Bruce said.
The temporary housing on Missouri will be used as long as it is needed, she said.
The storms that moved through Lawrence yesterday felled many a branch and limb. Kelvin Helmert, who worked in the city for more than 40 years, was killed.
What the heck
around 11:00 a.m. telling him that his car had become the target for one of those fallen limbs. When Helmert arrived on the scene, about all he could do was wait for the insurance people to come out and estimate the damage.
Senate to hold training sessions
Staff Writer
By BERNEIL JUHNKE
Before any organization funded by the Student Senate can spend Senate money, at least one of its members must attend a budgetary training session, Tom Mitchell, Student Senate business manager, said yesterday.
The first in a series of budgetary training sessions, which should last about a half-hour, be 3:30 p.m. July 13 in the Kansas Union, he said.
MITCHELL SAID that he and Jim Cox,
Student Senate treasurer, had compiled a procedures guide that would explain to the organizations how to set and spend funds.
There will be only one session this summer, but training sessions will be held on e a month during the fall and spring semesters. Mitchell said.
The guide explains how organizations can obtain University recognition, how they should petition the Student Senate for funds, and what the state and Student Senate rules and regulations on spending were, Mitchell said.
He said sample copies of forms organizations could expect to encounter in using their funds were included in the procedures guide.
This is the first comprehensive guide to spendin the Student Senate has put out,
TEN ORGANIZATIONS didn't attend training sessions last year and, as a result, their accounts weren't activated, Mitchell said.
The Student Senate has requested that faculty advisers of organizations funded by the program support the program.
mailing address for the organization, report changes in officers to the Senate and help members understand and comply with spending regulations.
"Since we fund so many organizations, we
are to communicate through the mail," Midge
Mike said.
he said that some organizations were negligent in getting their mail from the company.
offices and that sometimes bills went unpaid for months.
MITCHELL SAID that for the first time the Student Senate would require organizations to certify at the beginning of the year all property bought with Student
They will be accountable for each item at the end of the year where inventory is taken, he said.
Mitchell said that anything purchased with Student Senate funds became Student
The Senate has had trouble locating some of this property during inventory.
BY REQUIRING organizations to account for their property at the beginning and end of the year, the Senate hopes to keep better track of things, Mitchell said.
Clampdown on food stamps ahead
Bv ALEXIS WAGNER
If proposed food stamp regulations are adopted by the Federal government, some KU students now on food stamp rolls will no longer be eligible to receive the stamps, Suel Starr, supervisor of the Douglas program, said yesterday.
The new regulations, intended to remove no-poverty level recipients from food stamp rolls, were to go into effect June 1, 2013. The restrictions elapsed by a temporary restraining order.
Starr said that there were "no more than 100" students receiving food stamps this summer but that this number would double in the fall.
She said students receiving food stamps would be required to register for work. Under current regulations, a full-time job requires a $150 weekly work but has to show a means of support.
Unlike the old regulations, the new regulations will require that the student use 30 per cent of his monthly income for food stamps.
She said that currently to qualify for food stamps, a student could have no more than $215 in monthly income after all legal regulations were made. The new regulations
Under the present system, a student's tuition is deducted from his income, but Starr said that under the new regulations it might not be.
call for a standard $100 monthly deduction in place of the itemized deductions.
High court rules on racial balance
Starr said that she had received no offi
See CLAMPDOWN page 2
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that federal judges can't require school officials to alter desegregation plans annually to keep up with population shifts, even if integration hasn't been totally achieved.
See CLAMPDOWN page 2
By a vote of 6-2, the justices ruled that U.S. District Judge Manuel Real exceeded his authority in requiring annual reassignment of some pupils in the district. The district said no school would have more than a 50 per cent enrollment of minority students.
in Pasadena, Ramon Cortines,
in president of the school district, said he was pleased with the new system.
In an opinion by Justice William H. Rehquist, the Supreme Court said that the changes in racial balance resulted from a "quite normal pattern of human migration" and the school board should be required to change its plan annually to keep up with them.
The decision, focusing on the particular facts of the Pasadena case, left unanswered such broader questions as how long a school district may be required to remain under court supervision and whether a particular degree of racial balance can be required.
The Pasadena school busing case now goes back to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals for a decision on questions in question. The order should be lifted or merely modified.
The order, issued in 1970, required the Passadena Unified School District to come up with a plan in which no school would have a majority of students of any minority race. At the time, 85 per cent of grade black school students in the district were in eight schools in the high school district. Nearly half of the black junior high school students were in one school.
Fred Okrand, legal director of the Southern California branch of the American Civil Liberties Union, said the decision would have a limited impact.
"When you're looking to having a multiracial school system, constant redistricting does not lead to stability of a community," he said.
would have a limited impact.
"Apparently the Supreme Court did not recall from the requirement that if a school regiment be intentionally segregated, it will still have to desegregate and may have to use any means necessary," Okrand said.
—Rueded 5-3 that government employees, except those in confidential or policy-making jobs, cannot be fired because they belong to the wrong political party.
In other actions, the court:
The court's decision came in a class action suit filed by Republican civil servants in Chicago who said they lost their jobs when Richard Elrod, a candidate backed by Mayor Richard D. Daley, rebelled against the Republican sheriff of Cook County in 1972.
- Gave the government a go-ahead to issue strip-mining leases in the coal-rich northern Great Plains without preparing a climate environmental impact statement.
—Rueded 62 that a judge who is not a lawyer may try a defendant and sentence him to jail for a minor offense under a system which permits the defendant to appeal to a higher court and be tried by a judge with legal training.
Prof sets up scholarship
KU profs differ on odds of finding life on Mars
By LEWIS GREGORY
Staff Writer
A University of Kansas professor is honoring the memory of his daughter by offering a scholarship awarded on the basis of good work, intellect, understanding, progress or financial need.
Carl T. Lebau, associate professor of East Asian studies and Oriental languages and literature, has established the scholarship of Lewis Heyward. He was killed in a September car wreck near Lawrence. He, his wife and friends created the scholarship with the help of the Kansas University.
"Lym wanted to use her education to help people, so we wanted a scholarship to give to decent people with good qualities," Leban said.
"WE ARE looking for deserving students who reflect usual regard for truth, justice
and independence of mind in their pursuit of higher education," he said.
Leban said the only restriction on the award was that the recipient must ultimately want to serve others and not just himself or herself. The recipient will be selected by a committee established under the provisions of the scholarship trust.
The Office of Student Financial Aid declined to administer the scholarship evaluation, but evaluated evaluate the lengthy statements required of applicants for such scholarships. Leban decided to personally administer the scholarship through the KU Endowment Association.
There's irony involved in the scholarship because the financial aid office, which is designed to help people, can not effectively pay the debt. They don't have the time," Leban said.
Armstrong said that a manned expedition to Mars wasn't planned in the immediate future because the money and technology necessary to make the trip weren't available. But, he said, an expedition might be made before the end of the century.
"We had a pretty good idea of the situation from the Mariner program," he said. "The Viking pictures are of better quality than those of our predecessor information will come from the surface."
By JIM MURRAY
New life support systems and landers would have to be developed because a round-trip manned mission to Mars would take three years, Armstrong said. He said the mission would allow parts to an orbiting space station and assembled in space for the journey.
Zeller, who studied thousands of photographs of the planet taken by the Mariner probes in 1973, said he was plunged into "an abyss" and died in his study of Martian climatic conditions.
"A mobile lander that could move around and kick rocks over and sniff the air would be like a helicopter."
Armstrong said that the limitations of the lander made the odds so long. He said that the lander was limited to one position and the robot only perform a few simple experiments.
Differing views of the chances of Viking I finding life on Mars were expressed yesterday by two University of Kansas professors.
the landing site revealed it to be far more rugged than had been expected. An alternate landing site that would allow a touch-down July 8 is being considered. If this site is also too rough, the landing will be postponed until August.
Tom Armstrong, professor of physics and astronomy, was less optimistic about Viking's chances of discovering life on Mars.
The July 4 landing of Vikong I was post-
posed late Saturday after photographs of
Zeller said the spacecraft needed a relatively level landing area so it could swivel its antenna to pass information to an orbiter, which would then relay to Earth.
"I would say it is a definite short shot," he said. "The odds are between one in 100 and one in 1000."
"I'd say there's a 50-30 chance," Edward J. Zeller, professor of geology and physical science at the University of Chicago.
Pictures taken by Viking I are of better quality than those taken by the Mariner spacecraft, but they reveal no new information about Mars. Zeller said.
Local fiddler rocks to music of Kansas
3vGREGG HEJNA
Staff Writer
Sitting cross-legged, with hair flowing past his shoulders and a beard like a Brillo pad gone wild, Robbie Steinmantel had the shock of knowing one of the handful of rock violinists.
Steinhardt is the violinist and lead singer for the Topeda-based group, Kansas. The group is on a break from a hectic touring schedule to rehearse material for its fourth album, to be released in the fall.
Steinhardt has lived most of his 26 years in Lawrence, where his father was born.
HE CREDITS his parents with his early interest in music.
"I started out like most people, listening to stations at night under the covers. My mom used to buy me 98-cent pieces and I used to learn old tunes from those."
"It's because of them that I'm here now, because they forced me to practice."
Although he's one of a select group of rock violinists, Steinhardt draws his musical influences from a wide range of composers and performers.
"G I U S E S THE first group I flipped over would have had to have been the Beatles. Those guys really influenced me as far as just really diving into music head-first. Sheipje really influenced me folk-wise, and then jazzer creent in it," he said.
Steinhardt said he was influenced by only two rock violinists: Jerry Goodman, formerly of the Mahavishnu Orchestra, and Jeffrey jazz standout who switched to rock.
Steinhardt found it easy to laugh at himself when he spoke of his early effort
"My first band was the Catalinas," he said.
THERE WAS a momentary pause as his laughter died down.
"We even made an album. Four songs," he said. "We played our first gig at the recreation center at South Park. We did it for the whole band, five dollars aniee."
"We had to give this friend of ours a dollar out of our pay for moving our equipment. So, I made four dollars," he said.
WHILE WITH a group called Graywack, Steinhardt began to incorporate the electric violin with his singing abilities.
"I've tried playing on electric violins but they sound terrible. I like the natural violin sound."
Kansas stopped touring in the middle of May to begin rehearsals for a new album. Since then, they've stopped only for a two-week vacation and a few concerts, including an appearance at Kansas City's Summer Jam '76.
With three moderately successful albums behind them, Steinhardt said, Kansas hasn't regretted not having a hit single.
"On a bad night we're better than the average band. I don't know why, but we always seem to pull off a good show. If we're in bac form or good form it seems to come off at a C level, where a lot of plays will play in a D O F level," he said.
STENHARDT SAID the group had toured with more than 75 bands. He's not shy when it comes to comparing them with Kansas.
"The band has never gotten to the point where they just wanted to sit down and try to write singles and became millionaires overnight," he said.
THE POTTERY BOAT
Break from the road
Staff photo
"On a bad night we're better than the average band," said Robble Steinmund, who is the violinist for the group Kansas. Steinmund and fellow members of the band are also among the top three on the New York City music scene.
2
Tuesday, June 29, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
Drill instructor acquitted
SAN DIEGO--Marine S. Gat. Brandon Bronson, a drill instructor accused of involuntary manslaughter and other charges in the training-related death of a marine diver in 2014.
A general court-martial trial board of five officers and three emplaced men found Bromson not guilty on charges of disobeying orders, dereliction of duty, injurious conduct.
Bronson, who earned eight medals in Vietnam, could have been sentenced to five years in prison if convicted
Branson, 30, had sold command when Pvt. Lynn McClure was forced to fight six other corps in succession Dec. 6, 1975.
Mai, John Frewell, chief prosecutor in the case for the Marine Corps, said in final arguments that Boston had violated an order to conduct close-drill fights.
Mercenaries sentenced
LUANDA, Angola—An American and three British soldiers of fortune were sentenced yesterday to die before a firing squad for their part in the Angolan civil war. One of the Britons had admitted ordering the massacre of 14 other British mercenaries who refused to fight.
Two Americans and seven British citizens were sentenced to prison terms ranging from 10 to 30 years by a people's revolutionary court that called the 13
Daniel Gearhardt, a 34-year-old Vietnam veteran who left his wife and children in Kensington, Md., to come to Angola, appeared to wilt when the verdict was announced.
Prison terms were given to Gustavo Grillo of Jersey City, N.J., 30 years, and 21-year-old Gary Acker of Sacramento, Calif., 16 years.
Abortion funds escape ban
WASHINGTON—A ban on the use of federal funds to pay for abortions was deleted yesterday by the Senate from a $56-billion appropriation bill.
funds for the Departments of Labor and Health, Education and Welfare. Supporters of the ban on use of federal funds for abortions argued that public
money was better kept in a backpack, Parkwood, R-Oren, who moved to delete the ban, said the provision "simply denies the right to obtain an abortion to poor men."
After several heated exchanges, the ban was deleted on a roll call vote of 57 to 28. The Senate spent a little more than four hours on the appropriations bill, then voted 34 to 21.
Doctors debate flu shots
WASHINGTON - Two polio vaccine experts, Dr. Albert Sabin and Dr. Jonas E. Salk, disagreed yesterday on the planned nationwide immunization program.
Dr. Sabin, testifying before a House Commerce subcommittee, said that the vaccine should be given now to persons more inclined to catch swine flu or have severe effects from it. The rest of the vaccine should be stockpiled for more imminent dangers of an epidemic, he said.
However, Dr. Salk, who supports the federal immunization plan, said that the vaccine would "do better in people's arms than in the refrigerator."
Producers of the swine flu vaccine also asked the subcommittee to pass proposed legislation that would provide federal indemnification against claims for injury because insurance firms are refusing to extend coverage to the immunization program.
Critic reviews his job
Fine's lecture on producers and the press was part of the University of Kansas museum.
A drama critic must be a creature of knowledge and compassion, Marshall Fine, drama critic for the Lawrence Journal, which will lecture at a lecture in Swarthout Recital Hall.
"It takesugs and nerve to be critic," he said, plus "belief in your own abilities."
"It's easier to write a negative review than positive one! It is easier to tell why you dislike it."
Writing a review is more an emotional than an intellectual process, he said. Emotion motions the review, and the critic's state of mind often influences it.
"I always try to look for something redeeming in a show," he said.
When he is reviewing a show, Fine said,
he asks himself, "Does the director understand the script? Does he recognize that it's a turkey or a gem?"
He sees his job as a consumer service that he publics the get the best value for its materials.
"I have to constantly think of my audience. This is a college town but it's also Kansas, and I could offend some people," he said.
Fine said that KU theater productions, which he often reviews, had a two-fold function: to teach students and to provide entertainment.
"It's a hard balance to strike and I think the University Theater is close to it," he said.
Fine said he thought the theater tradition seemed to be dying out.
"The theater isn't as graphical as television. TV is always there. It's an effort to get up and go out to the theater. It's too easy to stay home," he said.
Senate freezes income tax rate
Should the cuts not be renewed, it would mean a $10-a-year tax increase for a 5% tax rate.
Here are the provisions that would be extended through August:
- A taxpayer is allowed a tax credit—which is subtracted directly from taxes owed—of $35 for himself and each dependent. Or, he may accept a credit of 2 per cent of the first $9,000 of taxable income up to a maximum of $180.
— A taxpayer who does not itemize deductions is allowed a minimum standard deduction of $1,700 or $2,100 for joint returns. The maximum standard deduction is $2,400 for single returns and $2,800 for joint returns.
— A special "work bonus" is allowed poor, working families with children. To reward them, the law allows them to subtract up to $400 from their tax bill. This credit is 10 percent of the first $4,000 of earned income. It is paid before ending at the $8,000 income level.
The new regulations, ordered by the Ford administration February 19, were to go into effect June 1. However, on May 28, a judge granted a temporary restraining order against the regulations until their validity could be decided.
cial word concerning the new regulations but that she expected to know by September 2014.
Clampdown
--curriculum and instruction at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, will speak on "Strengthening the Educational Program in a Period of Decline."
From page one
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Declining school enrollment, school closings and national demographic trends were the main topics covered in yesterday's session of the Kansas City Teachers Association. Kansas City, Kan., according to Dale P. Scannell, dean of the University of Kansas School of Education, who attended the conference.
Virginia Trotter, assistant secretary for education in the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, told educators at the Holiday Inn Towers that staffing and facilities and school financing were major contributors to declining enrollment and school closings.
The conference is sponsored by the School of Education, the Kansas State Department of Education and the Region VII office of the U.S. Office of Education in Kansas City.
Scannell said that Trotter told the audience the federal government wanted to assist schools facing declining enrollments, not interfere with them. Pending federal legislation would provide funds for improving old facilities to accommodate other students, but the state would purchase or leasing of public school facilities for use by the private sector.
Educators view problems
By GARY WALLACE
Staff Writer
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Dr. Katherine Eisenbarger, Hunter College, New York, said that national population trends increased the difficulty of planning educational needs. Scannell said.
Eisenbauer detailed a population decrease in the Northeast triangle of the United States between Chicago and Wash- ington, where population increase in the South and Southwest.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily
on Thursday during June and July except Saturday.
Sunday and Holidays. Second-class
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Scannell said sessions featuring case studies and policy development in rural suburban and metropolitan school districts were also held.
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Bob Brandenberry, superintendent of Duncan, Oka., public schools, spoke on the importance of a superintendent of Kirkwood, Mo., public schools, and Dwight Davis, superintendent of Des Moines, Iowa, public schools, spoke on metropolitan school districts, Scannell
Today's schedule will center on personnel, facilities and budget management.
Jerry J. Bellon, head of the department of
Carroll R. Swain, assistant superintendent for personnel at Lincoln, Neb., publishes articles in the journal superintendent of Omaha, Neb., public schools, will discuss problems involving
Alvin E. Morris, superintendent of Wichita public schools, will discuss the options for schools in Texas.
Nolan Estes, general superintendent of the Dallas, Tex. independent school district.
On Campus
Tonight: There will be a faculty recital at 7:30 in Swarthout Recital Hall.
SUA Theater Festional film "Hello Dolly"
starring Barra Streisand and Walter Matthau will be shown at 7:30 in Woodruff Auditorium.
Mr Yuk
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Live Bands Tuesday-Saturday
Thursday—"Equal Rights"
Guys and Gals Free,
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Friday and Saturday
'1.00 Admission
Summer Films
FRI., JULY 2
GOVERNMENT
TUES., JUNE 29
Hello Dolly
A fiction film about imminent urban guerrilla warfare in the United States. Directed by Robert Kramer. "Of all the films we've seen recently having to do with urban guerrilla warfare, the only one to make any sense is ICE . . ." The New York Times—Vincent Canby.
Ice
Wed.-Sat. June 30-July 3
"THE CONTINUING AMERICAN REVOLUTION"
presents
THE WHITE HOUSE MURDER CASE
7:30 p.m.
$1.00
1976 Summer Theater Festival
The University of Kansas Theatre's
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For Information and Reservations Call 864-3982
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, June 29, 1976
3
Museum plans Fall '77 opening
Construction on the Helen Foreman Spencer Art Museum has passed the halfway mark and plans are under way for an 77, William Hempsess, art curator said.
The new museum will be turned over to University art officials when it is completed next summer. Spencer staff members will work with the artists of the university's 25,000 piece art collection currently in storage, preparing them for exhibitions and setting up displays. Henning Schmidt will
Shortly after the move will come the opening ceremonies. Mrs. Helen Spencer, who gave the largest single endowment in University history to finance the museum will be joined by a prominent art historian and University officials in dedication ceremonies.
THE OPENING exhibition will be "Modern Artists Look at Art." Hennessy said the exhibited works will be paintings by artists who have been working in art. Arrangements to borrow works of Roy Lichtenstein, Alfred Leslie, Larry Rivers and others are being made with museums
"The form of the building evolved through the cooperative efforts of the architect,
Robert Jenka of Kansas City is the museum director, Charles Eldridge and Mrs. Terry Sullivan.
The director determined the physical needs, Mrs. Spencer made the aesthetic decisions and the architect responded in terms of design, he said.
THE COURTYFORD floor is made of flagstone, and a large chandelier will hang from the fourth floor ceiling. The galleries surround the courtyard in a rectangle.
The new museum is a five-level structure of Indiana limestone like Spencer Library. The first two floors are below street level. The first classrooms, offices and an art library.
The third story is the main level, whose entrance faces Mississippi. A large two-story courtyard forms the core of the third and fourth story gallery levels.
Gallery walls will be covered by a beige fabric and floors will be of dark lindholm. The third-level galleries will feature medieval, Chinese, classical, graphic and renaissance art. An auditorium, bookstore reception room will also be on the third level.
Art from the 16th century to the present will be the subject of the fourth flageoak exhibition.
Reds lead All-Star voting
NEW YORK (AP) - Catcher Johnny Bench, third baseman Pete Rose and second baseman Joe Morgan of the world champion Cincinnati Reds are three of the five National League players virtually Game next month. in baseball's All-Star Game next month.
The closest race for the remaining positions is at shortstop, where Dave Conception of the Reds leads Philadelphia's fifth-round series, 4-6, 4-6, 4-60, according to figures released Monday.
With just one week left in the voting, first baseman Steve Garvey of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Philadelphia left fielder Greg Luzinski also were almost certain starters in the 47th mid-season classic, to be played at Philadelphia July 13.
The American League leaders are Minnesota's Rod Carew at first base, Baltimore's Eobby Grich at second base, shortstop Fred Patek of Kansas City; George Brett, also of Kansas City, at third; and Boston's Danny Fletcher of Boston's Fred Lynn, California's Bobby Bonds and Ron LeFore of Detroit in the outfield.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York W L Pts. GB
Cleveland 35 11 .315 8
Baltimore 34 11 .315 8
Detroit 32 10 .465 10
Boston 32 10 .478 10
New Jersey 35 11 .478 10
folk and quillwork will be on the fourth floor. The fifth level will comprise adjoining classrooms.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Kansas City 42 29 659 8
Texas 42 27 698 8
Oakland 35 28 698 8
Cincinnati 33 35 485 8
Minnesota 33 35 481 8
Falcone 45 27 698 8
Hennessay said the Spencer Museum provided significant improvements over Spooner Museum, which was built in 1894 as a library.
Monday, December 1
Baltimore 12, Baltimore
Cleveland 5, Milwaukee
Detroit 5, Cleveland 4, City
3, Texas 5, Oakland 2, 11 innings
W W L Pet. GB
Philadelphia 9 10 374
Pittsburgh 39 29 174
Baltimore 39 29 174
St. Louis 31 40 437
Chicago 31 40 437
Milwaukee 41 42 543
Cincinnati 45 28 616 %
Los Angeles 41 33 354 %
San Diego 33 30 321 %
Albuquerque 33 40 452 12
Houston 33 40 452 12
New Orleans 33 40 452 12
"Flexibility is added by greater space and better safety and lighting conditions,"
Houston 8. San Francisco 2.
Los Angeles 4. Moorea 1.
Pittsburgh 9. Chicago 6.
Cincinnati 7. San Diego 3.
Chicago 5. San Jose 2.
SPACE FOR many of the collection pieces, which have had to be stored, is provided by a four-fold increase in gallery size.
Safe storage and display of fragile art objects is guaranteed by precise temperature and humidity controls in Spencer. Artifacts should be handled with care displayed without fear of damage, he said.
"WON TON TON" PG
Bruce Dern
Madaline Kahn
Art Carney
The Dog That Launched a Thousand Stars Daily at 2:30,7:30,9:30
Varsity Could It Be An
Nov 23 - December 17, 2006
"OMEN" R
7:30-9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:30
In the 21st Century you can have anything—except your 30th birthday. Hillcrest
"LOGAN'S RUN" PG
7:20-9:40 Sat.-Sun. at 1:45
Hillcrest
Bill Cosby
Raquel Welch
"MOTHER,
JUGS & SPEED"
7:40 9:35 Sat. Sun Mat. 2:05 PG
Hillcrest
Jack Elam in a story o Frontier Days.
'THE WINDS OF AUTUMN'
7:30:9:35 Sat.-Sun, Mat. 1:55 PG
Sunset
Quest in the Valley West on Highway 12
For everybody who ever had a desire to drag-race a cop.
"EAT MY DUST"
9:15 —PLUS—
"DIRTY MOMMA"
10:55
The Kansas Union Bookstore and Oread Book Shop Will Be Closed July 1 through July 5 for Annual Inventory
THE KANSAS UNION
"It is a thrill to get the real treasures of our collection back out on the walls." He said.
The addition of Spencer gives KU the premier art museum in the state," Hen
DURING SPENCER'S first year museum officials will concentrate on KU's own art collection rather than special exhibitions, Hennessey said.
Cyclists coast to finals
"We hope Dave can break the one-hour barrier in the 28-mile time trials and place in the finals."
Dave Conrad, Lawrence sophomore, and Roger Schweppie, Lawrence senior, qualified for national championships by taking the two top two places in the senior division of the Kansas state 100-mile road competition Sunday in Manhattan.
minutes over the 98-mile course was rather slow, Gene Wes. U.S. Cycling Federation
Two Mount Oread Bicycle Club riders will compete at the U.C. S cycling Federation National road championships August 14 and 15 in Louisville, Kv.
"Theilly course and the tactics, designed to win the qualifying positions rather than post good times, contributed to the unimpressive time," Wee said.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students in standard or foreign origin. FEAKING BURN ALL CLASSIFIED TO I11F FLINT HALL
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time times times times times
Conrad's winning time of four hours. 47
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Each additional
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AD DEADLINES
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Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
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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 904-8258.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
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All persons parking on the east side of the Pine
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ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS--Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WEBSER MOBILE HOMES, 349 8th street. Lawrence, KS.
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Two half-time graduate assistantships in the University of Kansas. One position serves as adviser to a woman in women's health research. The second involves research on women's concerns and practices in women's health, including: completed Bachelor's degree and enrollment requirement; August 8 salary range $280,000; Department of Women's Health position; Dawn of Women, 230 Strong Hall, (913) 846-5200.
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everage. Phone 843-1414 for 2 p.m.
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Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
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cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
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4
Tuesday, June 29, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sawmills and sawdust in their blood
Mike and Charlie working on a tree saw.
George and Steve lock one of the logs into place on the sled. "There's other things I can do." Steve says, "but in them it seems like I don't work as hard as doin' this."
For 40 years Bill Fainin's been around the sawdust and sweat of a wood-cutting mill. Once past the three drooling dogs on Fainin's farm at the end of a bumpy gravel road ten miles north of Lawrence, you'll likely find Fainin feeding lumber to the 6-inch saw he makes a living with.
It's just quiet enough there to bear clusters of bees in the tall weeds and clover that sprout up between the piled stacks of cottonwoods in Fannin's yard. But come eight in the morning Fannin, his son Steve and son-in-law George will amble down the path from their house to fire up the four-cylinder saw motor, and the sound of metal slicing easily through wood will echo down the hills that fall away from the farm.
"You gotta keep the saw runin', that's the main thing." Fanim says, "You can see by them," he says, pointing at his helpers, "that just anybody can feed lumber and catch it. But you gotta keep the saw in shape. The blades gotta be sharp and you gotta have the tension up or 'i'll tag a dishrag when you cut."
FANIN OUGHT to die. In the 1380s his father ran a saw mill in Topeka, where he cut mostly railroad ties. Fanin was the mill's waterboy, whose duty it was to fill ponds with water. He was also a man of many trades.
But the second generation's saw runs on gasoline and is one of five small rigs in the area. Only one other such saw, in Osage County, has enough business to run
But the second generation'saws run on gasoline and is one of five small rigs in the area. Only one other such saw, in Osage County, has enough business to run.
"There’s a guy in Tonganoxie that hadda shut down 'cause nobody hardly knew he even had a mill," Steve says. "We never had that problem."
Steve sports a thick black mustache that grows out of the bottom of his nose and wears an "I AM LOVED" button on his ten-gallon hat. He wrestles a log from a platform stacked with wood and locks it in place on the sled that holds the pieces for a cut. The sled moves on rails into the saw and after the cut George tosses the finished pile and flips the scraps in a heap with his big, brown forearms. Uncle George doesn't talk much; he mostly takes pokes at Steve between cuts and smiles.
Fannie will cut about 100,000 feet of wood this year, most of it walnut and cottonwood. The saw's running 10 hours a day, six days a week, to keep up with the weather.
"We plan on buildin' a warming shed out here for the winter work but we'll run anytime the cuttin' to be done, shelter or not." Fain savs.
Fanin pulls a pack of Skool's wintergreen from his overalls and puts a plug in his mouth under his three gold teeth. When he offers the tobacco around Steve takes a break.
STEVE TOSSES away a scrap and spills on the sign tacked up the saw that says NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS. Steve's check full of stories of other cutters who've had their arms severed in saws, hands sliced in half. But it's never happened to a Fanin.
After the lumber's cut Fanin puts the pieces into an edger to smooth jagged cuts. He files the blade and runs a calloused, brown finger along its edge to gauge
"This is a poor man's way to make a living," I admit that, he says. "But still, there ain't nobody standin' over my shoulder tellin' me what to do or to hurry up."
AFTER THE lumber leaves Fainn's it will be dried in a klin, smoothed and polished and put to use in construction. Much of the wood Fainn cuts is brought to him, although he sometimes makes logging ventures to secure his own wood, often from places like Clinton Dam where timber is already being destroyed.
Lunch comes at high noon and the men are ready for it. They rest in the shade of Mrs. Fannin's kitchen and eat platefuls of pork and mashed potatoes. When their hour's up, Mrs. Fannin fills three gallons jugs with cool lemonade and they start down the path again to the saw.
When Fanin comes back to work, things pick up. After five tries with George shouting "c'mon Betsy!" the engine motor sparks and starts. Fanin takes a turn loading the sled, and soon woodchips are flying. He doubles the pace the other two set before lunch and Steve and George scurry and sweat to keep up.
"SOMETIMES THE CHIPS hit you, but boggles are more nuisance than they're worth." Steve says. "Besides, you can wear about anything you want on a windy day like this and nothing's gotta keep the sweat from your eyes." Steve started working on his father's will I must know
Steve started working on his father's mill 11 years back
"I was born and raised with this," she says. "If my Gun I get an urge to go and up and do it, I always come back here to out. There's other things I can do but in them I don't."
Steve butts away Uncle George's open-handed swipe and runs to the scrap pile with a splintered piece from the saw.
"You gotta keep the saw in shape," Fann says. "The blades have be sharp and you gotta have the tension up or it'll be a lash like a dishrag when you cut."
"I'm one of'em I guess," Steve says. "A Fanin."
SUNYAN
Words by Greg Bashaw
Pictures by Jay Koolzer
100%
The cut of a 60 inch blade.
COLLEGE VILLAGE FARMER
Although he's gone to other places and done other things, Steve always comes back to his father's mill. "I'm one of 'em I guess," Steve said. "A Ffanin."
Fire, police slowdown threatened
Bv MELISSA STEINEGER
Lawrence firefighters and policemen may cut back on services unless the city gives them a voice in determining policies that govern them, the attorney for the Lawrence Firefighters Association and the Patrol Officers Association, said last night.
In an emotional speech to the Lawrence city commissioners, Arnold Berman, the attorney, said the groups may not respond "because they involve the loss of life or property."
"Lawrence is the only large city in the state of Kansas that does not give a voice to these groups in determining their policies," Berman said.
BERMAN SAID the police and firefighters are considering not;
—Responding to calls from the University.
- Answering calls from outside Lawrence
unless they are emergencies involving
- Performing housekeeping and administrative duties.
Other acts may be deemed necessary unless the city moves to include the two
groups under the Kansas Public Employers-Employees Relations Act, Bermann
The commission voted 3-2 last fall not to come under the state labor relations act, which it said would be overly restrictive.
The slowdown would not effect police service to the University, which is provided by a large number of law enforcement agencies.
THE DECLARATION stemmed from a news conference of the Lawrence Patrol Officers Association and the Lawrence Firefighters Association this morning, Berman said. He claimed the meeting was disrupted by the appearance of Brent Galfall, city personnel manager; Richard Catlett, city police chief; and John Kasberger, fire chief.
Barkley Clark, city commissioner, said he was surprised by the action. He said Watson, the manager, and required attention to the two women several times with apparent progress.
"Buffal has been meeting with them in good faith and they have ignored this," she said.
EARLIER IN the meeting, the commission decided to amend a proposed $25 fine for unleashed dogs. The amendment makes the minimum fine for first offenders
an executive session afterwards. The city budget must be approved by August 15
The proposed slowdown may have been turned to coincide with the planning of the next stage of the project.
roam free and not the one time offender,
Clark said. Repeat offenders will receive
half the fee.
The or dinance should be aimed at the dog owner who repeatedly allows his dog to
A report from the Community Development department explained that they were unable to handle the increased request for housing assistance but would continue to help as many people as possible on a first come-first serve basis.
★ ★ ★
City likes overtime ruling
The city of Lawrence now has the authority to give employees time off for overtime work instead of paying them time-and-d-half, because of a recent Supreme Court ruling, Buford Watson, city manager, said yesterday.
The Court said that the federal government doesn't have the authority to legislate city and stage wages. Watson said the ruling allowed the city to revert to the courts upon its oust off for overtime, but the city didn't plan to return to the previous system.
the ruling also gives local and state governments the authority to legislate
"We've been saying there's too much control going to the federal government and now it's going to the city and state," Watson said.
regular employee wages without federal interference.
City Commissioner Barkley Clark said, "I really want it (territory) important, it's really important."
The commerce clause Clark referred to is Article I, Section 8 of the U.S. Constitution, which gives Congress the power to regulate interstate commerce. The Supreme Court in a widely held that regulation of municipal workers' salaries was part of that power.
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Wednesday, June 30.1976
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.155
Hijackers demand prisoner trade
KAMPIA, Uganda (AP) - Palestinian extremists yesterday demanded the release of 53 "freedom fighters" imprisoned in Israel and four other countries in exchange for a hijacked French airliner and 256 hostage passengers and crew.
They threatened "severe and heavy penalties" if the demand was not met.
France immediately said it wouldn't give in to the guerrillas, who commanded the Air France airbus Sunday over Greece on a flight from Tel Aviv to Paris.
TOP OFFICIALS in Israel, which since 1968 has refused steadfastly to yield to terrorist demands, said they hold France responsible for the passengers. They gave up all their airplanes along with any trade of prisoners for about 70 Israelis seized with the plane.
The Israeli Cabinet was expected to meet today to discuss the hijackers' demand.
Members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, whose six-point ransom demand was broadcast by the official Uganda Radio, said the 53 deltasenne to be hawed to be from the Entebbe hotel to tomorrow, 7 a.m. CDT, 3.0 p.m. tomorrow, 7 a.m. CDT.
PENALTIES were not spelled out, but the blackjacks said previously they would blow up the plane and captives if anyone tried to interfere.
Besides 40 prisoners said to be held in Israel, six were listed in West Germany, five in Kenya and one each in France and Belgium. One was sent to the Arab, with a few Germans and Japanese.
Among those on the Israeli list was the
Greek Catholic archbishop of Jerusalem, Hilarion Capudjli, jailed two years ago as an Arab gunrunner, and Kozo Okamoto, the only survivor of the 14 Japanese Red Army members who carried out the 1972 Lod Airport massacre.
AMONG THOSE on the German list was Jan-CarLans Erp, 31, one of three alleged ringleaders of the Baader-Mehmof gang now on trial in Stuttgart for a wave of other crimes and other violence that killed four U.S. servicemen and a number of Germans.
The French Interior Ministry said the only person on the list supposed to be in France was 28-year-old Silvia Ampra who was charged with killing a Colombian girlfriend of alleged insurgents.
Senate to put strings on property
Because Student Senate property has been lost and misused in the past, a new inventory system will be started for next month. So, student Senate treasurer, said yesterday.
He said that organizations would now have to specifically request oneyear what state their building is in.
"We're going to start treating inventory just like dollars," Cox said. He estimated the repurchase price of all Senate property was $2,000.
Property already in the possession of the organizations will have to be formally authorized.
He said personal use had been made of some organizations' equipment and that typewriters and calculators had disappeared.
Student property is not intended for administrative office use. Cox said.
Cox said he thought most organizations will comply with the new regulation because they wanted their equipment returned.
"It's important to be able to tell whether office supplies asked for by an organization will be used for the organization or to take someone's class notes," Cox said.
He said there had been cases in which an organization that no longer needed office equipment it had purchased with Senate loaned the equipment to a department.
*Inventory becomes very, very fluid when there is a 100 per cent turnover in
Property that wasn't requested could be redistributed to other organizations and be used by others.
He said the new inventory procedure would give the Senate control over groups that could not take money from the Senate couldn't threaten to take money out of their future allocations, it could
organizations' officers from year to year," Cox said.
See INVENTORY page 2
ternational terrorist ljich Ramirez-alias
Carlos-Carlos, the most wanted man
Authentities said a medical team was at the old Entrbe Airport terminal transit lounge where the captives were housed and fed.
UGANDAN authorities said the hostages were well, including the nine Americans. At the request of Israel, none of the passengers' names was made public.
Alvamar loses pro; so KU loses coach
Kirkland Gates knew the relationship between his job as a coach of the University of Kansas marmen's team and as athletics pro at Alvamar Racquet Club was coy, but until last week, he didn't just how close the two were.
Staff Writer
Bv COURTNEY THOMPSON
Gates recently resigned as Alvamar pro to take a job as tennis pro at the Carriage Club, a Kansas City, Mp., country club. He said Monday he sub-committed to a new athletic director, that the University was looking for a new tennis coach.
"I was definitely surprised when Walker called last week and told me he was looking for a local person to assume the KU coaching duties," he said.
Bob Billings, KU alumnus and a member of the Kansas University Alumnae Racquet Club. Billings said that he didn't encourage the affiliation between KU and Alvamar, but that it was an important difference because it had worked well in the past.
"However, when I spoke with him about two weeks later, he had evidently reversed his opinion," he said, "and 'he was there and I remember any previous statements.'"
GATES ONCE owned the Racquet Club and continued to work for Billings as pro after he sold it to him nine months ago.
ACCORDING TO Gates, Walker wanted him to resign because Walker thought the time required to commute to work would be too long. He would detract from his time for coaching.
Gates, who lived in Kansas City while he coached the KU men's team, said he'd commited between Lawrence and Kansas City for five years without problems.
The Alvamar Club has employed KU's tennis coaches since it opened about two years ago. One team member called the arrangement convenient, because the tennis队 used the club's indoor courts as its winter headquarters.
When I first considered changing jobs, I asked him (Walker) about his support and he initially said my quitting did affect my KU position. "Gates said,"
Walker said Gates' ability to coach the team wasn't in question. He said that
Gates was still the tennis coach, but that Walker's office was trying to find someone from the immediate area to take over the job this fall.
GATES SAID he thought it was unreasonable to limit applicants to local residents and to require that they also coach at Alvamar.
If and when a successor to Gates is named, he would be KU's third coach in four years.
Gates said he thought the turnovers in coaches were a detriment to the morale and stability of the KU team. Two players left the team when Gates first became coach because of the turnover, he said, and a top recruit was lost this season, according to the uncertainty surrounding the KU tennis program coaching. Gates said.
"They wanted proof that a stable program existed, and since I was new myself, I couldn't demonstrate this to them." he said.
"WITH EACH new coach, the program is set back and must start over again." Gates said. "This isn't an attractive feature to possible recruits."
Bill Clark, a member of the KU tennis team last spring, said Gates had the support of the entire team.
"He's getting a rotten deal," Clark said. "He was promised stability and in turn he promised the team a stable program, but that got shot down."
Tom Kivisto, coach of the KU women's tennis team and a pro at Alamar, said he knew of no forced association between the KU tennis program and Alamar. Still, the association has merit, Kivisto said.
"The CONNECTION between the two enables you to get benefits like court time and equipment discounts, and it has a prestige factor, too." Kivisto said.
Gates said he understood Walker would notify him when a replacement was found.
"The club closes at 9 p.m. but as an employee, I have a key and can take the team to practice at all hours—like 12 or 1 a.m. if need be." he said.
"I'll be disappointed if they find some one less qualified than myself because it's the quality of the coaching that important," Gates said.
"I WANT the KU team to benefit from the program, not just Alvamar," he said.
Staff Writer
Ro QUICAN I VNN
Some frats rent rooms in summer
The houses are occupied by members and students who enjoy low rent and the conveniences of living in temporary dwellings without contract troubles.
The colossal fraternities scattered across the campus of the University of Kansas are the
Of 23 fraternities, 13 are open 'in one way or another', Robert Turvey, assistant dean
The decision to keep a fraternity open is made by members and the house corporation board. The board is composed of three members who handle financial and routine issues.
Some houses have a single occupant, who handles the chapter's rush work throughout the summer. Other fraternities have 20 people living in them.
Sigma Nu, 1501 Sigma Nu Place, is the only fraternity that is coed during the
There are 22 persons living in the Sigma
american drill team school
[staff photos by JAY KOELZER]
The cheerleading and drill team camp, now in session at the University, provided a contrast in molds yesterday, from the reaction of Karla Rusanak, Shawnee Mission South, to her instructor's comments to the strained call Miriam McCoy, Shawnee Mission South, earned by too much marching. The camp lasts five days, and is attended by more than 300 high school students from 28
1
"This gives us enough money to cover the rent and repairs, which are about $2,075." Charles Fairchild, Leawood senior and Sigma Nu president, said.
Nu house, 15 women and seven men. Each pays $75 a month for rent; which includes a single room with a bed and use of a kitchen. The room is paid, except for individual phone bills.
Sigma Nu advertised before Easter for summer residents and received an excellent score, Fairchild said. The house is in two classrooms, a tennis court and an outdoor grill.
"At the moment I found out that I didn't have any place to live so I decided to come here, and it's great," Diana Elliott, Wichita junior said. "I also didn't want to hassle with subleasing an apartment for just two months."
"It would think that the Sigma Nu fraternity will be making money," Turvey, of the dean of men's office, said, "but the others are probably losing some. It all depends on how many are renting in the houses and how much rent they pay. A lot of them have rent open only for rash purses, with just the rush chairman living there."
Fairchild does complete maintenance for
a house and lawn and said that the upkeep
has been good.
Pam Horn, assistant dean of women,
said a lack of interest was the main reason
most sororites weren't open during the summer. If they were enough girls in one house that wanted to live there, it could be done, she said.
"The houses are watched very closely by police," Turvey said. "Of course, if the residents would keep the doors locked it would be a lot safer, but there's really no worry."
At least one sorority, Sigma Kappa, 1325 W. Campus Road, is open this summer, for the third year, for members who work or attend summer school.
Not all fraternity members liked everything about keeping their houses open.
Protection against vandalism is a major incentive for houses to keep open. Many houses that aren't open have members who are responsible to make sure nothing has been damaged.
Fraternities have greater say in the decision to stay open, than sororites, Horne said. House corporation boards determine the decision more in sororities.
"It was nice to have such a large house to ourselves," Culp said. "It really seemed crowded when school started and everyone moved back in.
"It was hot and dirty," Randy Culp, Kansas City, Kan. senior and member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Culp and his brother were house last summer and paid $25 a month.
Susan Ford to enroll at KU to study photo-j
Susan Ford, daughter of President and Mrs. Ford, plans to attend the University of Kansas next academic year, sources told the Kansan yesterday.
The Topeka State Journal reported yesterday that Ford would enroll at KU preparatory to entering the photojournalism sequence of the William Allen White School of Journalism for the second semester of the 1976-77 academic year.
A source in the White House confirmed that Ford would enroll at KU and that if the President isn't nominated in August at the Republican National Convention in Kansas City she possibly would enroll for this year's fall semester.
"We discussed her coming to KU several times," Clarkson said yesterday. "She wanted a school with a good academic environment, and a strong journalism department."
Clarkson said Ford would work part-time as a photographer for the two Topowa kitsch galleries.
Del Brinkman, dean of the School of
RICHARD CLARKSON, photo chief of the Capital-Journal, said Ford told him of her decision to attend KU a month ago. Ford also said he will try to intern on the Capital-Journal last year.
Journalism, said Ford had applied to KU and had been accepted into the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
JOIN MEYER, director of admissions, said he didn't comment on the matter because KU kept all admissions applications confidential. Gill Deck, dean of Admissions and Records, also refused to disclose whether Ford had applied or been
Brinkman said, "I'd known of Miss Ford's plans to attend KU before today."
Brinkman he thought Ford had considered three other schools before deciding to attend KU. He had considered Michigan, Penn State and Michigan and as east coast school, he said.
BRIKMAN said Ford would enroll in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences if she were to come to college as a student. He is the only college requirement necessary to enter the journalism school. She will have to satisfy all admission requirements before being admitted to the college, he said.
Janet Anderson, press secretary to Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan., said both President and Mrs. Ford had mentioned the importance of Susan attending KU to Dole several times.
2
Wednesday, June 30, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
U.S. vetoes UN resolution
UNITED NATIONS—The United States vetoed yesterday a Security Council resolution endorsing a report that asks Israel to withdraw from all occupied Arab territory.
certification by the state to issue Albert W. Shereer Jr. said the resolution was "totally devoid of balance," stressing the right that residents one party to the Middle East dispute be represented in the case.
The vote in the 15-nation council was 10-1 with Britain, France, Italy and Sweden abstaining.
It was the 14th U.S. veto in the council and the second in less than a week. Last Wednesday, the United States vowed Angola's application for UN membership.
Wednesday, the United States vetoed Angola's application for UN membership. Under the vetoed Israeli-Arab resolution, sponsored by Guyana, Pakistan, Panama and Tanzania, the council would have taken note of a report by a 20-nation Palestine Rights Committee that was dominated by Third World countries.
office search constitutional
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court ruled yesterday that authorities may constitutionally search a person's office, seize his business records and use them
The court said, in its 7-2 decision, that this does not require the person to give testimony against himself because he is "not required to aid" in obtaining the evidence.
The dissenters said the decision made a hollow guarantee of the constitutional promise that "no person" shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witch.
Economy growing steadily
WASHINGTON - The government index that foreshadows developments in the economy climbed by the biggest margin in 10 months during May, signaling steady growth.
The Commerce Department said yesterday the composite index of leading indicators rose 1.4 per cent in May, compared to seventenals of 1 per cent rise in the previous year.
The index is composed of a dozen individual statistics selected for their ability to move in advance of general economic trends.
Steady expansion of the economy means more job opportunities, increased revenue for business and more money available for paychecks. But the signal from the leading indicators was somewhat at odds with expectation for a slower growth rate in the current quarter.
Carter to ease paperwork
MILWAUKEE—Jimmy Carter said yesterday that if elected president he did mim the dawn that drowned city officials by consolidating the federal programs as possible.
In a speech before more than 300 members of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, Carter said categorical funding—money earmarked for specific problems—should be combined in block grants wherever possible. He said certain conditions would assure the money is properly spent.
Carter made no specific recommendations but said he intends to create an advisory panel this year to "determine in what instances consolidation of the bank's assets is necessary."
President Ford has proposed a controversial program of block grants under which nearly all federal social welfare funds would be distributed with minimum benefit.
State phone network causes billing change
The Kansas Agency Network telephone system (KANS-A-N), rented to the state by the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, will adopt a new bill and budgeting system.
Under the new KANS-A N-system, which replaced the Foreign Exchange (FX) and US dollar exchange systems in Topeka and Kansas City April 1, all long distance calls are billed to the departments and extensions on which they are made. Craig McCoy, KU comptroller, said
Four long-distance lines to Topaka, five to Kobe and two lines used by the athletic department. The GX lines. This system was often used for highways. Wide Area Telephone Services (WAIS) line.
UNDER THE KANS-A-N system, each department is required to keep a log of all the calls that are made. The log must include the name of the person making the call, the party contacted and the purpose of the call
The department then checks the log with each runout's long-distance billing.
If the department can't identify calls listed on the billing, the department still must report.
Each department authorizes the entire bill and sends a notice of unidentified calls to the insurance company.
EACH BILL is taken out of the department's expense account. After the system has been in use for a while, departments will have a rough estimate of how much of their funds should be allotted for long distance calls.
"Before April 1, WATS users didn't have to worry about paying the bills from
department funds because the University paid for the entire system. Susan Sitton, chair of the finance department, said:
Now each individual call is cleaner, but department are billed for a greater number of calls.
All departments must pay three bills this month since April and May bills were late.
THE PAYMENTS must be made this month so the state can clear its bills by June 30.
'The biggest problem my department is having is the slowness of other departments in returning confirmation sheets,' McCoy said.
The system was designed to give the state more efficient service at a lower cost per call than was available when each state agency leased its own service.
Inventory...
From page one
"We have everything from hockey pucks and jerseys to typewriters and karate mitts."
He said the Senate has 105 different organizations to inventory.
The University of Kansas and Kansas State University have joined in an effort to predict Soviet needs of United States grains the Soviet's role in the agricultural market.
Previously each organization had been accountable for property it bought with Senate funds and the Senate sent a letter to each organization each organization at the end of the year.
William C. Fletcher, director of Slavic and Soviet area studies, and Roy D. Laird, professor of political science, have organized a program with two K-State faculty members to research Soviet and U.S. grain production.
Now each organization will be asked to certify its property at the beginning of the year—describing its condition and location. These items will occur at the end of the year.
Predicting how many and what varieties of grain the Soviet Union will need from the United States is derived from studying American and Soviet farm machinery markets.
"OUR OVERRIDING goal is to give us a better advanced knowledge of Russia's role in the agriculture market," Fletcher said yesterday.
"I don't like surprises," he said. "What happened two years ago when the Soviets needed more grain than we had expected." He pointed to a program we're hoping it won't happen again."
The University of Kansas Theatre's 1976 Summer Theater Festival
The Hesston Foundation, supported by the largest manufacturer of farm machinery in Kansas, donated $15,000 to the study.
KU, K-State research Russian grain needs
"THE CONTINUING AMERICAN REVOLUTION"
TONIGHT: "THE UNVINTED," an SUA film starring Ray Milland will be shown at 7:30 in Woodruff Auditorium. The KU Theatre Festival production of "White House Murder Case" will be show at 8 p.m. in University Theatre, Murphy Hall.
P
William DeTruk will present a CARILON RECTAL at 8 p.m.
On Campus
presents
Wed.-Sat. June 30-July 3
BY
JULES
FEIFFER
THE WHITE HOUSE MURDER CASE
Tickets $2.50
Mr.
Yuk
K. U. Students, Senior Citizens,
Music & Art Campers '1.50
"We consider this grant as 'seed money,'" Fletcher said. "It's great for putting people through the state. The grant demonstrates that we're out for other donations and that we are in a position to be an influential company if it must useful in generating future funding."
For Information and Reservations Call 864-3982
"YUK DOWN"
Live Bands Tuesday-Saturday
Thursday—"Equal Rights!"
Guys and Gals Free!
$1.00 Pitchers
Friday and Saturday
*1.00 Admission
FLETCHER SAID the $15,000 wouldn't cover expected costs.
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES:
Technics SL-1300
by Pioneer Direct Drive Automatic Turntable
RMS
ELECTRONICS
audio
724 MASSACHUSETTS
841-2572
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 724 00 00 TO 11 100 00
"Just guessing, I would say that our total package of funds will amount to about $250,000," he said, $90,000 for a future student exchange program, $75,000 for the university research, and $20,000 to $30,000 for conferences with the Soviet programs.
"We're getting contributions from local businesses, the government and the Soviet Union," he said. "Our main project now is getting local businessmen interested in agriculture and starting seminars to explain our program."
An exchange of 10 students from each country sponsored by the program is expected to start in about a year, Fletcher said.
The program is now in an advanced stage of negotiations with the University of New York.
"Up until now it has been under quasification. Now we are changing and restudying students." Fletcher said.
STUDENTS FROM KU and K-State will be required to have studied Russian for three years, Fletcher said. They will be free to design their course of study he said.
"All we're aiming for now is to get the people of Kansas to develop better international relations," he said. "Later on we hope to have developed an interest in the program where students who are interested in the English language will speak Russian will want to take part."
By developing the exchange system with K-State, Fletcher said, he hoped to break down the isolation barrier between KU and K-State.
Fletcher said he hoped the community and the entire state would approve of the plan.
"WE'RE ALL a state," he said, "and the weaker one is a chance for us to grow and benefit."
SUA
WED., JUNE 30
The Uninvited
A 1944 film, generally acknowledged to be the best of the haunted house thrillers. Ruth Husse, Ronald Crisp.
7:30 p.m. 75°
FRI., JULY 2
A fiction film about imminent urban guerilla warfare in the United States. Directed by Robert Kramer. "Of all the films we've seen recently having to do with the New American Revolution we only one to make sense is ICE . . . The New York Times-Vincent Cahy
Ice
7:30 p.m.
$1.00
ALL FILMS
SHOWN IN WOODRUFF
AUDITORIUM
It's a unique idea in soft, light design to give true comfort for your tired feet. Wide last design, unique flattenation cotton which molds this rubber creeper sole make this a classic shoe.
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This Coupon
Chef's
Student Special
Special Steak
Includes salad, beverage, choice of potato & Sizzler toast
All for $1.99
One coupon per person (Monday thru Friday)
Good only at 1516 W.23rd St. Lawrence, Kansas 66044
SIZZLER FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
---
GIBSON'S ALBUM of the WEEK
ELVIS
RCA
Regular $ 4^{97} $
Now $399
GIBSON'S
DISCOUNT CENTER
8 Track Tapes $^{49}$
Prices Good Through July 4,1976 (Open July 4)
525 Iowa Lawrence, Ks.
"ONE STOP SHOP"
JULY CLEARANCE SALE
Starts Wed., July 1, 9:30 a.m.
30%-40%-50% REDUCTIONS ON SPRING AND SUMMER
DRESSES
PANTS
TOPS
ONE GROUP SWIM- WEAR 20% to 40%
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FREE PARKING PROJECT 800
BIOLOGY
Wednesday, June 30,1976
University Daily Kansan
3
Biker pedals across U.S.
Bv BRYANTGRIGGS
Staff Writer
If you think the bike ride up Mount Oread is hard, consider what John Feeney is doing this summer—riding across America on a bicycle.
Feeney, a May business graduate from the University of Michigan, is in Lawrence, Miss., where she coached the United States from Reads Point, Ore., to Williamsburg, Va. He is spending time with students at the university.
"I got kind of turned on to the trip with the Bicentennial being here," Feeney said yesterday. "I thought it would be a good idea."
FEENEY SAID that although some people expected him to be a racer on a cross-country tour, he was just "an ordinary bike rider."
"I never had any kind of long distance
biking experience before. It all first to me
for the first time."
Feeney got the idea to bikepack across the nation when he read an article in Bikering Magazine, a national outdoor terminal, which is sponsored by the Department of Transportation to help people see
"I wrote to Bike Centennial, headquartered in Missoula, Montana, and they provided me with a series of maps for the trip," she said. "I sent away for all the maps." he said.
THE TOUR route is based on a 20,000-mile bike trip in 1974 from Alaska to the southern tip of South America by two couples, Gene Bentley and Federation State representative, said.
they took the trip because they wanted to," he said. "They did it for the fun of it." Foeney started out from Reads Point on M117 and received maps and roadside information.
Throughout the country nearly 3,000 riders have entered the tour. The riders can start whenever they want, at major starting points along the trail called trail heads.
KANSAS TRAILheads are at Newton, Eureka, Chanute and Pittsburg, Feeney park.
"About 75 riders started with me in Oregon and as we got farther down the trail we all kind of split up," Feeny said. "We all knew of a same trail, but you can go at your own pace."
Feeney, unlike most cyclists, didn't set out to ride a certain number of miles each
"I like to take it as it comes, that's the beauty of it," he said.
talking to the people in the towns," Feeney said. "A family who lived along the trail in Oregon me into their home and I ended up spending the night with them.
To prepare for the trip, Feeney jogged and played a lot of tennis. But not having been an avid cyclist, he admitted the journey was its toll.
"THE FIRST week was pretty tough. I wasn't in shape for cycling," he said. "I had one or two flat tires and we rode and slept in the snow in the Rockies.
"There were hundreds of logging trucks and they came pretty close to blowing me off the road. once time I got stopped by a crew, we saw them in and out of the center strips in the road."
The journey wasn't all bad weather and careless drivers. People who lived in and around the small towns along the trail made the trip more worthwhile.
The scenery was beautiful and I liked
"ALSO shared a hotel room with another rider I met along the way, when a bad snow storm swept away all of the roads and was all camping," he said. "The people in western Kansas were the nicest people."
Feeney said he had "gained more of an awareness for the history of this country."
"You're much more aware on a bike; drums in a car would be of no significance."
Feeny said he would travel south to place next, and then east to Williamburg, Va.
He hopes to make Virginia by August. From there he'll drive with a friend to the state capital.
Katz named interim dean of Social Welfare school
Arthur Katz, professor of social welfare, was named interim dean of the School of Social Work at UCLA.
He will replace Theodore Ernst, who announced his resignation in May.
Kenneth Wedel, associate dean of the School of Social Welfare, will be acting dean through July while Katz attends international social work conferences in South America. Katz will assume office August 1.
RONCALGAARD, vice chairperson for academic affairs, approved a recommendation by a search committee to establish a national search for a permanent dean.
The national search was approved because an initial sample search has attracted many serious, highly qualified candidates. The Kansas candidate has amoured so far.
Katz said a new dean would be appointed by January 1977 and would take office by January 1980.
The intervening months would allow the prospective dean to become familiar with the school by visiting and participating in various activities, Katz said.
KATZ CAME to KU in 1968 to be the chairman of the department of social
welfare. In 1969, he became the first dean of the School of Social Welfare but his resumed teaching duties in 2004.
Katz said that although administration was satisfying and interesting, his new duties as interim dean would delay other scholarly work.
Katz said the School of Social Welfare was in a position to fulfill outreach objectives to students in need, and that he would
*WE HAVE a well-developed program in Kansas City and given the necessary additional resources, we can expand in other areas of the state such as Wichita*, he said.
Katz said the school had met outreach goals in student and faculty recruitment.
"The School of Social Welfare has successfully recruited minority faculty and students," he said. "I feel currently that the school is in an excellent position to continue with our effort toward meeting the needs of its students for a greater depth of scholarship."
With the exception of outreach goals, the school of Social Welfare can benefit from a local support group.
*THE SCHOOL of Social Welfare can use time for consolidation and depth, after its formation.*
*The school has an annual budget of £500,000.*
this is the big one... MISTER GUY'S SEMI-ANNUAL SUMMER SALE
Suits
$9950
a large selection of vested suits including solids, plaids navy pincords and chalk-stripes. were '120-'135
Suits
$ 110-$ 115
two and three piece suits previously not marked down . . . teased poplins, navy and tan solids, pin-stripes and chalk stripes. were '145-'175
$ 11^{95} $
Knit Shirts
$ 14^{90} $ - $ 19^{90} $
designed and made expressly for Mister Guy in solids and stripes. were '15
a large selection of summer dress slacks, solids, madras,
seersucker. regularly $ ^{25}-^{35} $
Slacks
1/2 off
numerous pairs from all manufacturers.
Dress Shoes
open thursday night
till 8:30
MISTER
GUY
920 mass.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment are available to all foreign residents living in the United States or international BINNINES. Candidates must have a bachelor's degree in foreign language, social science, nursing, pharmacy, health care, business, computer science or related.
CLASSIFIED RATES
fewer
each additional
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
01 01 02 02
one two three four five
time times times times times
.1 .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.
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.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. The added can be placed in person or phone calling the UCR business office at 694-2388.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ANNOUNCEMENTS
FOR RENT
All persons parking on the east side of the pin
Trea's parking lot after July 4 will be
towed.
Dreary, but clean and elegant basement couches.
Furnished with contemporary furniture.
uplifted paid 115 Tennessean. Aft. 21 aft.
widened bed. 48 x 30. 21 ft. x 26 ft.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS--Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WEBSTER MOBILE HOME, 3469 6th Street, Lawrence, KS 75052
2 bdr. all utilities paid on campus. Furnished or unfitted. Free parking, a/c, pool. BES.
Unfurnished one bedroom not to sublease from
Meadowbrook January 1977 in Meadowbrook House
843-697-997
2 bd apt 8pt Utilities paid, between 9th and
10th block of Ohio. Women only. #624-7492-
883
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Note—Now on Sale
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use then—
1) As study guide
2) For class preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialists.
BEL AUTOMOTIVE BEL ELECTRIC, 832-500-9000, W. 4th, ht. 10"
Wait, the word "Automotive" is not in the image.
The word "Electricity" is in the image.
The word "Automatic" is in the image.
The word "Generative" is in the image.
The word "Electrical" is in the image.
Final check of the text:
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialists.
BEL AUTOMOTIVE BEL ELECTRIC, 832-500-9000, W. 4th, ht. 10"
Electricity Automotive Electrical Generative Electrical
SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tent
7th 2 Askansos RA2.3292
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
BOOTS, HATS, JEANS.
209 W Bx
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SMOOR
Classes 40, 41, 42 & 43
O
___ Master
Stay Cool Hours - Summer Stree
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods & Antiques
UNIQUE
IMPORTED * CLOTHING
10-3 (longer on cool days)
730 Mass 841-7070
opin on Comfort Hours Sweat
Stay Cool Hours - Cooler Days
BETWEEN MATTEES MATTENED
Mattresses - Liners
Heaters - Frames
Bedspreads - Fitted Sheets
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
WATERBEDS
712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
FELDS
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
THE GRAMOPHONE
902 1231 AUDI FOR STATIONS.
shop
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Storee Components
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
BIG LOUISIANA CENTER, LAUNDRY HARRING
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-produce speakers, you can get them at the GRAHMOPHONE SHOP at KIERES. If it doesn't work, call 800-754-1390.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trades. Trade the Furniture and Appliance Center, 794 S.
Washington St., N.W., Washington, D.C.
MIDLANG DOLCE, top line Harmony, excelence
MIDLANG ROWS, 140 MRS walk- speakers, 10:30
841-0746
Jensen E690" and 51" mobile speakers-20
monitors. Available at Ray Audio, 13-
842-209-6000, 13-842-209-7000,
13-842-209-8000, 13-842-209-9000
Save before you buy. Consult with Ray Audio
sales for a personalized coffee or car. Ray Audio,
inside, on the couch or on the car.
1961 Triumph TR3 Mechanically sound but
sturdy. Must work and TLC. B48-8575
B48-8575
Plumber stereo receiver model SK-424 1/2 years
Pioneer stereo receiver $155. Contact Susan at
9:00 am - 9:30 pm
1950 Chrysler tasty old car runs and looks great.
$370 842-8448. 7-7
1917 Pinto, solid economy car, one owner must
sell $500. 842-848. 7-7
JUST ARRIVED? Another shipment of "Our
Ship" arrives at Regina, Rep. 890,
900 the NWT. # 872 the MTS.
Pamascan receiver with speakers, small system but sounds good, Good for small apartments.
Midland 13-857 B.C. radio, Best offer, Call Randy:
843-096-206, 6 p.m.
THEY HERE! Large selection of "Our Special"
THEM HERE! Regularly $69—now $49
THE ATTIC. 927 Main
HELP WANTED
AVON- earn extra money for college and vocation
students. Call Me, Call Mr. Sethz, 822-635-9041,
train you, Call Me, Call Mr. Sethz, 822-635-9041
Two half-time graduate assistants in the a-
dministration department provide a advisory
to a Karanak. One position serves an adviser to
a research program that involves research on women's con-
sensus and behavior. The position includes:
completed Bachelor's degree and enroll-
ment point; begun August 8 salary range $250,000;
resumes to Karanak; duties of position include:
complete Bachelor's degree and enroll-
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resumes to Karanak; duties of position include:
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Cadheri-Hostes. Fine area restaurant. Over 21裤店。Phone 843-1451.二楼。Phone 843-1451.二楼。Phone 843-1451.二楼。Phone 843-1451.二楼。Phone 843-1451.二楼。Phone 843-1451.二楼。Phone 843-1451.二楼。Phone 843-1451.二楼。Phone 843-1451.
LOST AND FOUND
Found-Dichausthan at Frontier Ride Apts. Call or check in office no color 2018-06-24
Last-a ring in a bathroom on the 2nd floor of a building. Last-a ring on it! Reward offered: 822-0048 evening slots.
Found: Wire-trimmed tape, 12th and Indiana.
Also Datum (7) hubcock, 842-2145. 6-30
NOTICE
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
foams, patfaits and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and cheese galore at the Cashshat Cafe, 803
Humboldt St., Dumbo; Zimmer at the III 830室
Sundays.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CARL E. BURD
15 East 8th 841-2300
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Call Otis Vann!
For new Chevroletst and used cars at
Turner Chevrolet
843-7700
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
cabinets, televisions, electronics. Open daily 18h.
630-5377
After 28 years in business, if George doesn't
he will make it. He's George's Shop, Piper,
Stover.
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. 81-420. If you need help tell Alcohol Anonymous. 842-110.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring—Competent, experienceous users can help you through courses 002, 102, 103, 105, 115, 116, 117, 121, 125, 150. Regular sessions or test preparation. Request Session: 7-29 842-7681
FAST AND ACCURATE SERVICES OFFERED, 1
FROM: cassette tape recordings
FROM: cassette tape recordings
Call: (800) 526-7944
TUTOR
Position wanted. Qualified legal secretary leaving Kansas City mid-August, desires any available position in Lawrence. Resumes on request. 756-213-8521. 756-213-8521. Walton Kansas City, Ma. 64112. 7-12
TYPING
WANTED
Goldmuster Optical
Need male roommates immediately to share good
food, laundry and next year's
plus utilities 814-4125, 814-7125
Prescriptions Filled and Lenses Duplicated with Flawless Accuracy Complete Optical Services.
Sewing, talingting at reasonable rates. Will also make alterations. Those interested in something for that special occasion this summer will be welcome in the library (covers, pillows, draps, etc.). 6-30
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed,
Web design, design for print materials,
designs, illustrations, pics & cartoons.
B.A.Social Sciences.
Tpty editor/ IBM Piex / elite. Quality work.
Follow up with them. Descriptions welcome.
Call Jean. 842-127-2100.
Female roommate wanted for fall (or earlier)
a serious student and like dogs.
748-872-721
1 do damned good typing, Peggy. 862-4476.
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-29
Experienced typist-term paper, sheets, mice, mis-
spelled, 843-353. Mrs. Wright spell-
ing, 843-353. Mrs. Wright
STINCTIVE EYEWARE
742 MASSACHUSETTS
842-5208
Aztec Inn
THE HAWK
Experienced typist, IBM Mag-Card, term papers.
Correspondence, 846-346 or 829-7417.
0-30
846-346 or 829-7417
国家税务局监制
American and
Get a loot to move? Will do light hauling with
Gel a load to move? Call 812-4292 before 5. ask for Ken.
- Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
•Chilled Glasses & Schooners
•Pitcher Night Wednesday
“Beat the Sum
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 after 6 p.m. **tf**
Aztec Inn
Mexican Food
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont 842-9455
- Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
- Sandwiches
THE WHEEL
"Beat the Summertime Blues at 14th and Ohio"
in the summer.
Use the
student discounts
at
Outdoor Beer Garden
Keep your car healthy
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W.23rd 842-4152
喜
530 Wisconsin THE HIDEOUT CLUB
FEET
843-9404
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
—6 Nights a Week—
B Night
Open 2 p.m. -3 a.m. Dancers 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Mentorships Available
Class & Private Club
Wayne Club-Owner
4
Wednesday, June 30, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Tanner aces Connors
WIMBLEDON, England (AP)—Rosepue Tanner knocked favored Jimmy Connors off his stride with his famed 140-mph services and a 70-foot jump. The semifinals with a straight-set victory.
TANNER, whose service has been electronically measured, slammed 19 clean air, and is certified.
Tanner, 24, from Lookout Mountain, Tenn., won 6-4, 6-2, 8-6 and dashed Connors' hope of winning back the title he last lost in the first round. The action on the subaked center court.
But that was only part of Tanner's success. He broke the rhythm of Cronos' game by varying the pace of his service returns. For the first time since the tournament began, the Belleville, Ill., star lost the initiative.
Patek pushes KC over Twins
BLOOMINGTON, Min.. (AP) —Pried Patek's 10th-inspiring airship fly gave Al Fitzmarzil and the Kansas City Royals a 1-4 victory over the Minnesota Twins last night.
Matek's fly to deep left-center scored Ha McKee, who had backed and missed a shot. He scored on Storley Stop Roy Smalley. McMae moved to third in an infield out before scoring the game's only run.
Fitzmorris, 9-4, gave up five hits in posting his first shutout of the season.
Minnesota threatened mildly in the eighth inning when Mike CUBbage doubled to left with one out. But Fitzmorris struck out and was called for a Craig Kruisk to get out of the inning.
Dave Goltz surrendered only three hits and the one-out unearned run but was tagged with the defeat that dropped his record to 7-6.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W W L Pet. GB
New York W L 32
Cleveland W L 322
Cleveland W L 527
Baltimore W 34 480
Baltimore W 34 480
Boston W 34 480
Milwaukee W 21 479
West
Kansas City
Texas
Washington
Chicago
Minnesota
California
43 37 27 A14 ---
28 30 35 B16 ---
33 36 38 A78 ---
23 35 38 A78 ---
32 35 38 A78 ---
Tampa Bay Lakers
Baltimore 2, Baltimore 1
Cleveland 4, Milwaukee 1
Chicago 4, Cleveland 1
California 4, Chicago 1
KANSAS CITY 1, MINNEapolis 0
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--864-4810
Business Office--864-4258
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Friday. Mail to: University of Kansas Sunday, Tuesday, Wednesday, second-class postage by mail are $9 a semester or $18 a scripty
Photo Editor ___
Editor Dierck Casmaniel
Editorial Editor Gretchen Grisham
Campus Editor Greg Bashaw
Associate Campus Editor Beeel Breening
Associate Campus Editor Jake Larett
Photo Editor Larry Flah
Business Manager Carol Stallard
Assistant Business Manager Jim Marquart
Promotion Manager Jim Fawl
Ad Manager
Manager
Janet McGee
News Adviser Business Adviser
Bob Giles Mel Adams
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GREATER COMFORT SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT
Granada Burt Reynolds— just out to raise a little hell . . .
"GATOR" PG Daily at 2:30, 7:30, 9:35
Varsity Gregory Peck Could it be an ..
"OMEN" R
Hillcrest
in the 3rd Century you can have anything—xix century, his birthday. Loan is 29.
"LOGAN'S RUN" PG
Hillcrest
IN THE FIRST few games, nobody suspected what would happen. Connors broke Tanner's service in the opening game, only one point in his first three games.
What Bobbie Gentry's song didn't tell you—the movie does . . .
7:30-9:50 Sat.-Sun. at 1:55
Connors served at 4-3, and suddenly the pattern changed. Tanner began returning service short and Connors started grouping his team together in the second set with three aces in one game. He passed Connors with ground strokes to the next ace, and in the next game hit three more aces.
Hillcrest
Sat.-Sun, Mat. 2:05
The wildest, wackiest love affair that Hollywood ever
"Gable & Lombard"
In the third set Tanner went on drawing Connors forward and pulling in the points as Connors missed with more low volleys and half-volleys.
Sunset The wildest chase ever filmed.
Still, Connors fought well. Serving at 25,
he trailed 0-40 but then saved three match points and stayed alive for five more games.
BUT WHEN Connors served at 6-7, he lapsed again. He slid to 15-40 with two bad forebands, and Tanner finished it off with a backhand pass.
"EAT MY DUST"
—Plus—
There are now no former champions left in contention. In tomorrow's semifinals Tanner will play Borg Borg and Raul Ramirez will face Ilie Nastase.
"CRAZY MOMMA"
Dust 9-15 Mamma 11/27
PLUS— PG
"BRASH MOMMY!"
Dust 9:15 Momma 11:00
Today are the women's semifinals, Chris Evert of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., plays exiled Czech Navy Navalatlova, and Britain's Alexei Zubkov on Evonne Goalagow Cawley of Australia.
CLIMB THE LETTERS TO SUCCESS.
AFROTC
An Air Force way to give more value to your college life and college diploma.
* Scholarships
- $100 a month tax-free allowance
- Flying instruction
- Flying instruction
- An Air Force comm
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- Good pay ... regular
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- manu
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* Travel
Check into the Air Force ROTC Program now-perhaps we can lift into your plans for the Fall 1976 Term.
ence Building or call 864-467a.
Put it all together in Air Force ROTC.
Sports guides best in nation
AQUARIUS featuring "Indy 800"
A Pinball Arcade 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
No Beer No Cigarettes
Porsche
JAMES GANG
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
304 Locust 843-8080
M-F 8-5:30 Saf. 8-12
FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT!
Bugsys'S
Disco Theater
MYSTERY WEDNESDAY
CATFISH
BAR N GRILL
SHOW YOUR LEGS NIGHT
(everyone gets in free when they show their legs, by wearing hot pants, shorts, swimming suits, etc.)
Plus show legs contest for Money
25° Beer
25 Deer
Doors Open at 7:00
Show Starts at 8:00
642 Mass.
Drifters in concert with the Laser light show July 2 & 3
CATFISH
DAR N GRLL
12 & Oread
Happy Hour Daily
3-6
$1.25
Pitchers
Sandwiches and Salads
Open Grill 11:30:9:00 Daily
Try Your Luck at Our Dartboard—
Bring Your Own Darts
Air Conditioned
12 & Oread
Happy Hour Daily
3-6
$1.25
Pitchers
Air
Conditioned
Transportation has changed...
Has your mechanic?
John Haddock
FORD INC.
SECOND GENERATION SINCE 1914
23rd and Alabama
Ph. 843-3500
The University of Kansas's track and football press guides were judged best in the nation last weekend at a convention of sports Information Directors of America.
The guides were compiled by Don Baker, sports information director, and assistant director, Jim Sheldon, and are given to broadcast sports writers for their use.
Press guides from all NCAA member schools throughout the country were entered in the competition at Cincinnati, Ohio. The KU publications were judged against comparable brochures put out by Division I universities but major football-playing universities.
"Sports writers from the American football basketball and truck Writer Group."
basis of format and content relative to
the needs of the media. Baker wedge taylor.
"meauna." Baker said yesterday. He said the football guide required about four months to prepare. Shelden he thought it would be a ride took him about six weeks to complete.
Each guide contains sections on history, statistics and records set in the sport. Profiles on athletes and coaches are also included.
PITCHERS
$1.00
with any pizza
all day
Wednesday
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
2
PIZZA
THE GREEN PEPPER
U
THE KANSAS UNION
The Kansas Union Bookstore and Oread Book Shop Will Be Closed July 1 through July 5 for Annual Inventory