Propagandists, patriots enliven America's history
By CALDER M. PICKETT
CALDER M. PICKET
Professor of Journalism
Today's bicolentime minute - or perhaps slightly more than that, if you read past the first few paragraphs - is about the men in charge of the house and the cases the women too. Our minute will take us to the 1770s, when war was being made, in great part by the propagandists, the newspaper editors and printers, the pamphlets, the newspapers.
It will help to begin with a recent reference, and it comes from the historian Eric Goldman, who studied some patriots and some patriotic towns of the past. It is also useful to remind Br beaver lay moored at dockside, laden with tea chests, and once again a clamorous crowd justified its way down to Boston Harbor. This time mocking the British, they used the same proclamation. Proclaiming a "Boston Tea Party," demonstrators on the water and land denounced the high cost of gasoline and heating oil, chanting 'Freeze prices, not people!' and hurling simplicitly empty oil canisters.
"With bullhorns in a nearby warehouse, they called for the impeachment of President Nixon and raided against the International Telephone and Telegraph Corporation. Home-made banners
supported group strikers and Greek students,
assailed tax loopholes and U.S. foreign policy.
Round and round went the protest posters, in-
terviewed by said to say—SAM ADAMS—THINK
LIKE HIM."
SAM ADAMS was one of three Eric Goldman examined, the others being Patrick Henry and Thomas Paine. They were the men who made the rules of war in America and poetry and oratory and ballads, men in a direct line from the many who used presses out of the Gutenberg tradition: Benjamin Harris, John Campbell (scarcely a rabble-rouser), James Doyle (of course, of course, John Peter Zenger and his group).
Boston was the headquarters of propagandist activity, the focus being in a group calling itself the *Humpty Dumpty* movement, not heroic in appearance, 'something of a humpty-dumpty ... essentially the behind-the-scenes type,' says Goldman. He was plain and cheerful of his past, so he would have been since his forties, with shaking voice and hands.
Adams had let the family fortune slip away, and he owed 18,000 pounds in back taxes to the town of Boston. As early as his Harvard days he had written a thesis in which he asked whether there was any
good reason why one should owe loyalty to any ruler. He had a jugular, anything-goes hunger for power, says Goldman, but he was not what we call today a charisma figure.
HE AND his group conspired and stirred up the angry crowds that met at the Liberty Tree in Boston when Parliament passed the Stamp Act, and at other gatherings where there were free food, drink, fireworks and rousing speeches, plus much singing and hangings in effigy.
One of their favorite songs was "The Liberty
"Armed with hammers, axe and chisels...they approached with dreadful speed."
Song," written in July 1778 by a lawyer named John Dickinson, best known for his "Letters from a Pennsylvania Farmer," in which he argued for a middle position rather than either separation from the crown or continued support. A fellow on the other side composed a parody for the Boston farmers of that period, who pumped, pumps and bawl,/And own you gone mad at fair liberty's call;/No scandalous conduct can add
to your shame/Condemned to dishonor, inherit the fame./ In folly you're born and in folly you'll live/to madness still ready, stupidity steady /Not men, but as monkeys, the tokens you give."
In the time of Dickinson the Sons of Liberty were functioning in Boston, holding their pep rallies and helping to keep things so stirred up by 1770 the town was shook by the episode we call the Boston Massacre, which brought one of the major pieces of revolutionary propaganda: an engraving made by a man named Paul Revere. The propagandists kept the fire alive, stirring up that famous tea party of Samuel Adams, who collaborated on their paint—possibly in the building housing the newspaper called the Boston Gazette—and dumped the茶 into the harbor. A ballad celebrated the incident:
"As near beautiful Boston lying/On the gently swelling blood./Without jok or pendant flying/Three ill-fated ship tea ships./Just as glorious Soli was setting. On the wharf a numerous crew/Sons of freedom, fear forgetting/Sudden appeared in view./Armed with hammers, axe and spear. On the beach a helmet on the herbage-breasted vessels. They approached with dreadful speed./Quick as thought the ships
were boarded./Hatches burst and chests displayed;Axes, hammers help afforded;/What a glorious crush they made/Squash into the deep descended/Cursed wee of China's Coast./Thus at once our fears were ended./British rights shall be lost/Captains! Once more hoist your sail/well the sail/yet plough the wave/Tell your you sail/the weavereamers./When they thought to cheave the brave.
"ON THE eighteenth of April, 75, hardy a man is now alive, who remembers that famous day and night," he wrote in his memoirs. "Reveres rides on the 10th of April, two battles; 'By the rude bridge that arched the flood, their flag to April's breeze unfurled, one entombed face-faced another.' Another poem of a later time, by Emerson.
It was Isaiah Thomas of the Massachusetts Spy who celebrated the battle of Lexington in a story published May 3: "Americans! forever bear in mind the battle of Lexington—where British troops, unmoosted and unprovoked, wanted and, in the name of our countrymen . . ."
See PROPAGANDISTS page 10
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KU
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.156
Thursday, July 1, 1976
Lawrence's glorious Fourth of July
See page 2
BY BECCI BREINING
Associate Campus Editor
The power of judges to censor news media reporting of criminal cases was restricted yesterday in a Supreme Court decision that raised by journalists across the nation.
By unanimous vote, the court struck down a gag rule issued by a Nebraska judge last week, citing a case involving Erwin Charles Simons, a 29-year-old unemployed fire repairman, Lincoln County District Judge Hugh Stuart Moore. The judge said publicity until a jury could be selected.
Simians was convicted in January of murdering six members of a Sutherland island community.
Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, said yesterday that the decision was a victory for freedom of the press.
Brinkman teaches communications law to journalism and law students.
The decision will quiet a lot of fears on the part of the press, he said.
"IT IS a proper decision because it's consistent with the idea that there shouldn't be restraint on coverage of things in the public domain," he said.
CHIEF JUSTICE Warren E. Burger said the court had not ruled out the possibility that an order prohibiting press coverage of a public figure should protect an accused person's right to a fair trial.
"Journalists don't want some judge telling them what they can and can't use. I would have been disappointed if the court bad ruled otherwise."
"It left the door open for other cases by not declaring restraining orders unconstitutional," Brinkman said. "But I don't think a case asking that prior restraints be unconstitutional will come to court soon."
Yankee Doodle Kansan
The more observant among you have probably noticed that we are thunderning down the home stretch toward our nation's 200th birthday. Certainly the Kansan has not forgotten. Accordingly, you may notice that a Bicentennial Issue by some, the Bicentennial Issue by a miserable few—contains numerous celebrations in fact and fancy of this occasion of occasions. Whether you view the Bicentennial Fourth of July as a holiday of unequalled excitement or as a tired old gal that shouldn't be disturbed by new events, your unaware you find much of interest in this, our Bicentennial Kansan.
There will be no Kansas Monday, but Tuesday the paper will reappear on schedule.
Justices William J. Brennan Jr., Potter Stewart and Thurgood Marshall said they believed prior restraint on freedom of the press was unconstitutional.
"The decision to publish is for editors, not judges," Brennan said.
ALAN PETERSON, lawyer for Media of Nebraska, the organization that brought the gag order challenge to the Supreme Court, said he was delighted with the decision.
"It's a super opinion and surprisingly strong, but it leaves the door open for the possibility of closed courts—that is, trials conducted in secrecy." Peterson said.
Peterson said he believed that if a case came to court asking that gag rules be declared unconstitutional, the Supreme Court would do so.
"We think we have five of the nine judges on our side," he said. "Three judges said gag orders are unconstitutional and two others, Byron White and John Paul Stevens, said they tended to agree but wouldn't put themselves on the line until they had to."
RICHARD PAXSON, reporter for the Lincoln Journal, said that journalists throughout Nebraska were happy about the decision.
"We're happy but surprised because many of us predicted a loss," he said.
Paxson said that the decision should be a sobering reminder to reporters because it re-emphasized responsibility of the press for what it prints.
"Once the euphoria wears off, it may not be the panacea that it seems to be," he said. "Only three of the nine judges said that gag rules should be completely prohibited."
ANOTHER LAWYER for Media of Nebraska, E, Barrett Prettyman, said there was "no doubt at all" that the decision was to allow the ability of judges to issue款 orders.
"At least five of the justicees go further than the Chief Justice and indicate that in no way are these orders going to pass muster," Prettyman said.
Firemen, police meet to effect compromise
By DAYNA HEIDRICK
City police will meet with City Manager Buford Watson this morning to discuss pay scales, hours and benefits, and city firefighters will vote tonight on whether to accept a comprehensive employment proposal offered yesterday by Watson.
"I've already made compromises that I am philosophically opposed to," Watson said. "I haven't given away City Hall, but it's all one way."
Both the Lawrence Police Officers Association and International Association of Fire Fighters, Local 1596, told the city commission Tuesday night that they were considering a work slowdown unless the commissioners placed the city under the police mandate to enforce Relations Act and began to negotiate with employees.
Police Officer Assn, Chairman David Reavis said yesterday that police had compromised on many issues and that the only point they would consider changing was their request for expanded medical and hospitalization insurance.
The city currently pays for policemen's insurance. In addition, the police propose that police officers be trained in families of officers. However, they will give this up if the city is willing to provide more funds.
Watson said yesterday that the city had already given the policemen a plan of action to disarm the gunmen.
Meanwhile, city firefighters yesterday received a response from Watson to proposals they had submitted June 1st concerning conditions of employment.
Watson offered the firefighters a package compromise plan including a 6 per cent cost of living increase for the 1977 budget. He also offered for the city to pay the difference between the Workman's Compensation benefits, the Firemen's Relief fund benefits and full salary after the 7th calendar day through the 82nd for specified firemen injuries.
Bill Brutubaker, secretary of the Fire Fighters Association, said it was too early to know whether members would accept Watson's proposal.
He said he would recommend the total package to the city commission but not the local government.
One of the firemen's major complaints about the negotiations was that they hadn't received any written answers to their requests in Samuels, Samuels, Firs, Eckhers President, said.
Sarmueli said Watson told the association in their first meeting June 14 that he would fire fifteen a letter outlining the city's plans for the future, broken of, before his next meeting, June 30.
As part of their work slowdown, the police and firefighters are considering; not responding to calls from the University of Florida or elsewhere outside Lawrence unless they are
THE FASHION CENTER
See COMPROMISE page 9
Centenarian Marion Fowler
The University of Kansas' two new computer systems will be made available for the first time today, Paul Wolfe, computation center coordinator, said yesterday.
New computers cleared for use after final tests
The £4.2 million IBM I45 computer will be used primarily by University ad-
ministration. The Honeywell 66-60 system will be used by students, staff and faculty for instructional
By DAVESTEFFEN
The computation center staff finished two weeks of testing on the new systems.
Seitz said the major advantage to the user would be much faster turnaround time—that is, the time between submitting a program and getting it back.
The new Honeywell system has many advantages over the old research and instructional computer, Wafle said. The tapes can store more information on one reel, the computers are large enough while providing more space for programs and the printers are much quicker, be said.
Hours at the computation center will remain the same with the new systems, but the cost of projects is expected to drop slightly. Seitz said.
Woife said both Honeywell computers would be used in parallel operations for at least two months while the computation center was converting to the 66-60.
BY BECCI BREINING
Associate Female Editor
His memories go back 100 years
Seitz said time-sharing users, those who use the computer through a telephone tie-in, should dial 864-3430 if they wish to use the new 66-40. If you wish to use the old 635 Honeywell research and instruction computers, you can print, or print out, printing, or 864-4980 for slower printing.
Marion Fowler is 100 years old. He is an avid participant of life despite clouded vision and weakened hearing. His disability has been viewed as an assistance from a confusing world.
I visited Fowler this week to find out what it was like to live for a century. As a witness to half of this country's history, he could tell me about things I had missed. Viewed from the ground floor, his experiences war and progress is limited. Age and experience, I am told, are very wise teachers. From his peaceful room at Cherry Manor, Fowler looked at lush summer hills and
"ONE DAY I remember playin' with
some old turkey gobblers at the sawnmilk.
They were fun."
road after going to the convention that elected Grover Cleveland. I was pretty young then, 6-years-old, so things are kinda foggy. But I do remember that they were there because they didn't think that Cleveland was fit for anything, let alone president."
I asked Fowler which other presidents he remembered, and he paused for awhile, then with startling briefness said, "I was president. You knew Kennedy was president. They killed him."
When the United States declared war on Spain in April of 1808, Fowler was young and eager to enter the battle. But because a medical examination revealed that his right leg was shorter than the other, the army rejected him.
Pulling off his shoe with a laugh, he
KU police ready for Sunflower Spectacular
By MIKE DURHAM
The University of Kansas Police Department will have every available officer on duty July 4 to provide security for the Meporall Stadium interment celebration at Meporall Stadium.
"We're making a commitment," said Capt. Bobby Ellison of the KU Police Department. "Every officer we have, ex-
Ellison said the officers would direct traffic as well as patrol inside the stadium. The department's procedure for Sunflower stadium would be much like that of a home football game.
WHILE THERE are no specific regulations banning the use of fireworks
A detachment of 11 or 12 Lawrence police officers will be assigned to augment the University security detail, said Sargent Ron Dalquest of the Lawrence Police Department.
inside the stadium, Ellison said he hoped people, especially youngsters, would use common sense and not set off any fireworks because of the danger to the crowd.
Dalquest said the officers would be stationed in the stadium stands to prevent any harm to spectators or property. During last year's performance Memorial Stadium was plagged by a "crowd of vandals," he said.
The officers will be instructed to prevent people in the stands from setting off fireworks only if they are endangering lives or property.
BESIDES PROBLEMS created by events like Sunflower Spectacular, the traditional July 4th use of fireworks presents special worries for fire departments.
Lawrence Fire Chief John Kusberg said bottle rotted toks the list of In-1978 firefighters.
"Bottle rockets are number one in property damage because they have a tendency to land on a roof or even go down and catch a building on fire." Kasher said.
Kasperger said he anticipated that two or three buildings would be damaged by fire the day after.
ONE OF Kasberger's usual concerns, grass fires, shouldn't be much of a problem
"We have one thing going for us this year;
the grass is still green. If it's dry like it usually is is this time of year, we spend all day putting out grass fires all around town," Kasberer said.
Kasberger said that he wouldn't be assigning any extra to men on duty on the holiday but that there would be enough manpower to the job to handle any emergencies.
Enforcement of fireworks regulations is another seasonal responsibility for policemen and officers of the Douglas County Fire Department, the use of any fireworks declared illegal by the state of Kansas and a disregard for the time limits placed on the use of fireworks.
Violators will normally be given citations to appear before a judge who will then set the fine or sentence. Demory said. The maximum fine for a fire violation, the hound under which fireworkers regulations bound, is $100 or three months in jail, or both.
FIREWORK'S STAND merchandise is legal, but the sale of fireworks inside city buildings is prohibited.
Sgt. Roy Demory, Lawrence Police Department, said that during legal hours policemen answering noise complaints about firecrackers wouldn't cite those responsible with a violation of fireworks laws and would be charged for it, charge them with disturbing the peace. Such a charge will usually be considered only after 10 p.m. or 11 p.m.
The time period for the legal use of
newworks in Lawrence is from 7 a.m.
to 5 p.m.
pointed to his big toe and said, "If I'd a wore my cork toe, I would've made it!"
I FAUSED D for a moment then added,
"Then came the other war, but by that time
I had a big family to support and they told me no again."
Supporting his family during the Depression was a hard thing to do, he said. The years have dulled his memory of those bad times.
"I can't remember exactly how we worked it out, but I do remember it was pretty darn tough." His voice trailed off and he lapsed into silence.
The decades he spent as a farmer have made him wary of the consumption of land. He fears for the future of the fields where he once made his living.
"They're building houses on good land," he said, sweeping his arm toward the green countryside. "Pretty soon they'll be there and just like over in those other countries."
"WHAT WE GONNA do? We gonna get food, I may be mistaken, but if the population keeps growin', we're gonna be in trouble."
Fowler has great faith in the Bible. His conversation is laced with verses from the Old Testament, and he seems to find comfort in reciting passages.
Twenty years ago he bought a cemetery plot.
' it ain't my idea to live this long, but it's the Lord's will and I make no plans. God put us here just like little dust worms, and we can't know what's comin' next.'
When I asked Fowler about the Bicentennial, he was puzzled. He was unfamiliar with the word, and unaware that America was becoming 200 years old.
"I didn't realize that. I thought it was longer than it is. It've been more than that," she said. "I can't believe."
THE YEARS slip by in a hurry, I guess.
They don't wait for nobody.
2
Thursday, July 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Weekend Events
Opening ceremonies for the Prairie Chattaquua, a three-day celebration of the arts, will be at 12 noon in South Park. The afternoon's events are to include music performances from dixieland to rock to bluegrass. The day ends after a park dance at 9 o'm.
FRIDAY
The Jazz Band will give a concert at 7:30 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall at Murphy Hall.
Entertainment
The Kansas Union will be closed through Monday.
Theater, square dancing and the Lawrence Symphony will be featured at the second day of the Prairie Chauquaau at South Park. Events begin at 12 noon. The Art of Kansas in Music, Media and Poetry, a program funded by the Kansas Committee for the Humanities, will be performed at 9 p.m.
Fifteen teams will compete in a Woman's Softball Double Elimination Tournament to begin at 8 a.m. at the Holcom Sports Complex. Two of the four diamonds will be used for the tournament play; the remaining two will be set aside for Little League practice sessions.
The bicentennial will be observed in special services at most Lawrence churches.
In conjunction with a simultaneous nationwide bell-ringing at 1 p.m., the Douglas County Bell at the Lawrence Arts Center will be follled as part of the Prairie Chauffeau program. A quilt exhibit at the Lawrence Arts Center and beep-beep softball game in South Park, both at 2 p.m. are the Chauffeau's final
Albert Gekert will perform a Carnation Reclamation from Sopramonti's "Sunflower Spectacular," a display of fireworks and musical performances by
Also at 2 p.m., the Senior High Camp Concert, featuring groups comprising participants in the Music and Art Camp, will perform in the Murray's Music Hall.
Albert Gerken will perform a Carillon Recital from 3 to 7:15 p.m.
**PROGRAMMING:** a display of fireworks by the 350 particulare and the 350 participale at Art Camp, which will be held at 8:15 p.m.
the concert tunes will be performed by two concert bands, the camp orchestra and
Ken Smith, professor of voice, will narrate "A Panoramic View of 200 Years" written by Calder, M. Pickett, professor of journalism.
The Lawrence Joycees will provide the fireworks display, as they do every year.
MANAGER FACULTIES
Allen Field House and Robinson Gymnasium will be closed. Tennis courts with lighting will remain lighted until 11 p.m.
(LOCATION)
The Lawrence City Swimming Pool will be open from 1:30 p.m. to 9 p.m. All city tennis courts with lighting will remain locked until 11 p.m.
Lone Star Lake will be open for pincicking, boating and use of rental equipment from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m. It's advised that those wishing to rent equipment arrive
Perry Reservoir is open for camping, pinchicking, boating and swimming 24 hours a day. However, it's suggested that campers settle before dark so they won't be crowded.
Movies
GUYS AND DOLLIS-1955 musical stars Frank Sinatra and Marlon Brando, Frank Loesser and the graphic music of Michael Kidle provide most of the spark, but after Sinatra's "Adalene" number, the rest of the film seems
ICE—A lethargic, cinematically sterile film about little middle-class urban guerilla. Made for $12,000 for the American Film Institute, "ice" personally freezes the revolutionary position of the late '60s, for those who want it.
BARBARELLA—Roger Vadim
original French science fiction comic strip. Jane Fonda stars as the title character, but everything, including this one, was written by her.
ODE TO BILLY JOE-What the kids are asking, takes, if you think that the kids were throwing a rag doll off the roof, is Herman ('Summer of '42')
Raucher's script. Robbie Benson and Glynnis O'Connor play this like a Mickey Rooney Judy Garland backwoods traced.
THE OMEN-Gregory Plek plays foster father to the Devil's son. If you've managed to miss the TV campaign that urges you to give the Devil your dues, there are a few messages; otherwise, it's just stupefying.
LOGAN'S RUN—A manhunt in the 23rd Century provides the excuse for this futuristic nonsense. The effects of the drug can be felt by Peter Ustinov takes over with a charming bil that seems to have been inspired by Mister Magoo. With
GABLE AND LOMBARD-James Brolin plays Gable like he was a man. He doesn't reciprocate by embalming Lombard before the script does. Not only do they not love it like that anyone, they don't care as much about Hollywood feeding of itself.
ny BOB GILES Contributing Writer
at sundown on most evenings during the
year 1898, the "sporting belt" of Sedalia,
Nevada.
Ragtime's vitality born in Midwest
Gamblers, pimps, girls and the town's adventuresome males crowded into honkytanks and bawdyhouses like the Maple Leaf Club. The sounds of laughter that floated from the wooden sidewalks were mixed with the infectious strains of a syncopated music.
The music was ragtime, a rich new vein of culture that was being previewed for white America in the tenderloin district of this city and was railroad town in western Missouri.
LIVING IN Sedalia at that time were a number of gifted and sensitive black musicians. Among them was a markedly young serious man named Scott Joplin who was to be known as the most composer of the music and the most shape of its course.
As a child in Texarkana, Tex., Joplin was surrounded by music. His father, Giles Joplin, began playing the violin. His freeborn mother sang and played the banjo. Joplin left home in his early teens and became a wanderer toulourab, and became a gardener, toulourab, and finally, prying in Sedalia in 1894.
It was there that he published his first raga rags and fixed on sheet music a major song.
One of the hazards of Bicentennial worship is that it invites us to oversimplify complex historical patterns and to assign events to events beyond their importance.
NEVERTHELESS, IT is reasonable to suggest that rattime is the most American
Its development between 1895-1915 is an important point in the history of America's music industry. The concert hall of William J. Schafer and Johannes Riedel argue that it no exaggeration to say that the modern music industry "rose to full power on the tide of the rattime
By the turn of the century, black music was thought to be limited to quaint folk songs—the spirituals, worksongs and plantation songs that were left over from the old slave culture and the heritage of suffering.
This was, in effect, the black man being seen through the white man's eyes as a passive,folksy soul to be pitted because he was the victim of a hard fate.
RAGTIME CREATED a new and positive image of the black man, emphasizing his ability to conceive and score instrumental music. Ragtime composers served as collectors of the folk music that was in the archives; they wrote it to be played on the piano.
- is important in understanding the
routine to recognize that it is
based on
Schafer and Riedel, in their book "The
Art of Ragtime," explain, "The little melodies collected and integrated by black composers were primarily dance tunes; a piano raga is a keyboard dance suite, and the drum rythm is a percussion intended as accompaniment for dancing, for expressive physical motion. This fact, certainly clear in the era of ragtime's influence, helps explain why subsequent stereotypes about the music.
Ragtime was an important influence on the early development of American jazz, although the relationship of ragtime to jazz often is misunderstood.
EACH is a separate style; rattle to be played note-for-note as written while jazz is music of improvisation based on the principle of theme-and-variations.
Despite the differences, the emergence of jazz in its never-forming forms was heavily influenced by ragtime, part of a slow and confusing cultural evolution. Musicians created music from what they knew; and in the days when jazz was developing a
fascination of its own, much of it was inspired by or stolen from routine.
The whole music industry borrowed and adapted the ragtime idea. Sonsa's band played cakewakes and ragtime marches. The earlyolin's early songs identified with ragtime.
Most of the vitality and creativity of this American music form occurred in that pocket of the Midwest between St. Louis and Kansas City.
JOPLIN'S FIRST RAG, "Original Rags," was published by Carl Hoffman's music house in Kansas City. Hoffman rejected Joplin's second offering, "Maple Leaf Rag," which was published in 1899 by John Stark of Sedalia and became an instant hit.
James Scott, considered to be the second-ranking ragtime composer, lived for awhile in Kansas and did most of his writing in Sedalia and St. Louis.
After Jopin and Scott, the list of rattime writers, black and white, is dominated by Jimmy Clay, who writes about the
Kansas City and who contributed many pieces of enduring quality.
One of the best-known composers of rags in Kansas City was E. Harry Kelly. In 1901, Kelly, the son of an Irish alderman, wrote a tense colorful hardy Hearn," which he called "the song jaucer at Hoffman's music store. The song gained nation-wide popularity.
KELLY ALSO wrote marches. One of them, published in 1908, was called "Kansas" and was dedicated to Frank Strong, chancellor of the University of Chicago with experience of course, that includes the vocal trio with the "Rock Chalk Jayhawk" pepchant.
In the past 20 years, we have seen a rediscovery of ragtime. It has been accepted as a valid and respectable American music form. There are enough musicians, young and old, playing ragtime, listening to it, knowing to insure that the music will endure.
Take Burt—seriously
By CHUCK SACK
Contributing Writer
.
"Gator" is a sequel to one of Burt Reynolds's least notable roles. As Gator McKuskey in "White Lightning," Reynolds filled up ninety minutes of screen time with Southern style hanky-panky and high-speed, no-return garbage. Why revive such unpromising material two years later? The answer can be found in the credits. "Gator" was a role that Reynolds debut made possible when he arranged the services of actor Burt Reynolds.
The sequel is a combination of "White Lightning" and "Walking Tall." Moon-
Review
fering the roles. So now Burt is becoming a director.
II
shiner Gator is a two-time loser who is forced to work for the Justice Department. In exchange for immunity, he agrees to help get the goods on "Bama McCall (Jerry Reed), a country gangster who runs every vice racket in Dunston County.
EVEN IN repeating a character, as he does with Gator McKuskey, Reynolds expands his portrait. By now he's on the point, where he'd be perfect as one of Tom McGauley's Florida eccentrics, but McGuane, or someone like him, isn't off.
All the movie has is Burt Reynolds. Once again he fleshes out a flat character and makes this exceedingly minor film watchable. With his home-grown drawl, he's always on a ramp, down-home swamp-dwellers, without ever down-on that he's hit the territory before.
Why wasn't Burt Reynold's "Cosmopolitan" appearance discarded by America's throwaway culture? It's been five years since the former professional football player-turned-actor grinned and was able to watch all those many serious film-watchers have refused to look more than skin-deep at his talent. The truth is that Reynolds is a fine character actor who has made good without ever resorting to a stock set of ticks, tricks, quirks and kicks like many more highly skilled actors who repeat themselves in role after role.
When an automobile accident put an end to his sports career, Reynolds turned to acting, first on Broadway ("Mister Roberts") and then in Hollywood as a stuntman. His natural style, coupled with a dark resemblance to the young Brando, soon won him bigger, less strenuous parts. By the time he stripped for "Cosmo" he had starred in a TV series and had made films in India, Japan and China, adding to his many movies in this country. Yet one photograph made him a household off-color ioke.
Probably he fare much better than Marilyn Monroe, who confirmed her stardom in "Playboy" two decades earlier. Her career has given earnest consideration as an actor.
HE IS anathema to many liberated women, as well as to many chauvinistic men. Since "Deliverance" proved him a top xo-office attraction, he has been able to laugh all the way to his agent', and the hot scripts and top salaries waiting there.
III
State song of Kansas has colorful history
By LEWIS GREGORY
The song is known around the world. It was played in China for Presidents Ford and Nixon. It is "Home On The Range," the official state song of Kansas.
The song's history is about as colorful as that of any song ever written. It included a half-million dollar law suit and a nationwide search for the author.
The next day Kelley visited Cal and Gene Harlan to court their sisters, Lulu, and work on the song. The three men were the Harlan musicians in the opera that played for community dances.
"My Western Home," later known as "Home On The Range," was written in 1871 by Brewster M. Higley, a physician who served on the Corps along Beaver Creek, Smith County.
"Kelly put down notes to a tune he hummed and played on his violin until it was safely fixed in his mind," according to Nelson's book, "Home On The Home."
BORN IN Rutland, Ohio, Higley moved to Kansas after his fourth marriage reportedly drove him to drink. He wrote the lyrics to "My Western Home" in the autumn of 1872. In the spring of 1873 he showed his慰问 Dan Kelley a friend and former member in the Union Army and come to Kansas from his native Rhode Island in 1872.
IT BECAME popular with settlers, cowboys and school children across the country but more than five decades passed before the song reached national attention.
They sang the song for the first time publicly at a dance in Harlan one Friday morning.
Stories of the President's sentiment soon made the song one of the country's hits, according to Kirk Mechem, former secretary of the Kansas Historical Society.
"At its peak 'Home On The Range' was literally sung around the world, even in the Antarctic," Mechem said in a 1949 article in Kansas State Historical Quarterly.
If anything, Reynolds is too comfortable in his roles. He continues to waste his time and energy in the little pictures one expects from big stars with spare time between spectacles and sequels. Do he possess himself to these characters? Are they the best of what's offered?
The contradictions of his personality liven up his roles, so that if he promises the moon with his bearing and smile, he denies it with his eyes.
On the other hand, Reynolds's comic sense with a wry, more subtle type of humor is excellent. This is hardly surprising in view of his public, put-on personality, but he also has a great ability to capture the simultaneous tones of menace and pleasure in the grittily underbite of 'Bama's world. Jerry Reed makes a formidable villain, and Reynolds directs him with sure-footed ease. Unlike Weston, Reynolds' sense of style, and that makes all the difference.
SOMEWHAT RELATIVE to this, his comic timing in many scenes, particularly those in chase scenes and with Jack Weston's delivery, is poor. He settles for Disney-level cinematic clichés, and they don't pay off.
As a director, Burt Reynolds has used Burt Reynolds the actor with better results and greater flare than anyone since Peter Bogdanovich in "At Long Last Love." However, no other director has needed his services so much.
THE ARTICLE quoted Admiral Richard E. Byrd as saying he passed time during his six months alone at the South Pole by playing music on his phonograph. That music included his favorite "Home on the Range."
After his phonograph photocheek he said, "I found myself breaking the loneliness by singing "Home on the Range" against the cold, bleak darkness of the South Pole."
Past the rather perfunctory opening, Reynolds's strengths and weaknesses are readily apparent. On the negative side, he has a bad spacing. The film is too slow and too long.
Courtesy Kansas State Historical Society
There are no copyrights on the song. Everyone connected with the music business was making money on it because the author was unknown.
After searching in several states, he found Cal Harlan, then 86, the former member of the Harlan Brothers orchestra. Harlan was nearly blind but played the song on his guitar by memory. He told the lawyer that Hirley was the composer.
Then in 1934 a suit of infringement of copyright was brought against 35 individuals and corporations, including NBC, in a U.S. District Court in New York City by William and Mary Goodwin, Tempe, Arizona.
Dr. Brewster Higley, lyricist for "Home on the Range"
A copy of the Smith County Pioneer of 1873 containing the original published words couldn't be found to verify Higley's authorship, but an article written in the paper in 1914 mentioned the song and Higley.
A nationwide search for the author was begun by a New York lawyer Samuel Moanfield, employed by the Music Publishers Protection Association to investigate the plaintiffs and find the origin of the words and music.
A RECORD of the song sung by Harlan and the newspaper account were used as evidence to prove that Higley and Kelley wrote the songs.
The Goodwins lost the case and the July
10, 1945, issue of "Life" magazine identified
the suspect.
[A portrait of a man with a long beard and mustache, wearing a dark coat and white shirt. He is seated in a chair, his left hand resting on the armrest.]
This week is "Home On The Range" week
"Home on the Runge" was officially adopted as the state song two years later.
known around the world and written in our home state." Woman said Tuesday.
SMITH COUNTY, where Higley's cabin remains, also proclaimed June On The Moon.
in a few counties in Kansas, Sedgwick County proclaimed "Home On The Range" week because S. H. Womer and Muriel Wirtman of Wilford, Carliana, are long-time residents of Wichita.
It is time to give Reynolds his due and recognize him for what he onescreen, sees.
The cabin was restored and dedicated by Governor Edward F. Arn, 25 July, 1954.
"Since it's the Bicentennial year, I think it's fitting that we honor the song that is
The key to his portrayals is his mischievous smile, a blend of Newman's boyish beam and Nicholson's cocky grin. He wears it like a billboard, but employs it variously for deceit, humor, camouflage and occasionally to express pleasure.
From "The Longest Yard" to "Lucky Lady," Reynolds has not been led down to a macho, solemn, look at-me-when-I'm-pleased. She was unlike those who have developed a loathing for the cardboard character represented in the foldout, Reynolds has steadfastly refused to do so.
In short, the directing debut of Burt Reynolds has some mixed blessings. He is not as pretentious as Maximillian Schell, another actor-turned-director. But neither is he as proficient as director Paul Newman or Jack Nicholson.
COUPLED WITH this is a smoothy style that can be switched from "good-doe-bij" folkness to penthouse perfection. As one of the lines in "W.W. and the Dixie Dan-ceykings" put it, he has "that rare combination of horse manure and sincerity."
YET IF Reynolds has hopes of doing more as a director, he will have to make the transition from apprentice to master more quickly. "He's got directing, it takes more than being charming and effective, as George C. Scott found out. For without Burt Reynolds in the lead role, 'Gater' would reveal that a director is just a character actor gone bad.
Like many actors before him, Reynolds has recently expressed his dissatisfaction with acting. He spent too much time as an unappreciated journeyman and too often the movements have been overlooked because he was effective, rather than historic.
Comedy lacks direction
Rv GREGG HEJNA
A plot that portrays a war in Brazil, the murder of the President's wife, soldiers dying from nerve gas, and a presidential election hardly seems the basis for a national crisis. The Case" is humorous, even if its humor is the type that grows thin after prolonged use.
Staff Writer
The play, written by political cartoonist Jules Feiffer, opened at the University Theatre last night. The murder case the play is based on curated by the President's office at the White House.
The complicated plot shifts locations between Brazil, where nerve gas has backfired on American troops at war with Brazilian guerrillas, and the White House, where the President and his aides are trying to explain the gas attack and, at the same time, to upgrade the number of the President's wife because of a forthcoming election.
DUANE LADAGE as Lieutenant Culter is singularly impressive as he deliriously rattles on manhood, humanity and how many enemy soldiers he'll take with
Ladage's vocal performance seems even better when contrasted with Marcia Grund's portraital of the first lady, Mrs. Hale. Grunde appears to have only one manner of speaking, which would be beautiful. She relies heavily on her stage presence and a repeated series of stage moves that resemble marches.
As her husband, James Paul Ivy is brilliant. He carries the characterization of the President to its fullest. Relying heavily on his charm, Ivy is clearly the dominant figure.
command figure.
ALAN GORDON as Professor Sweeney, the government's head of research and development, steps into the pitfall of overacting. Although he tries to incorporate social media and online behavior, Gordon doesn't know where to draw the line. He uses hand movements and voice inflections as props, backing on them
Ind direct contrast, Tim Connors's General Pratt is anything but overacted. Connors underplays his part, the loyal Army officer who has been crippled, blinded and killed by enemy damage he caused or justified attack he made. Justified. Connors's character, although minor, comes close to stealing not just scenes, but the whole play.
UNFORTUNATELY, Foeiner's humor is at its best when delivered in small doses. The script represents little more than disjointed ideas swett together with a very thin thread. The basic message, and war-in itself, is pounded into the viewer relentlessly.
One of the most serious problems of "The White House Murder Case" is its lack of direction. Director Rufus Cadigan said he liked to give his actors room to develop characters, but in this play, the actors apparently directed themselves.
Thursday, July 1, 1976
2
University Daily Kansan
Comment
Fear and loathing on the Fourth
By RON HARTUNG Contributing Writer
If the average newspaper reader were asked today to rate the stories of the year thus far in order of importance, he would probably place the Bicentennial somewhere below the capture of the monkey-boy of Burundi.
To say that the birthday celebration has been something less than the Founding Fathers might have hoped for is to daily rather dangerously in understatement. To say that it was important whatever, or even with a detachable absence of malice, is to jeopardize one's social standing. (One hapless Kansan staff member, who unwittingly referred to this text as the of paper as the Biotic island, was last seen pelting Grit off campus.)
Why, or why this gruff welcome for our nation's two-hundredth birthday? Haven't we progressed beyond even Button Gwinnett's wildest dreams? The American citizen boasts of fistfuls of freedoms that are foreign to most foreigners.
BUT LATELY we've been very selective in exercising the freedoms: freedom to walk on the lawn, Munich freemoon from having the neighborhood and firehydrant storing Colonial garb and a fetching grin; freedom to frown on the wedding, but the groom who gene that resembles Old Glory toilet seats.
Answers don't come easily, of course
(except for sociologists), but the matter is a snack for thought, at least.
Certainly our 1876 km would be in a state of amaze—no, disgust—if they saw the boot-in-the-rump reception we're handling Mother America. The Centennial—now there was a celebration that was anything but coerced. The highlight of 1876 was the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, where he opened Freedom Train this; the Exhibition comprised 450 acres of displays from around the world, but primarily from young America.
Rapt visitors viewed a tremendous variety of wonders, from the disembodied arm of the Statue of Liberty (a premature gift from France); to the 'Coat, Vest, and Globe' sculpture in the glass cylinders displaying the fertile soils of toma, to Mr. Bell's strange new plaything, the telephone ("Of what use is such an invention?" asked the New York Tribune. His phone is a curious device that might find its place in the magic of Arabian tables).
It is difficult, indeed, to imagine one of our modern men of letters waxing poetic on the Wankel engine. Or that anyone in an enlightened state of mind could write, "Yes, it is still in these things of iron and steel that the national genius most freely speaks."
But in the jaded 1970 we doubt that there is a "national genius," let alone one fashioned of iron and steel. Through the miracle of hindsight we shake our heads at
the naivete of those who believed technology would cure all man's ills.
THE WIDE-EYED visitor to the Centennial Exhibition was probably amazed not so much by how well things had been done than by the fact that they had been done at the exhibition. They were amazed that nation would leap so far in one century? It had been born of a revolution, it had experimented with freedoms, it had expanded its own boundaries, it had suffered, then survived, a Civil war, and simultaneously it was able to use technology that would redefine the world.
In 1876 we were like the average student who, having landed a careful of a S, wanted to shoot his pride to the rest of the world. In 1900 he graduated from an honor-roll school who is self-conscious of his glut of A's and, consequently, feels more comfortable pointing out his B's, C's and D's.
Yet with such an auspicious beginning come great expectations—and if the 1870s were part of the Gilded Age and its promise of goodness and wealth, then the 1970s are part of the Guilt-ridden Age and its legacy of promises broken. Our ancestors looked to the future of technology; we are customised to its products, fear its by-products.
be bought off with sparklers and John Paul Sousa, too young to realize that most of our friends were 18.
What, then, is the lesson of the Bicentennial? Do we abslate advertising? Do we prevent marketing technology? Do we make patronism a capital offense? Do we derail the Freedom
Or do we stop flagging ourselves long enough to realize that there is something to celebrate after all? That for all we have accomplished there's still much more to do. That for all we've disturbed the natural order of things there's still hope for the future.
The CIA, the FBI, our frisky congressmen all provide us with plenty of warts to spotlight. Thus our national mood of large-scale outbreaks of pathogenic fowers.
As someone should have said, "A nation's reach should its grasp, or what's a nation's grasp?"
THEN AGAIN, a centennial comes along
a century. How often do we see a
centennial?
Big Nick, a ballplayer from a fading era
Bv GREG BASHAW
Campus Editor
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Back when the biggest games baseball teams played were held on a ball diamond and not in the courthouse, Jarryd and I had a teammate from South Carolina whose muscular and agile leftfielder for the Chicago White Sox who'd moved into our hometown a couple weeks into the summer
The papers alternately deemed him the new Ruth, a future homerun king, or, to Larry's and my almost tearful dismay, a strikefoot champ who possessed baseball skills. As he connected the ball, sheailed, and once belated one over Cornish Park's towering left field roof, a feat only one other player in the park's ancient history had accomplished. The team's first feet, and he would fall to his knees and be asleep as he got up from the home plate dirt.
Big Nick was never just another ballballer. He swung hard.
LARRY AND I fight over who was Big Nick when we batted rocks from the railroad tracks. Even the heaviest stones picked from between the ties seemed to fly further when you could pretend to have Big Nick's shoulders behind your swing.
We'd splintered three bats to pieces with rocks that summer before we got the nerve to run them. We'd get past the butter at big Nick's mansion, shoot the baseball breeze with Nick for awhile and then swap autographs, making sure he understood The Majors was
And certainly any feelings of birthday anticipation there might have been were steam-rolled by the running start the Bicentennial got. Some time in 1974 the candidates and advertisers seized hold and have throttled it ever since.
We bought 23 packs of bubblegum baseball cards at a nickel a pack, a week's allowance for both Larry and me, before we got Big Nick's card. After we saw the card we were reassured about having to go a ballpark for a game. At Big Nick's, standing steady over home plate, our forearms bulging ominously out of a tooott pin stripe uniform.
Armed with the card, an address where we'd heard he lived and our baseball gloves, Larry and I set to find Big Nick. We came to a small, two-story house with paint that was blue, so I couldn't be the residence of Big Nick, though we knocked to be certain.
TWO BABY kids and a mother came to the screen door.
"Is Mr. Nicholson home?" we chorused.
His wife said she would get him. We were to wait outside.
We shuffled about nervously for a few minutes until a tall, gagly man with a red crewcut and p-o-marked cheeks pressed his hand on my shoulder from his cigarette seeped through the screen.
AFTER WE asked for his autograph the
smoldering but onto the grass.
"Ya kids gotta pen?" he said
Larry pulled one of the five ballpoints he'd brought along from his pocket and gave it to the man. He signed our gloves and the card and wished us luck with our ball
ALAIS, IT $^{i}$ trees use *oo* information of *Motif*
$^{a}$ data, $^{b}$ trees use *oo* information of *Motif*
$^{c}$ data.
Larry and I scrutinized the picture of the ballplayer on the card for half a block before we finally asked each other, "Jeez, you think that was really Bick Nick?"
Paint peints from the sign nailed to the side of DAVE NICHOLSON'S SPORTING GOODS store. Only a few cars a day pull off the streets in New York and Chicago. Nicholson's shop, 12 miles west of Chicago.
INSIDE NICOLSON drinks sugared coffee under a mounted display of photos of him as a White Sox player. A pudgy guy named Joe who used to play semi-pro ball games. No one else is in the store and the easy listening music station loudly hums.
"Nobody wants to play baseball anymore, they all want to go to college," Nicholson said.
He smooths some strands of red hair over the shiny spots on his pate.
"A Richie Allen will got his ass sent home to his ma 10 years back," he says, "Nobody really comes to play anymore." "DAT'S ANGEL CIGHT," he says.
"Sure it's right. My kids would rather ride the bus, play baseball!" Nick saved, eavesdropping amike.
"DAT'S ABOUT right." Joe says.
Nicholson came to play when he was a kid. He grew up in baseball country in St. Louis, a tough part of town he calls "Dago Hill."
The hill was the stumping ground of Yogi Berra, Elston Howard and Joe Garagiola. There, 20 kids went out for a ball team and they were able to bike live and six miles to sweat at practice.
After sandlot ball he did more than a "stink" in the minors.
"MUSTA played in every triple A town that had a burger stand." Nicholson says.
See BIG NICK page 6
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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THE GOVT. CAPITOL
The University of Kansas Theatre's 1976 Summer Theater Festival "The Continuing American Revolution"
THE WHITE HOUSE MURDER CASE
BY JULES FEIFFER
Wed.-Sat., June 30-July 3 All Shows Start 8:00 p.m.
Tickets $2.50
K. U. Students, Senior Citizens Music & Art Campers $1.50
For Information and Reservations Call: 864-3982
---
4
Thursday, July 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
4th of JULY
U
Meeting Rooms Lounges/Study Space Bookstores Check-Cashing
THE KANSAS UNION
864-4651
Recreational Facilities Entertainment Dining Services KU Concessions
WE'RE RENOVATING OUR MAIN ENTRANCE AND LOBBY IT'S A MESS NOW, BUT YOU'LL BE PLEASED WITH OUR "NEW LOOK" THIS FALL. ENJOY THE LONG 4TH OF JULY WEEK-END THEN . . . COME TO THE UNION IT'S BUSINESS AS USUAL IN ALL AREAS
KANSAS UNION DINING SERVICES located on level two & three
7:00 a.m.-8:30 a.m./11:00 a.m.-1:20 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
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River City Salad Bar-
11:00 a.m.-1:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
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11:00 a.m.-2:00 p.m. Mon-Fri.
Full selection—leisurely dining
Hawk's Nest
8:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
Self service for those in a hurry
Catering
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Full service banquets, receptions,
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SUMMER BUILDING HOURS: 7 a.m.-9 p.m. Mon-Fri.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 1. 1976
4th of JULY
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6
Thursday, July 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
City requests 'Pedalplan' funds
By DAVID WARD
Lawrence city planners are putting the finishing touches on the proposed "Pedalapia for Lawrence" to be submitted in Department of Transportation by Aug. 1.
Designed by Miles Schachter, a city planner, a "Pededilan" is a five-phase system of bicycle paths connecting the town with local schools, river front and local parks.
If approved by the U.S. Department of Transportation, approximately 80 per cent of the estimated $106,000 cost of phase one will come from the Federal government.
SCHACHTER SAID that the government was taking applications from any industry, but it was necessary
funds for ten cities located in the Midwest.
"We don't know what our chancies are, but we hope that the proposal we submit will show the present necessity and the proper planning," Schachter said yesterday.
Schacher said there were currently 19,000 bicycles in Lawrence, well above the national average for a town this size. He also said there would be 30,000 cycles in Lawrence by 1895.
In developing such a comprehensive bicycle plan, Schachter said that it was necessary to analyze where the major obstacles lie in getting the cyclists determine their most frequent destinations.
PHASE ONE of the plan was derived by computing the cost, determining the origin and destination of each segment.
The phase one subsystem will include a path along the east side of Tennessee that will run from 14th St. to downtown Lawrence, as well as a path along the Kansas River levee and across the new bridge that is now under construction.
and taking into account the accessibility to certain areas largely determined by
It will also include a path down 21st St. and around the high school, with another path up to the beach.
Schachter said he also hoped to include rest benches along some of these routes and to provide additional amenities.
SCHACITT SAID that phase one of the system had been selected for more immediate installation in order to make annual costs reasonable.
The other four phases will be implemented as soon as funds become available.
When the system is completed, HOLLOW Complex, Clinton Park, Lyons Park in North Lawrence, Edgeswood Park in East Lawrence and Broken Arrow Park in South Lawrence will all be connected by bike paths.
Schachter said he thought the directness and safety of the new systems would be a priority.
THE PROPOSAL is being reviewed by several interested parties such as the Cream Bicycle Club, who are making suggestions and possible revisions in the present draft before it is submitted to the U.S. Department of Transportation.
Reform plans follow sex scandal
By GARY WALLACE
The Kansas congressional delegation's reaction to the recent Washington sex scandals ranges from cries for reform to no comment. Four Republicans were skeptical of the Democrats' proposed reforms, when in telephone interviews recently.
Congressman Larry Winn Jr., R-3rd District, and Keith G. Sebelius, R-1st District, said they had supported reform for the last five years by twice opposing the government's power to revise members' allowances to the House Administration Committee.
Les Rosen, administrative assistant to Rep. Garner E. Shriver, R-4th District, said Shriver also had opposed handing over the authority for adjustment of staff salaries, stationery postage and other expenses to Wayne Hays, Dohio, and his committee.
"I OPPOSED giving this power to the Administration Committee in 1971," Sebelius said. "Along with my other House colleagues from Kansas, with the exception of Mrs. Keyes, I opposed this when it came up again last year."
Rep. Martha Keyes, D-2nd District, was unavailable for comment. However, her office played a tape, recorded last week, in which Keyes called for an immediate investigation into the possible misuse of funds by House members.
Rep. Joe Skubitz, R-5th District, was unavailable for comment. A spokesman for Sen. James Pearson said that the senator had no comment.
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., said that the General Accounting Office (GAO) was the best place to periodically check payroll, travel and the expenses he said an employee would have in his position should rest with the GAO and the Integrity Division of the U.S. Justice Department.
plented by Rep. Frank Thompson Jr, Dem.
the new Chair of the Committee,
Administrator of the Committee.
LAST WEEK, House Democrats approved a slate of payroll and expense accounts from 108,000 employees accounting of each House employee's job and limitations on expense accounts, including public disclosure. The reforms also include the addition of 52 new expense accounts to the 14 different expense accounts into four.
The reforms were drafted by a special committee headed by Rep. David R. Obey, D-Wis, who, with two other members, was appointed by speaker Carl Albert, a Democrat.
WNN, SHRIVR and Sebelius support a reform proposal by Rep. John B. Anderson, R-III., that would return the responsibility of House allowances to the full House and authorize a majority of the House to order legislation a misunderstanding of any of its members.
"I think we were faced with a double standard here by letting three men of the Democrats investigate the abuses of the Administration Committee," said Dole. "They were not successful and the Democrats would have raised it. Nixon had done this with Watergate."
The Anderson proposal, along with a recommendation by the Obey committee to create a commission to study comprehensive Fund house-daccounting revisions by December 31, 1977, will require full House action.
house majority leader Thomas P. O'Neill, D-Mass., said last week he would introduce both proposals in the House today. However, Winn said Tuesday that a House colleague had told him that O'Neill would to leave today and thus delay any action.
The Obey committee's recommendations,
having received the approval of the
legislator, will be reviewed.
"The only reform the Democrat proposal is to publish the names of staff members, what positions they hold and where they are located," said S Bellus.
SEBELLIUS SAID figures presented to him at the Conference Tuesday.
changes would actually increase a
$44.96 per month annual allowance from
$44.96 to $79.51 per month.
The changes are designed to save about $4 million by preventing a House member from coming in such as the stationery and travel allowances. The proposed accounting system is so flexible, however, a member might be allowed to spend more money for
"It's time Congress cut back to the bare bones on spending," Sebelius said. "After all, the Congress keeps telling the country to cut back."
Commenting on the proposed reform of the stationery account, Winn said, "The one detail nobody realizes is that we have to pay income tax on the stationery allowance."
WNW ALSO said that the Democratic proposal would actually create a slush fund.
Winn, Sebelius and Dole agreed that the scandal was the result of Democratic control of Congress for more than two decades.
"This would have happened even if the Republicans had held office for that long, because a party in control that long become institutionalized," Sebelius said.
The scandals and the subsequent pleas for reform could have political repercussions
to many.
DOLE SAID there would be no significant political impact from the scandals except that individual members of Congress would have to answer to their continuities and that the respect for Congress would further diminish.
Mail reaction to the scandals was not as great as Winn had hooded.
"It depends whether the Democrats really want reform or are just sending up a smoke screen for the press just before their convention," he said.
"I wish there were more people pushing for reform," Winn said. "I get a lot of 'yougys' mail, which levels all the blame on you guys in Congress." He to explain to two other Republicans not much or I any other. Republican can eat us when the Democrats outnumber us 2 to 1.
Bebelius said the scandal had particularly damaged the reputation of the Capitol Hill office personnel who, he said, were 99 per cent honest and able to type.
Dole and Winn said that 99 per cent of the congressmen were honest and would never allow themselves to become involved in a similar scandal.
Big Nick . . .
From page 3
Nick broke into the big time in '60 with Baltimore and ended in '67 after a try with the Kansas City Ats. He had 61 career starts in the team of the pitching corrs in both leagues.
"Back then who'd ya have?" he asks Joe. "Whitey Ford in the AL, Drysdale and Koutafin in the NL? I faced 'em all. Talent is spread so thin now with all the expansion teams that the overall quality of baseball has zone down."
With the era the expansion clubs ushered in. Nicholson was out.
"I COULDN'T play ball good at all for Houston when I was with them in '66," he says. "The domed field was not unnatural. I couldn't call for comin' 'cause I couldn't see the real sky."
The road and traveling took their toll, and though the money was good for those days, about 12 grand a season. Nicholson retired to spend time with his family.
Joe says, "Ya see any of the guys anymore? Minnoose? Fox? Loper?"
"Nan, they're scattered all over the country. Never hear from anyone except at a church."
NICHOLSON SAYS he doesn't follow baseball much anyway, though he likes the ball.
"When I was with K.C. in 67 they decided
'two want to be an expansion team
sitting in the cellar for 15 years. They had a good organization and were starting to spend some bucks to build up their club. Now it's starting to pay off."
Still, Nicholson said, the Royals, like their teams in bases, have too many big players to have a shovel.
"Those 'Punch and Judy' singers hitters aren't worth much to a team," he says. "If you don't drive in any runs you don't win on the field, but a scoremaing, you gota go for the fences."
JOE'S GOTTA leave, so Nicholson takes up a baseball trophy and begins engraining it, standing under the pictures of him as a player. There's a framed, front-page photo of Nicholson in a glistened and glistened with sweat, neck tenuous, head bent to the ball. Nicholson's in the books for one record: most strikeouts in a single season by a major leader; 175 in the regular season to probably stand for awhile. But then few ballplayers swing as hard as the Big Nick did.
Dykes defends budget
The University of Kansas Medical Center considers the need for more doctors in rural Kansas the major problem it faces today. The university, a special legislative committee yesterday,
The situation could improve, Dykes said, but it's unrealistic to expect the Med Center to supply a physician for every town in Kansas.
Dykes testified before a subcommittee that is studying the KU Med Center's $78 million budget for the new fiscal year, for it. It was the first meeting of the committee.
"We have some continuing, very serious problems in these needs." Dykes said.
Rep. Deny D. Burgess, R-Warmo, chairman of the committee, said the main object of the study would be the budget, but that the study would also look into relationships between KUMC and private medical corporations.
He encouraged the committee to help develop a long-range plan that would help them.
Some physicians on the Med Center staff use Med Center facilities for their private patients.
The committee is also expected to study ways the Med Center can train doctors for the emergency room.
6th St.
Massachusetts St.
KU campus
Iowa St.
23rd St.
"Pedalplan's" route in heavy black lines
Naismith would miss that old game of his
By DAVESTEFFEN
"Basketball," the game Dr. James Naismith invented in 1891 as a fun indoor game for the winter season between football and baseball, has changed significantly to become the intensely competitive, money-orientated sport of "basketball."
Naimishn invented basket ball at the Y.M.C.A. Training School in Springfield, Mass., as a leisurely game dedicated to his principle of "clean living through sport."
Nismith made 13 original rules to which more than 200 have been added. Some of the rules include bouldering, holding, pushing, tipping or straking on the person of an opponent will be allowed.
"If either face makes three consecutive fouls, it shall count as a goal for the op-operative team, but halves with five minutes between halftimes. Each goal shall count one point. In case of a dispute concerning which player has made the goal, we go out of bounds, the umpire will throw it in."
THE COURT could be any rectangular size, Naismith's first published rulebook stated in 1892, from a "12x20 gymnasium to an ordinary football field."
The number of players fluctuated with the size of the court used. The rulebook stated "as many as 50 on a side have been accommodated," but Naismith said the ideal team size was 18 as used in the first game of basket ball in Springfield.
Original baskets were 10 apple buckets hung approximately 10 feet above ground. The open-bottomed net hung from a metal didn't become the accepted basket until 1912.
Standardization of team size was first done in 1897 and of court size in 1910. In 1893 the soccer ball Naismith used as his first makeshift basketball was replaced by a 31-inch circumference basketball with leather laces.
were scored, and four personal fouls
deteriorated a player from further action.
FREE THROWS were shot from 20 feet rather than 15, and one player could be designated to shoot them for the whole team. A jump ball occurred after goals
Enforcement of these rules was the difficult task of the officials, who had neither whistles nor a standard set of signals as their modern counterparts do. Naiamth is said to have merely grabbed a player by the waist to indicate a rule violation.
Referees who made bad calls were in danger of violent spectator reaction. Nets were sometimes installed to separate court and spectators, and backboards were added to keep fans from reaching down from their palaces seat and interfering with shots.
Early arenas were makeshift buildings that provided fans and players with many inconveniences. KU played its first home game in a makeshift stand against Topoka Y.M.C.A., in front of 50 fans. Although the campus newspaper reported that "it appears basket ball mania would be before it," only a small number were able to support the team due to space limitations.
THE ONLY buildings available for play often had pillars running from floor to ceiling, making play hazardous. The campus newspaper said that no home should have pillars under 900 feet because "No visiting teams will risk their lives among the pillars."
This problem was solved when Robinson Gym, the first KU building designed to accommodate basketball, was opened in 1908.
Early basket ball players' uniforms weren't as flashy as the uniforms worn today. The first players in Springfield were long trousers and short-sleeved jerseys. Women, Naismith's scrapbook said, wore "middles, bloomers, and long black bose."
Male spectators were often barred from women's games because of the clothing.
THE PHILOSOPHY behind the game has also undergone drastic changes since Nusamith's 8 day. Naismith said he was "very happy" to have played in one. One should play for the fun of playing."
JULY 4TH SPECIALS
JULY 4TH
SPECIALS
4th of July Sale
REGULAR PRICE SALE PRICE
GOURMANDISE $3.29/lb. $2.97
CAMEMBERT 2.17/ea. 1.89
ITALIAN GORGONZOLA 4.35/lb. 3.75
SWISS EMMENTHAL 2.97/lb. 2.82
FETA 2.93/lb. 2.69
GREEK OLIVES 1.97/lb. 1.79
SALAMI 3.29/lb. 2.98
MR. COFFEE FILTER
100 count 1.69/bx. 1.49
200 count 2.99/bx. 2.59
NEW ITEMS: GREEK KASSERI, KEFALOTYRI,
OIL CURED OLIVES, SESAME TAHNI.
Sale Ends Saturday, July 3
The Stinky Cheese Shoppe
809½ W. 23rd. Next to McDonald's
842-7434 Mon.-Sat. 10:30-6:00 Thurs. 'Til 7:30
Closed Monday,
July 5
4th of July Sale
GOURMANDISE $3.29/lb. $2.97
CAMEMBERT 2.17/ea. 1.89
ITALIAN GORGONZOLA 4.35/lb. 3.75
SWISS EMMENTHAL 2.97/lb. 2.82
FETA 2.93/lb. 2.69
GREEK OLIVES 1.97/lb. 1.79
SALAMI 3.29/lb. 2.98
MR. COFFEE FILTER
100 count 1.69/bx. 1.49
200 count 2.99/bx. 2.59
NEW ITEMS: GREEK KASSERI, KEFALOTYRI, OIL CURED OLIVES, SESAME TAHINI.
Sale Ends Saturday, July 3
The Stinky Cheese Shoppe
809½ W. 23rd.
Next to McDonald's
842-7434 Mon.-Sat. 10:30-6:00 Thurs. 'Til 7:30
Closed Monday,
July 5
BREATH FORCE BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION
FEATURING
the Drifters LASER LIGHT SHOW
DISCO WEEKEND JULY 9TH - 3RD 12:30 each nite
Guaranteed to get you UP for four continuous hours (minutes) of dancing to the Drifters In concert, playing their mid-sixties hit like, "Under the Boardwalk." COME BOTH NIGHTS!
BUG/Y/ 649 MAJL
...for the fast young set!
WE ALSO HAVE A LIMITED supply OF BEACHCOMBER Bills. SHUTS TO GO WITH YOUR SANDALS
TECHNICAL
$\textcircled{1}$ HUTTY CLORES
$\textcircled{2}$ BOUNDARY DECK
$\textcircled{3}$ STOCKY BOLL
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MECHANICAL
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WHALE BEACH
McCall's
Downtown Lawrence
BUGS'S KOVLEY
BIGENTENNIAL
CELEBRATION
FEATURING
The Drifters
and a
LASER LIGHT SHOW
---
BEACHCOMBER
BILLS
BEACHCOMBER BILLS
...for the fast young set!
WE ALSO HAVE A LIMITED supply of BEACHCOMBER BILLS TSHIRTS TO GO WITH YOUR SANDALS
TECHNICAL
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BEACHCOMBER BILLS ANLA BEACH
McCall's
To & You! On our Shoes
Downtown Lawrence
7
SUNFLOWER SPECTACULAR
JULY 4TH 1776
1976
BICENTENNIAL FIREWORKS
GIANT FIREWORKS DISPLAY & MUSICAL RECOLLECTION OF OUR NATION'S HISTORY
SUNDAY, JULY 4, 1976 Showtime: 8:15 p.m.
TICKETS: Advance *1.00 • At the Gate *1.25
KANSAS MEMORIAL STADIUM
Sponsored by Lawrence Jaycees & The University of Kansas
TICKET LOCATIONS
3 DILLON'S STORES
RANEY's
RUSTY'S
GRIFF'S
DAIRY QUEEN
WAYMIRE'S
SUNFLOWER SPECTACULAR
JULY 4TH 1776
1776 1976
BICENTENNIAL FIREWORKS
K
ALMSLE
MICHIGAN
UNITED STATES
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3 DILLON'S STORES RUSTY'S DAIRY QUEEN
RANEY's GRIFF'S WAYMIRE'S
SAMBO'S FALLEY'S KU CREDIT UNION
JAYHAWK FOOD MARKET ANY JAYCEE
8
Thursday, July 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
1876: Bad times.
By SUE WILSON
Staff Writer
Mount Oread hasn't always been the landmark, doubled woods it is today.
A century ago, in the year of the nation's Centennial, the ridge between the valleys carved by the Wakaraus and Kaw rivers was windswept and treeless. Grasshoppers plagued the crops in the valleys while stray cattle munched on the hill's prairie grasses.
The hill rose from encircling farm lands and peered in the city of Lawrence almost a mile.
A PROFESSOR'S turnip patch on the eastern slope of Mount Oread had survived grasshoppers and stray cows only to be vandalized by pranksters in the spring. The student newspaper was sure the culprits were diffuse riffles and not University students.
In 1876, the University of Kansas was 10 years old. Atop Mount Oread two buildings, called simply the Old Building and the New Building, housed classrooms and laboratories for the 300 students who paid $10 to $20 tuition.
Three years earlier, in 1873, when the University graduated its first four students, Chancellor John Fraser delivered his commencement address from Mount Oured and praised its "tranquil and diversified" pastoral beauty.
THE WISCONSIN professor hired to replace Fraser arrived in Lawrence on a hot summer day in 1874. He took one look at the University, perched on a bleak, treeless hill shaded only by clouds of grasshoppers, moving him to his home by cool. Wisconsin lakes.
His successors were less romantic.
The next replacement, Chancellor James Morris, arrived in the fall of 1874. By then, he was a minister to King George IV.
Barry Shalinsky, Lawrence PBC representative, said the commission didn't sponsor any organized activities in this area recommencing the nation's 200th Birthday.
Group to honor Fourth of July without festivity
The Kansas People's Bicentennial
Celebration will celebrate the
Bicentennial by not celebrating
them.
He said the PBC was opposed to the many commercial activities linked to the bicentennial. Instead, he said, the PBC studies American history on a broader scale than most of our present-day problems and to try to solve community "headaches."
"We don't have anything planned," he said. "I think that everything is on a local basis, whatever the local groups in the other towns want to do."
On a national level, the PBC is trying to mobilize people in Washington, D.C., and across the country.
The PBC is based on community groups focusing on local problems. A group in Emporia and a group from the Johnson County National Convention in August as a nonviolent "creative presence." The Emporia group wants to protest the planned building of a nuclear power plant near Burington. The group's members are sounded by the Johnson County PBC.
John Schleerman, another member of the local PBC, said the Lawrence organization was idle now that students had left for the summer.
He said the local PBC would have a hard time competing with the many other activities in Lawrence celebrating the four-day bicentennial weekend.
"It's probably more fun to party than to protest," he said.
---
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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 the New American Revolution . . . the only one to make any sense is ICE . . .." The New York Times—Vincent Canby.
cumbered to cooler weather. The cattle, however, were settling in to their winter
"The new University grounds, beautifully located and an extent in lie exposed as common pasture for stray cattle," Miller told the state legislature.
encing out wandering cows had to be delayed for three years, however. The immediate problem was finding shelter for 300 students.
7:30 p.m. $1.00
THE UNIVERSITY'S enrollment had
increased by 27% since 2015.
Building was far from complete. Many of
ALL FILMS SHOWN IN WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
The townpeople, faculty and the Board of Regents began a two-year search for funds at a time when drought and grasshopper storms powered state resources. Money was scarce.
In 1876, the search ensured. The last appropriated $1,000 to finish the New Building.
Ice
the rooms were not plastered, and a number of windows were boarded up.
BUT THE hardships of the preceding years were not forgotten. Instead, they became a reality, and it is with them that we reflect.
By December of that year, the Kansas
University RU$ student newspaper,
reported that 38% of its readers were
kansasians.
"Wherene we (Kansans) do not outstrip the world in crops of corn, wheat, and the blessings of life, we do in grasshoppers, drotches and the curses of life," the Collegiate said. "In a word, we are bound to be preeminent in one line or another."
Kanass Centennial display had "excellled all others of like nature," the newspaper said.
cows hit the Hill
In the years that followed 1876, Mount Oread began to yield its rugged bleakness.
Settlers got a bang from Fourth
By CORA MARQUIS
Early Kansas Fourth of July celebrations
were little in number with our present-day
memorials.
"We fired a swivel at sunrise in honour of the day," he wrote, "and continued our voyage," which was up the Missouri River toward what is now Aitchison.
The first Fourth of July in what is now Kansas occurred in 1848. Earlier travelers and settlers often hung up many times Spaniards, and had little interest in an American celebration of independence. Others in the area were more aware that they took small notice of the event.
Clark wrote that they dined on corn and named two creeks in honor of the day:
Patrick Gass, of the Lewis and Clark exploring party, wrote about the day in his diary, part of which was reprinted in a 1939 Kangas 'Historical Quarterly.
In 1804 the United States had begun exploration of the recently acquired land, now Kansas, which was part of the Louisiana Purchase, William Clark and Meriwether Lewis, early explorers of the region, and John Day in July near present-day Aichion that year.
Independence Creek and Fourth of July, 1804, Creek, now called White Clay Creek.
That night they camped in a deserted Indian village, they closed the day with another discharge from their weapons and "an extra gill of whiskey," wrote John Ordway, another member of the Lewis and Clark party.
Travelers in the region followed this first observance and sometimes kept the anniversary by firing salutes, raising the flag, feasting on buffalo and allowing themselves an extra shot of whiskey. For those not inclined to drink, there was an occasional meal about the discovery of America. Sometimes there was a special prayer service.
One unusual Fourth of July celebration occurred at Fort Leavenworth in 1855. A visiting Englishman, the honorable Charles Ponsonby, served as the gun salute and a feast with Mádera wine and champagne. But when 150 Pawne Indians arrived at the fort and 12-14 chicks joined the gentlemen in after-dinner wine jugs, the Englishman was taken back
After feasting, the soldiers sang and invited the Indians to join. The Indians rose together and let forth a shrill cry that roars "in full chorus of mingled yell and how!"
At twilight the Englishman jumped on his horse to "gallop off the effects of wine, too."
Mr
Yuk
"YUK DOWN"
Live Bands Tuesday-Saturday
Thursday—"Equal Rights"
—Guys and Gals Free,
$1.00 Pitchers
Friday and Saturday *1.00 Admission
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: Jim Cox, Student Senate Treasurer
Youth Seeks Identity
A Free Article by
Dr. W. Norman Cooper, D.D.
Truth Center
Box 6721, L.A. Capitol, CA 90028
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
1. Attend a TRAINING SESSION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
4. Account for All Inventory.
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2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
—NOTICE—
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following time:
TUESDAY, JULY 13, 3:45 p.m.
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
TUESDAY, JULY 13, 3:45 p.m.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
No other sessions will be held this summer
You must contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for this session, or for additional information.
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STORE-WIDE SUMMER SALE
the town shop
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SUITS Fresh,new summer stock 2 piece,vested,trios As low as $8650
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The
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 1. 1976
9
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Charges for '411'in effect
TOPEKA -Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. is putting into effect today a new charge for request to directory assistance for telephone numbers in excess of five
S. H. "Pete" Clow, vice president and general manager of Bell in Kansas, said the charges would be based on tariffs filed with the Kansas Corporation Commission, which recently approved a schedule of charges scaled down from what Bell had proposed.
Customers making calls to directory assistance will be able to ask for two telephone numbers per call, up to five per monthly billing period. The first will live in the customer's home address; the second will live in the company's office.
TWA moves against strike
NEW YORK-Trans World Airlines said it obtained a temporary restraining order yesterday against a threatened strike by its 5,100 flight attendants.
A spokesman for Transport Workers Union Local 511 said it had no immediate comment on the order, which was obtained in U.S. District Manhattan. It is returnable at 2 p.m. tomorrow, two hours before the attendants are to go on strike in their contract dispute.
Detroit police protest lauoff
TWA said that the union acted unlawfully in undermining the ratification of a new labor pact that the airline signed June 6. Its suit also seeks unspecified damages for losses TWA said were incurred by the union's urging the public not to fly with the airline in late May.
DETROIT—Nearly 40 per cent of Detroit police officers scheduled to work the afternoon shift failed to show up yesterday in protest against today's planned increase in homicide rates.
Almost one-fifth of the city's $5,200-member police force is scheduled to be laid off today as part of a city effort to battle a multimillion-dollar budget deficit.
A police spokesman said 357 officers called in sick yesterday for the afternoon shift. Absentism on earlier shifts was reported about normal. Disciplinary action may be taken against some of the officers who called in sick, and those unable to doctorneys verification of illness will lose a day's pay, the spokesman said.
Compromise . . .
From page one
emergences involving lives; not performing housekeeping and administrative duties; and setting up informational pickets.
The slowdown suggestion stenamed from a joint news conference of the police and fire associations, Arnold Berman, attorney for the two groups, said Tuesday.
Berman said the meeting was disrupted by the appearance of Brent McFall, city personnel manager, Richard Stanwick, police chief; and John Kasberger, fire chief.
Watson, who told the men to attend the press conference, said he thought it was an open meeting since it was held on public television. "We were firefighters in attendance," were on duty.
Reavis said that since police weren't elected officials they didn't come under the law.
which involve reducing the years policemen must be on the force before they can get a job.
"Reavis said yesterday that police representatives and Watson had "gotten along well" on seven of the 10 points of the debate. But a few more points, curred in discussion of the last three points,
Police want to reduce the number of years to four. Presently there are seven-year veterans on the force who haven't reached top pay, Revis said.
Police propose that the officers who will police five years or more on their salaries adjust from $4.35 to $5.57 per hour in the first pay period after passing the third year level
When the proposals will be implemente is another point of contention. Policemen *prefer* September 1970, but Watson proposes he would have had he couldn't give pay raises at mid-year.
The legality of the proposed slowdown by police and firefighters' associations has been disputed.
Carl Mibek, city commissioner, said the threatened cutback would be illegal. Reeva and Samuels said it wouldn't be and that they wanted to resolve the disputalely.
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KU students caretakers while on sabbatical
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Charles and Marilyn Weldon said yesterday they were totally unaware of the job when they came to the University of Kansas.
Two University of Kansas graduate students on a "second honeymoon" sabbatical now have one of the more unusual experiences in caring care of the clan-celler's guest house.
Staff Writer
By JIM MURRAY
"We came down here for interviews with our advisors on May 1," Charles said. "We received a letter on the 15th which mentioned the position, so we applied for it."
The position of caretaker is a special fellowship of the graduate school. Department heads recommend several couples, and the Graduate School Fellowship committee selects three. The chancellor's wife then interviews the couples and makes the selection.
"We were interviewed two weeks ago by Mrs. Dykes and were notified the next day," she said.
The caretakers' duties include taking care of the guest floor of the house, meeting guests, and cleaning up after them.
The Weldons are working for their doctorates in education. Charles is a public
"We put in for our sabbaticals six years ago, for this year," she said. "It's our second honeymoon, really, now that the children are gone."
of a familiar area. The Weldona said that while they had both received their B.A.'s, they were not familiar with the Nebraska, they were not familiar with this area and were surprised at the terrain.
school principal in St. Paul, Minn., and Martlyn is a chairman of the department of religious education at St. Paul Bible College, which their daughter, Janelle, 19, attends and their son Hai, 18, will attend this fall.
"We chose KU because we were impressed by the friendliness of the people," he said. "We really felt accepted. Also, we were impressed with the individuality of the graduate program here. The students help plan their program and that was very important."
They said they chose KU for several reasons.
The Weldons said their program would include course and dissertation work. They said they didn't think their schedules would interfere with caretaker duties.
"Basically we just have to avoid brow classes, which won't be hard to do," he said. "We have to be there in the morning to serve bread breakfast." This is the only meal we serve them.
"We were quite surprised that Lawrence was so silly," she said.
We the Weldons plan to tour Kansas with their children after the summer session end.
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1916 Triumph TR3 Mechanically sound, but it works some work and TLC Best off. 840-8757
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Full-time position for ten monthly study of students in geology, with experience in working with geological data in field work for weeks. Knowledge live in area of field work for weeks. Knowledge live in area of field work for weeks. Kansas Geological Survey, day work in Kansas. Kansas Geological Survey is full time. Kansas Geological Survey is full time. Kansas Geological Survey is full time. Qualified women and men of all races required.
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Folder contain news clippings about book
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7-7
Louisa ruined in a batherhose on the floor of her bedroom. A reward offered on it. Reward offered. #43-0088 evening.
Small black cat out with color cailar inladd with "jewelts". Found two weeks ago. Call 841-2523-722.
NOTICE
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and cools, parfaits and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream and cheese cake at the Cashah Cafe, 802 Main Street (Dinner) door. Tilt h 8-10 to see Sundays.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dulux, tables, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12 p.m. 842-337-3771
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Position wanted: Qualified legal secretary leaving Kansas City mid-August, desire any available position in Lawrence. Resumes on request. Position offered by Walnut, Kansas City, M. 64112. 7-12
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10
Thursday, July 1, 1976
University Daily Kansan
10 15
Propagandists
From page one
It was an emotional, scary objective, report, but the language of Thomas seems restrained alongside that of the Gazette of Providence, Rhode Island, in describing the British: "base wretches, who fight for pay and plunder; cattails devoid of all principles and tenderness; hence the honor" which may we not expect from such merciless raygers? -as, must we see our flourishing country pilaged and laid waste, our houses fired, our fathers massacred, our wives, our mothers, our sisters, and our daughters, fall a prey to brutal and inhuman raisvers; our tender infants torn from the breadline; our old women caught up in their crises and groans transpire the yielding air! . . . forbid it he good."
LATER IT was called the Royal Gazette; but to its enemies, it was the Lying Gazette, with reports of the capture of Washington, the death of Washington, the cowardesses of Washington, and with words, of the new use of Ben Franklin's old smile symbol in cartoons, he wrote: "Ye sons of sedition, how come it to pass, that America's typed, by a smoke-it is also carried moving social comment, as in this by a fleeing royalist;
There was "Yankee Doddle," too. The British created the appellation, the colonials wore it like a badge and we still love it. Our history is mainly that of the patrons, but on the other side there also was a young woman, who was Hugh Gaine, turncoat editor of the New York Gazette and Weekly Rington, but importantly there was James Rivington, who may have been a double agent, a Britian who started a paper in 1773 called the Connecticut, New Jersey, Hudson's River, and Connecticut Weekly Advertiser."
"I leave America and every endearing connection, because I will not raise my hand against my sovereign; nor will I draw my sword against my country; when I can consciously draw it in her favour, my life will be cheerfully devoted to her service."
Of the patriot agitators an interesting
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L W Pct GB
New York 70 41 3.62
Cleveland 36 33 3.52
Boston 36 33 3.52
Detroit 34 35 4.93
Baltimore 34 37 4.93
Hawthorne 34 37 4.93
34 37 4.93 16.54
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
Kansas city 44 27 .620
Chicago 39 18 .510 9%
Oakland 36 30 .500 9%
Chicago 33 77 .471 10%
Minnesota 33 77 .471 10%
California 32 45 .450 11%
**Yankees' games**
Boston 6, Hamilton 8,
New York at Detroit 10, penn
California at Chicago 10, tomb
Atlanta at Arizona 9, Toledo 4
Dallas 2
NATIONAL LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
**NATIONAL LEAGUE**
Philadelphia W 10 L 741 GB -
Baltimore 41 28 P14 - New York 41 27 P131 New York 29 27 P141 Los Angeles 31 41 P131 Montreal 24 43 P156 West Carolina 42 34 P156 Los Angeles 42 34 P156 Atlanta 34 41 P156 San Francisco 31 41 P17
name is that of Fritch Freeneau, best known in journalism as Jefferson's editor of the *New York Times*.
Yesterday's Results
San Francisco 10, New York
Pittsburgh 7, Chicago 6,
New York, postponed, rain
Philadelphia 8, Cleveland, postponed, rain
San Diego 3, Cincinnati 1
San Antonio 2
Freneau was the poet of the Revolution, a partisan who attacked General Gage as he later attacked Washington and Adams. In 1780 he was seized and placed aboard a British prison ship, and of that experience he wrote:
One figure comes last, the man who in January of 761 fired the American people with his "Common Sense." He was Thomas Paine—an Englishman, son of a corset-maker, a Quaker and one who had known poverty and hardship. His earliest known body was an epiphany for the youngest man buried: "Here lies the body of John Crow. Who once was high, but now is low; we Brother crows, take warning all. For as your rise, so must you fall."
"SUCH FOOD they sent to make complete our woes,/It looked like carrion torn from hungry crowds/Such vernin vile on every joint we seen./So black, corrupted, mortified, and team./That once we tried to kill them, we saw that he held him, holding up the beef/See, captain, see what rotten bones we pick/What kills the healthy cannot cure the sick/Not dogs on such by Christian men are fed./And, see good master, see what lousy bread/Your meat or bread, this man of death can eat it, too. Our carers provide/But this, base rebel dogs, I'd have you know./That better than my merit we bestow."
Paine became an exciseman, was a friend of Burke, of Goldsmith and of Sheridan, obtained audience with the great Dr. Franklin and with a letter of introduction came to America in 1774. Richard Bache, Franklin's son-in-law, helped him find employment at Philadelphia. He obtained employment with Robert Atiken of the Pennsylvania Magazine.
He began to write "Common Sense,"
which Dr. Benjamin Rush described as "bursting from the press with an effect which has rarely been produced by types and paper in any age or country." All of us know the story of "Common Sense," but one passage has special meaning:
"THE SUN never shined on a cause of greater worth. The not its affair of a city, a county, a province, or kingdom; but of a continent—of at least one—and of a day, a year, or an age; postity are virtually involved in the contest, and will be more or less affected even to the end of it. The least sacrifice is the seedtime of continental union, faith and honour. The least fracture will be like a name engraved with the point of a pin on the tender rind of a young oak; the wound of a wound of a young oak; the postity read in it full grown characters."
Tom Paine was not through writing. He began to write again, in late 76, in the winter of defeats, when the army of Washington was beaten, hopeless, hungry. He sent his troops to campfire, on the head of a drum, with the tattered continental soldiers gathered about him. He wrote such words as these, in his now-famous Crisis papers: "These are the times that try men's souls. The summer is here and I am crisiest, shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman."
When Eric Goldman was doing his research he went to Boston, to a place called Lerner's Cafeteria Delicatessen, at 134 West 27th Street. He did not know that it was on the very site of his establishment that Dunlap & Claypoond once existed, a printing house that published the first copies of the Declaration, of the Constitution, of Washington's constitution, and thumped himself on the chest and said: "I'm an American and it smacks me right
Rovals whip Twins, 4-2
MINNESOTA (AP) -- Major league batting leader George Brett scored the goahead run and drove in another two innings in Minnesota. The Tigers victory over the Minnesota Twins last night.
Brett, who enjoyed his 16th three-hit game of the season and boosted his batting average to .361, tripled and scored in the sixth inning to break a 2-2 tie. His RBI single in the eighth gave the Royals a two-run lead.
Kansas City starter Paul Spitofft, 8,6,
went the distance for the fourth time this
season although he walked six batters and
gave up seven hits.
Brett led the sixth inning with his eight triple of the season and eventually scored on a double play grounder to put McMahon up by a single. The game with a two-out rally in the fourth when Hal McAne laughed and scored on a double hit, and came home on a double by Buck Martinez.
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--here that all that stuff happened at my place.” Then he said: “They all talk freedom, freedom. But you know damn well some dowager doesn't mean the same thing by ‘freedom’ as a poor guy. Freedom,” he said, “is a complicated thing.”
by Carressa
Sunny Blacks Royal College Shop
Eight Thirty Seven Massachusetts Street
by Carressa
FREEDOM IS a complicated thing. Not to all the propagandists of the Revolution was
it complicated, but we know today that it is. Here in 1976, in midst of the celebration of our Bicentennial, we have a message offered by a contemporary delicatessen operator in Boston, and by those journalistic forefathers of the Revolution, and by that tough body who signed the Declaration 200 years ago.
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ICE
A Film by Robert Kramer A Fiction Film about Imminent Urban Guerrilla Warfare in the United States
Sometimes in the future—3 years maybe, or 20 years. Civil liberties are abused, and people have learned to live with this condition. An urban revolutionary group makes plans for a regional movement in the city's kind against the state apparatus. Security Police brutalize one of the key members of the revolutionary group. Liberal groups are kept informed of the revolutionary struggle through an underground film organization. The regional authorities killed, communication centers blown up, residential areas occupied, the head of intelligence kidnapped and held
"ICE to me is the most original and most significant American narrative film in two maybe three years. The film probes in depth the most urgent contemporary moment of the filmmaker of the first magnitude.
THE VILLAGE VOICE—JONAS MEKAS
for ransom. Members of the revolutionary group are killed by Security Police in the aftermath of the offensive. But the group survives and continues the struggle.
"Of all the films we've seen recently having to do with the New American Revolution . . . the
FRIDAY, July 2
$1.00
only one to make any sense is ICE . . .
THE NEW YORK TIMES—VINCENT CANBY
"ICE is the most important film of 1970." THE VILLAGE VOICE—NAT HENTOFF
"Quirly, almost sadly, with perturbing power, the film goes beyond ideology; it does not involve anger or ask for sympathy for the cause. It merely shows that these people, whether they destroy or are destroyed, are at this moment indelibly connected to NEWSWEEK
7:30 p.m.
WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
Transportation has changed...
A carriage with a sail. Four men are seated in the carriage, each wearing hats and holding a flag. One man is steering the carriage, while the others appear to be watching or playing with their hands. The carriage has large wheels and a tall pole with a flag at the top.
Has your mechanic?
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HAWKY SUN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.157
Hawks' hockey in jeopardy
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, July 6, 1976
See page 3
Carlson tapes political history for KU library
By SUSANLYNN
Staff Writer
The tape-recorded memoirs of a former U.S. Senator and governor of Kansas, Frank Carlson, will be available soon at Spencer Research Library.
The history, an accumulation of recorded interviews, is being reproduced into written transcripts and tape recordings. The Kansas Bicentennial Committee and Spencel library合作组织了 this project. Beece Construction Company of Scandia paid for the project.
"It's a relatively new procedure," Stitt Robinson, chairman of the bicentennial committee, said yesterday. "Our main interest is to record the opinions of such politicians while they are still sharp enough and important political and social questions."
LARRY YATES, Kansas City, Kan., graduate student in history, conducted nine interviews with Carlson and Corcorta院士 on behalf of Robinson. Yates was selected to conduct the interviews on the basis of academic qualifications and his interest in history and
"The Senator had a remarkable recall of the past 40 years," Yates said. "The experience was enjoyable, and quite easy. I wanted to do research on Carlson and ask questionnaires."
Yates said that the recordings tended to complement written texts, but that by themselves the tapes were inadequate for research purposes.
In the interviews, Carlson recounted his public and personal life as a politician.
ROBINSON SAID Carlson, 83, was a very
unpleasant person who enjoyed享醪 about
their health.
The tapes biggest advantage, Robinson is that the person's voice can be preserved.
THE PROJECT was suggested as a bicentennial endeavor by H. William Reece thnd. Reece Construction Co. last December, in transportation, lugging and transporter costs.
3 named interns for year's work in Strong Hall
Three administrative interns, participants in a program designed to increase the number of women and minorities in the job field, will be offered by Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor.
the interns are Marilyn Doerter, assistant director of the Kansas City Regents Center, who will work in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; and Marshall Jackson, assistant director of admissions, who will work for the vice chancellor for education.
The interns will serve twelve-month appointments effective July 1. 1976.
The internship program was begun one year ago by the University and seeks to provide administrative experience for the participants.
DANCE
Dancing Together
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
1. A fireball or explosion with a bright streak of light.
2. A fireball or explosion with a bright streak of light.
Celebration
KU students and area residents partook of the local festivities over the weekend as Lawrence celebrated the nation's 200th Fourth of July.
The festivities began in South Park, with a three-day Prairie Chautauqua sponsored by the Lawrence Bicentennial Commission. The Chautauqua featured a variety of concerts and other stage presentations, political speakers, games for the children, and perhaps most importantly, food.
Susie Bishop, a seventh grader at West junior high school, wore a clown face that was painted by Brenda Loyd, Lawrence graduate student. Bishop was later seen having as much fun as the little children she waved at.
John Snyder, Lawrence senior, found that his Revolutionary War costume was诺 to walk around in, but his wig wasn't fastened down well enough to dance with Montana Bennett, Bellevue, Neb. graduate student.
Lawrence Jaycees estimated that over 20,000 people crowded the stadium and the grass area around the campanile and night to watch the fireworks display.
Plans for radiation therapy center underway
Groundwork is underway for a new radiation therapy center for the treatment of cancer at the University of Kansas Medical Center.
Raymond E. Meyn, senior partner of Meyn and Fennel Architects, Kansas City, Kan, said yesterday that three preliminary studies are ready to present to the University.
after treatment had ended, the cancer was most likely cured.
Some patients can't be treated with radiation, according to Morrison. They include those with severe debilitating illness, those with cancers that are adnexed to the head who have been treated previously to full radiation tolerance of normal tissues.
Ninety per cent of persons with the first stage of cancer of the larynx or cervix, who are treated by radiotherapy, are free of recurrence for at least five years after treatment, Morrison said. Eighty per cent of patients with early symptoms of the lymph nodes or spleen, were free from treatment for five years after treatment, he said.
Two of the designs are for underground construction and one is for a two-story concrete building.
MORRISON SAID about 50 patients a day were treated. Treatments vary in frequency from one to five times a week and from one to eight weeks duration for each patient, he said. Each treatment lasts about 20 to 30 minutes, he said.
THE NEW radiation center therapy will be used primarily for the treatment of cancer. James L. Erickson, assistant manager of Add-America Cancer Center Program, said.
Erickson said that a linear accelerator, one of several machines needed for the center, would take from six to 18 months to build. He also suggested about the time construction begins, he said.
THE KANASS Legislature approved the $3.5 million for the new radiation therapy center this spring. The legislature allocated $2 million for construction. The $1.5 million for equipment will be raised as private gifts.
visited the Med Center. Now, it is a matter of satisfying him on the things he is looking for in the equipment necessary for modern radiation therapy, he said.
"The problem is securing funds for the equipment," Brown said. "We're having meetings to look at possibilities and directions."
Max Lacas, assistant to the chancellor,
estimated building completion would take
Lucas said that the Kansas state architect had approved final fee negotiations for the project.
The Med Center has been without a chairman for the department of radiation oncology for two years. Oncology is the science of tumors.
Police, fire slowdown hinges on talks today
Dale Dean, physicist in the department of radiation therapy, said, "Radiation therapy is a very sturdy component of cancer treatment." We all our leg cancer treatment stands up."
By DAVE WARD
E. B. Brown Jr., vice chancellor for faculties and academic affairs, said the position had not been filled because of the unpaid status of the radiation therapy center.
Erickson said patients had been coming to the Med Center for radiotherapy from Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Iowa and Nebraska.
"We have a candidate and have had him for some time," Brown said. "He has been very patient, but now we are actually moving."
BROWN SAID the candidate for chairman of radiation oncology had recently
RADIATION DESTROYS cells, both normal and abnormal. The goal of radiation therapy is to deliver maximum damage to the cancer, while minimizing damage to normal tissue.
DAYNA HEIDRICK
Staff Writers
A slowdown of Lawrence's fire and police protections could begin this afternoon if talks between representatives of the employees and city prove unsatisfactory.
"We have been a regional referral center for cancer for some time," Ericson said. "As we improve our capabilities, the more difficult cases will come here."
The firefighters and police postponed a joint work slowdown, scheduled for 7 a.m. today, after last Thursday's talks with the city," showed signs of progress."
Richard Morrison, acting chairman of the department of radiation therapy, said if a patient was ill, he should be given fluoride.
If a majority of members from both associations feel talks have stalled, a slowdown that would include the cutting off of sessions would seem to be coming to the University could go into effect.
Buford Watson, city manager, is to meet with representatives from the firefighters' association this morning at 10:30 and with them to discuss matters regarding a settlement and avoid a slowdown.
Barkley Clark, city commissioner, said if firefighters and police took this "congested action" the city also, was prepared to take action.
Following today's meetings with Watson, both associations will meet to decide whether talks are progressing satisfactorily.
"I am pleased that we can continue talks at the table." Watson said Friday.
English 101 course offered to long-distance scholars
Brubaker wouldn't talk about any specifics of the new proposal but did say, "I am pretty optimistic that we can reach an agreement."
He said that it was a "common law" notion that it is illegal for public employees, like police and firemen, to strike, because they are not paid. He also receive the service they provide elsewhere.
Bill Brubaker, secretary for the firefighters association, said that the firemen delivered a new proposal to Watson and any and that every item was negotiable.
Both sides previously agreed to a six per cent cost of living raise but are still separated over the realigning of salaries for staff. This will mean at least five years service in the department.
However, police association representatives said they were still in disagreement with the city on five points they thought they couldn't compromise.
By KENNA GIFFIN
"The city would be ready to seek an injunction, with those involved, with these involved, and disciplinary actions would be taken against people not doing a full day's work." Clark
Mike McMullen talks with his summer students just as he talks with students during the year—except his summer conversational phone and the students are in Kansas City.
McMullen, assistant instructor in English, teaches a summer course in English 101 for students who have just graduated from high school and are enrolled, or plan to study at college. In Kansas. The students, who live at home, do the course work at their own pace.
The police association is also seeking the establishment of educational benefits and services for children.
The course, offered through the Outreach program of Continuing Education, is similar to other independent study courses, and is used by the dependent study in Continuing Education, said.
STUDENTS SEEM to like getting a jump on college while keeping their summer jobs or other plans, be said. Although students get the same amount of writing practice and criticism as other English 101 students they may not have had reading readings that might be helpful, be said.
Students visit the KU campus twice during the summer to get materials for the summer courses. Visit the Museum of Modern Art.
"I don't have some of the guides in talking to students on the telephone. The mouth may be saying, 'Yes, I understand,' but the voice is not as loud as it is I'dn't and—why do I have to "hear" it?"
WHAT MAKES this course appealing is the amount of personal contact with the instructor, including the frequent telephone calls and e-mail responses. You should credit the students receive, she said.
McMullen said students told him they enrolled in the course because a friend was in it, or because they were interested in independent study.
For the rest of the summer, the students work on the lessons outlined in the syllabus and send them to McMullen, who grades and returns them. He telephones students to discuss lessons and answer questions about comments he made in their compositions.
McMullen taught the course for the first time last summer. His 10 students are all female.
McMullen said it was sometimes difficult to tell whether students understood his advice.
The students aren't required to finish in the two months allotted, McMullen said. Two of his students took a little longer than two months last year, but all finished the
KU student in Demo delegation
Staff Writer
By SUE WILSON
Marilyn Kent, Lawrence graduate student, is one of two Lawrence residents who will attend the Democratic National Convention in New York City July 12-15.
ALTHOUGH JIMMY Carter will probably be nominated on the first ballot, Rep. D. Ariz., has not yet released his delegates and alternates, Kent said.
Kent said yesterday she was excited about representing liberals and women at the convention.
Besides supporting Udall on the convention floor, Kent said she wanted to represent Midwestern women in special caucuses during the convention.
She was selected May 1 as an alternate for the two Morris Udall delegates from the New York team, and she alternate, Kent can vote if one of the Udall delegates leaves the convention floor. Kent said she would attend special interest caucuses such as those on energy, women
"We are people morally committed to his liberal stand," she said.
Kent said for Udall would speak for the liberal wing of the Democratic Forc
Women's groups from the east and west coasts need to know what is going on in the
"*THRINK it is important for women to be role models for other women, and to have a positive impact on them.*"
THE COURSE costs the same as a regular correspondence course even with the same tuition fee. He said he paid for many calls he made last summer because he called students at odd times.
June McMillin, Route 4, is an un-
Kent is paying her way to New York. She said the cost of the trip was not a problem because she would be staying with a friend and not paying for a hotel room.
She said Psychology 104 was advertised this year but only five students signed up for it and that wasn't enough to pay for the expenses of the course.
committed delegate who will attend the convention with Kent.
KENT SAID she knew of national women's groups who would have helped finance her trip if she hadn't been able to afford it.
KENT AND McMillan were chosen in political caucuses. Kansas is one of 19 states that chooses delegates in county, district and state caucuses rather than primaries.
The program needn't be limited to recent high school graduates. The handicapped, elderly, or those who aren't close to the university or any other school could take the course for credit or personal fulfillment, but it is possible for a group to take a course together and, by using speaker phone, have group discussions.
Douglas, Wyndotte, Johnson and Franklin counties sent 122 delegates to the Democratic state convention in Teopaca June 5. Those 122 delegates were narrowed to five--two for Carter, one for Udall and two uncommitted.
COLYER SAID when the program began last year, she "just started doing things as they came up and wound up running the program."
Kansas is sending 34 delegates and 27 alternates to the national convention. The delegates break down as follows: Carter, Willie Jones, and Sien; Henry Jackson, D-Wash., 1.
course. Coler said that if the students were slow in finishing, the instructor got stuck with summer lessons in addition to those he had for his regular fall semester class.
"English seems to be the course the kids are really interested in getting the jump on," she said. She wants to add more courses to the program.
Threats, deaths mar rescue joy
TEL. AVIL, Israel (AP)—Israel paused yesterday in its jubilant celebration of the daring rescue rescue in Uganda to bury 16 soldiers killed in the Entebbe Airport shoot-out.
The army watched Israel's borders for threatened revenge attacks by Palestinian militants.
Uganda and other African countries denounced Israel and mounted a political campaign to discredit it.
THE 48-NATION Organization of African Unity (OAU) condemned the commander raid and said it was asking the United Nations to meet immediately to take up the issue.
President Idi Arin of Uganda sent a protest over the raid to the OAU, the United Nations Office for Relief and World Countries. Amin charged in the statement that neighboring Kenya collaborated with Israel in carrying out the attack. The UN soldiers were reported killed and 32 injured.
Kenya has denied such collaboration.
Amin also said Uganda would seek compensation for deaths, injuries and damage and 'reserves the right to retaliate in whatever way possible to redress the harm.'
ISRAELI SHOPS and houses flew the blue-and-white national flag and newspapers. Filed pages with ad-resses for program mgrs in Minister Yitzhak Rahin and the army.
But there was little rejoicing in Batym and Netanya, where two of three hostages killed in the clash with the hijackers were buried.
"This is a harsh land," the husband of 56-year-old Ida Borochovich said. He and his wife, who was killed in the rescue operation, struggled most of their lives to come to Israel from Russia and finally arrived with his family in 1969.
2
Tuesday, July 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Communist fills Italian post
HOME—Ireland's new Chamber of Deputies confirmed Communist Pirog Ingresso as its president yesterday, the highest public post his party has held in nearly 30
Ingroa, a party hardliner-turned-moderate, was picked to lead the 630-seat Chamber under a political agreement worked out to reflect Communist gains in national elections two weeks ago. The Chamber presidency is somewhat equivalent to the speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives.
The agreement permitted the long-ruling Christian Democratic party to retain the post of Senate president, the occupant of which serves also as vice president of the country and could succeed to the presidency. That post went to Amirate in 2015, after he conducted a strong anti-Communist campaign in the June 20-21 elections.
Flood perils Arkansas City
ARKANAS CITY—Flood waters of the Waukut River threatened Arkansas City as southwest Missouri and southern Kansas cleaned up and counted 35,000 people.
The Walnut River was expected to crest here at 26 feet, eight feet above flood level last night.
Half a dozen homes on the town's east side, their residents already evacuated, faced flooding, and a mobile home may have been washed away. The rising waters are likely to continue.
The city manager and a city commissioner joined volunteers who sandbaggated 40-year-old flood dates that could not be closed on the city-owned dike system.
All the city's pumps were used in the threatened area of the city where two to three feet of standing water was reported, with some places as deep as five feet. Fire trucks pumped water from one of two underpasses and from at least one home.
Blacks protest at trial
HENDERSON, N.C.—Twenty blacks, their mouths tapped shut, stood silently yesterday in a demonstration for equal justice at the opening of the trial of a white man accused of killing his wife.
Inside the Vance Courthouse, nine jurers were selected in the trial of Sandra Dupre, 34, who is charged with first-degree murder in the March 11 pistol shooting at a house party.
on the late jurors jure duo, and on the Superior Court Judge George Fountain ordered the jurors sequestered.
about a week before Dickens was killed, Mrs. Dupee's son Mark, 14, was involved in a scuffle with several blacks. He was in the Dickens neighborhood when
Dickens, who was in his front yard, was shot once in the head as two of his sisters looked on. He died four days later.
Queen in Philadelphia
PHILADELPHIA-Britain's Queen Elizabeth II is to make a Bicentennial journey today to this city where representatives of the colonies rebelled against their oppressors.
The queen and her husband, Prince Philip, will arrive here from Bermuda aboard the royal yacht Britannia. The yacht will anchor at Penn's Landing in the Delaware River where William Penn, Pennsylvania's founder, came ashore in 1861.
During her Philadelphia visit, the queen will go to Independence Hall where George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and other patriots plotted the Revolution.
At the city's new Visitor Center, on the edge of Independence National Historic Park, she'll make her only formal speech, dedicating a 12,500-pound Bicentennial Memorial statue.
The bell was cast by London's Whitechapel Foundry which also made the Liberty Bell.
Musical shows have changed. Wright says
"Years ago, musicals were deep but not as visual," Wright said.
Today's Broadway musicals are more involved than they used to be, Richard Wright associate director of KANU, told 2013 persons in Swarthout Rival Hall yesterday.
Wright said that in today's musicals the actors had good looks as well as good voices. Years ago, he said, a person's voice was all that was important.
Wright was a guest speaker for the High School Drama Teacher's Workshop being held on campus this week. The theme of the workshop is "The American Musical," and Wright's lecture was called "What is American about the Music."
He said several genes combined to make up today's popular music, including European opera, minstrel shows, vaudeville and burlesque.
Wright also sang 14 songs a cappella.
Wright has been at the University since 1952 and received his B.A. and M.v in atav. (B.S.)
He resigned his full-time job with KANU last month so he could teach more classes in the School of Fine Arts. He said that as a music teacher, he had solved in the radio station's jazz programs.
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The new Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Agency Center will pull together most city and county police activities when it's completed in October.
"LOGAN'S RUN" PG
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Hillcrest What Bobbie Gentry's song didn't tell you—the movie does.
The center, a three-story structure east of the county court house, was designed by the architectural firm of Peters, Williams and Kubota and is expected to cost about $4 million, according to Dale Glenn, a member of the architectural firm.
Staff Writer
OdeToBillyJoe
New center to give county better jail, court facilities
By ROBERT KEARNEY
Eve.7:40 & 9:45
When completed, the center will house city and county courts and city and county police.
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COURTROOMS WILL be on the first floor. The second floor will contain the headquarters and the jail for the Lawrence and Douglas County police. Glenn said the design of the second floor was a combined effort of Douglas County Sheriff Johnson, Lawrence Police Chief Richard Stanley and the Citizens Committee for Correctional Services.
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"The new headquarters and jail facilities combine maximum security and efficiency while maintaining the human dimension of safety of the prisoners," diplomat said.
Architect Glenn said that a person could be booked, photographed, fingerprinted, issued new clothes, interrogated,印制,挂在屏幕上,line-up without ever leaving the inail area.
Prisoners may meet visitors in the jail area by talking through a glass partitioned wall. Sheriff Johnson and his officers talked through wire mesh in cell block doors. The glass will
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PROVISIONS HAVE been made for a police officers' locker room with an adjoining shower. The present buildings don't have such facilities.
Johnson estimated that the new law enforcement center would triple available space. He said the Center would be one of the most modern in the country and, because of the consolidation, one of the most efficient.
Glenn said an elevator connected the jail to the courthouses on the first floor. The elevator allows a prisoner to be transferred from his cell directly to the court room without risking travel through public areas, he said.
County and city police will share the same records rooms and communications facilities, squad rooms, briefing rooms and conference rooms, Johnson said.
The construction of the Judicial and Law Enforcement Center won't mean the destruction of the court house or the city police station, Glenn said. These buildings will be remodeled and used for county and city offices.
Going on at HENRY'S
Also within the center will be a multi-purpose recreation room and a lounge-library, which are currently not available to prisoners.
THE CAPACITY of the jail will increase from 39 to 52 prisoners.
make it more difficult to pass contraband to the prisoner, Johnson said.
Glenn said the old sheriffs office and county jail would be demolished and the area would be replanted as an extension of South Park.
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Tuesday, Julv 6.1976
Sports
Women's field hockey still faces bleak future
The women's field哮啤 program at the University of Missouri has been put on the endangered species list.
Marion Washington, director of women's athletics, said yesterday that the program would continue during the 1976-77 school year, but that insufficient funding might cause the sport to be eliminated the following year.
"To stay competitive, we need more money," she said. "At this point, the program is being run on a year-to-year basis, with the same problem (money) certain to be the primary factor again next year."
THE FIELD hockey program was allocated $4,500 by the Student Senate in May and received $2,500 when the University administration redistributed the state funds the women's program received, also in May. The administration specified that this money for the women's athletic program should be given to the hockey team.
"After this year, only four of the Big Eight schools will have women's field hockey programs because most are going the club-sim route." Washington said.
Field hockey isn't what athletic departments call a "major" sport in the Midwest, and records indicate that the majority of American high schools have also the case with other Big Eight schools.
A sports club doesn't receive money from
the athletics, it isn't governed by the women's
athletic association.
Jane Markert, women's field hockey coach during the 75-76 season, has returned to Warrensburg, Mo., after completing her leave of absence from Central Missouri State University. A graduate student at Missouri, although Washington said she had a good prospect for the job who was interested in several sports.
"Graduate students are feasible substitutes for full-time coaches in some sports, like field hockey, but I don't really want to do that because I'm already student students as a basis I have I want," she said.
Washington said she intended to conduct interviews for the position during the next two weeks. Special emphasis would be given to ensuring efficiency in more than one sport, she said.
The ability to coach more than one team
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE East
New York W L Pet. GR
Boston 38 27 .500
Cleveland 37 27 .500
Pacific 36 38 .500
Milwaukee 38 40 .400
Minnesota 38 41 .400
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Kansas City
Texas
Oklahoma
Minnesota
Chicago
California
47 29 618
43 23 358
42 32 390
36 34 468
36 34 468
36 34 468
36 34 468
Philadelphia 28 W L Pet. GS
Pittsburgh 28 W 196 78
Pittsburgh 43 32 58
St. Louis 43 38 324 12%
St. Louis 43 38 324 12%
Chicago 22 46 410 21%
Northwestern 22 46 410 21%
Kansas City 2, New York 1
Boston 11, Chicago 5
Missouri 6, Texas 8, Detroit 6
Oklahoma 7, Cleveland 1
Oakland 4, Baltimore 1
Cheetahland 49 49 613 613
Los Angeles 49 31 374 374
San Diego 49 31 353 353
Atlanta 37 42 468 468
Houston 37 42 468 11%
San Francisco 37 37 38 38
Chicago 3, San Diego 0
San Francisco 6, Los Lords 4
Detroit 5, Oakland 3
Cincinnati 11, Montreal 2
Los Angeles 4, Philadelphia 0
San Diego 7, Baltimore 3
On Campus
TONIGHT: A FACULTY RECITAL will be presented at 7:30 in Worthington Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The SUA Theatre will be shown at 7:30 in Woodruff Auditorium, the Kansas Union. The film stars Marlon Brando, Jean Simmons and Frank Sinatra.
sport is a primary element in Washington's program to concentrate acts within the state.
AT PRESENT, softball and volleyball coaching duties are combined into one full-time position to cope with limited budgeting, Washington said.
"I feel we can no longer depend on joint (teaching and coaching simultaneously) appointments. For the stability of the department, I think people to work within the department."
Washington said she hoped such combinations within the women's athletics program would enable KU to maintain its women's program, including the field hockey team, KU currently has 10 women's sports.
PUFF'S
FRAGRANT WEEDS
"Field hockey is in good shape for this year but the problem of sufficient money will always be there. All of the women's teams are getting better and are in condition for national competition—and as you need, you need more money," she said.
PUW
University Daily Kansan
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NEW YORK (AP)—Kansas City pushed across two runs in the first inning and Paul Murphy scored a double in notched his sixth consecutive victory as the Royals edged the New York Yankees 2-1 yesterday in the opening of a four-game series between the American League's
With two out in the first, the Royals nicked Doyle Alexander, 45, for both their run on George Brett's double and singles in Mayberry, Hal McRae and Al Iyawors.
on Columbia
KC nips Yanks, 2-1
In protesting the game, Yankee Manager Billy Martin cited an American League rule specifying that any substitute player other than a pitcher shall be allowed only five innings. McLewis took more than five and umpire DLMuro, the crew chief, agreed with him.
Splitterff, 96, was in constant trouble but
split the Yankees until the seventh when
New York played the game under protest. In the ninth inning outfielder Amos Otis rushed his shoulder trying to make a save, but the ball was replaced by designated hitter Mt-Rae.
Fran Healy's single, a walk to Willie
pulled by the band. You fly put
runners on first and third with one
Otis hurt in catch attempt
NEW YORK (AP)—Star centerfielder Amos Olsa of the Kansas City Royals injured his right shoulder while attempting a diving catch in the ninth timing of yesterday's game against the New York Yankees.
★ ★ ★
but a club spokesman said he probably would miss a few games.
X-rays of Otis's shoulder revealed little,
Prior to Monday's game, Ollis led the American League in sluggish percentage with a .497 mark and in runs scored with a. 497 he was second in total bases, tied for third in doubles, tied for fourth in runs batted in and sixth in home runs.
Editor
Managing Editor
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager
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 are $9.00 each; are $1 a semester or $12 a year in Douglas County and $1 a semester or $4 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, paid through the student activity fee.
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. The address can be placed in person or taken to the U.K. business office at 864-4358.
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UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
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FOR RENT
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
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Garbage needs experience display person. Please apply in person at 840 Massachusetts. 7-12 Substitute house parents for small group-care home for children with intellectual and behavioral problems.
Full-time position for ten month's study of sub-arctic ecosystems in geology, with experience in working with students on field work for weeks. Knowledge in area of
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Bureau of Child Research needs two part-time positions from July 12 to August 15. Appropriately to fill by June 14, Conduct Afterschool Attendance at an appropriate day and woman opportunity employer, qualified men and women will be required.
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Experienced typist—term papers, maps,
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electricity. Prefer neat. over 21. 412-879-759
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country, pets ok. 843-6600 after 7. 7-7
Female roommate wanted for fall (or earlier)
for serious student and like dog. Photos:
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Position wanted: Qualified legal secretary leaving Kannas City mid-August, desire any available position in the office. Contact Patricia Kobuch (816) 952-8142; Walnut, Kannas City, Mo. 64112. 7-12
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4
Tuesday, July 6, 1976
University Daily Kansan
"All in a day's training"
THOMAS SMITH
David Hatfield and Mike Penner struggle with firehoes worn with age.
F
It's a two-man job, holding down a hose that's putting out 145 pounds of pressure per square inch. Almiring at trees and open space instead of a burning building, Lloyd Hammerschmidt and Gregg Crossman accomplish the job.
(1)
Jim Renick and Jim Tucker found even the older hose connections harder to work with than those used with the newer hoses. The old equipment is
Story by
Randy Seba
Photos by
Jay Koelzer
PORCELAIN
Lawrence firefighters don't just sit around waiting for an arm to have the know what to do when they hear one. As the next person arrives,
During warm weather, the firefighters train outdoors at Fire Station No. 2, on Haskell. Here they battle fires in the station's training tower, perform rescues from fifth-story ledges or extinguish a blazing oil pit.
Firefighters from all three Lawrence stations recently simulated a response to a major fire. Most parts of the operation go smoothly under the watchful eyes of Capt. McPearson, a 17-year veteran, but there are a few foul-
TWO MEN grapple with a hose snaking wildly as water surges through it at a pressure of 145 pounds per square inch. A metal gate valve lever that is supposed to stop the flow of water can be pressed in instead. A weak spot in another hose burps with a gush.
Pearson shakes his head and grins. Mistakes will happen and the best place for them is on the training grounds.
"See, that's what we're trying to learn." Pearson says.
"All these mistakes are made here so we don't do them
aerial ladder truck from Station No.1, and a pumper from Station No.2. The aerial truck houses the heavy hardware: a hydraulic ladder that can extend to 100 feet, four 600-watt lights, bolt cutters, showels, sledgehammers and two 30-cm
Three trucks work the simulated fire: a pumper and an
FIREFIGHTER MIA PENNER locks a wide yellow belt with a large metal clip around his waist. He climbs a ladder, clips himself to it and takes control of the upper bottle, spraying a 50-foot stream of water over the station grounds. The ladder's two hoses can also be controlled from a panel at the base of the ladder.
The firefighters don't extend the ladder much more than
2z feet this day. When it’s its full 100-foot length, there’s a
hole.
"It's scary," Penner says. "Each change in hose pressure moves the ladder backwards and forwards and the wind moves it sidways. When you look down and see the birds飞 around under you, you know you're up there."
Although the ladderman has an important job, the kingpin of the simulation is at the control panel of pumper 14. This truck makes the only direct connection to the water to the other trucks and to two hand-held boxes. If
something goes wrong at pumper 14, the entire operation is affected.
THE MAN at the control panel monitors four pressure gauges and controls water flow and pressure in each line. A digital pressure gauge is also used for simulation. Pearson details truck placement and job duties required at a major fire. The simulation procedures continue until the fire is extinguished.
"We try to get six or seven men trained at the same position, we teach them or on vacation we don't have它们." Pearson says.
Suddenly, the training session is interrupted for a run. Two of the trucks disappear down the street with red lights flashing and sirens blaring, only to find a false alarm at their destination.
"NOT EVERYONE can take the life of a firefighter," says veteran Jim Tucker. "It's kind of like gambling; it takes a certain kind of a man to be a firefighter. We've had guys work 12 years and quit."
When you know that a man with 12 years is almost halfway to retirement, you realize that there must be some kind of help.
By BERNEIL JUHNKE Staff Writer
Studex makes plans for talks exhibits in fall
Students interested in promoting higher education in their home communities may may participate.
Tedde Tasheff, student body president,
said yesterday at a Student Executive
Committee meeting the Alumni Association
and the Office of University Relations
wanted students to speak to Kansas comm-
munity about the value of higher education.
Speaking appointments would be made
for weekends and vacation breaks, Tasheff said. Speakers will not be nailed.
Jim Cox, student senate treasurer, said a budgetary training session would begin at 3:45 p.m. July 13 at the Kansas Union. He said the union would about five organizations were expected.
Attendance by at least one member of a Senate-funded organization at a budgetary training session is necessary before the organization's account will be activated.
Cox said the University's bookkeeping system needed to be changed. The paper-
Tasheff said some remodeling would be done on the Student Senate offices in the building.
sue said Frank Burge, Union director,
and Kevin Flynn, student senate executive
secretary, were working on plans for the
offices.
work deadline for Senate-funded
organizations is June 1, but the fiscal year
starts on January 1.
He said organizations should be able to spend their funds till the end of each fiscal year.
"TUESDAY NIGHTS
AND WEDNESDAY
NIGHTS THIS WEEK ARE
FAMILY NIGHTS"
SPECIAL
4 p.m. to 8 p.m.
VISTABURGER
BASKET
99¢ Reg. $1.20
Vista
1527 West 6th, Lawrence
842-4311
NOTICE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: Jim Cox, Student Senate Treasurer
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
1. Attend a TRAINING SESSION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
4. Account for All Inventory.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following time:
TUESDAY, JULY 13, 3:45 p.m.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
No other sessions will be held this summer
You must contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for this session, or for additional information.
funded from the Student Senate activity fee
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES!
RMS
ELECTRONICS
a record store
audio
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STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00!
THE BOAT
5falf photo
The last ride
Waterskiers at Lakeview made use of Tuesdays' warm weather to enjoy their sport. The day was probably too long for this skier though, for after three unsuccessful attempts on the snowboard, she returned to her home in Manhattan.
Court's ruling limits evidentiary appeals
WASHINGTON (AP)—The Supreme Court, in a break with the Earl Warren court, cut back the power of state prisoners to challenge their convictions in federal
By a 6-4 vote yesterday, the court said prisoners aren't entitled to a second chance in prison if they fail fair chance to persuade state courts they were convicted with illegally obtained evidence.
At the same time, the court followed up its decision on capital punishment last Friday by striking down Oklahoma's mandatory penalty for several categories of murder.
The court acted on a series of cases, including the prisoners case, involving the guarantee against unreasonable searches in the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.
In 1971, the Supreme Court ruled that state courts must exclude from criminal
trials any evidence obtained in violation of this constitutional ban. This is called the exclusionary rule and is designed to deter misconduct.
In yesterday's decision, the high court specifically retained that ruling as far as it applied to the use of evidence in trials and rights of the defendant to appeal to state courts.
The court, however, severely weakened the impact of a 1969 decision that allowed prisoners to argue in federal court that the evidence was obtained illegally.
The exclusionary rule decisions were among the most controversial rulings banded down by the court under the late 1970s when the Supreme Court ousted the rights of criminal defendants.
In an opinion by Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr., the court said that the rule, as now applied in federal habeas corpus proceedings, allows the process and often frees the guilty."
Staff Writer
Legislator challenges '77 fee hike
A state senator from Manhattan said yesterday he would propose action in the next legislative session to overturn a recent $50 increase in resident student fees at the six state-supported colleges and universities.
Rv GARY WALLACE
The Regents' decision calls for students to pay 23.8 per cent of the costs of operating state colleges and universities beginning in January 2014, paying 20.2 per cent of the operating expenses.
Sen. Don Everett, a Republican, said last month's fee hike by the Board of Regents would make higher education less accessible to the poor.
Evertt said he was planning action on only resident fees.
"IPLAN to provide some formula for less oppressive fees," Everett said. "The percentage had justification in the 40s and 50s, but today there is a tremendous
"I'm not suggesting a plan similar to New York City in which there is absolutely no tuition," Everett said. "But around $288 per semester is too high and is just too much for the poor and those marginally unable to finance a college education."
presidents of each school, to raise fees to $60 per semester," Smith said. "Students will be paying 23.8 per cent of the total operating costs, which includes no capital improvements, extension functions or research functions."
Everett said he would suggest that fees be reviewed on an annual basis and that a ceiling be set in which the student would be paid at least $20 per cent of the operating expenses.
Smith said that KU students currently paid 20.2 per cent of the costs. Students at the state colleges pay 18.8 per cent, he said, so would feel a greater impact.
disparity in income, in which the poor and those marginally poor can’t afford the costs of education.
The increased fees still fall short of the average recommended by the Carnegie Foundation and the average maintained by peer institutions selected for comparison by the Center for Applied Economics. The advice that students should produce 63 percent of the total operating expenses.
Smith said the increase was a response to the recommendations made by the department, which is composed of state legislators. The commission urged the Regents to raise fees $44 a semester at the colleges and $61 a semester at the colleges.
Everett said there was no way to measure the effect on enrollment because all those affected were ineligible.
taxpayers have carried the burden of a 30 per cent increase in operating costs. Kansas State, Wichita State and KU haven't had a fee increase in four years, and fees at a higher rate than for Fort Hays State College and Fort Hays State College haven't been raised in eight years, he said.
Smith said he thought there wouldn't be a detrimental effect on the poor or on enrollment at the state institutions because of funds available through financial aid, loans, work-study programs and scholarships.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
"We've always respected the policy that no student should be faced with more than one fee increase during a four-year college career," Smith said.
GLEE SMITH, newly elected chairman of the Board of Regents, said he agreed that the Regents should try to keep fees as low as they could but defended the increases as necessary.
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.158
City, firemen still apart on pay
By DAVE WARD
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
and
COURTNEY THOMPSON
For the past three years, Smith said
Prohibition party presidential nominee Benjamin Calvin Bubar, 58, Maine, is joined by the bailot by vice president nominee Richard Kavanas of Kansas party chairman Warren C. Medina
Staff Writers
Members of local firefighter and police associations met separately late last night to determine their course of action in talks with the city.
The Lawrence Police Officers Association approved the city's final offer but decided not to accept it until representatives from the International Association of Fire Fighters can reach an agreement that is satisfactory to its members.
The 300 American party delegates convened in Sail Lake City, Utah, in mid-June and unanimously selected Tom Anderson, the state's Republican governor, Florida, to head their party's ticket.
Bubar is an ordained Baptist minister and a former member of the Maine legislature. Dodge serves as national executive vice president and has been active in the party since 1962.
A meeting between city management and representatives from the fire fighters
City Manager Buford Watson told members of the Lawrence City Commission last night that the city had presented a proposal to allow more measures of police and fire fighters associations.
Watson said meetings yesterday between city officials and police and firefighters representatives resulted in clarification of the city's position regarding cost of living increases and requested pay scale adjustments. He said spokesmen for the associations were checking their memoirs for responses to the city's proposals.
Wednesday, July 7, 1976
James Ward, state chairman of the MacBride campaign, and Hal Wert, state chairman of the McCarthy campaign, both last week they had submitted petitions with more than enough signatures to the secretary of state.
4 minor parties on ballot
"It was agreed that cost of living increases would be adjusted yearly, based on the consumer price index for all items in Kansas City," he said.
Watson said the key issue in the
The city would try to establish a six per cent contract cost increase, effective April 1977. Watson
Kansas election laws require that prospective candidates submit petitions containing at least 2,500 registered Kansas signatures to the Kansas secretary of state.
Staff Writer
MACRIDRE AND McCarthy, both running as independents, haven't yet been given ballot positions, and final approval of the candidates had to be second third Tuesday in August, when the signatures on their petitions are reviewed in Kansas Board of Canvases, McDonald's.
Tom Anderson, Ben Bubar, Roger MacBride and Eugene McCarthy want your presidential vote in the November general election.
The party believes the federal government shouldn't finance, subsidize or legislate with respect to charity, welfare, public works or education. The American Party favors a more favorable foreign aid and to United States membership in the United Nations, Hart said.
Those four names will appear on the Nov. 2 ballot with those of the major political candidates who filed before the June 2 deadline, Lavina McDonald, head of the Kansas election department, said recently. "Nasus aren't allowed on the Kansas ballot."
By ROBERT KEARNEY
Anderson, presidential nominee of the American party, and Bubar, Prohibition party presidential nominee, are already positioned on the ballot, McDonald said.
THE AMERICAN party platform favors steadfast adherence to the Constitution and calls for a restoration of states' and interests in the party, regional director for the party, said.
Prohibition party chairman Martin said the prohibition of the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages was the main plank of the party's platform.
Libertarians maintain that the only legitimate function of government is to protect people from the use of force and fraud by others, he said.
"BUT THE PROBITION party is not a one-issue party by a long ways," he said. A party is not a party to busing, aborting, free distribution of treasuries, the Equal Rights Amendment, any form of gambling, gun control and the legalization of marijuana.
"The American Party classifies itself as a true Christian party in the service of God," I said.
Roger MacBride represents the Liberian party but will be listed on the Kansas ballot as an independent because the Liberian party didn't gain the 25,000 signatures necessary to be listed as a party in Kansas. McDonald said.
MACBRID IS a graduate of Harvard Law School, a Fulbright scholar, and a former member of the Vermont legislature. Born in Bergen, New Jersey, he served Berland, a California attorney, Ward said.
Independent candidate Eugene McCarthy, former U.S. senator from Minnesota, has not yet established his final political platform although throughout the
"BUT THE PROHIBITION party is not one-issue party by a long waves."
The party opposes censorship, the draft,
victimless crime laws, busing, the Equal Rights Amendment and drug laws, Ward said.
The main tenet of the Libertarian party is, "Government governs best that governs least." The party's economic policy may be described as laissez-faire. Ward said.
spring he has issued position papers stating his policies, state chairman Wert said.
McCarthy favors registration of firearms and records of ammunition sales but believes individual moral beliefs, not laws, shall govern abortion decisions, Wert said.
MCCARTHY HAS supported the Equal Rights Amendment and positions for women in the national government and has mentioned LaDonna Harris as a possible secretary of the interior and Barbara Ruchs as a potential secondary state, he said.
firefighters' dispute was the association's demands of adjusted pay levels for officers with at least five years service in the department.
He said he thought it unwise to 'change the existing relationship of equal pay for equal work' and proposed review of the status of Lawrence firemen's salaries relative to other salaries in the city and within the competitive market.
Members of the firefighters' association wouldn't allow Kansan report to sit on in the conference.
The city proposed benefits for firefighters, such as health insurance at reduced rates, as an alternative to direct pay raises, Watson said. He said he thought the firefighters were willing to accept that arrangement.
Watson said the city couldn't afford to
Watson met separately with the firefighters' association and the police officers' association yesterday. In the meeting with the firefighters yesterday, the key issue separating firefighters and the city appeared to be possible implementation of a 2.5 per cent pay increase over the previously agreed to six per cent cash compensation in July 1977. The firefighters are also seeking another 2.5 per cent pay like in June of 1977
give firemen an 8.5 per cent pay hike in January.
As an alternative, Watson proposed that he could design a vehicle and life insurance to all city employees.
He said the primary concern of police
spokeness was also pay adjustments for those on the list, at the age of longer wives.
"The city will concede that any officer who passes the examination required for all
★ ★
See FIREMEN page 3
Police, in accord with city, wait for firemen to settle
Patrolman Dave Reavis, LPO chair, said the two departments would stick together. Until the firefighters approve a transfer to patrolmen won't officially accept their feathers.
Lawrence Patrol Officers Association members approved City Manager Buford Watson's offer last night, but the city has agreed to dispute with city hall remains unsettled
"I expect Bufurd (Watson) will be able to reach an agreement with the firemen in tomorrow's meeting," Reavis said, "but until then we won't officially accept.
"We approve the offer but we compromised ourselves to death," Revisa said.
'This agreement is a good starting
The stipulation wouldn't prevent continued negotiations over derandns not dealt with.
A stipulation in Watson's pay package prohibits the patrolmen from reelegating their staff on May 15, 1977. It also forbids them to participate in a work slowdown, strike, picketing or anything that would interfere with the normal city operations after July 1,
Revisi said he wanted to add a clause to the city's offer stating that if the city doesn't honor its each provision of the agreement, it would override the limits placed on negotiation void.
Staff Writer
Scholarship boon to KU strings
By SUSAN APPLEBURY
A substantial scholarship fund, donated anonymously, has been established with the Kansas University Endowment Association students studying stringed instruments.
Todd Seymour, president of the Endowment Association, said yesterday that the donors wished to remain anonymous and paid the amount of the donation confidential.
S six awards will be made for the 1976/77 academic year. The fund is large enough to support up to 12 awards each year, Seymour said. The average award will be $238.
JAMES MOESER, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said the gift was "inquirementably the most significant single contribution in the form of the string program at the University."
In the past KU has had to compete for
"With this endowment we will begin to close the gap as we become much more efficient."
Students who receive the award will have the opportunity to perform in the Lawrence Chamber Players and the Lawrence Symphony Orchestra. Moeser said.
Don Schole, associate dean of the School of Fine Arts, will administer the fund.
promising students with universities and conservatories in large cities who used the proximity of metropolitan orchestras and the opportunity to play professionally as a
SCHIEID SAID that he couldn't disclose the donor were or if they were competent.
"I's a magnificent gift," Scheid said. "If someone wants to make a donation of this size and remain anonymous, I'll protect them."
The School of Fine Arts has received a
YUK
OWN
Early morning blaze
Dink Wint, sworn of the Yuk Up and Yuk Down successors
Staff photo by JAY KORLTER
damage caused by fire early this morning. The dancing and billiard establishments, received an estimated $125,000 damage.
few anonymous donations, but nothing of this magnitude, Scheid said.
Although minor stipulations are connected with the donation, qualifications should not be used to determine eligibility.
THE SCHOOLARSHIPS may be renewable up to a maximum of 24 scholarship, he is
The recipients will be chosen before the end of August by an auditioning committee composed of members of the string department. The committee members are the violinist of violin, Kancel Blaas, professor of viola, and Raymond Stuhl, professor of cello.
Fire guts Yuk clubs
By the Kansan Staff
Fire of undetermined origin gutted the
Ford dealership's new Shopping Center
ease last morning.
Firemen answered the alarm at 3.17 a.m. today and battled the blaze for almost an hour before bringing it under control, John Kasberger, fire chief, said this morning.
Kasberger said the flames began in the north end of the Yuk Down, in the building's basement, and traveled up a stairway to the south end of the building, to the north quarter of the building.
Tremendous heat, estimated at 650 degrees or more, cracked the large plate glass windows on the building's side side, melted a plastic bubble window and letters on the west side and bonded a thick crust to the Yuk Up's pool tables.
Damage was estimate at about $125,000. The building's contents were a total loss, Karen said.
Dick Wright, manager of the dancing and billiard establishments, said that the contents were insured and that he thought rebuilding would begin soon. The first step, be said, was to begin the monumental clean-up task.
It was the second time in eight years that the Yuk Up had been damaged heavily, Wright said. In 1890, a year after it opened, claims claimed of the first floor, he said.
2
Wednesday, July 7, 1976
Universitv Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Bennett asks flood relief
TOPEKA—President Ford has been asked to declare an 11-county region in southeastern Kansas a flood disaster area, Gov. Robert F. Bennard said yesterday. A county-by-county assessment of damage to public property in six of the counties would be required, he said the less probably would increase as additional reports become available.
He said officials of the state Emergency Preparedness Office and members of his own staff toured the flood-damaged area to collect data to support the
Such a designation would set in motion federal aid for local governmental units and make private citizens eligible for low interest, long-term loans.
Elizabeth II presents bell
PHILADELPHIA--England's Queen Elizabeth II said yesterday that the American Revolution taught her country a valuable lesson to respect the rights of others to govern their own ways. Because of that lesson, she said, the Fourth of July should be celebrated in Britain, as well as in America.
The Queen made the observation as she presented the United States with a Bicentennial gift from England, a bell cast at the same foundry that produced the bell.
The queen, a distant relative of George Washington and a direct descendant of King George III, made the presentation during the first stop on a six-day, nine-city tour of the United States. She will go to Washington today and later will go to Montreal to open the Olympic Games.
Car sales at 3-year high
DETROIT—Domestic business cars sold boomed last month to the highest monthly level in nearly three years. The four U.S. automakers said yesterday they sold an average of 31,800 cars each day in June. That was up 29 per cent from June of last year, and down 16 per cent from December 2013, when the industry sold 32,136 cars a day in the midst of a pre-oil embargo.
The June sales tempo was stronger than industry analysts had expected and balanced forecasts that 1976 would wind up as the third best sales year in Detroit.
For foreign automakers, however, the June sales figures were down 19 per cent from June 1975.
Afrikaans not mandatory
JOHANNESBURG-South Africa's white-minority government announced yesterday it had dropped the mandatory use of the Africanan language for instructing black students. The requirement led to rots in some black townships last month that left 176 persons dead and more than 1,000 inured.
M. C. Boetha, minister of African education, said black schools will be given three choices for the type of language to be used in classes. They are: English for regular courses and Africans as a language course; Africans as the standard course as a language course; both Africans and English as the medium of instruction.
Soviet's Souuz 21 launched
MOSCOW—Two Soviet cosmonauts rocketed off in a spacecraft yesterday for an expected link with an orbiting station launched two weeks ago. The Soyuz 21 spacecraft was the first manned launch since last July's joint U.S.-Soviet Apollo-Soyuz linkup.
Soyuz 21 headed for a series of joint experiments with the space laboratory Sputnik 5, orbited on June 22, the official Tass news agency said. Soviet commentators and Western space analysts saw the launch of the 27 manned Soviet space as a relatively routine continuation of Russia manned space experiments.
The two cosmonauts went into orbit from Soviet Central Asia, 1,400 miles southeast of Moscow, at 9:30 a.m. c.m., and soon raided back that all systems were down.
Bv the Associated Press
Ford's campaign head reported on way out
Rogers Morton will be asked to step aside as President Ford's campaign manager soon, possibly before the Republican convention. ABC News reported yesterday.
The move for the change is a result of displeasure among state and local party officials with Morton's leadership of Ford's primary campaign, ABC said.
The network, however, quoting sources close to the Republican National Committee, told the newspaper that they would like to stay in his post at least through the GOP convention and possibly through a special session.
BUT RELIABLE sources within the Ford political organization said Marton probably would be asked to leave within the next two months, according to ABC.
Meamwhile, Jimmy Carter got a near-solid endorsement from the nation's Democratic governors, including some old Republican nomination.
A new assistant to the dean of men, William O. Lona, began work yesterday as a special resource adviser for Chicano students.
New assistant aids Chicanos
Lona said he would assist Chicago students in program planning, orientation and adjusting to university life in general. Lona will also work with the Reading and Study Skills Program, the Office of Admissions and the Office of Financial Aid.
CHICANO STUDENTS have some unique cultural problems because their backgrounds don't attune them to a university setting, he said.
*Problems are magnified when students have to think in Spanish terms and try to translate.*
Lona will also be working with Movieto Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan (MECHA), a Chicanos into the University and, once here, to keep them from dropping out. The English translation of the group's name is Chicano Students' Movement of Aztlan. Aztan is the traditionally recognized island in the southwestern United States.
Language is a special problem for some Chicano students.
LONA WAS formerly with the Human Resource Corporation in Kansas City, Mo., where he planned and evaluated antipoverty programs, and helped to resolve human resources issues. The Resource Corporation was funded by the federal Office of Economic Opportunity.
Ernest Garcia held the position in the dean of men's office before Lona.
Carter promised to restore the governors to the counsels of the federal government and said he would meet Thursday with a second candidate running mate, Sen. Walter D. Pinnington.
the presumed Democratic presidential nominee then returned home to Plains, Ga.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said he talked with Carter about potential vice presidential candidates. But the reason a senator said he made no recommendations.
THE FIRST potential vice presidential candidate interviewed by Carter, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, D-Maine, said that Carter believed Reagan might be a more formidable Republican opponent than President Ford in the November election.
The resolution of support by the governors was read by Gov. Marvin Mandel of Maryland, who has been frequently at odds with Carter since the days when the former governor was involved in the work of the National Governor's Conference and often took the other side of key issues.
Ronald Reagan appealed last night for support from democrats, asserting that the Democratic party had been taken over by the conservatives, he believed they alone could plan people's lives.
REAGAN ATTACKED President Ford, his rival for the GOP presidential nomination, as well as Democratic candidate Jimmy Carter.
In a speech prepared for a national campaign telecast, the former California governor said that through inflight "the big spenders in Washington have brought us to the place where older Americans are—but surely—being pushed to the wall."
The 30-minute speech, carried on the ABC television network, cost the Reagan campaign approximately $80,000 to $50,000 for one hour of time, a Reagan aide in Los Angeles said.
It was the Republican candidate's third national campaign speech on television. The first, also 30 minutes, helped bring his then-deleted campaign treasury out of trouble last March and April. A second, five-minute speech followed.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily
figures on Tuesday and Thursday. June and July expe-
lance Saturday, Sunday and Holidays. Second-class
scriptees are $10 each for scriptures by mail are $9 a semester or $18 a year in Douglas County and $10 a semester or $25 a year in Douglas County. Scriptures are $20 a semester or $30 a year in Douglas County. $20 a semester paid through
the U.S. Post Office.
Editor
Managing Editor
Business Manager
Assistant Business Manager
Dierck Caskelman
Kelly Scott
Carol Stallard
Jim Marquart
Staff Writer
Homecoming plans taking shape
A window painting contest, a pep rally and an all-University luncheon were included yesterday in plans for the 1976 Homecoming.
"I think a theme is helpful. Even if it's
a simple, basic aspect as to all the
decorations," Foster said.
A theme to bind these plans, made at the first meeting of the 1976 Homecoming Committee, will be selected next week when more representation from non-University committee members is possible. Bob Foster, committee chairman, said.
NEIL SEDAKA is tentatively scheduled
"We might be able to tie in the theme to one of his son titles." Foster said.
By MELISSA STEINEGER
to perform at the Homecoming concert,
according to Barney McCoy, SUA
guided by the Youth Advisory
Bob Nelson, of the Continuing Education office, suggested that the theme tie in with the football team's win over Oklahoma last year because the Jayhawks are scheduled to play OU's for Homecoming this year.
There is no traditional method for choosing a Homecoming theme, Foster uses the "Coral Reef" theme.
LAST YEAR'S window-painting contest was successful enough to try again, the
HILTON
BANK OF THE
UNITED STATES
Events
TODAY: Incoming FRESHMAN ORIENTATION will meet all day for Liberal Arts and Sciences and Engineering, Architecture and Urban Design.
Grants and Awards
OnCampus
TONIGHT: SAU festival film, "Barbarella," featuring Jane Fonda, John Philip David and Darryton Heavenside.
BETTY HAEGELIN, associate editor of the University Daily Kanban last semester, was awarded a 1978 citation by the Society of Professional Journalists (SJC).
CARLILLON RECITAL will be performed by Robert Lodine at 8 p.m. in Campanile.
UNIVERSITY THEATRE Productions will present "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" tonight at Saturday at p.m. in the University Theatre.
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committee decided. The contest offered a $20 prize to the best window painting in New York City.
The biggest problem with the contest was a lack of communication between stores, Foster said. Some stores didn't know the contest was going on, he said.
A meeting with representatives from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce should be held.
ANOTHER HOMECOMING event Foster said he hoped would become permanent is the All-University Homecoming Luncheon. The luncheon honors the recipients of the Fred Ellsworth Medalion for Distinguished Service to the University of Kansas.
The good student participation in the Homecoming Rally last year ensured its committee would be able to meet committee would attempt to place the rally time schedule in the permanent University calendar. The rally requires that 11:30 am and noon醒ates early on the day before Homecoming.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GREATER COMFORT. SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT!
GENERAL CONFERENCE
Granada
Francis could only
be told that he could
could kick field goals
"GUS"
Varsity Daily 2.30, 7.20, 7.30
Gregory Peck
Could it be an . . .
"OMEN"
R
Eve 7:10 & 9:30
Sat.Sun.Mat 2:30
Hillcrest
Burt Reindloh can
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PG
Eve 7:20 & 9:40
Sat.Sun.Mat 1:45
Hillcrest
In the 21st century you
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Logan is 29.
"LOGAN'S RUN"
PG
7:30 9:50 Sat.Sun.at 1:55
Hillcrest
What Bobbie Gentry's
movie does
Sat.-Sun, Mat. 2:05
Eve, 7:40 & 9:45
Next fall's budget for Homecoming should include more money for 'rophies and pompoms, Foster said. The increased cost of money he said, has made more cost necessary.
Sunset Action all night and same good stuff on the screen, too.
Thomas Sidham, committee member,
suggested that local merchants be asked to
receive payment of the fee.
"There never seems to be enough money for house decoration trophies," he said.
"DRIVE IN" at 9:15, plus
"IT MIGHT be an annual thing, with merchants able to provide nice trophies for the prize."
"Take the Money and Run"
Starring Woody Allen at 11:00
A systematic program to develop the full potential of the individual
Good Old Summertime STEAK &
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£450
TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION
Free Public Lecture WED., JULY 7
Kansas Union International Room
7:30 - 9:30
CATERING
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CLAM-BAKE
450
7:30 p.m.
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"THE CONTINUING AMERICAN REVOLUTION presents
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE'S 1976 SUMMER THEATRE FESTIVAL
WHO'S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF? BY EDWARD ALBEE
GUEST DIRECTOR
CAROL
BLITGEN
B.V.M.
July 7-10
WED.-SAT.
TICKETS $2.50
K.U. STUDENTS, SENIOR CITIZENS,
MUSIC & ART CAMPERS, $1.50
FOR INFORMATION AND RESERVATIONS CALL 864-3982
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 7.1976
Ignorance (in listeners) is bliss
By RON HARTUNG Contributing Writer
How exhilarating it is to talk to someone who knows absolutely nothing about what you're talking about.
Of course each of us has a wardrobe of personalities we keep within easy reach—we slip into one and out of another as the occasion demands. It's conceivable for me to make a dressing room make on Mean Joe Greene might be different from that you'd make on, say, Durward Kirby. You'd try to wow Joe with your pigkin insight, while you'd try to impress Dur with the fact that you'd, well, love you. Durward greene (Durward is fairly easily impressed).
But the picture we're presenting to others is constantly our primary concern. And locked fist-in-glove with it is the indescribable angst that one of our audience may humilize us at any second by calling our conversational bluff.
For example, with a crowd of alleged literary know-nothings you might assume a
Comment
man-of-letters swagger and allow as how you thought John Donne's "To his Coy Mistress" was the quintessential expression of the ever-oonular 'carde darm' theme.
But should a voice from the rabble inquire, "Wasn't that written by Andrew Tolstoy? You've told me bursts, your audience ceases its willingness of disbelief and you're left muttering that, what the heck, you only had one semester of it, and you were sick that
We've all been witness to such deflating experiences, experiences common in the school world. You know that probably in grade school, when one momentous day we learned that Teacher was, indeed, less than omniscient. But there were moments when time-honored dodge for pesky questions:
"Say, that's a good question, Biff. Your project for tomorrow will be to look up the answer in our friend, Mr. Encyclopedia, and what you find to your classmates."
The college professor, on the other hand, usually has Ignorance working in his favor—Ignorance incarnate, that is, seated in each of the desks before him. Early in his career he attended the Lecture and, above all, the Appetite commanding properties of The List.
No matter how much blub he may have spewed for thus far, he need only utter some such wisdom as, "There are five reasons for this phenomenon..." to hear the arresting rattle of ballpoint poised and the comforting ruscie of notebooks being readed to record his every syllable. The student, you see, recognizes the need for nothing else, in his notes and—by thunder—'he's not about to pass an upious objection.'
And as for Herr Professor—we wonder
whether his voice would still have that ring of authority, whether he'd bark his facts out so confidently, if his colleagues, or the book, or Walter Crinkle were in the room.
The student, however, is not always on the receiving end. He, too, toughes his audience shewlys. The philosophy major utters weighty pronouncements around physical education majors that he wouldn't dream of whispering to other philosophers.
It's in The Trip Horne, though, that the calculated Decit is loaded into the big guns and fired. Let's imagine, for instance, that young Sonny has been doing a bit of copy-reading for the school newspaper—a job that shared by, oh, 30 of his fellows.
He's no fool, though, our Sonny. He knows that Mother and Dad don't know how couples can play cards according to the cards accordingly. At the first exclamation of "Gee, Sonny, you're one of the editors of your paper!" he modestly stabs at the "G吞噬, no, Ma, I'm only a copy editor."
But parents will be parents. When Dad introduces him as "Sonny, newspaper editor," he corrects Dad with a hastily mumbled, "Well, not quite the EDITor," which soon becomes, "Really, I do have THE EDITOR putting the paper out." That's our Sonny.
Ah, if only every time we took the floor we
Firemen ... From past one
three-year officers will be elevated to patrol officer on the pay scale," he said.
The issue of workman's compensation coverage for extraordinary job-related injuries or illnesses was also a main concern of the commission, and the proposal, the city would pay the difference between coverage of all compensation benefits and the worker's full-time salary for a period not to exceed 60 days. After that, the workers would be entitled to receive on permanent disability. Watson said.
Arnold Berman, attorney for the firefighters and for the policemen, asked Watson if they could present this as an evidence package to the fireman's association.
Watson said he didn't feel it was an "either-or" situation. He said he considered this the city's final offer because the cost of implementing the 2.5 per cent pay increase would be too far beyond what the city could offer without raising taxes.
"I don't think you're coming away from the table empty-handed; we've compromised a long way from our original proposal," said Watson.
Berman said he thought that members of the firefighters association should be the ones to decide if they want the pay increase or the insurance benefits.
"We're negotiating for the firefighters, not the whole city. Since we're only $3,000 apart I think the membership should make the decision," said Berman.
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Before coming to the Med Center, Keeena's senior auditor for Blue Cross and Blue Shield.
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could be assured that no wiseacre from the balcony would question our thoughts and our words, let alone our right to either thoughts or words. The answer, it seems, is to speak only of that in which we are expert: namely, ourselves.
Stewart was previously assistant professor of surgery and pediatrics at the University of Utah College of Medicine in Salt Lake City.
Granted, if we all discuss only ourselves there could be a rather serious decrease in what has been called "meaningful dialogue" before we start to thank during an election year?
David R. Stewart will assume responsibilities in late summer as chief of the team.
R. Richard Keeble was named controller, effective July 1.
Med Center fills 2 appointments
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—Two appointments to fill an administrative and a faculty position at the KU Medical Center were announced recently.
professor of pediatrics and surgery.
Keeleb has been employed at the Med Center since 1975 as assistant director for financial analysis.
As controller, he will be in charge of cash receiving, disbursing and accounting functions of the Med Center. He will also prepare cost reports to determine hospital formal financial report and compile all Med Center financial information.
Bv MARION ABARE
Staff Writer
He has served as senior registrar in pediatric surgery at the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital in Manchester, England.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to you by the University of Hawaii or national institution. PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 11 FILL HALL JUNK
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
professor of pediatrics and surgery.
time times times times times
15 words or
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
.01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These can be placed in person or telephone. The calling the UDK business office at 664-3358.
FOR RENT
JDK BUSINESS OFFICE
11 Flint Hall
864-4358
ATTENTION STUDENT BENEFITS—Drop in and
visit the Student Center on the fourth
phone (212) 687-5340 at WESTERN
HILLS. Please phone with us during
the week.
2 bdr. all utilities paid on campus Furnished or unfurnished Free parking, a/c pool $899
Prescriptions Filled and Lenses Duplicated with Flawless Accuracy Complete Optical Services
Unfurnished one bedroom kit, to sublease from August to January 1977 in Meadowbrook Place.
PACIFIC
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American and Mexican Food
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont
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Call Otis Vann!
843-7700
For new Chevrolets and used cars
Turner Chevrolet
af
IMPORTED CLOTHING
new summer hours 10-3 (longer on cool days)
Stay Cool Hours - Summer Store
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Selected Secondhand
Goods & Antiques
UNIQUE
730 Mass 841-7070
doin Hours sweat
FOUND
A Brendale Adnk puppy. Owner may claim by identifying and picking it up. Call 844-8740-712
Ladies watch is found near KU band and drill team practices. Call 842-9682. Tz9
Small black cat with blue collar inlair with
jewels. Found two weeks ago. Call 811-2573.
Folder contains news clippings about book
celebration. Contact Wesley Cafeteria.
7-7
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes - Now on Sale!
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Makes sense to use them—
1. 1A. Study guide
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis 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 hifi equipment, the most important benefit you will pay the least and get the most benefits at the GRAMIPHONE SHOP at KIEFS. ¹³f
Excellent condition of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 701-
45th Avenue, New York, NY 10026.
Panasonic receiver with speakers. small system
model, 841-3410 after small appl user
models 724, 841-3410 after
JUST ARRIVED! Another shipment of "Our
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THE ATTIC: 977, 637 Manhasset
THEYRE HERE! Large selection of "Our Special"
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Male shibui childcare. Clean easy to care for. Newborn through 6 years of age. Chair, harduretube finish. American provided. Call 1-800-452-7939.
67 VW bus, must sell. $235. Runs very well. 842-
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Kennedy KR-4600 stereo receiver with 45 wm.
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speaker system. Philips GA2-9, completely electronic tunable. All components under warranty.
specifications and excellent condition. Fax 842-6721.
HELP WANTED
AVON-een extra money for college and veneer
60% off. Call Me, Call Mr.薛, 842-882-6
7-48
Full-time position for ten month's study of sub-Arctic geology, with experience in working with geologists in geology, with experience in working with scientists in field work for weeks. Knowledge in live area of field work for weeks. Knowledge in W. J. Thakris Jr. Kansas Geological Survey, Utica, UT. Master's in Geological Survey or equivalent. Kansas Geological Survey is under EoP. Oppenheimer ployer. Qualified women and men of all races. Resumes to: Oppenheimer Ployer, Qualified Women and Men of All Races.
Bureau of Child Research needs two part-time positions beginning July 19 and ending August 15. Approximately 20 applicants will be contacted by Air Forceattender or Military Contact by Air Forceattender. Positions require a Bachelor's degree, comfort with language, opportunity, qualified men and women to work in an office environment.
Garbage needs experience display person. *emply*
in person in MA 804 Massachusetts. 7-12
Substitute house parents for small group-care
problems. Call 845-616-6166.
Problem: Cobie 845-616-6166.
Douglas County is receiving applications for positions in the Department of Civil Defense ($10,000 to $25,000) and international and communicative abilities are essential. Benefits include health insurance, retirement benefits (including health insurance), retirement benefits should be made prior to July 20 at office of the Director. Applicants must accompany Mass St. Remire should accomplish
LOST
Ldst, white gold wedding band near basewall
bekind behind Waltlne, Call 895.446-7.8
NOTICE
Cool it these hot aftersaves with fruits and
foats, parfaits and peaches, Gold Cup ice cream
and chocolates galore at the Carabach Cafe, 683
(the rear door). Dinner to last 8:30 except
Sundays.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used for furniture, dishes, tables, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12pm-4:37-3437
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Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous 842-0110. It
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Math, Fitting, Compound, experimented table
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BankAmericard
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FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
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842-8413
Mastercharge
Roommate wanted 2 bedroom trailer. 5 min.
in country, pets ok. 843-6600 after 7-7
Tynan editor, IBM PcA callie. Quality work.
Writings on dissertations. welcome to:
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TUTOR
Female roommate wanted. Own room, $25/month
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4:00 (messages take 14 hours). 7-29
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Typing for technical and scientific thesis, dissertation and electrics. B.A. Social Sciences.
Position wanted: Qualified legal secretary leaving Kansas City mid-August, need any availability position in Lawrence. Resumes on jobs.com 7-861-2351-9058 Walnut, Kansas City, Mo. 64112.
FIELDS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Bedspreads · Fitted Sheets
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-758-
206 after 6 p.m.
if
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
NAPA
Auto Parts
For the Do-It-Yourself we offer: 1. Special Prices
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3. We have it or can get it overnight
- Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
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4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
- Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
Sandwiches
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
& Schooners
- Pitcher Night Wednesday
Outdoor Beer Garden
Smiley car
"Beat the Summertime Blues
at 14th and Ohio"
Gentlemen's Quarters
Creative haircutting for men and women W 9th & III 843-2719
PETER JACKSON
in the summer.
W. 9th & III 843-2719
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Keep your car healthy
at
Use the student discounts
Lobby
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AIRLINE FARES
Kansas Union Building
SUA Maupintour travel service
quality travel arrangements since 195
530 Wisconsin THE HIDEOUT CLUB
A
843-9404
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Open 2 p.m.-3 a.m. Dancers 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Mischief Club Away
Massachusetts Away
B Class B Private Club
Wayne Pool—Owner
4
Wednesday, July 7, 1976
University Daily Kansan
AMERICANS RETURNING TO BIG CARS
DETROIT GEARS UP TO FRAUDE JARGE MODELS
OPEC
1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES
Local sales of big cars on the rise
Bv COURTNEY THOMPSON
Detroit car manufacturers have been saying for some time now that the American romance with the big car is still smoldering, and Lawrence car dealers
Several dealers who offer a wide range of car sizes are experiencing increased sales.
Employees of six dealerships said their overall sales had increased during 1976. They said even the most economy-minded buyer was less concerned about the price of gasoline now than two years ago, when gas prices were higher.
BECAUSE GASOLEN prices have become relatively stable the consumer has begun to let personal preference dictate his choice of car, they said.
Terry Cradduck, Jack Ellena Buick-Oldsmobile-GMC, Lawrence Auto Lisa, 2112 W. 29th Terr., that said because General Motors planned to reduce the wheel base on 1977 cars, many people had taken part in a loss of a chance to buy larger 78 models.
He said the mid-size models were best sellers because they appealed to everyone. The smaller, more economically minded buyer and give more room and luxury features than the compact models.
The Honda is the Buick-Oldsmobile
dealer's foreign sub-compact. Cradduck said sales of this car were up.
BRUCE MILLER, Jim Clark Motors,
Lawrence A. Puzza, said compacts were
built in the 1970s and 1980s.
"We've got dozens of Volkswagens and Vegas on our used car lot. People can take being cramped in a little car for just so long, but the space more than pure economy," he said.
Miller said the Aspen, Volare and Cordoba were top-selling Chrysler models. Unlike GMC, Chrysler Motors won't reduce fuel efficiency or be able to could be a drawing card for Chrysler.
Both R.Keller, Dale Willey Pontiac-Cadillac, 116 W. 23rd, and Frank Case, John Haddock Ford, 23rd and Alabama streets, said there hadn’t been an increase in their
MILLER SAID big-car sales had increased because the Midwest didn't been hit by a gasoline shortage like that in the eastern states.
"The people around here have always liked big cars and luxury and have kept buying them, especially since we've never been hard-hit by gas shortages, he said.
Case said the traditional preference for roomy, luxury cars among Americans accounted for Ford's sustained sales of intermediate and large cars.
"Also, there's not the wide margin in gas mileage between the medium and small
models that you might expect," he said.
You have to go to the sub-compact to see
what is in your pocket.
IF INCREASED sales of larger cars are causing small car business to decline, Lawrence Volkswagen and Toyota dealers say they haven't noticed the effects.
Tad Estes, Lawrence Toyota, Inc., Lawrence Auto Plaza, said the last two months had been the biggest ever for his sales.
"I think the economy is on the upswing and more people are buying more cars, period. Maybe they're buying more big cars that aren't being sold, isn't showit out in the legal," he said.
Sargive Serru, Jahawk Volkswagen, 2522 Iowa, said an improving economy was the primary factor affecting his sales. He said that sales in the past two months had been slow but were picking up. People in the 20 to 30 percent of customers, Serru said, and 60 to 70 per cent of his sales have been to KU faculty and staff.
LAWRENCE RESIDENTS seem to be buying as many cars as their billfolds will allow. Case he thought it was wise that Mr. Lawrence bought them than what strict mileage funnels dictated.
"It's important that a person buys what he and likes—its much easier to pay for things when you have a lot of them."
KC wins 1, loses 1 against Yanks
Roy White delivered a soft tie-breaking two-run single and Chris Chambers added a third run of three.
NEW YORK (AP) — Run-scoring singles by John Mayberry and Mia McRae with in the sixth inning helped the Kansas City Royals to a 3-1 victory over the New York Yankees in the first game of a twin-tight doubleheader yesterday.
Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE East
Philadelphia W L Pet. GB
Pittsburgh W 43 128 666 9
Pittsburgh 43 32 166 9
St. Louis 44 44 418 10
St. Louis 44 44 418 10
Cincinnati 35 16 110 25
Montreal 35 16 110 25
Cincinnati 50 31 617 5/9
Los Angeles 60 43 678 1/19
San Diego 62 47 319 3/13
Atlanta 38 42 475 11/12
Houston 38 42 475 11/12
New York-Pierceburgh 38 42 469 1/12
Yesterday
Chicago, 4 San Diego
Cincinnati, 5 Pittsburgh
Atlanta, 5 Pittsburgh
Charleston, 10 Montreal
St Louis, 10 intaglio
Sl Lords, 13 San Francisco
LEAGUE
7
New York W L Pet. GB
Boston 38 27 317 4/9
Cleveland 38 27 307 4/9
Detroit 38 27 307 4/9
Baltimore 38 41 468 11/4
Nashville 38 41 468 11/4
Kansas City
Texas
Minnesota
Chicago
California
48 40 315 3
48 32 679 3
46 32 500 3
36 42 462 12
34 42 465 12
35 42 410 11
**Yankees' Game of**
Kansas City 2, Iowa 1
Boston 4, Chicago 0
Miami 4, Minnesota 2
Cleveland 3, California 3
Clovis 4, Colorado 3
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• Dynaco • SAE • Jonsen
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Car Stereos—C.B.s —T.V.s.
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beat the Royals 7-4 and split the doubleheader,
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was caught steaming but Jim Wolfford also walked. After Amos Ots struck out, George Brett, Mayberry and McRae came through to executive salutes to put the Royals on top 2-1.
Kansas City added an unearned run by Lyle in the ninth when Al Cowens singled with two out, moved up when first baseman Chambill muffled Lyle's pick throw and scored on Buck Martinez' single off the glove of stopstop Fred Stanley.
White's first-inning homer gave the Yankees their only run.
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In the nightcap, Kansas City starter Steve Busby, 3-3, started his own downfall by walking Sandy Alomar and Jim Mason to begin the eighth. Tom Hall relieved Busby and Mickey Rivers beat out a bunt to load up the defense, but Jim was over the draw-in infield. The ball landed on theinfeld dirt and rolled into short center field, and two runs scored.
'Chambliss' 10th home run of the season one out later made a winner of relief ace Sparky Lyle, 64, although he gave up two home runs and doubles by Fred Patek and Frank White.
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'Virginia Woolf' will open at 8 tonight in Murphy Hall
. The University of Kansas production of Edward Alice "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" opens tonight at 8 in the University Theatre in Murphy Hall.
The play, which has won the New York Drama Critic's Award and the Atonienne Perry (TONY) Award, will run through July 10.
SUA Summer Films
Carol Bitlegen, director of theater at Clarke College, Dubuque, Iowa, is the production's guest director. Bitlegen, a KU professor, leads in the Order of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Wed., July 7 (in the year 40,000) BARBARELLA
Directed by Roger Vadim, With Jane Fonda, John Philip Law, David Hemmings.
7:30 p.m. 75°
The drama is set one evening in the home of a college professor. The professor, George, and his wife, Martha, have returned drunk from a party. Martha has invited a young professor and his wife over for a nightcap.
Based on a futuristic cross-country demolition derby. With David Carradine, "An Orwellian vision of the American future."-Lawrence Van Gelder, The New York Times.
Although there is profanity in the play, Blitgen said it was very important to the
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"The action of the play moves from
safering, to grace, to redemption," she
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dramatic texture. The verbal fights show the characters' inability to deal with
"IT IS so accident that the action ends at on a Sunday morning. The ritual killing and burial site of the son by the deceased are summonses of commissions of passion and death of Christ."
"The agony of Martha and George is relieved by the acceptance of their son's death and the moment of acceptance for them, a kind of redemption," she said.
Tickets are $2.50 and $1.50 for KU students and senior citizens. Reservations may be made by calling the University Theatre Box Office.
Need help? Advertise it in Kansan want ads Call 864-4358.
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Telephone numbers for people wishing to use the Computation Center's systems were printed incorrectly in Thursday's Kansan. Users wishing to use the old 635 Honeywell computer should dial 841-4900 for a high line and 841-4900 for a high weed line.
Those wishing to use the new 66-60 computer should dial 843-5300.
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Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Bridae construction
Construction on the new Kansas River bridge at Vermont Street was continuing on the south side, with workers hard at work on rock at the coffee dam on the south side of the river. Construction beams to be composed are
Legislature resumes study of Med Center programs
Thursday, July 8, 1976
Staff Writer
By MARION ABARI
KANSAS CITY, KAN.-A five-member Kansas Legislative Interim Committee will return to KU Medical Center July 27 and 28 to continue a study of the center's health care programs.
The committee, headed by State Rep. Denny Burgess, R-Wamego, launched the study in a two-day session last Tuesday at the Med Center.
The committee's task is to present to the legislature a comprehensive picture of the Medical Center's patient care, education and research, according to Med Center Relations.
Other committee members are State Sen. Edward Jr.辉 Jr., R-Leavenworth, vice chairman; State Sen. Albert Campbell, D-Larned; State Rep. George Wingert, D-Ottawa; and State Rep. Bill Morris, R-Wichita.
Efforts to obtain more physicians for Kansas, general upkeep of the Med Center and problems between private practice and state institution are covered in the study.
Reilly said, "the task of reviewing all of the procedures and policies of KU Med
center will require much time and effort. We will not be able to solve overnight problems and deficiencies that have developed over long periods of time."
During last week's session the committee met with Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and Executive Vice Chancellor Robert B. Kugel, international, research and patient care facilities.
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 86 No.159
Firemen weighing final city offer
BULLETIN
City officials and representatives of the Lawrence fire fighters will meet before noon tomorrow to continue salary negotiations. The officials of the fire fighters association said today.
By DAVE WARD Staff Writer
Representatives of the Lawrence firefighters' association contacted members late yesterday in an effort to determine their sentiment on the city's final salary proposal formulated Tuesday in meetings with city officials.
Alvin Samuels, president of the association, presented the firefighters' proposal calling for a 2.5 per cent pay hike in January 1977 and an additional 2.5 per cent pay increase in January 1978. However, Buford Watson, city manager, said he couldn't agree to it.
In a Tuesday night meeting of the International Fire Fighters Association, local 1596, members voted to reject what the city termed its final offer but returned to the conference table with a counter proposal yesterday afternoon.
"It has so many ramifications to other operations in the city, that I don't feel I can handle it."
He said the city was reluctant to award one group of city employees a pay increase
The two sides had previously agreed to a six per cent cost of living raise.
without offering it to all of them, something the city says it can't afford.
After Watson rejected the firefighters' proposal yesterday, Arnold Berman, attorney for the firefighters, made a last minute compromise. The firemen would drop their demand for the pay hike in 1978, Berman said.
Watson turned down any pay increase beyond six per cent.
"I think we are paying a competitive wage and I wish you would urge the membership to wait until a salary survey study is completed." Watson said.
Berman said, "We've already extended our authority by dropping the proposed 2.5 per cent pay lapse in 1978, in lieu of insurance that we did it in an effort to settle this dispute."
Watson then said "If this additional pay hike (2.5 percent in 1977) is implemented, it will reduce the disparity in pay between firemen and policemen."
Samuels answered, "A 2.5 per cent pay increase in no way mean pay parity with police. The reduction wouldn't be significant."
Watson said that city policy dictated a certain degree of disparity in pay and that the city's consultant had determined the difference between the top pay for
policemen and the top pay for firemen would be five per cent.
Watson endorsed talks by urging the fire fighters to accept the city's offer to pay half the cost of family health and life insurance in place of both 2.5 per cent pay hikes.
"We think the insurance benefits will have a good effect for all city employees. The effect of changing your salary plan would be devastating to city operations. If we change your salary plan, we'll have to change it for lot of other city employees," said Watson.
When asked after yesterday's meeting
whether the firefighters would come back to the table, tables with another proposal, and so on.
"We're not in a position to urge the membership to accept the city's offer. We can't even return with a counter proposal. We've compromised ourselves right out of our jobs (as negotiators for the firemen)," he said.
On other issues, both sides agreed on for regular firefighters who substitute for captains for more than 48 consecutive weeks. The results of a survey study to begin work immediately.
Malpractice coverage required by new law
By MARION ABARE
KANSAS CITY, Kan.—There's a nationwide trend toward physician practicing without malpractice in insurance, but Kansas law are now prohibited by law from doing it.
The Kansas mlapractice package, which became law July 1, compels health care personnel to be insured for a minimum of $300,000, each year.
Arson suspected at Yuk
The state fire marshall's office is investigating a fire that caused an estimated 100,000 damage to the Yukup Center and the Hillicrest Shopping Center yesterday.
George Rogge, chief investigator, said yesterday that results of the investigation may be released by tomorrow. The KBI is analyzing evidence gathered by Rogge. He said he had no idea what results would be.
"The fire is still of a very suspicious nature," Rogge said. "At this point we can't tell what will be determined."
Floyd Dibbern, state fire marshall.
The fire began about 3:15 a.m. in the northeast corner of the building, which houses the two tawns. Firemen brought the fire to the building in an hour and remained until daylight.
said he suspected arson was the cause of the fire.
Dibbern said that an investigation was a normal procedure for such large fires.
Lee Dunn, legal counsel for KU Medical center, said that the Kansas law was an unfortunate misunderstanding.
A similar fire caused about $169,000 damage to the same structure April 23. A gasoline can thrown through a window or ledge caused the blaze. No one was charged.
"It's not just physicians that have to have this minimum $100,000-$300,000, but osteopaths, chiropractors, nurse anesthetists and dentists—all sorts of people who never had any high risk or exposure to malpractice before," Dunn said.
"THE POSSIBILITY of a dentist being sued is so much slimmer than doctors, whose possibility of getting sued is slim anyway," he said.
Most Med Center physicians carry insurance with St. Paul Companies, Kansas City, Mo.
Jeffrey Segall, underwriter for St. Paul Companies, said the Kansas mallepractice firm has written an offer to
"It is quite clear they are accomplices. We have a right and duty by international law to protect our citizens ... We must act with courage or use excessive force, Herzog added.
The Organization of African Unity asked the council to take up the charge that Israel should be recognized as an independent nation.
Israel denies aggression, decries Amin's role
wrong and offer doctors a place to get mal-practice coverage.
"We believe the Ugandan government was part and parcel of this operation," Israeli Ambassador Chaim Herzog said in an interview on the NBC "Today Show."
Segal said, "If a doctor can show three letters of rejection from insurance companies, then the state will provide malpractice coverage."
The state will provide insurance to physicians or other health care providers who are unable to get insurance coverage elsewhere. The 'health care stabilization fund' created by the state will insure. A surcharge, paid by each person insured, will establish this fund. Seall said.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)—Israel prepared yesterday to defend before the Security Council its military rescue operation in Uganda and to provide what it said was evidence of Ugandan President Idi Amin's cooperation with the hikers.
Israeli defense officials earlier said Israel had evidence that the Ugandaan leader
An Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman in Israel said Israel would present proof of the attack.
have known about the hijack plot in advance.
SEGALL SAID the insurance companies would handle all paperwork entailed in the collecting of the surcharge but receive no fees.
though some Africans had misgivings about defending Amin. Many U.N. diplomats privately expressed the feeling that Amin阻击了 U.N. forces in the hijackers during the week in Uganda.
The three Israeli planes stopped in Nairobi, Kenya, on the way home from Uganda, and there have been various incidents where two planes stepped on route to the raid.
Several of the hostages freed by the
THE 15-MEMBER Security Council originally scheduled a meeting for today, but it was announced later the debate would be set back to tomorow afternoon because Ugandan Foreign Minister Juan Orts could no longer attend. The diplomats indicated they intended to expand the debate into a full-dress assault on hijacking and terrorism.
U. N. diplomats generally agree with Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim's assertion that the Israeli raid was "a serious violation of the sovereignty of a member state." But they voice admiration for the skill and daring of the Israelis.
Dunn said he thought that Kansas main-practice legislation could be unconstitutional.
The ordeal began with the hijack of an Air France airbus over Greece on June 27. A total of 149 persons were released over the next few days, and Israel freed more than 100 others—mostly Israelis or other Jews in its lightning airport raid. Three hostages, one Israeli soldier, seven hijackers and 20 Ugandan soldiers died.
Israeli command raided on Uganda's Embel airport Sanday said upon Ugandan soldiers had fully cooperated with the Palestinian and German hijackers. An Israeli government said he had his government was preparing testimony from the hostages and other sources.
AMIN HAS loudly criticized both Israel and neighboring Kenya for the raid. He said Israel violated his country's sovereignty by sending a drone to the moment of collaboration with the Israeli raiders.
The state has the right to set qualifications to practice such as graduating from an accredited medical school, he said, but doesn't have the right to require a person to spend money on insurance in order to practice medicine.
An Idaho statute, similar to Kansas', that required every health care provider in the state to buy insurance in order to practice, was recently found unconstitutional, Dunn said. Similar legislation is under attack in Ohio, he said, but hasn't been ruled on yet.
Dunn said mparactice legislation in Kansas would benefit two groups in the state, the plaintiff's attorney and the insurance companies. Those who claim the legislation will come to physician's defense don't know what they're talking about, he said.
BEVERLY ZADOROZNY, a physician therapist at the Med Center, said she hadn't been insured previously, although some of her clients had received through their professional association.
Zadoromya said she had never felt the need of insurance before and wondered how patients would react if they knew she was insured.
Dunn said the mere presence of insurance wouldn't encourage more lawsuits. Patients file lawsuits if they feel they've been injured and not because someone carries insurance,
A Johnson County physician, who asked that he not be named, said he had no insurance.
See MALPRACTICE page 3
Local Vietnamese adjust easily to new way of life
By CHARLOTTE KIRK
Lawrence's two Vietnamese refugee families apparently have made the transition to American life well, and will now welcome a third refugee city to the city.
The Ngoc The Nguyen and Chiu Duc Vinh families, who came to Lawrence last summer after the South Vietnamese evacuation, are expected to be joined soon. Mr. Nguyen said he was waiting in Bangkok, Thailand, to fly to the U.S., Bobby Patton, member of the
"I've had to start all over; I've tried my best to prosper."
Lawrence Refugee Committee, said yesterday.
NGOC THO Nguyen, his wife Nghia, and their four children came to Lawrence July 14 of last year. They lived with the Harold Siegert family for two weeks until they moved into an apartment at 1600 Haskell Drive.
The Nguyen and Vinh families said although they had adjusted to American life, they were still very unhappy.
"Not much is different in my country so we have only had to adjust to the language," we have said.
Ngyen and his wife said they gained proficiency in reading and writing English as a result of jobs they held in Saigon. Ngyen was an associate professor of history at the University of Saigon. Nghia translated documents for the U.S. Defense Attach-
as a housekeeper, speaks English quite fluently. She said her husband, who works in KU's medicinal chemistry lab, was shy about speaking English.
"ENGLISH IS not so hard to read, but it is very difficult to pronounce," she said. "Mrs. Siegler has worked with us to learn English since we came here."
Nguyen said sometimes he heard words wrong and accused about making an in-terruption complaint.
Nghia, who works in KU residence halls
Although the language has posed a large barrier, Nghia said some things were very familiar. Nghia wears floured blouses, and Nghia tennis shoes at work, much like a coogler.
"The FOOD is different, but we still eat Vietnamese food when we get the chance," Nghia said. "You see, Vietnamese food takes much long; to prepare and since I am working, I usually just have time to fix American food, which is a lot faster."
"We wore the same clothes in Saigon. Our money matters are the same here also. We planned how we would spend our money every month like we do," she said.
The four Nguyen children, 7, 10, 12 and 13 years old, have completed one year at Lawrence schools. They did so well this year. Children allowed to skip a grade, this fall, she said.
"The children used to learn French in Saigon schools, but they adjusted to conversational English faster than my husband and I did," she said.
"I'm GLAD that God has helped us and I think everything is okay now," Nghi said. She said they hoped to become naturalized in Italy, by a few years.
She said her children really liked American food.
She said they hoped to become naturalized U.S. citizens in a few years.
CHIEU DUC Vinh, his wife, Nghia, and their six children came to Lawrence from Saigon a week after the Nguyens. They were hosted by John Boulton, assistant professor of wind and percussion, until they moved into a house at 733 Missouri.
Although the Lutheran Church supported them when they first came to Lawrence,
they are self-supporting now and have purchased a station wagon. They also hope to move out of their apartment and into a house.
The other Vietnamese refugee family has not done quite as well with English as the other refugees.
Vinh and his children speak English fluently, but his wife speaks no English.
"I'm glad God's helped us... I think everything's okay."
The English training class my wife was
in was discontinued and we haven't been able to find a place for her to learn," he
Financially, the Vinhs said, they have done well. They have been self-supporting since April, when Vinh got a job at the Cooperative Farm Chemicals Association. Until that time they were supported by private donations.
"WHEN I lived in Saigon I had many possessions, but when I came over here, I came empty-handed," Vinh said. "I have tried to do as best I can, and I have tried my best to noserrow."
Because this is the first anniversary of the families ' arrival in Lawrence, the Lutheran Churches plan to sponsor a reunion and picnic.
FLOWER DUMPSTER
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Having been in the United States for a year, Nighi Nguyen, who works in the cafeteria in Ellsworth Hall, says she is glad that her family left Saigon April 29, 1975.
2.
Thursday, July 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
White House hosts Queen
WASHINGTON - The White House Rose Garden, was covered with a 100-foot-long white canopy for the site of Wednesday night's dinner for Queen Elizabeth II and President Donald J. Trump.
The White House chef, Henry Haller, said that the first course for the dinner was Maine lobsters, cooked, gifted by Chef Thomas E. Sullivan. The main course was salad made with the White House salad menu $880, Haller.
Among the guests were Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, Mrs. Alice Roosevelt Longworth; from the entertainment world were singer Ella Fitzgerald, actresses Lynda Day George, Greer Garson, Hermine Hionne Julie Harris, Helen Hayes, Oleander obers, actors Cary Grant, Telly Savasalas and Bob Hope and his wife, Dolores.
Bennett visits flood areas
TOPEKA-Gov. Robert F. Bennett flown to southeast Kansas yesterday afternoon for a personal inspection of damage caused by floods resulting from last winter's flooding.
The governor said tentative, incomplete estimates so far indicated local governments had suffered about $5 million in damage to public property.
State and local officials have been surveying damage to public property in the flood area. But Leroy Towers, new aide to the governor, said wanted to be careful not to delay the investigation.
"That figure does not include the considerable damage to private residences and businesses," the governor said.
New pipeline test devised
WASHINGTON—Government officials are hoping a new technical device can test welding from inside the trans-Alaska oil pipeline and avoid the need to dig up it.
X-rays of the buried welded segments of pipe could delay completion of the pipeline, scheduled to begin pumping some 1.2 million barrels of oil daily in mid-
Late last year, the Alyekska Pipeline Service Co. reported that 3,956 out of the 31,423 welded completes in 1975 were questionable—either flawed or, more frequently, lacking the verifiable x-rays that the Interior Department needs to approve the pipeline.
Toneka concert canceled
TOPEKA-E- Efforts to save a controversial "Boogie in the Grass" rock concert here apparently have collapsed for lack of a place to have it.
Two sites for the concert, scheduled to be in Shawnee County Saturday, had fallen through when a third site was mentioned. Lafferty said. However there was no reason to doubt that it would happen.
The concert originally was scheduled for the Mid-America fairgrounds in Napa. The county signed a contract and later rereased on grounds that the county
Tuesday an owner of a 164-acre farm in southeast Siwanne County cancelled a contract with the promoters because they had not met contractual obligations for the lease.
Kelley defends FBI role
CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa—FBI Director Clarence Kelley, testifying yesterday in the trial of two men accused of killing FBI agents on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.
Two members of the American Indian Indian Robot Robertideau, 29. Portland, Ore., and Darelle Burrell, 34. Rogue River, Ore. — are charged with killing an American Indian.
— The bruiser, 34, Rogue River, Ore. are charged with killing agents Jack Coler and Ronald Williams, both 28, on June 28, 1975, at Pine Ridge. The FBI claims the agents were ambushed when they went to the reservation near Ogala, S.D., to serve arrest warrants. Kelley said the FBI conducted a thorough investigation of the circumstances surrounding the killing of the FBI agents.
Ruling on sex bias lifted
WASHINGTON - The Department of Health, Education and Welfare, acting on President Fords' instructions, yesterday suspended a ruling that father-son or mother-daughter school events violate laws prohibiting sex discrimination. The ruling, issued last week, was suspended pending research by lawyers to determine the legality.
The civil rights office ruled in response to an inquiry from the Scottsdale, Ariz. public schools, which sponsor father-son banquets and mother-daughter teas. The school officials wanted to know whether the events violated the laws prohibiting sex discrimination in public schools receiving federal financial aid.
Carter calm; Reagan races
Jimmy Carter announced plans to speak with more prospective runningmates, while Barry Goldwater suggested that President Ford tap John F. Kennedy for a third term.
Romald Reagan, meanwhile, set out to North Dakota in his quest for enough delegates to upset Ford's bid for the Republican presidential nomination.
In Washington yesterday the confident Jimmy Carter campaign told the Federal Election Commission it intends conduct studies before the November election on the results.
WASHINGTON-Labor Department investigators interrogated Teamsters President Frank E. Fitzsimmons about the union's Central States pension fund reports of questionable loan practices including possible fraud and embezzlement.
Fitzsimons was questioned under subpoena from a joint Labor-Justice department task force. The subpoena was issued after he refused a request to give a statement, and either he nor any of the Labor investigators would comment about the interrogation.
Labor investigators question Fitzsimmons
Five other trustees of the fund have been subpoenaed to appear in the next several days. They include William Presser of Cleveland, a vice president of the union who has been convicted in the past of illegally accepting payments to the union from employers, obstructing justice and illegally destroying record unions.
THE 85-YEAR-OLD chief of the nation's biggest union emerged stone-faced and silent after two hours of morning questioning. He was accompanied by three deputies, who refused to identify themselves. Department officials said they were his lawyers.
Fitzsimons and the trio returned after lunch for more questioning. In all, they spent 4½ hours before the investigators. Then they returned to return Thursday for more interrogation.
Asked by a reporter what had gone on during the session, one of the three replied: "I was shocked."
During the union's national convention last month in Las Vegas, Fitzsimmons defended the fund and complained of harassment. He said the fund "has been abused." But he argued for the past two decades and has been investigated by every Dick Tracy in the land."
AS FOR himself, Fitzsimmons declared: "I have been harassed personally as far as grand juries, indictments and what-not . . . I am in receipt now of a subpoena to appear in Washington, D.C., as a few others sitting on this rostrum are."
Sources said the investigators had uncovered questionable transactions by trustees of the $1.4 billion fund, which covers 400,000 of the union's 2 million members. The sources said evidence of possible fraud and embezzlement in two fund transactions had been turned over to the Justice Department.
The investigation, under the 1974 federal Pension Reform Act restricting the way pension assets may be handled, also has helped to reduce dollars in delinquent loans, the sources said.
TRUSTEES OF the fund include Fitzsimmons, seven other union officials and eight representatives of employers of Teamster members. Under the law, the department could seek their removal. The probe has been under way since the fall.
One source said the Internal Revenue Service had told the trustees that the 15,000 employers contributing $20 million a month to the fund could deduct the money from their federal income taxes until at least Aug. 31.
The fund's investments include an estimation of the investment in hotel and rental operations. Laev Levy
As Fitzsimmons was being interrogated, industry sources said the effects of the revocation of the tax-exempt status of the fund would be less severe than expected.
The trustees have told contributors this means back taxes will not be levied against either the employers or the beneficiaries of the fund, a source said. The source added that back taxes might not be levied against and itself, although that was less certain.
The arrangement was worked out during weekend negotiations among fund attorneys and officials of the IRS and the Treasury Department.
IF THE IRS decides to levy back taxes
on the fund, it might do so only in
the form of a tax credit.
The IRS had revoked the fund's tax-exempt status last month retroactive to Jan. 31, 1965, a move that could have resulted in millions of dollars in back taxes levied against the employers, the fund itself and its beneficiaries.
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.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Newroom--864-4810
Business Office--864-4328
Editor Dierek Caskasman
Editor Brennan
Campus Editor Greg Bahaw
Associate Campus Editor Breel Brewling
Copy Chicks Rory Hewlett
Larry Fish
August at the University of Kansas daily magazine published Thursday. June and July exclude Saturday, Sunday and Holidays. Second-class scripts by mail are $1 a semester or $18 a scriptation by mail are $1 a semester or $18 a scriptation by mail are $1 a semester or $18 a year outside the university and
Business Manager ... Carl Stallard
Assistant Business Manager ... Jim Marquart
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Classified Manager ... Jolene McCarthan
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Bob Giles Mel Adama
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KU grads join alumni staff
The University of Kansas Alumni Association recruitment graduates to create postdocs.
"I'm delighted, obviously." Ridgway said yesterday. "Most of my time will be spent coordinating out-of-state alumni activities. That will be my basic responsibility."
Stephen J. Ridway, 805 Missouri, was named assistant director effective Aug. 1. He is now assistant to the manager of tours at The University of Kansas. Ridway graduated from KU in 1969.
HE SAID the Alumni Association wanted to provide more opportunities for out-of-state alumni to get together and keep informed about the association's activities.
Daniel L. Reeder, Morrisville, N.Y., will become managing editor of alumni publications Aug. 1. He received a B.S.J. in public relations at KU in 1971, an M.S. in journalism in 1974 and was assistant editor of alumni publications in 1971 and 1972. He
was director of public relations at Cowley County Community College in Arkansas City in 1972-73. He has been teaching journalism at the State University of New York Agricultural and Technical College at Morrisville since 1973.
B. J. Pette, assistant ucreator on the Alumni Association, said that although Reeder would produce the alumni magazine and thereby provide continuity important to the magazine's production. She said Reeder was chosen for his journalism skills, and Ridgway for his experience in travel programs and work with people.
Pattee said Evie Masterson Rapport, a 1970 KU journalism school graduate, would work full-time as assistant editor of alumni publications under Reeder. Rapport has been working part-time in that position for two years.
Pet sterilization program to start
According to local veterinarians, the certificates will cover one-half to one-third the total cost of the operation. The balance is to be paid by the pet's owner.
Lawrence residents who apply at the Human Society, 1805 E. 19th, will be issued certificates worth $15 toward the cost of their insurance. If they are to be done by Lawrence area representatives,
THE PROGRAM will continue until the end of the year or until 50 certificates have been received.
The Lawrence Humane Society will initiate a spaying and neutering subsidy program for cats and dogs beginning July 1st. Hess, Society president, said yesterday.
- costs and difficulties involved in
implementing a system made an
alternate plan necessary, she said.
been issued. The certificates are limited because funding for the program came from a personal gift to the center, Hess said. A city neutering program has been in the
Costs and difficulties involved in operating a full-time clinic made an alternate plan necessary, she said. The plan should be coordinated with cooperative plan with local veterinarians.
THE BUILDING will use less than twenty five per cent of the energy consumed by most modern office buildings because it will minimize the internal systems of heating and cooling, he said.
"We're very concerned about the population problem," Hess said. "It has reached epidemic proportions and there are only two solutions to the problem: we have to educate people about breeding and actually neutering cats and dogs."
VETERINARIAN Gary Olson said, "It's a good program but people won't take advantage of it. They've been doing this in California for a long time but they haven't had much success. Let's just say I'm expressing cautious optimism."
Veterinarian Jerry Leroux said, "This is just not an effective way. There is no significant decrease in the animal health, so people don't take advantage of neutering."
Massive exterior walls and greatly reduced window areas are the keys to the building's low energy consumption, Glenn said.
Bradley said the program's major flaw was that the certificates were available to students.
Building designed to save energy
The exterior walls are built on the adobe principle, with a layer of bricks surrounding the wall. The mortar is sandy.
Glenm said design requirements for the building even covered the air use in the plaster and from the toilet fixtures will be passed through charcoal filters and recycled, he said.
"They put about 100 animals to sleep each month but they won't let anyone adopt one if they can't pay the $20 to have them snaved," he said.
"I could walk in and get one," he said. They have to recruit the certificates to the paperwork.
Gleim said that because the building was planned for open offices a "white sound" or background noise will be transmitted through windows, act as a mask to cancel out other sounds.
All mechanical systems in the building are computer-controlled. The computer will turn on machinery before the workday and continue until it is eventually near the workday's end, Glenn said.
Three area veterinarians said they would honor any neutering certificates but we cannot guarantee that you will be able to do so.
"if they want to do this it's fine, but I think that it is ridiculous," William Bradley, veterarian, said. "It won't do anything to control the animal population. I've never
Gleen said the building would be warmed primarily by heat radiating from human occupants and light bulbs and be cooled by conditioning augmenting the outside air.
turned down a spaying just because someone couldn't pay for it."
All desks used in the office building will have electrical and telephone outlets built into them. Each desk is also part of an in-room power supply ground system and is individually lighted.
**HESA SID* she believed the program would benefit people who could not afford to help with her work.
BRADLEY WAS also critical of the Humane Society's policy of not allowing animals to be adopted unless they had been neutered.
Glenn said that five architectural firms had designed the three-story building. "It's a beautiful example," he said.
The veterinarian performing the surgery takes care of the remainder of the fee.
"We don't know if it will work until we try, 'Hess said. "Anything done to cure overpopulation is good. If it doesn't work then we'll try something else," she said.
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THE FIRST two stories of the building are designed with movable office floors. The floors are constructd.l with carpeted walls. In each square squares can be lifted and moved by hand.
The building will be supplied with conventional air conditioning and heating systems, but they are designed only as backups to nature.
The $12 million all-electric building is the first building especially designed to meet the energy conservation deadlines set by General Services Administration, he said.
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Design techniques ignored for 20 years will help the New Topeka Federal Office Building use less energy than any building its size in the nation, architect Dale Glenn, of the Peters, Williams and Kubota architectural firm, said yesterday.
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Gleem said that in the summer the windows would be shaded by a five-foot overland to keep the building cool. The windows should be heated with water, allowing it to heat the building.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 8, 1976
3
Comment
Women lose ground in VD case
BY BECCI BREINING
Associate Covering Editor
Venercell disease has made its court debut.
In Park County, Wyo., a jury of four women and two men recently found a New York socialist-turned-rancher, Pony Duke, guilty of giving a woman gorilla torture. He has been jailed in damages, and although a woman won, the issue of women's rights suffered a setback.
The lawyer for the 35-year-old secretary proved three things to win the landmark decision. First, he proved that the defendant was the source of House's infection. Second, he proved that the infection left her permanently in pain and with only a 12 per cent chance of having children with it. Third, he proved that the jury that the defendant was liable for House's health problems because he knew he could be carrying nerve disease.
The woman's lawyer likened the risk of contracting gonorrhea to the risk of being hit while crossing a street. People should be free to engage in sexual activity without fear, just as they should be able to cross a street without fear, he said.
BUT THE lawyer pressed for more than basic rights. Unfortunately, he argued his case from the standpoint of women's rights.
Because VD symptoms are hidden in women until advanced stages (in men they are immediate and in dramatic), women should have special care said the lawyer. The lawyer said he hoped the case would "serve to stop the suffering of women everywhere from this kind of degradation."
Clearly, the term "women's rights" was abused. A woman can give VD to a man just as easily as he can to her. Regardless of symptoms and when they occur, the issue isn't one of women's rights. It's one of human rights.
To think that the law should provide women protection from "the ravages of D" and not give the same consideration to female gender, recognize gender. That's why it's social.
It seems the lawyer molded a popular cause to suit his needs. He disguised the case in a cloak of women's rights, and the predominantly female jury bought it.
It's unfortunate that a significant cause
suffered at the hands of someone who contorted it in order to pocket his share of a 7-factor compensation. Women's rights are under attack in many parts of the treatment of their cause, especially in court.
HIT HAS been said there is no justice for women as long as laws are made and administered by men. That is wrong. There is no justice for women as long as laws are made and administered by men (and women) who believe in legalism deserve different legal considerations.
The lawyer for Housen might have taught him he was doing woman a favor. He did only that and then left.
Karen DeCrow, lawyer and president of the National Organization of Women, has said that women fare miserably under the POCA framework "for them". The VD case is evidence of that.
Some people may be shocked that such a case has made an appearance on our blog, and the doodles. Others, who are merely amused, may get upset by getting a cold from a drinking glass?
British journal says England should be state
LONDON (AP) — Britain's respected Economist magazine, its stiff upper lip twitching with a hint of laughter, published yesterday a "declaration of dependence" proposing that Britain become the 51st State of the Union.
In a paraphrase of Thomas Jefferson's 1778 document, the usually staid economics and current affairs journal catalogued the sins of the British government:
"They have erected a multitude of new offices and sent out swarms of officers to harass our people and eat out their substance. . .
They have reduced the value of the point to just about 1,766 dollars, which is an exaggeration.
The item endured with the declaration "that this island is, and of right ought to be, the fifty-first state . . . of the United States of America and Britain."
Lest anyone in economically troubled Britain take it as a real call to rebellion, the Economist prominently subbed the piece: "Here's an only just tongue-in-cheek document disgruntled and rebellious Britons might like to sign."
United Tribes aids 80 students
About 80 University of Kansas students received financial relief this summer through a United Tribes of Kansas program, which is sponsored throughout the state by the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA).
Nanette Robbideaux, of the Office of Native American Alliance, said yesterday, "The purpose is to provide persons with jobs and to help them continue with school."
The 10-week program is federally funded through Title I and Title III, national higher
education acts, and is designed to provide campus offices with additional staff members. The program, in its first year, runs from June 5 to August 13.
"WE MOSTLY have minorities who are working at such sites as libraries, stadium maintenance, the Affirmative Action office, language labs and Building and Grounds," he said. "The program specifies that employment must be at nonprofit businesses."
Malpractice . . .
From page one
ance until last Thursday when the legislation became effective.
Dunn said proponents of "going bare" failed to state potential risks.
During 27 years of practice, he said he had never been sued. He said he had carried maipractice insurance intermittently during that time, usually when frightened peers told him he ought to be insured or when premiums were low.
"In a judgment against the person without assets, his house and furniture could be sold or his income could be garrisoned long as it takes to pay off the judgment."
Insurance companies are not "losing their shirts as they claim," he said.
Doctors ought to spend their time and expense bringing insurance companies to account rather than trying to remake the legal system, Dunn said.
"The amount of premium money in a given year in Kansas so far exceeds the total payout for settlements and judgments," Dunn said.
A New York insurance company, he said, claimed it had lost millions in a year, but an examination of its books showed the money was being managed of its investment portfolios.
"Either the doctors are being robbed or they are being murdered by nudginess of psychiatrists in other states."
"Either the doctors are being robbed blind in Kansas or they are paying for the negligence of physicians in other states," Dunn said.
On Campus
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THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS THEATRE'S 1976 SUMMER THEATRE FESTIVAL
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Thursday, July 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Entertainment
CORALIS
Howling Woolf
Martha, portrayed by Maureen Hawley, berates George, portrayed by David Cook, in the University Theatre's presentation of
"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" The play will run through July 10th.
No weak spots in 'Woolf'
Bv GREGG HEJNA
Staff Writer
The University Theatre production of Edward Albee's powerful drama, "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" is representative of how good the college stage can be.
The play takes place one not-so-average night in the lives of two college professors, who are almost complete opplies, and are even less similar than their husbands.
What begins as a social call by the younger couple, Nick and Honey, degenerates into a series of cold, dehumanizing games with George and Edward, who are brought to a chilling climax by the hanging spectre of the older couple's son.
WHEN THE PLAY was first presented 14 years ago, the profanity-drenched script came under attack, but the language is not profane for profanity's sake.
The viewer acts as an unseen visitor in the souls of the characters, who react as real people. The language of the play only obscures the feeling of a frightening reality.
There are only four characters in the cast of "Virginia Woolfe," and all are major parts. There is nowhere to hide a weak member. It is to the credit of director Carol Blitten's casting and to the actors themselves that the play stands.
HIS LECTURE-LIKE delivery is excellent. Cook's voice is musical but not sing-song, and is reminiscent of the Shakespearean Richard Burton. It's his strongest quality, and he makes good use of it.
David Cook is George, an overweight history professor who is "90 something and looks like 55." Cook's grayed hair and glasses give a visual believability to his character.
Although the play is a drama there are moments of humor, and Cook's dry, flippant delivery of these lines both underplays and to them that is not felt until they pass by.
George's wife, Martha, is played by Maureen Hawley. Hawley plays Martha's bitchy, brassy, vulgar personality to the girls. She dangles a dagger in one hand a drink in the other. When she tells George that she wears the pants in the family, there's no doubt she's a woman.
Her marriage to George has been disintegrating for 23 years. She bates him for his failures and emasculates him relentlessly. Yet, she complains of their communication, saying there's "not a moment when we can together."
AT ONE point in the play Mara seduces Nate, a young biology professor recently hit by a car accident.
Nick, played by Mike Wise, has come to George and Martha's for a late night drink following a party for the new faculty members. He and his wife, Honey, played and became first spectators and later participants in the older couple's ritualistic games.
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honey spends most of her time getting honey on brandy and vomiting. She sobs in her sleep and drinks.
*
Laird portrays Honey well, looking like a sorority girl staggering through a lost weekend. Honey becomes less of what she first seems to be, slipping into a frightened, neurotic woman as the games they play strip away her facade.
WDE DOES an excellent job with the role of Nick, Honey's husband. As the tail,
The actors react as they should and never wander aimlessly. Neither are they riveted to one spot. Biltown shows that she knows where to move, back to the audience and get away with it.
the play walks the fine line between too much directing and too little.
"Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" is an excellent evening of theater, thanks to the ensemble work of director, cast and crew. The play shows what can be found in a college theater when all the elements necessary for a fine production are present.
"Disaster '78" features a mid-air explosion aboard a jet liner, which crashes into a skyscraper and sets it afire, which causes an ocean liner to dam to burst, forming a tidal wave that capsizes an ocean liner whose passengers are left to drift in shark-infested taters. The best thing about "Disaster '78" is that you will never see more than five minutes of
By CHUCK SACK Contributing Writer
Those five minutes are interspersed in the regular 90 minutes of the film "Drive-In." The character inventory for "Drive-In" is almost the same, with the focus within-the-movie. The main cast consists of two would-be criminals, the hero and his kid brother, the heroine and her two girlfriends, the theater manager and his friend, a lawyer. A couple, and a black M.D. and his wife.
Every figure in the film specializes in homepause metaphors or snappy put-downs. One of them brags, "I don't need luck anymore than a tomatick needs a marriage license." A typical insult runs, "To be a biger idiot, you'd have to put on weight."
Everything that could go wrong in 20 years in the busiest outdoor moviehouse happens in three hours at the Alamo, a dinky drive-in in a small Texas town. It is indicative of Bob Pete's screws that the bandits use to confront the hero's kid brother is taken hostage and then helps the outlaws plan their caper.
Tacky as namesake, 'Drive-In' is still fun
What could have been a noxious tale about oversized cars driven by under-sized kids (standard drive-in fare of the "Eat My Dust" variety) is made palatable by the unassuming style of the film. The glimpses that weet of "Disaster 76" are convincing to those who know what Amateu didn't have access to the outkinds from "Towering Inferno," "Airport 76," and "Earthquake." While the special effects are deliberately corry, "Disaster 78"
The secret is in Amateuse's skillful juggling of the multiple storylines. With a completely unknown cast, five major plot threads, and another mini-move to keep coherent, this feat, in the vernacular of the genre, makes for "the trickier than dianping Siamese twins."
Director Rod Amateau evidently recognized the worth of his raw materials, so everything-plot, dialogue, situations and jokes—as treated in quick throwaway dialogs—inside its defects, which are legion, "Dr. Dreit-in" delivers consistent entertainment.
is obviously a parody of current Hollywood blockbusters, complete with all-star casts.
Since it would be worth the price of an admission to not have to see what's on screen at the Alamo, one is more than content to watch the amateurs. The acting, especially in the case of the hero and the villain, are set up as anything more than shallow high school kids, it works in context.
Gradually, it becomes apparent that Amateau and Peete haven't limited themselves to parodying one recent trend in film-making. The format here, superficially similar to "American Gritti," demonstrates all of the virtues of smaller, more intimate movies.
Or, as the Statler Brothers describe it in a song that floats through the soundtrack while the characters cruise in their cars, roller skate at the rink, or wait for the ball to start. "Whatever Happened to Randolph Scott has happened to the industry."
"Drive-In," which has the technical polish of a glorified home-movie, is really more fun than any film that I've been in Lawrence for the last two months. It has a vitality that turks like "The Omen," or that turkies clacks like "Logan's Run" lack.
The mundane stories of kid brothers, insignificant fistfights and couples splitting up all look preferable to the tripe in the movie-within-the-movie. The villain of "Drive-In" is a ganglehead who owns a customized van, and even he opts for "Ozzie" when he returns on his portable TV, rather than watch the parade of catastrophes.
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In act two George and Nick weave a maze of conversation as Nick's true personality begins to surface. The awareness he has entering the house begins to fall away, and he relaxes his guard as George keeps filling his drinks.
athletic stud. Nick becomes the foil for Martha's revenge on George.
Through all of this, Wise's portrayal of
Ick is nearly perfect. The man knows how to
speak, but not exactly how to talk.
Movie Fare
Nick and Honey enter a seemingly carefree married couple and depart with their lives altered. They will never again be together, and the pain of life into the roles of these two people.
COMPLEMENTING the fine acting of
their director, Tara Bilgeran,
Bilgert direction. Her tight control over
her body is a hallmark.
DEATHRACE 2000—David Carradine gives a mechanical performance in this refreshingly idiotic chase film. The movie, which was filmed on board and paint, but evidently that's where the miniscule waste was spent; since the money didn't go for scripting or
PARADISE NOW-A hybrid of filmed theatre. This剧本 (with minimal standard camerawork) the Living Theatre's production of the title play.
MURMER OF THE HEART—This naturalistic comic about a young bourgeois boy centring of age in an unprofessional role. It stars the heroine Male's best. Benoit Ferron gives an adopt portrayal of Lauret, the boy, but his mother, as his mother, who steals the show.
GUS—Another workhorse family picture from the Disney Studio. This time
the lovable critter is a mule that kicks
Disengage brain before attending.
GATOR-Actor Burt Burrydoes needs enough rights thing to compensate for the miscalculations of director Burt Reynolds, and Jerry Reed throws in an appearance as the slimy vain to make the southern soaper passable entertainment.
LOGAN'S RUN—This futuristic manuit pursuits to be the season's first white man chasing Runners and everyone else chasing pleasure. It is revealing that the elements of the film provide the material for a very different Peter Ustinov's portrait of the old man.
THE OMEG—Gregory Peck and Lee Remick star as an older couple who get duped into providing a foster home for the child in their childhood, is that it is impossibly slow.
Inge director new Theatre head
Staff Writer
Ru SUSAN APPIERURV
Maintaining the strength of the University of Kansas theater department is the primary goal of Ron Willis, newly appointed director of the University Theatre.
Willis, professor of drama and drama,
begins his duties on Monday, July 19th.
Willis described the theater department as a "large, multi-headed operation."
“This is not a one-man department,” “Willis said yesterday. “A theater department can reflect its director only so much. My job is to keep it moving forward. One of my goals is to maintain its strength, to keep it alive from the academic and the entertainment.”
Wills said he also wanted to further develop the touring program for KU's plays. He's planning a spring tour for "The Wonderful Life" and a series of 'Tol', an ensemble theater piece.
Wills succeeds Jed Davis, professor of speech and drama, who has been director for the past nine years. Davis is resigning to resume full-time teaching.
Willis was notified Tuesday of his appointment by Bobby Patton, head of the speech and drama department.
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Willis received his bachelor's degree in theater at Rutgers University, New Jersey. He earned his Master of Fine Arts at the University of Iowa and his Ph.D. at the University of Iowa.
Before coming to KU in 1970, Willis was director of theater at the University of Colorado. Last summer he was guest speaker at the University of Nevada at Las Vegas.
—MUCH MORE—
Wills is also National Chairman of the playwriting awards program of the Ballet Theatre Festival. The program fosters the talents and helps them develop, Wills said.
Wills will resign his position as director of the luge Memorial Theatre, which he has held for five years. As director, Wills will be coordinator produced by student directors.
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Although Willis will be teaching fewer cases because of his new job, he will still teach them.
"Playwriting is an area of particular interest for me." Willis said.
His new job will not immediately interfere with his play directing because he isn't scheduled to direct any plays next year, he said.
Wills has directed "House of the Blue Leaves", "The Glass Menagerie", and "Long Day's Journey into Night" for the University Theatre.
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NOTICE
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
rROM: Jim Cox, Student Senate Treasurer
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
1. Attend a TRAINING SESSION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
4. Account for All Inventory.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following time:
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No other sessions will be held this summer
You must contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-
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funded from the Student Senate activity fee
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 8, 1976
5
Union renovations to ease crowded office conditions
By BERNEIL JUHNKE
Staff Writer
Crowded conditions in student organization offices in the Kansas Union will be alleviated by renovations this fall. Frank Burke, Union director, said yesterday.
Burge said improvements in the 19 student organization offices, which are located mainly on the third level of the Union, would involve routine building upkeep improvements to be completed by the fall semester.
He said that it would be difficult to say exactly what costs for the student office improvements would be because they were expensive. He thought about $4,000 would be spent.
BURGE SAID the heating, ventilating and air conditioning system would be adjusted where necessary. Walls and cardboard panels, bulletin boards provided for the offices.
The Union plans to improve security in the student offices by installing new locks and heavy aluminum bars in spaces above doors, he said.
The Student Senate offices will have more work space for senators and committees when the room now used by the business department is converted into a meeting area, Burke said.
All office machines that are currently scattered in several rooms will be put into use.
THE PUBLIC Relations Director's office will be converted into a reception room, as a receptionist.
fices, according to Tom Mitchell, Student Senate business manager.
Teddie Tasheff, student body president,
" said The Student Senate has suffered in the past for not having efficient office space to help students and student organizations.
Work would be done before meetings if there was a spot for committee members to meet."
When SUA moved into its present offices six years ago, he said, there were two staff members and one secretary. There are now seven staff members plus part-time help.
Mike Miller, Union activities adviser,
said SUA would occupy two offices
halfway used by Consumer Affairs on the fifth floor. The fourth would increase office space for SUA by half.
"WITH A doubled staff and a large increase in the volume of business we do, we are literally running out of space," Miller said.
Consumer Affairs moved to an office on the third level July 1.
Burge said an attempt would be made to separate the auditing and ticket activities from the program planning activities in the SUA office.
Money budgeted for maintenance in the fiscal year 1977 capital improvements budget for the Union will be used for the operations he said.
The Union's maintenance staff will do the repairs and renovations.
"Student use of these office areas has reached an all-time high," Burge said. "We'd like to provide the most attractive, efficient office space we can."
KU to co-star with Royals
Kansas Jayhawk Night with the Kansas City Royals has been changed to Kansas Jayhawk Afternoon because the July 17 game was cancelled. Red Sox will be televised nationally.
The Royals called Bill Coughlin, chairman of the Alumni Association committee planning the event, about a week ago to change the game time from 7:30 to 1:30 p.m. Coughlin said the Alumni Association had instructed players to be out February, but NBC schedules its Saturday "Game of the Week" only two or three weeks in advance.
The time change seemed to have slowed reservations, Coughlin said, but the switch was not working.
Reservations for seats in the special KU section must be made through the Alumni Center.
THE ROYALS were delighted," he said, "and of course, it's going to be good for the University. too. It's a greater opportunity for national exposure than ever before."
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes will throw out the first ball. He and the KU Jayhawk mascots will be on the field before the game and during the national anthem, taped by the band. Band. A KU ROTC color guard will provide the colors preceding the national anthem.
More than 1,000 reservations have been made so far, Coughlin said.
A post-game party will be in the Royals' banquet facility, adjacent to the Stadium Club. Admission tickets are $1 and must be received advance through the Alumni Association.
GOV. ROBERT F. Bennett has been invited to attend the Guest Lecture, whether he will attend.
The game will be blacked out for a 75-mile radius around Kansas City. Those who maze reservations for the time change may need to call the Alumni Association office, Coughlin said.
SUA
Summer
Films
Fri., July 9
7:30 p.m.
Based on a futuristic cross-country demolition derby, with David Carridine. "An Orwellian vision of the American 'fue.'"—Lawrence Van Gelder, Th. New York Times.
DEATHRACE 2000
$1.00
ALL FILMS
SHOWN IN WOODRUFF
AUDITORIUM
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TRANSFER SALE
(THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY)
Woman carrying a banner in front of two people carrying clothes in hangers.
We combed all our other stores from corner to corner, rack to rack, and transferred all exciting summer fashions to our Lawrence store at enormous savings . . .
- DRESSES * SWIMSUITS
- SKIRTS
- SCARVES
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1/2 OFF AND MORE
Open Thursday
Evenings
'til 8:30
- TOPS
the VILLAGE SET
the VILLAGE SET
- METCALF SOUTH • BLUE RIDGE • PLAZA
- PRAIRIE VILLAGE - LAWRENCE
Brett and Lynn will be joined in the starting lineup by catcher Thurman Munson of the New York Yankees, first baseman Rod Carre of the Minnesota Twins, third baseman Baltimore Orioles, shortstop Toby Harry of the Texas Rangers and outfielders Ron
All Sales Final Entire Stock Not Included
NEW YORK (AP)—Kansas City third baseman George Brett, the American League's leading hitter and Boston outspoken player, was among the valuable Player and Rookie of the Year last year, are among the eight starters named yesterday to the AL team for the All-Star
Brett, Lynn win All-Star berths
The top players at each position were announced Wednesday by Baseball Commissioner Bowie Kuhn after a record 71-69 victory, balloting for the seventh straight year. The nationally televised 7th all-Star Game will be played Tuesday night at Philadelphia.
BRETT, HITTING 334 through Tuesday, was an easy winner at third base, polling 1,678,448 votes to 1,518,602 for runners-up Donovan, who scored the first appearance in the mid-season game.
LeFlore and Rusty Staub, both of the Detroit Tigers.
Lynn, the Lynn, the Red Sox centerfielder with 166 hits in the 315 red AL voters with 9266 hits.
Lefort, the Tiger's centerfielder was
lefonthe in the outfield balling with
Lhadeh.
1,770,998 www刺到 1,403,557 for second-place Carl Yastrzemski of Boston.
He was followed by Staub with 1,573,703 votes.
The balloting at shortstop was much closer, with Harrah, a 289 hitter, beating Mark Belanger of Baltimore 1,481,346 to $,233,755.
Gritch, who has the lowest batting average among the starters at 282, had an even easier time getting the starting job at second base, receiving 2,043,904 votes to 1,582,156 for runner-up Willie Randolph of New York, a rookie.
The closest race for a starting berth was among the catchers, where Munsion, a 322 hitter, edged Carlton Fisk of Boston, 2,284,577 to 2,218,875.
AT FIRST base, Carew, a five-time AL batting champion now hitting .303, polled
The National League starters will be named Thursday.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Acompoonditions, goods, services and empoly-
ment of the public health system in Nairobi.
Responsible for the management of the
INMAHIVA program, national response to HIV/AIDS,
training, community outreach and other refor-
mative activities.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five
time times times times times
time times times times times
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fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
AD DEADLINES
...01 .02 .03 .04 .05
to run:
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Wednesday 5 p.m.
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Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect injections. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
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FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ads can be placed in person or by calling the UK business office at 864-3538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
FOR RENT
864-4358
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. In person (no phone calls please) at WESTERN MOBILE HOMES, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS.
Mark I and II, nice and quiet, 1 and 2 bedroom
Mark III, very nice, very nice and close to canu.
B35-183-11
TET
2 bdr. all utilities paid, on campus. Furnished
or unfirmed. Free parking, a court, pool. 845-390-7128.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CRED.
15 East 8th 844-2100
10.5 Monday,Saturday
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7 EAST 7TH STREET
CLOSED
SUNDAY & MONDAY
HOURS 12:30-5:30
--oil piping for plates
807 Vermont 842-9455
CHECK OUT THESE
USED BIKE SPECIALS
1967 HONDA CB160
1968 HONDA XL250
1969 HONDA XL400
1970 KAWASAKI 315
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1811 W. 6th 843-3333
THE TEMPLE OF KING GEORGE V
Mexican Food
American and
Aztec Inn
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale!
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Makes sense to use them —
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2. For class presentation
3. For class preparation
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Available now at Town Crier Stores. tt
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialties
BEL AIR ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900, W. 6th, Ct.
ELECTRIC, 843-900-3900, W. 6th, Ct.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS--Regardless of any prices you see on your high equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, you can choose the GAMROPHONE SHOP at KIEF. If so, contact us.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7041
W. 35th Street, New York, NY 10024.
Panasanic receiver with speakers. small sym-
phonic room. 48x72. Call 614-454-1489 after 8 p.m.
748 West 30th Street, NY, 10022.
ARRIVED JARRIEL? Another shipment of "Our
Supplier" Repair Reg. # 8490 $4.99 The ATTIC 297 Med. Unit
THEME HERE! Large selection of "Our Special"
THEATRE HERE! Regular price $6.99—now $5.99
THE ATTIC: 971 Mass. Number
B.T.C VENTUH POMMUA 6 Skp system with
the new $250 for $500, will insure for $300;
and the new $400 for $800.
On all screen, C.B.s and TV for the home,
and on ear at Ray Audit 13 E. B. St. #28
20047
Male childbirth instructor. Class easy to save for care of newborns, as well as those their husband has finished. American provincial college program.
FOUND
67 VW bus, must sell. $225. Runs very well. 842.
426 evening. 7-12
Kernwood KR-6400 stereo receiver with 45 watt
chassis and a two-way load-
power speaker system. PSI GA-2-A supports
torture tunable. All components under warranty.
Supports specifications and excellent condition.
842-6728.
1945 Ford station wagon A/T, good condition.
- 403-8968. Ask for Stephanie or Paul.
7-15
HELP WANTED
A Brendale Askin puppy. Owner may claim by identifying and picking it up. Pick 84-838-70, 7-12 Ladies watch was found near KU band and drill team practices. Pick 84-982-68, 7-9
full-time position for ten months study of sub-
tropical ecoregions in geology, with experience in working with
natural resources and in field work. Live in area of field work for weeks. Knowledge
of field techniques used by Kansai Geological Survey,
Kansas Geological Survey (4891), Kansai Geological Survey is
an Equal Opportunity and men, and of all races,
played in geologic position.
尹
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
ROOTS MATS, IRONS
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOI
Open 9 30 a.m. to 8 p.m.
www.saddlebridle.com
]
BankAmericard Mastercharge
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Flatted Sheets
WATERBEDS
712Mass.St.
FIELDS
Downtown Lawrence 842-7137
AVON-ear extra money for college and vocation. Call the school to train you. Call Mr. Sells, 812-852-6126. 7-6
Bureau of Child Research, needs two part-time positions to work from July 12 to August 15. Approximately 20 applicants are being contacted. Contact Alice Atwater at cbp@bcrc.org or call (866) 342-7121. Priorly, employe, qualified men and women with a bachelor's degree in education.
Garbage needs experience display person. Please apply in person at 840 Massachusetts. 7-12
Substitute house parents for small group-care
members of the intellectual and behavioral
problems. Call 843-616-6016.
Douglas County is receiving applications for position of paramedic (civil defense). Salary $10,000 to $15,000 annually. Optional clinical and communicative abilities are essential. Benefits include health insurance, retirement benefits include health insurance, retirement benefits include trade credit or made prior to July 20 at office of should be employed by the St. Ramon office, 13 Mass St. St. Ramone should accompany
full-time position for ten month's study of sub-
surface tar sands. Minimum of bachelor's degree
in geology or related field is required. Minimum
dilling rig required. Must be willing to
live in an area of 10K work for a knowledge
base in geology. Please contact W.-J. Ehanks, J. Kanaas Geological Sur-
vey, 725 West 46th Street, Augusta, GA 30982,
July 15, 1976. The Kansas Geological Survey is
an Opportunity Affirmative Action em
ployee of the government and men, all race
-uraged to apply.
Feature film casting. Student project for com-
posing a 60-minute TV show, will format short
video with 90 minutes of TV style will show
composition of lead female roles. Must be attractive, 18-30. Some experience in video production, sound man and script supervisor. Call NB Pro-
fessors.
LOST
Lost, little gold wedding band near baseball fields behind Watkins. Call 843-4065. Z-R
or 3 or 7 keys on key holder that says "Worlds of Fun" on it. Offer reward. 841-797-7, 7-18
NOTICE
Swap Shop, 620. Mass. Used furniture, disks,
drives, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12-5pm.
1234 Main Street, New York, NY 10017.
Cult it these hot aftersmiles with fruits and
foats, patafits and peaches, Gold Cup ice cream
and chocoalte cheese at the Casbah Cafe, 803
black door; Dinner too, till 8:30 each.
Sundays.
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't he will make it. George's Golf Shop, 737-589-4100.
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 845-0110. If you lived my metadog at the fireworks, please take a picture, I did not get the CBT, P.O. Box 3506.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring—Competent, experienced man can help you through courses 002, 102, 105, 118, 121, 124, 121, 122, 150, 500. Reasonable sessions or one-time preparation. Heavily倦怠. Rate: 7-28
843-7681.
NAPA
N. A.P.A.
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
fer: 1 Special Prices.
For ff offer:
Auto Parts
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
530 Wisconsin
843-9404
TUTOR
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mime-
ature, and/or speech writing; spellcheck,
split误写; 843-565-8191
WANTED
Typet /editor, IBM Pica /site, Quality work.
Typet /editor, IBM Pica /site, Distributions welcome.
Nail, 802-391-7278
Bob, 802-391-7278
Wayne Pool—Owner
TYPING
Open 2 p.m. - 3 a.m.
Dancers 3:10-3:10 p.m.
Membership Available
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Testing, programming, software development,
bases, dissertations, paper electronics. A *Social*
science major. Master's degree required.
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents 7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 after 6 p.m.
If
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 642-4475, after
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours). 7-29
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Roommate roommate wanted. Own room, $3/month
electricity. Prefer neat, last 12 months.
84-7579-7890
Position wanted: Qualified legal secretary leaving Kansas City mid-August, demand any available position on request. Patricia Kobusch (Mh) Patricia Kobusch (Mh) Walnut, Kansas City, Mt 64112. 7-15
GRAMOPHONE
AZ 1811 AXN FOR STATION 4
SHOP
Baby sister is needed for Thursday afternoons and
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STATE OF THE ART
YAMAHA
Audio Components
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion Than Most Storee Components
Female roommates need to share large house
$78.50 month 1/ utilizes 84/876 or 84/1314
$90.00 month 2/ utilizes 84/940 or 84/1314
Stay Cool Hours - Summer Stays
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
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new summer hours
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Gentlemen's Quarters
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
W. 9th & III.
Creative haircutting for men and women
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD AND STEREO
---
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OFF
SUA Maupintour travel service
Kansas Union Building
AIRLINE FARES
- Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
Chilled Glasses
THE HAWK
quality travel arrangements since 1951
& Schooners
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
Phone 843-1211
Pitcher Night Wednesday
THE WHEEL
- Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
- Sandwiches
Outdoor Beer Garden
"Beat the Summertime Blues at 14th and Ohio"
6
Thursday, July 8, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports
KU stars Olympic-bound
By BRYANT GRIGGS
The smoke has cleared at the U.S. Olympic Track and Field Trials in Eugene, Ore. Of the 22 current and former KU athletes entered, only Mark Lutz, Terry Porter and Sam Colson will compete in the Montreal Games in August.
The three are all former KU All-Americans.
The 22 athletes who had attended KU gave the University more athletics than any other college or university at the trials, Bob KuU head track coach, said Tuesday.
TIMMONS SAID Oregon University had qualified the most athletes, four, in the 2015 season.
The strong representation in the trials
resumes to the University's strong track
results.
KU alumnus Lutz will compete in the 2004 NCAA tournament. In the Larrieu, will compete in the 1500-meter event.
"As far as I know that's the only couple in the Games." Timmons said.
Latz beat KU hopeful Clifford Wiley, 4-2, to snuggle Snub in the 19th and 20nd-meter dashes.
Lutz's best effort at KU was a 20.3 in the yard-dash and 0.5 in the 100-yard dash in
IN THE U.S. Track and Field Federation meet in Oklahoma City in 1974, Lutz ran the 309-yard dash in 30.3, just one-tenth of a second off the world record.
Lutz and his wife are now members of the Pacific Coast Track Club in California.
Timmons said he thought Lutz would do well in Montreal.
"Lutz is now running like he ran four years also," he said.
Terry Porter was one of four pole vaulters to make the U.S. squad. Porter transferred to KU in 1973 after an outstanding career at Ranger, Texas, Juco. He was the only juco performer to clear 17-fet and won on the national junior college championship there.
PORTER WON both the indoor and outdoor Big Eight crowns in 1973 with vaults of 17.4% and 17.4. He has recently cleared the 18-foot mark.
"Porter has real good speed, is a great competitor and is really tough mentally. He always seems to keep coming back after some of the worst problems." Timmons
Sam Colson is the NCAA record holder in his career in 1973 and in 1978. He was Bie Bril channel 5.
Colson is working toward a master of business degree at Clermann and coaches on the job.
COLSON FINISHED EENTH in the Olympic trials finals in 1972. Latz was also entered as a winner.
Timmons was cautious about Colson's chances at the Games because of a chronic muscle pull sustained in the lower part of Colson's back.
"He's had it quite a while and it's doubtful that he'll be ready before the Games begin.
Softball coach is out; new contract refused
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Sharon Drysdale, assistant professor of physical education and coach of the women's softball team for four years, has been rehired for the 76-77 academic year.
Marion Washington, director of women's athletics, announced Monday Drydale's contract hadn't been renewed for the coming year. A consolidation plan within the women's athletic program and a personal conflict between Drydale and herself that divided the program were the reasons for the action, Washington said.
Drysdale said yesterday that she had known of the plan to consolidate the softball and volleyball coaching jobs, but that she didn't know of any division in the women's sport because a program that could have been caused by a conflict between Washington and herself.
"From the outset, I was faced with
At the time, Drysdale was coordinator of the women's athletics program, then a coach in the women's sports department. Drysdale's duties were the same as hers are now. Washington said, but since the program was much smaller then, Drysdale's duties were on a reduced
WASHINGTON SAID his appointment as assistant athletic director for women's intercollegiate athletics two years ago was met with hostility from Drysdale and who Washington called her "supporters." He was also a candidate for that position.
Area track club and city dept. sponsor meet
The third annual Lawrence Track and Field Championships, sponsored by the Lawrence Track Club and the Lawrence University will be Saturday at KU's Memorial Stadium.
The relay events, beginning at 10 a.m.
will be the 440- and 880-yard medleys.
Beginning at 1 p.m. are the individual
events; hurdles, 100, 220, 400
and 880 yards.
Field events, to begin at 12:30 p.m. are the high jump, long jump, triple jump, pole vault, shot put, and discus.
Pre-registration forms, meet rules and event listings are available at the Lawrence Parks and Recreation Department, 910 Massachusetts.
hostility from Drysdale and her group of supporters. Although I had the option not to keep her on my staff, I did so in an effort to get her to understand that it is good (tough) gestures," Washington, said.
"I talked frequently with Drysdale about her apparent lack of cooperation, but her interests and cooperation had been confined to the softball diamond," she said.
THE SITUATION came to a head in the spring.
"I repeatedly asked her to cut down on her traveling squad because her team's trips were consistently over budgeted figures," she said.
Drysale told Washington that was impossible and didn't attempt to handle the situation in a professional manner, Washington said.
Washington said she and Drysdale would meet today and would issue a joint statement to clarify the events of the past few weeks.
DRYSALED SAID she was unaware of the alleged hostility or divisions of which Washington spoke. She said the letter she received notifying her of her release listed the hostility of the softball and volleyball coaching job as the reason she wasn't retained.
"If things stay the way they are now, we'll be looking elsewhere," she said. "I've been coaching this team for four years now and we've built the program into something really good. It's a situation that's going to be hard to give up."
An injured back is a definite disadvantage to a jujuin thrower because it has an effect on the pelvis and shoulder.
Of the 22 athletes eligible to compete in the trials, only 21 were able to go. Anthony Coleman, Dallas freshman hurdler, was unable to stay in summer school, Tremmons said.
Royals slip by NY,2-1
NEW YORK (AP)—Amos Gits delivered a saffron fly to score Frank White with one in the ninth inning, giving the Kansas City Royals a 2-1 victory over Caffrey Hunter and the New York Yankees last night.
After Andy Hassler, making his first appearance for Kansas City, matches seven scoreless innings with Hunter, both teams scored in the eight, the Royals on Hal McRae's fourth homer and the Yankees get a run in the bottom of the innings.
Reliever Mark Littell, 5-3, who struck out Thurmand Munson with runners at first and third to end the Yankees' eighth, was credited with the victory although Steve Miorigan pitched the ninth and recorded his fifth win in a game-set series, which the Royals took 3-1.
Hassler retired the first six New York batters, striking out four. Healy opened the third with a single, but a double play ended the inning.
Except for the mild two-out threat in the fifth and the tainted run in the eighth, the Yankees got a runner past first base in five games. The sixth took the stalemate in nine meetings this season.
Baseball Standings
W L Pet. GB
Pittsburgh 23 12 371
Pittsburgh 44 12 371
Pittsburgh 44 12 371
St. Louis 34 46 430
St. Louis 34 46 430
Chicago 34 46 425
Chicago 34 46 425
Cincinnati 51 11 27 632 — %
Los Angeles 51 27 632 — %
San Diego 42 44 109
Atlanta 38 34 469 12%
Rhode Island 38 44 469 12%
Boston 38 44 469 12%
San Francisco 38 44 469 12%
NATIONAL LEAGUE Easi
Chicago 10, San Diego 0
Los Angeles 9, Cleveland 5
Philadelphia 6, Philadelphia 5
Cincinnati 4, Minnesota 3
Detroit 2, New York 1
New York 11, Houston 4
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York W L 17 30 Pet. GB
Boston 38 36 590 41
Cleveland 38 36 590 41
Dearborn 38 36 590 41
Baltimore 37 36 423 41
Ballimore 37 36 423 41
W
Kansas City
Texas
Minnesota
Chicago
California
49 30 620 4
44 31 371 -4
37 42 688 12
36 25 468 12
38 26 417 12
Yankees' Game 6
Chicago 6, Boston 7
Cleveland 4, New York 1
Kansas City 2, Ohio 1
Detroit 2, Texas 1
California 2, Cleveland 0
Washington 3
the CRAMOPHONE shop
342-1811...Ask for Station No. 6
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on Columbia
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---
THE ATTIC
927 Mass. Street
Our "Special" T-shirts are here!
The 4-Stitch collar and sleeve
T-shirts have finally
come to Lawrence.
100% cotton-
Top spring colors
Reg. $6.00
Sale $4.90
THE ATTIC
927 Mass. Street
JAZZ
Exclusive Sounds of Jazz and the Blues
FRIDAY: Joe Utterbach Trio
SATURDAY: Ray Ehrhart
Old time Dixieland piano player, playing with the Gaslight Gang
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass. Open 8 p.m. 842-9458 or 843-8575
FRIDAY: Joe Utterbach Trio
SATURDAY: Ray Ehrhart
Old time Dixieland piano
player, playing with
the Gaslight Gang
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass. Open 8 p.m. 842-9458 or 843-8575
---
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
"AND THOU SHALT REMEMBER ALL THE WAY THE LORD THOR! GOD HAIL LED THEE FORESE T forty YEARS." — Deuteronomy 6:2. For your consideration: The same Lord God has led our nation these 150 old years. 1777-1930. Generally speaking, it was in the 1930's our nation and her government began to turn away from honoring and following after the God of our fathers. The God of the Bible, His way, has been so powerful that the God of our money "in God We Trust," and still do, in spite of the fact that we have "cast away the Law of the Lord of Hosts" in many respects: concerning idolatry, profaneness, Sabbath desecration, dihonoring of father and mother, murder, adultery, stalting, false witnessing, and covetousness — "covetousness is idolatry." Christ said of Himself: "The Lord is my savior, I am his Lord; His Lordship of the sacred day and turned it over to the kings of sport, the world, the flesh, and the devil? Also, do we not almost boast that we have nearly done away with the death penalty commanded by The Almighty, and are saving the lives of murderers, raplains, womemongers, homosexuals, and others whom God commanded His people to put to death and send their spirits back to Him who gave us the gift of life and our heavy and growing crop of crime. thieves, lilars, coveteurs, etc."
"BE NOT DECEIVED; GOD IS NOT MOCKED; FOR WHAT SOEVER A MAN SOWTH, THAT SHALL HE ALSO REAP. FOR THE THAT SOWTH TO HIS FLESH SHALL OF THE FLESH REAP CORRUPTION; BUT HE THAT SOWTH TO THE "SPIRIT" SHALL OF THE "SPIRIT" REAP LIFE EVERLASTING." Galatiana 8:7. 8. Since this column began over 800 times it has presented God's question to man in a profound way. The heathen is the one who states as to who are the heathen: "who they imagine a vain thing, their kings and rulers," and that "the people are against God Himself, and
His Anointed," and for the purpose of getting rid of His Laws and Commandments: "Let us break their bands as盟友, and cast away their cords from us." In this Psalm God also reveals to us the fruit and harvest of this anarchy will bring the contempt of the Almighty": He that sat in the heavens shall laugh: The Lord shall have them in his sore displeasure.
During the past thirty years or more have we not been very successful and made a good job of "breaking God's and Christ's banda assuier, and casting away their cords from us?" is not the rise of crime, rape, rott, pillage and burning of our cities good evidence that God mean what He said about "holding in derision and veiling with all adversity" who those reject His laws and Commandments?
"And God is angry with the wicked every day — — the wicked shall be turned into hell; all an the 'NATIONS' that forget God!—"
"and they turn to evil."
"I have not sent these prophets, they yet run; I have not spoken to them, yet they proshesied. But if they had stood in My counsel, and had caused My people to hear My words, then they should have turned their evil way, and from the evil of their doves." — Jeremiah 23:21, 22:1
“Of making many books there is no end — — Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter (of life and death): Fear God and keep His Commandments; for this is the whole duty of man. For God shall bring him, and he shall give it to you. Whether it be good, or whether it be evil,” Ecclesiastes 12:13-14.
"Now therefore lear the Lord and serve Him in sincerity and truth — — And if it seem evil unto you to serve the Lord, choose ye this day whom ye will serve — but as for me and my house, we will serve The Lord." Joshua 24:14, 15.
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Privacy is getting much less private, ACLU warns
RvGARV WALLACE
Big Brother may be watching you, according to Karen Blank, executive director of the Topeka branch of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLIJ)
Blank said last week that not only the federal government but the state governments, schools, banks, credit agencies, insurance companies and financial institutions you visit now and possibly violating your right to privacy.
"Since Watergate, the FBI has been so deluged with requests for personal dossiers that they are nine years behind in meeting the demand." Blank insists of the agency's role. "The firms have invaded individual privacy more so."
Students should become acquainted with files held by school administrators, Blank said. The 1974 Buckley Amendment states that schools must allow students to access records and examine their records or risk losing federal funds.
"If you examine your KU file, you might find personal information about yourself that may affect your ability to get a job," Blank said. "There have been evidence that you are vulnerable, and there has been evidence of personality rating."
Blank said she knew of no instances in which KU had violated a student's right to privacy.
KU seldom receives a high school transcript that includes teacher comments, character references and coursework. A professor or director of admissions, said. Myers said that less than 10 per cent of the transcripts received contained IQ, scores, and that only a few transcripts included recommendations of recommendation or notices of suspension.
"Our files consist of grade reports and transcripts," Myers said. "Instances in which we did receive questionable material were 10 to 15 years ago."
Information on a student's character or intelligence is more commonly gathered in high school and isn't forwarded to KU. Myers said, "We don't have a system that is not disseminated without a student's covenant."
"Even is a student flunks out, is suspended or is involved in an incident with campus security, this will not show up on their record," Myers said. "We see few online requests to see a student's records."
The ACLU recommends that if any incorrect or misleading information is in a student's file, he should request a hearing with school officials. If the information provided by the Department of Health, Education and Welfare
Some outsiders can review records without
consent: teachers and other officials of the same school who have a legitimate educational interest in a student's record, officials of another school to which a student has applied for a job, office to which a student applies for aid, certain educational data-gathering and testing agencies, and "appropriate persons" in an emergency information center.
The Buckley Amendment doesn't restrict the type of information in the record but only provides the student access and an opportunity to reply, Blank said.
"Students might also be concerned with the dossiers compiled by the federal Drug Enforcement Administration," Blank said. "Now under congressional investigation for using associate graphs, which are files on a friend of a friend of someone who was busted for drus."
Students should also be aware that their names could be in the files of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, Blank said. ACLU is currently awaiting a decision in a lawsuit against the RK in an attempt to obtain a new hearing for its records. Blank said many of those raids had occurred while Vern Miller was Kansas attorney general.
Bland also warned of possible outside use of
blank records. Those records document contacts
to the user who visited the facility.
panies, prospective employers and the government. However, they are not always available to the patient, she said.
Medical records are available to KU students, Martin Wollmann, director of health services, said. But students don't routinely have access to technical information, he said.
"Technical information includes such data as the results of lab tests," Wolmann said. "Of course, the student demands to see this we will show him, and he must sit down with him and explain the data."
Wollmann said medical information was given out only if a court subpoena was presented, which rarely occurred. Students are notified if their records are released.
Wollemann said that sometimes an insurance company would ask two or three times every month for more details regarding data a student had previously released. Wollemann his reply was that the student must sign a re-release before he could comply with the request.
The ACLIU states that 700 insurance companies belong to the Medical Information Bureau (MIB), in which affiliated firms have access to any of 12 million personal files. Much of this data information
is inaccurate and misleading, according to the ACLIU. Patients should be told that information will be shared with MIB, the ACLIU advises, and should not be disclosed to others without medical file written permission from them.
The patient waives the right to sue MIB once records are requested, so he should consult a lawyer for this request, a request the ACLU says. To obtain these records the patient must have an Essential Station, Boston, Mass., 62112. MIB will send a questionnaire and call collect within 20 days to take action, which should be made through the insurance companies.
Files are also kept on a person's credit report, Blank said. In addition to detailing one's financial history, many credit agencies compile investigative reports that may include a friend's opinion of one's character or a neighbor's comments on one's life style, she said.
If a person is denied credit, insurance or a job because of a credit report, he has the right under the Fair Credit and Reporting Act to be told the name and address of the credit agency. The agency must tell the individual all information contained in the report, including medical information, Blank said.
See PRIVACY page 4
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
WARM
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.160
5 from KU new in Who's Who
Monday, July 12; 1976
See page 3
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Remains of the harvest
Lawrence were left with only numerous bales of straw to attest to the year's haul. Yields in many fields around Douglas County are down slightly because of a frost May 3.
With most of the Kansas harvest completed or nearing completion, many fields around
Fireman says union informs men
BULLETIN
International Fire Fighters' Association Local 1596 implemented a slow work down.
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
The slow down will include no cleaning of trucks after fire runs, picketing, no station cleaning, no book keeping nor ground maintenance.
The concept of union officials dictating policy to obedient and uninformed members is inaccurate in the case of the Lawrence Penner, Lawrence fireman, said Friday.
Penner said that union leaders were keeping firemen fully informed during the current wage and benefit dispute with the city.
Penner said he and other rank-and-file firefighters were brought up to date daily by the Fire Department.
"OUR UNION leadership isn't puffed up with its own importance and hasn't put pressure on us to vote for or against the proposal. The top officials were split in their thinking about the advisability of the slowdown and they told us so." he said.
Union officials have conscientious in presentation of issues and alternatives to the law.
Penner said he supported rejection of latest offers made by the city. A work slowdown scheduled to begin today will be honored by policemen who last week accepted the city's "package" proposal, he said.
"I voted for the work slowdown because of the principle it impedes." Penner said.
"We'll still answer all emergency calls but that's it—no maintenance or cleaning of equipment will be done. We need to keep the equipment on the public and this is a means to do so."
Penner said that if the scheduled work
dowload occurs it will be primarily a
delay.
"I VOTED for it but if I had my way I'd recommend a complete strike like they did in Kansas City. A slowdown is more for the principle of the thing so the issues are kept before the city, uppermost in their mind," he said
The six per cent cost of living increase
of the official officials it a new offer
at all. Pennsylvanian
“It’s assumed that a cost of living increase will be announced each year. What we’re seeking is an additional five per cent increase in the cost of living, then the other 2.5 per cent January, 1978.”
"About one-half the membership doesn't carry the health and life insurance package in question, so this proposed benefit only affects a portion of the total firefighters," he said. "I also don't like the idea of the city telling us where to spend our money."
According to the city's proposal, the firefighters would accept health and life insurance benefits (cost reductions) in lieu of a government benefit, and he didn't favor such an alternative offer.
Penner explained that the acceptance of each alternative insurance benefits would be provided by the employer.
PENNER SAID that only merit raises given now and that those were few and infrequent.
He said men higher on the pay scale would experience greater relative losses in pay if the insurance benefit package were accepted.
Investigation of tavern fire continues to suggest arson
"For the lower to middle pay range firefighter like myself at about $800 to $900 a month, a five per cent wage increase would mean that future cost of living raises would be determined on a base salary of $40 to $45 per month. If we go the insurance company, we should be figured on the $800-$900 salary, so the result is you steadily lose ground." Penner said.
each year when cost of living increases were figured.
"ALSO, you are among those not subscribing to the union's insurance policy, the city's proposal is totally useless to you. Gain will not gain and lose a hell of a lot."
The fire began around 3 a.m. Wednesday and caused between $100,000 and $150,000 damage to the Yu building and smoke stores in the Hillcrest Shopping Center.
See FIREMEN page 4
said KBI testers have also found a fire- induced chemical on specimens that have
Carter narrows V.P. field to 7
Kasperger said that two and probably three fires had begun independently of each other in the building and that there was no evidence of breaking and entering.
NEW YORK (AP)—On the night before the Democratic National Convention, Jimmy Carter said his vice presidential nominee had been awarded to a seven-man congressional field.
Carter already has seen Sers, Walter F. Mondale of Minnesota, John Glenn of Ohio, Edmund S. Muskle of Maine and Henry M. Jackson of Washington.
He talked with Rep. Peter W. Rodino Jr. of New Jersey, and arranged to see Sems. Addi E. Stevenson III of Illinois and Frank O'Neill of Idaho today. Those are the final interviews.
Investigation into his possibility of arson in last Wednesday's fire at the Yuk Up and Kyu Down taverns is continuing, Fire Chief John Kasberer said yesterday.
CARTER'S VICE presidential selection is the only major matter to be settled. "We've done the most careful possible preparation for this election," distinguished leaders all over the country ... analyzing the voting records and past attitudes of these candidates and then personal interviews by staff members and personal interviews by me," Carter said.
Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota, an expert on the perils of vice presidential selection, said Carter is making his choice for president in a medical search and with personal interviews.
"I suppose . . . I am the last person that ought to be advising anyone," McGovern said. But he added that he is personally very pleased with the names on Carter's list.
"So far as I know, the vice president will come from one of those seven people," said Kroger.
"And I have maintained an open mind deliberately until after all the interviews are done."
CARTER TOLL the National Women's Political Caucus be does not favor a mandatory quota which would insure as many Democrats at the 1980 Democratic convention.
Kasberger said specimens sent to the Kansas Bureau of Investigation from the fire for testing should be returned today or early next month, as principals in the case were being scanned.
"I think it would be a step backward," he said.
Yesterday, women's groups offered Jimmy Carter a compromise on whether men and women should be represented equally at the 1980 Democratic convention.
California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., arrived for the Democratic national convention last night and said he would remain in office until the nomination process was over.
But after the meeting, Rep. Bella Abzug reported that Carter told the women's caucus he would consider their compromise.
Rep. Abzug and other caucus leaders told Carter they would accept a proposal under which local and state party leaders would be required to take "all feasible step" to attain equal representation between sexes at the 1989 party gathering.
The arson investigation was stepped up Thursday when a five-gallon gas can and traces of a flammable liquid were found at the scene of the fire, Kasberger said. He
Brown, leading his state's dedication, was asked whether he would withdraw if the convention tried to nominate front runner Jimmy Carter by acclamation.
"MY NAME will be in nomination," he told reporters at John F. Kennedy Airport. "I don't think it's appropriate just to walk over the process is rather inevitable."
Brown, who has 204 of 280 California delegates, would not say who would place his name in nomination but said reporters should ask him later.
Starry future ahead for sci-fi, Gunn says
Bv JAMES MURRAY
"I think there is more diversity and opportunity in the field now than ever before." Gunn said Friday. "And, for the first time ever, a science fiction book has made the best seller list: 'Children of Dune' by Frank Herbert."
Science fiction is headed for its best years in terms of high quality and general acceptance, according to James Gunn, professor of English at the University of well-known science fiction writer.
Gunn recently received the Pilgrim award from the Science Fiction Research Society for his work on the origin of science fiction movies made with the KU Department of Continuing Education, and a book, "Altered An Illustrated History of Science Fiction."
GUNN SAID the recent emergence of science fiction courses in colleges and high schools was part of a trend towards the realization of culture that reached back to World War II.
"After World War II, though, American Studies courses in colleges started teaching Dickens, James and Joyce, and popular westerns, in the early twenties, mysteryes, and science fiction."
Gum said his book, "Alternate Worlds,
had developed from a science fiction course
on the quantum mechanics of the universe."
"IN 1970, when I joined the English department full-time, the head of the department approached me about teaching a science fiction course," Gunn said. "I agreed, because I felt a good science fiction course was needed, and because I knew it could be written to write "Alternate Worlds." Each class ketacture was a chapter in the book."
"Writing is always a hard business, and
Gunn said that despite the scholarly interest in science fiction, it would be a while before it would be generally accepted. He said many academicians still thought of science fiction as the pulp magazines of the '30s.
having an incentive makes it easier," he said.
Gunn said that his book's publishers had suggested enlarging the format of the book to its present 'coffee table' size and that he had chosen the many illustrations used in the book. A paperback edition will be released sometime this fall, he said.
"I's hard to shake the old image," he said. "For a person to make a living as a writer in the 30s, he had to wage fast, and a writer in the 40s, he had to work out as first drafts, without any revision."
Gunn said that while he was in New York recently, he had been inundated with offers from companies.
"IT SEEMED that all I had to do was to say 'yes,' and I have a contract showed in my hand. It seemed like it almost didn't matter if I wrote the book or not," he said.
Gum, whose novel, "The Immortals", was made into a short-lived TV series in 1970, said the lack of good TV science fiction was a result of ignorance and cowardice.
"TV PRODUCERS know nothing about science fiction, and so when it comes to making the show, they lose their nerve, and are more likely to study body show, but not a science fiction show."
"What they try to come up with is a repeatable gimmick," he said. "So you get a $4 million dollar man, or a biotic woman, or something else." The bites in you do them those things."
Gum said he had two books due to be released in the near future: "The Magicians," in November, and "Kampus," which is set at KU, in January or February.
ALTERNATE WORLDS
THE ALTERNATE WORLD
THEIR DARK BLINDY
JAMES GARAN
Resident fiction writer
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
James Gunn, professor of English and journalism, says that writing is a hard business, and that having an incentive makes it easier. Gunn should know; besides being the author of numerous books, he recently won the Pilgrim award for his work on the origins of science fiction.
2
News Digest
From the Associated Press
4 quakes hit Panama
PANAMA CITY, Panama—Four major earthquakes hit the sharply populated jungles of the Panama-Colombia border region yesterday. Authorities and the government have been working to find out how the damage was.
The quakes were felt lightly in the capital city, about 150 miles from the border. In Bogota, Colombia, 300 miles south of the border, the third quake sent panicky waves through the streets and bridges.
The U.S. National Earthquake Information Service at Golden, Colo., said the first quake registered 7.0 on the Richter scale at 11:54 p.m. CDT, and another registered 7.1 about four hours later. The intensity would have been enough to cause serious damage in populated areas.
Rep. Howe asks dismissal
SALT LAKE CITY—Rep. Allan T. Howe returns to court today to argue that the Senate's misconduct misconduct are grounds for dismissal of the sex-oxidation charge against him.
Howe-D-Utah, was arrested June 12 and subsequently charged with the misdemeanor of soliciting services for pay. He is accused of offering two policy benefits to women.
Dean R. Mitchell, Hoewe's lawyer, subpoenaed seven organizations and two reporters and said he would show that excessive publicity has precluded Howe's
Howe, seeking re-election to his 2nd District congressional seat, has pleaded innocent. Trial, originally scheduled for today, has been delayed by July 19.
Body recovery effort fails
LISBON—An effort to get the body of executed American mercenary Daniel Gearart out of Angola stalled yesterday and the U.S. embassy will probably have to wait.
Mathias had flown to Lisbon on his way to Angola to seek clemency for Gearhard, of Kensington, Md. When the executions of the American and three British mercenaries were announced Saturday, Mathias was still waiting here because he lacked an Angolan visa.
Mathias said he thought the body would be flown from the Angolan capital of Luanda to Lisbon by the end of the week. This would meet the Angolan government's deadline of eight days to claim the bodies of the four men, shot by a firing squad Saturday.
City folks soon will reap fruits of Farmer's Market
Lawrence citizens will be able to buy fresh, farm-grown produce more easily in public parking lot, 8th and Vermont, on July 17. Justin Anderson, executive secretary of the Downtown Lawrence Association, which owns the market, announced the opening recently.
The purpose of the market is to bring together the grower and the prospective buyer of garden produce, according to Rob Lawrence, an associate with Downtown Lawrence Association (DLA).
The market will be open from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday through Sept. 25, if there is an opening.
The City Commission unanimously endorsed the market and made available rent-free to the DLA the city property at 8th and Vermont.
The market will be a non-profit venture for the DLA. There will be no fee charged to the producer sales, but those who want to purchase the must obtain a permit from the DLA.
Miller said anyone in Douglas County or surrounding areas who had home-grown vegetables or fruits for sale would be given the set up in the market if he obtained a permit.
Each seller will be assigned a stall. He may sell from the back of a truck or bring him to the store.
The market will save time and fuel for the buyers, because they won't have to drive around the county looking for truck-garden stands, Miller said.
"We are simply trying to bring the farmer and city closer together for their mutual benefit."
The study was done by two university of Kansas psychologists, David Campbell, assistant professor of psychology, and Ted Schlecter, Wichita graduate student in educational psychology, and was presented to the Library Facilities Planning Committee west to give more information for planning the remodeling of Watson Library.
Study catalogues library's faults
The layout and physical conditions in Watson Library were the two areas most disliked by students, an April study of library users showed.
The study was done, however, to determine how behavior is influenced by the environment and how the construction of an environment affects individual behavior.
"WE TRIED to do an unobtrusive study." Campbell said. "We didn't go around asking people questions while they were studying. We merely observed them."
Campbell and Shecter gathered the data through telephone interviews, behavior surveys and noticing traffic patterns of people arriving at the department, disliked the arrangement, hours, decem-
“It’s coming through loud and clear that the building is real complicated.” Jim Ranz, dean of Watson Library, said. “We definitely need help in solving this maze.”
Diaries were kept by 24 students who helped demonstrate the traffic patterns of library users. The students filled out forms recording a routine trip to the library and their streams of behavior that followed, indicating their use and feeling regarding the building as they went from one activity to another.
"WE FOUND out that there wasn't a big difference of behavior within different areas, as we had suspected before," Campbell said.
tralization, lighting, heating, crowding and noise of the library.
The records showed that the stacks, floors where books are shelved, were the most frequented areas. The most time was spent in the reserve reading room.
The researchers found that the most approved sections of the library were facilities, such as the microfilm department and the periodical room, and the staff.
First sketches prepared for Continuing Ed center
Initial sketches for the $8.6 million continuing education center to be built at the University of Kansas are being studied by Dr. Howard Walker, director of continuing education, and a committee of the Division of Continuing Education.
The center is one of three prototype continuing education centers to be built in the United States with funds from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.
The sketches were drawn by the Ekdahl, Davis, Depew and Persson architectural firm. The drawings they will be examined by the KU facilities advisory committee, Executive Vice Chancellor D. Del Shankel, Chancellor Archie R. Woods, Board of Regents and the state architect:
CONGRESS GAVE an $8,600 planning grant to the Division of Continuing Education last July for architectural and engineering studies. In March 1976, preliminary architectural plans were approved by the Chancellor and the Board of Regents.
The sketches being studied show ways available space can be used, Walker said, and include such details as office and bathroom placement.
The sketches also must be approved by HEW. Congress then appropriates money for the final blueprints, Walker said, which should happen in December.
The KU project, which will be built north
the Kansas Union, will be designed to
carry out the mission.
attle, Washington, will build a regional center for extension and continuing education. A prototype of a center for a community at Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Va.
WALKER REPORTED TO the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce education committee last week on the progress of the project. The Chamber of Commerce has said that the city would need better airport facilities in order to serve people coming to the KU center as students or as speakers, according to Larry Danielson, Chamber public relations director for the Chamber and KU were looking for a firm interested in building a model adjacent to the center to provide housing for the visiting continuing education students and teachers.
Walker said that it would take about 18 months to build the 7,100 square-foot center, and that construction should start in 1979.
On Campus
TONIGHT: The film documentary,
WHEN HAIR CAME TO MEMPIHS, will be shown at 7 in Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall. The guitar duet, LIFE, will perform from 7 to 9 in Woodruff Auditorium in the Kansas Union.
Staff Writer
By DAVE STEFFENS
Problems plague new computer
A new computer system at the University of Kansas encountered "significant" problems during its first week of operation, according to Paul Wolfe, coordinator of University computing, but the problems are expected to be resolved soon.
The new Honeywell 66-40 instructional and research computer system, one of two new systems, encountered severalhaltenal operations during its first nine days of operation.
One of the eight discums, which retrieves information being stored by computer users, malfunctioned on Wednesday; the other two replace the defective unit, Wofe said.
THE INTEGRATED control unit failed to work properly Thursday evening, causing a 14-hour period in which the whole system was inoperable. Tests revealed a faulty power unit, but a new unit was installed Friday, Wolfe said.
The other new computer system at KU, for $2.4 million IBM administrative computer, bad minor non-mechanical problems which were quickly worked out, Jerry Magnuson, director of administrative information systems said.
"The staff is really satisfied with the new administrative system. This was a good week with good productivity," Magnuson said.
Wolfe said the more serious mechanical
Letters Policy
Letters to the editor are welcomed but should be typewritten, double-spaced and no longer than 600 words. All letters are edited and may be condensed according to space requirements and judgment. Letters must be signed; KU students must provide their academic status and hometown; faculty must provide their position others must provide their address.
*A complimentary Redken organic cleansing bar
problems with the Honeywell system were understandable.
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The Honeywell system is also more complex and new, he said. While hundreds of the IBM 390-145 systems are being used in a growing number of schools, 48th of its kind produced by Honeywell.
Head-to-Head
842-9001 901 Kv.
UNLIKE THE Honeywell system, the IBM system has already been in operation elsewhere, and small problems that may have caused your use have worked out, Wolfe said.
Redken moisturizing treatment
Heat styling service
Because early problems with the Honeywell system KU officials protected themselves in contract negotiations by taking a very long period for the new system, Wolfe said.
Please call Vicki for an appt.
The Honeywell equipment must meet a standard of performance agreed upon by KU and Honeywell officials for a period of seventy days before the system is accepted.
There IS a difference!!!
MCAT Over 35 years of experience
DAT of experience
LSAT Small classes in
GRE Witnessing high study materials
GMAT Cources that are constantly updated
OCAT Cources that are constantly updated
CPAT
VAT Takes courses for review of cases
SAT lessons and for use in secondary materials
FLEX Useful materials
ECFMG Make up for
PREPARE FOR
NAT'L MED BDS
NAT'L DENT BDS
Most courses start 8 weeks
prior to event.
Spring and Fall Compacts
Courts in Memphis, Knoxville
Northwest and Little Rock
KANSAS CITY
9327 Commerce Ave.
Overland Park, Kan. 66207
(913) 649-9090
CHICAGO CENTER
(312) 764-5151
Stanley H.
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Stanley H. KIPPLIN
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12345 MARKET STREET
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(212) 200-1800
Boston, MA 02109 U.S. CITY
IF THE EQUIPMENT does not meet the standard of performance during the initial 30 days, the performance test will continue until it is met for 30 consecutive days.
If performance is not achieved in 90 days KU can demand performance guarantees from Honeywell, including supplying additional equipment, replacing equipment or other action necessary to insure performance.
"The effect of the performance agreement is to put pressure on Honeywell to make the system work and protect us at the same time," Wolfe said.
SUA
Summer Films
Tuesday, July 13 PARADISE NOW
A film record of the Living Theatres performance of *Performance* by Paradise Nail, Bristol at the Berlin Sporsalpalast. Directed by Julian Beck and Judith Mallin.
7:30 p.m. 75'
"If people were dissatisfied, this signaled us that something was wrong and maybe changes could be made in renovating Watson," Campbell said.
Wednesday, July 14
MURMUR
OF THE HEART
This partly autobiographical film is a true story of a young boy's growing up and initiation. Pauline Kael said, "Murmur of the Heart is melow and smooth, like a fine old jazz record, but when its over it was the make-up—a funny kick which sends you out doubled over grinning."
Friday, July 16 CESAR AND ROSALIE
"We'RE JUST waiting for other people to make a change and then we capitalize on it, applying our ecological behavioral approach. We're being the opportunists," he said.
Ranz said he was glad that Campbell1 and Silchester's findings were parallel to theirs. "They didn't have to wait."
7:30 p.m. 75
Directed by Claude Sauter, with Yves Montand, Romi Schneider, Sami Frey. "Intelligent, witty, and informed by an energy of direction and screenwriting which is matched with excellence." Most enjoyable.—Esquire
7:30 p.m. '1.00
ALL FILMS SHOWN IN WOODRUFF AUDITORIUM
"If they had found results saying that the students didn't like our staff, we'd be in trouble," he said. "Luckily, we can do it without book and seating arrangements."
STEREO SALE
20%-60% off
Dynaforce SAE Jenson
Pioneer Marantz Sony
Car Stereos—C.B.s—T.V.s.
For the Home—Office or Car
J.I.L. In Dash (List $151.00)
AM-FM-Tr... Now $100.00
A.R. 5 (List $151.00)
Speakers... Now $167.00
--MUCH MORE-will commence at 7:30 p.m.,
WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1976
at ye olde gathering spot
"THE COMMUNITY BUILDING"
to discuss the timely and
relevant topic of
RAY AUDIO
13 E. 8th 842-2047
BEST SELECTION IN TOWN
House Plants, Pottery, & Accessories
The Garden Center & Greenhouse 4 blocks east of Mass.on 15th 843-2004 A greenhouse bigger than a football field
--will commence at 7:30 p.m.,
WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1976
at ye olde gathering spot
"THE COMMUNITY BUILDING"
to discuss the timely and
relevant topic of
American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas
---
A Publick Meeting
★ ★ ★
"The Rights of Candidates and Voters"
Jim Lawing, ACUL of Kansas president, will explore the rulings that affect the rights of voters, including residency requirements, mail registration and literacy tests. Also featured is an examination of the controversial Federal Elections Act of 1974 and the challenges that have been raised against it.
THE FINAL HIGHLIGHT OF THE EVENING! There will be a discussion on the importance of electing an official to be elected. Now is your chance to exercise your right to vote in this organization.
For more information contact:
Tom Wilson, 814-5867 or Richard Perkins, 842-2871
629 Quincy, Suite 203, Topeka, Kansas 66603
Transportation has changed...
BICYCLE
Has your mechanic?
John Haddock
FORD INC.
SECOND GENERATION SINCE 1814
23rd and Alabama
Ph. 843-3500
University Daily Kansan
Monday, July 12. 1976
s, s
047
KU staff in 'Who's Who'
Bv ALEXIS WAGNER
Staff Writer
Four University of Kansas deans and a member of the Kansas State Geological Survey were selected to be inducted in the 1976-77 issue of "Who's Who in America."
Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism; Doris Zeller, research associate for the Kansas State Geological Survey; Howard Walker, dean of Continuing Education; Joseph Pichler, dean of the School of Business; and James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, were named.
Del Brinkman said this was the first time he had been chosen.
"I'M PLEASED to be listed in 'Who's Who' because I think it's more selective than some. I really don't know what the reason is or why it was selected," Brinkman said.
Before becoming dean in April 1975, Brinkman served as associate dean of the School of Journalism, director of the Midwestern Journalism Camp, chairman of the Faculty Committee and news-editorial adviser of the University Daily Kansan.
Brinkman attended Indiana University, where he received a master's degree in journalism and political science and a Ph.D. in mass communications and political science. He received his B.S. in English from Emory University State College.
Although Doris Zeller has been listed in "Who's Who of American Women," "American Men of Science" and "Dictionary of American Biography," she said she was honored to be selected for "Who's Who in America."
"IT'S a distinction because those people listed in 'Who's Who' are chosen with the understanding that they have contributed something in their field," she said.
Zeller is a research associate for the Kansas Geological Survey and is currently researching subsurface rocks in Kansas. Zeller said the research she is doing will be used to keep the oil industry in Kansas up-to-date.
She received a Ph.D. in geology from the University of Wisconsin. She has been a research associate for the Geological Survey since 1971.
Zeller was a consulting paleontologist for Petroleo Brasilero in Brazil in 1955 and 1956. Before that she was a consultant with Shell Oil Co.
IN 1954, she received the Mademoiselle magazine Award of Merit.
Harold Walker he didn't know specifically why he was selected, but he was pleased.
“It’s one of a number of honors that one appreciates having,” he said.
Walker has been on several national walkers and said this was possibly why he had to stop.
HE SERVED on the National Advisory Council on Extension and Continuing Education which is appointed by the President, and the National Advisory Committee for Education of the Deaf. He contributed to the University Extension Association.
Walker said that the most significant thing about being selected for "Who's Who" was that he was chosen for the Bicentennial issue.
"It's a good vintage year," he said.
NEITHER JAMES Moeser nor Joseph Picheler were available for comment
Moeser is a well-known organist and was chairman of the department of organ for nine years before becoming dean on July 1, 1975.
He was a Fulbright scholar in Berlin in 1961 and 1962 and did graduate study in Berlin and Paris. Moeser has made national concert tours, recorded albums and hosted a radio series on organ music which was carried by National Public Radio.
Moeser designed organs at Swartwout
Congress Hall and Yssexmouth
Congress Hall and 925 Vermont
PICKLER BECAME dean of the business school in April 1974. He was a faculty member since 1985. While on leave from 1986 to 1970, Pickler was special to the assistant secretary for manpower of the United States Department of Labor.
He received a bachelor of business administration from Notre Dame and an M.B.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Chicago.
"Who's Who in America?" was founded in 1898 and was established to serve as a list of individuals of reference value. Eligibility is determined according to positions and skills reflect achievement. Hands of major universities and colleges are usually included.
Others selected for the 1976-77 issue of "Who's Who in America" include Governor Bennett, Happy Rockefeller and Betty Ford.
Group reviews list of applicants for Balfour post
The search committee to select the vice chancellor for student affairs held its first meeting Saturday and started the process of reviewing applications for the post. Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, said yesterday.
At the meeting Richard Rundquist, director of the University Counseling Center, was chosen chairman of the committee.
"The chancellor and I will review their selections at the next meeting." Shankel an
Although the next meeting is tomorrow nationwide advertising for the position will continue one more week, extending the period of experience in submission of applications, Shankel said.
William Balfour announced his resignation as vice chancellor for student affairs in May. The office is to be filled by Aug. 15.
Orientation draws record number to new services, parents' sessions
More prospective students participated in this summer's orientation programs than ever before, Pam Byers, assistant director of admissions, said yesterday.
More than 2,000 students attended this summer's sessions, which were expanded this year to include more activities for parents and special service programs for teachers, she said. The average attendance was about 240 for each day-long session, she said.
Students met with their advisers from the
various schools about class schedules and curriculum for the coming semester. This summer each student was advised in their final week to leave advising was done in large groups, she said.
Rick Ophepia, Liberal junior and orientation staff member, said that mainly he tried to provide the newcomers with general information about what it's like to be a KU student.
"It also helps you to get straightened out
when the fall and save some time and
trouble."
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A Pacemaker award winner
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom-684-4510
Business Office-684-4358
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 subscriptions by mail are $a a semester or $1$ a year in Douglas County and $s a semester inside the county. Student subscriptions are “» on a学期, paid through the student activity fee.
Dierck Caseman
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Fewl
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Johnson
Editor
Manage Editor
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Copy Chiefs
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Member Associated Collegiate Press
NOTICE
All officers who are to be responsible for the expenditure of allocated funds MUST:
TO: All organizations allocated funds by the Student Senate from the Student Activity Fee
FROM: Jim Cox, Student Senate Treasurer
2. Sign a CAPITAL DISPOSITION CONTRACT with the Student Senate.
1. Attend a TRAINING SESSION conducted by the Student Senate Treasurer. See the schedule listed below.
No funds will be made available until these requirements have been met.
3. Obtain ADVANCE WRITTEN AUTHORIZATION for each expenditure from funds allocated to the organization.
Treasurer's Training Sessions have been scheduled for the following time:
4. Account for All Inventory.
TUESDAY, JULY 13, 3:45 p.m.
TUESDAY, JULY 13, 3:45 p.m.
International Room Level 5 Kansas Union
No other sessions will be held this summer
You must contact the Student Senate Treasurer's Office at 864-3746 to sign up for this session, or for additional information.
funded from the Student Senate activity fee
"This way the students are already enrolled when they get here in the fall. They just have to register, and pay their fees. Their class cards are being pulled for them during orientation. They even have their student ID cards," she said.
Jaigne Christian, Florissant, mo. senior,
screwed the convenience of the orientation
Juli Armstrong, Overland Park enrollee in the Orientation program, said that she was "a little confused about what exactly was going on," but that staff members and her adviser from the biology department, helped her.
Byers said that at the conclusion of each session students were asked to fill out evaluation forms on the entire Orientation curriculum, the staff curriculum, the university staff, and student services.
"They had answers to all my questions. They really helped me out," she said. "I know I'm saving a lot of time right now if enrollment is as bad as I’ve heard."
"This way we could better provide for next year's students and their parents," she said.
GOOD OLD SUMMERCASE STEAK &
CLAM-BAKE
1450
CROCKFISH
Thick 'n jice sirloin steak. Crunch deep-fried clams. Corn on the cob drizzled with butter. served Steak's own crisp green sweet potato and warm bread
It's a special summer treat. Right now at Mr. Steak, America's steak expert.
Mr. Steak
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment Advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all members without regard to national or national education or national BALL ASSEMBLY TO 111 FIRST FLIGHT
15 words or
fewer ___ $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word ___ 01 02 03 04
CLASSIFIED RATES
AD DEADLINES
one two three four five time times times times times
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Use UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks and can be placed in person or simply by calling the UDK business office 846-8358.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS-Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WEBSTER MOBILE HONES, 3469 8th Street, Lawrence, KS.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
2 batar, all utilities paid on campus. Furnished or unfirmed. Free parking. a/c pool. 843-
2 bedrooms furnished apartment near campus for
students from August 1 to November 3.
Sending August 1 Send requests to Box 3054.
Mark I and II, lile and quiet, 1 and 2 bedroom uniforms. 1 lile apts, very nice and close to cam.
**MARK III**
More than a dozen bedrooms, plus a large apartment.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale!
1. Must have a background in Western Civilization makes use of Urdu.
2. For class preparation
3. For class preparation
4. "New Analytical of Western Civilization"
5. For class preparation
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
1974 Yamaha DT250
1974 Honda XL250
1974 Honda XL250
1974 Kawasaki 350
1974 Kawasaki K7400
1974 HONDA CRF250
1972 Honda QA50
1974 Honda CL180
1971 Honda CB450
1975 Yamaha 500
1974 Honda CB750
HORIZON'S HONDA 1811 W.6th 843-3333
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES!
Technics SL1300
Technics SL-1300
by Paramount
Dedicated Automatic Turntable
BMS
ELECTRONICS
audio
U22 MUSICMANUFACTURER
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 100.00 TO 11.00 AM
AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT
FINE SELECTION OF NEW SHIRTS,
BOOTS & JEANS
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
P
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
BankAmericard Masterc
842 8413
Mastercharne
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
the
CRAMOPHONE
shop
ADIDI ASN FOR LEGEND
---
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion Than Most Stereo Components
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Components
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prizes you see on your hill equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-products, you must have a copy of the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFFS. **if**
Place an ad.
Tell the world.
Call 864-4358
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
BEL AUSTRALIA ELECTRIC 843-900, 3890 W, 10kW.
ELECTRIC 843-900, 3890 W, 10kW.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
12th St, New York, NY 10016.
THEYEVER Large selection of "Our Special"
Their average regularity $6.00-now -29
THE ATTIC: 673 Mass
Male childhicle babies. Clean; carry to care for
children. Comfortable. Work on a hard, chair,
hard urethane finish. American provided.
Available in New York and Chicago.
67 VW bus, must sell. $235. Run very well. 842.
4526 evening. 7-12
1965 Ford station wagon A/T. good condition.
843-908-808. For Stephanie or Paul.
7-15
AUSTIN AMERICA, very 33,000 miles. Great mileage and very good condition. Call 7-155
SONY model 124I, 12" color TV, used 2 months
with a Sony 600i. For $99 call 843-1230-3232, 7-12
phone. For $299 call 843-1230-3230, 7-12
phone.
For Sale...550 Plymouth Fury III Good condition.
Asking ...550 Culver City 814-272-1531 for five evening.
TECHNICS $250 receiveer used 3 months with full
payment. TECHNICS $150 receiveer used 3 months with full
payment. Hold new for $30, will pay $19 for CIS.
Hold new for $30, will pay $19 for CIS.
FOUND
Planner Stero Receiver model SX-84-12, 18 years
Planner Stero Receiver model SX-84-12, 18 years
91.6m, 84.1ft, 74-14
91.6m, 84.1ft, 74-14
A Bristle Afghan puppy. Owner may claim
of picking and picking up. Up call 848-8580; 7-123
Ladies watch was found near KU band and drill teams practice. 842-968-892
7-9
Found--young blender tom-cat, salt and pepper and brown with white panna cotta. Bake at 350°F. Bake 841-867-6678
Found: Precision glasses, 600 block of Alabama; found Monday. Call 841-514-61. 7-14
Sunglasses in bicentennial color by Memorial Stadium. 7-14
HELP WANTED
Full-time position for ten months study of sub-Arctic ice, sediment and soil in geology, with experience in working with field personnel. Requires knowledge in area of field work for weeks. Knowledge in geology, stratigraphy, Kansas Geological Survey, stratigraphy, Kansas Geological Survey is an Equal Opportunity and meet of all race/ethnicity encouraged to apply.
Garbage needs experience display person. Please
apply in person at 840 Massachusetts. T-12
Douglas County is receiving applications for positions in civil defense (civil defense) and paramedics (civil defense). Salary $10,400 to $15,800 per position. Necessary and communicative abilities are essential. Benefits include health insurance, retirement benefits, and made up of the made up of
Feature film casting. Student project for project managers, directors and executives with "60 Minutes", TV style format, will shoot a feature film with female leads. Must be attractive, 18-30. Some training required. Sound man and script supervisor. Call NB Pro.
full-time position for ten months study of subsurface geology, with experience in working with students in geology, with experience in working with geologists in a field work for weeks. Knowledge live in area of Field work for weeks. Knowledge applied to W J Ehrhardt, Kansas Geological Survey (KGS). Job Title: Kansas Geological Survey is an Equ Opportunity and women, all races, encouraged in职 apply.
Babywitter Wanted: Saturday and occasional weekends. **WEEKS 12/5 per hour** Call **811-62828**, after 4pm.
Telephone solicitors. Good pay and excellent compensation. Flexible hours. Call 841-7644-7, 15
Photography student seeks photograph model
from John McIntosh in Reply to Bob Jebb
X208 1019, Kansas. Ka
LOST
6 or 7 keys on key holder that says "Worlds of Fun" on it. Offer reward. 841-7797. 7-15
NOTICE
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
foats, perfarts and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and pretzels glaze at the Café Cushion
Mass. (hack. Jimnez Jr., tilt 80% except
Sundays).
Swap Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, disks
alarmes, televisions, open daily 12pm
842-397-377
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't he will make it to George's Apple Shop,裤子.
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous. 842-110-01.
SERVICES OFFERED
If you liked my hotdog at the fireworks, please
take a picture. I didn't get one. CT, P.O. 1490,
New York, NY 10026.
Hey, come on in! The KU-Y is open. Drop by
and think about it. We know companies and IBM
and thoughts. We know companies and IBM
and thoughts.
TUTOR
Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 062, 102, 105, 111, 112, 121, 122, 104, 500. Regular session text preparation. Reasonable rates. Call 842-7681.
Math Tutor, with MA in mathematics. Call 841-758-
209 after 6 p.m. **if**
TYPING
1 we damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4475, after
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-29
Experienced typist—term papers, sheets, mice, mice.
Spelling correction, spelling, spellings,
483-853. Mrs. Wright.
1.
WANTED
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Designing and developing thesis, dissertation or paper electric. BA. Social Science. Bachelor's in Electrical Engineering.
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/vite. Quality work.
Typing, editing, documenting, disententions welcome.
842-891-9278
Female roommate wanted. Own room, $25/month
electricity. Prefer neat, front 12, rear
83-7479-7098
Baby sister wanted for Thursday afternoons and
evenings. Also other occasional events. Plate
144
Female roommates need to share large house
$85.00/month 1/ utilizer: $84.96 / $84.94
74/14
74/14
Position wanted: Qualified legal secretary leaving Kansas City mid-August, desire any availability position in Lawrence. Requests on request include: [1] 764-812-3510; [2] 764-812-3512; [3] Walnut, Kansas City, M. Goalie. 611-27-128-712
530 Wisconsin
Female prommate wanted. 2 bedroom apartment,
50% off rent. Residency required. Utilities. Percy紧要 serious student. Avvy $40,000/month.
Housing wanted. two grad students, one sing-
e student, and one faculty member,宿
住 August-December, possibly longer. Call
me at (312) 684-7800.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLE POINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CENTERED
15 East 8th 841-2656
10.5 Monday-Saturday
GRAN SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
843-9404
— 6 Nights a Week
Open 2 p.m.-3 a.m. Dancers 3:00-3:10 p.m.
Memberships Available
Cable B-B Private
Wayne Pool--Owner
Keep your car healthy
in the summer.
Use the student discounts
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Smiley Face
THE HAWK
For Cool Summer Refreshment . . .
- Open 7 p.m.-Midnight
Chilled Glasses
& Schooners
THE WHEEL
Pitcher Night Wednesday
- Open 11 a.m.-Midnight
- Sandwiches
- Outdoor Beer Garden
"Heat the Summertime Blues at 14th and Ohio"
4
Monday, July 12, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Moeser performs in D.C.
By SUSAN APPLEBURY
James Moeser, dean of the School of Fine Arts, will perform tonight at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.
Staff Writer
His performance is part of the Kansas Day festival, one in a series of Bicentennial days featuring each state.
"I'm excited but I'm not worried," Moeser said Friday. "It's the first time I've
played at the Kennedy Center but I've played at places of equal size."
MOESER WLL play original pieces for the organ composed by two University of Kansas professors of music theory and composition. The selections are "O Ternary Selections," "A Littany Heard in Plover Courtship," Lawrence, Kansas" by Charles Houg.
He will also play an improvisation on a theme submitted by Eileen Gunner, dear of the Washington, D.C. chapter of the Guild of Organists and a KU alumna.
English Center changes foreign student program
By PAUL JEFFERSON
The Intensive English Center has a new name and a new outlook on the education of foreign students at the University of Kansas.
Michael Henderson, director of what is now called the Applied English Center (AEC), said last week that in addition to the new name, the Center had a new policy. This fall, for the first time, foreign students will be admitted to a school or department within the University. Advisers will guide them in selection of courses and English-language programs. Spring by the Student Senate, is the result of a recommendation by Henderson and an agreement between the Center and the various schools.
In the past, the AEC took sole responsibility for screening, advising and teaching students, who weren't admitted without a pass. The AEC also proficiency exam. Henderson said that under the old system students expressed dissatisfaction at being held back from other courses. This way, it allows the KU community to touch with the KU community, he said.
"I FEEL this plan integrates them more quickly into the University system," he said. "It will help them to feel better about themselves and KU."
Many of the students enrolled at the Center don't attend KU; they are here preparing for admission to other colleges and universities with much smarter English proficiency requirements, he said. The Center is the largest in the Midwest. It has an enrollment of 255 students, 30 of which are students at the University, he said.
Most students realize they should gain some proficiency in English, whether or not they intend to stay in this country, Henderson, said.
"GIVE WE them language to use after they leave us," he said. "Our new name tells what we are trying to accomplish. We tell them things they learn here to their situations."
Geoffrey Gathercole, AEC assistant instructor, said he thought the new policy would make things smoother by allowing students to take more time to students' individual needs.
"This will take some of the odum off of the Center," he said. "It will get rid of some of the bitterness, that the AEC was keeping students there purposefully."
He said that other difficulties had arisen from a lack of communication between students and teachers and disparities in the curriculum information required on exams. The new policy will allow students and advisers to work on individual weaknesses in the five study areas of learning, sentence structure, speaking, understanding, reading and writing.
"IT WILL be a more one-to-one relationship." he said.
Mohammed Ebktar, Tehran, Iran, special student, said the new AEC policy sounded like a good idea. He said that he had taken the proficiency test last spring and he was excited to pursue a degree in engineering while gaining language proficiency, he said.
"The Center has been accepting more ideas and recommendations from the foreign students lately," Eubek said. "And you can also an adviser will help me in my vocabulary."
"It's a little terrifying doing an improvisation," Moeser said.
A tri-college choir from Tabor, Bethel and Hesston colleges and a string quartet from Kansas State University will also perform at the festival.
MOESER SAID that he had been notified last fall by Who's Who in America that he had been chosen to represent Kansas in the Bicentennial celebration. He said he probably had been chosen because he was dean of the School of Fine Arts.
The Kansas festival was organized by Mrs. Clifford Allison, coordinator of Bicentennial projects for the Kansas Federation of Music Clubs.
"We chose Dean Moesner because he is in a master artist one of the finest artists in Kansas."
The University's symphony orchestra was to have gone to the festival, Allison said, but because the KU band had been sent to the Sun Ball last December, there wasn't enough money available to finance the orchestra's trip.
The Bicentennial series at the Kennedy Center is sponsored by the Exxon Corp. through the National Federation of Music Clubs. The series will be paid and paid for rental of the concert hall.
Moeser, who has played the piano since he was a child, began playing the organ in high school.
After his performance tonight at the Kennedy Center, Moeser will travel to Syracuse University, N.Y., to perform in a recital July 14. He will return to KU July 15.
1970
James Moeser
Staff photo
Privacy protection possible . . .
From page one
Inaccurate information may be challenged, a short rebuttal may be entered in the case, or a report of any corrections made may be requested, she said. Individuals should contact the Federal Trade Commission if evidence violations by a credit reporting agency
notified customers after complying with a request for access to a record.
Tax returns also frequently entail dossiers, she said. Tax returns show purchases and sales made, interest received in loans, medical bills, medical bills and sources of income.
One of the major areas of privacy infringement, Blank said, is information compiled by banks. The Bank Secrecy Act requires banks to keep records of financial transactions and copies of checks for more than $100. A checking account can reveal the name of a psychiatrist, political candidates or a victim whose interests lend or from whom he borrows money, and causes he has supported. Blank said that individuals should know whether their bank
chases and sales made, interest received and paid, charitable contributions, medical bills or income. Bank said if an annual engagement in any activity of possible interest to a federal or state agency, he should write that agency. Federal agencies are required to publish a notice annually in the Federal Register specifying where one should write.
to produce the record within 10 business days, with a 10-day extension for "good cause." The 1974 Privacy Act requires an agency to acknowledge a request within 10 business days, indicating whether access will be granted, where and when.
Demails under both acts must state a reason. Under the FOIA, the agency must indicate how and to appeal, under the Privacy Act, the agency must tell why records are withheld. Both acts allow individuals to sue an agency to release records.
Written requests should include one's full name, permanent address, any aliases used in the request and any information regarding one's personal interest is required. Inquirers should expect to pay a fee, usually 10 cents a page for copying and mailing, or $25 per person for Information Act (FOIA) requires an agency
The Privacy Act also places a moratorium on the use of the Social Security number by any government agency. No agency may deny any privilege if an individual refuses to disclose his number, unless the disclosure is specifically required by regulation. The law does not include private organizations.
Drysdale's dismissal upsets team
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Drysdale said Friday that she and Marion Washington, director of women's athletics,
Sharon Drysdale, assistant professor of physical education, is taking her dismissal as women's softball coach at the University of Kansas philosophically, but her former associates are openly upset over the situation.
Washington, who announced Drysdale's dismissal Monday, said Thursday that personal conflict and a plan to consolidate the women's program were the reasons she didn't renew Drysdale's contract. Unless a formal statement was released after her engagement with Drysdale, Washington said, she would have no further comment.
"AS I SEE IT, she (Washington) had the
wouldn't issue a joint statement concerning Drysdale's contract termination. Washington had said that a meeting with Drysdale Thursday might result in a formal statement clarifying questions raised within the past few weeks.
authority to hire and fire, and in my case she exercised that right," Drysdale said. "I don't see that the situation will change in any event and I think a rehash of the rationale behind her actions would be non-productive.
DETROIT (AP) —Rusty Staub singled to center with two men out in the 12th inning yesterday to drive in the winning run as the Kansas City Rivals a 6-5 victory over the Kansas City Royals.
Sports
The Royals tied the game in the seventh with three runs on singles by Frank White and Al Cowens and a sacrifice fly by Amos Otis. After George Brett's single, John Mayberry singled home Cows, and Brett scored on a wild pitch by Hiller.
John Wockentuss, who walked off Royals reliever Steve Mingori and got to third on successive sacrifice bunts, scored on Staub's hit.
Mingori, 3-1, was tagged with the loss, while Mingiori relief ace John Hiller. 8-4, got cut off in a drive.
Staub's 12-inning single spells defeat for Royals
The Royals broke the Tigers' shutout in the sixth inning when Cowens doubled and scored from second on a long sacrifice fly to right field.
The Royals almost scored in the top of the 12th when they loaded the bases. Otis was hit in the head, but followed with his second double of the game. Mayberry drew a walk, loading the bases, but the Tigers saved a run when Rodriguez missed McRae's grounder and fired to the plate.
Brett, the American League's leading hitter, warmed up for his appearance in tomorrow's All-Star game with four hits in six appearances at the plate. It was the fourth time this year he has collected four hits in a single game.
The eighth inning opened with the dual ejections of Johnson and Tiger Manager Ralph Houk. Houk said after the game that he impired Emile Joe Brinkman ousted Johnson, whom he bench, for making an obscene gesture. When he protested, be too, was tassled out.
The threat was extinguished when Cookie Rojas grounded into a double play.
"We both realized at the meeting Thursday that our positions wouldn't change and that specific accusations and rebuttals won't achieve anything," she said.
NEW YORKER
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"Washington and I both wanted to develop a winning team, but in our program there was a lot more to it than just won-lost figures." Drydale said. "I enjoyed working with the women, earning their respect and having a good team too."
OTHERS ASSOCIATED with KU
wrote a letter to the
termination as coach, without question.
Debbie Kuhn, Atchison junior, who was on the KU football team last year, said Drysdale's termination was a disappointment to all team members.
Karen Harris, assistant women's softball coach, said Drydale's release was a disaster. She said she wasn't surrounded by clear instances surrounding Washington's actions.
"Working with Drysdale gave me the flexibility I required." Harris said. "My ideas were considered seriously and I received total cooperation from her."
"WASHINGTON MET WITH us and talked about why she took the action she did. But I don't think she really convinced us. I guess she has a different ideas from ours." Kuhn said.
Janet Brown, Raytown, Mo., senior, who was also on last year's team, agreed that Washington's explanation to the team was unsatisfactory.
"I think her reasons are more a 'top-out' than anything else. Anyone who has to defend a decision to this extent is uncertain of the soundness of the actions," she said.
Brown said she thought that about 50 per cent of women athletes were dissatisfied with the overall program. She said many of them would be disappointed. Drysdale after learning of her dismissal.
"All of us still have questions which weren't given adequate answers. We've been told about money over and over but we don't explain everything," she said.
Brown said Washington told team members that the consolidation of softball and baseball were the reasons for her actions. Drysdale's instigation of negative feelings were the reasons for her actions. Brown said the team thought these were primarily based on personal rather than objective reason.
BECAUSE BROWN and other team members supported Washington for the position of athletic director, Brown said, she thought they weren't against Washington but were upset over the impact on the softball program.
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From page one
"Workman's compensation new collectable is one-half to two-thirds normal pay. We want this changed to full pay for at least a 60-day period."
The five per cent pay increase by itself wouldn't cause a major reorganization of most firefighter's financial status, Penner said.
Firemen...
Another demand made by the firemen concerned workman's compensation coverage. Although he hasn't had occasion to need the compensation for job-related illness, Pernan said, he agreed with the firefighters request for increased benefits.
"But when you consider a total 11 per cent increase this becomes an obvious factor because you're talking about close to $100 a month. You can make a definite impact on your budget."
Penner said that the city's offer to make up the difference between full pay and current compensation benefits was acceptable.
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Penner said that, as of late Friday afternoon, the city hadn't come up with a counter proposal to submit to the firefighter's association.
a'heroots! Meerschanums! Brier Boots!
One problem that won't change regardless of the outcome of current negotiations but which continues to annoy firefighters is lack of pay parity with policemen.
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
English in a headlock; good grammar pinned
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol. 86 No.161
Tuesday, July 13, 1976
See page 4
KBI results show arson
Arson caused last Wednesday's fire at the Yuk Up and Yu Down taverns, according to police.
However, Larry Stemmerman, arson investigator for the Lawrence Fire Department, said not enough progress had been made in the fire investigation to make an official statement about the cause of the blaze.
Dibbern said yesterday that 1 results from KBI laboratory tests on the contents of a five-gallon gas can gas found at the scene of the fire, in addition to existing evidence, was to establish arson as the cause of the blaze and as evidence the gas can had contained diesel fuel.
Stemmerman said evidence had strongly hinted to areas around town and that he had conducted searches in the area.
"Our opinion of what caused the fire hasn't changed because of the KBI reports," he said. "I didn't need a laboratory test to tell me what was in that can."
UNITED NATIONS (AP) - Ambassador William M. Scranton yesterday called Britain to rescue raid into Uganda "a commitment that has said heifum if ever been surpassed."
Scranton calls Israeli rescue smart, needed
Referring to the pro-Palestinian hijackers who had seized an Air France jet and its passengers, Scranton demanded that the U.N. Security Council "do everything within its power to insure against a breach of the brutal, callous and senseless international crime of hijacking—the crime which gave rise to the Israeli action."
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
IAFF-LOCAL-1596
CITY OF LAWRENCE
UNFAIR TO FIREFIGHTERS
A POLICE OFFICERS
AFL·CIO
Scranton spoke to the council after Britain and the United States introduced a draft resolution that would condemn hijacking. It also would direct the inquiries into the seek further means of "assuring the security reliability of international civil aviation."
Early mornina pickets
Nalaimogel members of the council submitted a resolution that would "condemn Israel's flagrant violation of fugitarian law and that Israel pay compensation to Uzanda.
THE CONFLICTING resolutions set the stage for a confrontation between Western states and the Third World and Communist members.
At seven yesterday morning, off-duty firemen Mike Lindeman, left, and Tom Teague began to picket the construction
Council sources said that would likely end with the defeat of both resolutions.
site of Lawrence Memorial Hospital as part of a general work slowdown against the City of Lawrence.
Rep. Jordan steals show
NEW YORK (AP)—Democrats joined in a unity chorus last night and began their 73th national convention, warming up with enthusiasm, divinifying, despair in America.
Robert Strauss, Democratic National Chairman, pronounced the party "organized, vibrant, forward-looking and bell-ent on victory."
Barbara Jordan, black congresswoman
KU fall housing shortage threatens close quarters
By CORA MARQUIS
It may become necessary to put three people into some rooms this fall if the availability of housing at the University of Kansas continues to worsen, William M. Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, said yesterday.
Those residence halls affected would be McColm, Hashinger and Oliver. Approximately 250 end rooms will have been furnished to McColm and McEilenin, associate dean of men, said.
The plan to put three people in some rooms will be used only if all available spaces, including ironing and sewing rooms, are full. Those people who contend for a room last will then be regrouped in the triple-occupancy rooms, Balfour said.
BALFOUR SAID that expected attrition later in the samaritne would reduce the need for external training.
THERE are always students who contract for rooms who never show up, quit school or decide to commute and find other housing arrangements, Balfour said. That matter will be to know exactly how many will actually stay in rooms they have contracted for, he said.
McEhenie said that approximately 800 more contracts for residence hall rooms had been returned than were returned at this time last year.
"We send a housing contract to every newly admitted student but we don't know how many more will be returned," McElhene said.
BECAUSE THE triple-occupancy rooms will be temporary, the same rates will be charged as for double-room occupancy, and because of their dependence on the residence hall, McKeehill
John Myers, director of admissions, said that the increased number of returned contracts might be an indication of student awareness of housing problems this year.
"I have the impression that students are applying earlier this year because the word has got out at KU and K-State in the last quarter, so I am a being a housing crunch," Meyers said.
also be filling. Several fraternities are pledging many people this summer, and other housing in the community may be tight, he said.
McElhenie said other housing units might
BALFOUR SAID he felt obligated to help students find housing.
"Certainly, I feel that we have to tell people like we have been doing at orientation, that there is an expected housing shortage. We also have an obligation to those people who contracted early. We want to house as many as possible without turning on the rights of others," Balfour said.
Balfour said he also wanted to help foreign students who arrived at KU just before the fall session. He said many times he had heard that students didn't understand the housing problems that had been mounting all summer. Balfour said his obligation to those students was deeper because they didn't have as much time for their shortage as American students did.
"We must restore our belief in ourselves," she said. "We are a generous people, so why can't we be generous with each other?"
from Texas, brought down the opening night curtain.
Glen drew a half-dozen rounds of apllae as he urged a revival of confidence and trust in American government and said a Democratic president could produce it.
Sen. John Glenn of Ohio shared the key-net platform, declaring this is "the time to erase divisiveness and despair—to build a nation of justice, a nation of equality, a nation of opportunity in which we can be proud patriots."
MeElhennie said that because the University actively sought out potential students, the University had some contacts whose students that chose to come to KU.
HOWEVER, MECHLENIE added that there was only a certain amount that they could afford.
The applause erupted again when she said "There is something different and special about this opening light. I am a keynote speaker."
Balfour said that in the mid 1960s there was a similar housing shortage. Those students who were housed in triple occupancy rooms often didn't want to break up when space became available and they could have moved to double rooms, he said.
Jordan's speech, however, drew a more enthusiastic response. During her speech, the crowd was in order, attentive and frequently cheering.
No consideration is being given now to building a new residence hall to eliminate the dormitories.
When she stepped to the microphone she received an ovation that lasted for nearly two minutes.
"The predictions of the last 10 years show that high school senior class enrollments are toting out. I think we can expect lower students in the future," McElenhie said. "McElenhie said."
"We are combing the halls to make sure we are using every available living space," he said.
The role was, she said, "one additional bit of evidence that the American dream need be fulfilled."
The eight residence halls at KU will house about 4,460 students.
She said many Americans feared the future's uncertainty, distrusted their
leaders and believed their voices were no longer heard. But, she said, those ills can be cured with a new sense of national commitment to the Democratic party heading the way.
When her speech ended, there was another long ovation, which didn't end until she had returned for a curtain call amid chants of "We want Barbara."
Although Carter's hour at the convention was two nights away, the convention was his as he auditioned vice presidential candidates at his hotel headquarters.
Then, Strass gavelled adjournment of the opening session.
His list of vice presidential finalists was down to six names, all of them senators. He selected a man who made choice that might be the most important of his life. He also said that in his polls, two of those names, Glenn of Ohio and Muskul of Missouri, could be the vote appealer of his ticket.
There were echoes of the Carter campaign in Glenn's keynote speech as he spoke of a government so big and complex as to leave Americans feeling noowerless.
"The are doubts in a nation that is the envy of the world," he said. "There are fears in a nation that has provided a good life for more people than any nation in history. And there is lagging confidence in a nation deserving of our pride."
Police, firemen picket expand work protests
Bv DAVE WARD
and
and MIKE DURHAM
MIKE DURHAM
Staff Writers
Members of the International Firefighters Association local and the Lawrence Patrol Officers Association (LPOA) said yesterday they would continue their work protests until the city and the firemen came to terms.
Firmen and policemen picketed city hall and city construction sites yesterday morning at Lawrence Memorial Hospital, the sewage plant on Eighth Street and the garage at 11th and Haskell. Building units held the honor the picked lines and work halted.
Though the dispute with the city concerns only the firemen, the police have pledged their support. The firemen are requesting a 2.5 per cent pay increase for next year above what the city set forth in its "final offer" last week.
THE "JOB ACTION" by the firemen is a work slowdown, designed to expand everyday. Yesterday, the firemen refused to launch a truck after it returned from a fire call.
"The truck was eventually cleaned, but the job was done by non-union personnel," Wesley Hale, vice-president of the firefighters association, said.
Starting today, the firemen will no longer clean the station houses, and tomorrow all begin to work on putting the station scheduled to halt. Firemen said that if the dispute continued to Friday, they would no longer be able to do that.
The police job action is the opposition of a slowdown; the strict enforcement of all city laws, to stop it.
violations and 55 parking tickets yesterday, which police said, was a strabble increase from the previous week.
MICKEY ALLEN, assistant city manager, said she will two complete the increased ticket fee.
"The people that called complained that the tickets they received were frivolous and could have to agree," he said. "I'd say that the way we did it was a good way to take their case to the city attorney."
Michael Hall, vice-chairman of the patrol officers association, said that the "speed-up" was designed to show solidarity with the fighters and to reassure the town-speakers.
"They're paying for law enforcement and they're going to get it," Hall said. "We're doing the job as we have been, just a little better, that's all."
"THE MEN have a very strong feeling of responsibility to the citizen. They wouldn't be killed without it."
The possibility of a large-scale increase in the number of officers calling in sick is considered only a joke down at police headquarters, Hall said. The chance of an officer flipping "dead flu," the term coined to describe an masse sick calls, doesn't exist, Hall said.
While policemen are cautious of the manner in which they show their support of the firemen, their conviction to stick with their efforts remains unshaken, Hall said.
"For a policeman, breaking his word is a "for emotional action," he said.
"IF YOU lie to a match (an informant) it must be all over town in no time and your credit will be ruined."
See POLICE page 2
Proposal offers time off extra pay scale to firemen
★ ★ ★
City Manager Buford Watson was to give the city's reaction to the latest firefighter's proposal today as talks aimed at ending the labor dispute continue.
The alternative called for the addition of another step at the top of the pay schedule for firemen, paying 2.5 per cent more than the highest sten now.
Arnold' Berman, attorney for the International Firefighters Association Local 1586, presented an alternative yesterday to the proposal per cent pay increase they have sought.
Another provision of the alternative was to give an extra day off out of every 12 working days, which would have the effect of reducing the work week from 56 to about 50 hours, Alvin Samuels, president of the firefighters, said last night.
Watson said yesterday that he would determine what the latest proposal would cost the city and react to it at today's meetings, scheduled for 10 a.m.
IN 'ADDITION, the firemen requested that the city average their pay, distributed every two weeks, so that all their checks were counted. Now the city now checks were for 96 to 140 hours of work.
Yesterday's meeting included several severa- l exchanges, and the issue of pay for labor was discussed.
The city's policy, as outlined by Watson, is to pay policemen five per cent more than firemen at the top of the scale. Watson has said that his men's proposals would erode this policy.
SAMUELE SAID that parity was a "phony issue" because, though the firemen's and policemen's checks might be too weak for a 6-hour week and the police worked 40.
Watson also accused Berman and Samuels of not "selling" the city's final offer, made Friday, to the association's membership.
Berman answered, "We didn't urge them one way or another."
Background
The current work protest by Lawrence firefighters and policemen centers on a dispute over the fireman's rate of pay beginning Jan. 1, 1977. Both sides have agreed to a six per cent cost of living increase; the firemen are asking for an
additional 2.5 per cent salary increase.
The firefighters association rejected the city's final offer last Friday and started a work slowdown yesterday. The police, the fire department, the city, an engaged in their own work sympathy with the firemen.
VE
Truck overturns
Cooperative Farm Chemicals Association at about 6:25 last night.
Hall died last night at the KU Medical Center from head injuries.
Pollice alvin A. Hall, Eudora, an ambulance after his pickup truck jacked and turned over on K-10 near the
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Crash kills Eudora man
A 55-year old Eudora man was killed after his pickup overturned at 8:25 p.m. yesterday on K-10 near the Cooperative Farm Chemicals Association.
Alvin A. Hall, 1111 Pine, Eudora, died at 11:45 p.m. yesterday during surgery at the hospital. He had suffered extensive head injury when he was pinned beneath the truck.
Witnesses said a 12-foot trailer hooked to the truck's stall-fishalled as he headed east on K-10 and that the truck jackknifed and sideways before landing in the ditch.
Police said the vehicle was out of control for about 170 vards before it overturned
Tom DeSanty, who works at the Co-op and witnessed the accident, said he saw Hall's truckweave back and forth and then heard its brake screech before it flown over.
The truck ended up facing west in the ditch, with its canopy attachment thrown aside and its traller behind it. Ambulance workers had to break the windshield of the truck to remove Hall from the wreckage. He was shot by police during the attack and then to the Med Center for surgery.
Firemen were called to the scene but left after setting a compressed gas can upright in the trailer's fuel holder. Police said no vehicles were involved in the accident.
2
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Concorde flights profitable
WASHINGTON—The controversial Concord superscript i is making money on flights to the United States, spokesman for two airlines said yesterday.
Flights of the British-French-built supersonic jets to Dulce International Airport from Paris and London have attracted many more passengers than necessary to carry this route.
Under a 16-month test approved by Transportation Secretary William T. Coleman f. air, Air France takes Concordes in and out of Dulles each week. Bombing strikes were weekly flanked by
Both airlines said they wouldn't be prepared to talk about profits until the end of the 16-month test.
Pat Nixon released soon
LONG BEACH, Calif. - Pat Nixon should be out of the hospital within 10 days and completely recover from the partial paralysis brought on by a stroke, her doctor
The family's physician, Dr. John Lungen, said a specialist who examined the former First Lady believed the partial paralysis that has affected her leg, arm and hand was caused by an attack on her brain.
Although Mrs. Nixon remained in serious condition, Langren said slurring of her speech had lessened and her blood pressure was under control.
Dr. Lungren told a daily news briefing that the change was possible because Mrs. Nixon no longer needed constant monitoring of her heart.
Mrs. Solzhenitsun ticketed
HAYS—Alexander Solenzhtysen, exiled Soviet author, thought he was headed for a U.S. jail last month when his wife was stopped for speeding in central Kansas. Highway patrolman Keith Denchfield said he stopped a van driven by Solenzhtysen's wife on Interstate 70 in Trego County. Denchfield said Solenzhtysen emerged from the van and came to aid his wife as she was struggling with the language, but the Nobel prize winner also became confused.
Dumfries wrote a ticket with a note on the back of it to Mrs. Solzhenysnay's brother in Vermont explaining the violation. The ticket was paid by money order a day earlier.
Ford loses TV adviser
WASHINGTON—President Ford is losing his television adviser. Formal word of the impending resignation of television adviser Robert Mead, a former CBS executive.
At the briefing White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen said Ford would by Philadelphia tonight to throw out the first ball of the annual All-Star game. The team will also host a charity event.
Mead, who had advised Ford on television appearances since the start of his administration, submitted his resignation during the weekend. Nessen described it as "quite a warm and personal letter," but declined to distribute copies or to discuss his differences with the departing adviser.
Janitor shoots 6 in swree
FULLERTON, Calif. — A college custodian fatally shot six college employees in the school's library yesterday after telling his estranged wife that it was his last day to live, authorities said. Among the dead was one of the founding professors of California State University at Fullerton.
Police . . .
From page one
after that. It means a lot to us that we maintain our credibility.
Hall said city Manager Butford Watson's credibility among police officers and firefighters is growing.
Hall said he thought city officials had tried to split the two departments by giving a good package to the policemen and a poor package to the firemen.
"The same applies to our commitment to the firemen. We knew what they were after and the steps they would take to get it, and we said we would stay together no matter how bad it turned out. We can't, and we have no intention to, back out on them now." Hall said.
BECAUSE OF Watson's apparent lack of
action on promises he has made to police and fire department representatives in the past, Hall said, the members of the LPOA would no longer accept terms in the nature of a gentleman's agreement. Only those on paper would suffice, Hall said.
The officers and firefighters aren't alone in their fight for benefits.
Hall explained that any action by the LPOA, such as yesterday's handbill distribution and law enforcement speed-up, was the decision of its members and no one else.
"The officers have the full support of their wives and families," Hall said. "That's what I am asking for."
Negotiations between Watson and
tremen are scheduled to resume at 10
am.
New assistant KU counsel named
An assistant to the Johnson County attorney accepted Friday the position of assistant to KU general counsel Michael Davis.
The new assistant, Victoria Thomas, will
duties on the Lawrence campus
August 18.
The job will entail advising students and staff members on legal matters, improving grievance procedures, reviewing the complaint process with administrators in Tampa, Daugaon,
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes made the announcement of the citing the workload of the council's office.
Thomas is currently involved in juvenile court work and is assigned to the division of
Thomas is a 1984 KU Phi Beta Kappa graduate. She earned her M.A. in political science at KU in 1968 and graduated from the KU Law School in 1974, where she
On Campus
received the outstanding service award. Thomas was also assistant to the director of marketing.
TONIGHT: The Senior High Musk Camp will play a RECITAL at 7:30 in Swartwout Bottom School.
SAU Films will present "PARADISE NOW," a film made in 1978 by Sheldon Curtis.
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 and paragraph alignment. Letters must be signed; KU students must provide their academic standing hometown; faculty must provide their position; others must provide their address.
Letters Policy
McMurray said he would meet today with City Manager Buford Watson to discuss what services would be required of a consultant who would conduct the study.
He said he hoped bids could be accepted from the consultant's position by the end of the week.
Mike Wildgen, assistant city manager,
said the city wouldn't be ready to accept
bids for a consultant "until the firemen go
back to work."
A study of the mass transit needs of Lawrence will begin soon, Steve McMurray, chairman of the Student Senate Transportation Committee, said recently.
IN APRL, the United States Department of Transportation gave $16,000 to KU and Lawrence to pay for 80 per cent of a study of the impact in the city and ways of fulfilling them.
The University and the city commission agreed to make $3,500 in matching funds available for the study. The Lawrence School Board contributed the remaining $3,500.
He said he would provide information and
KU, Lawrence study mass transit system
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The Continental Walk for Disarmament and Social Justice participants are expected to arrive in Lawrence this evening for a three day stay. Two walkers, Stuart Ward and Champney, arrived yesterday to make lodging arrangements with local families.
He said he hoped the study would help determine how successful the student bus service was and whether it needed to expand to other parts of the city.
Their walk started January 31 in San Francisco. Bankers plan to arrive in Hawaii.
Mc Murry said the transportation study would examine all forms of mass transportation in the city, including buses, bicycle paths, sidewalks and taxis and would consider such factors as patronage and the adequacy of facilities.
Population patterns, land use and the exiting transit system are areas the MTA uses to serve its residents.
"The city and the University need to work together to see whether a much larger scale of transportation service is needed," he said.
Course designed to aid elderly
HE SAID that a consultant might find that Lawrence's mass transit system was adequate, but that an evaluation of the communities were adequately served.
He is perhaps best known for his *mus* in Hanoi in 1968 as a member of the American Friends Service Committee of the Quaker Movement, which has maintained the release of three American POWs.
A march to publicize survival of the United States and the world is coming to Lawyers
"One of the superpowers must take the first step in total nuclear disarmament or the expression that we might not see the threat of a nuclear war will be true." Meacham said.
MECURRY SAID he started plans for the study three years ago.
Continental walkers head for Lawrence
lo logwork for the consultant to help pay for the University's share of the study.
By LEWIS GREGORY
The walk is a cultural leap, Meacham said.
"Ilike the march because of the boldness of the people who will walk more than 2,500 miles for an issue of national and international importance," he said.
By KARENSALISBURY
Meacham, 36, joined the march two weeks ago in Oklahoma City after a four-year stint as director of the Quaker International Affairs Seminar in Singapore.
Meacham said he didn't believe the United States would take over by force if Trump were elected.
Half Writer
"I think other countries will follow suit if
'Other countries wouldn't know what to do with the United States because it's too big.'
A Telenet course exploring the problems of the aged in Kansas will be offered this fall through the School of Social Welfare and the Division of Continuing Education, according to Theodore Ernst, professor of social Welfare and designer of the course.
Teleten is an instructional system set up by the Regents of the University of Kansas, Erust said, that allows teachers to broadcast lectures as well as exchange conversation directly with students at various locations throughout the state.
图
He said he thought other countries would leave us alone and then follow total nuclear
The course can't be taken for college credit but will provide "a basic understanding of the policies that affect the aged and financially available to the aged," Ermus said last week.
KU faculty and other persons with experience and expertise with problems of the nursing profession.
THE COURSE consists of four units lasting 28 weeks from Sept. 10 through April 15. Each unit is made up of seven sessions offered 4 p.m.-7 p.m. on Fridays at the 27th and 36th periods. The course offers one four-hour Saturday morning workshop at Lawrence, Wichita, Hays and Pittsburg.
The course will be directed towards those persons involved with the aged in Kansas, such as social workers, nurses, nursing home operators, clergy, librarians and high school principals, as well as the aged themselves, he said.
the United States would take the first step towards disarmment," he said.
He said that more than 12 per cent of the population in Kansas was over 65 and that in some rural counties in Kansas more than 25 per cent of the population was over 65
because of the movement to urban centers by rural young people
"BY THE YEAR 2000, the aged population combined with those children and youth who are also termed non-working people, will exceed the working population," he said.
"The course deals with the psychological and sociological forces that affect the aged—how a person adapts to aging—as well as training people to utilize the resources available to the aged," Ernst said.
Besides the Tenet course, Ernst said, KU is interested in setting up a Kansas area agency on aging that would serve Wyan-
ton residents by providing them with setting up information and referral systems.
Harris, describing Hearst as a convert to the SLA, said the newspaper he acted “totally spontaneously” when she fired a colleague who had criticized the Harrises’ detraway from a shooflining.
DWINDLING BUYING power and inadequate health care and housing have become the most critical problems for the aged in New York City. They will be devoted to these issues. Ermadt said.
Ernst said one reason she was more concerned for the ageed that there were simply more persons over 65 than ever before. Twenty years ago when I first met her, I would never remember their grandparents; now some students know their great-grandparents."
He said that until the passage of the Older American Act in 1965, the federal government paid little attention to the problems of the aged. The act authorized block grants to state and local government to fund programs for the aged.
Ernst said the main purpose of service for the aged was to enable them to live independently, with supportive services provided by the community.
THE PALE, slender Harris, wearing blue jeans and an open-necked blue print blouse, was calm as she stood at a lectern where he heavily guarded bullet-proof courtroom.
The heirus has testified she fired a fire as "reflex action" to the Harris' orders.
Soltsky, who died on her 28th birthday May 17, 1974, was slain along with five other SLA "soldiers" in a battle with Los Angeles police.
"I would like to see a government out of a peace walk with the people firmly on the ground talking with one another," Meacham said.
But her composure broke briefly when the prosecutor interposed loud objections and Superior Court Judge Mark Brandler upheld him.
Tertimony was scheduled to begin today.
Hethlathry was s Schwenched to begin today. HELSINKY AND her husband, William, are on trial for robbery, robbery and assault. Hearst, a codefender, is scheduled to be tried separately.
Champney has been with the walk since its beginning in San Francisco.
Emily Harris disputes Hearst trial testimony
Harris, in the role of her own lawyer,
delivered an opening statement to jurors
that challenged for the first time Heart's
version of events involving the trio.
But for that twist of fate, Harris said, Hearest would have perished in a Symbionese Liberation Army hideout—and Lucia "Mizmoon" Sölskyl would have died.
"This is a great way to see the country," he said. "I've worn out three pairs of tennis shoes."
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Emily Harris told her juries yesterday that Patricia Hearst escaped death in a fire shotout only by "a flash of light," and she would go along for the ride, on a shopping trip.
He predicted that other solutions to the problem of utilizing the increased age population might include an increased flexibility in retirement ages and employment of the aged to care for children of working parents.
Kansan Classifieds Work For You!
"That's argumentative," said Deputy
Champney heard about the walk while attending Wilmington College, Wilmington, Ohio. He said he hoped his walking would help the disarmment issue.
Hearst swore at her San Francisco bank robbery trial that she never joined ranks with the organization.
FEDERAL PROGRAMS such as the Foster Grandparent program, RSVP (Retired Senior Volunteer Program) and programs that make use of the expertise of retread business executives would continue and expand, Ernst said.
BANANA SPLIT
"We're basically poor people in the march," he said. "Money for expenses comes from previous jobs or donations along our travels."
Treat Yourself to a
only 60c reg.85c
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Jul 12-14
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HER OPENING statement, which followed an explanation of law by her lawyer, Leonard Weinglass, and a brief statement of the bare facts by the prosecutor, focused on the relationship between the Harrisons and Hearst on May 16, 1974.
District Attorney Sam Mayerson, interruping Harris.
"I've never done this before," Harris said softly. A brief recess was called, then Harris returned red-eyed. A legal aide confirmed she had been crying. But the 29-year-old defendant resumed her talk in a calm voice.
527 W. 6th
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THE PRETZEL
and Sandwich Shoppe
9th & Indiana Phone 843-3264
Shredded Beef Sandwich . . Reg. 89c 75c
Bar-B-Q Beef Sandwich . . Reg. 89c 75c
Italian Steak . . . Reg. 79c 65c
Plump Hot Dogs . . . Reg. 69c 55c
Kurly KU Fries . . . Reg. 40c 25c
Pork Tenderloin . . . Reg. 75c 65c
Ooey Gooey
GIANT SIZE SOFT
Pretzels . . . . . . . . . Reg. 29c 19c
FREE
With each haircut during July and August you receive absolutely free:
Heat styling service
★ Redken moisturizing treatment
- A complimentary Redken organic cleansing bar
Head-to-Head 842-9001 901 Ky.
Please call Vicki for an appt.
Tuesday, July 13, 1976
3
9th-grader excels in meet
Sports
By BRYANT GRIGGS
A ninth-grader from South Junior High School stole the spotlight from KU runners at the Third Annual Lawrence Track and Field meet会议 Saturday at Memorial Stadium.
Kevin Thiessen had never competed for an organized junior high or high school track team, but his 8.7-second time in the 70-yard low hardies and his 13 feet, 2-inch in the pole vault were better than the National Junior Olympic AAU records.
THE MEET was conducted under AU rules, but it wasn't an AU Junior Olympic meet. Ed Meyen, director of the Lawrence Track Club, said.
However, Thiessen's time in the low hurdles and his record-exceeding vaunt won't go on record because the meet wasn't registered with the AAU.
"We're not sure whether Thiessen's marks are a Junior Olympic record because we're not sure the AAU has recognized the marks because it wasn't a 'Junior Olympic'
Players'union baseball owners agree on terms
PHILADELPHIA (AP)—The All-Star Game, once almost threatened because of the continuing dispute between baseball's first two players in the 1960s Association, became the scene of settlement between the two sides yesterday when agreement on a new four-year contract was reached.
Marvin Miller, executive director of the players' union, said his executive board had accepted the latest proposal, which would extend to the full membership for ratification.
The six-man player relations committee, which represented management in the negotiations, voted unanimously for the pact and will submit it to the rest of the owners for approval at a special meeting tomorrow.
"I believe so." he said.
Miller was asked whether he thought the player between the players and owners was finished.
No details of the agreement were announced, but it was learned that it called for a new reserve clause that would allow players to become free agents after six years in the major leagues. Another feature would prevent a player who had moved from one team to another from changing teams again for five years.
The pact also includes a 29 per cent increase in pension benefits.
The settlement ends 13 months of negotiations between the two sides and ushers in a new reserve system concept for baseball. It does not, however, solve the perplexing "one-and-one" problem that Ayers and once after pitchers Ayers Messmessman and Dawn Browne had agent status because they had played the 1975 season without signing contracts.
Arbitrator Peter Selitz ruled that the two pitches had effectively played out their options and were free to move to new teams. McNally retired but Messersmith left the Los Angeles Dodgers for the Atlanta Braves.
TOASTY BREAD
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meet. But Thlessen has beat out the old marks," Meyen said.
Thitessen also won the 100-yard dash with a time of 11.0 seconds.
"I was hoping for a couple of records," Theissen said, "but I really wasn't ready for it (the meet). I hadn't run in a week and a half, but I got on a train to a camp at Kansas State," he said.
GEORGE MASON, KU miler, also participated in the meet, as did KU track team member Bill Lundberg, who ran the two mile.
Mason won the mile with a time of 41.78 in the men's ens. He also ran a 2:02.6 to take second place in the men's open 880-750, took sixth place in the 440 with a time of 55.8.
In the two-mile run, Lundberg crossed the finish line ahead of Mason with a run of 8.71 km (5.35 mi).
Lawrence residents set meet records in six field events and six running events. Other meet records were established by participants from outside the Lawrence area.
LOCAL RESIDENTS captured 11 first-place spots in field events and 10 first-place spots.
Lawrence winners in the running events were:
STUDENT NIGHT at BUGSY'S No Cover — Call 841-7100
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GREATER COMFORT, SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT
Francis could only talk--but "GUS"
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telephoneled Phillip Krumm, president of the U.S. Olympic Committee, and voiced his objections. Press Secretary Ron Nesson said it was too early to speculate whether Ford would recommend that American athletes boycott the Games. The President does not have the authority to order such a boycott.
"LOGAN'S RUN"
Hillcrest
What Bobbie Gentry's song didn't fall you- the movie does . . .
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BEACH TO BAYLEY West on Highway 59
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"DRIVE IN" at 9:15, plus
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Starring Woody Allen at 11:00
Summer Films
A film record of the Living Theatres
and a production of *Paradise Now in Brussels* at the Berlin Sportpalast. Directed by Sheldon Rothchen with Julian Beck
SUA
This partly autobiographical film is a true story of a young boy's growing up and initiation. Pauline Kael said, "Murmur of the Heart is hearty and smooth, like a fine old jazz waltz." In a sense, it's a kick of a mule—a funny kick which sends you out doubled over grinning."
Wednesday, July 14
MURMUR
OF THE HEART
Tuesday, July 13 PARADISE NOW
Directed by Claude Sautet, with Yves Montand, Romi Schneider, Sami Frey. "Intelligent, wifty, and informed by an energy of direction," the book is matched by vibrant performances. Most enjoyable"-Esquire
7:30 p.m. 75c
Merr's 100-rd run, 11-9 (age 11-year) 1. Jose Demby
Krumpel, Koen Ravenship, 11-0 (40-44). Diane Schusse
wade, 11.0
While the IOC still had faint hopes of solving one political crisis, another loomed nearer as the African countries talked of supporting an Olympic ban on New Zealand.
7:30 p.m. 75°
Friday, July 16
CESAR AND ROSALIE
7:30 p.m. '1.00
ALL FILMS
SHOWN IN WOODRUFF
AUDITORIUM
44-1, -Brock Davis, 12.43.9
Middle Women (Open), 1. Terry Anderson, 10.8.5
Women (Open), 12.43.9
Dennis Brutus, Chicago-based president of the South African Non-Racial Open Committee, said there was much talk and something could break in the next two days.
M. Dearman, 20), George Mason, 417.7,
Two MiHs, 60), James Lonsdale, 81.3,
85-(64-1). Robbins DAs, 12, 64.5.
McCormick, 21).
High-Jump (Men's Open 1, Ben Johnson '04,
'05), High Jump (Men's Open 2, Ben Johnson '06,
'07), Barek Barich '13, Barek Barich '16,
'30-35) - Beam Barich '19, (60-44) - Don Schwaeda,
(60-44)
Gita Nila Ruk (~Tadhak) Chamber Duncan, #42
Gita Nila Ruk (~Tadhak) Chamber Duncan, #42
Fallu Vale (E. Haili) 13' 12"
Fallu Vale (E. Haili) 13' 12"
M 60-4d. yu - (10-11) J. m. Headkern, 65.1.
M 80-9d. yu - (10-11) J. m. Headkern, 65.1.
M 80-9d. yu - (10-11) J. m. Headkern, 65.1.
M 80-9d. yu - (10-11) J. m. Headkern, 65.1.
20.07. Bufo Yu - (Men's) Open, Carl Michael
20.17. Miles (Men's) Open, George Maason, 6.17.8.
Men's "Tiebreaker" (18-17), Tom Davis, 40'4" (Mens)
open.) -1, Sanjay Jain, 41'4"
There was no immediate sign that the talks were succeeding. But the International Olympic Committee (ICC) still demanded that Taiwanese delegation would agree to a cooperation of their name and flag and that Canada would let Taiwan's athletes into the country.
MONREAL (AP)—U.S. Olympic officials acted as the go-between Monday, trying to get the Taiwanese back into the Olympic Games.
The Taiwanese said Sunday they would pull out of the Games. The IOC, under pressure from the Canadian government, had asked them to drop the name of the country and its capital in a opening ceremony behind the Olympic emblem instead of their own national flag.
Taiwan-Olympic talks slow
THE IOC executive board capitulated to Canada's demands Sunday and suggested
The Taiwanese said they would not compete under those conditions. A few of their athletes are in Montreal but others are stranded in the United States, unable to get into the country because Canada will not grant them visas.
The Africans want to bring pressure on New Zealand because a New Zealand rugby team currently is touring segregationist South Africa.
that the Taiwan athletes march under an Olympic symbol instead of their own flag. Although the recommendation by the Rugby World Cup has been by all IOC, that body never has overruled its board.
Athletes from other nations do not need visas, but Canada broke diplomatic relations with the Republic of China—Taiwan—when it recognized the People's Republic of China. Taking, Red China now is Canada's biggest export customer, especially in wheat.
PRESIDENT FORD called on U.S.
Olympic officials Monday to call
up more athletes, Ferdinand. Ford
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FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WEBSTER MOBILE HOMES, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS 75032.
2 bbr, all utilities paid, on campus. Furniture
included. Free parking. a/c/pool. boa4
4093.
Mark I and II, nice and quiet, 1 and 2 bedroom
Mark I and II, very nice, very nice and close to can,
843-1131.
2 bedroom furnished apartment near campus for
students, 1 bedroom furnished apartment for
August 1st 7 responds to Box 2138.
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
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5. Two stores
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
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2300 Haskell
843-6960
Mexican Food
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STEREO SYSTEMS APRIL 300.00 TO 11.00 PM ONLY
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COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES!
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
1. **1) As study guide**
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2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
3. For exam preparation "New Analysis of the Civilization" available now at Tait College.
Alternator, starter, and starter. Specialists. BELL AUDIO ELECTRIC, 845-909-3600, 300 W, 6th.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOI: LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hi-fi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, the following list should be your guide at the GRAMPHONE SHOP AT KIFFS ®
Excellent selection of row and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
W. 26th St., New York, NY 10019.
THEVEEH Large selection of "Our Special"
DESIGNER Regularly $69.00—now $29.
THE ATTIC, 671 Mam.
**PRICE:** $18.00
SONY model C124A 12" color TV, used 2 months
for $290. Clutch bid at 841-332-0300. 7-10
for $290. Clutch bid at 841-332-0300. 7-10
TECHNICES $250 receiveer, used 3 months with full warranty.
TechTech $250 receiveer, used 3 months with full warranty. Sale now for $250, with sell for $149.
TechTech $250 receiveer, used 3 months with full warranty. Sale now for $250, with sell for $149.
For Sale: 850 Plymouth Fury III. Good condition.
Bought: 850 Burlington 841-2724 two five evening
weeks.
Plainer Stero Receiver model XS-424, 1½ years
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72 Yamaha RD 350 perfect condition, $880 or
less. Yamaha RD 350 runs good, $400; Call
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Gung safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue dye
preservation? Price £20, price $12.95
The Aftre, 377ff Ave. San Francisco
$129.95
*Fabrics* : 100% cotton permanent press prints for fabric
finishing and fast dry quality. 40" wide, Prairie Print
fabric.
1973 Duster, Like new, 32,000 miles, automatic,
drive to appreciate. Make an offer. B42-
0190. 0190
FOUND
Found--young skillet tom-cat, salt and pepper and brown with white paws and neck in area of mouth.
Found: Precipitation glass. 600 block of Alabama; barned Monday Call 841-514-634. 7:14
Sunglasses in bicentennial color by Memorial Stadium. 7-14
Full-time position for ten months study of subsurface geology, with experience in working with geology, with experience in working with geologists in a field work for weeks. Knowledge of field work for weeks. Knowledge of geological surveys. Kansas Geological Survey, 1848-1949. Kansas Geological Survey is an Equi Opportunity Agency and, of all, are trained to encourage to apply.
HELP WANTED
Douglas County is receiving applications for positions in child welfare (civil defense). Salary $10,000 to $16,000 per position. Formal and communicative abilities are essential. Benefits include health insurance, retirement benefits include health insurance, retirement benefits should be made prior to July 20 at office of house 131 Mast St. Reamine should accompany house 131 Mast St. Reamine to apply.
Babywaiter Wanted: Saturday and occasional
breakfast at 12$ per hour. Call 824-8382 or
p.m.
7-15
Telephone solicitors. Good pay and excellent compensation. Flexible hours. Call 844-7648-7-15 Photography student seeks photographic model for a few months, $8/hour. Reply to Bob, P.O. Box 2300, London SW1X 8JH
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full-time position for ten months study of sub-murray tars sand. Mines of bachelor's degree in geology are required. Minimum small drilling rig required. Must be able to live in area of field work for weeks Knowledge of mineralogy, geology, petroleum geology W. J. Ebanks, Jr. Kansas Geological Survey July 15, 1976. The Kansas Geological Survey an equal Opportunity Affirmative Action environment women and men, all races encouraged to apply
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OPPORTUNITIES
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Couples earn extra income in your spare time by booking private lessons and/or performing private income. For app call 842-137-1580.
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 842-0110. If you like your hodat at the fireworks, please send a picture. I didn't get one. CTB, P.O. Box 3605.
Hey, come on on! The KU-Y is open. Drop by
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Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 102, 103, 105, 115, 116, 121, 122, 123, 500. Regular sessions or
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1974 Yamaha DT250
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TUTOR
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TYPING
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WANTED
Female roommates need to share large house.
Female roommates 1/3 utilities. B486-766 or
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Female roommate wanted: 2 bedroom gartment;
AC, close to campus and downtown. $75 plus
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7-15
Baby alter wanted for Thursday afternoons and
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7/14
P. T. student would like to room with other students in the same building and look for a place or room with others who need it. A typical room location is 10th floor.
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HOLIDAY DATE: AUGUST 24TH 8:30 PM
Kansan Correction:
The Maupintour Business Card stating 15% off airline fares failed to mention there are restrictions. This oversight was caused by the Kansan. We are sorry for any inconveniences this may have caused Maupintour customers.
in the summer.
Keep your car healthy
Use the student discounts
at
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4
Tuesday, July 13, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Comment
I THINK WE'RE IN
FOR ONE DULL
CONVENTION.
1976 NYT SPECIAL FEATURES
N.Y.C. delights delegates
NEW YORK (AP)—Can a staircase Wallace supporter from South Carolina bring his wife to New York City, vote for Jimmy Carter at the convention and still have a good time? Or at least survive?
Democratic delegate Wayne Hartley, 49,
wasn't too sure when he stepped off a
Southern Methic Jeff jeet La Guardia's
13th street and Sundale Suzanne's
Twenty-four hours later, he had an answer.
"Well, I'll declare," he said. "It is a pleasure being here, instead of the ordeal we had anticipated. I didn't want to come to New York before."
WAYNE AND CARL Hartley, real estate and insurance brokers from Charleston, said they hadn't been looking forward to their first stay in Fun City.
"At first I complained to the delegation about their choice of site." Hartley said at the airport. "The reasons are obvious, what with the muggings and all."
A welcoming committee moved in and began handing out to the Hartleys and 75 other South Carolina delegates some materials, 'cissting of newspapers and maps.
A little overwhelmed by the attention, Hartley said, "This is hospitality! We will have to reciprocate when you come to South Carolina."
THE HARTLEYS have three teenage daughters, have been married 20 years, described themselves as middle income, have graduated from college and are taking college courses.
En route to their Manhattan hotel, the Hartleys worried about what awaited them. "Are the abbys really dangerous? When they attack us?" she asked with mugginggs. Have you had any problems?"
"Well, now that we're here," Hartley said with resignation. "I guess we should see as much as we can. We're willing to look at this with an open mind."
While Mrs. Hartley craned her neck to the tops of tall buildings, her husband pointed out the metal grid screens in front of closed shop windows.
"TWE NEVER seen that before," he said,
"but I can understand the need for it."
"Well, I've never seen that before either," Mrs. Hartley exclaimed. "Look there, a church right in the middle of the street with shops all around it."
A late afternoon reception and meeting for the South Carolina delegates delayed a planned trip to a street fair.
Down in the 57th Street and Seventh Avenue subway tunnel, the Hartleys purchased tokens for their first ride. Mrs. Hartley stepped back, eyes wide as a train hurted past, then laughed as they ran for the last car.
"THIS REALLY gets you there in a hurry, doesn't it," she said.
"I's an experience, it is sure," Hartley said. "I'd never really thought much about it. I was not going to care."
Emerging from the subway tunnels, the Hartleys found themselves caught up in a New York street fair, and Mrs. Hartley had to walk home, taking hands with Mayor Abraham Beame.
They were soon involved in one of New York's top attractions, food. Various local restaurants had set up booths and were handing out free samples. The Hartleys opened the door to the conventionally at the crowds, the police, the free food and the party atmosphere.
On the subway to Times Square, Hartley wryly commented, "I guess this reminds me of a chihuahua."
THE MOST often refrain he refrains, "I've never seen anything like this before... . . ."
"This is not this at all like her (Mrs. Hartley) getting in her Lincoln and going where she wants to." he added. "We thought we lived in a congested area when we had to stop a few minutes at a traffic light."
Times Square, with the bright lights, theater marquees and its legitimate and seamy aspects, seemed a bit overwhelming. The Hartleys were clearly more comfortable as they walked through Rockfeller Center.
"Well, this isn't at all what I expected," and now there's so much I want to see.
"OH! LOOK straight up," Mrs. Hartley said in front of the Time-Life Building.
There is a rumor affoot that English soon will satisfy the foreign language request.
By RON HARTUNG Continuing Writings
Well, let's scotch that rumor here and now—temporarily, at least. The truth is that our language is being bludgeoned more severely every year (in spite of the fact that we have alwaysAmerica, since Mr. Coffee came along to student population, having been tutored by game-show hosts, sportscasters and pitcher, is showing itself to be less and less handy with the mother tongue. Collegegians have been known to whimper at the sight of a female accentence, and openly weep when told that "He should of went" is, alsas, standard English.
The situation resembles a bizarre tag-team wrestling match.
IN THIS corner, in lily-white trunks, stands Kid "Hit-the-books" College, with kids turned Avenger, a professional type in the high school, the other corner, in the black and blue trunks, crouches the Corruptor, sponsored by the advertising industry. With him, no trunks at all, is the trusted Truth, holding that good news is easier to talk bad than good, aren't it?"
Requiem for a language
The bell sounds, the grapplers enter the ring, and for the next ten minutes the hall is hitched with sticking of the forearm hitting flesh, the wrinkles of the vulgar rabble shriek for more. But look! the College Kid, trapped in the enemy's corner, is being knuckled silly by the unscrupulous duo. As his partner looks on in his pleading, the Corpuer plants his knee firmly in the Kid's legs and arms are locked behind him. The Corpurator plants his knee firmly in the Kid's back and cackles maniacally as the Naked One, skidding the Kid's face into the floor.
On and on this ungrammatical torture went, until finally the Kid's spirit seemed to snap, and he began mouthing their foul motteos. The Corruptor led him through a disgusting etiquity of all saying slogan ever to flash across a TV screen, while the other corner, fists dig in his ears to shut out the sound.
"All right, punk, repeat after me: I should of went; Everybody is doing their work; Winston takes good like it should; Mr. Klub goes down good; Hopefully the sun will rise going out the window, the car rolled downhill; Him and me is going with they and she."
BUT SUDENLY a frail, nondescript figure slipped through the rabid crowd to the Avenger and, whispering in his ear, he scratched the pages of his book. And, just as suddenly, a look of confident joy spread across the Avenger's face. He rose, hopped over the ropes, strode to the center of the ring and, in a voice that we have sold a chill dog to a vegetarian, began:
*Friends, are you grammatically correct?*
*The dependent clause is Saturant's impiliment, granddaughter.*
An eerie hush settled over the crowd, and
Bright city lights, country moon
By GREG BASHAW
Campus Editor
It's been said that to live well you must balance the terror you see in the world with its beauty. Just how hard it is to maintain balance because becomes striking on full moon nights.
Saturday was such a night, when the moon blotted out all but the brightest stars and its pull tugged on Earth like a powerful magnet. Our five cats sprawled in the front yard taking swipes at each other and chasing their tails.
At our friends' farmhouse four miles south of town four guys were jamming jolting blues on electric guitars and Jimmy Carter was on the distorted TV set, carrying a coat over his shoulder as if he were walking in a Camel cigarette ad.
The house couldn't contain Tim and me either. We paced about the living room for a while, then moved to the country. A wise yoga teacher had once told us that one should have as much liquid in his system as possible to reduce the pull of a sweater we stepped for a 12-pack at the liquor store.
Such noise was what we least wanted so we climbed the tall, grassy hill on the edge of the farm for solace. We sat on the summit on ground matted by a cow that had given birth the week before and watched the wind and rain blow through the cracks and howling dogs was all around as we looked down on ML. Bleu, north of our own peak.
"I heard Mt. Blue's just made of wrecked cars covered over with dirt," Tim said, as we shared our last beer. "That would kinda be" the romance out of skiing down it for me.
"Look at the city's lights for romance," said Iaowni Street's lights were lined up in a nest row in the distance, twinkling like an evening show. "Arent those a beautiful light?"
"Yeah," he said, "reminds me of being on vacation as a kid and finally makin' it to a big city and waking up in the back seat to watch all the lights just flicker by."
"Yeah, you get things for staying between them," he said. "like money. And you're always supposed to want more lights and to keep the carriage in control the carnival, every kid wants that."
Just stay within the limits. I don't know, I don't think I can do it for long though."
There was a long silence before I said, "Well, you are right," and just those lights this summer, I put to KEY.
We laughed and siped from the last beer. With some beer buddies I think about wiping the rim of the can before I sip but not after. I polished off the last half-inch of backwash.
"Watty say," he said, picking up and tossing a bunked hunt of dug during the attack.
So we stumbled down the hill to where our friends were bagged out in the grass watching the moon. They asked who we'd run into on the hill. They couldn't understand alone, doing for two hours and up there, alone, taking for two hours and up there, we had to get back to the city, to the lights.
With the dark recesses inside of me, that sun or even moonlight never touch, I have no trouble finding the black and terrible to dwell on. But I turn to others, like Tim, especially on those full moon nights, for the needed balance, the beautiful.
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even the evil twins cease their pummeling of the kid, as all ever fired on center,
"You!" he shouted, pointing to a confused figure at ringide. "Do you suffer from the heartbreak of split infinitives? And you! You modify your dancers' question? Do you你 suffer col distension? Do you你 shift needlessly in tense or mood—or are you shiffless?
"ARE YOUR commas spliced? Do you
know that they are capitalized?
Are you awkward, vague or reactive?"
His voice built to a roar as he continued:
"Do you have the recurring nightmare that you ARE a sentence fragment? Do you find it difficult to agree with your antecedents?
*Friends-listen to me, friends, hear what I say--do you sometimes SPEAK in your language?*
"This is it, friends, Salvation! This is your ticket to linguistic heaven, and it's called," God, Grammar, and You: Colloquial Language is the Devil's Workshop."
"I KNOW some of you are saying, 'I don't need that stuff.' Well stuff! pally! we need it, and I can show you where to get it." The place was so cool you could have
heard a post-nasal drip (and several did). A collective gasp was released as he held up his small book, which seemed to emit a strange glow.
With that the Avenger flashed the tiny book in the faces of the unholy pair, she shrieked, covered their eyes and scurried away to the sound of the crowd's hisses.
the place was so quiet you could have
WITHIN MINUTES the Avenger was surrounded by pairs and pairs of clammy hands forking over $1.95 plus postage for a copy of the marvelous volume.
"Well, there's one battle won for Grammar, Kid—but there's still a long war ahead of it," he said to his hapless partner, who was still dazeed by the thumping he'd taken.
"Still," the pouting Kid muttered to himself, "I could of won."
American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas
EAGLE
A Publick Meeting
will commence at 7:30 p.m., WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1976 at ye ole gathering spot "THE COMMUNITY BUILDING" to discuss the timely and relevant topic of
"The Rights of Candidates and Voters"
★ ★ ★
THE FINAL HIGHLIGHT OF THE EVENING! There will be a discussion about the choice of your school to vote in this organization. Now is your chance to exercise your right to vote in this organization.
Jim Lawing, ACLU of Kansas president, will explore the rulings that affect the rights of voters, including residency requirements, mail registration and literacy tests. Also featured is an examination of the controversial Federal Elections Act of 1974 and the challenges that have been raised against it.
For more information contact:
Tom Wilson, 841-5867 or Richard Perkins, 842-2871
629 Quincy, Suite 203, Topeka, Kansas 66603
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Lebanese civil war hits home for 4 KU students
By ALEXIS WAGNER
The civil war in Lebanon may seem to most Americans to be something going on "over there," but it is a daily part of the lives of KU students from Lebanon.
Four Lebanese students who wished to be identified as Tomey, Fadid, Bassam, and Zouhair, said that until about three months ago when the 15-month old war intensified, they could write or call their families without trouble.
"Now phone lines in some areas have been hit and the New York operator can't place any calls to Lebanon," Tomey said. "I try almost ever day to call home."
He said the only response to his calls was a recording saying the lines were busy or there was equipment trouble. Most phone lines in Beirut, where his parents live, have been bombed, he said.
"Not being able to communicate with your family kills your concentration in class. You just keep thinking about it. It's frustrating." Tomey said.
Jack Harris, Lawrence postmaster, said there was an embargo on all mail to Lebanon and anything addressed to Lebanon was returned to the sender.
Tormey said he had been able to send few letters to his family by mailing them to a friend.
Zoahair said he has a friend who is a hostess for Middle Eastern Airlines and can sometimes communicate with his family through her. He said she has a mailbox at the airport in Lebanon to which he sometimes sent mail.
fles the letters in to the area and then hand-
delivers them to *Tonye's parents*' home.
Zouhair said that his parents can mail letters to him by giving them to the hostess who will put it on any plane flying to the United States.
The airport in Lebanon has been closed, however, and flights to or from Lebanon are rare.
"I mail them and just hope it will reach
Zouhair has been in the United States for about seven months. He said that he had no trouble getting here because when he left fighting had been temporarily stoned.
my family," Zoahair said. "It is a matter of months, not days, to get letter home."
Mail from Lebanon must be taken directly to the Christian city of Jumiyah, but it must be untouched by the war. From Jumiyah, mail it to Cypriot forces. Given Cypriot stamps and sent on, But. it is
difficult and risky for people to travel to Junihay, Faddi said.
"Shells are flying around and wherever they land is destroyed." Padid said.
He said that driving to Juniyah was more impossible because gasoline, when it catches fire, is not as safe as fuel.
Torney and Fadid said the only way they could get clues as to whether their families were safe was by watching television and recording what you find out where the heaviest fighting was.
Bassam said that his family could leave Lebanon and go to a safer area but that his family had not done so.
"He is Lebanonese he will stay in Lebanon. Easily is all the people left, he would be there."
Torney said his father, too, would not leave Lebanon.
"He refuses to live as a refugee," Tomey said.
"People are just sitting and waiting for something to happen," Fadid said. "As long as they can hear the bombs falling, they can do everything." They hear bombs, they know they are dead.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
"We will have to wait until the situation changes before we can go back," Zoathar said.
Tomey came to KU in the fall of 1972, and Fadid came in the spring of 1972. Both Bassam and Zoahair have been here for many years. In 2005, when they will be able to return to Lebanon,
Wet
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.162
National League shines in All Star
Wednesday, July 14.1976
See page six
Fredric Sander
F. M. G. M. H. A. P. E. O.
Reaching a compromise
Yesterday the emphasis of the salary dispute between the Lawrence firefighters and the city switched from the picket line to the conference room. City manager Bufford Watson had been the sole owner of the office, which was vacant.
AUGUST 1986
Staff photos by JAY KOELZE
McMahon, vice president, second district, (right, top) of the International Fire Fighter's Association. When a compromise was finally reached the representatives of the firefighters' association discussed the proposal and how they would present it to their members.
Democrats decry GOP 'Tories'
NEW YORK (AP)—At the biggest show off Broadway, Democratic performers presented Jimmy Carter's platform last week to Republican Republicans as veto-baby, modern Toris.
Meanwhile, Carter considered a vice presidential choice to complete his cam
A Democratic congressional leader reported, and a Carter spokesman denied, that the former Georgia governor had decided that either Sen. Edmund S. Muske of Maine or Sen. Walter F. Mondale of Minnesota would be his running mate.
Carter's press secretary, Jody Powell, said the list of vice presidential prospects is one that he had to consider politicism, but Powell it was. He said the field will not be narrowed until late today, that Carter will then speak to all six nominees, and his mission will be announced tomorrow morning.
Humphrey said the voters will throw out the "Republican Tories" and make Carter president. McGown called for the kind of Democratic unity his 1972 ticket was denied, and said America cannot afford four years of an administration in which the veto of $30 billion . . . to paralyze the elected representatives of the American people."
The party's two previous nominees, Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota and Sen. H. Humphrey of Minnesota, took turn to asking the Republicans who defeated them.
Then came platform time, but it was a show, not a debate, a succession of speeches by party leaders on each section of the document that was set in advance.
That brought Muskie to the microphone, to accuse President Ford of saying no, no and no again, to economic and jobs programs Americans need.
"We need not government by veto but government by inspired leadership," he
While the television cameras focused on the men at the rostrum, the delegates, onlookers and newmen milled on the convention floor, crowded the aisles and
kept up a constant murmur of conversation.
There seemed to be more people talking
Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, widow of John F. Kennedy, attended the convention briefly and received a standing ovation from the delegates.
Wallace put his own stamp on the issue, and in a line he used from a hundred plates that he had taken to tell the convention, "Some of these bureaucratic briefcase toters ought to have their briefcases thrown in the Potomac River, the American people would be better off."
Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace was chosen to speak on government reform, which is covered in the platform with a plank pledging the kind of overhaul and consolidation for which Carter has campaigned.
Rep. Thomas P. "Tip" O'Neill Jr. of Massachusetts, the House major leader, said he had learned from someone familiar with Carter's thinking that the vice presidential nominee was Monday or Tuesday had that spot on Humphrey's 1988 test.
Wallace said Carter and a Democratic Congress will see to it that tax money is spent for purposes more productive than bureaucracy and red tape.
"I don't think they would be asking for clarifications if I was out of the race," he
"I've been so busy catching trout . . . I concentrated on them rather than on my chances," he said when he arrived from Maine.
Powell said Carter flatly denied that.
Muskie fended off questions about his prospects.
And John Glenn of Ohio said he was sure he still is in the running, since he had just discussed his background again with Charles Kirbo, Carter's vice presidential candidate.
"He said specifically no, and not only,
that, but that nobody knew." Powell said.
Mondale was cautious, too. He said the
There wasn't much else to run the 37th Democratic National Convention around, with Carter in command of a delegate from New York and murmur of dissent on the business at hand.
decision was Carter's, and added, "I'm not trying to crowd myself on the ticket."
The other three senators Carter interviewed as prospective running mates were Frank Church of Idaho, Adalie E. Johnson and Henry M. Jackson of Washington.
"This is the first convention in modern times that's been run around the vice president's office."
As if to underscore the harmony mood, the convention's second session quickly ratified the no-contests report of its credentials committee, settling an item that
Although it was the convention's first business session, the major order of business was more speechmaking; almost all the decisions had been made in advance. So Democrats who once opposed Carter—and each other—paraded across the platform at Madison Square Garden in unlikely harmony.
"Our business here is not to fight over credentials," said Sen. Alan Cranon of California, reporting for the credentials committee." . . . Our task is to nominate our nation's next president and vice president."
produced party-rending fights four years ago.
The main business of the convention was one night away; the call of the roll that will be heard is given.
Compromise settles firemen's pay dispute
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Staff Writer
Lawrence firefighters voted late yesterday to accept a compromise proposal after two negotiating sessions during the dav.
The agreement provided for each fireman to receive four extra days off per year in lieu of a direct pay raise, health and life insurance benefits or equal pay periods.
After reaching the agreement, the firefighters stopped the work slowdown the firefighters stopped the work slowdown the day earlier. According to David Reavis, a spokesman of policemen's association, the one-day-old policemen's speedup in support of their actions ended about 4 p.m. yesterday.
City officials and spokesmen for members of the International Association of Fire Fighters Local No. 1596 discussed several recent developments in an agreement acceptable to both sides.
Joe McMahon, firefighters association international vice president for the second district (Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa), attended both sessions.
"I wouldn't say the men are happy with the deal, but they're fairly satisfied," Alvin Samuels, president of the local firemen's association said after the final vote to accept one of the city's two alternate proposals.
At the 10 a.m. meeting, Buford Watson,
city manager, presented a letter to
★
In the letter, Watson said he would instruct the fire chief to make "appropriate hourly reductions in pay for the work slowdown," to be effective today.
firefighters' representatives rejecting unlawful proposals offered Monday. Watson offers or consider further requests from the firemen until pickets were removed from construction sites in the city garage, the fire station plant and Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
Immediately after he presented the letter to the union representatives, Watson said he had been informed that all pickets had been removed from their picket stalls still remained outside City Hall.
McMahon said he had ordered removal of the pickets in an effort to "come here with chalk."
★
McMahon then submitted a counter proposal to the city; one "Kelly" day (extra day off with pay) every two months (to total six each year) and equal pay periods.
"I don't think our differences are that great and I think the firefighters are anxious to reach a workable compromise," he said.
He explained that these additional days off with pay would be apportioned at the end of the year, although available manpower would permit. The equal pay proposal involved division of the
See AGREEMENT page 4
Commissioners approve praise Watson's actions
Lawrence城 city commissioners commended city manager manuf Bowl Watson during last night's meeting for his success in the police and firefighter's labor disputes.
Barkley Clark, city commissioner, said he thought Watson conducted the negotiations in good faith and exercised correct judgment in bargaining with the union representatives, despite opposition from the commission to the barwining.
"I think he the smart thing in spite of our determination not to recognize the truth."
Clark also said he thought it was good that the negotiations were opened to the press although Watson had originally begun "private" discussions with union officials.
"I think it's important that this openness was possible. I think it undoubtedly helped to prevent any bitterness being directed at them by officials by public employees," Clark said.
Mayor Fred Pence said he hoped that the firefighter's leaders could now "find something positive to do to better the situation, instead of all this negative action."
Pence and Clark agreed that the prompt resolution of the labor disputes was forti-
"I imagine they were technically involved in all kinds of illegal actions—like murdering boycotts and who knows what. "Claim said, "It's a good thing it all ended nicely."
Commissioners reported that the policemen's support of the firefighters' actions was met with anger by those persecuting them. "We all knew of the 'speed up' during the last two days."
Commissioner Donald Bimns said he had received negative response and frate the commissioners.
"I don't think this thing (the speed up) helped their cause or that of the firefighters at all. In fact, I think it probably has hurt them. But in general, anything else could have done." Binsa said.
Commissioner Carl Mibke agreed that we policemen would the powers of their citizens.
"I just don't like the idea of the police using a position they have to harass people. I think it's plain wrong, no doubt about it," he said.
U.S. denies overflights of Ugandan border
NAIROBI, KENYA (AP)—The presence of a U.S. Navy plane in Kenya prompted diplomatic reports yesterday that it is flying reconnaissance missions to survey a reported military buildup in neighboring Uganda.
But in Washington the Defense Department denied that the four-engine P3 patrol plane had flown along the Kenyah Uganda border and that only to give the crew a rest after a long over-water flight. A Pentagon spokesman said, "The only thing it does is when it lands."
Diplomats in Nairobi the plane was飞行的 along the Kenya-Uganda border after arriving here Saturday from the American military base on the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia. The plane is expected to be for an indefinite period, the diplomats said.
Relations between Kenya and Uganda, tense for months, have deteriorated sharply since farallah's July 4 rescue of more than 100 children from a nearby airport. Uganda accused Kenya of helping
the islands, and Kenya denied it. Some of the Israeli planes stopped in Nairobi on the flight.
Since then, Kenya and Uganda have accused each other of moving troop reinnervation agreements with Uganda also charged that Israel and American military personnel have moved into Kenya, which has friendlier relations with Washington than most African nations.
The U.S. Defense Department said Saturday that a Navy plane and a frogate ship on a nearby island had been but said they were not connected with the tension between the two East African countries.
Other administration officials, however.
In Washington Ast. Defense Secretary William Greener said he didn't expect a task force to be sent to Ranger, which is now in the Indian Ocean, to visit Kenya. He declined to characterize the voyage of the task force other than to say that U.S. task forces "from time to time" have been sent.
Five ships of the U.S. 7th Fleet, led by the aircraft carrier Ranger, left the Pacific and entered the Indian Ocean Sunday. Sources here believe they may also head for Mombasa although the U.S. Defense spokesman said a Kenyan port call was not scheduled.
seemed pleased that the presence of the task force in the area and the arrival of the frigate Beary in Mombasa Monday were interpreted by some as indicating U.S. support for Kenya in its dispute with Uganda.
At the United Nations in New York, Kenya charged that Uganda's military authorities have killed hundreds of Kenyan residents of Uganda in the past week. Kenyan Foreign Minister Munyu Waiyak said in a letter to the president of the government "an no longer sidle it down in the face of these atrocities and provocations."
Kenya is a normal port of call for U.S. vessels in the Indian Ocean. The aircraft carriers Kitty Hawk and Enterprise have been previous callers.
British diplomat Peter Chandley, second secretary in the High Commission embassy in Kampala, arrived here and slipped out of sight. President Idai Aimin's government had ordered him out of Uganda by last night. It was Chandley who reported to the Foreign Office in London that he saw missing hijackers from a hospital a few hours after the Israeli raid.
The British government says it believes Bloc, who had British and Israeli citizenship, is dead. She was reported hospitalized with an illness before the war, and was left behind when the Israeli spirted the other hostages out of the airport.
A Nairobi newspaper, the Daily Nation, quoted an unnamed Ugandan who arrived here Monday as saying he had seen Bloch's partly burned body in a forest where bodies of people killed by the Ugandan army are often dumped.
Uganda has denied responsibility for Bloch.
2
Wednesday, July 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Pat Nixon is improving
LONG BEACH, Calif. — "The entire picture has improved" for Pat Nixon, who started physical therapy yesterday to hasten recovery from a stroke, her doctor
The 64-year-old wife of former President Richard M. Nixon is receiving physical therapy in her sixth-floor room at Memorial Hospital Medical Center and in a unilateral arthroplasty.
A consulting physician said Monday that the partial paralysis which has affected Mrs. Nixon's left leg and arm and the left side of her face should be cleared up in three or four months. Nearly complete recovery is likely although some slurring of speech may occur at times of extreme fatigue.
Mrs. Nixon suffered partial paralysis and speech shurring in a stroke last week.
Mr. Nixon's physician said she should be out of the hospital within a week to 10 days.
Carter to come to Kansas
NEW YORK-Kansas is one of the states Jimmy Carter's presidential campaign has ticketed for a serious effort this fall. Robert L. Brower said yesterday at the Democratic debate in Washington.
Brock, a Topeka businessman and Carter's Kansas finance chairman, said Hamilton Jordan, Carter's campaign manager, told him that present plans call for
"Kansas is a state they are targeting," Brock said. "They are not going to write it off. Carter is personally coming to Kansas, and he intends to carry it."
Brock said the former Georgia governor plans to have a complete campaign organization in Kansas, including a state director and a coordinator.
Kansas has given its electoral votes to Democratic presidential contenders only twice in history.
Vaccine insurance studied
WASHINGTON- Insurance companies told the government yesterday they will decide by the end of this week whether to write policies protecting four drug companies that are producing vaccine for the national swine flu immunization program.
Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare David Mathews, who personally mediated a two-hour meeting with pharmaceutical, insurance and public health officials, said continuing problems with insurance liability "pose a major question" about the program.
But for the present, he told reporters after the meeting, the government still is planning to buy more than 200 million doses of the vaccine and to begin giving flu vaccines.
Mathews characterized the closed session as "productive, instructive and useful, but on a subject of great difficulty that is not going to yield instant
Ford's TV exposure shows large increase
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Ford, hardy but bashful about stealing some of the limelight from conventionering Democrats, kept a busy schedule of meetings yes and no, undercover policemen, forage students, farm family and the baseball All Stars.
The President declared himself too "toprecupcied" with the All-Star game in Philadelphia to watch the Democrats on television and doubled the usual number of events on his schedule open to TV network cameramen.
Usually there are one or two, but Tuesday there were four, including his attendance at the game where he was enlisted to throw out the first ball. The Democrats, meanwhile, gave routine attention to their non-controversial party platform.
Ford tuned in the Democrates on his living-quarters TV set on Monday night, said White House Press Secretary Ron Nessen. But Nessen said Ford turned off the sound.
The President gave his attention to paperwork, Nessen said.
"He found nothing last night that interested him?" a reporter asked.
"That's correct," the press secretary replied.
Nessen has said it would be wrong to suggest that Ford is scheduling his appearances "in some way to counter or top the Democratic convention."
But Ford told a National Exchange Club audience Monday night he was making no claim.
"I will be preoccupied" with the All-Star game, he declared.
During the day Tuesday, Ford met with 22 undercover police officers who ran two fake fencing operations here that netted some $3.5 million about $3.5 million in stolen property.
Then, along with Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz, he greeted the Wilmer L. Powells, the "farm family of the year" from Mansfield La., before meeting with more than 4,000 foreign exchange students and their American hosts.
Schools seek Federal funds to halt violence
WASHINGTON (AP)—The nation's public schools, plagued by crime and vandalism of staggering proportion, soon will ask Congress for $300 million to escalate what has been a losing battle, security officials said yesterday.
"We're talking about violence of the type never before experienced by schools and property losses in public schools of more than 75,000 others," said Laclus Burton, security chief Alexandria, Va., school system. "The federal government has a definite role here."
More than 300 security experts and school superintendents from 30 states are meeting in suburban Alexandria this week to discuss, in a conference sponsored by the Association of School Security Directors, new ways of combatting school crime.
But more money is seen as the ultimate weapon.
"Many of the school systems hit by 'student crime, arson, vandalism and burglary' can't afford to handle the problem,' association President Joseph McGraw said, in an interview. "We need more federal money for training and hardware."
Greaally said that security officials this week are considering all sizes of school systems, "drawing up programs to fit a system of that size—but many systems just don't have the money to implement the programs."
Congress already has heard about the growing problem of school violence.
After hearing testimony by students and educators last summer of gangs shooting up classrooms, teachers assaulted and tortured carried out by fourth-graders. Congress asked the Justice Department's special counsel to help ministration to help甩 out such crimes.
The LEAA, participating in this week's
season, has pledged a $12 million program to
support the school.
"We think we'll get congressional backing, although there may be some revision on the money figure," Burton said. "It's the main concern has been a presidential vote."
With statistics not yet compiled for 1975, Burton pointed to 174 figures which showed $694 million in public school property losses:
"Last year's total most certainly will top $600 million," he said.
- $140 million in other losses, including locker thefts and student extortion.
—$102 million lost to vandalism.
University Policy Statement on Equal Opportunity
It is the policy of the University of Kansas not to allow students with a disability, age, disability or political affiliation to have sex. It is also an affirmative government policies as required by the Civil Rights Act of 1972, the landmark federal law established in 1972, executive order 50-18, and Governor Edward M. Sanders' Executive Order to take affirmative action to assure that equality of opportunity is achieved.
$—109 million lost to arson.
Inquiries regarding compliance with these laws, including questions about the appropriateness of Affirmative Action. University of Kansas. Inquiries concerning compliance with these laws, including questions about the appropriateness of Affirmative Action. University of Kansas College of Law. University of Kansas and Birth and Rainbow Boundary Law. University of Kansas. Inquiries concerning civil rights matters may be served by the United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare.
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Today, when Jimmy Carter is destined to become the Democratic presidential nominee, is the President's 8 aird birthday. He arrives at his annual checkup at 8 a.m. in a semi-annual checkup.
All three meetings were open to television coverage.
On Friday, Ford takes a helicopter to Baltimore to be entertained along with Baltimore Home Homie Maligiano aboard the West Georgia Island Sorch Fock by Chellenor Helm Schmidt.
The White House used Ford's meeting with the policemen to provide a double opportunity in itself for careruns. With photographers present, the President conferred with them on the Cabinet room. By the schedule, that wait had been the extent of the ceremony.
But minutes later, White House press aides invited reporters and photographers into a driveway outside the West Wing, where Ford made yet another appearance and delivered another congratulatory speech.
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Wednesday, July 14, 1976
3
KU office aids job hunters
By TOM BOLITHO
Staff Writer
As the University of Kansas' first placement director, Vernon Geissler hopes to ease the frustration people encounter looking for a job.
Geisler, who assumed his post July 1, said yesterday that he would coordinate various placement activities currently divided among the schools. This coordination, he said, would benefit the student by centralizing all lob possibilities.
'Right now, I'm concerned more with the philosophy of the office rather than the managemen
"Primarily, I want to get our graduates prepared for their interviews and let the recruitors know what we have to offer," he said.
Geissler, 55, was associate director of Kansas State University's Career Planning and Placement Center for 10 years before he moved to Texas. He said his experience at Kansas State convinced him that the new placement office here would educate students to investigate many job opportunities.
"Job hunting is hard for almost every graduate, and most graduates wonder what the job market in their particular field is," he said.
"We're going to provide information for both graduates and recruiters. Our main goal is to bring more potential employers to our graduates, and allow our graduates more alternatives."
William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, hired Geissler as the University's first placement director in April. Balfour said that relatively little help was needed to placing students in the past and that Geissler's office was created to remedy that.
"The schools' programs will continue to run as they are now. We'll all be working together at making it more effective for both recruiters and students." he said.
"We want to make a system that makes
the students' opportunities clear to them. We want to make it more productive," he said.
Gessler said the job market was tight for new graduates, but his office would set up interviews for a graduate in any field of interest.
"We're concerned with placing a graduate where he'll be happiest, and if he's determined, we'll find him something he likes," he said.
Geissler said that although he would probably not have his full staff for another two weeks, his office was operating and encouraged students to come in.
Geisler received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from Kansas State. He is president of the Midwest College Placement Association. He is a member of the National College Placement Council and is a past president of the Kansas chapter of the American Society for Public Administration.
an emergency telephone is being installed on a lighted telephone pole outside Bailey Hall this week, the first of eight that be in use across the campus by early fall.
Kathy Hoggard, Douglas County Rape Victim Support Service worker, said the emergency telephone system was developed as a security device following a series of 20 rapes at the University of Kansas between 1972 and 1974.
First emergency phones being installed on campus
"The need for an easy method of immediately reporting crimes to police was demonstrated when five women were attacked within one block of each other in a short period and only the last victim notified the police quickly." Hoggard said yesterday.
The new phones will immediately connect the user to KU police when the receiver is lit.
A Student Senate task force was formed after the 20 raps in spring 1974. Various security measures were discussed with the staff of the consulting consultant W. Thomas Morgan, Hergestellt.
A special committee was formed through the office of student affairs to implement the suggestion that KU install a network of emergency telephones. The KU phone system was modeled after a similar system at the University of Oklahoma.
Early this spring, eight strategic locations for the phones were chosen by the committee. The first installation will be followed by the rest next week.
The installation of the phones will cost about $4,000, William Balfour, vice chancellor, will receive them.
Others will be set at 18th and Sunflower, 13th and Oread, 14th and Alumni, near the south entrance to "X" zone, on the dam at Potter's Lake, across from Learned Hall on 15th Street and on Irving Hill Road adjacent to Nunenaker Center.
Although the student committee feared the phones would be targets for crank callers, Balfour said "there was astonishingly little vandalism or misuse of the system at Oklahoma and we don't expect much here. People fear they could easily be identified since the direct connection will bring police quickly."
John Thomas, director of security and parking, said he expected little abuse of the
"Its advantages far outweigh its disadvantages," he said.
Thomas said the number of rapes on campus had declined since 1974
Hoggard said the Rape Victim Support
unit received no reports of rape on the
KU campus that day.
Hearst's robbery role described
The first witness at the Harris trial, store owner Carroll William Huett, described the 'strange' person he saw fired a machine gun. The police have heard has admitted she was the assailant.
LOS ANGELES (AP)—An absent Patricia Hearst emerged as the star character in the William and Emily Harris trial yesterday, described as a pale, bewigged gunwoman firing wildly at a sporting goods store.
Hutt recalled the confused scene when he and other store employees wrestled with them from their suspected shoplifter, and Hairst opened fire from across the street.
"It it had large sunglasses, a very white face," Huccet recalled. "a very strange face and this big afro style hairdo. None of it looked like it belonged to one person."
"There were shots being fired at us," Huett recalled. "They sounded strange because there was traffic on the street that kind of muffled them.
Under questioning by Deputy Dist. Atty.
Susan Mayerson, Huett spoke of Heart's
sufferers at a news conference.
"On the first burst of fire I looked up and saw the door. The left door of a van was open and they were outside the van looking through the framework of the window."
"...Mr. Harris said, 'You'd better get out of here.' She's shooting at you." We started running in the store and there was another burst of fire."
Moments later, he said, he saw the Harrises "beating it across the street."
Huett and another store employee,Gary Mason, said they never heard the Harrires call for help from Hearst nor signal her to shoot.
The Harrises, charged with kidnaping,
assault and robbery, claim the no part
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The 22-year-old Heart, indicted with the Harrises, is awaiting sentencing on a San Francisco bank robbery conviction and will be tried separately.
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Mrs. Harris, who delivered her own opening statement Monday, told how Hearst decided to "go along for the ride" on their shopping trip to test her ability to disguise herself. She was then the nation's most famous fugitive.
One employee, he said, was struck in a sart pocket over his heart, but a pen was pressed against his chest.
Huett revealed that Hearst's shots came close to causing death.
Huett said his wife, who was at the cash register, was bleeding from superficial wounds to the face and he was hit in the arm by bullet fragments, also superficially.
When the shooting stopped, the witness said, the scene inside Mel's Sporting Goods Store was "like Ringling Brothers Circus. It was complete pantomime (sic), confusion," he declared. "There were thousands of people."
University Daily Kansan
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Cadets appeal expulsion order
WASHINGTON (AP)—A group of 37 cadets involved in the West Point cheating scandal asked the U.S. Military Court of Appeals yesterday to halt academy action against them and restore them to good standing.
The court began considering whether it has jurisdiction to step in, since the past it has handled only appeals in criminal cases in federal justice. No crime is charged here.
The cadets are among 173 third-year men implicated in charges of cheating on a takehome electrical engineering test March 3 or charges of not reporting those they were aware did cheat. Violation of the academy's honor code means automatic expulsion.
West Point are due to review the cases this week.
There was no immediate indication when the three judges—Albert B. Fletcher, Matthew Perry and William Cook—will come to a decision. But some action may come quickly since the boards of officers at
The 37 cadets contended they had been "unreasonably or capriciously" selected for prosecution and called on the court to give them a hearing, assisting in dismissing the action being taken against them.
The petitions argued that the board of officers which returned the allegations of honor code violations against most of the 173 was outside the honor system.
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4
Wednesday, July 14, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Agreement
From page one
total number of hours worked per year into equal pay segments.
McMahon said the firemen were offering their alternatives in lieu of the initial proposal.
The idea of "Kelly" days originated in Chicago, the first city to institute such time.
No additional firemen will have to be hired to make up for the extra time each fireman now will have off. McMahon said. The city won't be spending any more money.
"The proposal doesn't involve shorting the department or closing down stations," McMahon said. "The chief will have discretion to as the allocation of time off and will regulate days off according to available personnel."
Watson said he and city officials would need more time to consider this proposal.
"I thought we'd worked out an acceptable agreement last week, but your membership wasn't as responsive as we'd hoped and our efforts backfired," he said.
McMahon said that any agreement formulated at the meeting would have to be taken to the union membership for approval.
"You and I can agree all day long but there still may be differences in the members' thinking about our proposals," he said.
McMahon said the firefighters wouldn't be the ones to give in, and said the were "a game of fair play where we both have to bargain."
He said that the negotiations had the basic concept of collective bargaining but were without any contractual rights. A memo indicating informal agreement rather than a binding contract results from such talks, McMahon said.
Watson suggested that both sides review their position and reconnect at 2:30 p.m.
their position and reconvene at 2:30 p.m.
At the later session Watson submitted
another proposal in the form of a letter to
firefighters in St. Louis, who included
included payment of hospital and
life insurance for the firemen and eligibility
of each firefighter for three "Kelly" days
Watson said this allocation of extra days off would reduce the average work week for them.
--and McMahon agreed that adoption of the eight-hour shift wasn't good.
"You break up the team concept when you go to eight hour stints," McMahon said. "Fire service today is a team operation and we are ready. It isn't important that it isn't kept at between 10-14 hours." he said.
Watson reminded the union representatives that present schedules for firemen in Lawrence were drawn up to accommodate them over 50 per cent of men who had other jobs.
McMahan said, "I don't think this and the compensation (days off) will break the team."
The problem of equal pay periods was discussed despite Watson's remark that he'd hoped such discussions were behind them.
Despite polite but firm objections from both sides, an agreement contingent on two alternatives is possible.
"I thought this business of equal pay periods was behind us when we started talking about the Kely's day. I don't see why they say men in advance on an estimated basis."
Both sides agreed to no change in the overtime cycle. A fireman can't work more than 240 hours per 28-day cycle without becoming eligible for overtime pay.
With the acceptance of the four-Kelly-day proposal, the firefighters decided against the city's offer of partial payment of health insurance costs and equal pay periods.
Watson said he and city officials would agree to three Kelly days and equal pay periods or four Kelly days and no equal pay periods. He added that any periods would be based on an average of 2,928 hours a fireman worked each year. This number of hours would be divided by 26 (total number of shifts worked) to determine if firefighters would receive in each check.
McMahon said he thought the firefighters would insist on the equal pay stipulation before they would agree to any of the city's offers.
The union ended the work slowdown at approximately 5 p.m. yesterday.
Lack of leads slows search for student
Baker's disappearance baffled her KU friends, too.
Fireman Isarel Bermudes said that he was surprised the slow down, which began at 7 a.m. Monday, ended so soon as Friday. "I never expected there is a lot of work to catch up on."
From Kansan News Services
Two truck drivers said they saw a female hitchiker on Interstate 70 the night Baker disappeared. This clue led to a fruitless search to Colorado, Wasinger said.
HAYS—There aren't any clues to help officials find Carla Baker, Hays senior, who has been missing from her home since June 15. Sheriff David Wasinger said yesterday.
"The searches have come to a halt until we get some more leads," he said. "We don't have any evidence of that there was an attack, like this we have to assume the worst."
"I don't think she left on her own because she didn't give me any reason why she wanted to," Rick Kellerman, Baker's boyfriend, said. "We weren't having any problems and she wasn't having any at home."
"She went out for a bike ride about 8 p.m. and when she didn't return for several hours we went out looking for her," Bakers' friend said. "She was bored about bike riding, but bike about 1 a.m. by a creek, but not her."
"It didn't seem like her nature to leave." Carol Kemp, Hill City senior; said. "We are
Several searches have been conducted since Baker disappeared. The creek where her bike was found was dragged, and many dogs were taken in air searches were made, her father said.
in pharmacy school together and she's a real good student."
The Ellis County sheriff's office will continue to investigate cloak to her disqualification.
Shankel names board to advise women's sports
Members of the newly created Women Intercollegiate Athletics Board were announced yesterday by Del Shankel, executive vice-chancellor.
The purpose of the board is to advise the director of women's athletics and the chancellor on all aspects of women's football, sponsoring, financing and fund raising, Shankel said.
Board members include Kala Stroup,
dean of women; Arno Knapper, associate
professor of business; Elizabeth Banks,
professor of business; classicists; Jacob
Klembert, professor of化学; Oldfather,
retired law instructor and
university attorney; Robert Billings,
president of Alvamar, Inc., and three
students: Rodney Dennis, Baltimore, Md.
Jill Grubaugh, president of Overland Park sophomore, and Jill
Grubaugh, Frontenac, Mo. sophomore.
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KU faculty members receive a higher salary increase than many other Midwest colleges of its size and was lucky to do so, it said. KU professors should express their appreciation and forsake any devious tactics to pressure the public for more money. It won't—and shouldn't—work any more.
You get what you pay for: This age-old adage no longer applies strictly to the marketplace. Since the Kansas University in 1971 in the form of a frozen budget, Kansans have had to deal with a large state university that doesn't pay its excellent faculty members as much as they get at other schools about as big as KU.
Pay ranking has meaning for KU
One large exponent that argument fails to recognize is that several years ago, while examining the program code,
When there was no faculty salary increase in 1971, professors began to look for other markets where they could sell their skills for a better price. That's understandable. We accept job mobility in other professions. Selling one's skills to the bidders is an accepted American tenet.
Comment
The Lawrence Daily Journal-World said the other day that faculty groups such as the American Association of University Professors (AUP) were playing with statistics and attempts to get more in on the legal issues in the Journal-World expressed disbelief that KU was listed near the bottom of a list of what universities of KU's size, called "peer institutions," pay their faculties. The AUP reported those figures last week.
Kansas Legislators won't swallow whimpers like that, the Journal World said.
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their faculty's salaries at a healthy rate, KU wasn't. The Kansas Legislature dealt in the only way it knew how with the early '70s student protest.
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A now-calm student populace genuinely deserves good teaching, legalators agree, but they have not.
If KU faculty salary increases were a rare item this year, it's only to help them gain ground on schools whose legislative fathers didn't seek to quiet the child by starving him. The myopic 1971 Kansas legislature thought that if they refused to pump money into a father of protest, the legislature had times changed, protest tailed off, and the legislature had failed to see the long term effects of its action.
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The salary increases that progressive KU administrators have succeeded in steering through the legislature have brought KU's wage scale to parity. It would be a recurring challenge for professors to勋府 to professors enough to keep them to stay at KU over a conflicting offer.
It's a good thing that groups such as the
AAPU are around. Legislators who may be thinking they've given too much to KU in the past three years can see from looking at their emails that they're still schools we like to say we compete with.
Wanting the best isn't enough in this case, and closing one's eyes and hoping for the best isn't, either. Lack of ability to weight sequences is a hallmark of sequences—slacking efforts to get the money we know our faculty merits—can reduce our chances of the misfortune such action surely precludes.
Kelly Scott Managing Editor
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"The Continuing American Revolution"
The University of Kansas Theatre's 1976 Summer Theatre Festival
presents
GUYS AND DOLLS
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For Information and Reservations Call 864-3982
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 14, 1976
5
U
Kansas Indians claim share of $9 million
Editor
By KATHY SOKOL
Staff Writer
The Supreme Court agreed recently to decide whether Kansas Delaware Indians are constitutionally entitled to share $2.1 million awarded by the Indian Claims Commission.
The Claims Commission award was based on a finding that the United States reneged on a promise to the Delaware in 1854 to sell for public auction the benefit of the tribes.
In a treaty signed May 6, 1854, the Delawares were compelled to authorize then-President James Buchanan to offer acreage from their reservation for sale at public auction—except for a strip 40 miles long and 10 miles wide.
Analysis
This tract was called a "diminished reserve" and the Hawkers were given the power to kill it.
smaller property as their own, Rita Napier,
assistant professor of history, said.
Instead of selling the land at auction, the government paid the Indians $10,000. The Indian Claims Commission found that the tract of land, containing more than a million acres, was worth at least $617,980 at 1854 land prices.
Before the Treaty of 1854 was ratified by the Senate, Admiral Ackermann had already appointed him as flagmaster.
Other treaties were signed on May 30, 1860, and July 2, 1861. A final one was signed at the Delaware Agency in Kansas on July 4, 1866.
In appropriating funds to pay the award, Congress limited distribution to the Cherokee Delaware and Absentee Delaware tribes. leaving out the Kansas Delaware
"The legal question involved in the suit brought by about 600 descendants of the Kansas Delaware is determining who is a member of the tribe," Naiad said.
The Absentee and Cherokee Delawares are the descendants of those who went to
Oklahoma rather than remain in Kansas and give their tribal membership in 1866.
The government excluded the Kansas Delaware from the award because in 1866 their ancestors chose to remain in Kansas their tribe with the rest of their tribe to Oklahoma.
Bruce Miller Townsend, chairman of the Delaware Tribal Business Committee, criticized the Kansas Delawares' claim in a lawsuit to Delwieres who received the award.
"Present-day descendants from the expatriated Kansas group had dissolved their relations with the Delaware tribe and their claim preposterous," the letter said.
"We are the only members of the Delaware Tribe, and we are the only persons, together with the Absentees, who sued the United States Government under the Commission Act, and without our efforts to defend it no judgment," Townsend's letter said.
The Kansas Delawareans say they are the true Delawares because, according to the State Dept., they have become members of the Cherokee Nation. Under the laws of the Cherokee Nation, the Delawares were to be governed by them, and the state government have any political identity of their own.
Napier said, "The government says the Kansas Delawares had to move with the tribe and the Kansas Delawares say they were members at the time of the treaty."
The amount to be awarded each individual depends upon the number of individuals.
The Kansas Delawares, because they were a slimmer group, weren't named in the draft.
The government argues that the decision could affect "the legality of thousands of Indian distributions involving hundreds of millions of dollars."
It said previous awards had been distributed without catch-all coverage for all descendants of the injured tribal members.
"they fight for compensation through the soi, means available to them," Napier said.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
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Published on the University of Kansas daily August 10 through May and March through July at www.ku.edu/koans. Publications by Kansas are $ a subscription or $ a year in Douglas County and $10 for each publication by mail
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Reduced prices on all SILVERLINE, BEECRAFT, BONANZA and NEWMAN boats
— Reduced prices on MERCURY inboard and outboard motors
MID-SUMMER SALE!!!
- 20% discount on STEARNS & TAPERFLEX ski vests and life jackets
- 20% discount on all ski and boat accessories with purchase of a new boat
Prices good only on Bazaar Day
APPLE VALLEY
BOAT & SERVICE
"More fun afloat in an Apple Valley Boat"
900 New Jersey
842-0753
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University D午 Kansan are offered to all students without regard to race, color or national origin. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLAHT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or
fewer
$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
additional
rd .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
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
Foam 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 844-5583.
FOR RENT
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
864-4358
ATTENTION BEDENTERS - Drop in and
wash hands (call cells) at WESTER
WORKSHOP HOSPICE.
2 bdr, all utilities paid, an campus. Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking, a pool. 843-693
843-693
Mark I and II, rice and quiet, 1 and 2 bedroom uninfirmed aids, very nice and close to care.
Artist studio space for rent with gallery front for
Call. 842-1730. 7-20
2 bedroom furnished apartment for campus for
starting August 1. Send responses to Box 2, 111
Melrose Ave., NYC.
For Rent: quiet room in professor's home - rent work per month and yard maintenance work per week. Must have reference designee separate. Separate bath, entrance, bathtub, toilet, privacy door. private lodgings Availability 15 Cal 841-1247
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Note—New on Sale!
*Makes sense to use them*
*Makes sense to use them*
**2) For class preparation**
**2) For class preparation**
*“New Analysis of Western Civilization”
*Availability of the book*
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialties.
BEL AUTOMOTIVE BEL AUTOMOTIVE ELECTRIC, 8400-9000, 9000 W, eighth.
6-1/2 inch.
TEV
7E1 GALLERY
7 EAST 7TH STREET
CLOSED
SUNDAY & MONDAY
HOURS 12.30-5.30
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
Dr.1 Special Price
1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
Technics SL-1300
by Panasonic
Direct Drive Automatic Turntable
RMS
ELECTRONICS
audio
224 MASSACHUSETTS 841 2672
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS - Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment you then factory dumps or out product, you buy. The kit contains the GAMRPHONE SHOP at KIFFS. 1f
BMS ELECTRONICS audio
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 100.00 TO 11,000.00
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trades. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
W. 3rd St., New York, NY 10026.
THEHEYRE Large selection of "Our Special"
*The ATTIC* Regular $69.00—now $39.
*The ATTIC* 973 Mass.
SONY model 124L, 12" color TV, used 2 months for $299.00 to refurbish. For $399.00 for $299.00 for $3
**TECHNICS $25 receives used 3 months with**
**Carrier fee.** **Technics $25 receives used 3 months with**
**Carrier fee.** Sold for $250, will sell for $195. **Can be used in lieu of**
**carrier fee.**
For Sale $59 - Plymouth Fury III. Good condition.
Assist $65 - Burlington 814-2724 after five events.
Pioneer Stereo Receiver XR-424, 1½ years
Pioneer condition. $15.15; Contact Shipment
9-900; Tel: 877-345-6144; Shipment
7-144
Goa safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue diving
them? Pre-sale price $20, special $120
The Atic, 927 Street.
72 Vavana RD 350 perfect condition, $680 or
cheap. Vavana RD runs good, $44 or
cheap. Dairy Call, 841-392-7400.
*Tailor-made* 100% cotton permanent press prints for fine quality and fine quality. *4 wide*, Prabal Gurung fabric.
1973 Duster Like, New 32,000 miles, automatic,
direction to进取 Make an offer.
0190 1:20
0190 1:20
Cactus - selling collection. Over 300 plants, small
hammer, some blooming. After 4:04, biodegraded
soil.
Must sort 192.7.1.7 Camaro with all options
excellent condition. Call Craig at 841-1224 7-21
FOUND
All-pro women's bike, 24" frame, 3 speed, quick new, $59. Call 843-645-31
Found: Prescription glues, 600 block of Ala-
bama; found Monday. Call 841-5164.
Found--young blender tom-cat salt and pepper and brown with white pawl and neck in area of onion.
Sunglasses in bleentennial color by Memorial Stadium 7-14
Found: a black, pregnant cat that looks part
of an angel. I came in the Submarine Sandwich Shop.
7-19
HELP WANTED
Full-time position for ten month study of sub-
stance ecology in geology, with experience in working with
numerous field staff. Apply to live in area of field work for weeks. Knowledge
of W. H. Blaskey, Kastanian Geological Survey,
W. H. Blaskey, Kastanian Geological Survey,
Equinquid, Opportunity and men, of all ages
acquired to work.
Babyitter Wanted: Saturday and occasional
weekend. $12 per hour. Call 843-6288 after
checking in.
Telephone solicitors. Good pay and excellent compensation. Flexible hours. Call 841-0647. 7-15
Photography student seeks photographic model to accompany our reply to Bob Bolt 7-108, Lawrence Kw.
Full-time position for ten month's study of sub-
aquatic invertebrate biology, in geology, with experience, in working with students in area of field work for work knowledge (prior to entry). Position requires live in area of field work for work knowledge (prior to entry). Lawrence (864-4991) for interview. Deadline for application (864-4991) for interview. An equal Opportunity Geological Survey has a
Architecture or art student with drafting capability.
Phone: 843-9245. 7-20
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
RD
15 East 6th 641-320
10:5 Monday-Saturday
Single woman under 25-operate hottie and cattle
Bachelor's degree 19-11.ii 7-15.
code 316-309-4255
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
712Mass.St.
WATERREDS
Lost: Amethyst ring in silver setting. Lost Tortuosa ring in silver setting. Sedimental zipper. Award. Refereed. 483-5011.
FIELDS
LOST
. NOTICE
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Nice comfortable atmosphere, good used LFa,
482-246
845-246
Stereo. Stereo. Tube. 7:21
After 28 years in business, if George don't have it he will make it. George's Pipe Shop, 736-459-2100.
Typeing: Theses, manuscripts, term papers, etc.
IBM Selectic: Nearest campus. 842-490-721
- 7-21
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
Couples earn extra income in your spare time
for signing a contract or making a personal
income. For app call 843-717-2555.
OPPORTUNITIES
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. 185-010. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous. 842-810-ff.
Hey, come on on! The KU-Y is open. Drop by
the office and have a drink. Come on into the
Welcome company and try to be as
nice as possible.
CHARMING ECCENTRIC seeking convivial feast on a rocky beach or adventure on上游 B-D-M W. Prep camp to motels; restaurants to cookouts. Would leave crowds and buy-centennial, Dutch-treat, but cost trip. Ten years and over 100,000 miles to trip. Ten years and over 100,000 miles to trip. TEMPTED? Call John at 843-800 and leave a message on the machine if I don't answer in person.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring—Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 118, 121, 122, 123, 150. Regular session or one-time session. Reasonable fees. 7-29
842-763-781
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
Bikes-Boots Backpacks-Canoes-Tent 7th & Arkansas 843-3328
SPORT
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
2005
RAASCH
4
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
---
842-8413
Mastercharge
Stay Cool Hours-Summer Stores
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods & Antiques
UNIQUE
IMPORTED CLOTHING
new summer hours
10-3 (longer on cool days)
730Mass 841-7070
American and
Mexican Food
Aztec Inn
All Mexican Dishes served
SUNNY
BAY
Aztec Inn
807 Vermont 842-9455
TUTOR
TYPING
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-378
6:05 after 6 p.m. tf
Experienced typet-form papers, muses, mice,
spellings. Mail resume to: 843-755-6930, Mrs Wright.
484-755-6930, Mrs Wright.
I do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-475, later-
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-29
Typhon/editor, IBM Pica/citele. Quality work. Provide support in dissertations welcome. Call Joan. 842-921-3728.
Gentlemen's Quarters Creative haircutting for men and women
WANTED
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Technical support for technical thesis, dissertations, pi electric. B.A. Social Science.
Than Most Staroo Components
Roommates need to share large house
$75.00 monthly, 1.5 utilities. $84.96 or
$84.96
*B44
Female roommate wanted. 3 bedroom apartment.
Must have job on campus or with a
attitude. Prefer quiet service. Active
volunteer.
Roommate wanted. female graduate degree tutor. Job offered by NYU Medical School. Room experiment. Available 20% of for Fall or Spring. Send resume to HR, NYU Medical School, 1905 Broadway, New York, NY 10024.
Housing Wanted, two grad students, one eng-
glish major and one foreign major,
housed August-December, possibility longer.
Crisp housing in a quiet neighborhood.
P. T. student would like to room with other people on a trip to look for a place or room with others who need room for their studies.
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion
Free-form blues-jazz guitarist willing to
four to five weeks a week. 841-6839. 7-19
843-2719
Roommate for 1976-77. Prefer female graduate.
student. 845-5940.
7-19
Female roommate(s) and apartment needed. Prefer senior students over 21. Would like to have someone with a bachelor's degree or higher.
GRAMOPHONE
Wanted: Roommate for unfurnished bedroom of mobile home; use of all facilities; very reasonableness.
STATE OF THE ART
YAMAHA
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
BILL GROSSMAN CENTER
LANE ANTHONY 102.847.3600
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
D
U
ADVERTISE
K
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W. 9th & III.
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
Keep your car healthy
Use the student discounts
in the summer.
U.S.A. RAIL PASS
AUSTRIAN
UNION
Unlimited Mileage on Amtrak
!
14 days.
21 days...325
20 days...400
Also available after September 7, 1976 at lower rates
Maupintour travel services
Contact: 043 821 5678
---
843-1211
530 Wisconsin
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
F
843-9404
—6 Niahts a Week—
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Open 2 p.m. -3 a.m. Dancers 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Memberships Available
Class B Private Club
Wayne Pool—Owner
6
Wednesday, July 14, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports
KU woman practices for AAU karate meet
Bv BRYANT GRIGGS
Staff Writer
Sherry Jones said her karate kick was a powerful as Muhammad Ali's hard right, and she hoped to prove it at next month's Karate Championships in Joplin, Mo.
Almost every night Jones, Denver, Colo., senior and her teammates on the Lawrence Vanguard Karate Club gather at Oliver Hall and practice karate kicks and punches. Jones said she was an experienced enthusiast of most types of martial arts.
"I've always been interested in karate," Jones said yesterday.
"I first studied the martial arts style of Shoreikai Guju-Rju, a form of Kung-fun, with the KU Karate Club for about a year and a half" she said.
Two other members of the Lawrence team, James Prestly and Herb Bland, Montgomery, Ala. senior, will accompany Jones to the national championships. Each qualified for nationals in competition in Independence, Mo., last Sunday.
"You don't have to be a special bait to participate in the competition," Jones said. "It depends on whether your instructor thinks you are good and competent enough."
National participants will compete in either a high or a low division. Jones classified herself as a green belt, meaning she would start out in the lower division, she would start out in the lower division.
Jones practices with her teammates five
times a day a week. Her two
workouts are likely to happen
"I've been running two miles almost every morning at 7:30 and be lifting my arms."
Jones said she found it challenging to practice with the male members of her
"I like sparring with men more," she said. "Men make me more aggressive than a woman would. They also help me to develop my speed more."
"Men naturally have more speed and power and they just make me perform much better than if I trained with a woman," she said.
Jones compared herself with the heavyweight boxing champion of the world.
"I reign poaching champion of the world," he said. "I am powerful as powerful as Muhammad Ali's front punch to the face. My punches are very powerful and just as fast as Muhammad Ali's too," she said.
Jones said that in addition to 'her daily workouts, she needed mental preparation.
"I need more confidence so that when you into a ring, fear or nervousness won't matter. I will be able to win first place and be known as a top contender."
High on her list of aspirations is competing in the Olympics and opening a karate
After the AAU competition, Jones and her teammates will compete in the Karate championship.
PHIJADLEPHA (AP) - George Foster walloped a home run and drove in three runs as the National League continued its All-Star domination with a 7-1 victory over the American League in the 47th renewal of their annual game Tuesday night.
The victory was the fifth straight for the Nationals and the 13th in the last 14 years. Over-all, the NL has built a 28-18-1 lead in the series that began in 1933.
The National League took an early 40 lead and then wrapped up its victory with three runs in the eighth innning, two of them on a two-out homer by Cesar Cedeno.
The Veterans Stadium crowd of 63,974,
including President Gerald R. Ford, had hardly settled down before the National
League was in front.
NL dominates All-Star game, 7-1
The NL took charge in the first inning, nicking American League starter Mark
Then, in the third, with one out, Joe Morgan stroked a single to center and Foster, the major league's run-batted-in leader with 72, drilled a one-strike pitch from Caffish Hunter over the wall in left center field.
Fidchyr for two runs on a lead-off single by Pete Rose and a triple by Steve Garvey. Foster's one-out grounder sent Garvey home.
The ball barely cleared the top of the fence, sailing over the first "p" in the Happy Birthday America" sign and set up a shower of fireworks high above the stadium.
The crowd, third largest in All-Star history, erupted with a roar as Piercer circled the crowd. A young fan, Jake Wade, joined the
The American League's only run came on another homer, this one by Fred Lyman. The third was a double.
NL. starter Randy Jones, and relievers Seaver, John Montefusco, Rick Hoden and Ken Forsch scattered five hits, and three double plays cut short potential AL rallies.
But, except for that line drive shot that landed in the first deck of the right field fence, it wasn't there.
Cedeno followed with his horse over the left field fence.
The Nationals cided it in the eighth when Dave Cain opened with a single and moved up as Tony Perez walked against reliever Frank Tanana. Bill Russell bounced into a game after the Astros' Griffey got a run in with a bouncing single up the middle off the Tartan Turf infield.
After Rose had lined Fidrych's second pitch of the game into center field for a lead-off single, the rookie right-hander missed with his first two pitches to Garvey.
Her Garvey lashed a drive towards the right field line. Rusty Staub broke for the ball but could get to it, and then fell as he chased after it. The ball bounced all the way to the wall as Rose circle the bases and Garvey pulled into third with a triple.
After Foster's homer in the third inning, the Nationals managed only one more hit—Rose's hot-tie triple against Luiz Tiant山扛 against Nighthigh-wing wrap rally against Tanana.
Tiant stranded Rose, retiring Garvey,
Morgan and Foster.
Jones worked three innings, the most of any of the National League pitchers, and permitted just two hits. Seaver gave up two hits in a home run by Duco and Forsch pitched little baseball ball.
The AL used four pitchers—Fidrych, Hunter and Tanana—each of whom pitched 6.8 innings.
Taiwan decision expected today
MONTREAL (AP) - The Taiwanese are expected to reach a decision today on whether they will accept the International Olympics Committee's (IOC) suggestion to host the Olympic Games under the Olympic flag, Lord Killian, president of IOC, said yesterday.
Taiwan had originally refused to compete in the games after being informed by Canada that it couldn't bring its athletes there, but it agreed it should discard its name and flag.
The suggestion was made during a four and one-half hour session where IOC unanimously condemned Canada's action, Killinan said.
White House Press Secretary Ron Nesson said, "The role of host country is solely to provide facilities for the Games, and the host country should not stipulate political or other considerations for participation in the Games."
The Taiwanese team had competed in Rome in 1980 under the conditions proposed by the IOC, but carried a banner of protest in the traditional opening parade.
position, the White House position", that the ICO alone should decide which teams should be assigned.
Canada has recognized the People's Republic of China and government officials have expressed fear that permitting the entry of a entry would offend the People's Republic.
recommend an American boycott of the Games over the issue, Nessen said he would have been more than happy.
When asked whether Ford would
U. S. Sen. Barry Goldwater and the New York Times suggested yesterday that the United States reconsider its participation in the Games.
But, Dougles Roby, U.S. member of the ICA, said it dorsal muscles much tighter than he is pulling out.
In Washington, a spokesman for President Ford said it was "the American
Montrealers favor Taiwan
★ ★
MONTREAL (AP) – If Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau had put the issue to a vote of his people, Taiwan would be marching behind its colors in next Saturday's opening parade and Canada would keep its political nose out of the Olympic Games.
A broad-based sampling of opinion along Rue St. Catherine and in teaming Phillips Square yesterday showed people predominantly in favor of letting the Republic of China compete in the two-week international festival.
By a margin of 10-1, persons interviewed
by the Associated Press said the government had no right to deprive the little island of 16 million people a chance to take part, as it has for years, in the Olympics and sharply criticized political interference in sports. *"ong the comments:"*
"Stunid mistake"
Stupid mistake.
"As bad as Adolph Hitler."
"Canada is influenced by the People's Republic of China, (mainland China, with 800 million people) because of its wheat deals."
"It will just give Russia ideas for 1980." China needs our wheat more than we need their friendship. We should not compromise our principles of fair play.
FREE
With each haircut during July and August you receive absolutely free:
Heat styling service
★ Redken moisturizing treatment
★A complimentary Redken organic cleansing bar
Women's Career Counseling Flash Testing Workshop
Adult Life Resource Center Division of Continuing Education 13 and Oread University of Kansas Enrollment Limited Inquire at 864-4794
9-12 a.m. July 20 & 27
Head-to-Head 842-9001 901 Ky.
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
Please call Vicki for an appt.
JAMES GANG
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
304 Locust 843-8080
M-F 8:5-30 Sat. 8-12
On Campus
TONIGHT; The film "MURMURS OF THE HEART," directed by Louis Malle, will present Auditorium in Kaiser Union. Milford will present a CARLILON RECITAL at 8.
It's a special summer treat. Right now at Mr. Steak, America's steak expert.
THE ORIGINAL BOXED SHEETS CAFE
Mr. Steak
*AMERICA'S STEAK EXPERT*
Good Old Summertime
STEAK &
CLAM-BAKE
£4.50
Thick 'n juicy sionil steak. Crunch deep-dried clams. Corn on the cob drizzled with butter. Served with Mr. Steak's own crisp potato and warm bread
920 West 23rd
11 a.m.-10 p.m.
Good Old
Summertime
STEAK &
CLAM-BAKE
£1.450
BAZAAR DAYS
Sale on All Ox Bow Tennis Clothing
10 W. 9th
½ blk.
west of Mass.
Bazaar Day Sale
Frye Boots Moccasins
(Selected Styles) Hand Bags
Assorted Shoes Wallets
Miscellaneous Items
PRIMARILY
LEATHER
812 MASSACHUSETTS
PRIMARILY LEATHER 812 MASSACHUSETTS
MISTER GUY'S SIDEWALK BAZAAR
Knit Shirts ... Now $10^{95}$ Reg. $^{15} \infty$
Polo Shirts
by Ralph Lauren Now $12^{95}$
Reg. '20º
Values to $ ^{15^{00}} $
Dress Slacks ... Now $14^{90} and $19^{90}
Values to $ ^{1}46^{00} $
Dress Shirts ... Now $8^{95}$ and 1/2 off
Dress Shoes...Now 1/2 off
Values to $ ^{25^{00}} $
Neckwear and Belts...Now 1/2 off
Prefinished Slacks Now $^{500}$ and $^{700}$
Values to $ ^{1}25^{00} $
Sport Shirts ... Now $12^{95}
Denim Shorts...Now $ 7^{95} $
Reg. $ ^{1} 1 2^{5 0} $
Denim & Khakis...Now $14^{00}$ Values to $^{200}$
open thursday night till 8:30
MISTER
GUY
920 mass.
CRAFTING CRAFTING
KANSAN
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Vol.86 No.163
Take some guys, add some dolls
Thursday, July 15, 1976
See page 4
Carter taps Mondale after first ballot win
Bv The Associated Press
NEW YORK--Sen. Walter F. Mondale of Minnesota is Jimmy Carter's choice for a vice presidential running mate on the Democratic ticket.
Carter, who swept to his party's presidential nomination here last night at Madison Square Garden, kept his selection of Mondale a secret until he was ready to tell convention delegates and the nation this morning on television.
Mondale, who was in seclusion in his hotel
room, got an early morning phone call from Carter asking him to join the ticket. Secret Service men then escorted Mondale to the room and entered the candidate after the appointment.
In addition to his call to Mondale, Carter also spoke by telephone this morning to the other five men he was considering, telling them he had picked someone else,
The five other possible running mates on
the field are Sen. Sean, John Glenn,
Ohio. Sen. Edmund,
Sayers expected to get SIU athletic post today
Staff Writer
By LEWIS GREGORY
Gale Sayers, assistant director of the Williams Fund at KU, is in Carbondale, IL, where he is expected to be named athletic director of Southern Illinois University. SIU officials will name the athletic director at a press conference this morning.
Sayers, who was unavailable for comment yesterday, was the last candidate to be interviewed by the SIU selection committee. He also wanted to be a university athletic director.
Don Baker, KU sports information director, said he had no official confirmation.
"HE'S BEEN in Carbondale for the past two days, and from my conversations with him, was very optimistic about his possibilities at SIU." Baker said.
Sayers, who has been with the KU athletic department for three and one-half years, is one of five men being considered for the position. The post opened when SIU athletic director Doug Weaver resigned to become Georgia Tech's athletic director.
Sayers said he would discuss his reasons for wanting to leave KU if he were appalled. "I don't want to be a professor."
Southern Illinois University, the 18th largest university in the country, has two faculties and is ranked 25th in the nation.
Albaugh Carter guarded his choice until the last moment and didn't tell his aides, to guard against a leak, most of the attention centered on Monday.
Henry Jackson, Washington; Sen. Frank Church, Idaho, and Sen. Adil Stevenson
Edwardsville. Together, they have a full-time enrollment of almost 30,000.
SAYERS STARRED for the Jayhawks during the 1962-63-64 football seasons before gaining a greater reputation with the Bears of the National Football League.
Carter, the outsider who conquered the establishment, will make his acceptance speech tonight, following the nomination of Mondale.
He was a two-time all-American at Kansas and was selected for the all-Big Eight team in three consecutive years. He won four Big Ten titles and was Rookies of the Year in 1986.
As a Jayhawk, Sayers totaled 2,675 career yards and scored 20 touchdowns. During his sophomore season he rushed for 1,125 yards and seven touchdowns.
AFTER COLLEGE, Sayers was the first 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 his knees. He had five knee injuries and six broken bones.
After a junior season of 917 yards, Sayers was considered a Heisman Trophy candidate, but he ended his final season at KU with only 633 vards and five touchdowns.
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.
Sayers than worked for a Chicago stock brokerage company before returning to KU.
At his American Hotel command post, Carter smiled his trademark smile at the television set and hugged his 8-year-old brother. Carter hugged his long angel for their greatest prize.
The Democratic National Convention erupted in cheers as the former Georgia governor, the inevitable nominee, was formally installed on its ticket.
It was ratified, first by the traditional roll call of the states, then by acclamation, in 1853. It was ratified again in 1904.
For the record, Carter had 2468.5 delegate votes when the convention made it unanimous in a voice vote that was more of a cheer.
Rep. Morris K. Udall of Arizona, who went before the convention to announce he was putting on a Carter button, had 329.5. He also took the stage when he relinquished his home state delegate and hailed Carter, had 70.5. And Ellen McCormack, the anti-abortion candidate from suburban Long Island, and the only woman in the formally placed in nomination, got 62 votes.
JACK KENNEDY
Udall drew a farewell ovation for his candidacy as he released his delegates before the roll call and promised to become a "soldier in the Carter cause."
It was Ohio's 132 votes for Carter that climbed his nomination, for there he won his final primary victory, the one that convinced rivals and skeptical party elders that it was time to unite behind a man who couldn't be stopped.
-AP wirephoto courtesy of the Tampa Capital Journal
Later, Brown took his turn, from the microphone in the California delegation, at the far corner of the arena. He said Carter could handle the nation's problems.
"He's proved that to you, he's proved it to me," Brown said.
Jimmy Carter prepares acceptance speech
Most bugs out of new computers
By DAVESTEFFEN
Despite mechanical failures during the University of Kansas' new instructional and research computer system's first 10 days of operation, most users are satisfied with the new system, Paul Wolfe, coordinator of University computing, said yesterday.
Jon Huxable, student dispatcher, said the old instructional and research computer, the honeywell 635 had had problems at first, too. "Users that complain don't know what to do," he said, necessary to keep the system going," he said. "When the bugs get worked out of the
Since the system was opened to users 1, 1 various mechanical problems have inconveniently users. One of the eight disc drives used by computer has been replaced by computer users malfunctioned July 7.
new 66-60 it should be more reliable than the 635."
The next day a faulty power unit prevented the integrated control unit on the system from working properly. On July 10 the system's printers developed problems that prevented the printing of job results for users.
KURT LOOK, graduate assistant in human development, said the new system's failures were the usual problems to be faced and anytime new equipment was installed.
Walkers share peace commitment
run on the old system and got the same accurate results, only more quickly.
"I was exceedingly pleased that the same job was finished in half the time with the same equipment."
"There has been a fantastic improvement in turnaround." Look said.
McNella uses a remote entry terminal, which submits jobs to the computer from a server.
Staff Writer
BvLEWISGREGORY
"The turnaround is much faster," McNellis said.
A longshoreman, a jewelry maker and six Buddhist monks are among 25 participants in the Continental Walk for Disarmament, which arrived in Lawrence yesterday.
India Queen, Harvard student from Berkeley, Calif., has been with the walk from its beginning in San Francisco to New York and then in mid-October in Washington, D.C.
"When you are moving components of a system thousands of miles, something's bound to need adjustment," Jesse McNellis, U.S. Geological survey hydrologist, said.
Both Jack Davidson, professor of physics, and Herman Lujan, director of the institute of social and environmental services, said many encounters encountered were unfortunate but minor.
John Seitz, assistant director of operations at the computer center, said users would notice significant improvements in the new system—likely in turnaround time, the time between submission of a job and the completion of it.
DAVIDSON SAID he ran a program on the new computer identical to one that he'd
MOODY SAID he didn't believe nuclear weapons were the answer to problems with hostile governments. Peaceful means are the answer, she said.
"The walk has given me an opportunity to tell people about alternatives to violence," she said.
The walkers average 20 miles a day and haven't run into any bad weather that has
Charlotte Smith, 21, said she joined the march May 16 in Securo, N.M., because she was a first responder.
"The country is a lot more beautiful than I ever expected," Moody said. "The people here are much better."
Many walkers said non-violent defense was the best solution to invasion.
"Jobs are ready practically by the time you read them into the computer."
He said he beloved invaders would be angry and go back home if the workers
The walkers will leave tomorrow morning for their next stoo. DeSoto.
HUANTABLE SAID the increased speed was due to a variety of factors.
"The scope of the walk has become greater because of the monks." Queen said.
With peace buttons pinned to his straw hat, Chuck Pierson, from Richmond, Calif., joined the march because of a strong feeling about the necessity of disarmament.
"IF THE country would be invaded because of our total nuclear disarmament, a total strike of the workers would be our defense." Pierson said.
"I WAS sitting one day and heard drums of the monks. I walked with them for 14 miles," Smith said. "Then I decided to go home." He then asked my personal belongings and here he am."
the world, but they don't know how to go about it". Smith said.
Smith, a jewelry-maker, said a couple of people had objected to her joining the walk because she didn't have any deep comfort with it. They changed their attitude later, she said.
"It has larger memory and faster hardware, giving it the ability to run larger programs and more programs at once in less time," he said.
Because of the advantages of the new system, Davidson said, he'd avoid the old system.
"I am quite enthusiastic about probing the potential of the new system. It is been a challenge, but I think I'm ready."
THE MONKS are carrying a letter from the mayor of Hiroshima urging nuclear disarmament. They plan to present it to Mayor Fred Pence today, Queen said.
Look said he was pleased with the new system.
"I heard about the nuclear disarmament walk and thought this was something I could do," she said. "I told him that he said, 'The walked seemed to fulfill all my needs to help peace in the world and the earth.'"
Queen said she believed Carter to be the best candidate for President because he probably wouldn't intervene militarily in other countries.
LUJAN SAID he was generally pleased with the new system.
THE CONTINENTAL WALK is sponsored by more than 21 committees and organizations, including the Socialist Party, American Friends Service Committee, War Resisters League and the People's Party.
"If I had to give it a grade, it would be an A-." he said.
Osbourne, a graduate of Stanford University, did graduate work in political science before deciding to become a longshoreman, which he has been most of his life. He is a Unitarian and hopes to make a difference in the assembly of the church to support the dissension.
McNellis said the system was better than he expected.
"When the new system is running properly it's really something," he said.
"I've been a part of the peace movement and have been disappointed with what I've been going on with nuclear weapons," Osbourne said.
The walkers are followed by a truck that carries food and sleeping gear, but they will stay in private homes in Lawrence. Donations have paid for most of their expenses, other expenses are met by the walkers.
Famous supporters of the walk include Joan Beaz, Dan and Philip Berrigan, Bard Daniel Elaborg, Allen Ginsberg, Benjamin Spock and Gloria Steinem.
"I'm not very happy with the political scence this election year," Osbourse said. "I don't think we will."
ANOTHER WALKER, Shelden Osbourne,
65, started in San Francisco.
CONTINENTAL WALK
FOR DISARMMENT & SOCIAL JUSTICE
Cross-country walkers
Steff photo by JAY KOELZER
A group of 25 people concerned about the issue of world nuclear disarmament moved toward Lawrence on Hikwah 40 yesterday.
After spending the night in the city, the group plans to move on to DeSoto tomorrow.
Campus Editor
Trumpeter brings his jazz to campus
By GREG BASHAW
Jazz is alive and kicking on college campuses, and trumpeter Willie Thomas is
Thomas, who's jammed with jazmine from Dizzy Gillespie to Miles Davis, talked yesterday in an Ellsworth Hall room about jazz's acceptance into the academic setting.
"jazz kinda grew up on the streets, ya know, man," he said, smoothing his curly red-blonde hair over a funky, flowered shirt. "And so now we are trying to develop the formulation of materials necessary to pass this knowledge on academically."
THOMAS, IN town to hold jazz clinics at the Midwestern Music and Art Camp, is a member of the new, formally educated breed of jazzerman, and his talk strays between the jive of a hormon and the formality of an academician.
"A whole set of kids who grew up with rock and were beat-oriented went to college and cleared the way for jazz," Thomas said, taking a cigarette from one of the seven instruments he learned on the trumpet. "And jazz is gonna stay alive and be reborn right in the classroom, man."
He started blowing in grade school.
"BACK THEN whatever jazz you did was on your own," he said. "Back then it was music that was 'out there,' away from the school, don't let me hear you play that."
It's a long way from the dark jazz clubs that flourished during Kansas City's 40s to an air conditioned dorm room on a sunny day. These guys have always been along for the ride. Mark his dues card paid-in for, if there was a jazz club cooking in the 40s or 50s, chances are.
Thomas developed anyway, and was good enough to become known as a kid
phenomenon in his hometown of Orlando, Fla. He got on with Horace Heald's Stars of Tomorrow, a travelling Ted Mack-type team that another trumpet player named Ai Hirt.
He giggled with an army band in Atlanta after graduating from the University of Alabama and then joined the A Ballet to perform his first chance to solo with toe-flight, leggen.
"For two years that group was just a total musical experience," he said. "We'd play our regular gig and then look around for a club to jam in afterwards."
A STINT with Woozy Herman's Third Herd and work in small clubs in Las Vegas, New Orleans and Denver and "everywhere else" followed. He tried playing session dates for awhile but found them too confining.
"I just didn't want the Tonight Show thing where you get in line and wait for your turn to blow," he said, so he went home, opened a music store that grew into a second and worked with Orlando's school system to introduce jazz to their concert bands.
"I had a bit of trouble selling jazz to the muns and stuff, but once we got rolling it was rewarding," he said. "Jazz is part of the music language that can be brought into the schools."
Still, bandroom dance, jazz, stuck in a "Maynard Ferguson-Buddy Big rich band syndrome," is many measures behind what you'll hear in clubs, he said.
"HORN PLAYERS got caught up in the electronic shuffle and left behind," he said. "Groups like Blood, Swat and Tears and Chicago brought back the focus on individual players, but we're not there yet." "I'd like to see college players form
He'd nice to 'see college players team up on the court, because he's more creative freedom and room for im-
See JAZZ page 2
2
Thursday, July 15, 1976
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Kansas casts 32 for Carter
NEW YORK—Kansas cast 32 of its 34 votes for Jimmy Carter for the Democratic nomination for president last night.
Kansas delegates not voting for Carter were Jim Johnston of Wichita and Barry Staleyship of Overland Park. They voted for Ren, Morris Udall.
Leaders in the Kansas delegation said they expect Carter to do well in Kansas in November, citing farmer opposition to the farm policies of the Ford administration.
State Rep. John Carlin of Simulon cast the Kansas votes in the absence of state party chairman and delegation chairman Henry Luce, who remained at the governor's office.
Carter called pro-farmer
NEW YORK—Farmers of Kansas and the nation should have a more sympathetic view if Jimmy Carter is elected president, state agricultural leaders are vested in them.
"There's no reason under the sun why he shouldn't be sympathetic to the farmer and give him an ear," Rep. John Carlin of Smolon said after Carter's agricultural advisers outlined farm policy to Democratic National Convention Chairman Richard Brutus, who had attended in agriculture were guests of Carter's campaign organization at a brunch.
MU head goes to K-State
MANHATTAN, Kan.-C. *Brice Ratchford*, former president of the University of Missouri, will join教授 at Kansas State University to teach international science and technology courses.
Paul L. Kelley, head of the Kansas State Department of Economics, said yesterday that Katchford would research new extension economic programs.
Kelley said Ratchford, who is on sabbatical leave from MU, would return to the Department of Agricultural Economics on the Columbia campus in the fall of 1977.
Schmidt arrives in U.S.
WASHINGTON - West German Chancellor Helmut Schmidt arrives here today to visit the U.S. Bicentennial and exchange views with American leaders on terrorism and global security.
The two-day visit allows Schmidt to inaugurate one of West Germany's Bicentennial gifts, the Einstein Spacearium, but substantial time has been allotted for official talks with President Ford and Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger. At Schmidt's urging, the nine member countries of western Europe's Common Market agreed yesterday to draft an international treaty that would commit them to either prosecute or extradite hackers and terrorists.
Reagan woos delegates
NEWARK, N.J.-Ronald Reagan reaned President Ford's New Jersey national 32-delegate lead in the GOP presidential race.
Reagan planned to meet privately with at least four of New Jersey's 67 officially uncommitted delegates before addressing all the delegates who accept his leadership.
The former California governor also said, in some of his firsest language yet, that he would not consider the second spot on a ticket headed by President Ford.
A conservative Republican, a liberal Democrat and a sharp-penned columnist will speak at the University of Kansas this fall in an SAU Forums series focusing on the presidential election, Jeffrey Byrd, Forums board member, said yesterday.
SUA slates politicians, columnist
By SUE WILSON
Staff Writer
Sten. Srom Thurmond, R-S.C., Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz., and columnist Nicholas Von Hoffman have been invited to KU, Byrd said. Thurmond and Udall have pointed out because they contrast conservative and liberal ideologies in the 1970 election year.
if scheduling goes as planned, Thurmond will appear the last week in September. Udall, who's winding down an unsuccessful campaign for the Democratic
presidential nomination, will appear the second week in October. Von Hoffman is not expected to be nominated.
VON HOFFMAN, a syndicated liberal columnist and author, two years ago faced conservative columnist James Kilpatrick as the liberal spokesman in Point-Counterpoint segments of CBS's "60 Minutes."
From page 1
"You just can't get the real feel of jazz in a bandroom, no way," he said. "But in a club like that you could come in and maybe show off a little, blow for your girl or for somebody else's girl, 'cause that's the reality of izz."
provision, and has a scheme to allow just that for high school students. He wants to open a private club for young band players who are in the early years to could drop in an album in a true jazz setting.
The fall semester's emphasis on political issues, he said, will shift to historical and governmental issues.
Von Hoffman has said he represents the squashed, but still wiggling, urge to throw a hammer.
Thurmond, Udall, and Voff Hanfenn each will be asked to give an evening lecture and a short talk.
Thomas is under consideration for an associate teaching position in KU's School of Fine Arts for the fall. If he gets the job he'll work with the stage band, hold seminars on trumpet and teach improvisation class, using a special chord-progression wheel he pioneered to help kids understand improvisation.
NEW YORK (AP)—Here is the first-ballot vote by the Democratic National Convention for its presidential nominee, after some delegations changed their initial vote totals and before his nomination was made unanimous by acclamation.
Democratic delegate totals
State Tot. twh ---
Alaska 10 19 1
Arizona 10 19 19
Ark. 26 32 1
Ark. 26 32 1
C.J. 28 3 1
C.J. 28 3 1
Chico 15 11 6
Chico 15 11 6
Coon 31 15 16
Den. 31 15 1.5
Dia. 17 12 5
Fla. 81 70 1
Gaa. 81 70 1
Gam. 17 17
Hawaii 3 17
Indho 16 16 1
Indo 169 144 2 1 1 1
Inde 179 144 2 1 3
Kan. 34 12 2
Kan. 34 12 2
Ku. 42 15 5
Malou 31 15 5
Malou 31 15 5
Md. 53 44 6 2 2 11 5
Mich. 104 35 6 2 11 5
Mich. 133 75 6 2 11 4
Mikl. 24 25 1 21 1 1
Mikl. 24 25 1 21 4 1
Moi. 17 12 2 7
Neb. 22 10 2.5 1.5
N.H. 17 12 2
N.H. 108 108 2
N.H. 18 14 4 6.5
N.H. 18 14 4 6.5
N.Y. 274 30.5 4 5.5 3 4
N.Y. 16 14 3 4
N.Y. 152 132 2 10
Oda. 132 132 2 10
Ora. 15 10 18 4
Ora. 132 132 2 10
P.R. 22 22 18
P.R. 22 22 18
S.J. 21 18 2 2
S.J. 21 18 2 1
Tenn. 66 15 1 1
Tenn. 66 15 1 1
Uth. 18 10 3 1
Uth. 12 3 3 4
V.I. 3 2 3
V.I. 3 2 3
Wa. 54 18 4 2
Wa. 53 18 3 11 2
Wa. 33 10 2 2
Wa. 10 8 1 10 3
Wow. Ab. 3 17 1 1
Jazz...
'JAZZMEN ALREADY know the changes, they've got chord patterns in their head and don't need a chart,' he said. 'But chord movements are better for chord movements, to transport to kids.'
Thomas has jammed with countless players but said he most admired Dizzy Gillespie.
"I LISTEN to what Davis does now and I don't know if he's really playing or putting them on."
"I'm a be-bopper trumpet man like colleague, though progressive jazz" is what he says.
Thomas admiries Miles Davis for "taking up the torch after Charlie Parker died" and giving new groups exposure while furthering a small group concept. But Davis's latest efforts and other recent jazz recordings confuse him.
exclusively to minority groups, but they have some voice." Byrd said.
But jazz is both his life and his cause, and in clinics like one he'll hold tonight at 7:30 in Ellsworth Hall, Thomas hopes to open up more people to the language of jazz.
"A lot of the jazznen I played with along the way are gone," he said. "It was a tough life. It's almost like an obligation to pass the music on man."
Then the green walls of the room pressed in on the jazzman and he paced around before he decided to leave for a band concert in the park. He grabbed at a few packs of cigarettes and then went downstairs and looked out Ellsworth's front door.
“MAN, OH MAN, it’s bright as hell out there, isn’t it” he said, even though it was past eight o’clock. “I’d better run back up and get my shades.”
Byrd said he planned to invite several minority speakers this year.
Jazzmen, even educated ones, never get used to seeing the sun.
For 25 years Hiss has denied having committed any crime.
"I like controversy," Byrd said, "but I don't bring in anybody who would insult us."
ALGER HISS has been confirmed for February 28 and March 1 and 2.
"IT WOULD not be responsible to cater
A fracas like the one begun last year by SAU's contracting of William Shockley, a Nobel Prize winner who theories that some people were wrong, others will not be repeated, he explained.
Hiss was convicted of perjury in 1960 in connection with the "Pumpkin Papers" espionage case. He was found guilty by about dealings with Whittaker Chambers, who was caught with five microfilms of State Dept. and Navy documents stuffed in a pumpkin. Hiss was sentenced to five years in prison; he served three.
SUA Forums' $9,300 share of the SUA budget will pay for the speakers. Production costs, which include bubbity and presentation fees, must be covered by admission fee to most lectures, Byrd said.
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"Demonstration at Sidewalk Bazaar Thursday Natural-Color Sand Bottles
These bottles are made with 100% natural sand. No dyes are used to alter the color, and no sand is ground up or sifted to change the texture. We collect the sands ourselves in Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, Missouri, Kansas, and several western states. The sands range in age from modern desert sand to sands which
Designs we make include: deer, elephants, flowers, butterflies, trees, mountains, clouds, bats, birds, thunderbirds, and others. Sandpouring in the U.S. is at least 100 years old, having been done by Andrew Clemens, a deaf mute, around 1876 with natural sands from McGregor, Iowa.
Each sand-bottle is made by hand with handmade wire tools. After the design is made, the bottle is packed with a steel rod to prevent the sand from shaking up. The bottle can then be mailed or handled normally without disturbing the design.
*Locations, colors and ages of our sands:* Alabama; green, brown—45 million years. Arkansas; dark gray, black, brown—65 million. Kansas; gray—modern; red, rose, red, brown, purple, pink, lavender—40 million. Missouri; white—480 million. Western states; white, fans, gray—modern.
HAAS IMPORTS
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The University of Kansas Theatre's
1976 Summer Theatre Festival
"The Continuing American Revolution" presents
GUYS AND DOLLS
BY
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LOESSER
July 16,17
22-24
Friday-Saturday Thursday-Saturday
All Shows Start At 8:00 p.m.
Tickets $2.50
K.U. Students, Senior Citizens, Music & Campers $1.50
For Information and Reservations Call 864-3982
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 15. 1976
ut they
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the SUA Productivity and 50-cent said.
Med Center encourages family practice physicians
By MARION ABARE
Staff Writer
TOPEKA-To help relieve medically underserved areas, the University of Kansas Medical Center expects 1880 to be filled with medical positions devoted to primary patient care.
Kugel defended a primary care physician as one who served the patient first—a family practice physician, a pediatrician, internist or obstetrician.
Robert B. Kugel, executive vice chancellor, presented this goal yesterday before a special legislative committee on public health and welfare.
THERE ARE 75 first-year primary care residents now, he said and 12 residencies will be added next July as part of the parity program. The Youth Practice Residency Program (IFRP),
Kugel said the mechanics for adding the full complement of residencies was within the grasp of the Med Center if funding were provided.
Jack D. Walker, chairman of the Med Center's department of family practices, said there were 73 available family practice centers compared to virtually none five years ago.
The IFPRP calls for a resident to take his first year in an approved program at Kansas City or Wichita and two years in a smaller community such as Salina, Hutchinson, Hays or Topeka. The intent of the program is to get more doctors for Kansas students who studies in a community for two years may decide to practice there, he said.
WALKER SAID additional approval and
uuring were needed to implement IPFRP,
which could be implemented in the
planned phase.
residents for the first year have already been funded.
Funding is needed to add 12 positions in both 1978 and 1979. other needs are development of faculty, living places, a building for ambulatory practice, community commitment and residency board approval.
State Sen. W, H. H. "Wes" Sowers, RWichita, chairman of the special legislative committee on public health and welfare, recommended a data-collection program be mandated in order to learn the location of health-care professionals, their area of specialty and age, to provide a workable definition of an underserved area.
Cramer Reed, dean of the School of Medicine, Wichita branch, said, that greater use in rural areas of the physician extender was one way to improve total health care. A physician extender is sometimes called a physician's assistant, nurse clinician or nurse practitioner, he said.
HE OR she is usually a registered nurse, Reed explained, who has received special training to help augment services normally provided by physicians.
Reed said a 12-month nurse clinicians program at Wichita State University had 51 students who were enrolled.
Reed said problems associated with physician extenders included getting approval for some types of hospital privileges and examining state laws that are inadequate to regulate and control extenders. He said a joint board comprising members from the State Board of Healing or the state's State Nursing Board set these rules.
Walker said, "If we're going to produce more doctors then in order to keep them,
more than half the battle is at the local level."
A COMMUNITY must look at its resources and could regionalize like KansasPanther
Kugel said midwesterners underplayed what they had to offer, "Kansas Health Day," stated for this fall, will help give students a chance to themselves to students and residents, he said.
Jesse Rising, of the Department of Continuing Education, said, "Some of the most attractive lifestyles I've seen have been in rural areas and students need to see the
Rising said KU medical students had voted unanimously to continue the precompetition program. This allows an anesthesiologist a special 6-month working with a doctor in the state.
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.
Love, lust, thrills for readers
AMERICAN MADE, by Shylah Boyd (Crest, $19.95)—Ah, the women can now dish out the dirt the way the men have been dishing it out for some time. “American Made” is about sex, every few pages, and explicitly, about our heroine, Shylah Dale, and her determination not to be as limited as some of the other girls were—you know.
Review
THIS SUITCASE IS GOING TO EXPLODE, by Tom Ardies (Crest, $1.50)—a dandy thriller, with a cover in the technique called "xograph"—two photographs superimposed on each other, providing for a unique effect. A secret agent in Washington watches an alien bomb atom bombs inside big cities, coast to coast. Guess whether he succeeds.
husband, babies, happy life, all that. No sir,
emails from bed to bed.
Pretenglish traps.
THE GOLDEN MISTRESS, by Basil Beeyear (Creature, $1.95)—A historical novel, about Betsy Bowen, up and out of the gutters and now the famous Madame Jumel,
SKIRMISH, by Clive Egleton (Grest, $1.50) — A new suspense novel about an assistant who is standing next to an Arab shaker as the man is assassinated. What he knows is that the bad guys had really been aiming at him, and he also knows that a little boy had taken a shot.
THE LAST HARD MEN, by Brian Garianfried (Crest, $1.75) You may have noticed that this one is also a new movie with Charlton Heston and James Coburn. It's about a long-time prisoner who bouts out for the lawman who put him away.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A Pacemaker award winner
Published at the University of Kansas daily published through May and July except day Saturday. Daily only excerpt Saturday. Sunday and Holidays. Second-class script by mail are $9 a semester or $18 a year and $10 a semester or $30 a year outside the United States. Second-class scripts are $20 a semester. paid through August.
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--864-4810
Business Office--864-4328
Business Manager ... Carol Stallard
Assistant Business Manager ... Jim Marquart
Promotion Manager ... Sarah Pawi
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Classified Manager ... Johnne Muller
Editor Dierck Caskerman
Managing Editor 吉林 Scott Snyder
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Photo Editor
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Parts for ALL Imported Cars
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WHITTON'S FOLLY, by Pamela Hill (Crest, $1.75) - Love, madness, witchcraft, tragedy, all in the Scottish Highlands in the 18th Century. For those who love Gothics.
304 Locust 843-8080
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THE WHITE JADE FOX, by Andre Norton (Crest, $1.50) - Romantic suspense, set in 19th Century America, and about a young girl in a mysterious estate in Maryland. One wonders: were there old houses that weren't mysterious?
SUA Summer Films
A SPECIAL PROGRAM MONDAY, JULY 19
Louis Mallie's Human, Too Human is "a provocative, vivid, complex, original movie that should not be missed by anyone remotely interested in Mr. Mallie, in films or in the set of modern civilization—Vincent Canby, The New York Times.
About a Tapestry, directed by Isa Hesse
Birth Without Violence, a film by Fredrick Lebley. Leboyer, the noted French obstetrician, films his new method of child delivery which aims to minimize the birth trauma and provide a peaceful transition from womb to life. A stirring film on the serene beginning of human existence.
7:30 p.m. '1.00
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4
Thursday, July 15, 1976
University Daily Kansan
I'll see you later.
Entertainment
A betting man
Staff photo
A racket plays Sky Masterson, left, and Joe Krause plays Nathan Detroit, right. In the University Theatre's product of "Galls and Dells" the production will run July 18.
'Guys and Dolls' ends the summer
By CHARLOTTE KIRK
Staff Writer
New York City and Broadway life in the '20s is being brought to Kansas by the University of Kansas" summer theater festival production of "Guy's and Dolls."
"Guys and Dolls" was written by Damon Runyon, a Pulitzer prize-winning journalist from New York.
The show, directed by Tom Rea, associate director of the University Theatre, is the first musical, but last production, of the theater's summer season. It is also part of a continuing plan to include the Lawrence community in the theater, Rea said.
"Although I dislike using the word typical" as a label for anything, I find no better way to describe 'Guy's and Doll's as a theater piece," Rea said yesterday. "It is a
typical contemporary American musical comedy."
The play revolves around four main characters. Sarah Brown, played by Lori Mortensen, is a social worker, spreading the gospel word and reforming gamblers. She falls in love with gambler Sky Masterson, played by Carl Hennessey, Oceanside, Cailidra, graduated student.
Adelaide, a singer and dancer in night clubs, is played by Victoria Stevens, Pacific Palisades, Calif., senior. She has been trying to get Nathan Detroit to marry her daughter, Alexandra Krause, Trenton, N.J., graduate student, is finally led to the altar at the end of the play.
"Guys and Doll's" features the songs "A Bushel and a Peck," "I've Never Been in Love Before" and "Sit Down, You're Rocking the Boat."
professor of wind and percussion.
The play will run July 18, 17, 23, and 24. Cater-
playing is by Miles Cunningham.
The vocal director is Maribeth Kirchhoff,
assistant professor in voice. Orchestra
director is Steven R. Klinger.
Lovers share nothing, everything
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
By CHUCK SACK Staff Writer
Asked by Cesar (Yves Montand) what she shared with a former lover, Rosale (Komi Yamada), whom he was everything "David (Sami Frey), the lover in question, has just returned from a hiatus of five years, Rosale's response seems willfully ambiguous. In truth, it is a precise
Rosalie is the heroine of "Cesar and
credit of director Claire Sauet and cosciconist Jean-Loup Dabadie, this theme is delicately advanced without resorting to romantic clichés or bombastic rhetoric.
Rosalie," a 1927 French film. Far from being a stereotypical "liberated woman," is nonetheless an independent human being once and again as Cesar. But this arrangement is far from binding, and when David's return arouses Cesar's jealousy, Rosalie abandons their
CESAR IS a businessman who has made a fortune dealing in scrap metal. He has made millions by selling his rides on Rosalie to do the serving at all his palmate games and to translate for him with foreign businesses. Unfortunately, his aggressive tactics spill over into his private
Through a series of carefully observed contrasts and seeming contradictions "Cesar and Rosalie" defines the relationships of the modern lovers. To the
In the face of Cesar's behavior, no wonder Rosalie runs to David. He is a cartoonist who has nothing, but he isn't so possessive. Unfortunately, it's less agreeable than that. David is nearly self-sufficient, regarding Rosalie as a valuable companion, while making it coolly obvious that he can survive without her.
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antithesis of the reserve he displays in much of his other work. And it is Montand who makes Cesar's erratic turtles believable in a way that the script does not.
When Rosalie can get no more specific about her past with David, C萨ran rants tactlessly, "I ask a question, you answer. That's life." When he quickly follows with, "What?" When he asks again because he regrets what he's said, but because he is trying to disguise his fears.
6th & Missouri
ROMY SCHNEIDER's enigmatic beauty and Sami Frey's dark sincerity are enough to balance the other arms of the triangle. What is notable, though, is the natural, intelligent comic style that the trio contribute.
"Cesar and Rosalie" achieves a fragile balance between comedy and poignant melancholy that could be destroyed by a miscalculation on the part of the actors.
If the character of Rosalie is the soul of the film, it is the acting of Yves Montand that gives it heart. Montain plays his role in a blustery, whole-hog manner that is the
For example, at one point Cesar "confesses" to David that he is marrying Rosalie because she is pregnant. Only when he further lies that he once killed a man who ignored a similar warning does the scue be found. He was then tempered by the viewer's recognition of the desperation that drives Cesar to say such things.
This same equilibrium is maintained from the delightful opening scenes at the wedding of Rosalie's mother to the touching truce made between Cesar and David after they had been saying farewell to either of them. If the story is slight, it is still thoroughly involving.
VANISHING POINT—A generally dull
sight of the horizon as he goes by
Gleavon Little's performance, a blind
DJ, and slowed by Barry Newman's
sound. In a cross-country race against the close
THE OMEM—Gregory Peck and Lee Remick babykiss for the devil's advice, so do you ask how she gets to SPECIAL DELIVERY—Bo Svenson and Cybil Shepherd play a lerious couple in the least appealing pairing of Hollywood and Madeline Kahn's leading man was a dog.
ODE TO BILLY JOE—Would you have guessed that it was a song about homosexuality? Glynnis O'Connor and Robby Benson star in this backwoods soap
HEART AND SOUL - A post-war italian film starring Vittoria Da Sica as a pacifist schoolteacher. The sentiments are too pathetic, but Da Sica acts gives the script vitality.
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BINGO LONG AND HIS TRAVELING ALL-StARS—The brightest spot in an inn at the Negro Baseball Leagues comp to the Negro Baseball Leagues of the late '30s features some nicely detailed art direction, as well as a sound sense of character, as many Ears Earl Jones, and Richard Pryor star.
GUS—The decline in the quality of the Disney studio's live-action films continues with this unamusing story about a posthuman mule that kicks field goals in the NFL.
COMPARED TO the blockbusters that Hollywood has been gearing up for, this film is nothing. It only succeeds in delivering a gentle touch of humanity, an ingredient that promises to be lacking from the onslaught of spectaculars awaiting fall and winter release.
And of what good is this minor element? Oh, it's nothing. And everything. Oh, it's nothing. And everything.
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TONIGHT: Jazz Jam Session (everyone welcome)
FRIDAY: Joe Utterbach Trio
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"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
Our subject today is JOSEPH'S BONES. "AND JOSEPH SAID UNTO THE BRETHREN, I'D;E AND GOD WILL SURELY VISIT YOU AND BRING YOU OUT OF THIS LAND UNT TO THE LAND WHICH HE SWORE TO ABRAHAM, TO ISAAC, and TO JOCABI"
`AND JOSEPH TOOK AN OATH OF THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL,
SAYING, WOD will SURELY VISIT YOU, AND YE SHALL CARRY UP
MY BONES FROM HENCE. SO JOSEPH DIED BEING AN HUNDRED
SIXTH DAY, THEY EHMBALMED HIM, and HE WAS MAID
IN A COFFEE IN EGYPPT.
" AND MOSES TOOK THE BONES OF JOSEPH WITH HIM, FOR HE HAD STRAIGHTLY SWORN THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL, SAYING, GOD WILL SURLIE YESTUDY YOU; AND YE SHALL CARRY UP MY BONES HENCE WITH YOU."
"AND THE BONES OF JOSEPH, WHICH THE CHILDREN OF ISRAEL BROUGHT UP OUT OF EGYPT BURIED THEY IN SHECHEM IN A PARCEL OF GROUND WHICH JACOB BOUGHT OF THE SONS OF HAMOR THE FATHER OF SHECHEM. AND IT BECAME THE RESPIRITANCE OF THE CHILDREN OF JOSEPH." *Onchite* Respirits of the above: Genesis 32:48-26; Exodus 13:19 (24:32)
In this physical world our bones are our most enduring part. If one or more of them are broken, or go bad life is terribly affected. Thinking about Joseph's concern and attention on his physical bones suggests attention to his "spiritual bones" of character, purity, holiness (without holiness no man shall see The Lord). Get familiar with the details of Joseph's life and you will find over and over again the connection between the spiritual bones and the moral commitment — "But that or whose skin him." (Matthew 12:3). And they shall bear His Name Emmanuel, who is interpreted as God, with us.
"RIGHTHEUSOENESS EXALTETHE A NATION. BUT SIN IS A REPROACH TO ANY PEOPLE" Prov. 14:34. Consider this one of Joseph's Spiritual Bones as indicated by this statement in Genesis 37:1. "And Joseph brought unto his father their evil report."
"Does not the following quote indicate a 'POWERFUL BONE OF PURITY' in JOSEPH'S SPIRIT BODY: "AND IT CAME TO PASS AFTER THESE THINGS, THAT HIS MASTER'S WIFE CAST HE EYES UPON JOSEPH; AND SHE LIE, WITH ME. BUT HE REFUSED, AND SAID UNTO HIS MASTER'S WIFE, BEOHOLD, MY WASTER MOTTEN NOT WHAT IS WITH ME IN THE HOUSE, AND HE HATH COMMITED ALL THAT HE HATH TO MY MAND; THERE IS NOKE GREATER IN THIS THAN I; NEITHER HATH HE KEPT HIS FRIEND, OR HAS BEEN WAITING FOR HIM, WIFE; HOW THEN CAN I DO THIS GREAT WICKEDNESS, and SIN AGAINGST GOOD", and she caught him by the gambit, saying, lie with me; and he left his gambit in her hand, and fled, and got him out!" Genesis 39:7-12.
After Joseph had been Governor over all the land of Egypt for seven years famine came on. Read Genesis chapter 47:13-26 and note his strong "Spiritual Bones" of Authority, Compassion, Mercy, Faithfulness to His God and People as well as to Pharaoh and Egyptians. Am quoting several verses showing how he handled matters — God with him — verse 13, etc. AND THERE was NO MASS OF HANDS, NOT TO THE LAND OF EGYPT; AND THAT THE LAND OF EGYPT AND ALL THE LAND OF CANAN, FAINTED BY REASON OF THE FAMINE, AND JOSEPH GATHERED UP ALL THE MONEY THAT WAS FOUND IN THE LAND OF EGYPT, AND IN THE LAND OF CANAN, FOR THE CORN WHICH THEY BOUGHT; AND JOSEPH BROUGHT THE MONEY INTO PARAHOH'S HOUSE, AND WHEN MONEY FAILED IN THE LAND OF EGYPT, AND IN THE LAND OF CANAN, FOR THE CORN WHICH THEY BOUGHT; AND SAID, GIVE U S BREAD; FOR WHICH BOUGHT IN THY PRESENCE? FOR THE MONEY FAILETH, AND JOSEPH SAID, GIVE YOUR CATTLE; AND I WILL GIVE YOU FOR YOUR CATTLE, IF MONEY FAILT."
"THERE IS NOTHING TOO WARD FOR GOD!" READ IN THE 37TH
"ZEKELIW, what God is capable of doing with our natural
and dry bones."
P, O, BOX 405, DECATUR, GA. 30031
Thursday, July 15, 197
University Daily Kansan
er
Sports
and 24.
Cromwell will join NCAA tour
By BRYANT GRIGGS
Staff Writer
University of Kansas quarterback Nolan Cromwell, offensive player of the year in The Big Eight last season, will join five other college football players on the second annual NCAA Football Promotion Tour next month.
"The purpose of the tour is to promote college football. It's a kick-off for the upcoming college football season," he said.
Because of the opening of KU's fall football workouts on Aug. 12, Cromwell won't be able to complete the tour.
The six will accompany ABC announcer Keith Jackson and college football coaches on a six-day tour of eight cities. The tour is scheduled for City Aug. 3 and end in Los Angeles Aug. 14.
He will return to KU from Atlanta Aug. 11.
Also on the tour will be Ricky Bell, senior tailback from Southern California; Willie Fry, junior defense end from Notre
Dame; Kirk Lewis, senior offensive tackle from Michigan; Larry Seivers, senior split end from Tennessee; and Brad Shearer, junior defensive tackle from Texas.
At each stop the group and a head coach will meet with the press. The athletes and coaches will meet the media as a group but will be devoted for individual interviews.
Notre Dame coach Dan Devine will meet the group in New York City, Oklahoma coach Barry Switzer in Arlington, Va., coach Chip Gaines in Alabama coach Paul Bryant in Chicago, Arkansas coach Frank Bohore in Atlanta, Nebraska coach Tom Osborne in Dallas, Penn State coach Joe Paterno in San Antonio, Texas coach Darrell Railow in Los Angeles.
"I'll be looking forward to meeting all the coaches," Cromwell said, "but I'll be more interested in meeting coach Bear Bryant, because he's a legend."
About 300 tennis players will descent on KU courts today through Sunday to take part in the second annual Lawrence Open tournament director, a manman, tournament director, said yesterday.
The junior division tournament, for those 18 years old and younger, began early this morning and will continue until tomorrow afternoon. The finals for the adult division will begin with the women's singles at 1 p.m. Sunday.
Most of the top players from KU and some high-ranked players from the Missouri Valley region will be entered in the men's and women's singles. Zimmerman said.
The International Olympic Committee discussed the plan in closed session, the Associated Press learned. No decision was announced.
300 tennis players enter city's Open Tournament
Lopez, a native of Mexico City who
was a member of the No. 2
player on the team's team.
There are some strong players in the winn-
ing. The best team is **Cold Green**, will probably be top seed.
Among those challenging Lopez for the singles title will be Jean Mills, a veteran from Topeka, who is ranked near the top in the Missouri Valley.
In Ottawa, meanwhile, a spokesman for Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau said there is no spirit in the government to yield on the issue.
In the men's singles, a showdown is expected between Kirkland and the men's
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Right-hander Steve Busby of the CITY City Royals will undergo surgery. Monday for a sore arm and may be benched for the rest of the year.
Shoulder puts Busby on ice
The Royals also announced yesterday that first baseman-designated hitter Tony Solita had been waived and was claimed by the California Angels.
Taking the place of Solatia and Busy, who was placed on the 21-day dislisted list, will be catcher John Wathan, being recallled from Omaha, and rookie outfield Torn Poquette, who has been out since June with a fractured left cheekbone.
Pouquette, 24, was put on the disabled list June 23 after crashing into the left field from the Chicago White Sox. He was hit 347 at the time and had appeared in 46 games.
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That would be a direct defence of the Canadian government, which has shut the bulk of the Taiwanese team out of the US under pressure from Communist China.
tennis coach at KU, and Van Thompson, ranked 16th in the Missouri Valley.
this thing." Zimmerman.
Gates lost to one player, Bill Clark, last year in the finals. Clark probably won't play this year, according to Zimmerman.
"Chances are that Gates and Thompson will be in the finals." Zimmerman said.
KU's K. 2. player, Tim Headke, is entered in the mixed doubles. Zimmerman said he didn't know why he hadn't entered the men's singles.
"He'd have a good chance in the singles," as Zimmerman. "But he still might enter."
The tournament is sanctioned by the United States Tennis Association and will help determine the rankings of the Missouri and Texas Tennis Association, a fiv-estate regional group.
Another KU team member who is entered in the singles is Mark Hosking, Kansas City, Kan, sophomore. Hosking was the No. 3 singles champion in the Big Eight last year
allow two yachtsmen to compete under the name of the Republic of China with their
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Olympics up in air; U.S. pullout possible
Cromwell said the tour would 'hinder conditioning' "They will provide us with learning."
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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 being called the UD business office 414-625-3558
FOR RENT
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall 864-4358
ATTENTION STUDENT BENTERS - Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (who calls please) at WEBSTER MOBILE HOME, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS 75051.
2 bbr, all utilities paid, on campus. Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking, a pool, beds.
845-796-1300
Mark I and II, nice and quiet, 1 and 2 bedroom
Mark I and II, very nice, very nice to close can
past. 843-1311
Artist studio space for rent with gallery front 7-20 Call: 842-1730.
For Rent: quiet room in professor's home—rent for $50/day, work per week. Must have transportation and
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Note—Now on Table 12
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1974 Yamaha DT250
1976 Honda XL250
1978 Honda XL250
1979 Kawasaki 350
1980 Kawasaki K7400
1982 Kawasaki K7400
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
1972 Honda QA160
1972 Honda CBA650
1972 Honda 580
1972 Honda CB750
1972 Honda CB750
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FIELDS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
THE MUSEUM OF THE ART OF CHINA
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
American and
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All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 0027 Normal
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Alternator, starter, and generator Specialists
BEL AIR ALU ELECTRIC, 843-900-3580. W. 4th. hc.
60-100 watts.
Mexican Food
oil piping for plants
807 Vermont1 842-9455
Excellent selection of raw and used furniture
trades. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
Washington Street, New York, NY 10022.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, you may be benefited from the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFES.
SONY model 124L 12" color TV, used 2 months
and $500 for repair. Sony model 62L
for $990. Call 843-833-2333. 7-4D
(843) 833-2333.
THEIR BEHRE: Large selection of "Our Special"
18% compoly. Regularly $6.00 - now $4.50
24% MOT $7.00
30% MOT $9.00
TECHNICS $250 receiver will cover 3 months with full coverage. New for $250, will sell for $199; build new for $250, will sell for $199
For Sale: 595 Plymouth Fury III. Good condition.
Asking $550. Call 814-2724 after five evenings.
**Falconi:** 100% cotton permanent press prints for **Falconi** and five quality, 48" wide. Prairie Match fabrics.
Gear safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue denim
gear. Regular price $20, special $129
Allerta, 937-567-8544.
73 Yamazaki RD 350 perfect condition, $680 or
unless you have 495 runs, $400 or less.
Call Call 811-225-5777.
1973 Duster, Like new, 32,000 miles, automatic.
Drive to appreciate. Make an offer. 842-526-6660.
Cactus - selling collection. Over 300 plants, small
charge, some blooming. After 4 mth, p2041 Miracle-Plus
Must sell 1973 LT Camaro with all options. Excitation condition. Cailrag at 841-4222. 7-21
All-pre women's bike, 24" frame, 3 speed, completely new, $5. Call 843-6645. 7-21
Custivite caccia still in impact, just bought: Yumira
Rio Grande, $250.00; Justin, $499.00; Crescent,
C-10 C-spoke租, $268.00 (two) want, $268.00
(three); Peggy's, $725.00 (two) want, $725.00
(three).
Bicycle-modified 32 Pleuger PX-10, camp tree
brightness, hull pump, hubs 2, hubs $225 each,
4837-6510.
99 VW campmobile, excellent condition, 843-
8793 7-22
HELP WANTED
Babysitter Wanted: Saturdays and weekends. Wages $125 per hour. Call 811-463-715-125
Telephone solicitors. Good pay and excellent compensation. Flexible hours. Call 841-397-7422.
Full-time position as corrections counselor with
a Bachelor's degree and 15 months of experience.
1. Applications close August 2. Degree in
compatible experience. $700 per month with
proficiency in English, Lawrence, Kx. Equal to
partnership opportunity.
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
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THE CREWEL
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15 Sate Bath 84120
10-5 Monday-Saturday
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7E7 GALLERY
CLOSED
SUNDAY & MONDAY
HOURS 12:20-5:30
7 EAST 7TH STREET
Stay Cool Hours Summer Stores
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods & Antiques
UNIQUE
IMPORTED CLOTHING
free hours Cooler Days
new summer hours
10-3 (longer on cool days)
730 Mass 841-7070
up to free hours Cooler Days
by Panasonic Direct Drive Automatic Temp/Alr
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES
Technics SL-1300
P
BMS
ELECTRONICS
audio
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00
Photography student seeks photographic model for a commercial photography session to Hobbs to Bibb. LORWAIN, Lawrence, Ka
Architecture or art student with drafting capability
Phone 843-9245
7-20
Single woman under 25-operate horse and cattle
with no experience. 10-11月. p. 7-18
p. 7-19
Young ladies working their way through school, working in the summer through fall and spring seminars. Work in a school setting with known nation wide. Should have 25-30 hours of study. Need help but not necessary. Call 843-7288, ask for further information.
Girl personnel for all shifts. Apply in person at
Vista Restaurant, 127 W. Width 6.7-1
7:21
Teaching Assistant. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction is responsible for the 1976-77 academic year teaching assistant for the 1976-77 academic year student teacher, some of supervising elementary students in grades K-5, and a faculty applicant must be admissible to a doctoral application must be admissible to a doctoral application must have elementary school education and must have elementary schools education and credential to NNSD University bachelor's and credentials to NSU School of Nursing. Applications for applications to NAE areEqual Opportunity Employees by applications to NAE Employees. Qualified men and women of all races are accepted.
Assistant Instructor. The Department of Curriculum and instruction is seeking a part-time associate position. Duties will include teaching undergraduate elementary reading practicum and advising undergraduate remedial reading practicum and advising undergraduate college students. Salary range from $400 to $700, depending upon employment of applicant. To qualify for this position, course work in reading and elementary school mathematics must be demonstrated by an admirable to a doctoral program in the Department of Education. A doctorate degree in an appropriate field. Submit rejection letter to the Department of Education, University of Kansas, Law School
Lost: Amethyst toy silver in silver setting. Lost Thurs-
day night. Gift for a friend. Sacred Sentiment;
Wearer reward. 442-631-0111
2. Found: a black, pregnant cat that looks like part-
of a cat's belly. In the Incline Submarine Sandwich Shop. 7-19
NOTICE
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. used furniture, dishware,
clock televisions. Open daily 12:38
464-35-33
After 28 years in buttress, if George doesn't he will be it. He says. George's皮套, 127
**TIME**
Nice comfortable atmosphere, good used LP's large selection of jazz. Stirrer House, The Rocky Mountain Hotel.
Typing: Theses, manuscripts, term papers, etc.
IB Electronic base. nursing. campus. 842-490. 7-21
OPPORTUNITIES
PERSONAL
Couples earn extra income in your spare time with your own business. Build award-permanent jobs to support your family.
Alcohol is America's number one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 842-1030. We come on hand for the KU-Y is open. Do you need help with your alcohol and thoughts. We welcome company and ideas.
CHARMING ECCENTRIC seeking convivial female traveling companion for campfire bicycle training on trails to motels; restaurants to nookouts. Would leave a tent, campfire, or picnic open for determination, but want to avoid crowds and buy-centennial. Distance but, can cost up to $250 per trip. Ten years and over 100,000 miles are required. TEMPTEP? Call John at 843-8200 and leave a person on the machine if it doesn't answer 7-20.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 118, 115, 116, 114, 121, 122, 123, 560. Regular sessions or text preparation. Reasonable rates. 7-29
842-761.
843-2719
PENGUIN
TUTOR
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-7587 at 6 p.m. ff
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 862-4475, after
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours). 7-28
Typist/editor / IBM Pica©/clite; Quality work
Typography; dissertations welcome
@k28, 862-1217, k28@ibm.com
Experienced typist—term paper, thesms, mux
of email and social networks, spellings, spelling
: 843-0544. Mrs. Wright.
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Designing and building interactive thesis, dissertation paper, electric car. B.A. School of Computer Science, Boston University.
Gentlemen's
Experienced tytub器 iMpG-Mag-Card, term papers,
Assistance form, correspondence, and 825-9471
WANTED
P. T. student would like to room with other students in the building and look for a place as room with others who need help. P.T. student will want to
Pervious roommate wanted. 3 bedroom apartment.
Private roommate wanted. 2 bedrooms apartment.
Offline quiet serious student. Avail on
Fri, Sat, Sun, Mon, Tue, Wed, Thu, Fri.
Call (805) 679-1414.
Hosting wanted: two grad students, one english major, and one graduate student. Applicants must be August-December, possibly longer. Call Karen at 212-795-6348.
Free-form blues-jazz guitar warmth to
four to five weeks a week. 841-8639. 7-19
Resume must wested graduate student ID number. Applicants should have recent apartment, Available July 20 or for Fall 2014. Contact Dr. Smith at (800) 752-3490.
Roommate for 1976-77. Prefer female graduate
843-504-390
7-19
Wanted: Roommate for unfurnished bedroom or
living room, with 3 bedrooms, very reason
base, 3232 square feet. Lot No. 1325.
N.A.P.A.
Quarters
Creative haircutting for men and women
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
SPORT
NAPA
For the offer: 1.
N.A.P.A.
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4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
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Thursday, July 15, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Women bankers advance
By ALEXIS WAGNER
Few women hold top management positions in banks, but opportunities for them in banking are expanding, four women bankers said yesterday.
Dorothy Rooney, one of three vice presidents at Douglas County State Bank, 9th and Kentucky, said the future for women in banking was "treemendous."
"Banks have recognized the abilities of women, and due to Affirmative Action guidelines, large banks are looking for qualified women," she said.
ROOKEY SAID that today women could get married. He said they had worked her up, positions but she had bad work habits.
'Banks have recognized the abilities of women'
up to vice presidency. She said she had
been given the impression of attaining a management position.
"In school I always competed with males, and I thought I'd compete with them in
Rooney said as a youth she had been curious and fascinated with banks, so after completing high school she got a job in a bank's bookkeeping department.
She started working for Douglas County State Bank in 1852 as an assistant cashier. In 1970 she became a vice president and in 1972 was named to the board of directors.
ROONEY SAID that today a college degree would be helpful to women going into banking. But experience is vital in gaining a management position, she said.
"Women interested in a career in banking should think in terms of ERA-education,"
"finally realizing that it is not just about getting
Another woman in banking is Judy Wenger, one of four vice presidents at Lawrence National Bank & Trusts, 647 Mass.
AS HEAD of operations and personnel, Wener wager supervises 45 employees. She has been with the bank since 1960 and has moved her way to the management position.
"When I started there were no women offenders. " The women in supervisory positions." she added.
Now, three of the bank's 13 officers are women.
women.
Wenger said it took a certain kind of
personality to be in a management position.
"MY BEST asset was that I was curious and ambitious," she said, "I understand what I'm doing and I like it. When you've met your want to do, you should do it." she said.
Although Wenger didn't have a college degree when she began working, she said a business degree would be helpful for women in banking.
Time, hard work and sacrifice were the ingredients Vernon Horton cited as essential for a woman seeking a bank management position. She is the managing officer of customer services at First National Bank, 9th and Massachusetts.
Herton began working for the bank almost 16 years ago in the bookkeeping department. She said that when she started working, she considered the possibility of advancement.
"IVE GOTTEN my job through hard work and dedication," she said.
Rooney said banks weren't looking specifically for women to fill management positions, but they were looking for qualified and "qualifiable" people.
Women, she said, usually must work their way into management positions, but men can often step into these positions with little previous experience. This is partly because many women don't have the desire to move into management positions, she said.
Roooney said women seeking jobs at banks usually applied for teller or bookkeeping
jobs, but men applied for jobs such as loan officers.
HORTON SAID the desire to obtain knowledge was more important than a certain degree of expertise.
Her advice to anyone want to make a career in banking was, "Get a job, be ready and willing to do anything you're asked and work whatever hours are necessary."
Elizabeth Mueller, assistant cashier and head of tellers at University State Bank 955 Iowa, said that now was an excellent time for women to enter banking.
"Banking is a good field with tremendous opportunities in the not-too-distant future," she said. "A bank is a fantastic place to work and it's exciting to be involved with it."
MUELLER SAID there was a trend toward finding qualified women to fill management positions. She said that a college degree wasn't essential for
'When I started, there were no women officers'
management positions, but that some of the large banks were beginning to require that a certain percentage of their
Mueller said women's banks weren't necessary for women to get loans or credit cards.
"I haven't seen discrimination. We deal with people as people. Guidelines have been established and if a woman meets the qualifications, she can get a loan," she said.
Library consultant advises Watson planning group
A leading library consultant is meeting today with the Library Facilities Planning Committee to review remodeling plans for Watson Library.
Ralph Ellsworth, Boulder, Colo., and the committee will discuss remodeling designs the committee has worked on this summer. Ellsworth said yesterday that they hoped to agree on definite plans for the construction, scheduled to begin in 1978.
Ellsworth has been consulting with librarians and the facilities planning office at the library.
Watson's ventilation system is its worst physical feature, Ellsworth said, followed by its lighting and placement of services and barriers.
tumes with various attempts to make do, that it's very difficult to work with."
"Watson is not impossible," he said, "but the building has been patched so many
"The keys to a library are the catalogue and reserve reading rooms," he said. "These need to be on the main floor, easily accessible to the public."
Ellsworth, a retired director of libraries from the University of Colorado, consults with eight to 10 libraries a year, spending about five days at each library.
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Kansan finds Olympic press pass means privileges
EDITOR'S NOTE-Kelly Scott, Kansan managing editor, is working as a member of the Associated Press staff during the Montreal Olympics. He's also playing Games for the Rangers, having the fluff of her hair.
By KELLY SCOTT Kansas Olympic Correspondent
MONTREAL—My first discovery at the 21st Olympic Games was that being a member of the press corps may be the best way to live comfortably for two weeks in this iam-macked city.
Montreal has been ridiculed by the press for its handling of the games, but the city bears us no ill will.
Special rates, easy-access transportation and basic living arrangements have eliminated for sports writers some of the complications and expenses confronting other visitors to the Olympics.
THE PLASTIC press credentials I wear around my neck—I even sleep with them—have guided me safely around town and have rescued me more than once from naving.
Press headquarters is in a hotel-shopping-office complex called Place Desirand. The Associated
Press is on the 28th floor with other wire services:
United Press International, Reuters, Canadian
Telecoms.
There is a heady atmosphere up there. The Olympics are a sports event, but the top AP sports writers who cover them realize they also will be covering the top news story in the world for two weeks.
There was talk of the political disputes involving Taiwan and African nations during an AP staff meeting Saturday. Peter Arnett, the Pultier Prize-winning Vietnam reporter, has been assigned to AP's Olympic staff to lend stability to its political coverage here.
THERE ARE periodic announcements of who is
tired of being "out." Still, it is a "business as
usual in atmosphere
The writers are glad that the Taiwan issue was decided. They didn't care what the decision was (Taiwan left the games), but they wanted to concentrate on competition instead of confrontation.
Bert Renthal, the AP track and field writer,
regrets Kenya's withdrawal from the games. The
Kenyan runners were strong and the caliber of
several races will diminish with their absence.
And the long-awaited showdown between Filbert Bay of Tanzania and John Walker of New Zealand in the 1,000 meters is off because the Tanzanian team pulled out.
TO GET some idea of how it is with the press at Montreal, come with me to the opening ceremony, where you can watch the entire show.
However impressive the pageantry might have seemed through the eyes of ABC's cameras and Jim McKay, imagine slitting three rows from the track to see what I was expecting. Zebeeh, see what I mean about that press pass?
I was wet-eyed through much of the ceremony. Being close enough to those athletes, many of them prancing and laughing joyfully through one of the moments of their lives, really did something to me.
Each time the crowd roared for a favorite delegation, I felt the urge to whoop and wave the
wheat. But sports writers, you know, don't applaud. Nor do they even acknowledge the history they are building. (Not to mention the sports media.)
There came a moment when we all realized that the athletes, in their colorful and often nationalistic attire, were in the stadium. The Queen had done her duty, and the flag had been carried in and raised severely.
Now, the most symbolic act of the opening
romantic appearance of the ruler's
rumpeter at hatha was again.
THE NORTH "end zone" of the stadium began to buzz and then worked itself into a low roar. They would see the runners first. The roar became loader. We jumped to our feet and crawled toward the northwest corner, where the runners would enter.
Spectators in the north end spotted them and transmitted the thrill to the rest of us.
The two runners, young Canadians named Sandra Anderson and Stephan Prefontaine, ran into the arena holding high the Olympic torch. It was an electric moment.
The diverse crowd, which had betrayed its nationalistic fervor by cheering loudest for their own athletes, united in a roar. It was a moment of motivation and excitement for the competition to come.
AS THE PAIR CIRCLED the track, thoughts of
her were filled with rides, minutes and
mins at what a good thing the OJ did.
Hundreds of flambelets throughout the stands blinked. and the largest ovation of the afternoon sky filled the air.
The runners quickly mounted a temporary platform in the middle of the infield where the torch would ignite the symbolic ring of fire. They saluted the four sides of the stadium, holding the torch high above their heads. Together they lowered the torch to the huge arm and the flames creped around it.
Pompos? A little. Too reverent at times?
Perhaps. But the ceremonies changed the troubled atmosphere from be.ng Montreal-the-Olympic-fiasco to an exciting, competitive bonanza.
SUNSHINE
I'll let you know whether it stavs that wav.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Vol.86 No.164
Monday, July 19, 1976
Jayhawk's loss Saluki's gain See page 4
By BERNEIL JUHNKE
Four of the six student body presidents of the Board of Regents institutions think the Board may have acted prematurely in its approval June 22 of a tuition increase, Tedde Tasheff, student body president, said last night.
Tasheff told members of the Student Executive Committee that each of the four members present at a Student Advisory Committee meeting last weekend expressed dissatisfaction with the procedure used to increase tuition.
The Regents approved a $6.9 million increase in incident fees (tution) for the students of Kansas and result in tution hikes of $50 a semester for Kansas residents, $150 a semester for out-of-state students at universities and $102 a semester for out-of-state students at colleges.
The Student Advisory Committee is composed of student body president of the
However, she said, the Regents met again Friday and might meet a third time before Friday.
TASHEFF SAID the advisory committee had been told that the Board of Regents would meet only once this summer, June 22, when she could maybe could be considered only at that time.
Tasheff said she was going to write to the Regents to see why the decision on tuition increases had to be made in June if the Regents could have met in July.
"Other kinds of alternatives to the tuition increase could have been considered had there not been such a change."
A GRADUAL tuition increase over four might have been one alternative to the usual increase.
Tasheff said the Student Advisory Committee had discussed fee waivers for graduate students and hoped to form a statement on waivers soon.
She said it had been suggested that teaching assistants and assistant instructors be given salary increases proportional to their costs rather than have their tuition waived.
Two StudEx members responded that a salary increase instead of a tuition waiver would be undesirable because salaries are taxable, a salary is paid in installments
over a long period of time and the money needed to pay tuition wouldn't be immediately available, and that some graduate students only took a few hours and could more easily pay tuition than those with full loads.
TASHEFF announced that the first of its installed on campus is in front of Barry Hall.
The search for a replacement for William Ballour, vice-chancellor for student affairs, will be delayed because of an ad change in the Chronicle of Education which states that experience in student affairs work is not necessary but is preferable. Taussel said.
The ad previously read that experience in student affairs was necessary.
Steve Owens, student body vice-president, said that Gov. Robert Bennett and Chancellor Archie Dykes would speak at the Higher Education Barnquet Nov. 7.
StudentEx members suggested Barbara Jara
dress, Representative from Texas; Elliot
Richardson, former Cabinet member; and Jerry Brown governor of California, as well as Senator.
Poor student representation at SenEx meetings this summer was discussed. Tash-eff said she wanted to be notified by SenEx representatives if they couldn't be at SenEx meetings so that she or some other student could attend.
Senate Committee chairmen are to contact organizations under their jurisdiction to make plans for a Student Senate open house this fall.
Organizations recognized by the University but not funded by the Senate will also be supported.
Steve McMurray, Student Senate Committee chairman, said that a consultant to do a mass transit study in Denver would probably be hired in two weeks.
He said the study should be completed by February.
★ ★ ★
Bus passes, fare to increase
Students will pay $3 more for bus passes and five cents more for regular fares this fall as a result of action taken by the Student Executive Committee last night.
Steve McMurray, Student Senate Transportation Committee chairman, said increased rental cost was the reason bus passes would go from $15 to $18 a semester and from $18 to $30 for non-students. Fares will go from 20 cents to 25 cents.
The $11 an hour Student Senate now pays for bus service will increase to $1.50 this fall with the stipulation that the service run on a 110 bus hours a day, McMurry said.
He said the rate would be $12 an hour if the buses didn't average a total of 100 hours a day, but he didn't think it would be difficult to use the buses that much.
this close," he said. "Fifty cents won't take care of all the increased costs."
McMurry said the transportation fee each student paid as part of his activity fees each semester would be $1.80 for full-time students and cents a credit hour for part-time students.
The student bus service, KU on Wheels, is funded entirely by bus passes, regular fare and the student transportation fees. Stuffs are押金, opposed abroad, in
Dunne Ogle, Lawrence Bus Co. manager, said salary and fuel were two of many cost increases that made the higher rental fee necessary.
BUSEN RAS an average of 110 bus-hours a day in the spring, McMurry said.
"We're very happy we could hold the line
*Approved another change in the See STUDEX page 4*
Royals Royals
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Jubilation!
Saturday was Jayhawk day as the Royals met Boston. George Brett, broke a 1 to 1 tie with a home run in the bottom of the ninth inning. The Royals came out with a win.
coach Chick Hiller. Brett was also a deciding factor in Sunday's game with Boston as he slammed a two-run bomber to leave the field.
GOP delegate selection ends; 172 uncommitted
WASHINGTON (AP) -With Republican National Convention delegation selections now complete, President Ford and Ronald Reagan must fight over 172 uncommitted delegates to decide the GOP presidential nomination.
One month before the climactic ballet
at Kansas City, the arithmetic favors the
President. Assuming he holds all delegates who presently say they'll vote for him, he needs to capture only 64 of the unified Reagan must pull in 11 to be nominated.
Both Ford and Reagan claim they will win on the first ballot. But the AP Poll, which credits a candidate only with those delegates who specifically say they will vote for him, shows both short of the 1,130 needed for the nomination.
The AP count shows 1,066 delegates for Ford and 1,020 for Reagan.
ON THE BASIS of learnings expressed by some delegates and claims of both camps, Reagan must cut significantly into the gains of a nation whose states and capture virtually every un-
The Associated Press has polled and repolled delegates throughout the selection process. The delegates column some who tell reporters they are uncommitted. Several sources report that one delegate has given three news agencies different scores for reference: Ford, Reagan and uncommited.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
In the border states and Mid-America, the largest block of uncommitted is 13 in West Virginia, 10 of which the Ford campaign lost to Lincoln. Four of the 13 tell the AP they are leaning
committed delegate in the South and West if he is to win on the first ballot.
Ford needs only to live up to his present caimins in the Northeast and hold his own in the South.
Mrs. Lloyd Burgert, 1658 Vermont, brewra an early morning rain to inspect the squash and dill for sale at Lawrence's first Farmers
Market held last Saturday in the parking lot of 8th and Vermont.
See story on page four.
Market decisions
ONE OF FOUR uncommitteds in Missouri and two of three in Kansas say they're leaning toward Ford. Of five uncommitteds among the recently elected North Dakota delegation, two are counted in some surveys as leaning to Ford and one to Reagan. No leannings have been stated by three uncommitteds in Minnesota.
Eleven delegates in Illinois claim they are uncommitted, although two of them were selected at large in the belief they'd vote for Ford.
THE QUEEN
In the West, most delegates of a group of 14 unaccompanied from Hawaii are expected to depart on Friday.
toward Ford, but the others profess not to even be leaning at this point.
See DELEGATE page
Grants fund KU seminars
By GARY WALLACE
Federal grants totaling $127,154 are being used at the University of Kansas this summer to sponsor seminars in Marxist theory, poetry and pc-Civil War American music.
The seminars, funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, are led by Richard T. DeGeorge, professor of philosophy, J. Bunker Klar, professor of music history, and Andrew P. Debicki, professor of Spanish.
Out of more than 70 grants awarded nationwide, KU was the only midwestern institution to receive grant funding.
institutions like KU with libraries suitable for advanced study.
THE TWO-year-old program is intended for teachers in small, isolated undergraduate and junior colleges who are concerned primarily with improving their knowledge of the subjects they teach, DeGeorge said.
The seminars provide these college teachers with opportunities to work with students.
Each participant receives a stipend of $2,000 for a two-month period and a housing and travel allowance of $250. Those at least 18 years old are given the term at Jayhawk Towers.
"MOST of these people are the heads of small departments or are the sole member of a department," Debcik said. "In some cases, we push them to explore further reserach."
"the question here is how well will the freshman and sophomore level classes be
Debicki said he was aware of critics like Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., who question the allocation of federal money to teachers and subject subjects as 20th century Spanish poetry.
Those eligible for the seminars have faculty positions at the time of their application. Preference was given to applicants who have been teaching at least one year, and who have not recently had the opportunity to use the resources of a major library.
taught for the four years when there will be less mobility in education and the emphasis will shift to upgrading the quality of teaching," Debicki said.
Clark said "the most important aspect of the program was the opportunity for these people to converse with colleagues in their own institution" Clark said.
DEGEORGE AND Debicki said that the seminars provided the participants the motivation and guidance to improve their teaching skills and enable them to publish their own work.
"Actually, this program has a more effect than that a regular graduate student can have."
One participant, Timothy J. Rogers, professor of Spanish at Miami University in Ohio, said the seminar's greatest asset was the motivation it generated by providing access to facilities and educators of high caliber.
The grant for Debicki's seminar, Methods of Poeic Criticism and 30th Century
See GRANTS page 2
2
Monday, July 19, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Viking I ready to land
PASADENA, Calif. - Scientists got ready yesterday to "wake up" the Viking lander for the craft's descent to the face of Mars for man's first close-up search for evidence.
They spent the day checking out the tiny landing laboratory's experimental equipment and recording its cameras.
Dr. Thomas Mutch, head of the team that will interpret the craft's pictures, said cameras would be turned on for the first time since last September. The time-consuming process of getting the cameras ready will not be completed until sometime this morning.
Dr. Harold Kleine, head of the biology team, said some scientists think the biology box is more complex by itself than many whole spacecrafts.
Perhaps the most important of the experimental equipment is the Viking Lander Biology Experiment, a box the size of a car battery containing miniature organisms.
337 ready to leave Beirut
BEIRUT - Lebanon-U.S. Embassy sources said yesterday that 337 persons, ten fewer than half of them Americans, have signed up to leave Lebanon in an emissary to France.
The sources said the evacuation is expected to include a highway convoy to Damascus, Syria, and possibly a second movement by either sea or air. Among those going will be 21 members of the embassy staff, leaving Ambassador Talcott Seelve and 14 other U.S. diplomatic in Lebanon, the sources said.
In recent action in the 15-month-old civil war, the Palestinian command claimed it reprinted another assault by Christian forces against the Tel Zaatar refuge camp in east Beirut. More fighting, punctuated by heavy explosions, was reported in the canal's gutted port district.
New heroin route watched
WASHINGTON—American and allied narcotics agents are keeping a closer watch along East European borders because the Lebanese civil war has interrupted established heroin routes from the Middle East to Europe, according to Drug Enforcement Administration sources.
The sources said there are indications that a new route takes narcotics through Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and East Germany.
An American army source in West Germany confirmed stepped up efforts along the East German front but said there had been no drust seizures so far.
The DEA sources said the change in focus to the East European borders has been taking place over the past year.
Carrier joins Soviet fleet
ISTANBUL. Turkey—A Soviet aircraft carrier sailed through the Bosporus Straits for the first time yesterday to join the Soviet fleet in the Mediterranean. Western experts say the Soviets already have about 10 more vessels in the area than the American 6th Fleet.
Turkey, a U.S. ally in NATO, allowed the 40,000-ton Kiev to pass through the straits despite reported objections from military officials of other NATO countries. Until now the Soviet fleet had lacked an aircraft carrier in the Mediterranean although it has had helicopter carriers in the past. Military sources said the Kiev was still in the process of obtaining them.
The 6th Fleet includes two aircraft carriers in the area—the USS Saratoga and America.
Turkish sources said NATO officials had argued that the 1936 Montroy Convention had no article covering aircraft-carrying naval ships and that Turkey had an obligation to obey the treaty.
KU summer camps end; program called a success
Staff Writer
By CHARLOTTE KIRK
The camp, sponsored by the University of Kansas, had 20 and included students from 35 states.
More than 400 high school students received specialized training and were able to exhibit their talent at the Midwestern University Art Camp, which came to a close Saturday.
THE ART campers were able to display the projects in two show at Murhay Palace
The art camp included classes ranging from design, which none of the students had taken in high school, to painting and ceramics.
The speakers for the art camp included professors in computer graphics, industrial and graphic design, besides drawing, painting and ceramics.
"We don't want them to come here and do the same old thing." William Bullock, camp director said recently. "We try to teach them something totally new." We will teach them something totally new."
During the music camp, students were able to study under nationally and internationally known guest conductors, such as Col. Arnold Gabriel of the U.S. Air Force Band, Victor Allandreso of the San Antonio Missions Visitor Academy. They also received private lessons and classes in music theory, jazz ensembles and choir.
"THE STUDENTS responded very well to the camp and conductors this summer." Bost Foster, director of the music camp, said. "We hope to do as well next year."
Music campers had many chances to display their work. Each weekend they performed under the direction of the conductor they were working with and on the day of July provided the musical entertainment for the celebration at Memorial Stadium.
The finale was Saturday when they performed in Murphy Hall. Included in the program was the concert band doing the University of Kansas March by J. J.
Dover publications
PUFF'S
FRAGRANT WEEDS.
Chevots! Weerschanns! Beer Roots!
PIPES OF PEACE
FOR DARK LIVING
Georga's Pipe Shop
27 Moss.
Politicians' Stands certainly on hand.
Richards, which hadn't been performed here in over 20 years, Foster said,
Even though the new astronomy camp was small this summer, it was successful, according to J. P. Davidson, director of the camp. The camp ran from June 20 to July 3.
THE CAMPERS experimented with telescopes, spectrascopes, learned to measure velocities and did solar observations.
On clear nights the students used telescopes to take photographs of the moon and stars, after which they learned to develop the film themselves.
"We took the campers to Washburn University to look at their observation," University officials. "They also were able to see Uranus. Nepheuus. The cornet West through their telescopes."
All three camp directors said their camps were a great success this summer. Because the students enjoyed and grew from the students, they used the same format will be used next year.
All or most of seven uncommitted delegates in Wyoming must be won by Reagan to keep his hopes alive. Nine of 10 have already been declared for the Californian.
delegation poll earlier in the year showed an 18-1 edge for the President, but so far only one Reagan supporter and five Ford supporters have said to what they'll do on the first ballot.
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and June, and only except Saturday. Sunday and Monday. Second-class scripts by mail are $1 a semester or $13 a scripture by mail are $1 a semester or $13 a year outside the county and $2 a year outside the county and $2.50 a semester, paid through the university.
Also, each director hopes to get more students next summer.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
TWO ARIZANDE organizes who claim they are uncommitted because of official positions are likely to split 1-1 in actual balloting. Two Alaskans are possible in any position that is otherwise all Ford. There is also uncommitted vote in Colorado.
Delegate . . .
From page one
In the Northeast, New York and Pennsylvania both are overwhelming Ford states, but still have enough uncommitted to make a difference in a tight race. Reagan was a strong candidate, but if he doesn't, there don't seem to be enough votes elsewhere to enable him to win.
Business Manager Carol Stallard
Assistant Business Manager Jim Marquart
Promotion Manager Jim Fawlty
Sarah Sarah Sarah
Classified Manager Johnne McCleaunan
The AP counts 25 uncommitted in Pennsylvania, plus one who claims to favor Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee for the nomination. Ford has 71 delegates, Reagan 68, and the day from the uncommitted column, and another went from Ford to uncommitted.
Editor Editor Dierck Causman
Editor Jacob Scott
Campus Editor Greta Hawkins
Associate Campus Editor Breed Brenning
Cuppy Chelfs Ron Horting
Jerry Terry
The picture is similar in New York, where 20 delegates tell the AP they are uncommitted. The Ford campaign claims 8 of these, again mostly on the basis of voting some weeks ago. Of those delegate disaffected, 115 are for Ford. 19 for Reagan.
Five other uncommitteds are in Delaware, a state whose 12 committed delegates all favor Ford. One leans to Ford and another to Reagan according to recent interviews. A single uncommitted delegate rests; the rest of his delegation favors Ford 15-4.
Reagan forces also claim some strength in New Jersey, where all 67 delegates on a
In the South, the major prize is 30 delegates in Mississippi. Reagan can't win without all or nearly all of them, but Ford can. This delegation, believed generally to favor Reagan, agreed earlier to bind itself unit rule, meaning all 30 would choose one of the candidates since then, a handful of Ford backers have said they might ignore that agreement.
nominally uncommitted slate were credited to Ford following that state's primary. So far, however, no New Jersey delegate has said he'll vote for Reazan.
Twelve delegates in Virginia, nine in South Carolina and five in Louisiana say they're still uncommitted. The committed delegation is overwhelming. The reagan debate over overwhelming margins.
Grants . . .
From page one
Poetry, is $43,456. The seminar will examine styles and features of such poetry applying critical methodologies, Debicki said.
"Most of these persons have not studied beyond the literature level," Debciki said.
CONTEMPORARY MARXISM-A Critical Analysis, taught by DeGeorge, operates on a #44.782 grant. The seminar will attempt to show Marxism's diversity by focusing on the strengths and weaknesses of Soviet-Leninist Marxism, the creative emphasis of Eastern Europe and the critical approach of Western Marxism, DeGeorge said.
The grant for Clark's seminar, Music in the United States Before the Civil War, totals $83,919. The seminar includes such areas as music for the stage, vocal music, keyboard music, native church music, sharp-note folk hymnody, musical societies, dance music, early minstrelsy, and individual composers. Clark said.
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GRADS: The New GNP
The Summer GNP (Graduate News Paper) is now being distributed.
Offer good time July 21st
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(23rd & Nwy. 59 South)
Copies are available in departmental offices and at the Graduate Student Council Office, Kansas Union.
Articles include: the Graduate Council Report on Fellowships, guidelines for the Master's in Special Studies, Grantsmanship, and much more!
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GOLF TOURNAMENT Thursday, July 22
Entry fee: $3.25
Tournament structured as 2-man teams, 9 holes, best ball. Tee-times will begin at 1:30 p.m.
Interested? Contact Recreational Services Office
Entry deadline: 4 p.m. Wednesday, July 21
---
208 Robinson or call 864-3546
SUA Summer Films
A SPECIAL PROGRAM
MONDAY, JULY 19
Louis Malle's Human, Too Human is 'a provocative, vivid, complex, original movie that should not be missed by anyone remotely interested in Mr. Malle, in films or in the set of modern civilization—Vincent Canby, The New York Times.
About a Tapestry, directed by Isa Hesse and
Birth Without Violence, a film by Fredrick Leboyer, Leboyer, the noted French obstetrician, films his new method of child delivery which aims to minimize the birth trauma and provide a peaceful transition from womb to life. A stirring film poem on the serene beginning of human existence.
7:30 p.m. *1.00
WOODRUFF AUD.
Coke 2 $ ^{c} $
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House Plants, Pottery, & Accessories
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LAST DAY: July 25, 1976
1516 W. 23rd St.
Lawrence, Ks.
SIZZLER
FAMILY STEAK HOUSE
Second Annual River Expedition
LET IT HAPPEN
Come along with KCMO Radio and friends to Vail, Colorado, August 13-15 for an exhilarating raft trip. All travel arrangements have been made for you.
$169 per person double occupancy includes air fare. Sk us about the details.
SUA/Maupintour travel service
Lobby quality travel since 1951
Kansas Union Building Phone 842-111
Monday, Julv 19.1976
University Daily Kansan
3
Plucky 'Guys'a winner
By EVIE RAPPORT
Contributing Writer
www
For sheer, goodhearted exuberance, a hard to surpass the American musical. No matter how flimsy the plot or shallow the characters, the breezy charm of a good musical wins over all but the most hardened grumps.
So it is with "Guys and Dolls," which opened Friday in University Theatre, the third of the summer's three productions in a series that The Continuing American Revolution.
In fact, it's only the breezy charm and the music of Frank Loesser that keeps this show going so strong. Based on characters created by Damon Runyon in a flood of
Review
short stories he wrote during the late 1920s and early 1930s "Guys and Dollas," as a work of pertinent social comment, was sadly outdated when it was first produced in 1950. The wonderful irrelevance of such characters as Harry the Nicey, Nicey and Jem, and John is ammonia in this age, when we become glut and self-conscious.
These characters inhabit a world of racing forms, dizzy blondes and marks—"Girl on a boat," "A boy about a harried, small-time gambler named Nathan Detroit and his attempts to find a place for his business." The Oldest Game in the Ancient Floating Crap Game in New York.
A lesser placer concerns Detroit's fiance, Adelaide, a second-rate chore who's been engaged for 14 years and has, consequently, developed psychosomatic symptoms caused by neglect and feelings of inferiority.
Then there's the serious romantic interest—the improbable love of Sky Masterson, famed for his brilliant gambling skills. The game is a determined but luckless mission worker.
Surrounding these four principals is a host of sidekicks, out-of-town toughies, firm-jointed missionaries and assorted counter-betts who counter-bets brings the action to a climax, and all ends happily – but not before brass, romantic or comic scenes.
Joe Krause is fine as the belegued, easily fhrended Nathan Detroit, who suddenly finds his life out of control as big-time players and a frustrated woman close in on him.
Carl Packard, as Sky Masterson, is vocally the strongest member of the cast, with a rich full baritone over which he has absolute control. He sings "I've Never Been Strong" and "You've Been Strong," a vigor and forcefulness that match the self-confidence he projects with every move.
Victoria Stephens plays Adelaide, the frustrated choreine with a charming blend of wit and sassiness. "Adelaide's Lament" is at once pitiful and sassy in her performance; when she adds the Hot Box Girls"I'm Bushel and a Peck," she takes the bushel and a Peck" and "Take Back Your
Alumna leaves KU Endowment $275,000 gift
A total of $275,000 from the estate of F. McQuarrie of Law, a university of Kansas graduate, has been given to the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, has been given to the University of Kansas Endowment Association, Todd Seymour, grant of the association, said last week.
The Chancellor and the Endowment Association executive committee would have to approve any request before funds could be used, he said.
The Endowment Association will have half of the bequest or its unrestricted-use money paid into the fund. They are used to help students available for a project such as when a special opportunity may be offered to a department after the department's budget is received.
The other half of the $275,000 was divided equally between two funds, Seymour said. One fund is for scholarships and the other is for eight students travel in the United States.
On Campus
Events
TONIGHT: Richard Codyer, assistant professor of English, will speak on "The Classical LAMS" at POETRY IN THE AMERICAN GRAMMAT" at 7 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Grants and Awards
ELIZABETZ G. REIBER, Lawrence graduate student, has been awarded a Fulbright-Hays Travel Grant to study in Germany next year.
JAMES FARMER, Kansas City, Kan.
senior, has been named to the American Musicians Associations "Outstanding Artists" for the second year in a row.
Mink," some of the funniest moments of the evening are achieved.
Lori Malin is Sarah Brown, the mission worker, and it's不便咐 that she is matched against Packard's powerful voice in several tendrils song. Her voice lacks control and range, but her sweet face and charming compensate somewhat for that weakness.
Marshall Fine and Beauford K. Woods have the graffiting chore of playing comic character roles, and they play them to the fullest. As Benny Sunshine Street, Fire is ready, but he isn't ready for the be of no help at all to Detroit as he scrabbles on a way out of the mess he's in.
Woods's Nicely-Nicely Johnson is well done. As a gluking hulk with an irritating nasal whine, he's a sharp contrast to Fine's more easy-going and casual Benny and the Woods sing "Fuge for Tinnahs" and "Guns and Dolls" and their deadpan shuffle in the latter is definitely delightful. "Sit Down, You're Rocking the Boat," sung by Woods and the chorus, as a high-spirited revival meetings and pious moralists.
Among the other generally strong performances are William Balfour as Big Jule, a graff gambler who's ready for some trouble. He's played by Horse, a jumpy go-between; Barbara Allen Wasson and Dedresser as two of the Hot Box girls who have a zany bit about an earring, and William Hail, as Sarah's
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GREATER COMFORT, SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT!
Francis could only talk-but "GUS" could kick field goal
Granada
CUS
4 Days Only
BINGO LONG
TRAVELING ALL STARS
& MOTOR KINGS
Maribeth Kirchoff has done an admirable job for borging the 40-member cast into a powerful chorus. "Wille," Lenoir choreographed the dance numbers well, even when he was very young. Brun skirmishes for an untrained cast, only about six of whom are obviously dancers.
They put the ball in baseball.
What Bobbie Gentry's song didn't tell you— the movie does
Double Horror
"THEY CAME FROM WITHIN"
Tom Rex's directing is unobtrusive and capable. He gets the actors on and off the stage and keeps them moving sensibly during the songs, which is no small trick in a musical. George Bober directs the small orchestra, which is likewise capable.
Altogether, "Guys and Dolls" is a marvelous evening of fun, brightened by good music. The book's title is "It's subtitled 'A Musical Fable of Broadway,' and it lives up to it. It's as simple and undemanding and straightforward as the book's subtitled worth a trip to Murphy Hall to see.
THE DEVIL pt. II" 10:45
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Spring and Fall Compacts
Courts in Memphis, Nashville, Nothville and Little Rock
KANSAS CITY
9327 Somerset Drive
Overside Park, Kansas City
(913) 649-9090
CHICAGO CENTER
(312) 764-5151
STARLEY H. KAPLAIN
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Now K.U. students, faculty, and family members may enjoy the exciting WORLDS OF FUN amusement park in Kansas City at substantial savings.
In 1976 WORLDS OF FUN is unveiling the new incredible upside-down SCREAMROLLER coaster ride. And this is only one attraction of the new, beautiful Bicentennial Square.
2
Through the SUA office, K.U. students and faculty members may purchase Passports at a $1.20 discount off the regular admission price of $7.95 per adult and $6.95 per child. (This reduces your price to $6.75 per adult and $5.75 per child.)
The Best Pizza This Side of New York
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These special Passports are valid any WORLDLS OF FUN operating day, and are good for all rides, live entertainment shows, and special Forum Amphitheatre performances at no additional cost.
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KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, good, service and employ-
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INFORMATION.
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AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These additions can be placed in person or on the UDR business office at 664-858.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 First Hall
FOR RENT
864-4358
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS--Dump in and
discharge (no phone calls) students at WESTERN
(no phone calls) students at WESTERN
2 bdr. all utilities on campus. Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking, a-case. pool. 843.
4903
Mark I and II, nice and quiet, 1 and 2 bedroom
Mark III, very nice, very nice and close to cane.
B3-123-113
Artist studio space for rent with gallery front for
Call 842-1730
7-20
For Rent: quiet room in professor's house -rent
room, office and yard maintenance work per month.
Work time: 6.5 hours a week, experience, reference desirable, Separate bath,
bathroom, laundry room, office, private property, privilege Available August 18, Call 853-187
Students; Happiness is an alternative lifestyle.
Try cooperative living. Workshaking program,
program, prize room, laundry facilities,
kitchen facilities, tent 128-9237.
Alice at 842-9237 from 7-10 weekdays. 7-29
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them—
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2) For class preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialties.
ALTERNATOR BELT ALERT ELECTRIC,
ELECTRIC 430, 3900, 3900 W, 6th.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS: Magnifier
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THEYRE HOME: Large selection of "Our Special"
THIRTY-22.975 Regularly $6.00—now 29.
THE ATTIC, 282 Mass.
www.theattic.com
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
W. 12th St., New York, NY 10024.
Gating safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue dunia safari hunting tiger price $20. special $125 to 300.
Frequent meals $9.
1973 Duter Like, new 32,000 miles, automatic,
must drive to appreciate. Make an offer.
$250 125-400
Cactus-selling collection. Over 200 plants, now.
thirty-four species. After 4 p.m. in 2014, Bay
Island.
Guarantee card still intact, just bought. Yumcha!
Guarantee card still intact, just bought. Yumcha!
C-16 speakers corp. req $25, (want) $20
C-16 speakers corp. req $25, (want) $20
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL
15 EAST 81st 0412654
10:5 Monday
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS.
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.
(827) 547-2000
SUNSHINE
Open 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Open 8:30 Thursday
RAASCH
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
wankAmericard Masterchary-
1974 Yamaha DT350
1974 Honda XL125
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1970 Kawasaki 350
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1970 CYRON CT270
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
1972 Honda QA50
1973 Honda CL116
1971 Honda CB450
1974 Yamaha 500
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GRANDPHONE
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MAY 1973 AMK FUN STATION - N
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KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
Must sell 1972 LT Camaro with all options. Offer:
Call Critch at 841-822-7211
DISCOUNT RECOM
AND STEREO
01 AANAS 1 + 83 847 6441
Bicycle-modified 23) Peugeot PX-10; camy reefer
machine; philwood hubs; ifamps; $225.00
843-6571
69 VW campmobile, excellent condition 843-
8793 7-22
Electric Electric organ with double manual and
full pedal board. Call 842-0355. 7-26
1923 Capri V6, Stick shift, good condition. Call
843-580-8900 p. 50; ippon 1209 Eat. 13th
Eat. 12th
JEWELRY-$50 OFF. 1A am closing out a line or a pair of jeans. 2A am closing out a pair of shoes. 3A am closing out a tie. Call 841-8341 or 841-9761.
HELP WANTED
Full-time position as corrections counselor with
the Southern Regional School District Sept. 1 to Applications June Aug. 2 Degree in Comp Sci or Comp Engg. Prior two month with compncy experience, five per month with compncy experience, three per month with three court floor, Lawrence, KE. Equal 40% of salary.
Architecture or art student with drafting capability.
Phone 863-9245. 7-20
Young ladies working their way through school, are encouraged to travel at times through fall and spring seminars. Work through summer programs before returning to known nation wide sites. Should have 26-30 hours of training and instruction before being helpful but not necessary. Call 813-7452, ask for
Girl personnel for all shifts. Apply in person.
Vista Restaurant, 1327 W. 5th. f. 7-21
Teaching Assistant. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction has provided a teaching assistant for the 1977-79 year, supervising elementary student teachers in Law, Nursing, and elementary quality for this position the applicant must be a graduate degree in the field of Curriculum and Instruction and must submit application and credentials to NISd Submit application and credentials to NISd. **6254 Deadline for applications is July 31st** Qualified men and women of all races are #224 Qualified men and women of all races are #224
Assistant Instructor. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction will provide a assistant instructor for the PGDTE, with duties that include teaching undergraduate education readiness practice and advancing undergraduates in remedial reading practice and advancing undergraduates in college-level reading range from $400 to $750, depending upon qualifications of applicant. To qualify for this position course work in reading and elementary school education will be required. The department admits to a doctoral program in the Department of Education in an appropriate field. Scholars earned doctorate in an appropriate field. Scholars must have completed the School of Education, University of Kansas, Law School or School of Education, University of Kansas, Law School. July 26. An Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action Employer. Qualified men and women of all races are welcome.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost: Amethyst ring in silver setting. Lost Thurs-
day. Sentinel value. Sentimental value.
Wondered. Award offered #48-3131.
Found. a black, pregnant cat that looks part
of a fish in the sand. In the Combat Sandwich Shop 7-19
Found a small poodle or pooch mix - black.
Found a large dog (or two dogs) in the ground near 199. St, and Stouffer Place. Call 317-564-2000.
NOTICE
C itt these hot affections with fruits and
coats, parfaits and peaches, Gold Cup ice cream
and chocoase galore at the Cabash Cafe, 823
Dinner. Butter too. 8:10 $36 offer.
Sundays.
Wasp Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
dishware, clock televisions. Open daily 12-
843-377.
After 28 years in business, if George doesn't
he will make it. George's Pig裙店, 727
630751841.
Nice comfortable atmosphere, good used LPs.
Science of jazz. Stirero Harmony 7LB,
845-204-96
845-204-96
Typing: Theses, manuscripts, term papers, ee-
IBM Is瑟特. base.com. 842-8900. 7-21
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 848-0150.
CHARMING ECCENTric NEEDING convivial female travel companions to help them get by, b-M-W. Prefer camping to motels; restaurants to cookouts. Would leave town for a week or an entire vacation open for determination, but want to avoid crowds and buy-centennial. Dutch-treat, but cost more than the average trip. Ten years and over 100,000 miles per year. Expensive. TEMPTEP? Call John at 843-8200 and leave a person on the machine if you don't answer. 7-20
Girls. Action! Excellence! Adventure! Awareness!
experience. apply in person at learn2care
1-800-465-7920
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 115, 116, 121, 122, 123, 500. Regular sessions or lesson preparation. Test readiness. rate: 7-29
842-768-701
TUTOR
TYPING
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 after 6 p.m. t
ti
I do darn good typing. Peggy, 842-4756,
400 messages taken 24 hours). 7-29
P. T. student would like to room with other students to look for a place or room with others who need it. P.T. student will be asked to
Typhid /editor, IBM Pine /clite. Quality work.
Davis, Jan. 841-2377. Illus. *Tutorials* education
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Experienced (typist IBM Mag-Card, term papers)
Information form correspondence, q2-97
853-9471
Experienced typed-term papers, thesis, mice,
experiments. 843-6544. Mail: 843-6544.
WANTED
Keep your car healthy
Typhing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Insurance claims, disclosures, piecific electronics. B.A.S. Social Work in NYC. Apply by mail.
Housing wanted, two grad student, one engr. student, two interns, a guest house manager, a养殖Award-Decreeee, possibly longer. Candidate must be bachelor's degree in Comp Sci or rel. field.
Free-form blues-jazz guitar warrior to
four to five weeks a week, 841-6832, 7-19
Female roommate(s) and apartment needed. Prefer senior student over 21. Would like to have 21 as roommate.
Roommate wanted; female graduate student
in room apartment Available $25 or for fall
room apartment Available $25 or for fall
in the summer.
Use the student discounts
Wanted: Roomatee for unfurnished bedroom of
120 sq ft, very reasonable, very
reasonable, 3333 feet Lot No. 3328
at
Roommate for 1976-77. Prefer female graduate.
University: 843-2940.
7-19
Female roommate to share furnished, two-bedroom apartment. Please contact me. Prefer 70-92% month plus 1% utilities. **Call** 800-536-2415.
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
Need one or two roommates for a two-bedroom apartment. Call myintime 918-835-1822. 7-22
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One or two roommates to share furnished $45,000 home in Oakle. Have separate rooms. 764-128-97
Need one or two roommates for a two-bedroom apartment. Call anytime 913-642-9458. 7-22
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES!
Need someone to sublease Jayhawk Towers apartments for fall and spring seminars. Call 7-688-5423.
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Kansas Unior
4
Monday, July 19, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports
Jayhawk Day festivities include Royals victory 2-1
Nearly 1,500 University of Kansas students and alumni spent Saturday afternoon at Jayhawk Day at Kansas City Mall on Friday. The Royals beat the Boston Bred Sox 2-1.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes gave Royals manager Whitley Herogz a plaing name him an honorary Jayawk and a complementary membership in the Kansas Alumni
The game was scheduled for Saturday evening, but was switched to the afternoon when NBC decided to televised it as the Sat. 12 game. The game was scheduled for a 75-mile radius around Kansas City.
The KU fans who turned out seemed to enjoy the comfortably-warm afternoon and showed their affiliation by wearing red and blue caps, teeshirts and suits.
you toughin, chairman of the Jayhawk
ball committee, threw out the game's first
ball.
The big Jayhawk mascot, Dave Muter,
Shawnee Mission senior, was on hand for
pre-game activities, parading around in
baseball shoes because he left one of his
yellow boots at home. The KU KOTC color
campaign is a special field for the presentation of the colors and the playing of the national anthem as recorded by the Jayhawk Marching Band.
The fans saved most of their enthusiasm for George Brett's winning home, although one man kept up an obstreperous buster throughout most of the game. When Brett hit the ball out of the stadium, the crowd cheered wildly. It would be for a Nolan Cromwell touchdown run,
Coughlin said there were about 700 student-age post-party game fans in the Royal's Stadium Chambers.
"I think the people who were able to come enjoy it," he said. "I was a super day, a
MONTREAL (AP)—Mike Brunner led a 1-2-3 American sweep in the men's 200-meter butterfly in world-record swimming time yesterday and the East Germans began to exert their expected strength in the opening day of the 21st Olympic Games.
U.S. sweeps 200-meter butterfly
Brunner, a 20-year-old sophomore at Stanford University, was timed in 1 minute 59.23 seconds, four-tenths of a second better than the old world mark, with teammates Steve Gregg, Wilmington, Del., and Billy Forrester, Birchway Ala., finishing in third during his first medalizing the Americans with their first medals of the Games.
JOHN NABER, Menlo Park, Calif., also smashed a world record, in the qualifying heats for the men's 100-meter backstroke. He covered the distance in 56.19 seconds.
Moments later, however, the East Germans picked up their second gold of the war by the way. They used a meter relay beat the second-place United States by some 10 yards in world record time of 4:07.95. The United States played in 4:14.55 and host Canada in 4:15.22.
And the American basketball grimly determined to regain the gold medal it lost for the first time four years ago, scored an impressive 106-84 decision over
Italy in its first appearance in the round-broin tournament.
Mitch Kupchak, Adrian Dantley and Scott May scored 19, 20 and 16 points, respectively, in a balanced attack that once ran up the front court, as he had beaten Russia in the European championships. Russia, of course, handed the United States its first Olympic basketball loss in history in the 1972 Olympics. The Soviets in their opponent, trumped Mexico. 129-77.
The first perfect 10 ever recorded in Olympic gymnastics was rung up by Romania's 4-foot-11, 88-pound Nadia Comaneci on the women's uneven parallel bars and sparked a controversy with the Russians in the compulsory exercises.
"I QUESTION the performance," said Russian coach Larisetta Lynne, whose charges usually dominate gymnastics. "I can see a 9.5, but it should not have been a 10. There were some flaws. It was not perfect."
On the political front, Egypt's team was ordered home—while some of its athletes were in competition—and Guyana became the winner of the Games. He team to pull out of the Hemisphere.
The United States' hopes in rowing suffered a setback.
No American crews were eliminated- in rowing there's always a second chance in winning.
BUT THE American eight-oared crew trained both Australia and New Zealand in the slower of two preliminary heats while the favored East Germans, defending world champions and favorites for the gold medal here, used a following wind to post a time of 5 minutes, 32.17 seconds, 24 seconds 24 seconds and 10 seconds for the 2,000 meters. World records are not recognized in rowing, due to the vast differences wind conditions can cause.
The Americans' best finish was a second by Mark Staines and Cal Coffey in the coxless pairs. Erik Germans had the best primary times in five of the eight events.
Savers welcomes change, challenge at SIU
An East German pistol shooter and a team of four Russian cyclists won the first gold medals, but the big excitement on a balmy Sunday morning was at the pool where the American men and East German women demonstrated their strength.
Steve Gregg, Wilmington, Del., set an Olympic record of 2 minutes, 0.24 seconds in winning his heat of the 200-meter butterfly. The old record of 2:00:70 was set in the Munich Olympics four years ago by Mark Smitz of the United States.
THE EAST German women's team cut seven seconds off the Olympic record and almost matched its own world record in the 400-meter medley relay qualifying race. In the final, a half second short of their world mark. The American team qualified fourth.
Kornetia Ender, 18-year-old East German swim superstar, set an Olympic record of 55.81 in her heat of the 100-meter freestyle event. Two other women swimmers bettered the old mark Sunday. Enitha Brigitja of the Netherlands clocked 56.71 and Petra Priemer of East Germany was time in 56.95.
By LEWISGREGORY
Uwe Pottek, a 21-year-old East German army lieutenant and sports instructor from Bielefeld, scored 373 points out of a possible 560. He was medal. Another East German, Harald Vollmar, took the silver medal with 366 points, and Ragnar Shanaker of Sweden won the bronze.
THE MESSY political situation that has cast a paly over these Games got worse Sunday when the 16-person delegation from Guyana withdrew from the Games in support of African nations that pulled out to New Zealand's participation in the Games.
The Russian cycling team took the first official gold medal of the Olympics with a time of 2:08.53 in the 100-kilometer team road race. Poland clocked 2:09.17 for the silver and Denmark took the bronze in 2:12.20.
Gale Sayres, new appointed athletic director of Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, said he was in a dead-end position at the University of Kansas.
Sayers' long-range goals include going back to pro football as a vice president or general manager. He didn't discount coming back to KU in 10 years or so.
The 33-year-old Sayers, assistant director of the Williams Scholarship fund at KU for the past three and one-half years, will take over as SIU athletic director Aug. 1.
SAYERS SAID he had his own ideas about athletic administration and wanted more of a voice in the policy-making decisions. He was one of the first problems with the KU athletic department.
The African states asked the International Olympic Committee to bar New Zealand from the Games because a rugby match between the two nations matches in segregation South Africa. The IOC said rugby wam't even an Olympic sport and pointed out that many nations had sent teams to South Africa. New Zealand started compete; the Africans started pulling out.
Clyde Walker, KU athletic director, said he was happy for Sayers and would probably hire a member of the athletic department to help direct the scholarship fund.
"I'm pleased when any KU people move forward in their jobs." Walker said.
As of Sunday afternoon, 26 countries that were supposed to compete in the Games were out, but not all because of political reasons. Zaire and Malawi decided not to enter because their pre-Games performances were not of Olympic caliber.
Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director for operations, said Sayers a matter to KT.
Boxing opened Sunday with Charles Mooney of the U.S. Army starting his bid for a metal in the 119-pound class. He scored a solid decision over Mohamed Rais of Morocco in their three-round bout. The 25-year-old was in the second round with his jab, a flurry of punches, two scored with a right hand lead and then a good one-two to the head.
40
"Anyone like him who is a part of history will always make a contribution to the athletic department." Waugh said. "He's one of my greatest friends, the Williams Fund and we will miss that."
SAYERS SAID this was the first time in the history of the Williams Fund that the athletic scholarships were completely disbanded. More than $600,000 was raised.
Sayers' first priorities at SIU will be to hire an assistant athlete director and promote the team.
Gale Sayers
SIU's 18,000-seat football stadium was only half-filled for games last season, and the SIU Salukis have won only six games in all. The SIU revenue teams revenue teams teams were winning and that he would work on the football program primarily through fund raising.
"I will talk with the coaches and give them total support and try to gain more student participation in the program," he said.
Luckless Bosox continue their slide, fall 6-3 to KC
KANSAS CITY (AP) - George Brett slammed a two-homer run and Marty Pattin, making his second start of the season, scattered six hits to lead the Kansas City Royals to a 6-3 conquest of the fading Boston Red Sox yesterday.
The defeat, Boston's fourth in a row and fifth in the six-game series, left the defending American League champions floundering in fifth place in the AL East. The defending No. 13 team took place New York Yankees, who were scheduled for a night game in Texas.
Pattin, 38-6, gave way to Steve Mingorni with one out in the eighth after a scoring run. The Rangers beat the Spurs.
The Royals snapped a 1-1 tie in the four innings with three runs on four hits and two stolen bases. Boston starter Reggie Greene undersked six hits and four runs in five innings.
Brett's home run off Bill Lee in the seventh, his sixth of the year and second in the eighth.
SAYERS STARRED for the Jayhawks during the 1962, 1963 and 1964 football seasons before gaining a greater reputation as a Big Ten Bears of the National Football League.
The Royals started the day 10% games in front of Texas and Oakland in the AL West.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York W 1 L. Pel. GB
Cleveland 41 12 68
Baltimore 41 42 69
Detroit 41 44 68
Indiana 41 44 67
Missouri 41 47 73
Kansas City 56 32 428
Oakland 66 31 616
Toronto 64 42 304
Chicago 40 40 645
Minnesota 40 40 645
California 37 54 407
W L W Pct. GB
Pittsburgh 48 37 27 165
Pittsburgh 48 37 27 165
Pittsburgh 48 37 27 165
St. Louis 48 44 322 12%
St. Louis 48 44 322 12%
Chicago 30 32 699 10%
Chicago 30 32 699 10%
Cinchastel 36 34 422 6
Lougateles 56 40 658 — 6
Houston 105 39 105 11
San Diego 44 47 484 12½
Atlanta 43 41 484 13½
Napoleon Francisco 41 38 484
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Oakland 10, Detroit 1
California 8, Baltimore 4
Chicago 15, Milwaukee 3
Tampa Bay 16, Boston 1
Kansas City 6, Boston 3
StudEx hikes bus fare . . .
New York 2, Atlanta 8
Chicago 9, Pittsburgh 8
Detroit 10, Miami 45, 3rd game 10
Philadelphia 2, Los Angeles 1
San Diego 2, Chicago 1
From page one
fall bus service prohibiting drivers from giving change.
"The driver will only have to stop for one and a half minutes where he was spending three and four minutes," he said. "Some of them did change but want to get a bill changed."
Ogle said that requiring students to have correct change would speed the boarding
Yesterday's Games New York 2. Atlanta 0
MCMURY SAID there would be fewer security risks if the drivers didn't have to handle them.
In a case where a student can't get correct change before boarding the bus, he would receive one or more 25 cent tokens as change. For example, if a student pays $1, he would receive three tokens, which he could redeem for change at the Student
"My wife like Carbondale and I want to stay there," Sayers said. "If something better comes along the way, who knows what I will do."
"THEER HAS never been any type of fund-raising department at SIU, but there are plenty of people in Illinois to support the program." Sayers said.
Senate office, or he could use them for rides,
StudExed rule. The payment must be made in
multiples of 25 to receive change.
You must count over the cost of the fare
will be lost.
The express is part of the KU on Wheels service that was started last fall when the Hawklet, a concession at Summerfield, was closed.
McMurray that bus stop signs would be replaced soon with signs showing the bus stop location.
The express followed a circular path along Alnai Drive, Sunnyside Ave., the west side of the intersection.
The Lunch Bunch Express, a bus service to bring the Hawklet lunch crowd up to the Kansas Union during lunchtime each day, is being run by one of those there aren't enough riders, McMurray said.
'Fresh vegetables here'
BvSUSANLYNN
Staff Writer
A handful of local farmers came to town around 7 a.m. Saturday to set up their vegetable stands, some in the back of cars or trucks, in Lawrence's first Farmers' Market in the parking lot at Eighth and Vermont streets.
A light drizzle turned into a downpour and discouraged townpeople from coming to buy, and in turn, discouraged them from coming into town to sell their produce.
Some children held umbrellas and raincoats over their parents' heads as they carefully selected the week's vegetables. Tarpawns were spread over the stands and trunks were partly closed, and they played on until their production was sold.
THE MARKET was sponsored by the Downtown Lawrence Association.
"I'm surprised there aren't more city folk," said Dorothy Dwyer, Route 3, who most likely onion and potatoes. "Of course, I don't know where most people want to stay home. And I really don't think that many people knew about it. But actually, I'd just as soon have a good soaker. That way, by next week I'll be able to have a lot more produce."
Carl Latham, Route 5, sold squash and
dill out of the back of his truck. His prices, he said, were about 15 cents a pound cheaper than those at a local grocery store.
"If we would have had a good rain about two weeks ago, I'd have a lot more squash," Latham said. "I had lots of blooms for a good crop, but then we had a long dry spell, and that almost wiped me out."
THE MARKET lasted from 8 a.m. until about 5 p.m. although most of the farmers sold out by noon. Only one stand was left in the late afternoon.
"Considering it's the first time for the market, we're not too disappointed," said Justin Anderson, secretary for the downtown association. "The weather, I suspect, has a lot to do with it. But with the rain we are expecting next Saturday should be a much better response by both farmers and townpeople."
The most sought-after produce, corn, came in later, about 19:30, brought by Ralph Earles, Route S, Baldwin, Earles. He delivered it to the store and he said for one a dozen.
Persons wanting to sell their produce at next Saturday's market should apply to the Downtown Lawrence Association and get a free permit.
WSU
A'S
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
Hulbert Albenbert and his son Mark set up one of the first stalls at the Farmers Market, but it still wasn't soon enough for the earliest of shoppers. Later in the day, the rain became a factor which caused many children to be enlisted as umbrella carriers by their neighbors. In Lindley, of Baldwin, does the umbrella chairs while his mother Pat insures the corn.
[Black and white photograph showing a market scene with two men working at tables, surrounded by boxes of fruits and vegetables. In the background, there are brick buildings and a street scene.]
**MARKET SCENE**
Two men work at tables in a market setting. The man on the left is sitting and handling a large object, possibly a bag or a container, while the man on the right is standing and working on a table. There are several boxes of fruit and vegetables scattered around the tables. In the background, there are brick buildings and a street scene.
MELONS
24 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 KANSON
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
HANSON
METRIC WEIGHT
1 TALTE SCALE
ELIJAHNIK
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Vol.86 No.165
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, July 20, 1976
O little town of Montreal
See page 4
Viking touches down begins Mars survey
PASADENA, Calif. (AP)—The unmanned Viking 1 landcraft cast off from its mother ship this morning and fell on its own through the atmosphere to a soft landing on Mars—and man's first search for life on the red planet's surface.
Final commands radioed to the spacecraft just before midnight triggered an automatic sequence of events ending with a collision at 8 a.m. on the landing site, called Chrysler.
The lander's fate wasn't known for at least 19 minutes after touchdown because of the time it takes radio signals to reach Earth. 230 million miles away.
BY COINCIDENCE, the landing occurred on the seventh anniversary of his first staff member's graduation.
Within seconds of landing, the camera atop the squat, three-legged craft began snapping photographs of the surface. They covered the photographs of Mars taken on ground level.
One scientist said it might look much like an area of the Arizona desert that surrounds Mount Rainbow.
Scientists expect to see a barren, sandy plain with meteorite craters scattered here and there and volcanic ridges winding across the plain.
Eight days after landing, a telescoping claw attached to the 1,300-pound lander is to reach out and scoop a handful of Martian soil, then dump it into miniaturized biochemical laboratories to be analyzed tor signs of life.
Linda Thompson, 25, was appointed new assistant director of admissions by Gilbert Dyck, dean of admissions and records, yesterday.
In addition, Thompson spent one year as an editor for the Institute for Social and Environmental Studies. She holds a B.A. in education and secondary education and an M.A. in counseling.
"I am really excited about the job and really wanted it pretty badly. It should be interesting and challenging, but I have a lot to learn." Thompson said.
Thompson, a native of Winfield, has two years of experience at the University in the staff benefits office, two years as a research faculty member, and three years was a graduate assistant to Phil Rankin, the University of Kansas personnel director. She also has two years experience developing teaching modules in a grant supporting the Gary Clark, professor of special education.
Dyck said the job entailed a substantial amount of travel, preparation and presentation of information about the University to prospective students, parents and alumni in individual and group settings. The job also involves educational counselling, guidance, and mentoring of parents and general administrative assignments within the office, he said.
The appointment of graduate assistants to the Dean of Men has also been completed. Kip Grasshorsen joined William Lona and Bob O'Reilly. Lona and Rozelle began July 1.
Dyck appoints asst. director for admissions
"Grosshans will concentrate on housing, Lona on minority students and housing and Rozelle on scholarship halls," Fred McElhenne, associate dean of men, said.
A graduate assistant is also to be named by the dean of women soon. Mumbi, assisting her, should
MOST scientists think Mars is too dry and barren to support life.
But, as it orbited the planet once a day for a month to scout possible landing sites, the Viking orbit photographed many features of ancient streambeds carried by water.
If water once flowed, living organism may have thrived, some think, and the sophisticated Viking detectors should be able to spot signs of them.
Viking 1, the first of two unmanned American spacecraft scheduled to land on Mars this summer, was launched last August 20. It arrived near Mars and went into orbit around the planet—which is about half the size of earth—a month ago.
A planned July 4 landing was called off when scientists studying pictures taken from orb found the terrain much more rugged than they had expected, threatening to damage or topple the delicate craft. A waiting date was put on for similar reasons.
EVERY MOVE of Viking's descent to the surface was controlled by a computer aboard the craft. Because of the distance and 19-minute time-lag—each way for commands from earth would have arrived far too late to react to emergencies.
The landing sequence began with the separation of the lander from the orbiting mother ship about 3½ hours before the planned touchdown. The lander entered the water about 10,000 miles per hour, then was slowed by a parachute and braking rockets.
During the first part of its trip through the thin atmosphere, the lander was covered by a streamlined, saucer-like shell and carried through the air like a wingless glider.
When it was 20,000 feet up, the shell popped off and the 50-foot parachute blossomed. Less than a minute later, the downward motion added the bluests to help slow the craft.
【写真】山本淳一
Research director
Besides his duties as a professor of pharmaceutical chemistry, Takuro Higuchi is the director of McColm Research Institute.
corporation that owns over 40 U.S. patents and more than 30 foreign patents for research in anti-malaria agents, contraceptives and improvements in health-related drugs. See story on page 2.
Ford defends pardon, says he would do again
"I think the American people will make the decision, whether it will be an issue," Forst.
"We could not be involved in the Nixon matter and concentrate fully on the more important matters." Ford said. "I decided in the national interest, I would do it again."
WASHINGTON (AP)—President Ford said yesterday his pardon of Richard M. Nixon served the national interest and "I will give you a clear, no matter what the Democrats say.
The AFL-CIO executive council cited the pardon yesterday among the reasons for labor's endorsement of Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter.
Democrats, including vice presidential nominee Walter F. Mondale, have raised the pardon and the memory of Watergate scandals, as a campaign talking point.
At the same time, Ford announced he has sent Congress legislation "which would further advance our efforts to restore public trust in the federal government," three branches of the federal government."
Balfour fill-in possible
An interim appointee to temporarily replace William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, may be forthcoming, or executive vice chancellor said yesterday.
Shankel said action may be taken because of a delay caused by change in education. Mr. Shankel was a Chronicle of Higher Education. The change stated that experience in student affairs work was preferable, but not necessarily, as had been previously stipulated.
"I hope not, but an interim appointee might be necessary from two weeks to several months," Shankel said. "I'll have to wait until after Aug. 5 (the new deadline) before I appoint somebody on the staff to coordinate student affairs."
Shankel said the decision to change the ad was made by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes and himself in conjunction with the search committee, headed by Rich
"We just wanted to make sure the selection process was run correctly and to make it possible for people with a broad experience to apply," Shankel said. "I don't know if we'll be able to, but I do know we can candidates by the first of September."
Re-touching a facade
Construction work at the new law building is progressing on schedule, and while next summer's completion date draws closer.
workmen yesterday touched-up one of the new facades on the eastern corner of the building. The first classes in the new facade were held on April 28.
Student advisors want time to study fee hike
Bv BERNEII..JIHNKE
Staff Writer
Three members of the Student Advisory Committee to the Kansas Board of Regents said yesterday they felt they hadn't been given enough time to study the tuition increase at the six Regents universities and colleges.
Tedde Tasheff, student body president, told the Student Executive Committee Sunday of the members' disapproval of the procedure.
"We were led to believe we had to take action now," said Chris Lamb, student body president at Kansas State College at Pitt. "I was very nervous." He wrote a statement on the tuition increase.
LAMB SAID the Student Advisory Committee had been told at a June 18 Regents meeting that the tuition increase could only be discussed at the June 22 meeting because the Board wouldn't meet again until late August or September.
On June 22, the Regents approved a $6.9 million increase in incident fees (tuition) for the 1977-1978 school year. The increase was for Kansas residents, $150 a semester for out-of-state students at universities and $102 a semester for out-of-state students at universities.
Lamb said alternatives to the approved tuition increase could have been considered if there had been more time to study the issue.
Since the June 22 meeting the Board has met once, Friday, and plans to meet two times this month.
He said the issues discussed at Friday's board of Regenta meeting weren't any more serious.
CHRIS BADGER, student body president at Kansas State University, said the advisory committee wanted to know why the Regents couldn't have called a special meeting after June 22 to discuss the tuition increase.
"The Student Advisory Committee is wondering about the urgency of the June 22 deadline."
Lamb said the effects the tuition increase
would have on student enrollment should have been more thoroughly examined.
TASHEFF SAID that a gradual tuition over a four year period could have been avoided.
She said she would contact each of the Regents members to find out why the tuition increase decision couldn't have been made at a later date.
Lamb said, "I am extremely dissatisfied with the manner in which the tuition hike woke me up."
HE SAID two more Regents meetings were scheduled for Aug. 4 and 13.
Bickford said he thought it unnecessary to delay the Board's decision on a tuition increase beyond June 22 because the Council of Presidents' study on a tuition increase would be published in other information was available and to delay the decision would have been pointless.
Prudence Hutton, Regents member from Newton, and the Regents didn't tried to solve the problem.
She said that it wasn't the Regents policy to meet as often as they had this summer but that "once in a lifetime" issues had demanded their attention.
THE ISSUES are the bond sales for the KI Medical Center and the replacement of Michael Bickford as executive officer, she said. The president of Regents, she said, the three Regents meetings scheduled after June 22 were special, not general meetings.
He said last Friday's meeting to consider procedures for selling bonds for the Med Center had to be in July because the sales were to begin in August.
"There is nothing controversial about the tuition hike," he said.
Smith said the tuition hike was a minimal increase considering total cost increases for the Regents institutions and that the tuition increase decision hadn't been made in a
He said much information had been examined before the decision was made.
Loneliness and despair precipitate suicide attempts
By GREGG HEJNA
Staff Writer
Terry was dying. In a moment of desperation she had taken an overdose of pills trying to kill herself. Three months later, last April, Andrew would do the same thing. Fortunately, both are still alive today.
Terry is a sophomore majoring in pre-nursing and Andrew is a junior major in advertising. They don't know each other, and the odds are that they never will. Terry is a Catholic and an only child, while Andrew doesn't go to any church and is the oldest child in a large family.
names. Although Terry and Andrew aren't their real names, they're real people and students at the university.
The reasons behind Terry's and Andrew's suicide attempts are very similar. Both were lonely and had been rejected by their families.
THERE IS ONE thing that links them together; they've both tried to commit suicide.
"I lost all hope, was disgustingly lonely and saw no way out of it." Terry said.
THE BOTTOM just dropped out. I was lonely, dejected and just couldn't see things getting any better.
That is a common feeling in suicide attempts, according to Janet Snyder, director of Bert Nash Mental Health Clinic, Lawrence. Loneliness and lack of role roles lead to a suicide attempt, Snyder said.
also pointed out some of the other common reasons for such attempts.
"Often a person who wants to commit suicide will feel that there are no alternatives to what they are doing. They also feel that they have no goals in life that they just can't reach their goals." Snyder said.
Andrew's reasons for trying to commit suicide
"I'm meaner than I used to be, I don't have any patience now, there's nothing really positive."
THIS WAS THE first time Andrew had tried to commit suicide. It was something that he had not done before.
thing to do. I guess that if I had thought it of a little more carefully or rationally, then I wouldn't have done it. There wasnt any way I could be rational right then." he said.
"It killed me not seriously entered my head before
myself. I used to think that it was the wrong
"They say, 'Justice is inherently was' her fourth. "I was a junker in high school the first time, just a kid. I got upset and took an overdose of my pills. The second time wrist;s; it didn't work. Of course, the second time I was quite stoned, but I had been thinking about it for some time before that," she said.
Terry's last suicide attempt was her fourth.
ALTHOUGH Andrew describes his attempt as a
If the problems that cause a person to try to commit suicide persist, he may consider trying to kill himself again, according to B. Kent Houston, associate professor of psychology.
"spur of the moment thing where the pills happened to be there," it wasn't the same for Terry.
"I had tried it before, but I would still think about it. Even though I knew it was bad, I still think it is."
"While most attempts are the first time, three-fourths of them try again," he said.
Both Andrew and Terry said their parents were a big factor in their decision not go through with their suicide attempts. Terry explained that she had been out of touch with her parents.
"I REALLY wasn't in touch with their feelings right then, just my own feelings. You can't do that, you have to think about other people too," she said. "And I know."
"I had called a friend. There had been an argument earlier in the evening, and I just didn't want her to feel responsible for what was going to happen. Well, well, anyway, she said that if I didn't go to Watkins (Hospital) with her, she was going to call my parents." Andrew explained.
"I guess that's when I realized that I would really be hurting them if I went through with the suicide. We're awfully close and I wouldn't want anything to change that," he said.
THEY WERE both taken to the Watkins emergency room after their attempts. Terry had
called the hospital where someone called the resident director of the hall Terry lived in. The director took her to Watkins. Andrew's friend and her roommate took him to Watkins.
Andrews described what happened there:
"You go into the emergency room and you're given a small cup of syrup liquid. I get shakey thinking about it. The syrup is followed by three pitchers of warm water. This combination causes you to begin to throw up uncontrollably, and it wouldn't stop. My ribs and stomach were wouldn't stop. My ribs and stomach were."
"I had tried it before, but I would still think about it. Even though I knew it was bad."
Schroeder was quick to point out that not all suicide attempts were reported to Watkins and that
SYDNEY O. SCHREDER, director of Watkins Mental Health Clinic, said that last year one KU student committed suicide and there were six attempts. He half the number of attempts of the year before.
strained that I hurt for days afterwards. It was awful. The next day I was afraid to eat anything because I thought I would have to go through the whole thing again."
these numbers didn't reflect the complete picture. He said he thought that about twice as many suicides were attempted as were reported each year.
"In the 13 years that I've been here, we've had two students who were in contact with the clinic commit suicide, as opposed to between 20 and 25 students who were not in contact with us." Schroeder said. "The successful suicides are not in contact with the clinic."
FOLLOWING an overnight stay in the hospital,
he met a psychiatrist he had been seeing intermittently.
"We both discussed it and decided that I would be a lot better offer if I was left on my own. I told him that if I needed any help I would call but I haven't talked to him since." Andrew said.
Terry met a psychologist for the first time following the suicide attempt.
"They put me to bed but I couldn't sleep. About a half hour later I asked if I could leave, and they said that he (the psychologist) had come up and talk to me. I really didn't feel like talking, and he made me call my parents and tell them what happened. Then I walked home," she said.
TERRY WAS WIST bit about what the psychologist did. She said that although he did what he thought was best, she still regretted telling her parents that she would be leaving him and wants to work things out for herself.
See SUICIDE page 3
2
Tuesday, July 20, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Bosox fire team manager
BOSTON—Darrrell Johnson, who led the Boston Red Sox to one victory a World Series championship in 1975, was fired yesterday. A club statement said it
Third base coach Don Zimmer was named manager for the rest of the season. The Red Sox, who carried the Cincinnati Reds into the ninth inning of the seventh game before the World Series last October, changed managers while in fifth place during the first half and behind the division-leading New York Yankees in defense of their AL pennant.
"In my opinion it was time for a change. But I wouldn't change anything I did one bit," Johnson said.
Kansas flood aid readied
TOPEKA—An agreement designed to clear the way for allocation of federal disaster funds in a 10-county southeast Kansas area was signed yesterday by Gov. Robert B. Bennett and Francis X. Tobin, regional director of the Federal Disaster Assistance Administration.
The agreement covers Butler, Cherokee, Cowley, Crawford, Elk, Greenwood,
Labette, Montgomery, Neosho and Wilson counties.
the area was hit by severe flooding following torrential rains that fell July 24. Meanwhile, a shortage of available housing units for victims of the recent floods in southeast Kansas was reported yesterday by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
HUD officials said the situation was particularly serious in the communities of Riveton, Galena and Baxter Springs.
Cons sought in kidnapping
CHOWCHILLA, Calif.—Authorities were investigating the possibility yesterday that three doctors — former former doctors — were responsible for last week's shooting at a hospital in California, but bus driver
A law enforcement source in the San Joaquin Valley, where this small town is located, said an all-points bulletin was issued for three men based on an informant's statement that while in San Quentin Prison he overheard three fellow inmates planning a revenge plot.
Rough campaign predicted
KANSS CITY — Columnist Jack Anderson predicted yesterday that President Card would win the Republican nomination and there would be “Watergate-style” voting. He said he was confident that his campaign would win.
"The research they've dug up refers to all of his favorite theologians as being pro-Communist and tries to brand him as favoring laws benefiting homosexuals." Anderson told a news conference. He was in Kansas City to address the Independent Truckers Association convention.
"If they use that research I think we're going to see some Watergate-style campaigning," Anderson said.
Briefs
1,000s and co railmen woke on strike Monday in West Virginia, angered by what they see as unfair federal court intervention in union affairs . A Marine drill instructor was convicted Monday of failing to insure that a subordinate knew how to stage a hand-to-hand combat drill in which a recruit was beseteless since his rifle was loaded with explosives. Leonard Woodcock said yesterday as the United Auto Workers and General Motors opened the 1976 contract talks . Six Polish workers were convicted Monday of rioting against food price hikes and were given prison sentences of four to 10 years . Abercrombie & Fitch, the famed outfitter of great expediations, is beset with
Takereu Higuchi, professor of pharmaceutical chemistry and director of McColm Research Laboratories, is also the incident of his own drug research corporation.
Hugich, a distinguished Regents program founded INTEX to conduct drug research.
Drug studies conducted by KU prof's company
INTERxes 40 U.S. patents and more than 30 foreign patents for research in antimalaria agents, contraceptives and drug improvements. Hicuichi said.
"We're doing research for a major British and Japanese corporation and have done work with corporations in France, Australia, Italy and Brazil," he said. "We
developed a nasal decongestant and a medicine for the treatment of poison ivy. $ ^{1} $
Higuchi was a professor of chemistry at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, before he came to KU and organized the department of pharmaceutical chemistry. He directs physical chemistry and analyti- research of drug research at McColum Research Laboratory where they were built in 1972 from money donated by the McColum family.
"One of the difficulties KU has is selling the state of Kansas on graduate-level education," said Sidney, a top-level university, progressive research resource and simultaneously with classroom teaching."
Negligent dog owners to pay increased fees
Man's and student's best friend is the subject of recent revisions in the Lawrence University Journal.
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Staff Writer
An increase in both impoundment fees and the authority of animal control officers to issue citations for specific violations are measures designed to promote owners' compliance by hitting a sensitive spot—the pocketbook.
Gilizens charged with violations will be prosecuted in Municipal Court and may be tried on conviction. Fees for repeated impoundments have also been increased.
MIKE WILDGEN, assistant city manager, said yesterday that a major source of the dog problem in Lawrence came from students at the University of
He said that, although students live primarily in apartments or single rooms (residence hall or rooming house), they seem to prefer large dogs. These dogs, St. Bernard's, Shepard and Collies, aren't most student living situations, Wildlife see.
"It's not hard to understand that these large dogs just don't get along well in small apartments," he said. "People let the dog run at a night as a reward for being cooped up all day. They usually back home but unfortunately not always."
Wildglen said he'd had reports of packs of dogs running together around the campus
JANE HELLSTROM of the Lawrence Humane Society said a marked increase in the number of stray dogs picked up occurred twice each year.
"The biggest problem is when the KU school year begins and ends," she said. "When students come to Lawrence in the fall they let their dogs run loose to get them accustomed to the strange place. Then when school is over, they decide the don't dog anymore and we take it too much trouble to take it back home with them."
Hellstrom said students tended to leave big dogs behind when school was out because they thought they couldn't take care of them anymore.
SUA sponsors noon serenades for Strong Hall
Students ambling through Strong Hall at noon next spring will be serenaded by campus musicians as part of a five-week program "program sponsored by SUA Fine Arts.
The lunch hour concerts, poetry readings and art are scheduled between Feb. 10 and March 6, Howard Collinson, Fine Arts board member, said Friday.
*Accent the Ars'* will focus on artists, poets and musicians from the University of Wisconsin.
Although the program highlights KU musicians, they will perform during "Accent the Art."
Joffrey II, a team company from New York is by invitation to II City Center, will dance with the company.
Robert Joffrey, the troupe's sponsor, is one of the moving forces in American dance.
Louis Falo, a modern choreographer and dancer, and his seven-member New York troup will appear Oct. 27 in Hoch Auditorium.
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
LARGE SUPREME PIZZA
Six Meat
and
Garden Toppings
The Best Pizza
This Side of
New York
$2.00
OFF
Coupon Expires July 31—So Hurry
NEW YORKER
1021 MASSACHUSETTS ST.
LARGE SUPREME PIZZA
Six Meat
and
Garden Toppings
$2.00
OFF
Coupon Expires July 31—So Hurry
The Best Pizza
This Side of
New York
SUA Summer Films
Tuesday, July 20
Vanishing Point
Directed by Richard Sarafian. With Barry Newman, Cleavon Little, Victoria Medlin, Dean Jagger.
7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, July 21
Heart and Soul
With Vittorio De Sica. The story of an Italian school teacher who disagrees with the policies of facism and faces official reprimand and dismissal for airing his views.
"Mr. De Sica gives an impeccable performance."—New York Times.
7:30 p.m.
Friday, July 23
The Garden of the Finzi-Continio
Directed by Vittorio De Sica. With Dominique Sanda, Helmut Berger. "Quite marvelous. A beautiful surprise."—Pauline Kali, The New Yorker. Academy Award—Best Foreign Film.
7:30 p.m.
$1.00
Mistreatment of pets doesn't occur at only those two times of the year, however. He was not given a pet for the last semester of a student keeping his dog in a car because dorm regulations didn't allow dogs in rooms. She said she was at least two trips daily to check on the dog.
"I LEFT the student a warning on his car window, explaining that the weather was too warm for an animal to be kept in a car like that. The next day the dog wasn't there, so it's anybody's guess what happened to the animal," she said.
NEW YORKER
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Wildgen said that another problem was that students often weren't used to paying the $10 fee for impoundment of their dog. The fee increases $10 with each subsequent impoundment, and in addition there is a $2 daily boarding fee.
"A lot of students say they don't have the money to pay these impoundment fees or citation penalties. But I can't understand how those who say they can't afford these costs can afford the pet in the first place," he said.
Good Old
Summertime
STEAK &
CLAM-BAKE
£4.50
"All residents and students with dogs should make appropriate arrangements to properly care for their animal," he said. "I worry that they refuse to take care of their animals."
. Copies of the revised ordinance are
available at city offices or from the
Hamilton Society.
Wildgen also said that animal control officers had reported trouble with students in the district.
Good Old Summertime STEAK &
CLAM-BAKE
£4.50
He encouraged students to familiarize themselves with the new ordinance and its requirements. Issuance of citations for five listed violations, mandatory rabies enforcement of the leash law are areas the student should be aware of. Wildden said.
Thick 'n juicy sirion steak. Crunch deep-fried clams. Corn on the cob drizzled with butter. Served with Mr. Stork's own crisp potato and warm bread
COOKED WELSH BREAD
"I CAN just see that situation—the dog becomes a 'cause' and the students defend the animal against the officer trying to do his job." Widden said.
He said Lawrence had no license requirements for dogs because, generally, people who bought problems weren't the ones causing problems with their pets.
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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*AMERICAS STEAK EXPERT*
Little known poet incisive, prof says
By MELISSA STEINEGER
The incisive poetry of a once-known New Jersey doctor, William Carlos Williams, places him among the top five American poetos of the first half of the 20th century, according to Richard Colyer, professor of English.
Colyer discussed Williams, the doctor and poet, in a lecture in the Continuing American Revolution series last night in Swarthout Hall.
Ten of the applicants are from Kansas,
which said. The new appointment will
be taken on Monday.
Williams ranks with Robert Frost, Ezra Pound, T. S. Elliot and Wallace Stevens, but Williams and Stevens will emerge as the leaders during period in the next 10 years, Colyer said.
"He did not go to an ivory tower, he did not even go to a retreat, he had a typewriter
WILLIAMS DEVOTED about 70 per cent of his life's energy to the practice of medicine and still produced an impressive effect on poetry. Colver said.
"It is a descent into the self . . us
ourselves . . as Americans and as in-
gressive."
The application deadline for the post was mursley and the Board met Friday for a response. The application deadline for the post was mursley and the Board met Friday for a response.
This describes Williams poetry, also, said. Colyer said. There is no buried meaning in the poetry, he said, rather a visual imagery that touches.
Max Bickford, who is retiring, held the post since 1961.
in a cubby-hole of an office and wrote poetry between patients." said Colver.
Regents review 75 applications for Board post
This is the essential point, that the poetry evoke some subjective feeling or spark, he said. It isn't watching a polar bear in a noo, he explained, but being 10 feet away from
poetry in the American Grain," no book by Williams, best explains his poetry.
The Kansas Board of Regents is reviewing 75 applications for the position of executive officer to the Regents, chairman Glee Smith said yesterday.
WILLIAMS USED imagism, Coller said. Imagination is centering things on a visual image and working outward to create a new way of writing poetry.
Smith said that references were being contacted now and that the Board would narrow the field of candidates to eight or 10 after the next meeting on Aug. 13.
"We will conduct interviews in early September and announce our decision later."
Imagists go back to the idea of poets being the namer of the world, the idea that they gave the world life by naming it, Colyer said.
He said Williams believed it was only enough dealing directly with real objects or images to be an actor.
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Eve, 7:30 & 9:30
GRADS: The New GNP
Articles include: the Graduate Council Report on Fellowships, guidelines for the Master's in Special Studies, Grantsmanship, and much more!
Copies are available in departmental offices and at the Graduate Student Council Office, Kansas Union.
Hillcrest 4 Days Only
Ev. Kev. 7:00, 9:15
"BUTCH CASSIDY & THE SUNDANCE KID"
FIGS
The Summer GNP (Graduate News Paper) is now being distributed.
Richard Pryer, Jam
Hillcrest Now Showing Billy Dee Williams.
Hillcrest
What Bobbie Gentry's song didn't tell you—the movie does . . .
They put the ball in baseball.
OdeTo Billy Joe
Sat.-Sun, Mat. 2:05
Evo. 7:40 & 9:45
Double Horror
BINGO LONG
TRAVELIN' ALL STARS
& MOTOR KINS
Sunset
(800) 714-1234 | www.sunset.hk
'THEY CAME FROM WITHIN'
"MARK OF PG
THE DEVIL pt. II"
10:45
The University of Kansas Theatre's
1976 Summer Theatre Festival
"The Continuing American Revolution"
presents
GUYS AND DOLLS
BY
FRANK
LOESSER
July 22, 23, 24
Thursday-Saturday
Tickets $2.50
K.U. Students, Senior Citizens, Music & Art Campers $1.50
For Information and Reservations Call 864-3982
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, July 20, 1976
3
Greeks feel effects of enrollment boom
By SUSAN LYN
Staff Writer
Soaring enrollment figures and the resulting housing crunch at KU have hit sororities and fraternities as well as residence halls.
"The increase has definitely affected our rush procedures this summer," Pat Schaefer, Prairie Village senior and chair of the Interfaith Council, said yesterday.
"Compared to last year's statistics, by July 25 we had pledged 319 members, this year, as of July 19, we equaled that number, averaging about 40 pledges a week."
SCAHEER SAID since the downswing in fraternity interest in 1969, fraternities had not increasingly better every year. He said he was pleased with this summer's recruiting.
"There seem to be more guys who are finding out earlier that they want to pledge. More are wanting to settle down and have the security of a fraternity," he said.
It has always been the rule of fraternities to fill each house to capacity, Schafer said.
Sororites, too, are feeling the increase in entourage among FIStaterms and FIStatermets and president Patience.
Like fraternities, sororites are experiencing record recruitment numbers.
"I DON'T KNOW if it has to do directly with the housing situation in Lawence, but we have more than is normal for the number of girls signed to go through fall rush."
"Last year we had 125 girls signed to go through fall rush," Pfisteranger said. "And so far this summer we have 122 signed and we can expect a total of between 135 to 140."
About 55 sorsity spaces will be filled, and the houses will be filled, PHlasterer said.
Women wanting to participate in the fall membership program Aug. 13-18 have until
"WE HAVE explained in letters to all the girls the housing situation in Lawrence and the chance of not getting into a sorority," said "But it doesn't seem to deter them."
The number of women wishing to join sororities has exceeded the number of spaces in recent years. Plaisterer said there was a possibility of a new sorority being established at KU. Several sororites will visit the campus this fall to view the University, and a final decision will be made later in the year.
Suicide
From page one
Terry describes the aftermath of the attempt as "pure hell."
"My parents didn't trust me afterwards and my friends thought they had to babysit me. So I had to look for that I lost a lot of respect from those people. That's a big factor. I still haven't completely rebuilt everything. Some people have a part of me. That others me very much."
For Andrew, things came out better. He said he thought that his friends who knew about what happened understood and didn't get it. He then went on to argue out that very few people knew about it.
Snyder said that a social stigma went along with suicide.
"IGUESS I am ashamed of what I did and I don't want anyone to know about it. I just don't think I could ever tell anyone in my family about it at all," he said. "It's not that you shouldn't think that they would definitely lose some resentment me, and I really don't want that to happen."
HOUSTON said that all psychological problems had an unfavorable social stigma
"Most people fight against death, and here is a person who has given up the fight and said, 'I will control my own destiny.' This alienizes most people," Snyder said.
"Suicide attempts, drugs, alcoholism, nervous breakdowns, all have a social stigma. This discourages people from getting help. It's better to have cancer than
psychological problems in some people's eyes," he said.
Although Andrew feels that he is basically the same person he was before he tried to kidnap her, he still has a lot of respect.
"I'm meaner than I used to be, I don't have any patience any more, there's nothing really positive, I guess. I'm bitter about myself, I don't like what I'm doing now. I can't really think of anything that I like about myself," Terry said.
"IWE tried to change, but it just doesn't
just drown it and go back the way I did."
*
Terry and Andrew both doubted they would again attempt suicide.
"Since this last time, I haven't even thought about it. Even when I get as deep down as I am right now, the thought never is my mind. It's gone forever." Terry said.
They both agreed that they would try to talk anyone out of suicide.
Andrew said, "I just really can't see myself ever doing it again. It isn't part of my character and I don't think it will ever chance of me ever repeating that mistake."
"I'd try to show them that life is worth living," Terry said. "I'd try to tell them that somebody does care very much and ask them to try to get help."
Andrew said, "Nothing is so bad that you can't start over again."
Mental assistance centers
Students seeking psychological help in the Lawrence area may obtain it at the following locations:
**Mental Health Clinic at Watkins Hospital.**
For KU students needing treatment. The first four visits are covered by the student fee. A $25 charge applies to $3 to $14 a session is charged, depending on
KU Psychological Clinic. The clinic offers free psychological services to all Lawrence residents. The clinic is located at 307 Fraser Hall. Their telephone number is 844-6121. It is a 24-hour access for crisis intervention through the Information Center, 844-3506.
BERT NASH Mental Health Center. The center provides mental health services to residents of Douglas County. Fees are on a sliding scale based on income and depend-ment, which is located in Missouri. The telephone number is 843-922, the switchboard is open 24 hours a day.
Headquarters Inc. They operate 24 hours a day, every day of the year. Staffed by para-professional volunteers. People can stop by or call any time of day or night. Located at 1602 Massachusetts, telephone, 841-2345.
GOLF TOURNAMENT Thursday, July 22
Entry deadline: 4 p.m. Wednesday, July 21
Entru fee: $3.25
Tournament structured as 2-man teams, 9 holes, best ball. Tee-times will begin at 1:30 p.m.
Interested? Contact Recreational Services Office
208 Robinson or call 864-3546
WHAT A MOUTHFUL OF FUN!
FOUR TACOS FOR $1
---
And a small price to pay for so much tun!
TACO
TICO
2340 Iowa (23rd & Hwy. 59 South)
Ofor and then, July 21st
841-4218
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kanan are offered to all students in its origin. FAILLE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
KANSAN WANT ADS
CLASSIFIED RATES
15 words or fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word 24 20 18 16
one two three four five time times times times times
... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
AD DEADLINES
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insections. 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 CUR business office at 644-1538.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
Handicapped graduate student (uses cuckles)
will will share expenses on goat nest range open,
will will share expenses on goat nest range open,
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 st. Edward, Lawrence, KS.
2 bdr, all utilities paid, on campus. Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking. a/c, pool. 848
4953
Mark I and II, mice and quiet, 1 and 2 bedroom
Mark I and II, very nice, very nice and close to canoe
843-1011-313
Artist studio space for rent with gallery front for
call. Sales 648-1730. 7-20
Students; Happiness is an alternative life!- Try cooperative living. Workshopping program, laundry facilities, laundry facilities average $53/month fee; average $35/month fee; Alice at 942-9273 between 7-10 weekdays. 7-29
Shares country living- 3 bedroom, carpeted
office, private entrance, reasonable, utilities paid,
private entrance
2-bedroom unfurnished apartment ready for resale
1-bedroom I Call Steve Craig; Dramatic
Keep trying
7-12
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them.
1) As study guide
2) For later use
For exam preparation
"New Analysis"
Available now at Town Crater Stores
1234
7E7 GALLERY
EAST 7TH STREET
CLOSED
SUNDAY & MONDAY
HOURS 12:30-5:30
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
For offer
the Do-It-Yourself we
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days and nights
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
1. Special Prices
overnight
THE HARLEM MUSEUM
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
Mexican Food
All Mexican Dishes served on glistening hot plates
American and
Aztec Inn
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
materials. The Furniture, the Appliance Center,
204 W. 15th St., Chicago, IL 60611.
new summer hours 10-3 (longer on cool days)
THEY HERE! Large selection (regularly $6.00—now $9)
THE ATTIC 917 Mass
IMPORTED CLOTHING
10-3 (longer on cool days)
1973 Duter, Like new, 32,000 miles, automatic,
driver to appreciate. Make an offer. 7-20
Fax: 455-822-2646
807 Vermont 842-9455
Alternator, starter, and generator. Speakalist
ELLECTRIC, 835-2160; DELL AEU1
ELLECTRIC, 835-2160; 3000 W; Wire
COIL, 835-2160
Cactus - selling collection. Over 300 plants, small island. Some blooming. April 4, p.m. 2014 island. $125.
Guarantee cards all intact; just bump! Yamaha
C-26 with $390, resh $285 (two) want
C-26 with $499, resh $389 (two) want
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on your hifi equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, we supply them at the GRAMOPHONE SHOP at KEPS.
Giving away hunting hunt? Pre-washed, blue deim
blue deim price $3, price $12, price $12
The Auie. 927 Mass. 927
***
*
Must sell 1972 LT Camaro with all options. Exc-
cellent condition. Call Craig at 481-622-712.
**SOLD**
Selected Secondhand Goods & Antiques
All-pro women's bike, 34" frame, 3 speed, complete $5, Call 843-664-564. 7-21
Electric Wrench organ with double manual and full pedal board. Call 843-0355. 7-26
Stay Cool Hours Summer Store
HALF AS MUCH
1921 Caupi V6, Stick shift, good condition Call:
843-630-2900 p. 159, p. 1208 Eighty-13, 7:20
Top in Comfort Hours Sweat
09 VW camprobe, excellent condition 843-
8793 7-22
JEWERY-$0 OFF! I am clinging out a line of
hand-made sterling ring Vazz
stone stillet $10 OFF!
Herril Nova 1974 2, 800 bedroom, atr conditioned,
fireplace, patio, kitchen, furnished or unfurni-
zed. Kitchen 842-782-367.
Box springs and mattress sites, used and raw at various locations, are shipped in boxes of stock at a reduced price. Used Plywood boxes may be purchased by the buyer.
HELP WANTED
Architecture or art student with drafting capability
Phone. 863-9245
7-20
Students working Their way through school, learning about the importance of time through fall and spring seminars. Work with students on a variety of topics known nationwide. Should have 25-30 hours per week. Knowledge of helpful but not necessary calls 943-8748, ask for further information.
---
Assistant Instructor. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction is seeking a position in curriculum development for the Duties will include teaching undergraduate education, remedial reading practicum and advising undergraduates on course range from $450 to $750, depending upon qualifications of applicant. To qualify for this position, applicants must have a Bachelor's degree and elementary school teaching experience. The candidate must be admirable to a doctoral program in the Department of Education and earn doctorate in an appropriate field. Submit application to the School of Education, University of Kansas, Sunday School of Education, University of Kansas. Kansas 60043. Deadline for applications is September 15th. Applicant must be a qualified woman. Employed women and women of all races are welcome.
Personnel for all shifts. Apply in person at Vista
Restaurant, 1327 W. 6th. 7-21
Eidjoacker Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
21 Medical Health
224-365-7800
FIRMWORKS
FINAL MODELS
FINAL TASKS
FINAL ALGORITHMS
FINAL OPPORTUNITIES
COSTLE CITY HOSPITAL
COSTLE CITY MEDICAL
COSTLE CITY MOVING
COSTLE CITY WORKSHOP
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FIELDS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEPPEO COMPONENTS!
YAMAHA
GRAMOPHONE
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion
Than Most Storero Components
0
5 2 1 4 7 9 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Teaching Assistant. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction has designed a teaching assistant for the 1967-74 academic year and a teacher educator for the 1968-72 academic year. Student teachers in Lawrence, Saskatchewan is ESOP-683. Teacher assistants are desirable to a deferral program in the Department of Education. The Department of Education have had elementary school teaching experience, supplies and credentials to New Brunswick. The Department of Education has offered for applications in July 2015. Qualified men and women of all races are eligible. Qualified men and women of all races are eligible.
STATE OF THE ART
Lost: Ametrythet boy in silver setting. Lost Thurs-
day. Reward offered. 482-6312. Section 12.
Reward. Value offered. 482-6312.
NOTICE
Audio Components
LOST AND FOUND
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
seafood, parfaits and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and choucroute galette at the Cathedral Cafe, 803
Dunluce Drive (dinner), Dinner, till 9:30 a.m.
Sundays.
Lost H-19 45 calculator on July 7th, reward of
100. answer asked: 814-781, you thank 7-26
Wash Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, tables, television, electronics. Open daily 12 p.m.
824-377-2977
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
MULTI-SUPPORT CENTER LARRINGTON ARBOLES 800-752-4361
Gentlemen's Quarters
NEW LOW PRICE
After 28 years in business, If George doesn't have it he will make it. George's Pipe Shop, 3401 W. 26th St., Brooklyn, NY 11239.
W. 9th & III.
HEWLETT PACKARD CALCULATORS
SR-50A 850.95
SR-1A 174.95
SR-12A 106.95
SR-52 249.95
HR-34 72.00
HP-21 12.00
Plus $2.50 shipping
Creative haircutting
for men and women
Discount Calculator
Sales
PO Box 30392,
Dallas, Texas 75235
Phone 214-7621-0310
Nice comfortable atmospheres, good used LFPs.
Dose of observation of jazz. Storie House. 782-1
843-26-90
843-26-91
Typeing: Theses, manuscripts, term papers, etc.
IBM Selectric. Campus near. 842-4900. t-71
843-2719
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 842-101-ff.
CHARMING ECCENTRIC needring convivial feenial experience on adventure in full-dress B-M-W. Pre camp training to motors; restaurants to cookouts. Would leave for a day at the pool or open for determination, but want to avoid crowds and buy-centennial. Dutch-treat, but cost up to $100 per trip. Ten years and over 100k miles of trekking. TITLE TEMPTED? Call John at 843-8200 and leave a message on the machine if you don't answer.
Girls' Action! Excitation! Adventure! Travel! Arena goals: exercise, apply in person at JAXTA 7-folded T-shirt
SERVICES OFFERED
Math. Entering, Completing, Appertaining tutors
TUTOR
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-754-
802 after 6 p.m. If
TYPING
at
1 do damned good tying. Pengy, 842-4675, after
4000 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-29
in the summer.
Typist/editor, IBM PICA cite/learn. Quality www.
Typist/editor, dissertations welcome
Born: May 14, 1927; Married: Naomi B. Moirz-82
*
Experienced typet-term paper, thesis, mise.
Expert in the use of digital spelling, lettering,
483-854-0363. Mrs. Wright.
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Broadcasting, digital production,
desktop graphics electric AIA Social
Sciences.
Keep your car healthy
WANTED
Experienced typist iptlb MAG. Mag.Card, term papers.
Experienced form ICM, form correspondence, orfice
835-8471.
Recomma wanted: female, graduate, student room apartment. Available 9am or for 7am, room apartment. Available 9am or for 7am.
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W.234 842-4152
Use the student discounts
Need someone to anbisshe Jayhawk Towers apart-
ment for fall and spring semesters. Call 842-582-8921.
Wanted Roommate for unfurnished bedroom of
two apartments with all facilities very
reasonable, 3232 lawn. Let me know if you can
One or two roommates may share furnished $45,000
one or two roommates may share furnished 764-708-
392
Need one or two roommates for a two-bedroom
apartment. Call anytime 913-885-1683; 7-22
Female nominate(s) and apartment needed. Pre-
ferable phone number. Would like to talk to 7-21
Contact 311 Fint Hall
HORIZON'S 1811 W. 6th
HONDA
Roommate wanted to share spacious two bedroom
apartment downstairs, 849-808, room 16-268
phone 849-808-5372, mail us at 849-808-5372
1972 Honda QA50
1967 Honda CL136
1967 Honda CB450
1967 Honda CB750
Need one or two roommates for a two-bedroom apartment. Call myname 913-642-9458. 7-22
Female couples in its always furnished two-bedroom suite may be preferred over the $775/month plus 15 utility-unit apartments for which it costs $2,300.
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
1974 Yamaha DT550
1966 Honda CBI640
1972 Honda XL510
1970 Kawasaki 350
843-3333
DENSO CHRIS PASCAL CHRISTIE
Technics SL-1300
by Panasonic
Direct-Dual Automatic Treadle
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00
BMS ELECTRONICS audio
TJL MASSACHUSETTS 843-2672
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES?
smile
O
---
U.S.A. RAIL PASS
Australia
14 days...$250
21 days...$325
30 days...$400
Unlimited Mileage on Amtrak
Also available after September 7, 1976 at lower rates
Maupintour travel service
Kansas Union
---
KANSAN
CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR
YOU
4
Tuesday, July 20, 1976
University Daily Kansan
2013.4.15
Sports
Gymnast Comaneci earns third 'perfect'
By WICK TEMPLE
MONTREAL—Nadia Comanei of Romania achieved her second and third perfect gymnastic performances of the summer Olympics last night and American swimmers John Naber and Bruce Furniss won gold medals in world record times.
Comaniec scored the first 10-point Olympic performance on the uneen bars Sunday night. Then to the cheers of 18,000 fans last night she got another 10 from the balance beam and an incredible third 10 on her optional turn on the uneen bars.
Despite her excellence, the Romanian team finished second to the Soviet women in performances from Ludmila Tourscheinicea, Nellie Kim, Maria Filiova and Olga Korbut, the daring of the 1972 Olympics. The Simply had more depth than the Romanian.
But Comaneci's three perfect scores put her in good position to win the all-award individual tomorrow night, an honor that escaped Korbut in 1972.
The American swimmers served notice that they intended to dominate their sport.
Olympic Notes
MONTREAL—A Russian gold medalist was tossed out of the Olympic Games Monday for using a "James Bond" electric drill in the modern pentathlon competition.
Epees are wired to blink a light over the judges' desk when a hit is registered.
MONTREAL—The International Olympic Committee moved into position yesterday to bring down the axe on the African countries boycotting the Olympic Games.
But no sanctions are expected until the IOC's session at Prague next year. As 28 countries were reported involved in the haste to undermine the 31st International Day of the Woman.
As 28 countries were reported involved in the boycott undermining the 21st Olympics.
★
MONTREAL—Jorge Hernandez, the world champion at 106 pounds, underscored the strength of the Cuban boxing team with a brilliant performance last night while Marine Leen Spinks of St. Louis earned the United States a split in Olympic boxing.
Spinks knocked out Abdeltail Fatifi of Morocco in the first round.
Furniss, of Santa Ana, Calif., led a 1-3-2 swimmers of Americans in the men's 200 meter freestyle swimming event, setting a world record of 1:50.29.
Naber of Menlo Park, Calif., won a silver medal in that race and 50 minutes later won his gold by becoming the first swimmer to win the 100 meter race. He was timed in 55.49.
Completing the American sweep in the 200 meter freestyle race was Jim Montgomery of Madison, Wis., who took the bronze medal. Pat Rocca of Orinda, calf, was second to Nasser in the 100 and Roland in the 200. Both pairs both races the last two Olympics, was third.
Kornelia Ender of East Germany won the women's 100 meter freestyle event last night in the world record time of 55.65, followed by Petra Prieger of East Germany and American Brigid Bighla of Holland. Kim Kwang-in also competed. American finisher in fourth place. Shirley Babashoff of Fountain Valley, Calif., finished fifth.
Fifteen-year old Andrew Pollack led an East German sweep in winning the World Cup, and a major event in an Olympic record time of 3:11.41. Urike Tauber was second and world record-holder Rosmarie Gabriel took the bronze medal. The old Olympic record was
Thus the American men and East German women dominated the aquatic events as expected. After two days of competition, the U.S. men had won three gold medals, three silver and two bronze out of nine medals awarded. The East German women have picked up three golds, two silvers and one bronze.
Orioles beat Royals, 4-3
KANSAS CITY (AP)—Reggie Jackson's home run and back-to-back doubles by Ken Singleton and Tony Muser lifted the Baltimore Orioles and Jim Palmer to a 4-3 triumph over the Kansas City Royals last night.
Jackson's sixth-inning blast, his 12th
homer of the year, came off Dennis
Leonard, 10-4, and scored Bobby Grich
ahead of him. The four-bagger gave
Baltimore a 4-1 lead and the Orioles held on
for the victory.
Palmier, 13-8 and the winning pitcher in the American League; was relieved in the eighth inning.
After AI Cowens put the Royals ahead in the second with a solo home run, Baltimore went ahead 2-4 in the fifth when Musser and DeCincinnati won by 3. DeCincinnati followed by an RBI single.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
New York W L Pet. GB -
Ballard 35 44 89 -
Baltimore 54 42 194 -
Cleveland 42 43 494 -
Detroit 62 49 173 -
Indianapolis 41 46 184 -
Kansas City 56 32 429 629
Texas 66 32 429 9½
Minnesota 41 47 466 14½
Chicago 41 47 466 14½
Callifornia 30 30 466
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L W. Pts. OB
Pittsburgh 39 28 176 11
Pittsburgh 48 45 131 11
St. Louis 48 45 131 11
Chicago 36 35 120 10
Michigan 36 35 120 10
cleveland 3, Cleveland GAM.
cincinnati 3, Oakland GAM.
California 6, Milwaukee 2.
Minnesota 4, Chicago City 3.
Minnesota 4, Detroit 1.
New York 3, Chicago 0
Boston 2, Philadelphia 2
Chinatown 57 34 41 .826
Los Angeles 57 34 41 .826
Houston 45 47 49 .70
San Diego 45 47 49 .70
Albuquerque 42 39 40 .807
San Francisco 42 39 40 .807
**Nationwide Game**
San Francisco 3, Seattle 2
Cleveland 4, Pittsburgh 1
Chicago 4, New York 4
Alabama 4, New York 2
San Diego 3, Chicago 2
Tampa Bay 3, Chicago 3
Maupintour
S
Trav
Leaving Town?
MONTREAL—Nine-to-five working people of Montreal woke yesterday morning to find that a subculture had taken firm root over the weekend.
See your Maupintour Travel Agent for complete travel arrangements at no extra cost.
Airline and Amtrak tickets
Athletes, tourists and press people were easy to pick out from native Montrealers on their way to work aboard the city's beautiful Beaches. The Olympic entourage dresses grubby.
★ Hotels
★ Resorts
They wear either cameras or press passes or both around their necks. Many of them, and not the Canadians, wear leisure suits (a sass testament to American taste).
★ Tours
AND ALMOST everyone I've seen wears track shoes. They're comfortable during long hours of standing or running after inconsistent city bushes.
★ Cruises
Rental Cars
By KELLY SCOTT
Kansan OlympicsCorresponder
OOK EARLY FOR BEST SELECTION!
It would do the Adidas people proud to see the successful results of their promotional, blitz. We received Adidas cigarette lighters in our press kits. A 24-hour "Adidas Lounge" is open in the press center. And since most of the posters illustrating track running cars runners in the familiar triple-striped shoes, they get a freebie there. 100
★ Eurail Passes
What Montrealers think about this strange growth upon their normal way of life is hard to pinpoint. I think it schizophrenia, but I don't understand stuffed in my mailbox alluded to the soil.
Leisure suits invade old Montreal
"You aren't seeing the real Montreal," it says, "It is a different city when the Olympics are not here. Nice in a different way."
SUA ⊗ Maupintour travel service
ONE BUS DRIVER I talked with was ambivalent when I asked him whether he was driving.
"Yes and no," he said. "For me, I like the money. But I think Mr. Drapson (Mayor of Washington) can do better."
The money is plenty. I spoke with another bus driver on the way home quite late in the day. "I'll just go to work."
843-1211/900 Mass./Nillcrest/The Mails/KU Union
“It's American money,” she snapped, He, too, seemed irritated. I asked him why the foreign money was trouble. He just smiled, shrugged his shoulders and said "No, not at all. I just charge you three per cent."
People who don't have Canadian currency pay for it, literally. Places accept American money for a price. I couldn't get Canadian currency until Monday morning, so I had to pay a three-to-five per cent exorbitance on every thing I bought over the weekend.
ian dollars that day. He was working overtime on a Sunday during the Olympics, three criteria the city of Montreal rewards with time-and-three-quarter pays.
He admitted he enjoyed it, though we both groused a bit at being in such a delightful environment.
THE BEST WAY to handle the language differences, I've found, is to smile a lot and be friendly. You can speak French, who can't speak English, speak both, but there is a nervous moment when you are ready to ask a question or pay a bill in French. Old western midwestern will付 von through.
I WENT INTO a store and was waited on by a most engaging French-Canadian woman. When I told her I had only American money, she turned surly. She threw my American $10 bill at the man who rang up the sales.
I am constantly amazed at the bilingual way of life here. I haven't met a language barrier yet. In phrasing a question, my tendency is to say it in slow, distinct English, anticipating that the other person will have a difficult time understanding me.
It is with a certain amount of embarrassment that I hear a repent that goes like: "Ok, you have been stupid."
I took four high school years of French,
however, I am reluctant to try it around
the world.
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me a masket to carry several items while I shipped. He offered it me in French, so I muttered, a self-conscious "merci" in return. I thought I saw him snicker.
IN MY JOB with the Associated Press, I spend many hours in the office and a minimum on venues, as the Olympic sites are called here. I take phone calls from reporters on the scene and type up their stories. The closest I've come to the competition has been the crowd noise on the other end of a poor connection.
It was the first time Smith, a long-time gymnastics trainer, had seen one, but he didn't see it for a long time.
today...
I 'took' AP gymnastic correspondent Howard Smith's urgent phone call to report Romanan Nadia Commench's perfect 10.8 of the compulsory uneven parallel bar event.
Transportation has changed...
A
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Viking I photographs Mars; search for life begins
Viking I sent this 300 degree panoramic view yesterday morning just after touchdown on the surface of Mars. Objects in the foreground are parts of the spacecraft. At left are shown on the center horizon, Patches of bright sand, rocks and boulders are in the middle distance. Projections on the right horizon represent rims of impact craters. A wide range of hills can be seen behind Viking's antenna. The photo's quality has been enhanced by computer.
[Image of a barren, desert-like landscape with scattered buildings and structures. The terrain is rugged and uneven, covered in patches of sand and rock. In the foreground, there are large, flat areas with flat roofs, possibly buildings or storage facilities. The background shows more extensive desert terrain with scattered vegetation and rocky outcrops.]
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
Wednesday, July 21, 1976
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Vol.86 No.166
EDITOR'S NOTE: Last week a Kansan article examined problems KU's Lebanese students have in communicating with their families. In some cases, several months had elapsed since students had had contact with home. Along with anxiety, the isolation has another ramification, the focus of today's story.
By ALEXIS WAGNER
Staff Writer
Lack of communication to and from Lebanon has thrust University of Kansas students from the war-torn country into a new era of learning.
Two Lebanese students, John Smiley and Ghassan Ghandour, said yesterday that the war had isolated Lebanese students from their supply of money and that they were not aware of the need designed to keep them from supporting themselves.
Smiley said the majority of Lebanese students came to the United States with a limited amount of money expecting to be able to receive funds from their families as needed. He said those cut off from families and financial resources must support themselves; outside jobs, jobs within the university, loans or money from the Lebanese embassy.
BUT, SMITLEY said, foreign students ordinarily aren't allowed to work because they came to the United States with the understanding that they had enough money to support themselves.
"Even if the immigration services give us work permits, we can work only so many hours, Smiley said. "The work may cover room and board, but what about tuition, books and clothes?"
Work permit regulations restrict foreign students to 20 hours of work a week. In addition, the rules state, students must be in good standing.
Smiley said the immigration services were beginning to recognize the needs of the Lebanese students and work permits for the summer had been issued to students who showed they were in need.
SOME OF THE Lebanese students may be able to get jobs or loans from the University, but Smiley said as far as he knew no Lebanese student had yet asked the University for aid.
"We're still hopeful that something will happen back home so that normal channels of support are open again."
Jerry Rogers, director of financial aid, said that foreign students were not eligible to receive grants or loans from the school.
*Before coming to the United States, foreign students certify that they can support themselves and they are ready to attend college.*
- AP wirephoto courtesy of the Topeka Capital-Journal
ROGERS SAID that the only type of financial assistance a foreign student could get was a short-term loan through the University Endowment Association. The maximum amount to be given to a student through the Endowment Association is $400.
William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs, said that in some cases students with financial problems had been allowed to delay their fee payments but that the state didn't favor this.
Ghandou said that most of the Lebanese students would rather work than get loans.
"We will try to get jobs first. When we have exhausted all other opportunities, then we will go to University offered."
GHAUNDROU SAID that there was very little hope of getting money from the Lebanese embassy.
"The embassy doesn't have any funds for students even in peace time and now because of the war they can't get any education."
Another concern of the Lebanese students is that they don't know how their families have weathered the wars.
"We are all undergoing emotional strains. We cope with our situations as best we can, sometimes collectively, but mostly on an individual basis," Smiley said. "We are in a kind of recovery since for some of us, the war is very close to our homes."
"IT SEEMS that the Lebanese people have no more control. The different factions are being randomly supported by various countries. Somebody is going to have to face this war. It may have to be a super-power," Smiley said.
THE STUDENTS are also concerned about the labeling of the war as a "Christian versus Moslem" conflict.
Both Ghandour and Smiley agreed that the situation in Lebanon is a world crisis and should be taken seriously.
Smiley and Ghandour said they thought that the armed Palestinian presence in Lebanon had resulted in confrontation between Lebanese nationalists and Palestinians. Lebanese leftist parties, made up most of the Lebanese forces as they saw in the Lebanese situation "a material which they could implement their ideas," they said.
"Most of the Lebanese students at KU are not supporting any of the parties involved in the conflict," Smiley said. "We all hope that the situation will return to normal soon."
Ghandour and Smiley said that most of the Lebanese nationalists are Christians and that the coincidental situation had given rise to the "Christian versus Moslem" label.
By RICHARD SALTUS AP Science Writer
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) - Ivking I made America's first Mars landing look easy, dropping down safely yesterday on a boulder-strewn plain and sending back stumbling sharp pictures of a landscape resembling the Southwestern desert.
The robot laboratory that will continue a search for Martian life absolutely intact after settling to the plain among the rocks, where they have been large enough to wreck the lander.
It was the first successful soft touchdown on Mars in history. The trouble-free landing and the startling photographic detail of light and dark rocks, sand dunes and a stark horizon left scientists trembling with emotion.
"There are tears in my eyes, my heart is beating fast . . . It's mind-boggling." Neel Hinners, associate administrator of the nation's space agency, said.
By coincidence, it was the seventh anniversary of another space milestone—the first manned mission to orbit Earth.
As television monitors at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory reproduced, one line at a time, Viking's first panoramic picture of the landscape, imaging team leader Jason Bacon, said in his podcast, "goeth, just love! You can almost imagine yourself walking right out there!"
The pictures traveled 213 million miles and—even at the speed of light, 186,000 miles per second—took 19 minutes to reach earth.
The pictures showed a low-lying plain called Chryse, which at one time may have given channels in the palm of its winding humpain plain, and Mutch said it was quite "reminiscent of some desert areas on the coast" or peculiarly the Southwestern United States.
But in eight days, a telescope arm is to reach out and grab a claw full of Martian soil to be deposited in three life-detecting experiments aboard the 1.300-foot lander
On Mars, the squat three-legged craft weighs about 450 pounds because the crust is so thin.
if any tiny organisms are living in the
sea the experiments are believed capable of
fruit.
Carl Sagan of Cornell University, one of the best-known advocates of searching for extra-terrestrial life, called the terrain a "neat surface."
"It's just tremendously exciting, especially after a series of Soviet failures," said Sagan, a member of the lander photography team. "Mars is a very tough place to land. I suspect Mars will be sufficiently interested in to hold our interest."
The Soviets have landed two spacecraft on Mars but both ceased functioning shortly after their launch.
The crucial last leg of its journey began early yesterday morning when it parted company with the mother ship that had landed it into orbit around Mars a month ago.
A computer aboard the lander guided it through the complicated descent sequence. As it entered the Martian atmosphere, it was traveling about 10,000 miles an hour, and its rocket boosters showed to a mere 5.5 m.p.h, as it dropped to the surface at 4:53 p.m. P.D.T.
Viking, the first of two unmanned American spacecraft scheduled for Mars landings this summer, blasted off on the historic mission 11 months ago.
When signals reached earth 19 minutes later, a flight commentator cried. "We have to make sure our airplanes fly."
Officials and mission controllers whooped, cheered and hugged each other, with the warmest applause reserved for them. A contact manager with a misty look in his eyes.
"I just want to say this is the happiest time of my life," he declared. He praised the thousands of persons involved in the eight-year project and noted with a touch of irony, "Some of these people probably don't know anymore—they probably got laid off."
City OKs plastics plant bond sale
President Ford called to offer his congratulations to Martin and NASA Ad
The Chryse landing site was the third target for Viking. Two others, including the original one on another part of the Chryse ship, were hit by a sword-shaped secession they appeared dangerously rough.
DANIELS
Before the landing, the orbiting Viking command ship had taken photos that suggested the final site might be covered with mineral swept from highland plateaus and ice sheets. So scientists said, the lander might find exotic minerals like gold and platinum there.
Inorganic analysis instruments on the under will be used to determine the composition.
Workmen laid corrugated pipe yesterday as construction continued on the new Spencer Richard Alexander helped connect the pipeline, which will be used to carry electrical lines.
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Connecting the pipe
The panoramic landscape picture showed dark shadows cast by the inkier and boulders in the late afternoon sun. It was covered with sand and mud, touched down the. The shadows accentuated the scattering of boulders and made the dark ones appear almost like clumps of sand.
Parts of the squatter's superstructure could be clearly seen in the foreground of the panorama. All the equipment looked undamaged, and a meteorology boom for Martian weather appeared to have properly swung into an upright position.
city code regarding licensing of solicitors.
The revised code deletes several requirements which are unconstitutional in many jurisdictions, and is required of all solicitors and peddlers.
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
The commission also received bids for proposed street improvements and purchase of new office equipment for the police headquarters of the judicial building.
Business was light at the Lawrence City Commission meeting last night.
Approval was given to the proposed letter of intent to issue $80,000 in industrial fabrication materials for Plastics plant. City Manager Buford Watson said that the city owned this property until the bonds were paid off. The company will be responsible for 10 years while bonds are being retired.
Watson said he thought Packer Plastics could improve Lawrence employment statistics.
"I THINK we must take a serious look at local industries that want to expand—especially those that are good sources of food and drink, which are clean industrial" he said.
Commissioner Barkley Clark said that revenue bonds are a business subsidy paid for by the federal government and that a bond is used to their exemption from income tax payment.
The commission voted to allow a 15-cent increase per trip in taxi fare. This increase will yield about a 13 per cent increase in rates.
Ward Thompson, owner of the Lawrence Yellow Cable and Union Cab Companies, said that buses which provide regular transportation for the elderly were a major source of competition for him. He said this year he would seek a reason for his requests for fare increases.
APPROVAL WAS also give to revise the
KU prof critic of secrecy policy
By SUSAN LYNN
Staff Writer
Ronald R. McCoy, professor of history, last month was invited by the U.S. Commission on Records and Documents to voice his opposition to what he feels are unnecessary and unconformal restrictions on access to government documents.
A University of Kansas professor was a recent guest critic of the United States government.
Mccoy said yesterday he was invited because of his work on a book about the history of ancient Egypt.
Mccoy said that more than 10,000 government employees were hired solely to work with the company.
"We dealt with the problem of the government having too many documents being classified when there really wasn't enough data," he said to have the material locked up," he said.
"THE ARCHIVES contain only two per cent of all government records. They are interested in the complexities of classifying records," McCoy said yesterday.
transcribe classified government records
to preamble records open to the public.
New vegetarian cafe is collective
By GREGG HEJNA
The cafe, which will offer a totally vegetarian menu, won't follow the traditional concept of owners, managers and hired help but will be run by a collective, a group of 15 to 20 people, Valeire Kelly, a member of the collected said yesterday.
A new concept in restaurant management will begin in Lawrence with the opening of the Sister Kettle Cafe, 14th and Massachusetts late next month.
Those who work more than 30 hours a week, will become part of the steering wheel crew.
Plans for the cafe started off on a much smaller scale as the original concept was to only serve lunches at the United Ministries in Higher Education building, Kelly said. The café was able to get things around with the mini-fit last March at the United Ministries.
"When we found out that this building was
available, we decided to enlarge the idea to restaurant, "Kelly said," "The whole thing
Their non-traditional approach extends into the other areas of the restaurant.
“During the first month we won't pay any salaries, all the work will be on a volunteer basis. We'll just take care of the salaries for the first month. Up to then, we'll just be making tips,” Kelly said. “Most of the people will be counting on something else to support themselves for a salary.”
The cafe's planned hours are also unusual. Sister Kettle will be open from 7 to 10am.
"We don't have air conditioning so we'll be closed for the hottest part of the day," Kirsten said.
During the evenings, the kitchen will close down and the cafe will be a coffeehouse. Food and drinks will be available, books will be on hand, poetry reading and music are being made.
Glassed-in shelves along the walls will display works by local artists.
"Our ties to the co-op are both political and emotional. We'll be ordering our food through them, but there is no real connection," Kelly said.
"We'll be serving vegetarian food, including eggs and cheese, but we'll have meals without them to show people that you are not only vegan but also educational as well as serve good food."
"We are trying very hard. People here are learning to work together and how to keep lines of communication open," she said. "We're very enthusiastic. This could develop into anything. It's just sort of being born right now."
Although there is no official connection with the Community Mercantile food cooperative and Sister Kettle, there are ties between them. The Mercantile is a nonprofit store run by volunteer workers.
The real problem begins when the documents are declassified because each document must be declassified individually, he said.
"THIS is a cumbersome and expensive process," he said. "The agencies are super-sensitive about their information, much of which is harmless."
McCoy proposed that federal records used for government, scholarly, and journalistic research purposes be regularized by imposing acceptable time restrictions on them.
"Of course it would depend on what types of information we were dealing with," he said.
"AS AMERICAN citizens who are involved in all types of professions, a great deal of material that we have a right to see is kept from us," McCoy said. "Much of the time the information is kept secret because it might be a public embarrassment, not because it has to do with national security reasons. This has outraged me."
To keep the information classified is expensive because special security systems and guards are required to keep the documents secret. A long process is required to see confidential information, he said.
A lot of progress in declasifying information has occurred in the last six years, McCoy said, but another step forward is needed.
McCoy has taught history at KU since 1970. He is the author of nine books on recent events in American history.
He will teach American history in Ireland or a year beginning this fall under the supervision of the Irish Studies faculty.
2
Wednesday, July 21, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Kidnap riddle clues found
LIVERMORE, Calif.—Authorities concentrated their search for the kidnappers of 26 Chowchilla school children in the Santa Cruz mountains area after discovering that the kidnappers had been there both before and after the mass abduction.
O.J.'s retirement predicted
And another lead was unearthed when the makeshift underground prison which held the captives was dug up. Law officials found that the moving van the kidnappers had buried was purchased last Nov. 20 from Palo Alto Transfer and Storage Co.
LEWISTON, N.Y.-Buffalo Bills owner Ralph Walton said that Tuesday he belies O.J. Simpson, the dominant running back in the National Football League
Wilson said he has not had contact with the Los Angeles Rams in a week
When she is not on the court contact with the 225 Augusta men in a week. When they are on the court contact with the 225 Augusta men, wide receiver Jack Snow, safety Steve Prece and defensive tackle Bill Nelson in an evening.
Wilson said that was like offering "a Cadillac, a Toyota and a Datsun for a $46.000 Rolls Royce."
Cannery workers walk out
PALO ALTO, calif. — Thousands of California cainery workers walked off their jobs in early March to protest the warning that tones of fruits and vegetables will be lost if the walkout continues.
As many as 70,000 Teamsters struck, idling 76 caneries, which process about 95 per cent of the state's canned fruits and vegetables.
WASHINGTON—President Ford picked off eight Republican convention delegates yesterday in two of Ronald Reagan's strong Southern states—Virginia
Both sides continued to claim event victory at Kansas City next month, but the Associated Press count of delegates shows Ford leading 1,082 to 1,023 with 1,056 votes.
EPA inspecting new cars
DETROIT—The Environmental Protection Agency said yesterday it would begin spot checks of cars rolling off assembly lines to make sure they comply with new laws.
"The auto manufacturers data indicate that more than half a million 1976 cars and trucks emitted emission requirements when they came off the assembly line," said EPA admin.
Truce called in Lebanon
BEIRUT - Lebanon's warring factions agreed in a surprise meeting yesterday on a short truce to evacuate the wounded from a besieged Palestinian refugee camp.
They also took tentative steps toward setting up negotiations to end the 15-month-old civil war.
Late Prof. Bussell praised
Robert H. Bussell, KU professor or microbiology who died last week, was praised yesterday as a man concerned about his students and his profession.
Bussell was known to students and teachers for his generous attitude in helping them.
"He leaves behind a large group of students whose careers and education are dedicated to him," David Paretsky, professor of microbiology, said.
Bussell, who fought at KU for the last 13 years, suffered a heart attack Friday morning and died soon after at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. He was 48.
Funeral services were Saturday morning at Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd.
Survive in the Care of a Good Shepherd.
Survive in the Care of a Good Shepherd.
child, one of whom is an undergraduate
Bussell was a virologist known for research of canine distemper, a mite problem.
"He wasn't one of the 'hot rocks' on who did famous research projects just at UW."
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Bussell received his Ph.D. from the Galveston medical branch of the University of Texas in 1956. He was a research associate at the University of Buffalo medical >hool from 1957 to 1963, when he department of microbiology at KU.
KU shares $80,000 grant
By DAYNA HEIDRICK
An $80,000 grant to support activities designed to improve Kansans' understanding of Africa America will be shared University of Wisconsin and Wichita State University.
Staff Writer
Charles L. Stansifer, professor of history and director of the Center of Latin American Studies at KU, said there were at least six cases where the award was for the funding. The award indicates that the program proposed by the three Kansas schools was ranked as one of the nation's strongest by both the U.S. government and several universities that reviewed the applications, he said.
The U.S. Office of Education selected 10 programs in the nation as National Defense Education Act Centers for Latin American Studies.
THE GRANT will allow increased Latin American library acquisitions at KU, WSU and KSU, and will support a distinguished research group of conferences focusing on Latin America.
KU art curator leaves to take California post
Enyart recently was named executive director of the Friends of Photography, an international organization devoted to creative photography.
James Enyear, curator of graphic arts at the University of Kansas' museum of art and associate professor of art history, will be presenting his work as a new position in Carmel, Calif.
He said yesterday that there were many reasons for his accepting the new job.
"It's a step up and an opportunity," he said.
His new duties will include editing the organization's scholarly journal, composing photography exhibits and giving grants and awards to photographers.
Eldredge said Elizabeth Broun had been a temporary replacement for Enyear since July 1. Broun's duties will vary and won't be limited to photography, Eldredge said.
Charles Eldredge, associate professor of art history, said a replacement for Enyart wouldn't be named until next spring semester.
"The resignation came so late that there wasn't time to review candidates for the position."
Brom has a Ph.D. in art history. Her specialty is American painting. She has written articles on the history of photography and is a Ford Foundation Fellow.
The University of Kansas Theatre's 1976 Summer Theatre Festival
"The Continuing American Revolution"
presents
Elementary school teachers will be in-
vented to teach activities planned for
1977 and 1978.
The first conference, "Forces for Change in Rural American America," will be at McPherson College, October 1-2, jointly sponsored by the Tr-TU Center and Center of Kansas. A conference on religion in Latin America is scheduled in Manhattan for spring 1977.
Stansifer said the grant represented a significant breakthrough in cooperation among the state universities. Stansifer and Braden Schaw, professor of modern language at James W. McKenney, professor of political science at WSU, are associate program
directors. The combined faculty resources of KU, KSU and WSU consist of 66 with Latin American specialization or extensive Latin American experience.
Thursday -Saturday
Stanisfer said the outside funding would bring a visiting professor in Brazilian history and civilization, Elizabeth Ann Kuzensou, to KU in the fall and to KSU in the spring, and would support regular Portuguese classes at KSU and WSU.
July 22, 23, 24
K. U. Students, Senior Citizens, Music & Art Campers $1.50
Stansifer said he thought the emphasis on Brazilian studies and the Portuguese language was long overdue. Though Spanish is the second language of the United States, it has a large share in other European languages, he said, especially in this section of the country.
BY
FRANK
LOESSER
For Information and Reservations Call 864-3982
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Lawrence, 841-2547
July 27
Coupon Expires
PEPSI-COLA
STRAW HAT
Pizza Palace
COUPON GOOD FROM NOON TO 3 P.M.
THE GREAT GIVE-AWAY
(Thursday-Friday-Saturday)
FALL MERCHANDISE ARRIVING FAST, WE MUST MAKE ROOM YOUR LAST CHANCE
COME EARLY
ALL SUMMER FASHIONS AT GIVE-AWAY PRICES
TOPS
HALTERS
TEE-SHIRTS
BLOUSES
Reg. to '22
$3-$4
PANTS
JEANS
Reg. to $5 and
'22 up
• ALL SALES FINAL
• NO EXCHANGES
• CASH ONLY
NO WILL CALLS
TOPS HALTERS TEE-SHIRTS BLOUSES
Reg. to '22
$3-$4
BARGAIN TABLE
Assorted Items
Reg. to $24
$2
DRESSES
Short or Long
Reg. to $16-$42
1/2 OFF
PANTS JEANS
Reg. to $5 and up
SWIMSUITS
Reg. to '23
$6
SKIRTS
Reg. to $5 and up
• ALL SALES FINAL
• NO EXCHANGES
• CASH ONLY
• NO WILL-CALLS
the VILLAGE SET
OPEN
THURSDAY
EVENING
TILL 8:30 P.M.
922 Massachusetts
DRESSES
Short or Long
Reg. to $16-$42
1/2 OFF
SKIRTS
Reg. to $5 and
'24 up
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, July 21. 1976
3
Lawrence life new for Laotian refugees
By RANDY SEBA
Staff Write
When Tran Ba Huang, a 28-year-old Laotian refugee, arrived with his family of six in Lawrence last Monday, he was hoping the new adversary afraid of the uncertainties.
Behina! the Trans were eight months in a crowded refuge camp in Thailand, where thousands of displaced people live.
Ahead of them was the challenge of beginning anew in a country with ways of living and speaking radically different from anything they had known before.
Tran; his 24-year-old wife, Lau Thi Luyen; his wife's sister, Lau Thi Nga, 15; and his four sons, ranging in age from 3 months to 5 years, brought with them little more than the clothes they wore. Tran speaks some English but his family speaks French. He will be missed for his family in Lawrence, and no possessions with which to begin a new life.
"On the airplane I was afraid," Tran said.
"When we land, I was no longer afraid."
HOWEVER, A warm reception by former refugees and conversed townpeople helped the organization feel welcome.
The Trans are being aided in their adjustment to American life by the Lawrence Unitarian Fellowship Committee, the family's local sponsor. The committee sponsored two refuge families who settled in Lawrence last year. Clothes, toys, eating utensils and a temporary place to live have been donated for the Trans by members of the refuge families. The Trans have also been dinner guests of several of the families.
The main thrust of the committee, however, is to aid the Trans in long-term employment.
TRAIN SAID his most important goal was to find a job. In Laos, he worked as an electrician and, for the past four years, stocked pharmaceutical goods for a pay of about $50 a month. The committee would like to find an electrician's job for Tran. He has been working in electrical systems much different from American systems, and may be inadequate.
The problem of permanent housing may be solved already for the Tran family. Paul Brotsman, associate professor of social welfare and a member of the committee, said that the Trans had applied to live at New York University on Haskell. Brotsman said that the family might be able to move in seven or eight days.
"We're waiting for a four-bedroom apartment to open up." Brotman said. This would be good if they can live there without having to move in and would be close at hand to help them."
Medical aid such as shots for the children, child care, help in adjusting to American foods and assistance in shopping will be provided by the committee.
"ONE OF the committee members, for quite a while, will go with them around
Transportation is also being provided. In Vientiane, Laos, where Tran worked as a stocker, he owned a Toyota. Tran said that when he left Laos, a new Toyota sold for about $1,200. A bargain price for Americans, it is a high price to Laotians.
The house will provide offices, whose rent the coordinators hope will pay for the house.
Tran said that although his wife had worked as a dressmaker in Laos to supplement his $50-a-month salary, they still worked in a basement with his sister's sister. Lui Tha Ng, took care of the children while the parents worked. They lived in a one-story, two-room house meaning about nine by 28 feet. The front room was cleaning and the back room for preparing food.
Three floors are needed because each floor will provide different services. Traffic through secluded areas must be kept minimal, Gordon said.
It was in Vientiane that Tran acquired his knowledge of English. He went to classes at a large library and also learned some French.
TRAN SAID learning French and English was good preparation because most refugees went to France, Australia, West Germany and the United States. He said that "many, many people" wanted to come to United States but that it was difficult to do.
Tran said refugees had to stay in the camps at all times and had nothing to do except grow vegetables or flowers. The American government provides the camps and basic necessities for the refugees. He was there when most of the refugees were left in the camp, waiting to be reunited.
Several organizations help find homes for refugees by locating local sponsors. When a sponsor is found he is matched to the next location in the country. The Tran family came to Lawrence through the efforts of the U.S. Catholic Conference Services of the U.S. Catholic Conference.
Tran said most of his fears were past and that he liked Lawrence. Although many adjustments lie ahead, he said a beginning would be better than it would have been in the past.
A 30-hour airplane trip brought the family from Thailand to Lawrence. The first stop of the exhausting trip was Tokyo. An hour later they were on their way to San Francisco, where they had a two-hour wait before going on to Lawrence.
"I cannot live under the Communists," Tran said.
New women's cooperative to provide unique services
Women will have a space all their own in Women's homes the first women's cooperative to open the first women's
"We want to find a house with three stories and a basement," Susan Davis, building coordinator, said. "The problem is that we don't many three story houses available now."
Several Lawrence women have been meeting recently to draw up the plans for the house, she said, and the next major step is to locate an available building. No date has been set for the opening.
"Women's Space" will provide a place for Lawrence women to come together to grow creatively and will provide services not currently offered in Lawrence," Julie Gordon, one of several organizers of the house, said yesterday.
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One office will provide clinical help such as legal assistance and personal counseling for women, Gordon said. Workshop space will be used for classes in self-defense, carpentry and survival skills. There will be room for dance, music and painting.
"Survival space" will provide a place for women having problems at home, she said. Gordon said there would be strictly "women's space" where Lawrence women can come together to grow, relate interpersonally and get support from other women.
"It will be open to every woman in the community," Gordon said. "I feel it will play an important role because I don't know what to do." Women are geared toward these women's needs.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GREATER COMFORT, SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT!
Grandda
From the folks who made "Benji"
N.Y.C. SUPPLEMENTARY
"HAWMPS" G Daily 2:30, 7:30, 8:40
Remember the Girls we all talked about?
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Varsitu
904711 ... Virginia 822-3064
COTTON CRAFTING
PAUL NEWMAN
"BUFFALO BILL
and the INDIANS.
or SITTING BUILLS
HISTORY TICKETS."
Eve. 7:30, 9:30 Sat.-Sun. 2:30 R
Hillcrest
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kansan are offered to all students without regard to race, color, religion, national origin or language. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
Eve, 7:35-9:55 Sat.-Sun, 1:45
CLASSIFIED RATES
Rod Steiger
Valerie Perrine
BINGO LONG
TRAVELING ALL SAFE
& MOTOR KINGS
KANSAN WANT ADS
AD DEADLINES
W.C.FIELDS
AND ME
15 words or fewer ... $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional word ... 01 02 03 04
Word ... .01 .02 .03 .04 .05
ID NUMBER
Hillcrest
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Monday 5 p.m.
Thursday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These ad can be placed in person or at the UK office of the UKB business office 646-4358.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
one two three four five
time times times times times
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
ERRORS
Hillcrest2
Eve. 7:25-9:35
Sat.Sun. 2:05
FOR RENT
Hand-tapped graduate student (studies crushs)
will provide hours of labor to pay for
cash will share expenses on gas rent range op
sessions.
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTERN MOBILE HOME, 3469 8th street, Lawn-ka, 82015
Eve. 7:20-9:35 Sat.-Sun. 1:55
Sunset "JAWS" Tonight 9:15
2 bdr. all utilities on, campus Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking, a.c. pool, beds
4903 4903
Mark I and II, rice and quiet, 1 and 2 bedroom
Mark III and IV, nice rice, very nice to close can
beds. P83-101-11
Robert Redford 11:30 PG
"The Great Waido Pepper"
Students *Happiness* is an alternative lifestyle. Try cooperative living. Worksharing program, food program, private room, laundry facility, lifecycle planning. Visit Alice at 842-9237 between 7-10 weekdays. Alice at 842-9237 between 7-10 weekdays.
Basseterre South Africa living - 3 bedroom, carpeted
kitchen, private entrance, reassuring, utilities paid,
private wi-fi, internet access.
2-bedroom unfurnished apartment ready for occupation August 1. Call Steve or Craig, 841-250-7673.
2 bedroom unfurnished apartment at Cremorne
Hays. 913-620-2758
913-620-2758
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—On sale At
Senior Citizens (Western Civilization)
Makes sense to use them—
Assistants
For 2.1 class preparation
Assistants
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES!
Technics SL-1300
by Technicon. Direct Drive Automatic Turntable
RMS
ELECTRONICS
audio
VZL MASSACHUSETTS 841-2972
BMS
ELECTRONICS
audio
MASSACHUSETTS 831-2679
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00!
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any price you see on popular hill equipment other than factory dumps or close-on products, you must have a GPS system at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIVER.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture.
The Trade. The Furniture and Appliance Store, 1941.
Chicago, IL.
THEY HAVE 'Large selection of "Our Special"
TOMBERS' Large Selection of "Regency" Regularity 95% - now 129
THE ATTIC, 971 Mass.
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialists. BELL AUCTION ELECTRIC, 843-2060, 2000 W, 9th.
Going safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue dermi-
nium skin price $2, special price $3, special
The Attic, 297 Seventh Ave.
Cactus - selling collection. Over 300 plants, small
some blooming. After p. 4 m. 2014 p. 127.
岛兰 - island
Guarantee words shall still intact; just touch! $want:
$a. $b. $c. $d. $g. $h. $i. $j. $k. $l. $m. $n. $o. $p. $q. $r. $s. $t. $u. $v. $w. $x. $y. $z.
G. 2-6 spencher var. $reg. $twant. $want
must sell 173 LT Camara with all options Ex-
cellent condition. Crawl at Creig at 8412-7225.
***
All-pro women's bike, 24" frame, speed, three speed, new. $55. Mail 843-645-54. 7-21
69 VW cammobile, excellent condition, 843,
8793. 7-22
Electric Wheatgrill organ with double manual ignition full pedal board. Call 842-0355. 7-26
JEWELRY - 50% OFF! I am closed out a line of one-year-ceramic stud earrings. Vary. $149.95. $299.95.
Box springs and mattresses used, and new at low bargain prices. Limit one per customer. Will all in stock at reduced prices Use Pumpkin and Appliance Center, 2041; Mason, 7-2971.
Herriol Nova 1924 2 bedroom, air conditioned
furniture, furnished or unfurnished.
Call 845-327-777.
Dodge 64 `Coronet` engine is in good condition.
Dodge 53 `Coronet` engine is in good condition.
Anihil. Nathall火机 No. 428. Attn: 7,29
Anihil. Nathall火机 No. 428. Attn: 7,29
73 Brown Florida Dollars $1,200; 36,000 miles. Ex-
celler condition: 841-3023.
**
GUIDELY WITH hard-shell case, $275 or trade
for 35 mL kit. Call 841-6020 between
9 a.m. and 10 p.m.
HELP WANTED
Full-time position as corrections coordinator with a Master's degree or equivalent. May 1- Applications must cover Aug. 2 - Degree in Biology, Chemistry, Engineering or Comp Sci, experience $700 per month with full-time position. Must be a Judge, Court judge, Lawrence, Ke Equal Opportunity Employer.
Students working their way through school, are being taught about time through fall and spring seminars. Work is done on the campus with a known nationwide wide' should have 25-30 hours of study. Students need to be helpful but not necessary. Call 948-708-049 for help.
Assistant Instructor. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction must provide a participant assistant instructor for the 1976-77 term. Duties will include teaching undergraduate education, providing coursework in reading remediation and advising undergraduates from $400 to $700, depending upon qualification, the applicant must have graduate level training, the applicant must have teaching experience. The applicant must also be an assistant instructor or have an assistant member of Curriculum and Instruction or have an application and credentials to Nila Sundy, curriculum and instruction, Kansas 6605. Deadline for applications is November 30th. Applicant must be a licensed employer. Qualified men and women of all races are required for all afiliies. Availability at Wes
Personnel for all shifts. Apply in person at Vita
Restaurant, 1527 W. th. 6th
7-21
TE1
7E7 GALLERY
7 EAST 7TH STREET
CLOSED
SUNDAY & MONDAY
HOURS 12:30-5:30
SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
530 Wisconsin
- - - - -
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
843-9404
P.
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
—6 Nights a Week—
Open 2 p.m. -3 a.m. Dancers 3:10-3:0 p.m.
Memberships Available
Wayne Pool—Owner
Memberships Available Class & Private Club
Gentlemen's Quarters Creative haircutting for men and women W. 9th & JJ 843-2719
---
Keep your car healthy in the summer. Use the student discounts
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
at
Happy Car
Teaching Assistant. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction for the 1974-75 term, teaching assistant for the 1976-77 term, elementary student teacher in Lawrence, having a elementary student teacher in Lawrence, having a primary student to be admissible to a judicial program in Los Angeles, and having had elementary school teacher training. School of Education, University of Kansas. School of Education, University of Kansas. Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action employer. Women and women of all races are encouraged to apply.
LOST AND FOUND
Lost! Amberbyet银 in silver setting. Lost Thur-
shire. Value reward offered. 814-6022. T寿-
7-21
Value, reward offered. 814-6022
Lost H-10 $ 6 calculator on July 9th, reward of
h-10, no questions asked. 841-731-766, thank you 7-26
NOTICE
Cool it these hot afternoons with fruits and
foats, parfaits and peaches, Gold cup ice cream
and chocolate gale at the Cahab Casa, 803
Dunbar, Dutton县; till 8:30罢 Sundays.
Wash Shop 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, cups, checks, televisions. Open daily 12-5. 843-2977
843-3977
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't he will make it. George's Pizza Shop, 717-456-2800.
NEW LOW PRICE TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
HEWLETT PACKARD CALCULATORS
SR-50 A4 550.95
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Discount Calculator
Sales
Sales
PO Box 30392,
Dallas, Texas 75250
Phone 214-691-7021
Typeing: Theses, manuscripts, term papers, etc.
IBM Selectric. Nasher college. 842-4900. 7-21
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 842-0110. -Illustration
Girls' Action! Excitement! Adventure! Travel! A woman's experience, apply in person at AT&T.
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcoholics Anonymous 845-810-7160.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring—Competent, experienced tutors
Can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 118,
119, 121, 122, 600. Regular sessions or
one-time life preparation. Rates: 7-29
842-7881.
THE BIRTH OF THE WORLD
Aztec Inn
Mexican Food
All Mexican Dishes served
807 Vermont 842-9455
FIELDS
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
ADVERTISE U
D
K
ADVERTISE
TUTOR
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics Call 641-7852 after 6 p.m. If
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 842-4476, after
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-29
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/site. Quality work.
Typewriter, disertations welcome.
Book: 862-912-897
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Technical writing, drafting and proofreading,
thesis, dissertation paper electric, A.S. Signal
processing.
Experienced typist—term paper, thesis, micro-
processing. Required 84-35 hours. Mrs. Wright.
84-35 hours. Mrs. Wright.
Experienced ttypist IBM Mag-Card, term papers,
form correspondence, form correspondence, 928-943-9711
928-943-9711
WANTED
Ouse or t coworkmate to a share firm
Hossein H. Haievateen Hossein H.
645 400 7233 haievateen.hossein.hossei
Need an experienced tytish? IBM Selectric II plan
with a 250-gallon carbon tape (carbon bison);
Call Pam at 862-579-793.
Roommate wanted: female geriatric care
person, 28-34 yrs old, for fall/winter
room apartment. Available July 25 or for Fall
August 10. Call 718-693-1200.
Wanted: Roommate for unfurnished bedroom or
apartment. Must have at least two very reasonable,
3232 Suite, Lot No. 3225.
Female roommate to share furnished two bed-
room apartment in the Bronx for $750/month plus 1% usd-
preferred fee. $750/month plus 1% usd-preferred fee.
Need someone to sublease Jawhawk Towers apart-
ment, full and spring seminars. Call 8-268
availime.
Need one or two roommates for a two-bedroom apartment. Call myname 911-838-1532. 7-22
Female roommate(s) and apartment needed. Pre-
pared contacts. Would like to contact:
phone. Contact 111 Flint Hall **T-21**
Need one or two roommates for a two-bedroom apartment. Call anytime 913-624-5425. 7-22
Serious female grd school student roommate for
students aged 18-25. Please send $35 plus utilities, Start Aug 1, call (800) 764-9281.
Roommate wanted to share space two bedrooms
and two bathrooms. Room was located in
Available August 1. Call 843-0081 at 5 p.m.
or e-mail roommate@villagehome.com
Stay Cool Hours-Summer Sto
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods & Antiques
UNIQUE
IMPORTED CLOTHING
new summer hours
10-3 (Longer on cool days)
730 Mass 841-7070
Nice female recruitee w曼耍了 2 bedroom
accented home for $195,000. Satin
sitting room; 2 bedrooms in K.C. after
retirement. Call Clinton collected in K.C.
after retiring.
Copin Comfort Hours Sweat
RAASCH
SADDLE & BRIDESHOP
Open 9:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.
FINE SEALS, HOODS AND LINEN SHIRTS,
BOOTS, MATS, JEANS
BankAmericard
力
842.8413
Mastercharge
VARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
THE CREWEL
15 East 8th 841-2646
10-5 Monday-Saturday
Eldredgeer Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
32 Minute Proof
90% UV Resistant
FARRINGTON HOSPITAL
FOLLECTIONS
MEDICAL ACADEMY
FACILITY OFFICIAL
MEDICAL OFFICE
MEDICAL ASSOCIATE
QUALITY & MEMORY
HOSPITAL
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer: 1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days and nights
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
overnight
1. Machine upon service
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
the
GRAMOPHONE
shop
821 6931 ANN EASTON STATION
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Storee Components
Audio Components
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KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
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MAIL DESIGNER CENTER LAVENDER BOXING 103-872-6444
4
Wednesday, July 21, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports
U.S. swimmers dominate
By WICK TEMPLE
AP Sports Editor
MONTREAL—Brian Goodell and John Hencken continued America's world championship swimming events in the Summer Olympics yesterday. But American Shirley Bajabash lost her bid to best East German Petra Kubasova, a world champion in Germany. German domination of women's swimming
Babasoh failed in a stretch duel with Thuner in the women's 400 freestyle.
Goodell won the gold medal in the 1,500-meter freestyle and Henken won the 100-meter breaststroke gold, making five victories in as many men's swim events.
Jennifer Chandler, 17, from Lincoln, Ala., won the gold medal in the Olympic three-game series.
The American basketball team came from behind, netting two free throws in the second half. The Washington Ford, to beat men's R冰-954 in the second round of the men's cage tournament, a close call for a team that has lost only one game. It was the third and is favored to meet Russia for the title.
The American women's basketball team kept its medal hopes alive with a 95-79 victory over Bulgaria. The Americans lost to Japan in their opening game and the Japanese beat Canada yesterday 121-89. Russia beat Czechoslovakia 88-75.
In skeet-shooting, the United States won another gold medal from Don Haldeman, a 28-year-old tool and die maker from Souderton. Pa.
The United States' eight-oared rowing
cockpit will be the first time to
Olympic flies.
The American eight finished a badly beaten third behind Great Britain and
Orioles beat Royals, 10-3
KANAS CITY (AP)—Lee May slammed two home runs, while Bobby Gribch and Reggie Jackson had one each to pounce for the bases in deciding of the Kansas City Royals last night.
Grich drove in five runs with a homer, a triple and a walk.
Wayne Garland, who has the best winning percentage in the American League, impressed at home and at the
Gritch's two-run homer Baltimore's four-run third inning as the Orioles rebounded to a 2-0 deficit against loser Doug Bird, 9.3.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE East
New York W L Pet. GB
Baltimore 42 35 12 12
Cleveland 42 41 488 12
Greenwood 42 41 488 13/16
Boston 42 36 477 16/
Milwaukee 42 36 477 16/
Rancho City 56 34 622
Oakland 69 44 322
Toronto 10 34 9
Minnesota 41 48 681
Chicago 41 48 461 14½
California 29 25 15
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East
Oakland 7. Cleveland
Hallamore 10. Kansas City 9.
New York 6. Miami 9. Illinois
New York 6. Miami 9.
Rockton 4. Texas 7.
W 10 L Pts. GR
Pittsburgh 49 20 54
Pittsburgh 49 20 54
Pittsburgh 49 20 54
St. Louis 49 45 449
New York 49 45 449
Chicago 37 53 411
Chicago 37 53 411
Cheetahim
Los Angeles
Houston
San Diego
Atlanta
San Francisco
57 31 48 620 -- 6
51 31 48 110 6
46 47 49 -495 11¼%
46 47 49 -495 11¼%
49 39 -495 11¼%
49 39 -495 11¼%
Pittsburgh 9-14, Houston 5-4
Mostral 3-1, Seattle 2-1
Cleveland 1-1, Cinnamati
San Diego 3, Philadelphia 0
Los Angeles 3, St. Louis 2
San Francisco 1
ACME
CLEANERS
20%
OFF
Offer expires Friday,
July 23,1976
Czechoslovakia. The first two boats advanced to Sunday's finals.
The race concluded two years of decline for the American oarsmen. They were upset winners in the World Championships in 1973 and in 1975 and now have been eliminated.
Nikolai Kolesnikov gave the Soviet Union its second gold medal in weightlifting, winning the featherweight title with a total of 627 pounds.
The Japanese men won the team gold medal in gymnastics, with the Soviet Union taking the silver medal and East Germany, the bronze.
In the women's three-meter diving event, Chandler won the gold medal with 506.19 points. Second was Christa Kohler of East Carolina and third was Cynthia Mclevaine of Dallas.
Goodell, of Mission Viejo), Calif., was a 150-meter freestyle Bobby Hocky of Yosemite.
Athletic Director, Clyde Walker, has appointed Hank Hetter to the dual role of academic coordinator and recruiting coor-
dinator in the KU football team effective August 1.
2 athletic roles being combined by appointment
Hettwer, 39, has been an assistant football coach for KU the past two years and is a member of the women's national team.
As academic coordinator, Hettwer will
wise and counsel all KU athletes with any
difficulty.
"We felt the consolidation of these two positions would be in the best interest," Don Baker, director of sports information said. "These positions go hand-in-hand."
Hettner came to Kansas in 1974 from Emporia Kansas State College, where he attended.
He began his coaching career in 1960 as football wrestling coach at track and field, finsh school.
He received his bachelor's degree from Moorhead State College in Moorhead, MN, and returned there in 1983 as a graduate assoc. at the University of Michigan track while completing his master's degrere.
He was later named head wrestling coach and assistant football coach at MINT (N.D. State College, where he compiled a record of 35-1-1 through the 1968 wrestling season.
That year, he became head football coach replacing former MU great Bill Schanek.
On Campus
Events
won the silver in 15.03.91 and Steve Holland of Australia was third in 15.04.66. All three were under Goodell's previous world record of 15.06.66 for this metric mile event.
"TONIGHT: SUA film 'HEART AND SOUL' is at 7:30 in Wooldorff Auditorium. The DUMMY theatre production "GUYS AND DUMMYs" will begin at 8 in University Theatre.
ELENA BASTIDA, Lawrence graduate student, has been awarded a Fulbright-Hays travel Spanish government grant to study at the University Compulissee of Hawaii. She expects to go to Madrid in January after completing a doctorate at KU.
Grants and Awards
In the women's 400 meter swim, both Thurmer and Babahassoff broke the world record of 4.14:00. Thurmer was timed in the 4:14:50 and the 4:14:20 Smith of Canada was third in 4:14:60.
Hencken, of Santa Barbara, Calif., produced his third world record time in two days in winning the men's 100-meter race. In Great Britain was second in 1:03.43 and Arvidas Iuozayti of the Soviet Union was third in 1:02.43. Hencken, 22, tied his word mark in Monday's preliminaries and beat it to 1:03.80 in Monday's semifinals.
The crusade to restore Jim Thorpe's Olympic medals has broken down again
Olympic Notes
The International Olympic Committee decided yesterday to take no action on the fallen id of 64 years ago, a spokesman said.
Thorpe won gold medals in the decathlon and pentathlon in the 1912 Olympics at Stockholm but was stripped of both of them. He also lost to Sir Alec Douglas for playing basketball three years before.
Korbut, the darling of the 1972 Games in Munich, is now 21 and fighting to retain her gymnasium supremacy. Her stiff competition is expected to come from the 14-player national team that was precedentely perfect 10 scores in three phases of the team gymnastics competition.
A confrontation between gymnasts Olga Korbut of the Soviet Union and Nadia Comaneci of Romania will highlight Olympic competition tonight.
★
Russian pentathlon champion Boris Onischenko, who was thrown out of the Olympics Monday for using a cheating device on his fall, flew back to the Soviet Union yesterday after he was dropped from the Soviet team. A Russian official said the incident was "a very sad matter and he will probably be stripped of all his medals and name." Onischenko is a master of sport, the soviets' highest honor for athletes.
Egypt and Morocco joined the Olympic boycott yesterday, bringing to 30 the number of countries that have walked out of the Games. The tour is touring segregationist South Africa.
★
★
IT'S HARD to forget the first time you ever saw such a sight. There's something frighteningly unnatural about seeing a house on wheels; sure, there are trailers (excuse me-mobile homes), but they're slicing it off in its basement, jacking it up like a communal toilet onto a truck and dumping it across the staggers the imagination. Indeed, it takes a heap of luggins to make a house leave home.
And what about those walls and walls? Most houses that are moved are fairly well along in years, not quite as spry as they might once have been—and hardly suspecting that one dark day they would be buried in a mine, they and transplanted in foreign soil. Surely those floors would lose their spring, those walls their solid knock of confidence.
And how bizarre it must be for the occupants of those houses, to be walking the same floors and facing the same walls in a totally different neighborhood.
THE GRISLY headline possibilities are almost endless: PSIMO BEAM COUPE
BUNGA-LOW. O: COTTAGE OWNER GRILLED
HIT-AND RUN RAP.
Woe the unhappy motorist, though, who fails to drive defensively when townhouses take to the turpines. Watching out for the other guy takes on added importance when that other guy has six rooms, two and a half baths and a sumporch.
Progress has never come easily,
however. How are we to move ahead if
we're afraid to make dramatic changes?
Soon we'll no longer have to be content with moving our houses from one side of town to
the other. We'll be able to transport whole neighborhoods. Think of it: there need
never be a wrong side of the tracks.
But, if moving is called for, then move we must. Better wrenched up than torn down.
SRI RADHA VAYU
As we drove home Monday night we noticed, in the blocks immediately preceding our house, that those peky little yellow signs had been posted again. Their neighbors were Parking. By Order of Sheriff "Good luck" to them. Noticees not spoke as clearly as a wanted poster in Dodge City. Another house was going to hit the streets.
1974 World Plan Executive Council—U.S. All rights reserved. Transitional Mental Health TM are service marks of WPEC—U.S. a non-profit, educational institution.
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This increase in habitat traffic could point up an exciting new trend. It's not so much urban renewal as urban . well, rearrangement.
It's not at all uncommon anymore, at least in our neighborhood, to peek through the draperies and see not a car, not a truck, but walk its way calmly down the tree-lined avenue—looking for all the world like some forlorn cascade from the Parade of Homes.
TM
By RUN HARTUNG
Contributing Writer
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THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Kabuki comes to Kansas
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, July 22.1976
Vol.86 No.167
See page 3
SCHOOL SHOP
NORTHWEST
MESA
Staff photo
Volunteer fireman
William Gunter, maintenance employee at the Kansas Union, is helped down a shaky ladder after extinguishing an electrical at the union yesterday around noon. The fire started at 10:35 a.m. on Tuesday, Dec. 27, 2019.
Electrical fire atop Union results in $3,000 damage
A short circuit caused a minor fire in an elevator control room atop the Kansas Union yesterday, resulting in about $3,000 damage but no injuries.
The fire, which started about noon, was spotted by two Union maintenance employees, William Gunter and Joe Sample. After smelling the smoke, the men saw smoke coming from the room on the Union roof.
As soon as he smelled the smoke, Sample said, he knew the fire was electrical.
"I knew it wasn't burt hamburgers," he said. "I was sure the smok had to be from a nearby establishment."
Gunter climbed to the roof by using a chair atop a table, and Sample handed him an envelope. He continued to climb.
The Lawrence Fire Department was called and four trucks responded. No injuries were reported.
Dykes OK's Title IX proposals
By The Kansan Staff
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes approved yesterday 14 recommendations for policy changes designed to bring the University of California's Title IX regulations banning gx blazs.
The proposal, drafted yesterday by a committee of the Kansas Legislature, would require a government agency or governing body to specify the subjects to be discussed in the body votes to go into executive session before the meeting place for the open meeting to be resumed.
Dykes released details of the changes, but withheld the University's Self-Evaluation report which described practices that may have adversely affected students' admissions and the treatment of students.
Subcommittees on each campus completed their findings and turned them over to the Steering Committee in March. Yesterday, the Steering Committee gave Dykes the list of 14 recommendations for change.
The report and recommendations are of the work a Title IX Steering Committee that examined conditions on the Lawrence and Kansas City, Kan., campuses. Members of the committee are Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, Michael Davis, University graduate course and Robert Krugel, executive vice chancellor of the KU Medical Center.
TOPEKA-Recommendations by Del Brinkman, dean of the School of Journalism, to limit executive sessions have strengthened the Kansas Open Meetings Act.
Davis said last night that the recommendations in response to specific, hard-to-find cases were during the study. But, he said, he thought the findings showed that the University was well along in compliance and that the Self-Instruction report "was actually quite dull."
Another change would make it illegal to use a social event, chance meeting, electronic or written communication to circumvent the open meetings law.
Discontinue requests for marital status on admission information.
Teddie Tasheff, student body president, said she thought that the University's admission blanks already met this requirement, but that some schools within the University still asked for marital status on their applications. Teddie Tasheff explained details of the self-evaluation report to the Student Senate.
Brinkman, in testimony before the special Federal and State Affairs Committee Tuesday, said the law should provide specific instances when a public body may go into executive session and only for stated reasons.
Karen Blank, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, also criticized the practice of meeting in executive sessions. She said most other states defined the topics that could be issued in executive session, but Kansas didn't.
Davis said this action would be aimed at high schools and junior colleges and the attitudes about students eventually brought to KU.
Davis said he thought the law school application form retained a marital status question.
- Create a task force to expose traditional stereotypes in career opportunities and devise ways of broadening career options for students.
Stronger meetings law proposed
Here are the recommendations:
- Request the director of the University Counseling Center to identify and eliminate scholarship test questions that discriminate on the basis of sex and race.
Davis explained, however, that the University's offer of single sex scholarships like the Summerfield scholarships for men and the Watkins scholarships for women was a procedure that was acceptable.
Blank said a survey indicated that only
- **Instruct the vice chancellor for student affairs to devise a solution to current inequities between men's and women's finances** • **Instruct the vice chancellor for money to operate men's than women's halls.**
Tasheff said the inequities were caused by a substantial difference in
In approving the suggestion to strengthen the open meetings law, the committee asked its legislative staff to prepare the committee for consideration at a later meeting.
four states had "exceptional" open meetings laws, Hawaii, Massachusetts.
the endowments given to establish and operate scholarship balls.
If the committee approves that proposal, it would go before the legislature in 1977.
There it would face review by committees of the House and Senate and would have to be approved by both branches, then apply to the Senate before the amendments could become law.
*Instruct the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences to review the Pearson Integrated Humanities Program to insure that it didn't discriminate.
Davis said the Lawrence campus subcommittee for the E-Evaluation report had discovered complaints that the program reinforced traditional sex roles and could possibly be raided, which he believed because the program was in the College, the Dean would be given the responsibility of investigating.
- **Instruct the vice chancellor for student affairs to analyze single sex organizations, such as honorary societies, on a case-by-case basis to determine whether assistance given by the University was significant in the organization subject to Title IX regulations.**
- Tasheff said federal guidelines determined whether an organization was dependent upon the University of Utah, which has jurisdiction of Title IX regulations.
- Instruct the vice chancellor for student affairs and the director of the University Counseling Center to make every effort to balance balanced staff in the Counseling Center.
Tasheef said the Lawrence campus subcommittee had found that although the staff had an equal number of men and women, the staff members who coded students were predominantly of one sex.
*Instruct all vice chancellors to review salaries of their staffs and eliminate any discrepancies that appear to be based on sex and not directly related to merit.
Tasheff said the Lawrence subcommittee had noted that the women professors were paid, on the average, a lower slary and that there was a small number of women in administrative positions.
*Reaffirm the University's commitment to quality in women's athletics and work toward greater equity in funding and personnel in the women's athletic program.
sity has two years to comply with the federal guidelines on sports, Tasheff said.
The sections on intercollegiate sports are vague in their recommendations because the Univer-
Background
The 1972 federal legislation of Title IX, under the jurisdiction of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded educational institutions. Title IX regulations went into effect last year, and HEW required that studies of potential discrimination in all areas of the institutions within its purview be completed by yesterday.
At stake is the loss of federal funds, should the University fail to comply
Subcommittees were established on the Lawrence and Kansas City campuses to study employment, admission and treatment of students. Their reports were completed in March and compiled into a report. The recommendations released yesterday by Chancellor Dykes were drawn from that report.
Watson, city workers exchange grievances
Representatives of Lawrence's sanitation, water, street, and parks associations and exchanged grievances night with City Manager Buford Watson.
The four associations met jointly with Watson but aired separate grievances
Phil Bohlander, representative for the sanitation workers, listed three major demands of the workers. He said better enforcement of the trash package ordinance of routes and "some of the modifications in plan" were of major concern to workers.
The current system was devised over a year ago, but Watson said the fallacy was that routes were determined by the number of things and not the quantity of trash to be bailed.
Watson said he saw the need for equalization of routes, and that he was currently looking into the possibilities for improvement. Watson said he could see that Mr. White would from some route wouldn't get finished if a crew ran into any kind of hindrance at all.
Earl, Eilers, representing the Street Workers Association, said that its members
wanted the city to pay one half the cost of family insurance in addition to the six per cent cost of living raise Watson had offered all cost employees.
The street workers also asked for full pay for days missed as a result of job-related injuries. In addition they also want courses in first aid and defensive driving and the implementation of a review board to evaluate workers more frequently.
Watson replied to those demands by saying the city couldn't afford to pay eminent architects.
"That's what workman's compensation is for." Watson said.
Watson did say the city would set up courses in first aid and defensive driving as well as look into "some sort of practical tool" to evaluating the performance of workers.
The Parks and Water Associations agreed on demands asking for a ten per cent across the board pay hire, and boosting the base pay to $3.50 an hour.
In the city's memorandum to the associations was a clause calling for no concerted work stoppages or strikes by any of the groups represented.
ΕΙΣ ΚΑΛ
ΠΟΛΑΣ
C'mon Ump!
After a questionable call, Ken Helisitm, Lawrence graduate student, was about ready to question the umpire's eyesight.
Staff photo
during the fast pitch intramural play yesterday. Helstrom kept his cool, though, and was granted a walk after the next pitch.
U.S. swimmers making big splash with their fans
By KELLY SCOTT
BY KELLEY SCOTT
Kansas Olympic Commisseries
MONTREAL—The nightly swimming finals drew the most Americans of the Olympics events this week. Track and field competition doesn't start until tomorrow. Our entrants aren't expected to do well in gymnastics or weight-lifting, so the bulk of them migrate to the Piscine Olympic night.
There was a carnival atmosphere on the wide cement terraces around the pool shortly before Tuesday night's race. Americans have devoured more than their share of the available swimming tickets and outnumber any country in the strings of people waiting to enter the pool complex.
They wore *T*-shirts from their hometown as if for protective coloration. "Bakeries of California," "Deep in the heart of Hill Country, Texas," "Wildwood, N.J." and many college *T*-shirts swarmed the area. One enterprising soul sported a CARTER-MONDALE FLAIR shirt.
brightly-colored warm-up suits mingled with well-dressed spectators in the stands. There were several Canadian Mountains stationed at the opening gate, and many patrolled the steep slopes to the pool deck.
Inside the swimming centre, swimmers in
They are pleasant and spectators stand around awhile before shooting them along. They helped the swimmers, who wanted to watch the races between their own events, find empty seats. When people got
up to leave, a policeman would wave a short-baird,
large-shouldered swimmer to the empty seat.
More Olympic coverage on pages 2 and 4.
The 1,500-meter meter's freestyle event can be long and boring, but americans Brian Goodell, Bobby Hackett and Steve Holland of Australia swam such a close race that the 30 laps passed quickly.
That pro-American crowd you see on "Wide World of Sports" is no illusion. The sound of the hemmet-in-crownt each true Hackett, the early 1970s and now a hallmark of some people cloking the race on watch-watches, and
they shouted over the early splits (timet for each hip) that more than a world record, they smelled an odor.
Goodell's turn for the final 50 meters put him in the lead and from there it was evident he would win. The crowd volume reached new heights, eching back and forth across the pool. A wild roar went up as Goodell touched first in world record time of 64.82 seconds, second and third, and they, too, beat the previous record.
The Canadian newspapers have been featuring the contrast between the open enthusiasm of the American swimmers and the workmen-like attitude of the British swimmers in an example of that American exuberance. He paddled happily down the pool in his lane, hugged Hackett across the lane rope and flashed a thumbs-up.
As he climbed from the pool, his ovation was still going strong. Goodell jumped up on the starting block and waved his arms jubilantly. He was barely winded.
Five minutes later, the Olympic trumpet sounded over the loudspeaker, and an announcer said in (French and in English): "Ladies and gentlemen, the official Olympic presentation ceremony."
A young, well-dressed man marched solemnly through a pool entrance, leading the three medalists Holland, the bronze medallies, led by Mr. Kyle and Ms. Reagan, by mimicking a goose-behind the official.
Goodell was beaming. The applause didn't stop. So he held up his arms and nodded his head, grinned and acknowledged all corners of the stands. Hackett raised one arm and waved haltingly.
Goodell and Hackett, in red warm-up suits, sauntered after him, no monkey business, but not pompoms. When the threesome was standing behind him, two officials of the International Olympic Committee. One awarded the medals, first to Goodell and second to another, the other man shock hands with all three medalists.
About 10 rows below where I was standing, a group of American swimmers, urged on by two-tone Olympian Gary Hall, led the cheers. With each award the entire swimming delegation rose and shook their fists triumphantly. Goodell and Hackett looked up and waved at them. Several women moved forward, and in the task of recording the moment on film, aimed their pocket instantamats and snapped away.
An abbreviated version of the National Anthen (the custom at this year's Games) was played as the three flags were hoisted on a metal bar. I thought I had outgrown the drama of that moment but the tears welled and I felt a shiver go up my spine at the specialness of that scene.
After the brief ceremony, the same straight-faced young man led the three medal winners off the stand and three quarters of the way around the pool to a far doorway. As they passed the stands, the audience stood and cheered one last salvo at the friendly young men.
2
Thursday, July 22, 1976
News Digest
From the Associated Press
'Red Planet' red after all
PASADAEN, Calif.—Mara is, indeed, a red planet, as shown in the first color pictures ever taken on the planet's surface, but its sky looks like a smoggy day on Earth.
The color shots sent by the Viking 1 robot explorer yesterday, just a day after the craft's safe landing and transmission of black and white photos, show a landscape captured by the camera.
Suit filed in WSU crash
BALTMORE—A $2.43 million suit has been filed in federal court here against Fairchild Industries of Hagerstown in connection with a 1970 plane crash that killed 18 people, officials said.
The suit was filed on behalf of the families of the victims and survivors of the accident.
It alleges that Fairchild was negligent by defects in the aircraft's piston rings, cylinder walls, carburator gaskets, seat attachment assemblies, wings, and struts.
Reaaan provoses debate
NEW YORK—Republican presidential hopeful Ronald Reagan has challenged President Ford to a debate during the party's national convention next month. In an interview with the former California governor after on the NBC "Today" show, Mr. Reagan said he prefers the presence of the more than 2,000 attendees attending the Kansas City convention.
Kidnapping arrests near
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.—Investigators prepared two teams to make arrests on the San Francisco Peninsula last night, reportedly searching for three wealthy young men who may have kidnapped 26 Chochilla school children and their bus driver for thrills.
EPA to study pesticide
WASHINGTON—The Environmental Protection Agency will investigate possible environmental and health hazards of the pesticide endrin, now used on cow
The inquiry allows continued manufacture and sale of endrin, but sets the stage for an eventual EPA decision whether to ban some or all endin uses.
EPA has, in effect, that endrin looks like a hairstyle to the environment and maybe human health and is inviting the pesticide industry and the public to try to
Senate overrides veto
WASHINGTON—Aided by key deficiencies from Republican ranks, the Senate yesterday override President Ford's vote of a $3.98-billion public jobs bill.
Briefs
The Senate Appropriations Committee voted yesterday to withhold funds for production of the B1 bomber until next year. The staff of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has recommended that a construction permit be granted for the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant near Burlington, Kan. . Under pressure from complaining farmers, Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz said yesterday the government will begin buying ground' beef for school caterers early this year to help boost sagging price tues. In its first major legislative response to the governor's proposal, it will try to create a special prosecutor and to bar presidential aides from top Justice Department posts. Earle Combs, centerfielder for the 1927 New York Yankees "Murders" Row' and a member of the baseball Hall of Fame, died yesterday at 77.
WASHINGTON A(P) -Clyde M. Reed, publisher of the Parsons Sun, has been nominated by President Ford as a director of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.
Ford nominates area publisher
The announcement was made yesterday by Sen. James B. Pearson, R-Kan.
"He will be a strong asset to the board in view of his broad journalistic experience."
The corporation is the agency that allocates federal funds to public television.
The nomination, for a six-year term, is
listed on the ballot.
subject to confirmation by the secretary.
The board consists of 15 members.
MONTREAL - Margaret Murdock of Topeka tied an American Army captain in the small-bore riffle competition yesterday after a big victory on the field because she shot a poacher, fine round.
Work on the underground utility service tunnel for the Helen Foresman Spencer Museum of Art will continue to limit traffic near the construction site to one lane for at least two more weeks, Fred Davis, construction superintendent, said yesterday.
It took the judges three and one-half hours to make the decision. Their ruling hinged on the fact that Bassham made more concessions in the final third of the competition.
Spencer work to limit traffic
Pete Peterson, construction project inspector, said construction of a concrete box that houses a manhole entrance to the tunnel on the west side of Mississippi would narrow traffic north of the Kansas Union on Mississippi.
The gold medalist, Capt. Larry Bassham, argued that Murdock should share the gold medal with him because the two had identical scores of 1.06 of a possible 1.200.
Murdock is the first woman to win a medal in Olympic shooting competition.
U. S. Coach Joe Berry said that at the award ceremony today Bassham planned to ask Murdeck to hold the gold medal with him.
It is arbitrary rubbish about ties." Cap. Bassham said: there should be two ties. It would be more appropriate.
petitions were enriching and valuable experiences for law students.
Topekan wins Olympic medal
Moot court competitions involve teams of students who argue fictional cases based on important legal principles.
On Campus
Cases are argued before members of law school faculties and visiting judges. They are often similar to cases being considered by the Supreme Court.
TOMORROW: SUA film "THE GARDEN OF THE FINZI-CONTINIS" will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in woodruff Auditorium.
"GUYS AND DOLLS" is at 8 p.m.
TONIGHT: University Theatre
presents QUYS AND DOLL'S in at 8
in Murphy Hall.
A CARLLON RECITAL will be given by Mark L. Holmberg at 8 p.m. at Memorial Campanile.
Events
GRANT K. GOODMAN, professor of history and East Asian Studies, has been named a fellow of the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study. He will teach in Wassenaar, Netherlands, next academic year.
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Dickinson said that before this fund was established, the law school had inadequate funds to finance students in competitions, sometimes paid a portion of their expenses.
regional and national moot court competitions.
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Dickinson said that qualifying for moor court competitions was difficult and winning was regarded as one of the highest honors of a law school career.
The endowment will be used to cover expenses of law students who travel to
"Now there will be a source to assure that students who win the competition within the school can go to the regional and national moot court competitions." Dickinson said.
A fund to support University of Kansas law students participating in moot court competitions was recently established at KU's law school.
The fund was donated by Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Mullins of Wichita, Martin Dickinson Jr., law school dean, said yesterday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mullins said they created the fund because they thought the com-
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 22, 1976
3
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West meets Eastern play
By SUSAN APPLEBURY
ers of law tes. They considered
Kansans will get a taste of traditional Japanese theater this fall as Andrew Tusuki, director of the International Theatre Studies Center at the University of Kansas, presents "Rashomon," a Kabuki-inspired play.
"I want to do some exaggerated things with a designed purpose," he said.
Taubaki will use the Japanese theatre styles of Nu, Kaunu and Rabuk according to this report.
Tsubaki said he wanted to show students and the community how the traditional theater of Japan could be utilized in predominantly Western plays.
"instead of the usual realistic approach, I want to try to bring in the original theater testament," she said.
"In the Greek plays," Tsubaki said, "the chorus are characters in the play. In No plays, the chorus aren't characters and only participate vocally."
The No style developed in the 14th century and became popular with the samurai class in Japan. No is performed on a bare stage with limited properties, Tsubaki said. There is chanting by a chorus that is different from the chorus in a Greek play.
Masks are used in No plays, which usually use an appeasement in the soul of *x* dead *deaf*.
Kuggen are short plays, similar to situation comedies, performed between the No plays with a separate set of actors. Actors sometimes use masks.
The common people wanted their own art, Tsubaki said, so they developed Kabuki, which uses more scenery and is less formal than Opera can be a comical musical or drama.
Although men play female parts in traditional Kabuki, Tsukubi uses women in the dance.
"I'm purposely using girls to appear as girls or as men," Tsukai said. "I'm short-handed in a sense, and also I don't want to study with me because of their sex."
The Japanese government banned women from performing in Kabuki theatre shortly after it developed in the early 1700s. Some actresses use their performance to attract
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Thursday. Sunday and Holidays. Second-class Saturday,
Editor Dierck Casekerman
Managing Editor Kelly Scott
Gregory Editor Gregory
Associate Campus Editor Bee Brenning
Copy Chiefs Ron Hartung
Business Manager ... Carol Stallard
Assistant Business Manager .. Jim Marquart
Promotion Manager .. Jimi Fawl
Ad Manager .. Sarah McAnavy
customers for their prostitution business, Tsubaki said.
"There is a long history of other art forms being done by men instead of women," Tsubaki said. "I think this corresponds to the traditional idea that man is superior.
"They say that sometimes the expert actors could express femininity in a more selective manner—more clearly and precisely," he said.
Young men portray women until their voices change, Tusaki said, then they must decide whether they want to specialize in male or female roles.
Costumes are very important in all Japanese theater, he says; they show the air of form and expression.
"Kabuki is very similar to the Chinese traditional theater which uses gorgeous costumes and make-up very much like Kabuki." Tsuabui said.
Tsukaiw was born in Japan and went to Canada in 1968 to study at the University of Saskatchewan. He earned his Master of Fine Arts at Texas Christian University and
Parts for ALL Imported Cars
JAMES CANG
JAMES CANG
100
FOREIGN AUTO PARTS
304 Locust
M-F 8-5:30
843-8080
Sat. 8-12
20° Size
Coke $ 2^{c} $
or your Favorite Soft Drink
With the purchase of any
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Basket Dinner
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RESTAURANT
[图]
Worlds of Fun
DISCOUNT PASSPORTS
AVAILABLE AT
SUA OFFICE
Now K.U. students, faculty, and family members may enjoy the exciting WORLD'S OF FUN amusement park in Kansas City at substantial savings.
In 1976 WORLDDS OF FUN is unveiling the new incredible upside-down SCREAMROLLER coaster ride. And this is only one attraction of the new, beautiful Bicentennial Square.
Through the SUA office, K.U. students and faculty members may purchase Passports at a $1.20 discount off the regular admission price of $7.95 per adult and $6.95 per child. (This reduces your price to $6.75 per adult and $5.75 per child.)
SCREAMROLLER
These special Passports are valid any WORLDDS OF FUN operating day, and are good for all rides, live entertainment shows, and special Forum Amphitheatre performances at no additional cost.
WORLDS OF FUN FORUM
July 25 Pat Boone
WORLD'S OF FUN FORUM
AMPHITHEATRE TALENT SCHEDULE
July 30 Barbi Benton
is director Marin Ritt's version of the Japanese classic "Rashaman." Paul Ritt is a man of taste. Mexican Manifesto is delightful as well as even more beautiful behind a large, droopy mustache, his perfect features are forced to take a back seat in his less visible, but very real, saloon.
Tsukiab will use more than 4,000 slides and 2,000 feet of film from his trip to Japan for his Oriental theater and drama course this fall.
examines the show business approach to history and the historical approach to show business that is highly entertaining. David Chapin, Pal McCormick. Joel Grey.
He took a sabbatical leave without two years ago so he could return to Japan to study Oriental theater. He also spent four years in Israel, where he directed a Kabuki play.
his Ph.D. at the University of Illinois.
Tsubaki bekan teaches at KU in 1968.
BUFFALO BILL AND THE INDIANS—Already declared a failure by the book *Laurentia*, this film features Paul Newman and Laura Hasselbrenner in a performance that should raise serious questions about Ms. Hasselbrenner's judgments. She succeeded in making a film that
Movies
THE GARDEN OF THE FINZI-COUNTRY—Director Vito Valdo Sica's "comma" film has received the award for Best Foreign Film, Dominique Sanda and Helmut Helmbur star as members of the Jewish aristocracy that isolate themselves in Musil'i's Italy.
GENTLEMEN PREFER BLONDES—Anla Lloyd's story about two diggersgins never quite meshes with Howard and their architectural style. Still, there are fine moments in Russell, Elliott Reed and Coburn make the shortest summers easier to take.
THE OUTRAGE—A single story told from four points of view. "The Outrage"
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan are offered to all students without regard to their background. BRIALL ALL CLASSIFIED TO 115 FIINT FLATT HALL
CLASSIFIED RATES
time times times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
AD DEADLINES
word ... .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.
ERRORS
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three weeks. These can be placed in person or online and can be delivered to the UDK business office at 864-4538.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
Handcuffed graduate student (studies cruises)
will hold exp on cabling, gant range open;
will share experiences on gant; rent range open.
864-4358
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTBORG MOBILE HOMES, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS.
2 bdr, all utilities paid, on campus. Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking, aa. pool: 843-
4903.
Mark I and II, nine and quiet, and 2 bedrooms
with apts, nicely and nice close to canopies.
B45-181.1
Students, Happiness is an alternative lifestyle. Try cooperative living. Worksharing program, and program room, laundry facility, fitness center, community garden. Alice at 842-922-72 between 7-10 weekdays. Alice at 842-922-72 between 7-10 weekdays.
2 bedroom unfurnished apartment at Creston
Cove, August 15th. Call收集 800-743-5659,
833-649-2608
3 bedroom house. Near Campus. fenced yard. shade trees, quiet. 842-9758. 7-26
GRAN SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES!
Stay Cool Hours~Summer St
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods & Antiques
UNIQUE
IMPORTED * CLOTHING
new summer hours
10-3 (longer on cool days)
730 Mass 841-7070
technics Stereo
Direct One Audio Systems
RMS
ELECTRONICS
audio
212 WASHINGTON ST.
800-555-9200
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11,000.00
Technics SL-1300
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them
3) For exam preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Store.
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specializes in high-voltage alternators. BEL AUDI ELECTRIC, 835-909-3000, W 300 W.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS— regardless of any prices you see on popular lift equipment, you factory dumps or off-load your equipment to the GRAMMERSHOP or at the GRAMMERSHOP SHOE AT KIFES. **tf**
Excellent selection of new and used furniture,
warehouse fixtures, and appliances to trade. The Furniture and Appliance Center, 7015 N. Eaglesway, Atlanta, GA 30322.
THEYBE 'HOT!' Large selection of "O'War薛"
The ATTIC, 927 Mass. Registration $6.00—now $8.
THE ATTIC, 927 Mass.
Going afar hunting? Pre-washed, blue dyeim
$19.95 for airplane $2, price $3, special $12.90
The Affic, 292 Mass.
Cartus - sellling collection. Over 300 plants, small
thoughts of blooming. After 4 m. p. 2014. Burlington
Island
69 VW, cammobile, excellent condition, 843-
8733 7-22
Cguardware cards shift intact, just bought; Yumaba
cards shift intact, just bought; Yumaba cards
C-26 cards $25, C-29 cards $25, two $20
cards $15, one $10
Electric Virutic organ with double manual and
full pedal board. Call 842-0355.
7-26
JEWELRY-50% OFF. I am closing out a line of my one-of-a-kind hand made jewelry. Variations on this design are available.
other stones. Call 841-5838 or 843-0970. T-22
Hervé Navarre 714-6538 or 714-6543 all conditioned
with insurance. T-22
Douglas Wilson 841-5838 or 843-0970. T-22
Herrih Nova 1074 1.25 million, air conditioned
furniture, or patio, furniture, furnished or
patio. Call 842-382-7700.
Box springs and mattress sets, used and low bargain prices. Limit one per customer. Will sell all in stock at reduced prices. Used Purse and Appliance Center, 7041, Miau, Maine-74-2721.
85. Dodge 68 Cornerstone engine in good condition.
86. In good condition. In stop by shop.
p. mason, Nailah Hall No. 428. 12-29
7-29
173 Brown Honda Sedan $1,600; 36,000 miles
condition. 841-3023.
7-26
GULD-HT with hard-shell case $275 or trade
for 65mm lens camera Call 841-6260 between
them.
1972 Sierra Kiil mobile kit, 14. x 18 with cervical spine support. Excluded in skirting included. Excluded condition C441 8415. Excluded condition B350 615.
Sealy mattress, box spring & frame. Excellent
condition. $159.00 backpack &
backseat. $499.00 bed. 844-861-8001 or
844-861-7225.
Acoustic guitar plus off-brand electric guitar
Cheap Good for beginners. 841-2879 by 5 p.m.
www.guitar-store.com
68 VW Campmobile—excellent mechanical condi-
V5 VW Campagnol-succulent mechanical candidate R8V or Campagnol-hscl-3292 after 5 days 7-22 R8V or Campagnol-hscl-3292 after 5 days 7-22
Harman, Karden 320 I receiver, 15 watt/channel,
new $120, Karden 842-938 before 9月, 7-29
Small window unit air conditioned and various
piece of furniture Call any 843-1523. 7-27
Tempest Lab series 1: 5 smonths old $30 or best
offer. 842-2372.
7-27
Band equipment: Gibson EBE electric bass with case: Shure MSEMP A19; mixer/tone control/preamp; Kutton 50 amp with speaker; BKL-14 K舟 an offer. May sell by August. 7-29 offer. 842-1423.
HELP WANTED
Full-time position as corrections counselor with a minimum of 3 years of experience in Sept. 1. Applications close Aug. 2. Degree in Compensation, Counseling or Compensate experience $700 per month with position in the Law enforcement, Lawrence, Ke Equity Opportunity Employees.
Students working their way through school will often find themselves at times through fall and spring seminars. Work is also required during the winter when known nation wide. Should have 25-30 hours of instruction, a good education, helpful but not necessary. Call 843-7458, ask for the information.
NAPA
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
BankAmericard Mastercharge
Auto Parts
N.A.P.A.
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
1. Special Prices
4. Machine shop service
5. True or false
overnight
2. Open 7 days and nights
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
Assistant Instructor. The Department of Curriculum and Instruction is seeking a para-operative Duttes will include teaching undergraduate education, remedial reading practicum and advising undergraduates on course range from $400 to $750, depending upon qualification, must qualify for this position the applicant must work in curriculum and elementary school course work in training and elementary school attributable to a doctoral program in the Department of Education. The applicant must earn debarrance in an appropriate field. Submit resume to School of Education, University of Kannan, Law School of Education, University of Kansas, Law School of Education, University of Kansas, July 26. An Equal Opportunity / Affirmative Action employee. Qualified new and women of all races.
Teaching Assistant. The Department of Curricula and Instruction has a teaching assistant for the 1976-77 year, your teaching assistant for the 1976-77 year, your elementary student teachers in Lawence, Salary, and Math. Your admission to this department applicant must be admissible to the application program and must have an education and instruction, and must have had education and instruction in NU Sisbunday, School. Admission for applications is July 26. Only qualified men and women of all races are allowed.
COOK FOR CHILD NUTRITION STUDY. Fast-ing organized person to cook from food supplies, search and toddler day care. 8:30-1:30 M-F.
bear appl A513 Bristol Terrace, Mckinley
LOST AND FOUND
Lot-19 H-45 calculator on July 9th, reward for
no 75 questions;臂动.81-7391.感谢你.7-26
NOTICE
Swag Shop, 620 Mass. Used furniture, dishes, patio lamps, clocks, televisions. Open daily 12pm-7pm. (314) 885-9641.
Cool it these hot afternoon's with fruits and
foams, palettes and peaches. Gold cup ice cream
and chocolate galerie at the Cashan Cafe, 802
Sunday, 11 a.m., Dinner to 11 a.m. 3:30 to 5:30.
Sunday,
After 56 years in business, If George doesnt
he will be make it. George's Pizza Shop,
712-438-3977
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. You need help call Alcoholics Anonymous 842-810. If you
SELL OR TRADE
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcohol Anonymous, 842-110-0.
1970 VW Bug. Excellent rating. $1250
Gary 842-8349. Keep trying.
7-29
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 103, 115, 116, 117, 121, 122, 123, 500. Regular session or test preparation. Reasonable rates: 7-29 842-7681.
TUTOR
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CAMP COORD
15 Bath 8th
10-5 Monday, Saturday
7E7 GALLERY
T&T
7 EAST 7TH STREET
CLOSED
SUNDAY & MONDAY
HOURS 12:30,5:30
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
FELDS
Mattresses · Liners
Heaters · Frames
Beds spreads · Fitted Sheets
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
843-2719
---
TYPING
1 do darn good typing. Pegsy, 842-4470, 7-29
4:00 messages taken 24 hours).
Experienced typist- term papers, thesis, mime.
Academic writing. Proofreading, apiece of
writing. 843-954, Ms. Wright.
Typist/editor, IBM Pieces/clite. Quality work.
Typist/editor. Deserts,谅息sellings welcome.
Mail: 842-3517. NM2208.
WANTED
for men and women
Experienced typist IBM Mag-Card, term papers,
materials, form correspondence.
932-8471. 7-25
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Designing visual materials for thesis, dissertations, pts electric, BA. JAFFS. AMAZING TECHNICIAN.
Gentlemen's Quarters
Need an experienced typist IBM Selectric II plan and order elements, carrying tarbon carbon (TAR) to your site.
Need someone to subline Jayhawk Towers apartment for fall and spring school. Call 842-768-5491
W. 9th & III.
Female committee to share furnished, two-bedroom suite. $200-$300/month preferred. Save $75/month plus 1% utilities. Offer valid through Dec. 31.
Need one or two roommates for a two-bedroom apartment. Call anytime 918-383-1852. 7-22
Creative haircutting
Need one or two roommates for a two-bedroom
公寓. Call anytime 913-642-9458. 7-22
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
---
Roommates wanted to share precious two bedrooms, so they decided to move. The August 14th Call 843-0848 after 5 p.m. T-26
Serious female grad students want reunion for
their $500 stipend. $35 plus utilities, Aug 19). call **847-269-7989** or
www.careers.baylor.edu.
1
Nine female roommate wanted 2 bedroom
room in spring '97. Ctell Cindy collect in K.C.
after moving to New York.
1972 Honda QA50
1987 Honda CL180
1971 Honda CB450
1974 Honda CB750
HORIZON'S HONDA
1811 W. 6th 843-3333
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
302 Mavalton Hwy.
1974 Yanaha DT250
1966 Honda CB160
1984 Honda XL250
1979 Kawasaki 350
Eldgwickstar Optical
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
Aztec Inn
PRECIOUSLY HOTTIE
FILM LOOKS
PROBLEM SOLVING
ALGORITHMS USED
COMPLETE OPTICAL
HOURS OF USE
COMPLETE FASHION
HOURS OF USE
American and Mexican Food
530 Wisconsin
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates
GRAMOPHONE
shop
422-1811 ASK FOR STATION - 4
807 Vermont 842-9455
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion
Than Most Stores Components
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
...
THORGENT
O THAN
TEAQ
O THAN
HUACCH
STATE OF THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
PODMAN
T0D+
HOS1
BANK
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
843-9404
—6 Nights a Week—
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Open 2 p.m.-3 a.m. Dancers 3:30-8:30 p.m.
Classic Male Bareback Available
Must be 18+
Wayne Pool—Owner
4
Thursday, July 22, 1976
University Dally Kansan
Sports
Perfectionist Comaneci earns gold, two 10s
By HOWARD SMITH AP Sports Writer
MONTREAL - Nadia Comaneci, the 14-year-old Romanian prodigy, had two more perfect performances yesterday and captured the women's all-around Olympics gymnastics gold medal, the crowning achievement of world gymnastics.
It was a moment for which she had always been, the one that had the gold medal in her grasp, there and there.
were no celebrations, no tears, no smiles,
nothing.
"I felt very good about the gold medal," she said afterward. "It was nice."
Surrounded by a phalanx of Romanian coaches and bodyguards, she sat before a microphone, coolly eying the crowd of spectators. She almost seemed uninterested.
How did she feel about her perfect scores
on the balance beam and the bars yesterday?
I felt happy, but I will try to perfect my
present routines and try to add new things.
Aked if she was certain of victory going away. "No, you didn't replied," Da"s, and didn't blink an eye.
She stunned overflow crowds at the Montreal Forum and on television around
the world Sunday and Monday with the first three perfect gymnastics performances in Olympics history. She did it again twice yesterday with an exciting routine, including bars and a classical, dramatic performance on the hazardous balance beam.
Nelli Kim of the Soviet Union overcame Tourischeva to finish second with Tourischeva, Teodora Ungurean fourth and Olija Korb, fifth.
U.S. swim team sets world record in relay
MONTREAL (AP)—The American men's
oklympic word wrestler is its brilliant
Okymanic word wrestler.
U. S. swimmers set a world record in the 60m freestyle relay and, led by Mat Watson, the United States.
Vogel, 19, was timed in 54.35 seconds. Joe Bottom of Santa Claire, Calif., was second in 54.50 and Gary Hall, 24, of Cincinnati, was bird in 54.85.
Luitkirch of East Germany won the women's 100-meter backstroke gold medal in 1.01.83, three-tenths of a second off the world record, but a new Olympic record. Brigit Treiber of East Germany was second and Nancy Garapack of Canada was third.
The 800-meter quartet, anchored by double world record holder Bruce Furniss of Long Beach, Calif., shattered the relay record in the semifinals with a time seven minutes under the old limit of 7.30.84. Great Britain was second and Great Britain third.
Other members of the team are Mike Bruner of Stockton, Calif., Doug Northway of Tucson, Ariz., and Tim Shaw, also of Longe Beach.
Marina Koshevai led a Soviet sweep of Olympic medals in the 200-meter breast-stroke, winning the gold in the world-record time of two minutes 33:35 seconds.
In basketball, all-Americans Adrian
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East W L Petl GB
New York 57 32 64
Baltimore 62 40
Cleveland 43 44 494 13
Boston 43 44 494 13
Davenport 47 44 494 13
Milwaukee 71 49 494 18%
West 65 45 651 9
Kansas City 65 45 651 9
Texas 62 45 618 9
Chicago 46 48 647 13%
Minnesota 62 48 647 13%
Oklahoma 62 48 647 13%
| East | W | L | Pet. | GR |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Philadelphia | 60 | 19 | 543 | — |
| Philadelphia | 51 | 28 | 519 | 10 |
| New York | 49 | 60 | 316 | 14½ |
| San Francisco | 49 | 60 | 316 | 14½ |
| Chicago | 37 | 54 | 307 | 14½ |
| Montreal | 37 | 54 | 307 | 14½ |
| West | W | L | Pet. | GR |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | ---: |
| Chicago | 58 | 17 | 534 | 8 |
| Angeles | 35 | 41 | 534 | 8 |
| Los Angeles | 32 | 41 | 534 | 8 |
| San Diego | 46 | 68 | 489 | 13½ |
| Albuquerque | 42 | 50 | 489 | 13½ |
| San Francisco | 42 | 50 | 489 | 13½ |
**LAKE TORRINGTON GAME**
Chicago 4, Detroit 1, Cleveland 0, Californias 3
Minnesota 7, Arizona 8, Milwaukee 5, Kansas City 0
Missouri 6, Boston 2, Georgia 13
12 innings
Yesterday's Games
Los Angeles 7, St. Louis 6, San Diego
Philadelphia 5, Ohio 4
San Francisco 3, Chicago 1
Houston 4, Houston 2
Montreal 4, Atlanta 3
New York 0
All-American Special!
HEAD FOR HENRY'S
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3 BIG DAYS ONLY
—Sunday
—Monday
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Something's Always
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We Have a New Series of Glasses
Bob Nieman of Hindsale, III., moves use U.S. team into fourth in the Olympics modern pentathlon with a world record for the 300-meter swim. Czechoslovakia held both the individual and team lead after four of the five pentathlon events.
Canada 108-85 with 7-foot-4 Vladimir Tkachenko scored 22 points.
Damley and Scott May lead a second half of the game, which ends in States a 112-93 victory over Yugulaco.
The margin of victory in America's third consecutive triumph was, by no means, indicative of the game. At half-time, the Americans trailed 55-51.
Russia won its third straight, devastating
KANSA'S CITY (AP) - Von Joshua and Tim Johnson transferred its bite apples to the Milwaukee Brewers, aided by six Kansas City errors, whipped the Royals 8-0 last
Rovals lose 5-0
The victory went to Bill Travers, 11-7, who gave up four hits in 62 innings, walked six, threw two wild pitches and hit two batters. Al Fitzorman, 11-6, was made one of the Royals' errors, was victimized by the faulty support.
Granada
1347 981 - Segura / 1347
082 635 0144
From the folks who made "Benji"
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GREATER COMFORT, SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT!
"HAWMPS" G Daily 2:30, 7:30, 9:40
Varsity Remember the Girls we all talked about?
"THE POM POM GIRLS"
Eve. 7:30, 9:30 Sat..Sun. 2:30 R
Hillcrest
PAUL NEWMAN
'BUTTALO BILL
AND THE INDIANS.
* STITTING BUILLS
HISTORY LESSON*
A
T
E
R
O
N
T
Eve. 7:35-9:55 Sat.-Sun. 1:45
Hillcrest2
Eve. 7:25-9:35
Sat..Sun. 2:05
They put the ball in baseball.
Hillcrest3
BINGO LONG
TRAVELING ALL STATES
AND MOTOR KINGS
Rod Steiger
Valerie Perrine
W. C.FIELDS AND ME PG-13
Eve. 7:20-9:35 Sat.-Sun. 1:55
Sunset
Tuesday at 10:30 AM in Augustine 64
Tonight 8:15
Tonight 9:15
Robert Redford
"JAWS"
11:30 PG
★
T
"The Great Waldo Popper"
JAZZ
SUA SUMMER FILMS
★
Exclusive Sounds of Jazz and the Blues
FRIDAY: Joe Utterbach Trio
TONIGHT: Jazz Jam Session (everyone welcome)
SATURDAY: Ray Ehrhart
--player, playing with
Old time Dixieland piano
the Gaslight Gang
Paul Gray's Jazz Place
926 Mass.
Open 8 p.m.
842-9458 or 843-8575
As American as apple pie.
Warron Beatty
THE PARALLAX VIEW
Monday, July 26
7:30 p.m. 75'
Woodruff Auditorium
Pizza inn.
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5 p.m.-12 p.m.
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Next to Hillcrest Theatres
The University of Kansas Theatre's.
1976 Summer Theatre Festival
"The Continuing American Revolution"
presents
BY
FRANK
LOESSER
GUYS AND DOLLS
July 22, 23, 24
Thursday-Saturday
Tickets $2.50
K.U. Students, Senior Citizens, Music & Art Campers $1.50
For Information and Reservations Call 864-3982
HOT
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
U. S. packs Olympic punch
Vol. 86 No.168
The University of Kansas—Lawrence. Kansas
Monday. July 26.1976
See page 2
tone
Don't worry, they'll show up
Ed Abramshannon, Evanton, III, graduate student, left, had a causal词 for Tom Muschman, Los Angeles junior and president of the Mr. Groad Bicycle Club, as the two children of his parents.
peratures pushed 100 degrees, the five participants arriving for the tour shortened their ride. The ride was the last of seven summer sponsors joined by the club and the staff.
KU student to head Union board
By SUE WILSON
A 1976 graduate in urban studies, who will enter law school this fall, became the first student president of the University of Oklahoma. He was also a director of Directors at its annual prefecture Saturday.
The election of Greg Bengston, Salina graduate student, marks the first time in the 50-year history of the Kansas Union that a student has been elected president.
Bengtson defeated Anderson Chandler, a 1948 alumn, in a close race. Chandler is president of Fidelity State Bank and Trust Company in Toecka.
Bengtson was SUA president last year and was active in SUA and the Student Senate during his undergraduate study. He held positions at CSUN and in Public Administration program this fall,
Bengtson succeeds Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction and director of the university's math program.
In other actions, the board of directors approved the 1976 fiscal year financial report and progress reports on Union renovation and the satellite union.
The board's approval of the financial report means Union Bookstore patrons can begin receiving a five per cent refund today. The refund is for purchases made during the summer, which runs from Jan. 10 to June 30 this year, and will be paid for the next 18 months.
The refund, a percentage pay back based on patrons' receipts, is down from the seven and eight per cent returns paid in past years.
A one per cent increase in cost of sales.
which includes theft losses, freight costs and obsolete inventory write-offs, reduced the money available for refunding, Warner Ferguson, Union associate director, said.
Much of the increase in cost of sales came from a 10 per cent penalty charged by publishers for returns and from the loss of revenue due to J. D. Christmas, Rockstore managers.
In other financial actions, the board gave a vote of confidence to food service management for reducing operating losses from $32,000 a year ago to $36,000 this year.
Mariann Scheetz, food service manager, said an increase in sales volume and a decrease in demand for her products.
Frank Burge, Union director, said renovation of the Union lobby should be completed Sept. 7 after 24-hour-a-day work over the three-week Labor Day weekend.
The lobby renovation will add 60 seats against a background of reed and blue and white.
The Union's main entrance will also be opened Sept. 7; Burge said, but will be delayed until after the canopy completion of a canopy. Materials for canopy construction have been grounded in the building industry.
Burge said students will have to be routed around construction during enrollment and training.
Planning for the proposed satellite union has stalled until a cost study is completed. Burge told the board. Burge said the three-month study should be finished. Thursday
Remodeling of the Hawk's Nest and the
Room will be completed by
engineering a walkway.
increases since the original blueprints for a satellite union were drawn in 1968 should not be used to make adjustments.
If the revised costs go over a $2.5 million limit, new planning will have to be done, Burge said, and construction would have to be delayed. He said, however, that additional delays would lead to even higher costs.
The study survey of construction cost
After approving financial and progress reports, the board elected officers and commissioned staff.
president, officers for the 1977 fiscal year are vice president William Balfour, vice chancellor for student affairs; secretary, treasurer, and treasurer, Craig McCoy, coproducer.
The elected members of the executive committee are Anderson Chandler, Topeka alumnus; Jeff Rhoads, Leavend junior; Jeff Tempelman, Leavend junior; Adelson, Adamen, of men; Evelyn Swartz, professor of curriculum and instruction; Gwen Young, Kansas City, KS., senior.
Besides Bengtson, who was elected
KU women neglected by athletic magazine
By BERNEIL JUHNKE
A promotional magazine recently put out by the University of Kansas's athletic department was examined recently for possible Title IX violations.
The 1972 federal legislation of Title IX, under the jurisdiction of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, prohibits sex discrimination in federally funded educational institutions.
The 33-page, color illustrated magazine, called "Jayhawk Athletics—Intercollegiate Athletics at the University of Kansas," mentions the women's athletic program.
"I was up to see a book calling itself an intercollegiate sports guide soley describing men's athletics at the University of Michigan, and to attend, student body president, said last week.
She said she sent a letter to the chancellor's office requesting an evaluation of the magazine with respect to Title IX regulations.
"Some kind of compensation needs to be made to set the record fairly for the season."
"A mistake was made in the title of the book," Baker said. "Certainly next year it will correct it so that it says, 'Men's Intrigue Athletics at the University of Kansas.'"
The magazines will be distributed by various men's varsity team offices to recruit athletes inside the state and out, he said, in final cost of the book will be about $3,000.
Doug Messer, assistant athletic director, said, "The book was completely paid for by resources from the men's athletic program and so only covers men's sports."
Don Baker, sports information director,
said the purpose of the 1,500 magazines
which were published in June was to recruit
athletes for the men's athletic program.
Messer said the book had "one little overnight, in that it didn’t specify that it was going to be a holiday"
Baker said he wasn't aware that there might be a **TITLE** IX violation until after the
Computer facility plans underway
By DAVESTEFFEN
Construction of the **$4 million Computer Services Facility** is scheduled to start in October. Allen Wiechert, assistant director of operations and operations planned, said last week.
Paul Wolfe, coordinator of University computing, said "the site will be very
Final architectural plans for the two-story structure were approved by the chancellor's office and the state board of regents two weeks ago. The plans are now being reviewed by the state architect's office, which will set final building specifications and open them to construction bids Sept. 1, Wiechert said.
The facility will have a precast concrete panel exterior and be located 400 feet east of Robinson gymnasium on the corner of Sunnside and Illinois.
convenient for users, being located along various campus traffic flows."
The first level will be the machine or operations level.
The University of Kansas' new $5.5 million computer system and support personnel offices will be on this level. Special raised floors will be used in the building to allow more equipment into the floor for the inordinate amount of electrical wiring the computers require.
Access to the operations area will be limited to computer center staff but an observation window on the second level will provide a view of operations for users and visitors. The main campus entrance to the building will lead into the second level from Sunnyside.
Space, safety and convenience factors have been incorporated into the building design.
The new facility will have about 47,000 square feet of floor space.
Walf said, "Maintenance of computer equipment has been complicated by lack of space to pull it off line and on work in it. Maintenance provides for necessary maintenance space."
Similarly, insufficient space for library materials and tape storage will be remedied
Convenience is enhanced by a drive-up window and express batch system.
"Users can call in a job order from their office and pick it up at the window at their leisure," Walfe said. "It is the only drive up window at a computer facility I know of."
A series of convenience factors such as
ashtrays have been added for handicapped
The computer services facility is scheduled to be finished in fall, 1978.
magazine was printed and the Office of Affirmative Action started asking questions
"The Title ID guide are relatively
precise. We'll all still learning
about its application."
Bonnie Ritter, Affirmative Action director, said the magazine didn't violate TIX guidelines because it was paid for TIX. It is not part of the department is separate from the woman's department.
"It would have raised fewer questions if he had called it 'Mun's intercollegiate Athletics.'"
Mike Davis, University general counsel,
said the athletics department had two more
players to be announced.
But, he said, "I think everyone wishes it (the magazine's title) would have had him."
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, called the magazine's title "unfortunate" but agreed that the magazine didn't violate Title IX regulations because it was issued strictly by the men's athletic department.
Building owner says no taverns to replace Yuk
Richard Raney Sr., owner of the Uk and Yuk Down tavern property, said last week he wouldn't lease the building for use as a tavern again.
"The tenants (Jess Roberts and Dick Wright, manager) have been good. They've made improvements and always paid the rent. There is a last tavern I have in there," Raney said.
Raney said he didn't have negative feelings towards taverns but after his property had burned down twice in eight years it was time for a change.
Fire caused an estimated $125,000 damage to the building and its contents July 7. The Yuk Up was heavily damaged by a fire, when flames gutted most of its first floor.
"I took a great loss from the first fir and,
"I took a great loss from this last one, too," he said.
The insurance adjustment hasn't been set but Raney said he doubted if the settlement would cover his loss and rebuilding expenses.
Raney said he was advertising for new tenants, but as of last week, no one had made a bid.
Lawrence Fire Chief John Kasperberg said it was too early in the investigation to determine if there were any injuries.
"About all I can say at this point is that we're all not quitting." Kasberger said两年前。
Kasberger said progress in the investigation was slow because of the bulk of the data.
"The bigger the fire, the slower the investigation," he said. "We've been talking about a lot of evidence quite a bit of evidence involved in this case, we'll do a lot more before we're through."
7th women's coach joins exodus
Bv COURTNEY THOMPSON
Dissatisfaction among women in the women's athletics program at the University of Kansas reached a peak Thursday when the athletes learned that Karen Harris, a softball coach, wouldn't have her contract renewed.
Harris said Friday that Marian Washington, director of women's athletics, hadn't officially notified her that her contract would be renewed. she said that she learned of the contract at a meeting with her softball coach, who had recently spoken to Washington.
Washington declined comment and said she would speak through her news releases only.
Since the announcement of Drysdale's dismissal as women's softball coach, parents, athletes and alumni have voiced strong opposition to Washington's program, reunion, last year's softball team manager, said Thursday.
Positions in women's athletics currently vacant are coaches in: field hockey, volleyball, swimming and track and field. The jobs of head and assistant softball coaches and athletic trainer also are vacant.
Drystaile was notified in late June of her release from coaching duties. In a letter from Washington, consolidation of the softball and volleyball coaching positions was given as the reason for the action.
Harris is the seventh staff member that has either left or been fired from Washington's staff within about a year.
Washington said later that, although consolidation was a factor in her decision not to renew Drysdale's contract, a personal conflict was her primary reason for the dismissal. Washington she said felt Drysdale resented the fact that she wasn't appointed women's athletic director and that hostility among athletes and staff members resulted.
In the written statement released Friday afternoon, Washington cited limited resources and consolidation as reasons to stand firm on her initial action to release Drysdale.
"I have decided, after careful evaluation of the situation, not to offer Sharon Drysdale a contract for softball coach for the coming year. Given the limited experience of her coaches and the number of coaches who will have time and ability to coach more than one sport and who can devote their major efforts to the women's athletics program at KU," Washington said.
She said a group of athletes (Donna Sullivan, Stephanie Norris, Janet Brown, Debbie Kushin and Glynn) met with Washington to discuss their complaints but were given unsatisfactory answers or no answers at all.
Glynn said letters sent to Washington supporting Drydale caused Washington to reconsider Drydale's decision.
"She wouldn't let us record the conversation, so I can't prove to you her many contradictory statements," Glynn said. "But all she wanted to do was get through with us by asking her questioning her judgement and you're not supposed to."
Harris said she had expected to find out about her contract renewal in a round-about fashion.
"Now there are only two people left that were here when washing came. Even the secretaries are quitting here."
Norris, a former softball team member, also voiced her disapproval of Washington.
"I told Washington my decision would depend on Brylea's situation, and since I know how that went I will tell him," he said.
"You usually expect a contract will be renewed unless you're told otherwise but in this department you expect to be hired."
Harris agreed that Washington was forced to reconsider firing Drydale due to the large amount of mail received supporting Drydale. By threatening to fire Harris, he would be able to refuse an offer to be reinstated as coach, she said.
"Washington used my intended release to force Drysdale out," Harris said.
Harris said working in the women's athletics program hadn't been extremely enjoyable in recent months, but that she and others put up with it because of the quality of the athletes.
"The athletes wanted Washington to take some sort of action," Harris said. "All she did was use me as a bluff to make Drysdale the fall guy. By doing this she could say I was good for it. That would refuse it—that way Washington would look good."
Glynn said Jane Markert's release as field hockey coach two days prior to her contract expiration date was evidence of Washington's reckless housecleaning. She also said she would go on Markert's employment record as being fired.
Glynn said Markert had been asked to resign a year earlier as the result of Washinton's displeasure over Markert's criticism of the women's athletics program. He was then subjected to constructive criticism in an evaluation questionnaire.
Markert sent a five-page letter date May 24 to Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, outlining inconsistencies and problems in the department and their on atlets. She said she received no response to her letter.
Irene Malee, former athletic trainer, resigned last spring. She said her resignation centered on an incident involving a girl who fell down.
"I think it's about time Washington took the responsibility for my resignation instead of claiming inaction on Drysdale's part. My decision was strictly the result of a policy that had been enforced and the policies of the women's athletics department."
See WOMEN'S page 2
Malaley also sent a detailed seven-page letter to Shankel explaining her reasons for resignation in view of the situation in women's athletics. No acknowledgment of her resignation or response to her letter was received, she
PETER G. HARRIS
Marian Washington
Stall photo
2
Monday, July 26, 1976
News Digest
From the Associated Press
White House intruder killed
WASHINGTON - A man carrying a three-foot section of pipe climbed over the White House fence when night rays hit by a guard when he failed to heed instructions.
The man, identified as Chester Plummer, 30, of Washington, died at George Washington Hospital soon after being shot, according to Ken Lynch of the Secret
President Ford, who was in the second floor family quarters of the Washington House at the time, was informed of the shooting, said Deputy White House Press
The man was about 60 feet inside the fence when the single shot was fired, Warner, said.
The man set off an alarm when he scaled the fence and an Executive Protective Service officer went to investigate, said Jack Warner, a Secret Service spokesman. Warner said the intruder disregarded orders to stop and the officer shot him.
Kidnap suspect list grows
CHOCHLIA, CalfH - With one young man in custody and two others being sought, authorities reported yesterday that they were investigating evidence that a man had been carrying an object.
"There has been some talk of a fourth and fifth person being involved, but we haven't gotten far enough into the investigation to be sure," a law enforcement
Israel banned from games
MONTREAL—Israel has been excluded from the 1978 Asian Games, and its sports officials fear its bankruptcy could become a precedent to keep Israel-or-other nations out.
The Asian Games Federation, of which Israel is a charter member, said Israel was being suspended from competition in Bangkok two years from now because assuring the team's safety posed security and financial problems too difficult to resolve, it said.
Martian 'paintings' denied
PADENA, Calif.—Two Viking Mars-craft scientists said yesterday that it was only viewers' imaginations that made pictures of rock shapes and shadows transmitted from the Red Planet look like crudely painted letters and numbers. They saw "B," "G" and the number "2" were seen in Viking pictures Saturday night.
"People are great at imagining things," was the comment of Dr. Carl Sagan, with which Dr. Bruce Murray, director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, agreed.
Renaan address tonight
LOS ANGELES—Republican presidential challenge Ronald Reagan is taking time off from his vacation to make what aides describe as "a major campaign
None of Reagan's campaign aides would discuss the subject of the planned remarks, but one said it would be "a positive statement" for the campaign.
Delegates remain neutral
JACKSON, Miss.-Mississippi's 30-vote Republican delegation des-
dayesterday to remain uncommitted until the national convention in Kansas.
SPECIAL EDITION
They also voted to cast their votes as a bloc, but there was no clear indication whether the 30 votes would go to President Ford or to his challenger, Ronald Reagan. Supporters of both candidates agree the Ford-Reagan fight is close; each side claims it can swing the delegation.
'Grits' OK with Carter
PLAINS, Ga. — Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter said yesterday he has no objection to the slogan "Grits and Fritz" for himself and runnable Walter F. Mondale because the phrase represents "a pretty good melding between the North and the South."
Carter told a picnic gathering at the 106-year-old St. Mark's Lutheran Church outside Plaina that "a lot of people equate grief with the loss."
Princess fails to win medal
BROMONT—With the royal family watching, Princess Anne completed her OVEN tour and daylightly guiding Goodwill over 12 jumps in the final phase of the three-day trip.
The Princess, however, was over the time limit of 124 seconds and was penalized 3.25 points. her bring her total penalty points to 299.30. She did not win a medal.
MONTREAI1—The United States Olympic马拉松 had its wings clipped this weekend and some super-patriots here were calling disappointing finishes in the men's 100m dash, the shot put and an Olympic triple jump in men's swimming a "black Saturday."
U.S. fans pin hopes on boxers
By KELLY SCOTT
It seemed that where the Americans lost an anticipated medal, they won an unpredicted one. AI Feuerbach finished out of the medals in the shot put, but the United States took a silver in the European-dominated roping contests.
BY REELY SCOTT
Kansas Olympics Correspondent
Madeline Manning Jackson failed to qualify in the women's 800-meter but Kathy McMillan, a recent high school graduate from the University of Georgia, grabs a silver in the women's long jump.
IN A SPORT that few people watching the Olympics follow until it produces a Muhammad Ali, a Joe Frazier or a George Foreman, the U.S. was doing very well.
People associate boxing with cigar smoke and bookies more than with the supposedly less dangerous sport. But boxing could produce the American hero of the 21st Olympiad that track and field star Jackknife would never see.
Charles Mooney, Dave Armstrong and Clint Jackson are a diverse trio of black boxes on a team that includes a baseball player, Charles Walker who lost yesterday).
They have a 4,000-member fan club each time they fight at the Maurice Richard Arena. "U-S-A! U-S-A!" the crowd chants one of the three appearances in the ring.
OLYMPIX boxing audiences aren't filled with the cigar-chomping ringers you see in the movies. They're often people who know a lot about boxing, or other boxing teams or just fight fans.
Many are young and verbose, nearly all are fiercely nationalistic. And they crave the same thing in their minds: yesterday's bouts that wasn't always good. Advice to the fighters is given loud and demandingly. Encouragement is of importance. And boas are loud, angry and heartfelt.
Chris Clarke carried the pressure of being the sole realistic Canadian medal hope into his 140-pound bout yesterday. Clark is an attractive young bruiser, with a boyish swagger the fans adored. He had a rough bot with Poland's Jozsef Nagy.
"thrown the combination, Chris!" one fan
shouted. "The right, the right!" another
saxon.
Clarke started slowly.
EACH TIME Clarke landed a blow, and it wasn't often, the arena came alive. He made a modest attempt to reverse a loser's battle in the third round. Then the Polish boxer seemed to "butt" him with his head, a forbidden tactic in boxing. Bubble burst from
Clarke's left eye, streamed down his face and onto his chest and shoulders. Moments later the fight was stopped and awarded to the Nagy.
After the fight, speaking to sports writers, Clarke and his coach were bitter. They thought the referees should have disqualified them because they had ruled an unintentional but by the referee.)
The official was Taiwanese, the only one remaining in an active role at the Olympics, and that didn't help his image in Clarke's eyes as an impartial judge.
"He ought to be thrown out," Clarke said.
AS IT turned out, Clarke's gas was serious enough to require 10 stoves. Even if the bout had been decided for Clarke, one week before he'd be ready to fight again.
The first American fighter on yesterday's card was Clint Jackson, who is a deputy sheriff in his home town of Nashville, Tenn.
Jackson is a huge favorite with the fans, and not just the Americans. There were French voices and some broken English accents pulling for him yesterday too.
But Jackson, in the 148-pound class, needed little outside help. He was a confident, steady pillar against Wesley Felix of Haiti. He stood firm and few punches while Felix failed away desperately. The fighters were in one corner of the ring when.
suddenly, it was all over. There was 1:50 to go in the 3-minute first round when Jackson knocked Felix on his back with his first serious punch of the fight.
THE REFEERE gave an eight-count that Felix heard, andJack got his job.
Armsrising团fight联盟y在1923年
Orliarmn团fight联盟y在1923年
The other American fighters who could end up with a boxing medal are Mooney, Armstrong and possibly "Sugar Ray" (Ryan Lochte) who won their welts Saturday night.
Two years ago he was in an automobile accident and suffered third degree burns on his feet. His feet are still wrapped each time he goes into the ring, and it's obvious if you're walking behind him, as I was yesterday, that he treads gingerly.
His win over Tibor Badar, a two-time European champion in the 132-pound class, is his first victory.
Money is a character both sports writers and fans love. Although he engages in the most basic struggle between two men in sports he doesn't psych himself to dislike them, he has a good deal to them. And he always has a smile and kind words for them before he leaves the ring.
Both Armstrong and Mooney go today in their quarter final matches. Jackson will meet a tough Venezuela, Pedro Garnaro, who upset the defending champion Emilio Correa yesterday, in his quarterfinal Tuesday night.
Intern seeks changes in education
By KENNA GIFFIN
William Hogan is define about his long-
est friend; he wants to be chancellor of a
university.
That's one reason Hogan, associate dean of engineering, applied for the American Council of Education internship he was offered in 2013 to be an executive Vice Chancellor, Del Shakelo.
Another reason was to make higher education more responsive to minorities and women, Hogan, a black administrative intern, said.
'I want to change higher education to reflect attitudes and views of all the people I work with.'
He also hopes to gain insight into the University administrative process and make a positive contribution to the university. He wants you to learn what it takes to be a manager, he said.
So far, Hogan has met three university chancellors who are engineers, he said. Specialists in physical sciences are going up in university administration, but people trained in education still predominate, he said.
Hogan has been involved with several programs for women and minority engineering students, computing services and community work and said he would
Universities can adopt many principle, from engineering, such as using system management and computer simulation to allocate resources. New administrators are like corporate managers, especially in managing budgets, be said.
Women's coach .
"How many minority students are rushed by sororites and fraternities? How many minorities do you see in administration? Even with a shortage of supply, how many minorities do you see in faculty and staff, or students of student organizations?" he asked.
From page one
"But at any university money talks, and if major contributors to her programs are withdrawing their support and are notifying the administration of their reasons, why doesn't the administration respond?" Norris said.
The women agreed that divisions within the department were evident because of lack of response to their complaints about women's athletics.
He said he debeted the enthusiasm of some departments in seeking minority and gender diversity.
"I've made it a point to say nothing to him about my opinions of the present situation," Norris said. "His decision to withdraw his vote has been made solely on discreteness he's seen."
Brown, a softball and volleyball team member, said Washington labeled softball team members or any athletes questioning her program as trouble makers.
Donna Sullivan, softball and hockey team member, said Washington told the athletes that opinions of parents and alumni weren't always true. The department was none of their business.
In fact, he came to the University in the fall of 1973 because he wanted to interact with students and affect the lives, he said. He originally planned to stay in industry—he was the first black engineer in the Dallas firm where he started out—and his experience in the internship this year may have helped him decide whether or returns to industry. He would like to be a corporation manager if he doesn't remain in education.
Norris said parents and alumni were becoming concerned about Washington's handling of the women's athletics department and were withdrawing financial support of the program. She said her father was withdrawing funding for the scholarships from Dean B. Norris and from the Blue Clip Club, a donations fund.
Answering his own question, he said,
"Verv few."
"Washington acts like we can't think for
Hogan said KU minority students hadn't been helped by racial considerations in university.
Hogan said he hoped he was chosen for the post because of his qualifications, not her.
save time for these activities in his new position as an administrator.
"She has this rule that says 'I don't care if you like me but you must respect me' which causes lots of problems. She can't just say 'I love you' and then tell things her way or else." Drysdale said.
"After all the rehashing she told me Wednesday that she'd thought it over and decided not to rehire her. She said she'd now have a new manager, and I've evaluated her rationale for the firing."
Drysdale said Washington's need to repeatedly clarify her actions and to ensure 100 per cent agreement with those actions was unnecessary.
Drysdale said she regretted all the rehashing that went on concerning her retaliation.
Drysdale she received a statement last week from Washington outlining the specifics of the decision not to renew Drysdale's contract. The letter also proposed a possible reconsideration of the decision by a compromise.
"Administrators have the right to fire personnel and I don't feel she owed me money."
Deydale said she had talked to Shankel and asked if he had any questions about her
"I'm not going to let it take me away from students," he said. "I can't afford to be too fearful."
release or the women's athletics program in general.
"He said he had no questions whoseover and that he would support Washington's decision whatever it was. To me that inward state of involvement," Drysdale said.
"Some departments are doing very well,
but it has to come from the grassroots of the
country."
Hanskel said he refused further comment because of his lack of direct contact with the athletes. Glynn said several attempts to talk with him had been made by the women involved, and a statement on impending withdrawal of funding from contributors to women's athletics.
The situation with Harris is another example of inconsistency in certainty in the Bayesian approach. Dryden
Despite little prospect for change in the department, Drysael said she wanted her job too.
Shankel he agreed with Washington and that he has reviewed the entire situation with her in considerable depth and has met with Drysdale. He said he had kept him informed of the situation and that the Chancellor was aware of the decisions made.
"On the other hand, the University especially admissions and records, is "doing a fantastic job in recruiting," he said.
"I appreciate the volume of response from the athletes' letters because it took me a while to process."
Also, it probably has made the process of filling posts) a lot more objective. It gives individuals outside a chance to get a foot in the game by being elected to the (the selection) committee." he said.
What does he think of Affirmative Action?
Until his appointment ends in June 1977, Hogan said, he will welcome students and faculty coming by his office and voicing their complaints about higher education as it affects them. He said he wanted to learn as much as possible about all aspects of
Absentee ballots now available
Voters wanting an absentee ballot may come to the county clerk's office, sign an affidavit and pick up the ballot anytime prior to noon Aug. 2.
Registered Douglas County voters expect to be out of town Aug. 3 who wish to vote in the primary election on that day should pick up their absentee ballots immediately, Douglas County Clerk D. E. Matha said yesterday.
The affidavit merely states that the voter will be out of Douglas county on Aug. 3, 2015.
The absentee ballots must be mailed to the County clerk's office to arrive before 7 p.m. Aug. 3 to be counted as votes, Mathia said.
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Monday, July 28, 1976
2
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nt that got his
1972 3. Now
U.S. team gathers gold
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By WICK TEMPLE
AP Sports Writer
writers in the men in dislike them. words
MONTREAL--American Olympic athletes rebounded from "Black Saturday" with a string of gold medals yesterday led by Edwin Moses' world record in the 400-meter hurdles and Mac Wilkins' gold-winnings effort in the discus.
Rod Strachan won the 400-meter individual medley swim in world record time and Jim Montgomery set another world mark in winning the 100-meter freestyle. Those victories gave the U.S. 12 of the 13 gold medals awarded in men's swimming.
The American women swimmers finally won a gold medal. The victory came in the 400-meter free relay, with Shirley Ashoff anchoring a world-setting team.
American Rolf Wohlhuber of Chicago was a disappointing third in the 800-meter run, won by Alberto Juntorena of Cuba. He finished fifth in the Ivov Van Damme of Belgium was second.
The East German women dominated the women's water events, winning 11 of the 13. Petra Thumer set a world mark in the 800-meter freestyle and Urike Richer set an Olympic mark in the 200-meter backstroke for her third gold medal of these Games.
American riders won the team equestrian gold medal, and Tad Coffin and Mike Plumb grabbed gold and silver in the individual awards given in the three-day riding event.
The massive, bearded Wilkins, San Jose, Calif., won the disc medal with a throw of 22 feet, 5 inches, short of his own world mark of 222 c. But after the medal game, he continued to official officials and said "I won the gold medal for myself, not the United States."
Wilkins and teammate Al Fleuerbach of San Jose have raided at American officials who require that they train at the Olympic Village.
Both left to work out with the West Germans about 150 miles from Montreal.
A's beat Rovals
OAKLAND (AP)—Ken McMullen slammed a two-run triple and Phil Garner followed with a two-run homer in a seven-run Oakland first-inning yesterday which powered the A's to a 8-2 victory over the Kansas City Rovals.
The first three runs were charged to Kansas City starter Doug Bird, 94, and the next four to Andy Hassler, who also gave up a third-inning homer to Gene Tenace.
In boxing, Ray Leonard danced his way into the quarter-finals after his American teammate, Clint Jackson, took a much bigger lead. First—eight knockout in Olympic boxing.
John Powell of San Jose was third in the
discuss and Wolfgang Schmidt of East
Maryland.
The two victories put six American men into the quarter-finals and three other Americans still in contention in the 11 weight classes.
While Leonard, a 140-pounder from Palmer Park, Md., and Jackson, 147, Nashville Tenn., were winning, light mid-score was held. Joe Correa became the second American to be eliminated. Cuba lost its third man when defending Olympic champion Emilio Cornea was stopped in the third round of a 147-foot bout with Venezuelan Pedro
Leonard danced, feinted and jabbed for the first two rounds against Clinton McKenzie of Great Britain, then swarmed to the attack in the third round, staggering him with a left hook and shaking him with a good right-left to the head.
Jackson, a deputy sheriff, earned the right to meet Gamarro in the quarter-finals when he knocked out Wesly Feliix of Haiti and brought to the jaw at 1:18 of the opening round.
Moses, a long-stirring Morehouse College student from Ohio, Detroit,io set a 47.64 second world mark in the 400 hurdles, with Mike Shin, Youngsville, Pa., running second and Evengen Gavrilenko Soviet Union, third.
Moses and Shine were so elated with their one-two victory that they circled the track embracing, embracing, waving to the crowd and both knocking over a hurdle when they tried to jump together at a trot. The old world hero had to step back and John Akib-Au of Uzama in much in 1972.
The American women staved off what might have been their first gold medal shutout since 1952 by winning the swimming event—the 400 freestyle relay. Jill Stickler, Hacienza Heights, Calif., grabbed the lead from East Germany's Ralf Burger in the men's race and handed a slim margin to Babashoff, from Fountain Valley, Calif.
Babashoff had won three silver after hoping for better. She ignored the strain of an 800-meter race earlier in the menel and held off Claudia Hemel in an electrifying
race to the wall. The other Americans were Kim Peyton, Fortland, Ore., and Wendy Lankford.
East Germany's Uritke Richter won the 200 backstroke in Olympic record time of 2.13.43. Petra Tether伞 off off Babashoff to 8.39.63. Petra freestyle in world record time of 8.39.63.
Published at the University of Kamas daily Thursday during June and July except Saturday. Sunday and Holidays. Second-class mail by any carrier or $10 a letter; second-class mail by any carrier or $18 a letter in Douglas County and $10 a semester or a half year. Second-class mail by any carrier or $10 a semester, paid through the university. Second-class mail by any carrier or $10 a semester, paid through the university.
Wendy Weinberg of Baltimore was third, Strachan, Santa Ana, Calif., set a world mark of 4:23.68 in the 400-meter individual medley. Tim McKee, Newton Square, Pa., was second as he was in the last Olympics and he smirks of the Soviet Union was third.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
Montgomery, Madison, Wis., shattered the 50 second barrier by winning the 100-meter freestyle in world record time of 49.99 seconds. Jack Babashoff, Shirley's brother, was second and Peter Nocke, West Germany, third.
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RESTAURANT
842-4311
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
"IF THOU THOU AWAY TWAY FOOT FROM THE SABBATH, FROM DOING THOU PLEASURE ON MY HOLY DAY; AND CALL THE SABBATH A DELIGHT, THE HOLY OF THE LORD, HONORABLE; AND SHALT HORN HUMER, NOT DOING THOIN OE WAYS, NOR FINDING THOIN OE PLEASURE, NOR SPEAKING THOIN OE WORDS; THEN SHALT THOU DELIGHT THYSELF IN THE LORD; THEN SHALT THOU DELIGHT THYSELF IN THE LORD; THEN EARTH, AND FEED THEE WITH THE HIERGITE OF JACOB THY FATHER; FOR THE MOUTH OF THE LORD HAT SPOKEN IT."
This passage from Isaiah 58: 13, 14; think it would be well if put in every week — not well for folks who do not like it and pay no attention, but surely well for multitudes of others for God Almighty says His word is "quick and powerful" and would not "return unto him Elim". To the Lord, we are told that he will "ride upon the Lord." Also, to "ride upon the high places of the earth" We submit that England and The United States back yonder "delighted themselves" in God's sacred and Holy Sabbath as evidenced by the laws concerning it on their statute books, and the way they enforced them up until about fifty years ago! Consider how God has fulfilled His promise to cause these things to happen on the earth!" Has any other nation ever been so lifted to ride so high?
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
"O THAT THEY WEREWISE, WHAT THEY UNDERSTOOD THIS,
THEY THEYWOULD CONSIDER THEIR LATTER END!"
Deuteronomy 32:29. What will be the end of our 'casting away The Law
Of The Lord concerning the sacredness and holiness of His Sabbath!
Consider one instance of the latter end of the Kingdom of Judah, Her King, Princes, Nobles, Men, Women and Children. Quoting now from Jeremiah chapter 17:20, etc., "Hear The Word of the Lord — Take heed to yourselves, and bear no burden on the Sabbath Day — neither carry a burden from your houses on the Sabbath Day, neither do any work, but hollow you the Sabbath Day, as I commanded your fathers. But they obeyed not, neither inclined their ear, but made their neck stiff, that they might not hear, nor receive instruction. And it shall come
to pass, if they diligently hearken unto Me, saith The Lord, to bring in burden through the gates of this city on the Sabbath day, but balk the Sabbath day, to do no work there; then shall there enter into the gates of this city kings and princes sitting upon the thrones of David, riding in charlots and on horses, they, and their prices, the men of the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and this city shall remain forever.
Think of the last thing The King saw before his eyes were punched out — his own boys slain with the sword, and his princes. If you wish to kill him you would be wrong. You would not forget they were told just a few years before if they would faithfully observe the Fourth Commandment their City, Kings and Princes and the Lord God.
Consider over and over again: “THE CITY SHALL REMAIN FOREVER!” THIS CITY SHALL REMAIN FOREVER! They were stiffened, refused to obey, to honor God Almighty a Sabbath. Now what happened in just a few years in spite of these precious promises, probably less than a score of years from the time of Jeremiah’s words the “city would remain forever!” Quote beginning Jeremiah 52:7. Even now, it seems that Jeremiah is forth out of the city by night by the way of the gate between the walls, which was by the king’s garden — But the army of Chaldeans pursued the King, and overlook Zedekiah in the plains of Jericho; and all his army was scattered from him. Then they took the King, and carried him up to the King of Babylon to Ribisha in the land of Hamath; where he gave judgement upon him. And the King of Babylon slew the sons of Zedekiah before his eyes; he slew all the princes of Judah in Ribisha. THEN HE PUT OUT THE EYES OF ZEDKEAH; AND THE BABYAD IN RIBISHA, WITH THE BABYAD IN PRISON, AND CARRIED TO BABYAD, AND PUT HIM IN PRISON TILL THE DAY OF HIS DEATH!”
It is the same God and His same Commandment that you and me have to do with once every week!
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Free kittens 7 weeks old, people-loving 843-
9446.
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and ask us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WEBSTER MOBILE HOMES, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS.
2 bdr. all utilities paid, on campus Furnished
as unfurnished. Free parking, a/c, pool, 843.
Students. Happiness is an alternative lifestyle.
Yoga cooperative living. Worksharing program.
Food program, private room, laundry facilities.
Facilities and equipment. Attendance: 842-9237 between 7-7:00pm. 7-29
2 bedroom unfurnished apartment at Crestwick
819-635-7070 August 19th Call 614-720-
931-625-7070
3 bedroom house Near campus, large fanned
trees, quiet trees, unclever, Avail Dec 14, 7:27
1978.
2 bbf. hesignmentagt. in private home on 19th
June, 2014. In lieu of cash, please pay $50.
$50 ca. cell Phone: (644) 381-6444, 644-823-3233,
644-777-7777
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—Now on Sale!
Makes use of the following materials:
Makes use of an asst study guide
2) For class preparation
3) For exam preparation
New Analysis of Western Civilization
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
Available now at Town Crier Stores. t
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hifi equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-products, the GRAMPHOUSE SHOP at KIFEES. **tf**
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialist.
BEL AIR ELECTRIC, #83-969-309, W. 4th. hp
ELECTRIC, #83-969-309, W. 4th. hp
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHOP
1900 W. 32nd St. 10th & 6th AVE.
RAASCH
SADDLE 4 BRIDLE SHOI
RAASCH
P
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CHEER BOARD
18 East 19th Street
10-5 Monday-Saturday
1974 Yamaha DT250
1966 Honda CB160
1970 Honda XL250
1970 Kawasaki 150
CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
1972 Honda QA50
1967 Honda CL316
1971 Honda CB450
1972 Honda CB750
1972 Honda
HORIZON'S HONDA 1811 W.6th 843-3333
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS!
GRAMOPHONE
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Things Loss Distortion
Then Most Storero Components
Audio Components
Electric Wirel organiz with double manual and
full paddle hall. Call 842-0355. 7-26
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
ALL ABOVE COMPANY CENTER LORNING AMSTERDAM 100-624-8544
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
furniture, office furniture, appliances and
Appliance Center, 70145 W. 36th St.
844-872-7711
THEYRE HERE! Large selection of "Our Special-
sale" apparel. Regular $5.99 now—
$24.99 at THEATK 727 Mass.
Going safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue denim
alternate. Regular price $2, special $15.00.
Airtel, AT&T.
Herrii Nova 1974.2 182 bedroom, air conditioned
bedroom, carpet, patio, furnished.
Herrii Nova 1974.2 842-727-687
Box springs and mattress sets, used and new at low bargain prices. Limit one per customer. Will sell in all stores at reduced prices. Use Furniture and Appliance Center; 704; Mass., 7-29. 2721.
Dodge 68 Cornet; engine is in good condition. A C, radio, 4-door. After stop by after 25 minutes.
72 Brown Honda Sedan $1,600 36,000 miles Ex-26
condition. b41-1023
1972 Siberia KI mobile home. 14' x 10' with centrally placed windows and skirting included. Excellent condition. Call 315-286-7534.
Safely mattes, box spring & frame. Excellent
for children. Wide matting. Call 150 Call 843-6801 or 848-6401.
Small window unit air conditioner and various pieces of furnishing furniture.
Acoustic guitar plus brand-off electric guitar.
Clean Good for beginners 841-287-0250 a p.m.
**of pieces of furniture. Call anytime 853-1200.** 7-27
Temperate Lab series 1. $300 old. $200 new.
Brownstone series 1. $400 old. $400 new.
Harman, like Karden 320 B receiver, 15 watts/channel,
like Karden 130; $48.938 before 8 p.m. 7-29
Band equipment: Gibson EB2 electric bass with band; Shure MGRP A.1 mkone/control/preamp; Kristen 50 amps with speaker; JBL K-140 bass with preamplifier; Must sell by August; an offer, 842-1425. August; 7-29
1970 WI Wug. Excellent condition $1250 Call
842-934-5394 Keep trying
HUGE MOVING SALE • Thistle, inberra, beather, bethar
• Westbury, Northumberland, Nantwich, Leeds,
Frith, Ft. Bromsgrove 726 Locust in North Lawn,
Berkshire.
Complete suitcase outfit, like new. Ten-gallon aquarium with light, filter and lid. Call 516-748-3120.
HELP WANTED
Waitress, beautiful area restaurant and club.
Cashier, 8:30 a.m. after fall. Phone 842-1611 after 6:00 p.m.
7:29
COOK FOR CHILD NUTRITION TEST. Fast working, organized person to cook from develop-mental needs, travel to parent's search and toddler day care. 8:10 - 13:40 M-2:20 hr) apply AAB31 Birtlet Terrace, Meadwood.
BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH NEEDS BEEN APPROXIMATELY 18 TO 10 HOURS PER WEEK, AND A PERSONAL EDITING SKILLS ARE ESSENTIAL, TYPING IN ENGLISH, JOURNALISTRY OR HUMAN DEMANDS. THE BUREAU IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER QUALIFIED FOR ALL RACESES. ENCOURAGED TO APPLY
LOST AND FOUND
H-S II-P calculator on July 9th, reward of H-S II-P calculator on July 10th, reward of H-S II-P calculator by Kerron Post Office. Found a cell phone by Kerron Post Office.
Found, Male Setter (mixed breed) Call Mark 841-1134. 7-29
NOTICE
Cult it these hot afternoons with fruits and
foats, parfaits and meals. Gold Cup ice cream
and chocolate cake at the Cashah Cafe, 803
Dinner; door) dinner; HHI 8:30 o'clock
Sundays.
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Made, furniture, dishes.
Swap Shop. televisions, telebooks.开放日 12:35-1:15.
After 26 years in business, if George don't have it he will make it. George's Pizza Shop, 727
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcoholic Anonymous 842-810-9167.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring-Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 115, 118, 142, 121, 122, 950. Regular session or test preparation. Reasonable rates. 7-29
843-7681.
TUTOR
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics, Call 841-
3708 after 6 p.m. **tf**
TYPING
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/clite, Quality work.
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/clite, dissertations wears. 829,
842-1027, 842-1028
1 do damned good typing. Pegery, 962-447; atten-
400 (messages taken 24 hours). 7-25
Experienced typist—term papers, thesis, mime.
Educated in English, computer science, spelling,
corrected 834-953. Mrs. Wright.
Typing, professional quality work guarantee
typing, using the Web; design these
thesis, dissertations, plus electric, B.A. teaching.
English is required.
WANTED
Need someone to subline Jaykah Towers apart-
gently, fail and spring semesters. 6-14:
anime.
Experienced typist IBM Mag-Card, term papers,
illustration form correspondence, 853-9471, 229
853-9471
Need an experienced type1? IBM Selectric II plus
type2. Call Pam at 842-5798. (Call
Pam at 842-5798.)
To Buy: Used premium wood tennis racquets 4x8
or 4/5 light only. Phone 841-7292. 7-29
Nice female roommate wanted 2 bedrooms.
Would you join me for $500/month?
Sorry, sorry. Clinty collect in K.C. after
season.
One male roommate, 2 bedrooms, apt. one-half rent and utilities. Call collect 913-1147-7298-7-29
Applied English Center student from Saudi Arabia, with a Bachelor's degree in English and an American family. faculty only. 321-5126 (Katherine J. Ward).
Married senior in engineering needs quiet place.
St. Shawnee, KS 60212 60212 7-29
St. Shawnee, KS 60212
4th male roommate to share nine townhouse-
baths; 6th, cell: -191-915-814-793 or -1-915-792-893,
-191-915-809-894
Bikes-Boots- Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
530 Wisconsin
GRAN SPORT
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TECHNICS SYSTEMS
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audio
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843-9404
THE HIDEOUT CLUB
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
—6 Nights a Week
Open 2 p.m.-3 a.m. Dancers 3:08-3:09 p.m.
Memberships Available
Cabin B or Private
Wayne Pool-Owner
Keep your car healthy
in the summer. Use the student discounts
at
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
Smiley car
WHY NOT! Sell your unwanted items with a classified in the UDK
4
Monday, July 26, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Pilgrimage to the Dew Drop Inn
By G. S. BASHAW
Whether it was cosmic forces, friendship or just plain despair that made my buddies Mike and Billy drive more than 500 miles only to end up sipping 3.2 beer in DeSoto last Saturday night, I just don't know.
But there we were, with a balding, dyed-black-haired woman named Peggy Sue, her mother, and the same girl who was
slew of other townes, boogying in the Dew Drop Inn. Just like Mike said, "Now when would ya see this place if we weren't here to take ya?"
Comment
They had sojourned to Kansas from Chicago the day before, powered by a case of beer and seven bags of Fries. The beer was gone by St. Louis, the corn chips at K.C.
Beyond just visiting, their trip had only the faintest glimmers of a purpose: Mike wanted to snap some "historical type stuff" on his Instastatic and bring back a KU shirt for his girl, and Billy wanted a vacation from 70 hours a week at a gas station. They both wanted to lounge in a college town, an amusement park, out cheated out of by work after high school.
Mike and Billy are city people, survivors
of an unorderly world away from the greenery of a college campus, and they've had to pay the price of the survival. They each lug around more-than-ample beer bellies and, more often than not, cases of beer to put in those bellies. Though they're best friends, rarely do they talk to each other. The outrageous insults aimed at each other's abdomen. They are Hardy and Hardy, the thin man out.
Mike was the star of the comedy show last weekend. In high school he was known for prodigious beer drinking, plowing his car across fine suburban lawns at 40 miles per hour, driving in limousines, usually directed at innocent women, that earned him the title, "The Bushesest."
Mike retained his crown at a party we had in the two jolly boys' honour, by telling "hard-ta-fair college women" to "leave her room," then "keep Darlin," and "keep me abreast of g汗-son in Budapest, babe." If only he hadn't been decked out in a too-tight T-shirt with an iron-on decal 'IM ONLY HERE FOR THE DADDY' I doubt have had more romantic success.
Billy listened to one of my more twisted college friends describz a psychology experiment that tended his哭 of spiders after he swallowed one of the buggers. Billy listened to one of the people respite from the party's collegiate madness. He returned after trying to read the
"most screwed-up porno ever written." He got about 20 pages into an edition of Joyce's "Ulysses" with a half-naked woman on the cover.
The pair hail from city streets and so got their chance to shine when we packed up a beer breakfast to travel into Kansas City the next day.
At first Mike was disappointed. He liked clicking historical shots inside taverns in the River Quay but was sad to find that "where the two railroads met" wasn't in K.C., but a few states to the West. Billy proclaimed that "all Kansas women look thighs." But when Mike said a couple hours later, "It must be the farming work they do, about their thighs," Billy he didn't realize in such sweeping generalizations
Try as I might I couldn't keep pace with the established brewmasters, lost much of my consciousness in K.C. and woke up in the Dew Drop Inn slouched next to a woman named Miley who sat with a smoking cigar lodged in the plentiful gap between her two top teeth. Billy quickly whispered to me that he was going out of Nashville" and so were honored from a drinking off one Peggy Sue's liquor pool, because she always did like Charlie Rich.
had us managing Conway Twitty's personal affair's before Peggy Sue told us her current husband was even ornieried than her second one and we left.
Mike almost got us worked over when he out-busted an old, overran man at the pool table, and Billy was walking dangerous ground in similar work with Peggy Sue. He
They were ready to leave very early the next morning, and with a cooler full of cold Coor's in the back seat and Mike bellowling, they were ready to walk through neighbors to the loudspeaker mounted under his car's hood, they rode off east for a 10-hour trip home. I wished they could have stayed longer but we don't have a TV, and I would make it back for Kojak, or at least Bronk.
Clarification
Teddie Tasheff, student body president, said Friday she wished to clarify remarks made by her that appeared in an article on the University's website. The article made her appear to have immediate access to and recent information from the University's Title IX Self-Evaluation report, the basis of policy changes authorized by Cancellor Dykes Thursday.
In fact, Tasheff said, her remarks were collections of facts she collected in May about the report based on its form then. She said that, although she took notes when she read the report last spring, she wasn't using them at all. Ms. Cobb said that she hadn't seen the report since May.
New plant to solve trash disposal woes
By ROBERT KEARNEY
A garbage-powered steam heating plant is the answer to the trash disposal problem in Douglas County, according to a resolution recently passed by county commissioners.
A new Kansas regulation requires each county government to declare plans for future trash disposal to the Kansas Bureau of Land Management. County Engineer Dean Sanderson said.
A proposed Kansas University garbage-powered steam heating plant, which would use solid waste, as fuel, was named by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency county's garbage problem, Sanderson said.
The power plant is the subject of a study being conducted by an Omaha, Neb. engineering firm, Max Lucas, assistant director of facilities planning, said recently.
Sanderson said that he had consulted Lucas and that they were very optimistic about the heating plant. If the plant is not functioning, he said, he hopes it will be functional by 1980.
Time is important because of a new regulation controlling solid waste disposal, Sanderson said. The regulations, which became effective July 1, prohibit all open burning and restricts many other forms of trash disposal.
Sanderson that under the new regulation the only acceptable means of
trash disposal was the landfill method. But, he said, the landfill is expensive and unacceptable to many residents of the county.
Douglas County commissioners considered opening a new landfill near the Wakaraus River, but so many people complained and the land was so expensive that the plan was abandoned, Sanderson said.
Sanderson said that the proposed KU plant would solve the trash problem not only of Douglas County and Lawrence, but also of Minnetonka Kinch County and part of Shawnee县.
Current estimates indicate that a solid waste incinerator large enough to heat the entire University would require 200 tons of solid waste a day.
Sanderson said that Lawrence produced 100 tons of trash a day and that it would require all of Douglas, Jefferson and McDowell counties to produce the other 100 tons.
The benefits of the system are obvious, Sanderson said. The cost of from $9 million to $11 million to the incinerator-heater to fuel it creates a matter of years by the fuel cost savings.
The University wouldn't have to pay for the trash because residents would pay for the collection and the counties and cities involved would have the money otherwise spent on landfills.
10.2
Strewn within and around the second railroad car were planes, which were in various states of disarray.
A Summer Day's End
So Buddha had the shade of 'a tree to contemplate under and Dylan the cool bars of Greenwich Village to classify meditation in. The oak trees grew slowly day like yesterday, when the fullest oaks offered little relief, and most tawards were so hard that people sought enlightenment in other places.
The image shows a person sitting in a rowing boat on a river, likely engaged in fishing or preparing food. The boat is relatively small and equipped with oars and a net. In the background, there is a bridge spanning the river. The water appears calm, and the scene is quiet.
By later afternoon, Athey's cheeks were summed pink where his purple baseball cap didn't cover and he was ready to call it quits. He was tired of stooping over with his
Gray-haired Jesse Athey, of Lawrence, was fishing through the river's inlets for bait for hours. From his boat on the north shore he saw the city firemen drag around the sandbar for a man who drowned Friday. "I don't know that the firemen found the body."
net in the water, dragging the riverbank and coming up unty-handed.
The relentless sun provided ample illumination for some at the Kansas River where the wind sprayed into droplets, the brown water spilling over the dam.
A few drank in a view of the tree-lined waters upstream from the Bowersock Bridge while others were down at the dam and along the river. The halfway across the cool moss on the dam, and others in a boat paddled to the sandbar where a hundred birds and a few crabs were swimming.
"I been trying to get some minnows to put on my trout lines," he said, and then pointed to a beached fish lying between some rusted rocks. "I saw them there if I don't come up with anything."
Athey later picked up the perch and walked down the beach to his boat. The sand was white and hot from the sun. He cut up the perch into 25 pieces, one for each of his lines, on a wooden plank in the boat. He put them into a basket and will check for any catches tomorrow.
"I tell her, ya jashin" is bound to get better around it, he said. "is bound to darn slow里."
The two boxcars closest to the Price house
"I tell ya, fishin' is bound to get better around here." Jesse Athey said. "It's so darned slow right now."
"Those old things were used by the Lawrence Transfer and Storage Company before the flood back in '51 hit," she said. She flattened her nose against the screen and smiled. "After that the students came and pretty much ransacked them out."
Down the railroad tracks on the south side of the river near 11th and Haskell, five boxcar; that lay rotting in the woods near which also provided a place of discovery.
Mrs. George Price looked through the screen door of her house at the cars.
still hold an ample amount of treasures that Detters Rettenmeyer, Shawnee Mission
"I like to just poke around the cars and look at all the junk," Price said, sitting on a boxcar floor and eating a sandwich she'd packed. "Once I climbed one of the regular cars too, but it started moving and got goin' pretty fast before I could jump off."
Next to her were three chipped upright pianos, a hand-wringer and a set of faded Boy Scout aviator novels. The other car mounted a huge Schlitz beer sign, a shiny gold footing hat that dwelt into a corner when a shiny new Seite Fei diesel corobed by.
PIZZA HUT
TACO
GRANDE
HAPPY GERS
BUR
champlin
CA D LEE
DOUJTS
The countless fast food shops of 23rd street do a brisk business on Sunday afternoons
But many more people than were in boxcars were out in their autos, paying Sunday hatch to 23rd street. They cruised beyond the rows of shiny chrome cars lined up in lots and sought salvation in drives at the burrier stands.
"Sunday's just about our biggest day here," Leslie Rose, a McDonald's employee said. "Everybody likes to eat Sunday dinner here, it seems like."
Even though McDonald's serves up culture with piped-in music and art exhibit, Stan Switzer, a Lawrence high student because there was nothing else to do."
Ken Taylor, a senior at Lawrence high, was in the drive-in line at Burger King in his dad's bronze Electra 225 with rock jacked up on the stereo, and understandably more
"I like drive-ups, they're kind of a buzz"
he said. "I just like puffin' up here and being
A few will no doubt pass unscathed through all the neon lights and tentations of 32rd street to seek further satar. And the fuss lit atoon Fraser Hall always
on campus last night, a few walkers stolped alone along 14th Street, a couple embraced by Potter Lake and a harmonica held up in the air. A Spooner Museum of Art. Etched in stone on the museum front above him was the true message of the day: WHOSO FINDETH WISHIN' TO BE WITH YOU. On a summer day, a cocktail-filled summer night, that's just backwards.
Story by G. S. Bashaw
Pictures by Jay Koelzer
CAUTION
BUILDING OVERHANG
CLEARANCE 8FT.6IN.
STOP
2V 1049
Having your food in the car or sitting in an air-conditioned restaurant are two choices oen to those in search of food.
mod. But,
ative and
of the
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
HAWK
KANSAN
Surprise under the backboards
ers connear the people expensive enderson
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Tuesday, July 27, 1976
a solid heat the ) tons of
See page 3
s used KU not only but also and part
produced it would ion and Shawnee ans.
pay for pay for d cities herwise
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Vol.86 No.169
Pichler spots business trends in final lecture
By SUSAN LYNN
staff writer
Environmental protection legislation, criticism of federal regulations and the rapid expansion of international trade are three current developments affecting America's future economic stability, Joseph Pichler said last night.
Pichler, dean of the Business School, spoke on the "Continuing Revolution of Business" in the last of seven public lectures sponsored by the School of Fine Arts.
Pichler cited the re-enactment of legislation protecting the environment as the first of "sophisticated" acts to affect the U.S. economic base.
"Now legislation is holding the producer accountable for social costs. The producer is responsible for using up source resources that have been polluted?" he air that has been polluted?" he
Increased criticism of federal regulating systems has also developed, Pichler said, and there are too many areas that are being upsetting the balance of free enterprise.
“As for now,” he said, “our government has kept its commitment to safeguarding private property owners, keeping peace and security in national policies with those of everyone.”
"Congress should remove controls and rely on competition as a regulatory device," he said. "We should let the invisible hand of competence take control."
Another development Pichler saw was the rapid expansion of international trade. Russia and China are the largest consumers, he said, that greatly affect our market in the U.S. and allow larger agricultural allotments to be predicted.
Pichler traced America's economic process discussing the impact of the land value system, various antimonopolistic measures and the effect of government control in the 1930s.
"I cannot overstress the importance of the wealth of the land to the wealth of the people."
Through advanced technology, Pichler said, there is an enormous amount of land available.
mt w r r
Information at her toetips Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
Judy Browder, Tucson, Arizona, senior, answer the lines of the KU information center. The telephone lines at the center are open 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Ronald Reagan's decision to break tradition yesterday and name a running presidential nomination surprised observers but appeared to have no immediate effect on Kansas' three unqualified Republican National Convention delegates.
By The Associated Press
Reagan move stuns GOP
One of the three termed Reagan's selection of Sen. Richard Schweiker, R-Pa., "surprising." The other two said they didn't much about the Pennsylvania Senator.
The former California governor told a Los Angeles news conference yesterday that he had chosen Schweller because although he was a Republican, he knew "basic beliefs compatible with my own."
SCHWEIKER, who has been publicly a Ford delegate, accepted Reagan's invitation to his running mate if Reagan was Republican presidential nomination.
"This bold, unprecedented action dramatizes the leadership, the courage and the openness which Gov. Reagan will bring to the White House," he said.
President Ford's campaign manager said a senior assistant, with surprise to President Rigout, had been in touch.
The move could help Reagan gain support within the 103-member Pennsylvania delegation, the bulk of which had been counted in President Ford's camp.
BASED ON the current AP survey of delegates, if the entire Pennsylvania delegate should line up with Reagan it will vote on the 1.384 needed for nomination.
Ragan's camp was hoping Schweicker could help pry votes from Ford in New Jersey and New York as well. Neither of them formally committed to vote for any candidate.
Ford won the April 27 primary in Pennsylvania, but those results are not binding on the uncommitted delegate slate elected at the same time.
An AP survey shows Ford has 71 delegates in Pennsylvania to Reagan's six. Twenty-five others are uncommitted and one is for Sen. Howard Baker of Tennessee.
MARYNELL REECE, Republican national committeewoman and a delegate
Information Center knows it all
These and other questions have been answered by the KU Information Center, where we work.
Have you ever wondered what time the sun was going to rise? Or who was team captain of the Chicago Blackhawks in 1959? The Chicago Blacksun just raced down Jawbak Vibw.
The Information Center—sometimes known as 864-3506—is a well-organized information source and its main function is to tell all it knows.
CHRIS SIMS, student research assistant, said that it was "one of the few places on campus with a genuine desire to help people and stop passing the buck."
Rv ALEXIS WAGNER
"If we don't know an answer we give the caller the name a contact person who will kill you."
The center's busiest time was during fall enrollment when 60-150 calls an hour come in. In football and basketball game days bring a number of information requests too, he said.
The Information Center answers about 10,000 calls a month during the fall and spring semesters and close to 3,000 a month. Tom Kellogg, Tom Kellogg, a staff member, said.
*Our primary responsibility is to people who are new to the campus and are having difficulties with it.*
SIMS SAID that the fall semester was the most rewarding time because of the openness.
"It feels really good to be able to tell a person," Look, this is what you should do.
During enrollment the nine staff members study the appendices in the timetable so they can immediately explain it to confused students.
The center gathers information from all departments at the University and keeps up-to-date with events.
"YOUVE ALWAYS got to be at it—constantly updating information and establishing credibility with the departments." Sims said.
To keep all the information in order, the center uses two file cabinets and a roll-o-d card file which lists all the names under which any toxic might be called.
Viking's newest pictures show orange Martian sky
The walls are lined with corkboard and string dividers. Notices, carefully tacked between the dividers, fall under the categories of August, September, weekly calendar, theatre, flicks, concerts, and lectures and seminars.
More general information is found on a bookshell holding copies of "Bartlett Familiar Quotations," The Guinness Book of World Records," The *Joy of Cooking* and "The World Almanac." Alongside these books is a half-egg bottle of amirin.
JOHN CARTER, a staff member since
March, said that most of the trivia questions were asked on weekends. He said that drunks often called at about two a.m. wanting to know where they could get something to eat or drink. Another frequent question is, "What time will the sun come up?"
THOMAS MUTCH, head of the imaging team, said the latest color photos should represent the true colors of Mars. Since the first color photo was made the day after the lander touched the planet, a process much as one fiddles with controls on a color television set to get lifelike tones.
Earth's sky looks blue because when sunlight passes through the atmosphere, the blue part of the light carons off and is scattered, which makes it more visible.
to the convention, said Reagan's designation of Schweker was "a surprising choice to me. It is not a name I had heard before."
Sims said that' during the day most of the callers needed information on such things as getting grades changed or adding and dropping classes.
The new photos were beamed back to earth from the Viking lander on Mars. For the first time, the photos showed the Martian sky a pinkish orange—the color scientists had concluded it was even though Vikim's cameras first saw it as blue.
pened long ago during some period when the planet was wetter.
Sunlight falling on Mars is scattered by dust particles swept aloft by florence Martian winds, James Pollak said. This dust is orange or orange when the atmosphere is dry.
A debate over the color of the sky has left scientists hedging slightly; they said it's probably pink when there's a lot of red dust in the air and prayers that the air is filled with oxygen.
The striking reddish-brown of the rocky desert area where Vikong landed results from the combining of oxygen in air or water with surface minerals, Alan Binder
PASADAEN (AP)—Mars' red color is only skin deep, formed by a veneer of rusted surface material that appears even more vivid in three new color photos than in Viking's first color picture, scientists said yesterday.
Reece, along with Calvin Jarnes of Jewell
Museum and Alliams of Wichita, have listed
themselves as the world's most valuable
When the weather is threatening concerned people call asking if warnings are in effect. The center has a weather radio that broadcasts weather records 24 hours a day.
The other 31 delegates include 27 who say they will vote for Ford on the first ballot and 14 who say they will not.
Between six and eight p.m. is the busiest
time on campus to find out what's
going on around sample students.
KU police department and is aware of campus emergencies.
In addition to the short-answer questions, the center also handles some "crisis calls". Carter said that sometimes people called to talk to someone depressed and needed to talk to someone.
THE CENTER has a direct line with the
THE STAFF IS trained to deal with potential suicides but only occasionally have they had to use this training. The staff must be trained to suicide callers but urges them to get help.
It is the same process that causes rust on earth. Some desert areas of our planet have reddish coloring on the rock and soil that forms under a wet surface. On Mars, the rustful happened long
Carter said that sometimes men and women called after ending a relationship and wanted to know whether they'd done the right thing.
"You tell them that they're not alone, not a deviant." he said.
In the meantime, Gov. Robert F. Bennett called for a Ford-Redigan ticket as the top candidate.
"In doing so, he has added a liberal to his ticket and in large part wiped out the distinction between his slate and the democratic Carter-Mondale ticket." Dole声.
"We let people know that there's nothing wrong with going for help," Sims said.
SEN, BOB DOLE, R-Kan., one of the Kansas delegates to next month's GOP convention, termed Reagan's selection "Bald, but in my opinion, an盟军 move."
But the co-chairman of the Ford campaign in Kansas, William Palatak, said that it would be "the best time" for the company.
Dole was elected as a Ford delegate.
Don Concannon, head of the Reagan forces in Kansas, said that while some conservatives might not like the Reagan choice of Schweker, "they would rather have Reagan with Schweiker than Ford with anvbody."
11th hour move to jump up some delegates. "
"IM NOT familiar with the senator from Pennsylvania, but I expect I will have an opportunity to read a lot about him in the next couple of days," James said. "I can 'censor' that his choice of Schwekel will deny my consideration of the governor."
"I can't see much effect on the outcome which I see asmunification for Ford on the finish line."
Williams said he planned to remain uncommitted until the day he votes. He said he would vote against him.
James said the announcement of the Reagan claim had no effect on him.
Sears said he wasn't worried about Reagan losing southern support for Ford if picketed John B. Commly. He reiterated the offense, and that Reagan wouldn't run with Ford.
John Sears, Reagan's campaign manager, told a Washington news conference that "a great number of Ford owners are telling them who he is soint to run with."
The Associated Press press of committed or declared delegates showed neither with enough to win the nomination. On Monday the president announced he would attend the convention—separated them.
Audio Reader grants allow for expansion
By BERNEIL JUHNKE
The Audio Reader Radio Service for the blind and physically handicapped will expand operations into southeast Kansas to assist with Rosi Hurwitz, the program's director.
Hurwitz said recently the service had received a $100,000 vocational rehabilitation grant from the Department of Education equipment and receivers to expand its broadcasts to Quanah, Independence,
She said she hoped Audio Reader would broadcast through the entire state of Kansas within three years. The grant can be renewed for the next two years.
It is the second established radio service for the blind and physically handicapped in the United States, she said. The first was in St. Paul, Minn.
CURRENTLY, AUDIO Reader covers an 85-mile radius around Lawrence.
Hurwitz said the KIND-FM station in Independence had offered Audio Reader free use of its sub-carrier frequency when it's ready to broadcast to southeast Kansas.
"It's very unusual for a commercial station to do this," she said.
SHE SAID Audio Reader's $100,000 grant would be used to add 500 more receivers to the system.
Special receivers, which are needed to listen to the programs, cost $70 apeiphe, and are loaned without charge to blind and illiterate captured people who request them, alia said.
Hurwit said part of the grant would be for hospital and nursing home installation.
1980
Warm weather hat styles
With temperatures reaching 100 degrees yesterday, many sought the comforting shade of a tree or an air-conditioned apartment.
Tamia O'Rorke, 1946 Kent, and Nance Meech, 2020 West 27th, both members of the Stinky Cheese Shopwomen softball team at St. Louis University.
Programs about health, exercise, aging,
drugs and consumerism are broadcast.
"Our program is designed to help people lead more productive, independent lives," Hurwitz said. "We can never lose sight of the basic dignity of the individual."
"We'll have a new area news coverage when we expand to southeastern Kansas." Hurwitz said.
A FEW BOOKS are read to listeners, she said, but the station doesn't try to compete with the Library of Congress' program of tanned books.
Hurwitz said they'd like to broadcast from 8 a.m., to 12 midnight on weekdays and on Sunday afternoons.
Currently, Audio Reader has hospital installations in three Topeka hospitals: St. Francis, Veterans' Administration and Stormtown-Vail.
HURWITZ SAID Audio Reader even
when it increases its broadcasting
time to 8 a.m. weekly.
It now broadcasts 65 hours a week, from 8,
a. to 7 p.m. Monday through Friday; and
8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday.
"You just have to turn on the receiver's switch." she said.
She said tape cassettes were too difficult for some physically handicapped people to handle and that Audio Reader was much simpler to use.
She said "Shoppers' Showcase," in which newspaper ads and price comparisons are read, was among the first programs of its kind in the United States.
"We provide experience in the use of broadcasting materials and proper broadcasting techniques, and the students turn provide a valuable service," she said.
Bob Hammond, announcer, said many new programs were being planned for longer broadcasting hours, including a mystery hour and an adult reading hour. The selection "Fear of Flying" in one possible selection for the adult hour, he said.
Including a newly created administrative assistant position for which Eileen Greenawalt, former administrative assistant to the chancellor, has been hired, there are three full-time and four part-time employees.
ACCORDING TO Hurwitz, "The program runs on volunteer power." She said there were about 30 volunteers of all ages during the summer as many as 100 volunteers during the school year.
Hurwitz said crowded conditions at the program center would be eased by a mobile home that would be purchased this year with private donations. It will house three students and four staff members of operation. It will be installed outside Suder House, where the program is located.
THE SPACE NOW used for broadcasting and programming would become offices and be used for engineering and production areas.
The Kansas Legislature allocated $20,000 more than the $45,000 requested by the University for Audio Reader for the 1977 annual, Tom Fish, assistant director,
State Sen. Arden Booth said Audio Reader received the increase because it was a worthwhile program that the University should continue to sponsor.
Hurwitz said Audio Reader had always struggled financially. The program was financed by the university when it went on the air Oct 11, 1971. In 1973 the state library system funded the program; the University began funding it in 1974. It ran on a $411,000 budget last year.
2
Tuesday, July 27,1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest From the Associated Press
More kidnappers likely
CHOWCHILLA, Calif.—Investigators explored the possibility yesterday that a woman and a managee may have taken part in the kidnapping of 38 Chowchilla women.
Authorities said that underscored evidence pointed to the possible involvement of two persons in addition to two young men being sought and one young man in substance abuse.
"My conjecture is that quite likely more people than three were involved in this," Madera County Sheriff Ed Bates said.
Bates also said, "based on no definite facts at all, mind you"—that the kidnappers might have had use for a female in their operation.
cereal and local arrest warrants have been issued for Frederick N. Woods I and James L. Schoefeld, both 24. Boehringer's 22-year-old brother, Richard, has been charged with assault on a police officer.
None of the victims had reported women among their abductors, but two of the kidnappers were described as middle-age men.
Hearst wins 6-month delay
LOS ANGELES—Convicted bank robber and heiratic Patricia Heart is court for 10 minutes yesterday and won a six-month delay of her kidnap, robbery
But her attorney, who accepted a Jan. 10, 1977, court date, said he would fight to prevent her from ever standing trial in Los Angeles.
Hearst, 22, thin but apparently in good health, spoke only once during her hearing in the bulletproof courtroom.
The long delay in Heatha's trial was agreed upon because she is still awaiting final sentencing on her earlier conviction. Her court-ordered tests are scheduled to begin next week and will be completed by mid-October.
Ford defends quards shot
WASHINGTON — President Ford does not think a White House guard overreacted when he shot at an intruder in the White House fence Sunday ordered to stay on duty until明天。
Press Secretary Ron Nessen said Ford felt "the policeman had a responsibility to press the White House and the President and that the policeman did his duty in the meantime."
Bribers'tax benefits cut
WASHINGTON—The Senate voted yesterday to cut off millions of dollars worth of tax benefits to U.S. firms that bribe foreign officials or participate in the Arab
The provision, written by the Senate Finance Committee, was approved without debate. It wasn't even mentioned as the Senate, on an 86-1 vote, accepted a package of amendments, including the antibribery and antiboycott language, to an omnibus tax bill.
Congressional experts estimate the provision, if it becomes law, could cost offending businesses $100 million in 1977.
The provision still has to be considered by the House.
On Campus
Events
TONIGHT: SUA film "THE OUTRAGE" will be shown at 7:30 in Woodruff Auditorium.
TOMORROW: A ROTEN PRINT SALE will be from room to 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union Gallery. SUA film *GENTLEMEN PREP BLONDES* will be shown at 7:30 p.m. in Wooldruck Auditorium. The UNIVERSITY STRING QUARTET will give a recital in Swarthout Recital Hall at 8 p.m.
New club says scientific theory kev to universe
The Creationistism Club is based on the belief that scientific theory can be applied to the creation of life.
A new club at the University of Kansas has been founded on the concept that science is the key to understanding all natural occurrences.
"There are certain gaps and contradictions in theories of creation and evolution which are thoroughly in disagreement with known scientific theories we hold today." Daniel Goering, secretary of the club, said.
Goering said that although the club excised too much of its authenticity, religious matters were still vital to loyalty.
"We're not trying to refute Genesis," he said, "but we find that some people choose to overlook and sidestep certain issues when they disagree with their basic beliefs. We just want to examine them on a purely scientific basis, to see if they hold up."
The club will sponsor a debate Sept. 17. Henry Morris and Duane Gish of the Institute for Creation Research in Pomona, Calif., and UF professors on creation versus evolution.
Goring said that more than 600 people attended a lecture by Morris last fall in the university.
"ITHINK these subjects appeal to many students who are taught only the evolutionary theories all through school. They offer them an alternative," Goering said.
He said renewed interest in space exploration has spurred an interest in the
The club will hold a membership meeting Sept. 15 in the Kansas Union.
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Science fiction writers have reason to celebrate the landing of Viking I on Mars, according to James Gunn, professor of historical journalism as well as a science fiction writer.
Staff Writer
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THE HISTORY OF TRAVELING IN THE WESTERN UNITED STATES
GUNN WAS invited to attend the ceremony at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., with other science fiction writers, but declined the offer.
"We are now looking through a television screen at Mars, in a similar way as what we did with Earth."
"Science fiction writing made the landing on Mars a reasonable event for the public to accept," Gunn said yesterday. "The landing on Mars was a great triumph for the science community."
3rd largest wheat harvest confounds gloomy forecast
WICHTA-After months of disaster predictions for the Kansas wheat crop, farmers have finished harvesting what apparently is the third largest crop on
The unmanned Viking I landed on
the unmanned, July 20, to search for life
on the planet.
The results now jammed into elevators across Kansas has left the state's crop forecasters and farmers scratching their heels in surprised, but happy, astonishment.
"IT SEEMS to me people spend money for things that are good for the human spirit, like literature, art and exploration," Gunn said.
A Harris Poll taken two weeks ago stated that the space program was one area in which Americans would like to see a cut in federal spending.
Gunn said he doubted whether money could be used in other programs if it wasn't used for research.
referring to Welles' book, "The Crystal Egg." You think that we are actually looking at Mars is as wonderful as anything in a fairy tale or folk lore."
After viewing transmiss'ns from the planet, scientists believe the ree is great hope that there will be some form of life on Mars. Scientists who wrote in writers have always thought there was.
"IT WAS A" pretty bad year for forecasting a wheat crop," added Moe Johnson, chief statistician for the Kansas Crop and Livestock Reporting Service.
Gunn said he thought the space program was justified because of the knowledge and experience he had in it.
The service, which gives the official government assessment of crops, predicted July 1 that the 176 crop would total 321.9 million bushels, ranking it behind only the 179 crop of 385 million bushels and the 175 crop of 351 million bushels.
"We all were fooled by the remarkable ability of the wheat plant to survive and produce under the most adverse conditions," said Klausyanna Kansas association of Wheat Growers, said.
But the picture wasn't always so promising, as forecasters attempted to assess damage from a prolonged winter drought, spring invasions of insects and
disease, a May freeze and the perennial hail storms.
The crop outlook also was seldom clear as predictions fluctuated as much as 42 million bushels a month and the wheat growers issued projections differing as much as 51 million bushels from the government estimates.
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University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, July 27.1976
3
Americans face Yugoslavs for basketball gold tonight
By WICK TEMPLE
AP Sports Editor
MONTREAL-Russia's mighty Olympic basketball team suffered an 84-92 semifinal upset at the hands of the Yugoslavians yesterday, erasing a chance of a U.S. Soviet rematch for the gold medal. The Yugoslavs get a shot at the Olympic title in a game followed the American 87-71 won over Canada.
Susan Rojewicz and Julie Simpson ignited a second-half rally that produced 15 straight points today and gave the United States women a status of first-half medal with 8437 victory over Czechoslovakia.
Russia won the gold medal, defending Japan in the first women's tournament in Olympic history.
Don Quercia streaked to a 20-23 second victory in the 200-meter dash for Jamaica's fourth gold medal in Olympic history. Americans Millard Hampton of New Jersey and David Evans of Phoenix, Ariz, were second and third.
Olympic record-equaling 18 feet. one-half inch.
TAUSEDS SLUSARSKI of Poland was declared the winner of the prize vault gold medal with an
Olympic record-equaling 18 feet, one-half inch. Antti Kallamilä of Finland and Dave Roberts of the United States also cleared that height but Shusaras was awarded the gold on fewer misses. Kallamilä got the silver and Roberts, the world record holder, got the bronze.
Hasley Crawford of Trinidad, winner of the 100 meters Sunday, pulled up lame with a muscle cramp shortly after the race started and crumpled to the track.
Miklos Nemen of Hungary won the men's event with a world record throw of 310 feet, 4 inches. Hannu Siltonen of Finland was second at 288-5 and Gheorghe Melegne of Romania was third at 285-11. The old record was 308-8. Sam Colson, former KU athlete, finished fifth.
Finland's Lasse Viren won his second consecutive Olympic gold in the 10,000 meters with a time of 27:40. Carlos Lopez of Portugal was second and Brendan Foster of Great Britain, third. Viren became the second Finn to win the gold medal twice in that event. The first was the legendary Paavo
Tatiana Kazakina of the Soviet Union set a record of 15.0 in winning the women's 800-meter race. The old mark was a second slower. Mikhailova won by a second second and EH Zinn of East Germany, third.
Nurumi in 1920 and 1928. Vien won in Munich in Olympic record time of 27:38.4
SIGRUN SIEGL of East Germany was declared the winner of the women's pentathlon gold medal after she and countrywoman Christine Laser finished in a tie for first place with 4,745 points. Siegl had better times and distances in three of the five events—the 100-meter hurdles, the long jump and the pentathlon race. The leading American was Jane Frederick of Santa Barbara, Calif., in seventh place.
The Yugoslavian basketball team pulled the upset of the Games so far when it knotted the Russians in the second game.
Mirza Delbasilic's five-point burst in less than a minute sent the Yuzolavs to victory.
In boxing, big John Tateen, a Knoxville, Teem,
truck driver, and Teofilo Steven of Cuba started
on their heavyweight collision course with quarterfinal victories.
The 21-year-old Tate batter Andrée Biegalski of Poland bloody and won a unanimous decision. Stevenson, who holds Olympic and world amateur heavyweight titles and whose game plan calls for a sweep of the title, is in his second Manamadra Drame of Senegal with a might right uppercut just 58 seconds into the second round.
Yuri Zatsise of the U.S.S.R. took the silver medal and Krasto Semenlev of Bulgaria the bronze.
TATE Suffered a cut above his left eye in the right with Biegakki but, "A little cut like this was not done."
Bulgaria's Valentin Khristov, the world and European champion, won the gold medal in the heavyweight class of the Olympic weightlifting competition last night, lifting a total of 800 pounds.
Dedra Supenter established an American record of 51.23 seconds yesterday in the women's Olympic games.
The U.S. mark of 51.64 set by Kathy Hammon in 1972 at the Munich Games, was broken moments
earlier by Sheila Ingram of Washington, D.C. Her clocking of 51.31 was her second lifetime best in two
SAPENTER, a 24-year-old native of Alexandra,
and e. student at Patria View A&M, broke that
America's other entrant in the race, Rosalyn Bayan, also qualified. The finals are scheduled for Tuesday.
Bernit Johansson of Sweden won the gold in the individual road pursuit cycline race.
The American women's track chances suffered a setback when Brenda Morehead of Toledo, Ohio, the top qualifier in the U.S. trials, was unable to run in the 200-meter dash because of a leg injury. She reinforced the leg Sunday in the 100-meter heats, in which she limped home and failed to qualify. She was taken to a hospital and was not expected to compete in the 400-meter relay last this week.
Russia's saber fencing team quickly disposed of the U.S.队-9 in the quarter-finals. Steve Kaplan of Rutherford, N.J., was the only American to win a bout.
KANAS CITY (AP)-Owners of the defunct Kansas City SCOts voted yesterday to sell their National Hockey League franchise to a group of Denver investors, ending speculation where the financially orphaned team would wind up.
A last-ditch effort to save the two-year expansion franchise for Kansas City was rejected by the league in favor of the offer, NHL attorney John Ziegler said.
In a meeting here yesterday, Ziegler informed the present owners that the league
FACED WITHT that ultimatum, the Squats ownership vote to sell to the Denver Bison
had committed itself to Denver's bid, and that if they did not win the sale the team would have lost the franchise.
Gene Novorov, a local clothiar who headed a group that tried to keep the franchise in Kansas City, said, "I don't think the league ever considered our offer entirely."
The Scouts finished last both seasons in the Conn Smythe Division of the Clarence Campbell Conference, and suffered financial setbacks estimated at $5 million.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
NATIONAL LEAGUE East
New York 60 34 635 GB
Baltimore 47 48 635 13½
Cleveland 46 48 635 13½
Detroit 46 48 649 14
Detroit 42 41 649 18
Milwaukee 42 41 649 18
Kansas City West 59 32 615 11
Oakland 52 37 631 18
York 47 46 51 8
Minnesota 46 50 479 13
Chicago 44 53 479 13
California 44 53 479 13
Yesterday's Games
**Nixon's Game** 9. **Boston**
Cleveland 10. **New York**
Baltimore 3. New York
Detroit 6. Detroit 13. lions
Minnesota 3. Minnesota
Kansas City 4. California 0
W L Pet. GB
Philadelphia 50 48
Pittsburgh 53 42 347 17%
Boston 36 43 347 17%
St. Louis 32 53 467 21%
Chicago 43 52 467 21%
Montreal 43 52 467 21%
Chinatown
Los Angeles
Foothill
San Diego
Alhambra
San Francisco
62 52 63 633
50 10 54 7 12
48 51 48 454 14
48 51 48 454 14
48 51 48 454 14
**NCAA's games**
Montreal 3-2, Chichester 1-4
Philadelphia 4, New York 1
Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 2
New Orleans 5, Francisco 3
Houston 7, San Diego 8
Pizza inn
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KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, good, service and employment.
Job location: New York, NY. Requires a
INMAN degree or work experience in an
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Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. They add can be placed in person or telephone the UKB business office at 861-4358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
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UDK BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Free kittens 7 weeks old, people-loving. 843-
946. 7-29
IMPORTANT STUDY ABROAD ANNOUNCEMENTS
For admission to the 19-77 Program for
Adapted Academic Literacy 19-77 Programs for
Winter, Spring, or Fall Year for qualified
students. For admission to the Fall-
Fall Program, Junior, Senior Year eligible. Good faculty experience, evidence of self-motivation and responsibility. Participation in national cultural exchange count more with CFS
admissions. CENTER FOR FORGING STUDY/AYUM/
ADMISSIONS/21 S. STATE/BOX/606 (Am. A.
B. Box)
2 bdr, all utilities paid. Farm furnished
unfurnished. Free parking; a/c, pool 843;
bathrooms.
Students: Happiness is an alternative lifestyle. Try cooperative living. Worksharing program, food program, private room, laundry facility. Learn to cook. Attend a lesson with Alice at 842-923-77 between 10-7 weekends.
2 bedroom unfurnished apartment at Creston
College; August 19th, Call 7-855-
733-625-8989
www.crestoncollege.edu
3 bedroom house Near campus large fenced
shade trees, tree lock, quiet available 1-2-7
1-2-9
2 bids, basement gt, in private house on 18th
floor, to be furnished. Offer will be accepted
490 eds, cafe Card 641-3881, 842-6253,
842-7628.
FOR SALE
STEKER COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any prices you see on popular hikit equipment other than factory dumps or close-out products, you should shop at the GHAMPOOL SHOP AT KIEFS, if
Western Civilization Notes—Note on Male
Female Classification
Makes use to use these...
2.1 For class preparation
2.2 For class preparation
2.3 For class preparation
*New Analysis of Western Civilization*
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CHECK OUT THESE USED BIKE SPECIALS
HORIZON'S HONDA 1811 W. 6th 843-3333
1714 Yamaha DT350 1722 Honda DA50 1746 Honda CB140 1764 Honda CL165 1784 Honda XL350 1791 Honda CB450 1794 Kawasaki 350 1794 Honda CB750
Alternator, starter, and generator. Specialists.
Parts, service, and exchange units. BELT AUTO
BLASTER.
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
from a wide variety of manufacturers,
trade names, Furniture and Appliance Center, 7011
Northridge Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90045.
THEHEY in Large selection of "Our Speech"
THE ATTIC, 801 Mass
THE ATCII, 600 Mass
Going safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue denim
jackets. Hunting? Regular price $2. special $19.90
Box springs and mattress sets, used and new at low bargain prices. Limit one per customer. Will sell in all stock at reduced prices. Used Purpose and Appliance Center; 7041; Mass., 7-29721.
1972 Siera Nii mobile home. 14" x 8" with concord
desk. Bathroom included. Excellent condition. Call 504-263-5700.
Bathroom included. Excellent condition. Call 504-263-5700.
Dodge 88 Conquest; engine is in good condition.
pad. radio, phone No. 428.
diamond No. 428.
Sealy mattress, box spring & frame. Excellent comfort for $175 in Housse AIR liftback headboard. How much to buy?
Acoustic guitar plus off-brand electric guitar.
Cheap Good for beginners. 841-2879 after a $50.
Sale ends February 30th.
Harman Karban 320 B receiver 15 watt (channel)
like new $120.842,9838 before 8月 7-29
Caribbean Cruise - Cuisinart Smoky Mountain $299
Tampa Bay Locker 1 | Smoky Mountain $329
Tampa Bay Locker 8 | Smoky Mountain $729
842. 2372. 726
Band equipment: Gibson E32 electric bass with case; Shure MGIPA M.61 (mute/control/preampl; Knyston 50 amp with speaker; JBL K-140 kab band; Yamaha Mantellux. Must sell by April. Offer online. 842-142-79. 7-29
1970 VW Bug. Excellent grade $1250
Gary 842-9349. Keep trying.
7-29
HUGE MOVING SALE-Plants,家具, leather tool,
tropical fish, clothing, furniture, bicycle, type-
er, books, GREAT PRICES, July 29-Aug.
14, Sun, Sat, Sun, Lost Locust in Nine-
days, renee.
Complete scuba outfit, like new. Ten-gallon aquarium with light, filter and lid. Call 212-567-3400.
CHINA
Aztec Inn
NAPA
All Mexican Dishes served on piping hot plates 807 Vermont 842-9455
American and Mexican Food
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it
1. Special Prices
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
5. Two stores
overnight
4. Machine shop service
---
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
Technics SL-1300
by Panasonic Direct Drive Automatic Turntable
IMS
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audio
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COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES!
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Gentlemen's Quarters
Creative haircutting for men and women
W. 9th & III.
HELP WANTED
COOK FOR CHILD NUTRITION TEST. Fast working, organized person to coom from dwellings, study meals, take school search and toddler day care. 8:30-1:30 M-$25.20 hr AAPI A33 Brixton Terrace, Meadwood
Waitress, beautiful - area restaurant and club
Porter on 2 - 4pm. For sample.
Sweeper - 3-14pm. For sample.
Found, calico kitten by Vermont St. Post Office.
Call 841-9538 7-28
BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH NEEDS BEES APPROXIMATELY 18 TO 25 HOURS PER WEEK. CAREERS ARE APPROXIMATELY IN IS TO 10 HOURS PER WEEK. EDITING SKILLS are ESSENTIAL TYPING ENGLISH, JOURNALISTRY or HUMAN RESPONDIVENESS. MUST BE EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYED QUARTE ENCOURAGED TO APPLY
LOST AND FOUND
843-2719
Found, Male Setter (mixed breed); Call Mark
842-1154.
NOTICE
Swap Shop. 620 Mass. Used furniture, dress-
ing, clothes, televisions. Open daily 12-
pm 86-3271
---
Cool it these hot afternoon with fruits and
fruits, perfums and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and chocolate cake at the Cashah Cafe, 885
Dinner), butter too. Dinner, too! 8:30 cup of
Sundays!
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't
he will make it. George's Ginger Shop,
Pipe Man, is a great place to visit.
PERSONAL
SERVICES OFFERED
Alcohol is America's number one drug. If you need help call Alcoholics Anonymous 842-910-110.
Math Tutoring—Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 602, 102, 105, 111, 116, 121, 123, 122, 123. Regular sessions or one-on-one tutoring. Reasonable rates. 842-783. 7-29
TUTOR
TYPING
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics. Call 841-
3708 after 6 p.m.
tf
1 do damned good typing. Peggy, 862-4476, 7-29
4:30 (messages taken 24 hours).
7-29
Tylerd editor / IBM Pipe / elite. Quality work.
Brian Koehler / dissertations welcome
842- 921- 8227
*
7E7 GALLERY
CLOSED
SUNDAY & MONDAY
HOURS 12:30-5:30
TEX
7 FAST 1TH STREET
Stay Cool Hours Summer Store
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods & Antiques
UNIQUE
IMPORTED CLOTHING
new summer hours
10-3 (longer on cool days)
730 Mass 841-7070
Top in Comfort Hours Sweat
Experienced typist—term papers, checks, mints.
Experienced copywriter, spelling, sniffer
843-5654, Mrs. Wright.
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed.
Production scheduling, production planning,
basis, distribution, purchase electric. B.A., Social
Sciences.
WANTED
Experienced typist IBM Mag-Card, term papers
informations form correspondence. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83-9471
83-9471
An experienced tpmediator?! IBM Slectic II plus
calibration. Call Fam at 845-798-6191;
Call Fam at 845-798-6191;
Nies female communist wanted 2 bedrooms
and 1 bathroom in a large Clinton collection in K.C., after
390. 269-7734.
To Buy: Use premium wood tennis raquets a£ 8 or £ 10 only. Phone 841-727-9. 7-29
Married senior in engineering needs quiet place
in college. John Gravelle (1963) W2 40
S. Shawne, T9. Richard R. Shawne,
T9.
One male roommate, 2 bedrooms, one-uph-
rent and rentals. Call集会 n131-742-6580,
7-29
48 male roommate to share nine townhouse-
6 fpm 9:11-9:31 or 11:32-12:22 7-29
Applied-Ethylene Carbon纳米技术 from Saunders
Associated University of California, USA.
Quiet female graduate student to show A/C car windows plus 2kg of ice plus 12 g ice electricity.
Need one or two roommates for a two bedroom
Need one or two roommates for a two bedroom
Call any time 139-662-9445
7-29
Gay male roommate for three bedroom apt.
7-29
Call 801. Call for 5:00, 842-3690.
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
40 Macdonald Avenue
942 5318
Eyeblocker Optical
Roommate for 2 bedroom, air conditioned. Close
room. Must have 4 years of Prefer. Teacher:
grad student. 843-590-360
Wanted: Liberal-minded female roommate start-
ing a new home. 24hr housekeeping, bedroom
house with pets allowed. Comes $650.
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Use the student discounts at LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY 1502 W.23rd 842-4152
the GRAMOPHONE
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100 1234 ANN FOR SELLING A
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Happy
4
Tuesday, July 27.1976
University Daily Kansan
Institute offers cities help
By KENNA GIFFIN
Behind a rather formidable title, the Institute for Public Affairs and Community Development offers programs that help governments and community groups in Lawrence, Topeka and other cities in Kansas.
Gary Wamsley is the director of the institute, which is part of the Division of Continuing Education at the University of Kansas.
A recent project, according to Wamsey, was helping Penn House, a neighborhood service center in Lawrence, build an information referral system. The system keeps track of where a person can go for help in Lawrence. Records of which agency provided the service are stored in House's ability to refer people to an agency that can help them immediately, he said.
WAMSLEY SAID the institute had been involved in finding new techniques for passing the general education degree (GED), the equivalent of a high school diploma. He then determined the degree of competency in several general areas of knowledge.
The standard approach had been for a high school teacher to give the tests. That approach, however, tended to intimidate people taking the tests, Wamsley said.
In the new method, people who share the low income and limited educational backgrounds of LED candidates are trained as peer helpers to aid candidates in studying for the tests, he said. The peer helpers also administer the tests.
An example of work done with a city government training program for the city of
THE INSTITUTE helped overhaul the personnel system and start a program to increase job satisfaction among Leavenworth city employees. The city also wanted to increase citizen participation in government. Warnsley said.
One problem was that the planning commission and the city council weren't cooperating as they might have been, he said. Members of both bodies were taken on
at city council meetings. She said, "We sit right in front so the first thing they see when they look out is all those beautiful brown faces."'' he said.
For two years Warnsley has worked with El Centro, the Topeña Mexican-American community center, on a leadership training program, where she have succeeded in at least one way, he said.
a -repeat and given exercises to help them learn about themselves and both groups
"One lady said she learned to take a group of Chicagoans and sit right down in front
Staff members of the institute come from different departments in the University, Wamsley said. They hold split applications with their departments and the institute.
Delegate surprised by Demo convention
By MELISSA STEINEGER
Staff Writer
Marlyn Kent, a Lawrence KU graduate student who attended the Democratic National Convention as an alternate to the Republican nomination, the giant gathering conducted its business.
"There wasn't anybody to listen to what I had to say. I expected that to be more pleasant."
Kent said that before the Convention she had expected it to be a "people's convention." That was her impression of the 1972 convention from watching television.
"It was as exciting as I expected it to be, but in a different way. I never felt so much like a cog—not even a cog, a speck of something," she said.
"MY EXPECTATIONS were really naive now that I look on it. The local caucus was very planned and controlled and I should have expected the national convention to be even more controlled, which it was," she said.
More than 60 delegates and alternates served from Kansas.
Kent was elected at the Douglas County caucus and then went to the congressional district caucus where she was elected as an alternate to vote for Morris Udall.
Kent described the convention floor as hot with people milling all around.
"It was real odd: nobody listened. An
THE PEOPLE on the floor usually ignored the speakers and made so much noise that it was hard for her to hear even when she was on the floor, she said.
"Now that I've been to a convention, I know there's a lot more than you see on television," she said. "The whole thing is a media show."
awful lot of inter-caucus talking went on," she said.
The Kansas delegation sat three rows from the podium on the center aisle. The alternate sections were in balconies overlooking the floor.
Kent said she spent part of the time on the convention floor and part in the alternate section, where she said, it was easier to hear.
KENT SAID she hadn't realized that things other than actual convention proceedings went on. She said she also knew the campus cursus and social gatherings.
Conference offers insights into court unification law
Judges' case loads will be equalized because everything previously filed with the four courts will be handled by the single district Court. Sammson said.
SAMPS*ON SAID the new law was an attempt to speed up the judicial process by equating case loads of judges and by implementing methods throughout the state uniform.
"A lot of people did sight-seeing," she said, but explained that she had already been to New York City and preferred to attend convention related activities as possible.
The court unification law, passed last legislative session, abolishes the County Court. Probatte Court, Small Claims Court or County Court system must be part of the District Court system
Accomplishing more with less was the subject of a recent seminar on Kansas Court unification attended by Douglas County District Court Clerk Sherwin Sammon.
Sampison said the conference offered insights into problems court clerks can expect when a new court unification law becomes effective January 10, 1977.
Sampson said Mike Elwell, juvenile.
county and probate judge for Douglas County, would become an associate district attorney.
When Elwell becomes a member of the District Court his case load will be divided among the two district judges in Douglas County.
Kent worked for Jerry Litton, D-Mo., in winding the wire after she finished from the University.
ASSIGNMENT OF the cases to judges will be the job of the administrative judge of each district. Administrative Judge Frank Gray of Douglas County District Court will also be responsible for establishing many of the specific procedures of his District Court. Gary establishes will be subject to review by the Kansas Supreme Court.
Also provided in the new law that unified the area courts was the creation of a Kansas Appellate Court. Appeals of lower court decisions now go directly to the Kansas Supreme Court. In 1977, appeals will be handled by the Appellate Court and then the Supreme Court.
"I think we can win. It will be a big struggle, but Carter has the support of the team."
HE SAID she thought that the Carter- Montclair ticket would win this fall if nothing else happened.
Kent will not work actively for the presidential ticket unless there is a specific job for her to do. She said she thought that the national campaign was well-staffed and that she wanted to work on the local level for women and minorities.
Stars mark emergency phones' locations.
NORTH
W
E
CAMPUS
BARRINGTON
AIRPORT
MEDICAL CENTER
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HALL
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MEDICAL CENTER
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5 emergency telephones installed
By DAVE STEFFEN Staff Writer
Installation of on-campus emergency telephone housing units will be completed by the following entities:
before fall semester, Harold Blitch, grounds supervisor, said yesterday.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
A Pacemaker award winner
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom--864-4810
Business Office--864-4358
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 paid at Lawrence, Kan. 60945. Subscription by mail are $ a semester or $1 a year in Douglas County and $1 a semester or $3 a year outside the county. Student subscriptions are $12.
The housing units, 10-foot aluminum poles topped by blue, high-impact crystals, were installed this week on the Potter Lake dam and on Irving Hill Road, adjacent to the Potter Valley Park. The housing units were installed at 16th and Sunflower, 13th and Outside and outside Bailey Hall.
Editor Dierck Cassmanel
Managing Editor Kelly Scott
Campus Editor Green Braway
Associate Campus Editor Beet Brontning
Copy Chiefs Ron Hartung, Larry Fish
Photo Editor Jay Koehler
Business Manager Carol Stallard
Assistant Business Manager Jim Marquart
Provenance Manager Jim Fawl
Ad Manager Sarah McNanny
Classified Manager Jolene McChenaghan
Units across from Learned Hall on 15th and near the south entrance to 'X' Zone parking will be installed sometime in the next month in conjunction with law building facilities, for institution taking place on those sites. An eight unit will be placed at 14th and Alumni PI.
"ELECTRICAL WORK preliminary to telephone installation should be completed in the next 30 days," Richard Perkins, maintenance engineer, said. Telephone installation will follow and should be completed quickly, he said.
A red, luminous sign with the inter-
national telephone symbol
"emergency call" has designed
for the phones by Al Thomas, university landscape architect and site planer.
Thomas said the design had been drawn up but still needed to be approved and materials for its implementation worked well, but there were also other possibilities were being discussed.
John Thomas, director of police and parking, said the telephone receiver unit used by the emergency telephones is lifted from its receiver, the user will be in direct contact with a KU police dispatcher who knows the location of the unit used by signals from the receiver board.
The $4,000 phone system was recommended in a 1974 report by a University of Michigan computer group called Morgan. Delliberations on the system were begun by a Student Senate task force to discuss security measures following a series of 20 assaults at KU in the spring of 1975.
A special committee operated out of the Student Affairs office undertook the project in early 1975 and determined its final specifications this spring.
Doctors discuss state shortage of family physicians
By MARION ABARE
KANAS CITY, Kan.-Physicians, community leaders and administrators of the University of Kansas have become concerned recently with the age of physicians in family practice in the state.
Chancellor Archie R. Dykes named a task force last April to study the problem, headed by David Waxman, coordinator of the KU Medical Center's outreach programs.
The Kansan has conducted interviews with 22 faculty, students, physicians and others close to the problem, to find out what could be done to remedy the situation.
Q. How extensive is the need for physicians in Kansas communities?
**Physicians** Clearing House and Kansas Medical Society—Physicians' Placement list more than 200 community who have requested physicians. Examinated of these communities have less than 50,000 people.
There is general agreement that the main problem is vast patient overloads for physicians. Some physicians, who are approaching 90 and older, may not be able to practice in towns such as Alwood and Heworth.
In Rawlins County, two physicians, one 89 years old, serve 4,300 people. In Hawthorne, 14,000 people served by a doctor, one is 68. Gerald Alkire, administrator of the Hawthorne Community Hospital, says four family members served by a nurse.
Often patients must travel from 10 to 30 miles to have a broken arm set or a sore throat treated.
Q. Is it realistic to expect every Kansas town to have its own physician?
Johnson, a western Kansas town of 1,038, is grateful that a second doctor established practice there in April. The deseration of Goodland lessened when a physician arrived in the spring to increase the medical staff to four family physicians and one surgeon to care for 15,000 people.
Dykes says it can't realise. Family practice residents say they shun isolation from peers. An option they suggest is formation of a regional clinic or a community hospital to serve a cluster of towns.
Anywhere from a guaranteed $32,000 in Aftwood to the "sky's limit" in Ulysses, where a chamber of commerce official, Otis Wells suggests a physician could earn $50,000 annually. This comes with the income range in an urban area for a family physician of about $50,000 to $100,000.
Q. How much can the small town doctor expect to earn in a year?
D. Do communities give financial aid to medical students in exchange for commitments to practice
Yes. The Dane G. Hansen Educational Scholarship Foundation, Logan, Kansas, offers four grants to medical students. In return, the student, after completion of his professional training in family practice, internal medicine or pediatrics, practices in a medically-short community in one of northwestern Kansas counties. The students practice one year for each of financial aid received.
Alkire says Hiawatha offers two scholarships. One is being used by an osteopathic student and another is being held for a medical student. These scholarships are offered on a one for one basis.
Uysses is financing an American medical student in Guadalajara, Mexico, who has agreed to practice in the United States.
(Not all medical students can be accepted at KU. The Fifth Pathway Program allows students who complete medical school in foreign schools to be admitted to the completion of residences in Kansas, Dykes says.)
Q. What other entreaties do communities offer?
Pride blooms in each community. Goodland, Sabetia, Hiawata, Oberlin, Johnson and numerous small towns boast clinics or community hospitals.
Each town has the best schools, a great golf course, hunting and fishing according to their speeches.
However, many medical students have got aid however a community then changed their field of specialisation to take care of patients which they had to repay. The Hansen Foundation has had some repayment. Often the medical student was not well prepared for the job.
Q. To what extent do Kansas trained physicians leave the state to practice?
Sewenty-three family practice residence positions have been established since the early 70s at the Med Center.
Q. What is the picture for family practice physicians?
The Med Center and Wesley Medical Center, Wichita, each have eight positions in each of three
years filled for a total of 48 family physicians in training. St. Joseph's Hospital, Wichita, has six in each of three years for a total of 18. A new program at St. Francis Hospital, Wichita, has five in the first year and two second-year residents. Student records in Waxman's office showed of the 27 first year family practice positions in the state were filled by 1976 KU graduates.
Beginning about this time of year, medical students visit and interview at hospitals interesting to them. In January, students make their choices in order of preference. Hospitals do the same. A computer matches according to the highest two numbers. Most students get one of their choices.
Q. If Kansas needs physicians so badly, why aren't all the openings filled with Kansans?
The National Internship and Matching program is used nationally to pair medical students with hospital interns. Each student has a number of years, replaces the old "wait and see at the last minute"; method of residence selection.
Q. What is the match record for KU graduates in the Center family practice residence program?
Of eight positions for each year, three third year residents, four second year residents and six first
Q. Persons close to the physician shortage claim a tendency for teachers to practice near where they take their residences. Has Kusma lost the family member who are taking residences in other states?
Q. What is the demand for Med Center family practice residencies?
About 100 medical students applied for eight openings in 1978. Walker said.
Twenty-six graduates in 1976 chose to enter family practice. Three crossed the state line to Kansas City, Mo.; Iowa; 2; North Carolina; 1; Missouri; 2; Oklahoma; 1; Virginia; 1; and the 18 who stayed in Kansas.
Q. Where are other KU graduates taking family practice residencies?
Q. How do Med Center family practice residents are Kanans feel about staying in Kansas to pursue their dreams?
Not necessarily. Three first-year resident students, lifelong Kansans, have selected residences in other states to broaden their own interests. In their viewpoints, they choose good programs. One says a Kansas small town would definitely be considered as a practice locale.
Those interviewed said they would stay in Kansas.
Q. Will they choose rural areas for practice?
Probably not. Medium sized towns are preferred.
However, Wichita Branch branches weren't interviewed. So it wasn't learned whether they may need to build a new branch because they would practice in rural or western Kansas.
Q. Is income a factor to deter physicians from practicing in small towns or rural areas?
Generally, no. Family physicians thought they could earn a good living any place.
Q. Then why do physicians shy from practicing in rural communities?
The country doctor bears a moral and legal responsibility to his patients. They depend on him to be there when needed. One second-year residency student says the physician has a legal responsibility to cover the patients in his care. He gave an example: If Mrs. Smith was in his care for pregnancy and he wasn't there to deliver the baby or another physician wasn't available to cover, he would have to leave.
So, having another physician around as colleague back-up and friend is rated high by all the residents
Davis said it could be a nice blending of experience if a young doctor entered a community with more than one specialty. The difference could be an immeasurable gap of space and knowledge, particularly if the older doctor had been in a different practice.
The workload of being the only doctor can "run
him into the ground," Old said. He needs time off
for training.
Q. What do family physicians say would attract them to rural areas?
to recruit physicians in pairs, perhaps over a quarter of Q. How much influence does a physician's wife have?
David K. Rose, a second year resident, says, "If your wife is used to living in Los Angeles, she should probably leave."
Although national surveys say the wife's approval of a community isn't most important, the Kansas law provides that a woman's
Meanwhile many ongoing programs seek to fill the needs.
(it could be husbands' approval, but no women graduates in the class of 1976 entered family practice. The class of 200 entering the medical school in July comprised 149 males and 51 females. The future might bring another slant for family practice physicians.)
Through the Locum Tenens program, Med Center residents relieve a doctor anywhere in the state during illness, vacation, just a day off or to attend a continuing education program, Dykes
Any physician in the state can use the inwards WATS line to request help from faculty, Dykes says.
says. This helps up physicians and, he says, we "physicians" Clearing House in Topека identifies the needs. Regent James J. Basham has been using temmens to fill in for an ill participant Dykes said.
Wichita is training Physician Extenders. A PE is usually a registered nurse who has received special training to help augment services normally done by physicians.
At the national level, Sen. James B. Pearson, R Kan., has introduced legislation which would give Medicare reimbursement to patients treated by the extended nurses or physicians' assistants.
The Med Center's preceptorship program provides opportunity for advanced medical students to work with a doctor out in the state. This exposure to another community may place this community in consideration when the student is exploring practice opportunities.
Approval was recently received to increase the base size from 25 to 50 at the Wichita Branch municipal office.
Kuugel says 40 would be admitted to the January 77 class and the full class of 50 students would be invited. The 91 class would be admitted.
The most ambitious goal, announced recently by Dykes and Kugel, is to increase by 1890 the number of primary care residency positions in the state to 100.
The Kansas Legislature gave approval during the closing days of its last session to the Integrated Family Practice Residency Program (IFRPP). IFPRP will add 12 family practice residencies in June 1977. The stipend for the salaries was approved for the initial 12 residences.
To continue the program 12 residency positions will be added each year until it reaches the total of 85.
In the first year, residents serve in an established approved program at Wichita or Kansas City. During the second two years of the residence, they participate in a community hospital, yet to be identified and approved.
After the program has been functioning for three years, 12 more family physicians will be provided
Program supporters believe a physician may root in a community in which he lives, practices, children are born and he has formed relationships with colleagues over a two-year span.
Shankel again expresses support for Washington
Bv COURTNEY THOMPSON
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor, yesterday retraited his support of Marion Washington's recent actions within the women's athletics department at the University of Kansas.
Washington, director of women's intercollegiate athletics, has made several changes within the school.
Shankel said that he thought articles about the situation were a misrepresentation of the facts. He said he thought that the use of the press by the authorities made their complaints was an inappropriate action.
"I SUPPORT Ms. Washington's decision not to fight her personal battles via the press and I think that the women involved in the situation should have exercised the same judgement."
Shankel he felt he girls became frustrated when Washington wouldn't do everything they asked her to do concerning recent decisions to release several coaches and staff members.
"I think the whole situation has been greatly overplayed," he said. "It seems that a relatively minor incident of an athletic director exercising her muscles in front of a crowd into a major event of unwarranted proportions."
Accusations by the women that he and the administration were inaccessible were unfounded,
"I HAVE no knowledge of any refusal by me or my secretaries to arrange an appointment with these women," he said. "They're no different from anyone who asks for an appointment gets one."
field hockey coach, was released two days prior to her contract expiration but he said that it was known that her contract was for one year only and that a two day variation wasn't significant.
Shankel said he knew that Jane Markert, former
He also said that Washington is now filling the vacant positions within the women's athletics department and that he thought all coaching and staff would be filled by the beginning of the fall semester.
Washington's decision not to renew Sharon Drydeney's contract as head football coach was passed.
"WOULD IT seem logical to you to retain a staff member with whom it was impossible to have a teammate?"
"I think in many cases that disappointment over Drysdale's failure to be chosen as women's athletic coach has been a major factor," she said.
probably is the root of much of this opposition to Ms. Washington."
Sankel said that he had responded to letters he received about the problems within the women's athletic program. Specifically, he said that he met Sankel in person and made a statement of dissatisfaction with how the department was run. No comment was made about the team. Sankel by Irene Maley, former athlete trainer.
He said a new coaching staff which will be able to solidify the department under Washington's direction would be an incentive for contributors to continue support of the women's athletics program.
Shankel said he thought that many of Washington's strongest supporters hadn't spoken out because they agreed with Washington that the department's problems shouldn't be discussed in
the press or by word of mouth.
"THIS IS a very complex issue that Washington must deal with (building the women's athletics program) and her job is certainly not an easy one. I think she has done many things to strengthen women's athletics at KU and I will continue to support her actions."
Shankel said previously in an official news release about Drysdale's dismissal that he had kept Chancellor Archie R. Dykes informed of the allegations. Drysdale knew of all decisions which had been made.
Dykes told Tuesday night that he hadn't had an opportunity to read the latest article about the dissatisfaction among the women athletes and was therefore not able to comment on the specific charges. Dykes could not be reached yesterday for further comment.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY
KANSAN
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Wednesday, July 28, 1976
Vol.86 No.170
100 YEARS OF TENNIS
SCHNEIDER
Summer tennis camp
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
The third session of KU's tenis camp for boys and girls aged 9-17 went bouncing on yesterday. While Jeannie Brooker of Tokea had her hands full with tennis balls, Danny
Westerville of Blue Springs, Mo., puffed his cheeks and kept his attention undived. By Friday, many of the 38 students of the camp will have had their fill of blistered feet and bruises.
Connally says he's backing Ford
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Texas Gov. John B. Comcast announced yesterday that he was ending his neutrality and coming out "nequivocally" in support of President Ford for the Republican nomination.
The announcement was made, with Ford standing by, following a meeting between the two companies.
Ford said the decision on who would be his running mate was still open to "any potential Republican."
CONNALLY, who has been discussed as a possible vice president candidate, said he decided to announce his backing of Ford and George W. Bush. Reagan had selected Sen. Richard S. Reagan.
City approves agreement for county to use landfill
By G.S. BASHAW
The Lawrence City Commission approved last night a contract between the city and Douglas County for disposal of county waste in the city's landfill.
Under the plan, approved last week by the Douglas County Commission, the city will retain control of the landfill, located northwest of Lawrence.
Buford Watson, city manager, said the county will pay regular ordinance prices to use the fill, which should have room for trash for about six more years.
Watson suggested that the commissioners review the city's water extension policy in order to ensure that rock excavation needed to install new水 lines. Although the city now charges $4 a foot in trenching costs, this doesn't cover the cost of rock excavation is necessary. Watson said.
"WE HAVE plenty of room in the dump and wanted it to put us," Mike Wilden, assistant city manager said. "After it was done, I'll have to provide for another landfill."
"I say that when excavation is required to install water mains, the city should charge for labor, material and equipment to whoever owns the property," he said. "There's no reason for this to come out of the general utilities fund."
Commissioner Barkley Clark said he agreed with the plan but that a commission would be created to develop developers, already started on a project at 15th and Kasold, of a possible change in policy. The issue will be reviewed as a discussion item at next week's meeting.
THE COMMISSION authorized preparing of ordinances to begin annexation of 29 acres of land west of Kasold and north of Trail. Rivierview Investment requested the annexation and wants to develop the area into a residential section, Watson said.
COMMISSION MEMBERS vuiled their approval over a resolution, drafted by the board of directors of House of Representative's bill calling for a uniform unemployment insurance act. All city employees would have to be covered under the federal insurance fund, Watson
The new ordinance allows recreational vehicles parked on streets for up to 48 hours as long as they are at least 150 feet from the center of any intersection. This distance is required so you see around campers and trailer like they can see around cars. Watson said.
"This is just another mandated program pushed on us," Watson said. "In Lawrence, where we have a three per cent unemployment rate, we'd only be subsiding high unemployment areas by trying to contribute to an unemployment fund."
An amendment to the city zoning ordinance on storage of recreational vehicles may be stored on ordinance vehicles may be stored on property for 72 hours during a seven-day period, provided they aren't on front lawns or within 10 feet of other property. Watson
"That's an ordinance that will be tough to enforce," Clark said. "I'll probably have to do it."
Schweiker of Pennsylvania as us running mate.
He said that his statement had nothing to do with his chances of being picked as Ford's running mate but that he felt the need to win and make a difference. Ford and Reagan "as quickly as possible."
"I think it's quite clear between the two men that the President is unmistakably the better choice, not only for the party but for the country." Connally said.
Clark said, "The Supreme Court only recently held that the federal government
See CITY APPROVES page 3
Earlier in the day it was announced that Ford would personally return to the nomination battle with a trip to Mississippi to woo 30 uncommitted votes there.
PRESS SECRETARY Ron Nessen said that as far as he knew, the decision to visit Mississippi had no relation to Reagan's announcement of Schweker as a running
Nessen has indicated that Ford won't select a running mate until after the election.
Reagan's vice presidential move has caused, at least for now, almost no significant moves of delegates in either direction. Ford headquarters in Washington declined to announce that delegates found two shifting from Ford to Reagan and two from Reagan to Ford.
THE CONSERVATIVE governor said he would not switch his support to President Ford for the Republican nomination, and he said he would wait until after the party's presidential candidate had been selected, so he could "see what the whole picture is."
There was reaction from one powerful non-delegate, though, when New
The Mississippi delegation voted last weekend to cast all its votes for the same candidate and has been the focus of considerable attention from both Ford and Reagan. The delegation lists itself as uncommitted to either candidate now.
Hampshire Gov. Meldrum Thomson withdrew his longtime support for Reagan, calling the selection of Schweiker "a crass political maneuver."
Ford will meet with all 30 Mississippi delegates and 30 alternates in a group and then the team will send to smaller groups of delegates during the Jackson visit. Details of the trip will be posted online soon.
From the South, while there was some grumbling at Schwedker's liberal voting record, there were no immediate known moves by him. His moves by uncommitted delegates to Ford.
With 1,130 delegates needed to capture the presidential nomination at the Republican National Convention next month, Ford now has 1,094 and Reagan 1,025, with 140 uncommitted, according to the latest survey by The Associated Press.
Med Center inquiry hears of dirt, low pay
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) — A legislative inquiry of the University of Kansas Medical Center bead complains yesterday of inadequate equipment, excessive dirt, and poor maintenance of personnel morale, too many boses, and too little coordination and communication.
Several nurses and a doctor told the three-member special committee of the Kansas Legislature they would not want to be patients at the hospital.
Mau Macau, an institution of the
the Medical Association, will serve at
the Macau University.
"It's not compatible to a patient's
bally wild open and rooches and bugs
in their mouths."
She also complained of inadequate air conditioning, causing surgeons to perspire excessively over incisions, and a lack of suctions to carry away excessive blood.
"I hope your committee does some good," Miss Rupp said. "We've been complaining and complaining, and nothing has happened."
She said she once scrubbed the floor of her
san's hospital room to clean up vomit and blood. M.searles charged that there are not enough nurses and housekeeping personnel to properly care for patients.
Patricia McAanney, a nurse in graduate study, said the center "is loosing its nursing talent." She said several nurses have recently been recently by low pay and overwork.
Janet Sourk, a nurse in intensive care, said supervisors and administrators blame the state Legislature for staff shortages and lack of equipment.
Barth Hoogstraten, physician, said he agreed with the others, but added that he thought the center "has more than enough very talented doctors and nurses and supportive staff to make it a very fine hospital."
"We simply don't have enough nurses to give the kind of nursing care we want to give."
"We unnecessarily rob patients of duty, said Mr Koehne, a fifth-grade teacher. "We have to lie in urine or have had to let urine lie on the floor because there weren't enough people on housekeeping duty to lift it, and we wasn't included in their job description."
Dykes releases testimony
- KU is attacking the shortage of physicians in Kansas by the increase in the number of students studying medicine at KU. KU is now educating doctors in Kansas at a rate approximately 50 per cent higher than the national average.
- Chancellor Archie R. Dykes released yesterday testimony he gave July 14 before a joint Kansas House-Senate interim committee investigating medical services that outlined the steps KU is taking to improve the availability of health care in Kansas;
- The national Liaison Committee on Medical Education has approved the increased enrollment to 50 students in the medical Clinical Branch of the KU School of Medicine.
- KU is expanding training programs for allied health professionals to increase the amount of time physicians have to devote to medical problems which they are uniquely able to handle. KU has presented to the Health Education Committee of the Board of Trustees of the University of baccalaureate programs in emergency medical services, nurse anesthesiology and respiratory therapy, while increasing the enrollment in the School of Nursing.
- KU is making a major effort to attract more medical students to primary care programs, especially Family Practice. The KU Medical residencies in primary care fields.
**KU** is planning the development of the Integrated Family Practice Residency Program, beginning in the summer of 1977 with 12 new residencies in Family Practice. For the first year of residency in this program, students will be exposed to the skills required for residency in City or Wichita; to the second and third years of training, these residents would be based in cities over the state where community-based physicians would serve as faculty. While based in these cities, the residents would also periodically rotate into small communities, gaining exposure to the benefits of establishing medical practice in communities which aren't new practitioners. Although the program will begin next summer with just 12 residencies, the program is expected to grow.
*Studies have shown that a doctor tends to establish medical practice in the areas where he/she is practicing.
In response, KU has increased the number of programs for training residents outside KU.
In the 1975-76 school year, 39 residents spent驻居民 outside of Kansas City and Wichita; this year 68 residents will participate in such residencies. Presently, KU has residents in Family Practice, Internal Medicine, Pediatrics, General Surgery, Obstetrics/Gynecology serving in residency rotations in Topeka, Garden City, Halsted, Hays, Kingman, Norton, Minola, Belleville, Phillipsburg and Howard.
*Increased emphasis is being given to programs of continuing education for practicing physicians so that they may engage in professional renewal and avoid the effect of isolation from professional colleagues.
- KU has provided services to practicing physicians such as inward WATS and MATCH lines so that physicians may call clinical specialists at the Medical Center, KU also provides medical library materials upon request.
*The University and the Kansas Medical Society have developed a Locum Tenens program. The program will make available advanced medical residents who can relieve practicing physicians who need time for vacation, postgraduate courses, or medical illness or to provide extra medical help should the need arise in a community.
*KU is planning a model rural health care center to be located in a small community in a rural area of the state. It would be a clinic for ambulatory patients and would serve as a training center for healthcare residents and a continuing education center.
*The University is planning this fall two Kansas Health Days, one in Kansas City and Wichita. Already more than 40 people have indicated an interest in participating.*
- A state scholarship program, developed under the leadership of Sen. Wesley Sowers, R-Wichita, is to provide financial assistance for students pursuing education or practice in medically underserved areas.
*KU is trying to find ways of bringing into the medical school students who are strongly committed to Kansas and who are likely to practice in the state.
Carter calls reserve forces inept
PLAINS, Ga. (AF)—Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter said yesterday that the nation's national Guard and military forces are "shot through with politics," "madefully trained and equipped and unprepared to fight."
Commenting on a Monday briefing from defense experts, Carter said that as president he would try to involve all the nation's governors in the initial planning of a series of changes to improve the National Army reserve and other reserve forces.
Carter said that reform of reserve forces had been difficult in the past because of the influence of state politics and the desire of the military to use force free of control from Washington.
HE SAID changes he would strive for in consultation with the governors was
result in a reserve force that could be counted on to perform its mission in close coordination with the nation's regular military forces.
The readiness of current reserve forces is doubtful, Carter said, adding that they lack both the training and the weapons to be an effective fighting force.
Carter's running mate, Sen. Walter F. Mondale of Minnesota, said he believed the key to the nation's military strategy should be the maneuverability of our retailer force.
I think inevitably put a hair-trigger on nuclear war and scared the Russians as well.
Monale said he voted for research and development funds for the costly and controversial BI bomber because he felt it was more sensible to deploy a sophisticated drone. He also said the team was to proceed with a publicly acknowledged policy of counter force which
Carter said it is essential for the nation's leaders to realize that "when we talk about 40-megaton capability for our submarines or 800 megatons for our bomber fleet that in
CARTER SAID a successful first-strike nuclear capability could not prevent "unbelievable" devastation in the nation that originated the attack and that 200 million Americans would die in any all-out nuclear war.
He said Monday that he could foresee having to order the use of nuclear weapons as president if the nation's security or the security of nations to which the United States is bound by treaty were to be threatened.
human terms this is an unbelievable amount of death."
Asked if he believes the United States should or could seek a first-strike nuclear capability, Carter replied, "Obviously we now have and the Soviet Union has the ability to create devastation. But there is no way to prevent a massive retaliatory strike."
"There would be no possibility under the sun that a first-strike capability would be adequate in preventing a massive bombing," he signaled the massive attack. "Carter said."
Therefore, he said, while first-strike capability is a possibility, it no longer is a reality and has not been since the first combat airbornemen were launched 15 or 20 years ago.
2
Wednesday, July 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest
From the Associated Press
Earthauake strikes Peking
HONG KONG—The largest earthquake recorded in the world since 1941 struck northeast China and the capital of Peking early today, sending residents fleeing.
A duty officer at the U.S. liaison mission in Peking, contacted by telephone, said he had no information on casualties or damage in Peking and Hope Province.
He added there were no reports of injuries in Peking's small foreign community and the U.S. mission building was not damaged.
It registered 8.2 on the open-ended Richter scale, he said, "and with the size of this one, damage would be expected.
Leroy Irbv, a geophysicist at the U.S. Earthquake Information Service in Golden, Colo., said the epicenter of the uke was not known but it would be about 40 miles away.
Kidnaner hunt narrowed
SAN LEANDRO, Calif. — The nationwide ride to the Chochilla mass kidnapers shifted to the Northwest over confirmed sightings in Washington and Idaho of one each.
The bureau verified the sightings of Schoolen Sch沸in in Spokane, Wash., on July 19 and in Cœur D'Arène, Idaho, on July 20, according to Thomas Drinkin, Montana-Idaho FBI agent in charge. Authority authorities reported Monday that Schoolen unsuccessfully attempted to cross from Washington state into Canada on July 19—four days after the kidnapping of 26 school children and his bus driver. The FBI said another man wanted in connection with the kidnapping had
Earlier, the FBI said another man wanted in connection with the kidnapping had sighted in the Long Island, N.Y., community of Hicksville.
Investigators would neither confirm nor deny reports that Frederick Newkall Woods IV, 24, had contacted Nassau County police in a possible attempt to murder a man.
Higher gas bills due soon
WASHINGTON—The Federal Power Commission established new price ceilings for the nation's natural gas yesterday, handing consumers the prospect of higher prices.
FPC staff studies indicated average residential gas bills would increase by approximately 4 to per cent during the next year as a result of the commission's
Nationalwide, the commission said, the total cost of the price hike will be about $1.59 billion, adding about $15.60 to the average annual residential bill.
But the actual consumer impact will vary, depending on the amount of gas used and the location.
Harrises surprise court
LOS ANGELES--William and Emily Harris stunned the prosecution in their trial yesterday by resting their case without calling a single witness. Without a defense presentation, there will no rebuttal testimony for the prosecution, which means the jury will not take the stand against her former underground partner. Our company
Earlier in the day, it had been Miss Hearst who pulled the surprise, saying she would be willing to forfeit all her legal rights and testify without immunity. That came as Deputy Dist. Atty. Sam Mayerson announced he was resting his case but he could call Miss Hearst as a rebuttal witness after the defense case was presented.
Miners's strike spreading
CHARLESTON, W. Va. — The president of the United Mine Workers (UMW) urged coal miners to return to work yesterday as their wildcat strike spread from New York to Pennsylvania.
Spokeshen for railroads that haul coal out of the region reported scattered mine closures for the first time in Kentucky, Maryland and Virginia. Ohio and Indiana have also been closed.
Gulf Oil lobbyist acquitted
WASHINGTON—Claude C. Wild Jr., former Gulf Oil lobbyist, was acquitted of charges that he contributed $8,000 contribution to the re-election campaign in Dauphine, IA. Dauphine
Wild, a veteran corporate lobbyist who controlled millions of dollars in political funds, wept and embraced his family after the verdict was read.
Wild, 52, admitted in his testimony to making the illegal cash gift by delivering a sealed envelope to Inouye's chief aide.
the case hinged on the date of the contribution and whether the three-year statute of limitations on political contribution cases had run out.
StudEx alters bus fare policy one more time
A token system of giving bus fare change adopted by the Student Executive Committee of the Student Senate a week ago was revised last night by StudEx.
By BERNEIL JUHNKE
StudEx decided that beginning this fall, a student who couldn't get correct change before boarding the bus would be given a receipt for the amount owed him. He can redeem the receipt for cash at the Student Office or Union, but he can't use it for a bus ride.
The revision negated a StudEx decision made last week that said that a student who couldn't get correct change before boarding the bus would have received one or more tokens worth 25 cents as change. For example, the student had paid one dollar, the bus he had received and a $2 token could have redeemed for change at the Student Senate Office or used for rides.
THE RECEIPTS will be written for any amount necessary, whereas under the token system a student who paid the 25-cent fare with three dimes would have lost a nickel because bus drivers would only have had tokens worth 25 cents.
Steve McMurray, Senate Transportation Committee chairman, said the new receipt system would transfer the money responsibilities from the drivers to the
Faster boarding and increased security were reasons given for the exact-change (p10).
StudExRed bus bares from 20 cents a ride to 25 cents last week.
MCMURRY SAID he would inform students about the new change policy through advertisements and Senate information dispensed during enrollment
He said about 26 per cent of all bus rides were paid for by fare. Bus passes are used
STUDEX GAVE permission to Steve Owen, student body vice president, to have five boxes at a cost of $20 each made by the University. To collect old paperwriters for recycling.
The boxes will be placed in the lobbies of the Fusion and four residence halls: Corbin, GSP,
Papers will be recycled at the Whompner recycling center, oth and New Hampshire,
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KANSAN
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Crown Center having KU Day in September
A new twist to the University of Kansas Outreach program will take the University to Kansas City when KU Day at Crown Center Square is staged Sept. 25, Jim Collier, director of University Relations, said yesterday.
A full day of activities will include exhibits from academic departments from both Lawrence and Kansas City campuses, demonstrations on space technology, medical technology and geology entertainment by the KU Marching Band, and performances by theatre groups and a musical ensemble. The puppet shows for children and concessions such as KU t-shirts and pennants will be sold, Collier said.
The exhibits and entertainment are geared toward families and are open to the public. The museum's commitment committee hopes to have the mayor of Kansas City and other dignitaries on hand. Yell leaders and members of similar groups will be present and hostesses during the day, he said.
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KU gets funding for full-time vet
By GARY WALLACE
The University of Kansas has received funds from the National Institute of Health (N.I.H.) for improvement of animal care in the hospital and the campus with a full-time veterinarian.
Staff Writer
Most of the two-year, $232,700 grant will be used for improvement of drainage, heating, ventilation, space and personnel facilities. The grants will support Snow, Malott and McCollum halls, Glenn
The grant also involves renovating a concrete building on west campus, creating new grounds, and groundings, as an animal care facility, Nikki Jochman, KMU animal care supervisor, said. She said the structure was isolated so it could be used to dogs or primates in experiments.
from 15,000 to 20,000, make a diverse group including birds, amphibians, lizards and ponies. Johman said that between 80 and 90 per cent of them were mice that were bred and shipped nationwide to university researchers.
KU'S ANIMALS, ranging in population
Jochman said that animals currently were dispersed across campus among many departments, but space designed to coordinate the animal care operation was planned for the Malott addition to be completed in 1979.
Psalms 2 and Acts 4:25
In the Second Palm of the Bible God asks the above question, and then answers it. He tells who the heathen are, why they rage, and His reaction and consequences of their rage. God further warms, instructs men to surrender to His King and be blessed, and not perish.
In the First Psalm, God says that delights himself in "THE
AW OF THE LORD" shall be like a tree planted by the riverside,
and it will be like a vine grown on earth.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?"
Usually we think of the heathen as savages or uncivilized people, but here God names them as kings, rulers, people who imagine a vain thing, and rage and rebel against His Government. His King, Laws and Commandments. Such folks certainly do not believe The God of The Bible — Webster says a heathen is "one who does not believe In the God of the Bible."
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?" Why? What is the cause? It is to rid of Hid of the Government of God, His King. His Male, His Ten Tears. Heathenism? Heathenism? No. Heathenism? Yes.
Our Government and rulers have now rejoiced God's Book and The Lord's Prayer for our schools. Psalm 22:28 tells us "GOD IS THE GOVERNOR AMONG THE NATIONS". Hear this Governor's orders: **AND THOUSHAIL TEACH THEM (God's Laws) DILIGENTLY UNTO THEM**, **TALK OF THEM WHEN THOU SITTED IN THINE HOUSE, AND WHEN THOU WAY, AND WHEN THOU LOST DOWN, AND WHEN THOU RISEST UP — THAT IT MAY GO WELL WITH THEE, AND WITH THEY CHILDREN AFTER THEE." Deut. 7:16 and 12:25.
Our forefathers put God's Name, "The God of The Bible," on our coins: "In GOD we trust." We are still willing to have God's Name on our money, but it appears we don't want God's Name on our school children! You don't have to go to 'far away places' to find heathen! We are in great need of Home-Missionaries. Every true Christian is a miserable person who doesn't want BUT THE LABORERS ARE FREY. PRAY THERE FORHERE INTO THE LORD OF THE HARVEST, THAT HE WILL SEND FORTH LABORERS INTO HIS HARVEST." Matthew 9:37, 38.
traint The Almighty has thrown across our paths to hold us up from damning ourselves, children and posterity in time and eternity.
"WHAT ARE THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE RAGE OF THOSE WHO DO NOT BELIEVE IN THE GOD OF THE BIBLE HE THAT SITTET IN THE HEAVENS SHALL LAUGH. THE LORD SHALL HAVE THEM IN DERISION; THEN SHALL HE SPEAK TO THEM IN WATH, AND VEX THEM IN HIS SORE DISPLEASURE." Paalm 2-4, *CONTEST UPON PRINCES* — Job 12:17, 21. *CONTEMPT UPON PRINCES* — Job 12:17, 21. *BRINGETH THE PRINCES OF THE EARTH TO NOTHING; HE MAKEITH THE JUDGES OF THE EARTH AS VANITY*
In our day and generation has not God laughed at, held in derision, spoken in His wail, and poured contempt upon many a king, prince and the late Czar and Stalin of Russia; the late Kaiser and Hitler of Germany; the great marshal of earth who have come and gone! In these invitations have not most of the nations of the earth, including our own, had to drink the wine-cup of The Almighty's wrath and indignation — two world wars, a number of wars, and a crusade against the oppressive God, taken to heaven without dying, by passing the grave, said to King Abah who raged against God's Law: "I HAVE NOT TROUBLED ISRAEL: BUT THU, AND THEY FATHER'S HOUSE, IN THAT EYES FOR SAKEN THE COMMANDMENTS OF GOD." 1st Kings 18:18
"BUT THE WICKED ARE LIKE THE TROUBLED SEA, WHEN IT CANNOT REST, WHOSE WATERS CAST UP MIRE AND DIRT. THERE IS NO PEACE SAITH MY GOD TO THE WICKED." iashal 57:20, 21. We cry peace, peace, but make little effort, if any, to cut our lawlessness all about and around. In Amos 5:23-24, God says: "TAKE THOU AWAY FROM ME THE NOISE OF THE SONGS FOR IASHAL 57:20, 21. WE CARE FOR THE OLDS. BUT LEFT JUDGMENT RUN DOWN WATERS AND WATERSHEDS MIGHTY STREAM." in plain everyday language God is here saying: I am sick of your songs and music, take it away. What I want is judgment and righteousness established in the land like mighty rivers and streams that bless the earth and their inhabitants: That God's Kingdom might come and His will be done on earth as in Heaven!
P. O. Box 405, DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
Cash paid for your Books Bring them to
The Kansas Union Bookstore
2 days Thursday and Friday
July 29,30 8:30-4:30
THE KANSAS UNION
University Dally Kansan
Wednesday, July 28, 1976
3
et
verse group cards and 80 and 90 were bred university
currently among
designated to
tion was
n to be
Consultant submits plans for renovation of Watson
By SUSAN LYNN
Plans for renovating the ventilation, lighting and other features of Watson Library were recently detailed in a report to builders and staff. A consulting consultant Elkhorn Shelby
The Library Facilities Planning Committee, which has been working on the plans all summer, will provide information administrators need to make the proper decisions and to secure the necessary funds in monitoring. Ellsworth said in the report.
"If the building can be physically renovated in terms of ventilation, lighting and other physical matters, properly, and at an acceptable cost level, the building can be reorganized so as to be an architecture for the foreseeable future." Ellsworth said.
Ranz said the report would give the
9 departments combined into 4 for Fine Arts
By SUSAN APPLEBURY
A recent consolidation within the KU School of Fine Arts has resulted in the appointment of two chairmen to head the departments of performance and ensemble.
Kenneth Smith, professor of voice and former chairman of the voice department, and James Ralston, professor of performance, and James Ralston, associate professor and director of choral activities, has been appointed chairman of the ensemble movement.
"MANY OF the departments were small only had a faculty of two or three perperson."
"The consolidation was done just for budget flexibility," James Mosew, dean of the university.
The office can be located at the smallest
office of the company.
In the spring, after a year-long study, the faculty of the School of Fine Arts and the Board of Regents approved the consolidation. Moeer said.
Instead of nine departments there will be only four: performance, ensemble, music and dance.
THE FORMER departments of voice, stringed instruments, piano and wind and percussion have been consolidated into the Department of Performance.
The Department of Ensembles has envisioned departments of band, choir activities and dance.
Ralston and Smith will not be giving up
admission to duties and will report
directly to Mosses.
The chairmen of these former departments will continue as directors of those areas within the newly-created departments.
"IAM looking forward to working closely with them in an administrative relationship which constitutes a great improvement over the many small departments that formerly comprised the Division of Music," Mosser said.
Smith, who has studied at the Manhattan School of Music, the New York College of Music and the Metropolitan Opera School, Music at the KU School of Fine Arts in 1983.
Ralston, who holds the M.E.M., M.M.E.
PhD degrees in 1984, and PhD degrees in
science viruses since 1986.
He also has had a professional singing career as leading bass-baritone with the Zurich Opera and most of the major opera companies in the United States.
He has been named an Outstanding Educator of America and is listed in "Who's Who in the Midwest." Ralston is also the Trinity Episcopal Church Adult choir.
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University administration a basic idea as to what areas needed to be covered. The library planning committee plans to discuss this with the students. They will report a report, requesting funds. Rana said.
Ellsworth said that the Office of Facilities planning should be permitted to analyze immediately the feasibility and cost of developing a comprehensive ventilation system and of correcting other physical deficiencies.
Stanley H.
KIPLAN
EDUCATION CENTER
1527 W. MAIN STREET
SPECIALTY TERM 1908
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(212) 200-3600
Birmingham, MI 48601
Birmingham • MI 48601
"The single most serious deficiency in the building today is its ventilation." Ellsworth said. "It is a very dangerous building to be put on and it would be condemned for human use."
One of the objectives of the planning committee is to bring library services and tools, such as the reference and reserve reading areas, together at the street level.
Other goals are to place infrequently used library services and departments on other levels of the building in proper relationship with other staff and staff additions and remove the walls and other physical barriers that frustrate the users of the library today, Ellsworth University.
"Major physical changes planned are removal of the original central book stacks and reflooring of the area at the first, second and third reading room levels. Ellsworth said those areas were a fire trap in the area." (The room or other non-book storage purposes)
Also planned is the installation of an auxiliary lighting system, so that users could find their way out of the stacks if the regular lighting system were to fail.
"The piecemeal manne in which the building has been remodeled in past years has had disastrous results, and this kind of must make not be repeated." Ellsworth said.
The library planning committee plans to submit to the University a final draft of its curriculum.
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The Commission voted unanimously to send copies of the resolution protesting the act to each of Kansas' representatives and senators.
couldn't force structural changes in city employment so this unemployment insurance would likely be unconstitutional."
City approves . . .
From page one
In other business, the Commission forwarded to the city attorney a letter from Robert Schwanzie requesting $1,100 in damages. Schwanzie contends city workers were fired because they were burning grass during road maintenance at 23rd and Vermont, Watson
"I KNOW we've agreed not to 'play
politics" in the past," Clark said. "But this Federalism is an issue that is uniquely
In a safety traffic item the Commission established a handicapped driver zone, a loading zone and a 30-minute parking zone on the west side of Louisiana, south of 19th
said the city agreed it caused some damage to his car. The attorney to offer Schwanle a lesser amount
Watson said city canine officers had so far issued 12 tickets under the city's new,
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Daily Kannan booklet (e.g., library, color, creed, or national origin). PLEASE BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
The Commission postponed until next week acceptance of bids on demolition or removal of a house at 512 Tennessee because proposed bids were considered too high. They accepted a bid of $250 to remove a structure at Sixth and Vermont.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
15 words or
fewer $2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $2.75 $3.00
Each additional
word ... 0.12 0.23 0.34 0.45
...01 .02 .03 .04 .05
10.00 DATE
to run:
Monday: Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday: Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday: Tuesday 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 items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three days. These are can be placed in person or by calling the URB business office at 864-3583.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Free kittens 7 weeks old, people-loving 843-
9446. 7-29
864-4358
Bids were accepted from Motorola for
IMPORTANT STUDY ABROAD ANNOUNCEMENT
ACADEMIC Year 1974-75 Programs for
Winter. Spring, or Full Year for qualified
students. Welcome to SUNY Stony Brook,
Sophomore, Junior, Senior Year eligible. Good
facility evidence of self-motivation and
national cultural exchange count more with CFS
national cultural exchange count more with CFS
mation: CENTER FOR FOREIGN STUDY/DAY-
SCHOOL (FOX) / HOX/ 608, Amsterdam
MI. 8107 (313) 635-2837
FOR RENT
ATTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and
visit the student center on Friday or the
phone (516) 327-4511 at WESTERN
STATE UNIVERSITY.
2 bdr., all utilities paid, on campus Furnished
unfurnished. Free parking, a pool, $88.
693 693
Students; Happiness is an alternative lifestyle.
Try cooperative living. Worksharing program,
e.g., 2 meals per week. Average $25/month food.
Alice at 842-9273 between 7-10周夜. 7-29周
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
For the Do-It-Yourselfer we offer:
1. Special Prices
2. Open 7 days and nights.
3. We have it or can get it overnight
4. Machine shop service
5. Two stores
817 Vermont 2300 Haskell
843-9365 843-6960
COMPLETE IN STORE SERVICE FACILITIES
Technics SL-1300
Technics SL-1300
by Pioneer
Direct Dual Automatic Turntable
BMS
ELECTRONICS
audio
212 945 860 799
STEREO SYSTEMS FROM 300.00 TO 11:00.00
Stay Cool Hours-Summer Stores
HALF AS MUCH
Selected Secondhand
Goods & Antiques
UNIQUE
IMPORTED CLOTHING
new summer hours
10-3 (longer on cool days)
730 Mass 841-7070
Top in Comfort Hours Sweat
2 bedroom unfurnished apartment at Crescent
Street August 19th Call 845-625-1300
913-825-2232 7-29
One bedroom partially furnished apartment. Pre-
ferable college campus. Available August 1st, call 824-197-5987.
2 bdt. basement apt. in private home on 189 th Street, NYC. 3 bdr. spacious studio w/ 900 sq. ft. 99 cei. serv. Call Carol 645-1181, 645-8291, 645-7891.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes—New on Sale!
1) Make sense of Western Civilization
On make sense to use them...
2) For class preparation
3) For class preparation
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
"New Analysis of Western Civilization"
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS.-Regardless of any prices you see on popular hi-fi equipment other than factory dumps or out-of-production parts, your components will be sold at the GRAMPHONE SHOP at KIFES. **tt**
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialties.
BELT AUTOMOTIVE
Electric 843, 726, 3000. W. 6th.
(843) 519-4860. (3000) 519-4860.
THEYRE HAVE Large selection of "Our Special"
Tickets. Regularly $6.99—now $29.
THE ATTIC, 827 Main
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
Trade The Furniture and Appliance Center, 704
W. 35th St., New York, NY 10026
Gooing safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue denim safari jacket. Regular price $20; special $125.
Box springs and mattress sets, and new and at low bargain prices. Limit one per customer. Will sell in all stock at reduced prices. Used Furniture and Appliance Center, 7045 Meadow, Mass. 2721.
Dodge 68 Coroner; engine is good condition.
A/C 68 Coroner; engine is stop by shop.
Maintail Hull No. 428
7-29
1972 Satera K16 mobile bungee, 14" x 20" with con-
version kit. Compatible with Satera X18,
skirt included. Excellent condition. Call 503-765-5600.
mattely matte, box printing & frame. Excellent
matte finish. $150 Call Howard 831-6801 or 864-290-
1250 Call Howard 831-6801 or 864-290-
1250
Acoustic guitar plus off-brand electric guitar.
Cheap. Good for beginners 841-2879 after 5 p.m.
Harman Kardon 301 15 receiver, 15 watts/chanel,
new like $120. $142.984 before 8 mths. 7-29
*Note: The image is cropped to only include the first line of text.*
Band equipment: Gibson EB2 electric bass with case; Shure MG6A MIP, music/one control/reamplifier; Kinton 40 amp with speaker, JBL K-140 band; Ripcord; Mist sell. August 7, 2029. offer number: 842-1425
1970 VW Bug. Excellent condition. $1250. Call Gary 843-9249. Keep trying.
SPORT
Bikes-Boots-Backpacks-Canoes-Tents
7th & Arkansas 843-3328
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWED
15 East 8th 041-2654
10.5 Monday, Saturday
图
FINE SELECTION OF SHIRTS
SADDLE & BRIDLE SHO
Open 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.
Open 8:45 a.m.
RAASCH
Mattresses • Liners
Heaters • Frames
Bedspreads • Flatted Sheets
FIELDS
Mastercharge
COMPLETE WATERBED SYSTEMS
Downtown Lawrence 842-7187
WATERBEDS 712Mass.St.
MAJOR CITY OF NEW YORK
American and
Aztec Inn
Aztec Inn
Mexican Food
All Mexican Dishes served on dining hot plates
807 Vermont
842-9455
saturday only. July 31, Granite wood and coal
brush set; August 28, Granite wood and coal
OAK buffer table, buffet glass doors, 4 care-
corsellas mirrors. Aven battes old set of silver, 5
meters, two carved stone panels. Also one horse
duggage 2002. Westchester
HUGE MOVING SALE-Plants,家具, leather tools, tropical fish, clothing, furniture, leather, typewriter, books GREAT PRICES 甜 日 $24.99 Fr. Su., Sun. Sat 740 Locust in North Lawn 7-29
Complete scuba outfit, like new. Ten-gon aquarium with light filter and lister Call 824-631-0950.
FOR SALE: orange Neaco frame-pack 110 $C
Roger, 842-8734 7-29
HELP WANTED
COOK FOR CHILD NUTRITION STUDY. Fast working, organized person to cook from devel- mentary materials for children. search and toddler day care. 8:30-1:30 M $25.20 hr AAPJ AA313 Briarden Terrace, Meadow
Watkins, beautiful area restaurant and club.
Sunday. 8:30 a.m. to 7:25 p.m.
Fall. Phone 814-1431 after 6 p.m.
BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH NEEDS REFERENCES FOR THE BACKGROUND. APPROXIMATELY 18 TO 16 HOURS PER WEEK. EDITING SKILLS ARE ESSENTIAL, TYPING IN KITCHEN, JOURNALISM OR HUMAN DRAFTING. A MUST HAVE ACCEPTANCE AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER QUALIFICATION ENCOURAGED TO APPLY ALL 7-29
Food service workers—part time, 12.55 hrs. be
ready to work on 24/7 basis. 20 days,
30 days $2.50 hr. Apply Schumann Foods, 719
845-2368.
Position opening; Media specialist, KUAF Partners; position developing layout and photography. Professionals in design, editing, layout and photography. Provider BA 6-7-6. Contact Jim Blunde, KUAF 348 Haworth to employ employees qualified and women of all backgrounds to provide qualified men and women of all backgrounds.
Position opening Communications Director, KUAF *Permanent full-time. Duties include use of KUAF media staff. Experience in reporting, media production. Prefer MA in journalism or English. Production. Prefer MA in journalism or English. KUAF 548 Hawthorn Hall, KU (864-8300) for interview. Equal opportunity employer. Qualified candidate.
LOST AND FOUND
Found vicinity of 10th and Indiana. Small black cat. Call 842-9986 after 5:00.
7-29
Found, calico kitten by Vermont St. Post Office.
Call 642-9038.
Found, Male Seller (mixed breed) Call Mark 821-154
7-28
FOUND MONDAY MORNING--small white hat
Calls Lia Adelafter days before
846-4976 to identify
4 car keys found on corner of 19th and Alabama.
Call 864-3543. 7-29
NOTICE
Cool it these afternoons with fruits and
feats, parfaits and peaches. Gold Cup ice cream
and cloaksea plaque at the Caulshan Castle, 650
Dinner; dinner) toilet, 8:10 ill 8:30 Sundays.
Swap Shop. $20 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
dining ware, televisions, open daily 10am
482-3577
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't have it he will make it. George's Shop Pipe, 722-987-0411.
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's number one drug. If you need help call Alcoholics National 8-800-2110.
SERVICES OFFERED
Math Tutoring--Competent, experienced tutors can help you through courses 002, 102, 105, 114, 121, 122, 123, 128. Regular sessions or one-time lessons. Reasonable fees. 7-29
847-781.
TUTOR
Math Tutor with MA in mathematics, Call 841-7038 after 6 p.m. tf
W. 9th & III.
Gentlemen's Quarters
843-2719
TYPING
1 do damned good typing. Peggy 862-4475, after
4:00 (messages taken 24 hours). 7-29
Typist/editor, IBM Pica/site. Quality work.
Music editor, dissertations welcome.
Born 62, 847-9177.
Bach: 823-9177.
Creative haircutting for men and women
at
Experienced typist—term paper, sheets, mike, phone. Experience typing, spelling, spellings. 843-905-6344, Mrs. Wright.
in the summer. Use the student discounts
LARRY'S AUTO SUPPLY
Need an experienced tpimt!? IBM Selektite II pixes
carbon tape, tpimt carbon tape (carbon,
Call) Phone: 842-759-7989
1502 W. 23rd 842-4152
WANTED
To Buy: Used premium wood gemis reqrets 4\
or 4/8 light U phone. Only 841-2729. 7-29
Typing, professional quality work guaranteed,
typing for various types of governmental
thesis, dissertation, paelectric, A.B. Sagittarius.
Experienced typist IBM Mag-Card, term paper,
informational form correspondence
834-9471, 7-29
Keep your car healthy
Married senior in engineering needs quiet place
St. Shawne, Ga. Gravelcreek, 1240 615-798
St. Shawnee, KS. 66213
7-29
One male roommate, 2 bedroom apt. one-half rent and utilities. Call Collect 913-7428-3488.
Applied English Center student from Saudi
American family. Fall semester only. 351-283-
406.
Nice female roommate wanted 2 bedrooms.
Nice girlfriend wanted 1 room.
Stupid girlfriend Clint Gley collected in K.C., after she left.
4th male romantate to house nine lowhouse:
6 baths - 10+1-8519 or 1+1-912-739-295
6 pier 6 pts.
Quahib female graduate students to share A/C, car-
board, heating systems, indoor room air, 1.5 g, electricity
and refrigeration systems.
Need one or two roommates for a two bedroom
Call any time 613-626-9445
7-29
Female teammate to share duplex for school
work. 15-30 hours per week. One month,
per two/4U utilities. Call Shelley 866-440/du-
sle.
Gialey male roommate for three bedrooms apt.
6510. Call after 5:00. 842-3690. 7-29
Roommates for 2 bedroom, air conditioned. Close to Metro area and utilizes. Prefer Roommate student education. 843-309-7651
Wanted: Liberal-minded female roommate start.
10:00-12:00 morning, 6pm-8pm,
bedroom house with pets allowed. Connie,
Susan, Karen, Melissa, and Jill.
Wanted rider(s) to Denver or destination en-
trance (a. e. 844-2176, 731/ Call Suc 844-4122 or
590. 844-1876, 840. 844-1876)
Male roommate will to share nice apartment
campus with pre-dental students.
813-748-8124
813-748-8124
Eyeteacher Optical
DISTINCTIVE EYEWARE
FINE CLEARING
GLASS LINES
FINE GLASS
FINE GLASS
FINE GLASS
MOUNTED OPTICAL
MOUNTED OPTICAL
GOLDLIFE FASHION
YEAR BOOK
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREOS COMPONENTS!
39
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
HALLS SHOPPING CENTER LARNICK INC. 1802 634-0444
the GRAMOPHONE shop
DEC 1971 AMS FOR STATION A
YAMAHA
3 to 10 Times Loss Distortion
Than Most Stereo Components
STATE OF
THE ART
Audio Components
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORDS
AND STEREO
Happy Car
530 Wisconsin
THE HIDEOUT
A cartoon character aiming a rifle.
CLUB
843-9404
—6 Nights a Week—
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
8 Nights a Week
Open 2 p.m., 3 a.m. Dance's 3:30-10 p.m.
Akshaya Ashwin Academy
Class B Private Club
Wayne Pool—Owner
4
Wednesday, July 28, 1976
University Daily Kansan
U.S.A. reclaims basketball gold
Bv KELLY SCOTT
BY REMI SCOTT
Kangan Olympics Correspondence
MONTREAL—I thought I heard the strains of "Back Home Again in Indiana" as they raised the American flag last night after the United States recaptured the gold at the 21st Olympic Games, beating Yurielaolvia, 95-74.
What's most important is that the medal is back in the country at all, but if there is to be a special home for it, it would have to be Scott May, Quinn Buckner, and Adrian Dantlev territory—the Hosserion state. Indiana
Americans had put quite a premium on getting that gold medal back after what has been called "that controversial victory by the Soviets in 1972" in every basketball story written in Montreal this week.
The people who came to Montreal with revenge on their minds have a scrappy team of individual talent to thank. But the leadership of that team came from Indiana, where basketball comes right after God and country.
In last night's championship game at the Forum, the Hoosiers on that team again had their day. Dantley, the huhstie Notre Dame forward who terrorized college teams and had a game-leading 30 points. May followed with 14.
There had been some speculation that the emotional level of last night's championship game would be diluted when the Russian team, those arch-villains from 1972, failed to make the finals. They lest to Yugoslavia Monday. We wouldn't get to play Russians at all, after four bitter years.
When I got to The Forum last night, the scalpers were doing a good business. Tickets were going for about $125 and, although I didn't see a sale, there were several people dickering for tickets.
And I didn't notice that the crowd last night thought the game was anything but the ultimate experience. Each
row of the Forum was neatly filled with screening fans, most *of* the really loud ones rooting for the U.S.
They were almost embarrassing in their lavish affection for the American team. I kept thinking, they can't all be from the States. What prompts a Canadian or a Mongolian to cheer for the United States rather than an underdog team like the Yugoslavians, who pulled off a real coin when they defeated the Russians?
Several celebrities in the SRO crowd of 16,000 helped stake enthusiasm to new levels.
The Froum was definitely the place to be last night. Track and field took a hiatus yesterday, and platform diving and quarter-final boxing couldn't compete for the fans' attention.
Former KU basketball star Wilt Chamberlain was at courtside, causing a commotion, but bandy waving away reporters. Dave Cowsen, center for the world champion Boston Celtics, is reporting the game for the Lowell, Mass., newspaper. He too, was there for the game and not for interviews.
The ritual began when the teams paraded onto the court behind an Olympic official bearing a standard identifying each squad. Then came the traditional gift exchange. I couldn't see what the two teams exchanged, but it reminded me of those $1-maximum Christmas grab bags in junior blitz.
The Americans then slid smoothly into their warmup routine, running and laying the ball up with grace and precision. They were especially fond of dunking the ball. Unlike the NCAA, Olympic basketball permits the dunk during warmer, and the players practiced it with great intensity. The team began dunking the ball, brought a minor roar from the crowd. The rest of the team began dunking. After such dedication to the shot, I expected to see in the game, but evidently Coach Dean
The 'Yugslavs, meanwhile, betrayed a lack of finesse that would plague them during the game. As the Americans ran their structured warmup, the Yugslavs milled disjointedly under the basket.
Smith's game plan didn't call for it. I think they dunked three times during the game.
May and Dandley got the bigest cheers from The Forum crowd, Mitch Kupchak, the North Carolina center, also was warmly received. Little Phil Ford, Smith's playmaker from Chapel Hill, was another favorite.
Too bad for the capacity crowd, the starting team of May, Buckner, Dantley, Ford and Kupchak came out after eight minutes in the first half. Smith substituted during unit until it played together again until late in the game.
The U.S. led 50-38 at half-time. But at certain points in the second half their befty lead was cast to eight points.
With 8:25 to play, the starting team went back in to build on a 12-point lead. The game got physical and Buckner had an easy win.
Buckner had possession as the final buzzer sounded. He ran out the clock hugging the ball and doing a little dance as the last three seconds ticked away. Then the team swamped the court, one giant pile of bodies hugging bodies and slapping butts, and feet jumping up and down on each other.
I wondered about the gut reasons for their reaction. Was it the revenge that had simmered for four years? Was it pride at having won for the U.S.A.'s Or was it the desire to win back the country who came together and pooled their vast talents, gilled and proved that that combination could beat anyone in the world?
Administration wilts Student Senate team,13-9
By LEWIS GREGORY
Staff Writer
Hard hitting, speed and endurance took the administration softball team to a 13-8 victory over the Student Senate team last night in their second annual softball game.
A six-run explosion in the second inning kept the administration on top the rest of the game. Del Shankel, executive vice chan-ger, the winning pitcher in the fast pitch game.
"We will beat the pants of the administration," Tedde Tasheff, student body president said before the game. "It's too much. The administrator would play with them."
STUDENT SENATE secretary Carol Jacobs grounder to Mike Davis, university general counsel, started the ball game, played in blistering 90-degree heat.
"The game will be a tough battle, but the administration will win," Shankel said.
In the second iming, Dan Rayer, Prairie village junior sent to Tsaff for the first service.
Gerhard Zehnder, former University senate executive committee chairman, hit a fast ball and drove in Max Lucas, assistant coach of the New Orleans Lacrosse was 4 for 4 at the end of the game.
Richard Lee, director of supportive education services, sent Tasheff running in pursuit of his smash hit while he went for home.
At the top of the third inning the score was 9-3 and the administration started taking the ball.
THE GALLERY included Mrs. Del Shankel, Mrs. Ronald Calgaard, Ellen Reynolds, graduate senator, and Adrienne Sparks, Essex Esm, member, other spouses and children.
The rest of the five-inning game was dominated by the Senate team, but the Senate couldn't catch up to the administration. In the top of the fifth inning
"IT'S ONE of those things that happens all the time," Tashseff said. "If we had one more day, we would win over the administration."
MONTREAL (AP) - Sixteen-year-old
Greg Lougain was a second place
in platform diving, one of four metals won
U.S. Olympics yesterday.
"We tried to keep the game as close as we could, but couldn't help but get ahead," Davis, administration coach said. "Quality came to the foreground."
16-year-old U.S. diver wins silver medal
THE AMERICANS advancing were
wedge-lightweight sugar Ray Leaf, flywheel
And, with the basketball team making a runaway of its gold medal game with Yugoslavia, he got a lot of television time, too.
So did the boxers. In the early bouts, four Americans advanced to the semifinals, where they're assured of at least a bronze medal. The winners of the semifinals in each class fight for the gold while the semifinal loses each get bronze.
Rovals lose, 2-1
NAHEMIA (AP) - California's Frank Tarana made Andy Etcheller's two-run double stand up with a four-hit 21-victory over the Kansas City Royals Tuesday night as the Angels snapped Paul Slittorff's club record eight-game winning streak.
Tanana, 12-7, struck out seven while facing only two men over the minimum. The complete game was his 15th of the season, tops in the American League, and gave Norm Sherry, the Angels' new manager, his fourth victory in five starts.
Kansas City 59 38 608
Oakland 58 46 605 71
Tampa 67 46 605 71
Minneapolis 46 50 479 13 16
Chicago 44 50 479 13 16
California 44 50 479 13 16
W W L Pek. GB
New York 8 41 62
Baltimore 48 48 590 12 3/8
Cleveland 48 48 489 13 1/4
Detroit 48 48 489 13 7
Houston 43 52 653 15 1/4
Milwaukee 43 52 653 15 1/4
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
Philadelphia 50 41 32
Pittsburgh 53 43 35
New York 51 49 310 16½
St. Louis 41 48 310 16½
Chicago 40 58 310 16½
Boston 8. Cleveland 7
Salem 5. New York 1.
Tampa 4. Los Angeles
Texas at Minnesota, postponed, rain
Minnesota, postponed, rain
Chicago 1. Oakland 0
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Then Shankel struck out Tasheff; Steve McMurray, Norton senior and transportation director of the senate. A pop fly by Jim Cox, student body president ended the game.
the score was 13-9 with Corky Trewin,
Lawrence enceint, driving in two runs
followed by a home run by Steve Grindel,
Overland Park junior.
Citigroup 61 37 85 426
Los Angeles 10 34 50 61
Houston 9 32 50 11/16
San Diego 40 52 480 14/16
Atlanta 44 51 480 14/16
San Francisco 44 51 480 14/16
NJagoe 5 Montreal 2
Pittsburgh 3 Philadelphia
Los Angeles Attended, appenced, rain
San Francisco 9 Clementain 1
Pittsburgh 8 SL. Louise 1
Washington 2 Attended
Leo Randolph and bantamweight Charles Mooney.
Klaus Dbiasis of Italy won the gold medal in Olympic platform diving with 600.51 points. Dibiasi also won golds in 1972 at Munich and 1968 at Mexico City.
Louganis, of EI Cajon, Calif., won the silver medal with 78.99. Vainikh Alemkyn
IN ADDITION to Lougans, the other American medals or a relatively light weight football shoe.
The United States' three-man sailing entry, Texas John Kolisn of La Porte and Walter Glasgow and Richard Hoefner of Houston claimed the silver medal after winning the last of the seven-race series. East Germany finished in a tie in points against Russia and third because they did not have a victory. Denmark won the gold in that class.
Skipper Dennis Corner of San Diego and crewman Conn Findlay of Bellmich, Calif., won the bronze in the Tempest class, Sweden and Russia in the over-all standings.
Louganis, a 16-year-old phenom from Et Cajon, Calif., led the qualifiers in men's platform diving, held the lead through the early dives then gave way to vehicle Kians. He was named won an unprecedented third consecutive win on his last international diving competition.
Track and field competitors got ready for five final events today. America's fast 600-meter threeseason of Maxie Parks, Fred Newhouse and Hernan Framer zeroseen to twart the id of Cuba's Alberto Juantoren for an uncrested Olympic double.
Japan defeated the U.S.'s handball team 27-30 in a game for ninth place. The U.S. lost to Russia, eliminated as Russia, Poland, France, Romania, Hungary, West Germany, Italy and Spain.
DIBIASI, who won a silver medal at Tokyo before taking golds at Mexico City and Munich, won with the highest diving total in Olympic history, 600.51 points. Kent Vosler, Eaton, Ohio, was fourth with $44.14 from Moore, Columbus, Ohio, fifth with $38.97
Juntiorena won the gold in the 800 when he turned bronze winner and world champion.
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BETWEEN THE LANDS
Winning pitcher
Del Shankel, executive vice chancellor pitching his team to a victory over the student senate last night in a game of fast pitch softball. The final score was 13-9.
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Sports
NCAA rule forces KU to limit coaches
The other two assistant coaches involved were Wade Phillips and Jack White. Baker said that Phillips had resigned to take a job with the All-Stars. White's position remains uncertain.
By COURTNEY THOMPSON
Staff Writer
Two changes in the men's athletics department at the University of Kansas are the results of a new NCAA ruling that makes Assistant coaches a football team can have.
Hank Hettwer, formerly an assistant football coach, has been named to the dual position of academic counseler and recruiting co-ordinator effective Aug. 1.
Don Baker, sports information director said Monday that recent NCAA legislation, which becomes effective Sept. 1, limited football coaching staffs to eight assistant coaches. Last year KU had 11 assistant coaches.
"WED HAD TO do something with the three extra coaches," he said. "We didn't want to fire them so it was necessary to relocate them in some fashion." Baker said.
"We're still attempting to re-locate him. Clyde Walker, athletic director, has plans formulated which are subject to NCAA approval. He intends to create a needed position for White within the KU men's athletics department." Baker said.
Skahan said that he'd notified Walker last January of his intended resignation. At the end of the summer Skahan will complete his duties under administration, higher education and business.
Baker said that this new position would be one which was needed and wouldn't be just a means of keeping White on the staff with busy work.
HETTWER's appointment to the dual position of academic counselor and recruiting coordinator was made possible because he was working step down as academic counselor, Ayw. 1.
Skahan said that, contrary to popular opinion within the athletic departments, his team was not expected to be wrong he thought there were many things wrong in intercollegiate athletic programs as a whole. KU is one of several institutions experiencing problems with procedure for conducting athletics.
Skahan said that he spoke to a Wichita newspaper regarding nationwide problems with methanol use.
"THE ARTICLE deals with the present attitude of universities toward their athletes, priorities of these schools, and the overall purpose of intercollegiate athletics.
"the references made were not intended to apply only to KU but I did acknowledge
that KU wasn't exempt from many of the problems in men's athletics today." he said.
problems in men's athletics today," he said. Skaahan said that Walker disagreed with some of the statements he made to the presentation, in no way responsible for his resignation.
"We've always had our differences (Walker and I) because we have different philosopheries concerning the priorities of collegiate athletics programs. But if I were in his position I would have questioned me about statements to the Wichita paper," he said.
SKAHAN SAID Walker thought something should be done to correct problems outlined by Skahan if, in fact, they existed at KU.
Although their personal goals are different, Skahan said, Walker had done an excellent job of restructuring the men's athletic department.
"I think we are losing sight of the academic priority in college athletics. The phrase 'student athlete' is almost a totally hypocritical phrase. I think we must act to further that relationship between the academic aspect and the athletics" he said
Kshaan he thought Walker saw the primary purpose of an intercollegiate athletic program as a business operation, with a show business flavor. He said that, in contrast, he was interested in the conflict of academics vs. athletics.
ALTHOUGH several college athletes have had the good fortune to become super stars, it's important to remember that the players who "ran asians" when they left college, Skahan said.
He said that he liked the attitude of the Ivy League schools toward athletics.
"People still get excited about the Harvard games but they don't lose sight of the fact that student athletes are intended to be students, not just jocks. I think most schools need to re-think this situation and recognize the emphasis of their programs," he said.
WALKER COULDN'T be reached for comment. Jerry Waugh, assistant athletic director, confirmed that Skahan's basketball team had no bearing on his resignation.
"We don't fire people because of stories in the paper. Walker or anyone might not like what I say to you today but I'm not going to be fired because I state my opinions," he
Both Baker and Waugh said that Skahan had done an excellent job in athletic competitions.
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KANSAN
This is the last Kansan published for the summer session. The next Kansan will be the special back-to-school edition, to be published August 18 for dispersal during fall enrollment.
The University of Kansas—Lawrence, Kansas
Thursday, July 29, 1976
Vol.86 No.171
Staff photo by JAY KOELZER
BETTER THAN EVER
The Vipkins have been denied use of Penn Valley Park for their own convention in connection with the Republican National Convention.
Yippie headquarters
Hiram Hill, left, and Leon Vipsky, right, of the Youth International Party, are seen at their headquarters in Kansas City.
Convention coalition plans protest
KANSAS CITY (AP)—A spokesman for a nationwide gathering of demonstrators for the Republican National Convention said yesterday they would camp out at a public park near the convention arena in defiance of the city.
"The city has refused to help us, so we plan to make do with our own arrangements," said Hiram Hiller, a leader of the organization. Coalition, which represents the protesters,
"Demonstrators coming from out of town have been told to gather at the park, and the
plans are unchanged," Hitler said. "We will use it as planned."
Frank Vayidik, city parks and recreation director, responded to Hiller's statement to the news media, "By God, they are not going to tear up anything in that park, structures or land. I don't care who I have to call in, there's going to be nothine turn it."
The city had rejected Hiller's request for sanitary facilities, water for demonstrators and campuses. City ordinations prohibit camping in public parks.
Hiller said they planned to take over the park for camping, dig their own latrines for the animals and provide them with water.
"We are left with no alternative at this time but to provide the vital facilities to the best of our ability." Hiller said. "Of course, we will fill the trenches in and return the ground."
He said the demonstrators would see and play Valley Lake, in the park, to wash and battle in it.
"It won't be the first time the lake has been used for swimming or washing." Vaydik said, but added, "I'll be talking to Police Chief Joseph Nomura, however, on this thing about digging latrines. That's out."
Dykes extols Med Center
By GARY WALLACE
Criticism of KU Medical Center conditions made Tuesday by a doctor and several nurses before a joint Kansas House Senate interim committee was called exaggerated yesterday by Chancellor Archie R. Dykes.
Staff Writer
"Many of these statements were substantial exaggerations designed to impress the legislators," Dykes said. "I've been in every room of that hospital, including surgery, and I've never seen evidence of these conditions."
Excessive dirt in operating rooms, insufficient help, billing errors and low personnel morale were among the complaints of the doctors and nurses.
DYKES SAID he conferred with David Robinson, vice chancellor for clinical affairs, after Tuesday's hearings. Robinson assured him that he had never seen the conditions described to legislators, Dykes said.
"There are problems and deficiencies," he said. "That's why we're spending $500,000 a year."
Russell H. Miller, vice chancellor for medical center administration, agreed that the new facility, scheduled for completion in October 1978, would improve conditions.
"What we have now is a large, busy, busy, old institution," Miller said. "Sanitization is a special problem that needs constant attention."
"UNDER ALL present circumstances we
would not be able to reach sanitation
facilities."
Miller said the problem of insufficient help was being allocated by requests to add new users.
The Med Center isn't competitive in salaries with other hospitals in the Kansas City region, but it is determined by the Kansas Civil Service Commission, which requires salaries across the state.
It is "practically impossible" to fire a Civil Service employee, he said. He said he suggested to the three-member committee that the private firm be hired for endorsement.
Miller said there weren't immediate changes to change the Civil Service status of Mills.
NURSES TEND to leave and go to Missouri hospitals where wages are higher than in other states.
State Rep. Denny Burgess, R-Wanego, who is chairman of the interim committee, said public hearings such as the one cited tend to attract negative judgements.
"IM FINDING we have probably some of the best doctors in the world out here. There were some disgruntled people who testified, but that was to be expected."
"The thousands who are satisfied with the hospital don't bother to attend," he said. "I have talked with many other individuals who have said that the medical and nursing staff are as qualified and capable as any in the world.
Miller said that despite limitations of staffing and physical facilities caused by limited legislative expenditures, he was convinced he would continue to come to the Med Center.
a completely adequate staff, he said, and
staff members are overworked.
"If I were ill, I could find of no other place to go than the Medical Center," Dykes said. "In fact, I have gone there and I wouldn't hesitate to go again."
Police see vendetta possible in Yuk fire
Investigators believe that the fire that destroyed the Yuk Taverns July 7 was set as a vendetta against the tavern's owner, Jess Roberts.
Roberts owned a Mr. Kruz tavern in Roberts Oklahoma in 1972 was also arrested during Dupont's trial.
According to police, the tavern was ridden several times in violation of liquor laws.
Ron Dalque, Lawrence police detective said yesterday that Roberts's testimony against men who apparently tried to kill him in Oklahoma in 1972 might have triggered the arson at the taverns in the Hillcrest shopping center.
The plan failed and District Attorney's office there prosecuted. Dalquest said the Kansas City man and his friends had a falling out, and, as a result, Roberts was driven out into the country, shot and left for dead.
Roberts wasn't available for comment. Fire investigators discovered traces of diesel fuel in the gutted building and cans covering the floor outside the building shortly after the plaza.
Roberts survived the shooting and testified against his assassins who are now serving prison sentences for the incident, Dalqert said.
Daliquet said he and others investigating the Yuk fire are considering the possibility that those responsible for the arson were somehow associated with Roberts' one-time partners and were acting in their behalf when they set the blaze.
Dalquest cautioned that this was only one of several angles of the investigation, and that they were looking into every possibility.
These men then brought prostitution and gambling into the Grove community and with the offer of a new car, tried to bribe the man into ignoring their racket, Daquest said.
Hishina first mentioned the quakes 20 hours after the first tremor, saying
Barry Relish, a geophysicist at the U.S. Geological Survey in Menlo Park, Calif., said major earthquakes in northeast China had been expected by Chinese scientists.
China rocked by 2 earthquakes
Some men, at least one believed to be from Kansas City, approached Roberts and assured him they would solve his problems with sheriff, the official directing the raids.
The Canadian ambassador to Peking, C. J. Small, told Canadian Press by telephone that the quakes were "a great tragedy" and the toll of the disaster yet been told the full extent of the damage.
IN WASHINGTON, the White House said the U.S. laison office in Peking reported all Americans in Peking and Tientsin were safe. U.S. mission head Thomas Gates offered any American aid that the Chinese might want.
TOKYO (AP)—Two huge earthquakes that hit heavily populated northeast China yesterday caused "great losses to people's lives," said Hongxiang, a Chinese news agency, Hsipin, said today.
IN THE capital, frightened residents, plastic tents and makehift hospitals crowded the streets, Japanese press reports from Peking said the first quake, which struck before dawn, collapsed old brick buildings, sent residents fleeing into rainsew avenues and cut off electricity in many sections.
Hainau, in a broadcast monitored here, said that Tangshan City, an industrial center located near the epicenter of the first quake 100 miles east-southeast of Peking, suffered "extremely serious damages and the agency gave no casualty figures.
Witnesses said there was widespread destruction in the big city of Tienanm, in central China.
Religl returned from China two weeks ago. He said if there was no warning of the quakes "the death toll certainly could be more than 10,000."
However, former Australian Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, who was visiting Tuenan, said on his return to Tokyo, that the people killed, but we were told not many.
The nine-story hotel where Whitlam and his wife were staying "split in half, down the middle in two halves," he said. Mrs. Whitlam was slightly injured.
Hishinau's report of a great loss of life came in a message of condolence from Communist party leaders to officials in the stricken areas. It also noted Communist party chairman Mao Tse-tung's "great concern."
Union additions delayed; remodeling finished by fall
THE ONLY specific casually report came from the Japanese embassy in Peking. It said one Japanese trading company official was killed, six Japanese were injured and two were missing in Tangshan, 70 miles away where they were working on a project.
"damage of varying degrees was reported."
After arriving in Tokyo last night, Whitlam said most modern structures in Teikun, a city of 4.3 million people, were built on older buildings "collapsed completely."
Although the Chinese have reported success in predicting previous quakes and evacuating people, there was no known warning of overtied's snakes.
Remodeling of the Prairie Room and the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union will be completed as planned by Aug. 16, but the addition of a delicatessen and souvenir shop to the Trail Room won't be finished until the new office building is completed. The union associate director, said yesterday.
The souvenir shop was to have been completed by the beginning of the fall semester, J. D. Christman, Union bookstore manager, said.
Schoenfeld to be booked
Madera County Sheriff Ed Bates said the 48-court courtroom will be sealed except for repeaters, court personnel and a handful of staff. He entered the courtroom will be searched.
CHOWCHILLA (AP)—As investigators followed his brother's trail in the Northwest, air-tight security was arranged yesterday for Richard Schoenfeld's arrangement in the abduction of 26 Chowchilla school children and their bus driver.
Whitlam said his hotel got an "immense tearing around" in the first tremor that was
Bates said an unidentified person shattered a window of the old abandoned courthouse Tuesday night with three bullets. The courthouse is directly across the street.
"We haven't been able to make an assessment of the evidence against him because of the court seal," Gagen told reporters. He said he would move a motion
Heavily armed police officers will man roofs along the two blocks of Chowchilla's main street when Schoenfeld, 22, is flown into town this morning for arraignment.
MEANWHILE, in Oakland, a William Gagen,
school dept. will play.
AND IN RENO, Nev., authorizes said yesterday they had taken a newspaper containing stories about the abduction from a trailer home believed to have been occupied by James Schoenfeld after the kidnain.
Ferguson said work in the Trail Room would be delayed because other companies were waiting.
The Schoolboy fielded and Frederick N. Woods IV, 24, were named in federal arrest warrants in the mass kidnaping. All are charged with San Francisco Peninsula families.
today "to obtain access to what evidence there is against our client."
Leslie Dickman, FBI special agent in Spokane, said the car had the same license number as the one James Schoenfeld was when he twice attempted to get into Canada.
Thomas Druku, special FBI agent in charge of Montana and Idaho, said the car established that the older Schoenfeld was in the resort town until July 22.
The FBI confirmed earlier Wednesday that a car found at Coeur D'Alene, Idaho, was registered to Schoenfeld's 24-year-old son, who sought in connection with the kidnapping.
The older Schoenfeld brother and Woods have been the subjects of a nationwide manhunt which was concentrated on the Canadian border area after confirmed sightings of James Schoenfeld at border crossings in Idaho and Washington.
The Redwood City Tribune said yesterday that Woods was seen more than two months ago digging a large hole at the Livermore rock quarry where the kidnapped children and their bus driver were imprisoned in a buried van.m
Woods' father owns the quarry.
QUOTING UNNAMED law enforcement sources, the Tribune said a security guard has identified Woods as the young man he stopped and questioned. The sources said the guard told investigators Woods showed no evidence of misconduct and marry and told him he was the owner's son.
Investigators have said Woods bought the moving van. The sources did not say exactly how much it cost.
The souvenir shop in the Trail Room, which will sell KU mugs and sweatshirts.
The younger Schoenfeld turned himself in last Friday and was scheduled to be arraigned Thursday on 43 counts of
See KIDNAP page 2
will be open between the Union Bookstore hours, Christman said.
The delicatessen, which will serve sand-wiches, beer and hot pretzels beginning at 6:30 p.m. after other Union eating areas are closed, will also be added to the Trail Room.
FIRST-BAPTIST-CHURCH
Ferguson said that when the Hawk's Nest closed after summer session a portable stage for the upper level of the Hawk's Nest would be built for night entertainment.
建筑材料分类及应用
一、建筑材料的分类
1. **混凝土**:由砂、粉、黏土等矿物组成,常用作建筑物的基础和结构。常见类型有标准型(ISO 7018)和非标准型(ISO 7019)。
2. **钢筋混凝土**:由钢筋和混凝土组成,是常见的建筑结构。它适用于各种工程,如桥梁、隧道、房屋等。
3. **轻质混凝土**:采用轻质材料(如石膏、聚苯乙烯泡沫塑料等)制成,具有重量轻、成本低的特点,常用于高层建筑和空间设计。
4. **粘结材料**:包括水泥、沥青、胶水等,用于将不同材料的表面紧密结合,形成坚固的复合材料。
5. **保温材料**:用玻璃纤维、聚氨酯、碳纳米管等材料制成,具有良好的保温性能,适用于寒冷地区和冬季施工。
6. **防水材料**:用橡胶、聚氯乙烯、沥青等材料制成,具有良好的防水性能,适用于潮湿环境。
7. **防震材料**:用玻璃纤维、聚氯乙烯等材料制成,具有良好的抗震性能,适用于地震灾害中。
8. **隔热材料**:用玻璃纤维、聚氯乙烯等材料制成,具有良好的隔热性能,适用于高温地区和建筑装饰。
9. **防火材料**:用玻璃纤维、聚氯乙烯等材料制成,具有良好的防火性能,适用于火灾隐患严重的场所。
10. **隔音材料**:用玻璃纤维、聚氯乙烯等材料制成,具有良好的隔音性能,适用于噪声较大的场所。
二、建筑材料的用途
1. **住宅建筑**:主要用于居民住房,如别墅、公寓、宿舍等。
2. **公共建筑**:主要用于公共设施,如图书馆、餐厅、健身馆等。
3. **工业建筑**:主要用于生产厂房、仓库等。
4. **农业建筑**:主要用于种植基地、养殖场等。
5. **娱乐建筑**:主要用于游乐场、博物馆等。
6. **教育建筑**:主要用于学校、幼儿园等。
7. **医疗建筑**:主要用于医院、诊疗所等。
8. **体育建筑**:主要用于运动场、篮球场、足球场等。
9. **文化建筑**:主要用于艺术馆、博物馆等。
10. **休闲建筑**:主要用于公园、旅游景点等。
All that's left
Other renovations for the Hawk's Nest include hanging planters, new drapes and table tops, a new ceiling and a partition between the food and seating areas.
IN THE Prairie Room a built-in salad bar, hanging planters, new carpeting and a new ceiling are being added. A red and blue-bannered divider between the Prairie Room and the Hawk's nest is also being added. Feruson said.
The delicatessens and souvenir shop additions to the Trail Room will cost about $200.
He estimated remodeling of the Prairie room and the Hawk Nest is also being
B. A. Green Construction Co. of
Lawrence B. been hired to do the
construction for the development.
The First Baptist Church at the corner of Eighth and Vermont had only its front wall remaining yesterday as a bullhorn shoved the
10
Staff photos by JAY KOELZER
debris that remained on the inside into orderly piles. Out front, somebody had already begun salvaging bricks, destined for parts unknown.
2
Thursday, July 29.1976
University Daily Kansan
News Digest From the Associated Press
Britain breaks with Uganda
LONDON-Britain severed diplomatic relations with President Idi Amiri's Uganda yesterday in an unprecedented move against member of the British Council.
Foreign Secretary Anthony Crostland announced the break in the House of Commons "with deep regret." Britain, which rarely resorts to breaking diplomatic relations, last severed ties with another country in 1946 when it broke with Albania.
Relations between Britain and Uganda had deteriorated steadily since August 1972 when Amin ordered the expulsion of Asians, mainly Indians and Pakistanis, from Uganda within 90 days. Many held British passports and were brought to Britain in emergency flights.
Ford claims Mississippi
President Gerald Ford's campaign leaders in Mississippi laid claim yesterday to the state's 30 Republican delegates, but Sen. Richard S. Schweiker said yesterday he had persuaded at least 20 Pennsylvania delegates to shift their support away from Ford.
Ford backers said they wouldn't push immediately for a formal poll of the inegation which, if included in his column, could push the President to within a quarter of a mile.
Last night, Mississippi's GOP chairman, Clark Reed, endorsed Ford after Ronald Reagan announced his selection of Schweizer, a liberal, as his choice for president.
Schweiker declined to name the Pennsylvania delegates he said had switched loyalty.
Six delegates he has contacted said they were changing their preference ... Ford to Reagan and at least 14 others were shifting from Ford uncommitted, he said.
Carter briefed bu Bush
PLAINS, Ga. — Democratic presidential nominee Jimmy Carter received a top-secret, full-scale intelligence briefing yesterday designed, in the words of CIA director George Bush, to prevent the candidate from making "the wrong mistake."
Bush and an accompanying group arrived on the grass field that serves as the Plains airborne on two Army helicopters from FT. Bennin, Ga.
Carter had asked for a general intelligence briefing with special attention to such global trouble spots as the Middle Angle, Angola, Rhodesia and South Africa.
Harris mistrial bid fails
LOS ANGELES—William and Emily Harris' lawyers, losing a last bid for a mistrial yesterday, accused the judge of actions "more prosecutorial than the meritorious."
They said he had sanctioned a jury that may include a botber. Supreme Court Judge John Mark Benedict refused to diagnose himself.
*execution* and *demanded his removal*
They could he had requested a jury that may include a subtrah
"I think the court is now out of control in assuming the role of prosecutor," said chief defense attorney Neleigh Winged. "The court has taken a position more prominent than usual."
Outside court, Weinglass told reporters he felt the judge was "handling the case like a prosecutor gone berserk."
It was the fourth time in two days that the defense had bitterly denounced the judge as biased.
Weinglass and Harris are scheduled to address jurors today before the case is submitted for their verdict.
Vikina I scoops Mars sou
PASADAEN, Calif. - Viking 1, America's robot lab on Mars, scoped up a handful of Martian soil yesterday and quickly began searching the dirt for traces on it.
The event marked the first time man has scratched the surface of another planet, sending data back to Earth.
Although analysis of the Martian material began almost immediately, it may be a matter of weeks before conclusions about life on the red planet can safely be made.
Traffic control stations have been reporting abuses of departmental traffic pass privileges for years, but the problems remain. The agency is training to worry University Police officials.
Campus pass abuses distress KU police
Thomas said the passes were to be used to handle brief business matters, deliveries and other errands. However, some student employees and department personnel have been using the cards for their own benefit—to attend classes or teach them.
According to Mike Thomas, director of University Police, every department is automatically issued two cards to be given to traffic control station operators as authorization for them to be given a temporary pass.
Some people, Thomas reported, renew their passes, which are good for approximately two hours, by traveling to a city where one runs out to acquire another.
The crowded parking situation on Jayhawk Drive, even during the summer session, is due in part to these abuses, Thomas saves.
"Parking on the hill is designed for brief periods and frequent turnover at parking spots," Thomas said, "not for one or two hours while the driver attends class."
Thomas has issued memos to all departments to explain the situation and said he hoped that would be sufficient to stop many of the abuses.
"I don't expect any problems next year. "I hope that by informing the department heads of the problem they will take steps within their departments to reduce it."
If the problem persists into next semester, despite the memo, Thomas said
be would recommend to the Traffic and Safety Board that traffic control station personnel take names of the frequent abusers.
Life on Mars would require natural pumps
Dr. Gerald Soffen expressed optimism that Viking I would find life when it scoops up a sample of the red planet's desert surface today.
PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — If there's life on Mars, it is probably a microscopic variety equipped with biological pumps to extract liquid from the very dry atmosphere, Viking I's head scientist said yesterday.
He said that since Mars has been dry for eons, Creatures on Mars would have to have adapted to the relative dryness by pumping it up to draw water from the atmosphere.
"I'm extremely encouraged with the discovery of nitrogen," Soffan said. "That that's why we're so excited."
Now that scientists think life could exist on Mars, they've begun speculating on what it might be like.
If there are Martians, Soffen said, they would be almost certainly in the form of microbes, organisms too small to be seen by the human eye.
And because the planet is so dry, the organisms would have had to develop a mechanism by which to draw water out of the atmosphere, Soften said.
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New courses scheduled for fall
Approximately 20 to 30 new courses will be offered by the University of Kansas this fall. Paul Elliott, assistant registrar for admissions and records, said yesterday.
By TOM BOLITHO
Staff Writer
Most of the new courses will be offered by the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, although no exact count has been made. Elliott said that lists of new courses are no longer printed because many additions are made in August.
IN THE art department, Introduction to Studio will be added to the schedule. This course will stress more studio work than introduction to drawing, which was previously the freshman's only choice of a drawing course.
Included in the new course offerings are changes in the structure of Fine Arts courses for freshmen. Two- and three-dimensional design courses for freshmen will be combined for the fall. Both a lecture and laboratory session will be required.
The change was made in order to allow freshman more choice in their class selection, Lois Green, basic studies director in the School of Fine Arts said.
Elliott said that there would also be new offerings in Liberal Arts and Sciences courses. She said that many LA&S courses are subject to renewal each semester, so it was difficult to guess what the new courses would involve.
The English department of the College will offer several of the new courses.
George Wedge, professor of English, said he will teach a class in the study of written English created in response to student suggestions.
Prof says U.S. can't feed developing nations unaided
"We have wanted to offer a writing course as graduate level for some time," Wedge an
The ultimate responsibility for staving off world-wide famines belongs to developing nations, a University of Kansas expert in Soviet agriculture said recently.
WEDGE SAID that the course would help students at or near graduate level work in relevant areas.
Roy D. Laird, professor of political science and Slavic and Soviet Area Studies, was recently a panel member at the World Food Conference in Ames, Iowa. The conference focused on economic experts from 70 countries attended the quadrennial conference.
Developing nations must cut birth rates and provide incentives to increase farm production, Laird said. The United States can't feed the world, he said.
"The great bulk of surplus U.S. grain should be sold to nations that can afford it at the very best prices it will bring. If we don't, we'll be in serious trouble."
"Our resources aren't unlimited," he said. "The grain-producing countries can provide limited stop-gap shipments, but they are not perfectly in the face of exfoliating populations."
"The United States clearly is the major source of grain for disaster relief, but that in no way means that the American farmer should carry the whole bill."
Many students want some professional composition training before they leave school, and this course is an attempt to meet their needs," he said.
The costs should be paid proportionately by all industrial and oil-rich nations, he said.
Laird said agricultural extension agencies like those in Kansas should be
Stannard said world agriculture had developed in such a way as to make the study of its diverse economics difficult and erratic. He also said that the study of agriculture's progressive technology was better understanding of the total subject.
kidnapping and robbery. He has been held on $1 million bail at the jail in Alameda County east of San Francisco, about 100 miles north of Chowchilla.
Kidnap . . .
From page one
Madera County sherriff Ed Bates said that the younger Schofield will be flown here to all of the local airports or private air strips just before court time. The arrangement is expected in real time at the new government building in this San Joseau Valley town of 5,000.
New satellite courses involving the study of classical civilization will also be offered by the history department. Dionysos Kounas, professor of history, said that the course will be designed to give the student more intensive instruction in specific areas of classical civilization.
Bates said he will ask the judge to allow authorities to spirit Schoenfeld back to Alameda County immediately after the trial of 16 ids of kidnapping and 16 counts of robbery.
BATES declined to say how many officers would be working on security but said Special Weapons and Tactics Team (SWAT) officers would be standing by and the majority of his officers would be handling traffic problems.
He said he would have to do extensive probuffiling of his about 100 prisoners to meet state requirements that Schofield felt was appropriate or those charged with misdemeanors.
Schoenfeld's lawyers have said they would seek a change of venue for the trial and were expected to ask for a reduction in bail.
JIMMY CLIFF
IN
THE JABBER
THEY GONE
"THE HARDER THINGS COME but more gets, wett, humor and their experience then most moves you in any one year of move going." Vincent Carney. NEW YORK TIMES.
SUA SUMMER FILMS
Friday, July 30
7:30 p.m.
$1.00
Woodruff Aud
Woodruff Aud.
Current yield per acre in developing countries is half of industrial nations' yield, he said, and surveys indicate that more farmers are working in Africa and South America (slow growth).
established in developing countries. Research methods should be adapted to each country's climate, soil, farm size and culture. Farmers must be guided in the use of seeds, fertilizers and equipment in order to get maximum crop yield, he said.
Artificially low prices imposed by governments in developing countries make it difficult for farmers to invest in fertilizer machinery to increase crop yield, he said.
Wedge said that the new course would often meet with his advanced composition course, which centers on details of legal writing.
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
A Pacemaker award winner
Kansan Telephone Numbers
Newroom-864-4810
Business Office-864-4358
Published at the University of Kansas daily August through May and Monday through Friday. Mail to: University of Kansas, Sunday and Holidays, Second-class scriptings by mail are $ a semester or $1 a year in Douglasville, Georgia. Contact the school Student subscriptions are $2.00 a semester, pass through the university.
Editor Dierck Caslemann
Editor Editors Campaas Editor
Associate Editor Grabhaw Bishw
Associate Editor Breed Brewing
Chefs Jerry Fish
Editor Editors Jarry Fish
Business Manager Cardinal Stellard
Assistant Business Manager Jim Marquart
Promotion Manager Jim Fawl
Ad Manager Johnne McGregor
Jolene McGregor
Publisher David Dewey
News Adviser Business Adviser Bob Glies Mel Adams
Member Associated Collegiate Press
We Write Motorcycle Insurance
Gene Doane Agency 824 Mass.
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
GREATER COMFORT, SERVICE AND ENTERTAINMENT
Granada
The Wildest Road Race of All
"THE GUMBALL RALLY"
THE NEW courses require concurrent enrollment in a two-hour introductory ancient history course, Introduction to ancient Near Eastern and Greek History.
Varsity
PHILADELPHIA...September 27, 1981
CLINT
EASTWOOD
IS
"THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES"
Hillcrest
Plus
"Benji's Life Story"
9:30
"HAWMPS"
"These satellite courses will give students the chance to study the subject without taking a five-hour survey course," Koumas said.
Starts Friday Hillcrest
"THE REVENGE OF THE R CHEERLEADERS"
"We designed them so the student can become involved in his greatest areas of interest."
Hillcrest Paul Newman Robert Altman's
A NEW course in the history department,
History of Agriculture, will be taught by
Jerry Stannard, professor of history,
Stannard said that the course would deal
with world agriculture from the neolithic
revolution to the twentieth century.
"BUFFALO BILL and the Indians"
"Usually, this kind of course is taught from a political or socio-economic point of view, but this course will be taught with a focus on the management and technology of agriculture," he said.
Kounas said that the fall semester would concentrate on the Near East and Greece, and the spring semester would offer courses on Roman civilization.
Sunset
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"Line" 11:00
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, July 29, 1976
3
he had take the cult and study of anology more total
Comment Summer's lease hath all too short a date
By RON HARTUNG
Contributing Writer
And so, as the July sun slowly sinks into history, the fierce August sun, preparing to assume its thrones, glares down at a woman, in an act of homeland humanity in the vicinity of Mt. Oread.
Ain! he sneers. That telltale pallor can
maint only one thing—summer school
At the end of this week the old KU whistle will sound an agonized retreat, and obedient buildings will belch forth their prisoners. And we, squinting mole-like in the brightness of the outside world, will taste freedom once more.
SUMMER SCHOOL, that nafrious conspiracy against rest and relaxation, is sizzling to a halt—and not a moment too. The hapless student, alternately charroiled by the sun and freeze-dried by the rain, masters on the brink of scholastic insanity.
So he's forced to the musical conclusion:
I ever I would leave you, KU, it is sure hell
wouldn't hurt.
He bclings to a memory that once, in the dark past, summer was a time of butterflies. Dill Bars and long trips—in the Exploration of the Economy, or Remedy of Hivensei 101
Let's not be hasty here, however. This summer school experience has had its moments. What can match the thrill of striding over a University sprinkler just as the authorities decide to press it into service? And who among us hasn't santered through the Union to the infectious rhythm of dueling jackhammers?
AND CERTAINLY the campus is more scenic during the summer than in winter, spring or fall. For the husky young college man there's the captivating sight of scantily clad young maidens frisking about from one class to another. For the appreciative college woman that's the stirring sight of scantily clad women, she's building buildings in a single day. And for those who eschew such sightseeing, there's always the camillean.
But then there's that disturbing element of summer school: school. Education, indeed, takes some severe body blows during the long, hot summer. Some courses
simply do not lend themselves to condensation, nor is every student made of stren enough stuff to spend salty mornings wolfing down knowledge that, during the school year, would have been spoon-fed him a morsel at a time.
Nor are all faculty types safe from academic heat prostration. The normally gentle, understanding professorial soul becomes surprisingly testy when caged for their safety in the university undergraduates. He is, of course, under terrific pressure; he has to convince his unruly charges that they were wise in spending good money to sit inside a clammy building on a glorious, sunshine day when students have been punished one should have to bear such a burden.
BUT NOW, for the diligent among us, the reward has come. We've been tossed a bone (an A, an ideally) and told to run along and play, because summer's almost over. Good lord! summer's almost over! And we're just going to start some serious pleasure-seeking.
Many a summer student's willpower turns to mum when confronted with the age-old dilemma, to study or to play. We recognize readily the weaklings among us; the token tanned classmate, the catnapping coed, the regularly empty chair.
So what can we do but scramble for the doors. In an unending stream come the summer school students—pouring forth from the belly of Watson,咦ing out of Wescoe, positively dripping from Green Hall. They rip off their spiffy new summer wardrobes and surrender themselves to the cold, the wet, the wind, the months of sustained paleness with a week or two of beet-red pain. The frantic search for summer memories is on.
And then what's left to butte to a sigh of guarded contentment and wait—for the guarded contentment, which is the knel of summer comes the signal for the faceless multitude to once again descend upon the campus. The relative peace of the campus may be broken by the howlings of the autumn mob.
The CYCLE begins anew, as it has so many times before. The semester stops, the semester ends, and then the CYCLE begins anew.
And summer! Summer's gone, and soon even the sun will have faded away.
So long, folks
Just as dedicated were the staff members, who labored in the early
Thanks goes to the 25 reporters and 10 copy editors for their diligent effort, much of which won't be seen until August 18 when the back to school edition is released.
morning hours to bring life to the Kansan daily.
And so the summer ends. And with it, the Kanserist. At this time, at as any time an editor is on the brink of relentless his position at the helm of this particular publication, a short farewell and praise for jobs well-done are in order.
A special word of thanks should go to the news advisor, who after getting a job with the Associated Press in Montreal for the managing editor, made sure her regular duties on the paper were completed, even if he had to do them himself.
The summer's been good to us all at the Kansan. Briefly, we had fun; we did our best; and I think it showed throughout the summer.
Movie fare
BUFALFO BILL AND THE INDIANS—Added material and a slightly altered ending mast the release version of this book, which will be featured in costume. Still, there is an abundance of rich material, and Paul Newman's remarkable portrayal of the doubt-rider star makes him one of the most interesting witnesses. With Geoffrey Chaplin, Will Samson and Joel Gray
about how the army of its lions in the Lost West isn't armed. "Moral. Don't attack."
THE GUMBALL RALLY—A cross-country demolition derby where the cars are the stars and the live actors are mechanical, wannili, so shift to low gear when attending.
HAWMP5 - dragged down by the simper-
d lead performance of James Hampton.
(Revised)
THE OUTLAW JOSEY WALES -Clint
acting, but his devoutness will hardy care.
After all, who wants to see Clint's
guitar, can concentrate on
joesy guitar.'
REVENGE OF THE CHEERLEAD-
ERS-Pay for a ticket and you'll get the
idea. Go again to the same movie and
"Revenge of the Cheerleaders—Part Two."
THE HARDER THE COME—Strong,
vital film starring Jamaican singer Jimmy
Curtis has been described as
extremely polished, especially in view of
the low budget, but the music is a little
Sandy's
presents
SUNSHINE BANANA SCONES
THE 59¢ BANANA SPLIT
Offer Good July 29-Aug.1
SANDY'S — 2120 W. 9th — 842-2930
Scott Grant McNall, professor of sociology at Arizona State University, has been named chairman of the department of sociology at KU.
New chairman for sociology starts in August
McNall, 35, will assume teaching and administrative duties in August.
McNall received a B.A. from Portland
His current research involves the extent to which U.S. foreign policy is controlled by law enforcement.
KANSAN WANT ADS
Accommodations, goods, services and employment advertised in the University Dally Kannan are offered to all students without regard to race, creed or religion. BRING ALL CLASSIFIED TO 111 FLINT HALL
State College, Portland, Ore., in 1962 and a Ph.D. from the University of Oregon at Eugene in 1965. He has been an instructor at the University of Oregon and an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota. He joined the faculty at Arizona State in 1970. He was a Fulbright lecturer in Greece in 1968.
CLASSIFIED RATES
one two three four five time times times times times
15 words or fewer ___$2.00 $2.25 $2.50 $3.00
Each additional ___0.11 0.11 0.11 0.11
AD DEADLINES
ERRORS
to run:
Monday Thursday 5 p.m.
Tuesday Friday 5 p.m.
Wednesday Tuesday 5 p.m.
Thursday Friday 5 p.m.
Friday Wednesday 5 p.m.
The UDK will not be responsible for more than two incorrect insertions. No allowances will be made when the error does not materially affect the value of the ad.
FOUND ADVERTISEMENTS
Found items can be advertised FREE of charge for a period not exceeding three months. They can also be placed in person or delivered to the CUK business office at 644-4358.
UDK BUSINESS OFFICE
111 Flint Hall
ANNOUNCEMENTS
864-4358
LITTENTION STUDENT RENTERS—Drop in and us about renting a mobile home. Inquire in person (no phone calls please) at WESTBORNE TOBILE HOME, 3409 6th Street, Lawrence, KS.
FOR RENT
2 bdr. all utilities on campus Furnished or unfurnished. Free parking, cage, pool. 843-769-5001.
Free kittens 7 weeks old, people-loving 843-
9416
Students; Happiness is an alternative lifestyle;
Try cooperative living. Worksharing program,
meal sharing. Eat on the go, average
average/month rent; eat 7-10 weeks/food;
住 at 842-923 between 7-10 weekdays. 7-29
2 bedroom unfurnished apartment at Cresten
Apartment Occupies August 19th 19ch call collect
386-507-4000 www.crestenapartments.com
2 bff. basement gt. in private home on 19th
floor. 2 bff. basement gt. in private home on
3rd floor. 90 eo. ca. Carol 641-388, 642-692,
693-693, 700-700, 701-701, 702-702, 703-703,
FINE SELECTION OF WESTERN SHIRTS,
ROOTS, NATS, LEAN
209 W 8th
BOOTS, HATS, JEANS.
RAASCH
RANGLE & RIDGE SHOP
2020 WA
842 8413
American
Americas
YARN-PATTERNS-NEEDLEPOINT
RUGS-CANVAS-CREWEL
THE CREWEL
CREWEL
15 East 8th, 841-2634
10:5 Monday-Saturday
NAPA
N.A.P.A.
Auto Parts
2. Open 7 days and nights
3. We have it or can get it overnight
One Do-It Yourselfer we
Special Price
4. Machine shop service
SAVINGS ON FAMOUS BRAND STEREO COMPONENTS
2300 Haskell
843-6960
1. Special Prices
5. Two stores
STATE OF THE ART
YAMAHA
Audio Components
3 to 10 Times Less Distortion Than Most Storeo Compounts
817 Vermont
843-9365
KIEF'S DISCOUNT RECORD
AND STEREO
BILLS CENTER, FLAIR LAKE, 902-851-7474
the GRAMOPHONE
842-7611 AM/FM FOR STATION - 9
shop
One bedroom partially furnished apartment. Pr-
vious credit. No financing. Campus: available August 11; call 842-197-9999.
Campus: Huntington Beach, CA.
FOR SALE
Western Civilization Notes- Now on Sale!
Make sense out of Western Civilization!
Makes sense to use them-
1) As study guide
3) For exam preparation
"New Analyst Training Center"
table now at town Cater Store.
STEREO COMPONENTS FOR LESS—Regardless of any price you see on your high equipment other than factory dumps or close and product batteries, the STEREO can be shipped at the GRAHAMPHONE SHOP at KIFTES
Excellent selection of new and used furniture
trade, trade the Furniture and Appliance Center, 70154
688-222-3960
Alternator, starter, and generator Specialists.
BELL AUCTIONS
ELECTRIC, 843-809. 3000 W, 4th. hp.
120 VAC. 60 Hz.
THEYHE Large selection of "Our Special"
THEATRE All-inclusive 6.60 - now 7.29
THE ATTIC, 857 Mass.
Going safari hunting? Pre-washed, blue denim
for $2, price $2, special $12
The Atac, 227. Mass. NA.
*
Dodge 84 Carver II engine is in good condition.
Dodge 84 Coronet II engine will by after
p.m. on Hall Mall No. 428.
Box springs and mattress sets, and new and at low bargain prices. Limit one per customer. Will sell in all stock at reduced prices. Use Puntiler and Appliance Center, 7041; Mail: 7221, 7221.
1072 Sierra KSi mobile handle 14 * 8 mm with cervical pad (DIN 32*16) skirted in included. Excelsent condition Call 611-269-5200
Harman/Kardon 320 I receiver, 15 watt/channel,
110 new $129.9439 before 8 p.m.
7-29
Acoustic guitar plus off-brand electric guitar
Cheap. Good for beginners. 841-7870 by p. 638.
Sincily mattres, box spring & frame. Excellent
price. Mattress sold by Reflex 150.
$59 Call 843-881-688 or 848-450-688.
Band equipment: Gibson EQ2 electric bass with case; Shure MG3P-A guitar tone/control-pipe; Shure MG14 speaker with speaker; JBL K-140 speaker with speaker Must sell by August 7, 2019
an offer. 842-1425.
1970 WV Bug Excellent condition $1250
Gary 842-934-984 Keep trying.
HUGE MOVING SALE - Plants, leather tools,
tropical fish, clothing, furniture, bicycle,
typewriter, books GREAT PRICES July 24-Aug.
8, Sun. Sat., Sun 72 Locust in Near-
north 7-29
rence.
Complete scuba outfit, like new. Ten-gallon aquarium with light, Hitter and Ild. Call 812-590-3744.
Saturday only, July 31. Granite wood and coal
furniture, granite countertops, oak AUK buffer,
alder gliding glass doors, 4 canisters,
collariers, mirrors. Avon bottles, old set of silver,
50, one horse drawn duggie 202 Westchester
also one horse drawn duggie 202 Westchester
FOR SALE: orange Nesco frame-pack. $10! Roger, 842-6734 7-29
HELP WANTED
COOK FOR CHILD NUTRITION STUDY. Fast working, organizer to take on research in study, and partake in research and toddler day care. 8:30 - 13:40 M-F. Apply AAS 135B Brittle Terrace, Meadowbrook
Watness, beautiful area restaurant and club.
Fall, fall 83-1438. For summer and fall. Phone 83-1438.
BUREAU OF CHILD RESEARCH NEEDS REFERRAL
APPROXIMATELY 10 (10) JOURS PER WEEK.
ABILITY TO LEARN IN ASSISTANT OR DIRECT
IN ASSISTANCE IS INDISABLE. PREPARE STUDENTS
VOLUME. CONTACT KRIEN BETHA AT 894-272-
VOLUME. CONTACT KRIEN BETHA AT 894-272-
A EQUAL OPPORTunity EMPLOYER QUAL-
lITY. CONTACT KRIEN BETHA AT 894-272-
A HIGH QUALITY. HAICON COURAGEOUS TO APPLY
Position opening: Media specialist, KUAP. Faculty member in digital media, editing, layout and photography. Pre-PA position offered. 8-A-W. Contact Jim Biddoe, KUAP 368 Hawthorne county employee qualified and women of all backgrounds employed
Position opening: Communications Director,
Position opening: KUAF publication coordination of all KUAF publication managers of KUAF media staff. Experience in reporting, research and analysis of production. Prefer MA in journalism or English. Provide training for KUAF production. KUAF March 849, Harworth Hall, KU (864-4504) for interview. Equally opportunity employer. Contact: 7-298
Food service workers—part time 18-25 hrs. food service workers will be required to pay $20 or Apply Unemployment Food, Taxes & Insurance for the first 24 hours.
RUSSIA
American and Mexican Food
Aztec Inn
Aztec Inn
All Mexican Dishes served
807 Vermont 842-9455
Tutorial Coordinator for Supportive Educational Assessment student status, history and academic advantaged students, tunctional knowledge of students, prerequisite course requirements, Transcripts must accompany applications 7-29
DIRECTOR OF INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Responsible for development, ordination and direction of University-write work, including the development and development of administrative systems software support of the University and the College of Health Sciences; directly to the Chancellor's Office, Qualifications and Experience; at a comprehensive university in institute of information systems; and administrative committee appropriate based on qualifications and experienc
LOST AND FOUND
Found vicinity of 10th and Indiana. Small black cat. Call 842-9969 after 3.0%. 7-29
FOUND. large, male dog. Brown, part St. Bernard, need good home. It is very friendly. Call $350.
4 car keys found on corner of 18th and Alabama
Call 864-3543
7-29
FOUND MONDAY MORNING—small white feather
6-487-679 to identify
29-487-679
FOUND Ring ring found in Murphy Hall
Identify at Fine Art musee. 864-3421-729
***
Call, called kiteh by Vermont St. Office
Call 842-9538 or 842-9158.
7-28
NOTICE
Cook 13. Throw hot aftermilken with fruits and potatoes. Cook 14. Stir well with vegetables (hash-back) . Dinner toil, till 8:20 except for salad (hash-back).
After 26 years in business, if George doesn't learn it he will make it. George's Phone Shop, JLP, has a new phone number.
Swap Shop, €20 Mass. Used furniture, dishes,
cookware, clocks, television. Open daily 12-
8pm-3:57 PM. 832-3577
Earn extra money for college expense, supplement your income Call Ms. Mills at 842-612-6120
PERSONAL
Alcohol is America's one drug. If you need help call Alcoholics Anonymous #820-1109.
*Avoid alcohol.*
SERVICES OFFERED
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4
1. 2023年1月1日
Tuesday, July 29, 1976
University Daily Kansan
Sports
France claims first gold
By WICK TEMPLE
AP Sports Editor
MONTREAL—Guy Drut, France's best athlete, brought his country its first men's track and field gold medal in 20 years yesterday when he won the Olympic 110-meter hurdles in 13.30 seconds. Willie Davenport of Baton Rouge, La., finished third to avoid a U.S. shutout in five medal events.
Anders Garderd of Sweden won the 3,000-meter steeplechase in world record time after Frank Baumgarti of East Germany, with whom he was running neck and neck, tripped over the last hurdle and left behind. After Bromsenkai Malnowski of Poland leaped over him while he was crumpled on the track.
The East German women continued their masterful showing with Barbell Eckert scoring a surprising victory in the women's 2002-dash meter and Rosemarie Ackermann winning the women's high jump with an Olympic record 6-feet-4-leap.
The Russians and East Germans increased their lead in total medals. The Soviets had 31 gold, 50 silvers and 23 bronzes to East Germany's 30, 19 and 18. The United States was third with 22, 26 and 19.
In boxing, America's John Tate and Cuban defending heavyweight champion Teo菲 Stevenson scored quarter-final victories and got ready for a semifinal showdown bout tonight that may determine the gold medal.
Tate had to rally in the third round with a right-hand attack to score a narrow 3-2 decision over West German Peter Husing. The second half saw Finland's Kuokola of Finland in the first round.
Tate went into the quarter-finals with a swollen left eye, suffered in his first bolt. It began to bleed in the second round but a doctor said Tate could continue.
"I thought the ref was going to stop the fight," Tate said. "I had a little cut on my left eye. But I can't get to let no little cut in. And I had I in the last round, and I won it."
The Russians swept the hammer throw as track and field competition resumed after a one-day layoff. Yuriy Syedekh, former world junior champion, won the gold with an Olympic record throw of 254 feet, 4 inches. The old record was 247-8.
The Russians also won the first Olympic gold medal awarded in women's team handball by beating East Germany 14-11. The French silver and Hungary took the bronze.
Veteran Brendan Foster of Great Britain shattered the Olympic record for 5,000 meters with a clocking of 13 minutes, 20.34 seconds during a trial heat.
The time by Foster erased the previous mark of 13.26.48 set by Lasse Viren of Finland four years ago at Munich. Viren also qualified for Friday's final.
Esther Roth, the only 179 Israeli Olympic athlete who was on the 1972 Munich team that was decimated by Arab terrorists, set a national record in the women's 100-meter hurdles and Francis Larryri broke the American women's mark in the 1,500-meter hurdles. Roth qualified in 13.04 seconds, better than her own Israel record of 13.09. The top qualifier was Tatiana Anisimova of Russia at 12.91—but her heat was scheduled to be rerun Friday because of a disqualification.
Larierre, Long Beach, Calif., finished sixth in her first heat of the 1,500 but still lowered the American record to 4:07.21 in Merrill, Waterford, Conn., also qualified.
All three Americans in the long jump qualified—defending Olympic champ Randy Williams, Fremo, Calif.; Arnie Muckle and Larry Myricks, Mississippi College.
Wylie's future uncertain
By DAVESTEFFEN
The future of Cliff Wihle as a University of Kansas sprinter may be decided this Sunday when the U.S. District Court in Topeka is expected to rule on his suit against the league to negotiate Athletic Association (NCAA) for disqualifying him from college competition.
"If I don't win the case I'm not sure I'll be able to return to KU," Wily said yesterday.
The NCAA ruled in March that WYA's financial assistance exceeded the NCAA limits for outside aid to athletes, and was denied from competition with the KU track team.
WYLLE, Baltimore, Md. Junior, received a $2,600 scholarship from KU as well as a $1,400 grant from the Federal Basic Educational Opportunity Grant program.
This $4,000 in aid boosted Wyke over the $2,756 limit the NCAA has set for student athletes at KU.
Wyfe jifled suit against the March NCAA ruling and obtained a temporary restraining order allow him to compete in the Big Eight Outdoor track meet in May and the NCAA Outdoor track meet in June to prepare for the Olympic trials.
In addition to obtaining the temporary restraining order, allowing him to try for the Olympics, Wylie pointed to two other purposes of his suit.
"I hope to receive all my past financial assistance by winning the court case. I had
to borrow heavily to get through last spring
and I'd like to pay it back soon." Wylie said.
"Also, winning the suit would allow me to keep receiving the level of aid I've gotten the last two years and need to afford KU," he said.
LEADING WYLIE's attempt to win his case are his attorney, Phil Miller, and the Kansas Civil Liberties Union, which is providing financial assistance.
Miller's arguments center on one major challenge to the NCAA. He said he believed that the federal BEOG aid, which was designed to substitute for inadequate parental financial support shouldn't be counted towards the NCAA outside assistance limit when parental contribution to well-off athletes as well as funds from other federal grants such as social security are not.
The NCAA defends its rule, saying it prevents universities from trying to lure top athletes with large packages of financial aid. The NCAA has asked for a dismissal of the rule. While due process through hearings and before the plaintiff has no cause of action.
Wily said he was optimistic about the chances of his case and not embittered at the fact that he had won.
"IM NOT mad at the NCAA," he said.
"The majority of their rules are valid, but there are a few sleepers like this one that tend to hurt athletes in the process of trying to help. I just hope they realize this and make an exception to the rule."
Bim Timmons, KU track coach said he agreed with Wylie.
"I approve of the NCAA's theoretical purpose but Cliff has good reason to oppose the way it has worked out for him. He's in the right and I hope he wins the case."
Wyile says the litigation has hurt his training, education and reputation.
"I was able to run some good times this spring and summer but wasn't in condition to run a good time in one race and come back an hour later and it do again," he said.
BUT WYLIE said the people at KU have supported him in his trouble.
"I was really depressed during the spring and thought of transferring to another school to run track. But the people at KU stayed in my corner. That goes a long way and is one of the reasons I didn't transfer," he said.
Wylie said he didn't know whether the case would be appealed if he lost. Miller anticipates the case will be appealed to U.S. Circuit Court in Denver, Colorado, if needed.
Timmons said he doubted the NCAA would appeal the case.
"An appeal by the NCAA would be very, very unpopular. It would mean fighting an economically handicapped youngster I had to win. You really be that determined to win the case."
2 former 'Hawks sample pro ball
Staff Write
By BRYANT GRIGGS
Two former University of Kansas baseball stars, Tom Kraftil and Roger Shagle, are discovering what it's like to play professional baseball.
Rightfielder Kratti, who was drafted by the Kansas City Royals last June, is now in Sarasota, Fla., on the class A team there. He has been a double-A starter for Yankees' farm team in Leverkusen.
Both ended impressive careers at KU last year on the most successful baseball team ever at the University. The team won 23 games and lost 14.
Slagle, from Larned, said he spent most of his leisure time on the Atlantic Ocean beaches before doing battle with batters each day.
"We play on noon everyday, but once a week we play at night," Kratts said.
"We start batting practice about 3 o'clock everyday and later on we play night games," Sligle said. "I'm pretty much on my own before then."
Single engleys the sun, but Kratti, from Leavenworth, is on the field at 9:45 a.m.
Both players said one problem most
rookies had to overcome was transition from college to professional baseball. Daily baseball games soon take their toll.
"We play every day," Krattli said, "but you have to get used to it. If you have a bad practice the day before, you have to forget about it and do better the next day."
Slagle said he didn't mind the heavy schedule as much as the hot weather.
"I've been playing a bit," Krattli said, "but I'm not as doing well as I'd like to. Right now my batting average is around 80 percent that I've had no serious problems."
But, the weather aside, both players said they were doing pretty well in the summer camps.
"The humidity is much higher and it makes you get tired more quickly." he said.
"So far I've played around 50 innings and my ERA is about 2.2. My record is 3-4, but in my game last night I didn't get a decision," he said.
On an 11-pitcher team, Slagle has become one of the six starters.
Although both rookies said they appreciated their training camp experience they said it would be awhile before they'd appear in major league uniforms.
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Krattli, however, said he had other plans. After the conclusion of rookie camp in August, he will attend KU this fall and go back to training camp next March.
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RESTAURANT
Royals nab 3-2 victory
ANAHEIM (AP)—Dave Nelson's suicide squeeze bunt scouted Tom Pouchein the 10th inning to give the Kansas City Royals a 3-2 victory over the California Angels Wednesday night.
Larry Gura, the fifth Royals' pitcher, picked up his first victory of the season and his fifth in five lifetime decisions against California.
Baseball Standings
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia W 6 L Pct. GB
Pittsburgh 61 43 1.58 11%
Baltimore 51 43 20.17 11%*
St. Louis 31 42 300 18%*
Chicago 41 50 364 18%*
Houston 41 32 310 19%*
West Cincinnati 62 32 44 .020
Los Angeles 85 34 144 -¼
Houston 78 34 144 -¼
San Diego 40 52 465 13½
Alanta 40 52 465 13½
San Francisco 44 68 144
Rive City
CITYBAND
Federado's Games
Montreal St. Louis, Philadelphia, rained, rain Chicago 5, Philadelphia 2, 11 lignes Pittsburgh 3, New York 0, 13 lignes Pittsburgh 1, New York 0, 13 lignes Frankfurt 7, Chandos 8 San Francisco 7, Chandos 8
Mainstream Jazz at 7S SPIRIT
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Friday, July 30
11 p.m.-2 a.m.
East West LB LB Pct. GB
New York Baltimore Baltimore 49 58 16% 11%
Cleveland Detroit 47 49 400 13%
Detroit 47 49 400 13%
Dallas Milwaukee 49 52 448 17
Wetness
Kansas City 60 32 812 --
Montana 53 48 713 8
Minnesota 60 37 812
Texas 47 45 485 12/8
Chicago 47 54 465 12/8
California 45 59 452 12/8
Yesterday's Games
Minnesota 7, Boston 5, Texas 0
Cleveland 7, Boston 8, New York 0
Detroit 1, Milwaukee 2
Kansas City 3, California 2
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